Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 98South Africa
Phoenix International Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Stax of Wodd CC and Another (3651/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 98 (22 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
22 February 2024
Headnotes
economic duress is held to be present when commercial pressure is exerted on a party, amounting to coercion, which compels the party to enter into the contract unwillingly. The Court held that consent is vitiated in these circumstances.
Judgment
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## Phoenix International Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Stax of Wodd CC and Another (3651/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 98 (22 February 2024)
Phoenix International Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Stax of Wodd CC and Another (3651/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 98 (22 February 2024)
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sino date 22 February 2024
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:3651/2023
Before:
The Hon. Ms Acting Justice Golden
Date
of hearing: 14 February 2024
Date
of judgment: 22 February 2024
In
the matter between:
PHOENIX
INTERNATIONAL LOGISTICS (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
and
STAX
OF WOOD
CC
First Defendant
GERHARD
KIRSTEIN
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
GOLDEN
AJ
:
[1]
The
plaintiff has noted an exception to the defendants’ Plea dated
6 July 2023 on the basis that it lacks averments
which are
necessary to sustain a defence. The relevant facts are
summarised below.
[2]
The
plaintiff provided logistical and freight forwarding services to the
first defendant in respect of which the plaintiff shipped
wood to the
first defendant’s overseas clients. A dispute arose regarding
the plaintiff’s invoices and what was owing
to it by the first
defendant. Because of the dispute the plaintiff refused to release
and ship 13 containers of wood to the first
defendant’s
overseas clients. The defendants then signed two Acknowledgement of
Debts (AODs) which the plaintiff required
before it was prepared to
release the orders for shipment.
[3]
The
plaintiff filed a provisional sentence summons on 1 March 2023 where
it sought judgment against the defendants for payment of
the amount
of R579,700.76 together with interest thereon based on the AODs.
[4]
The
defendants entered into the principal case and delivered their Plea.
Their defence is set out more fully in paragraphs
3.4 to 3.4.10 of
the Plea.
[5]
The
defendants plead as follows:
[5.1] Prior
to the signing of the documents, the plaintiff rendered logistics and
freight forwarding services
to the first defendant and rendered
invoices to the first defendant.
[5.2] During
the course of December 2022, the first defendant entered into a
legitimate dispute with the
plaintiff concerning the plaintiff’s
invoices and refused to make further payment of same, as can be seen
from emails annexed
hereto marked “SOW1”.
[5.3] At
the time, the plaintiff was unable to prove that the amounts of its
invoices were indeed due and
owing to it.
[5.4] Because
of the dispute, the plaintiff refused to release the first
defendant’s shipments of 13
containers of wood, which were
exported by the first defendant to its overseas customers.
[5.5] The
refusal to release the shipments of wood compromised the first
defendant’s relationship with
its overseas customers, to the
extent that the customers threatened to terminate their relationships
with the first defendant,
which in turn threatened the first
defendant’s very existence.
[5.6] At
the time when the documents were signed, the plaintiff threatened the
defendants that the shipments
would never be released, if the
defendants do not sign the documents.
[5.7] The
threat was conveyed to the first defendant, duly represented by the
second defendant, on 10 January
2023 at Strand, orally by Mr Craig
Melnick, and via email by Ms Robin Theron, a copy of which email is
annexed hereto marked “SOW2”.
[5.8] The
defendants signed the documents in the
bona fide
and
reasonable belief that, if they failed to do so, it will inevitably
lead to the first defendant’s demise, for the reasons
pleaded
above.
[5.9] But
for the threat, the defendants would not have signed the documents.
[5.10] The
documents are therefore void due to duress.
[6]
The
first exception is that the defendants have failed to plead:
[6.1] that
the alleged threat made by the plaintiff was of considerable evil to
the person concerned;
[6.2] that
the alleged threat was of an imminent or inevitable evil and induced
fear; and
[6.3] that
the alleged threat was unlawful or
contra bonos mores
.
[7]
The
plaintiff further pleads that, to the extent that the purported
defence is one of
economic
duress
,
such a defence is in any event not sustainable in terms of the law
and does not constitute a defence to the plaintiff’s
claim.
[8]
The
second exception posits that the covering email referred to in
paragraph 3.5.1 of the defendants’ Plea upon which the
first
defendant relies to prove that there was no consent to the AOD’s,
constitutes extrinsic evidence and is inadmissible
to contradict, add
to or modify the AOD’s. The plaintiff asserts that the
defendants’ allegation that the plaintiff
could therefore not
have placed reliance on the AOD’s is therefore unsustainable
and bad in law.
[9]
During
the course of legal argument counsel for the plaintiff, Mr Robbertze,
informed the Court that the plaintiff no longer pursues
the second
exception as it was predicated on
justus
error
, as
the plaintiff had understood the defendants’ defence also to
have been premised on a mistake thereby bringing the assent
to the
AOD’s into question, by relying on the email dated
10 January 2023. In this email, the second defendant
informs the plaintiff that he (second defendant) does not
automatically waiver his right to query any invoice which may have
any
discrepancies or disagreements in the mentioned period by
agreeing to the AODs.
[10]
There
appears to be some conflation on the part of the plaintiff between
the basis for the second exception and the defence of
justus
error.
I did not understand the defendants’ defence to be one of
justus
error
simply because they never relied on an alleged mistake which induced
them to conclude the AODs. A defence of
justus
error
must
also be expressly pleaded if a party seeks to rely thereon which the
defendants have not done. However, I need not determine
the second
exception as counsel for both parties agreed in the hearing that the
issue for determination will now only be confined
to the issue of
economic duress and/or duress of goods, namely, the first exception.
[11]
The
defendants’ position is that they would not, of their own
volition, have concluded and signed the AODs had it not been
for the
plaintiff’s threat that it would not release the shipments to
the defendants’ overseas clients. They contend
that the refusal
to release the shipments of wood had compromised the first
defendant’s relationship with its overseas customers,
where
they had threatened to terminate their relationships with the first
defendant and that this had threatened its commercial
existence.
[12]
The
exception noted against the defence of economic duress is twofold.
The first is that the defendants’ have failed to plead
the
essential allegations required to substantiate a defence of duress,
and that without pleading these essential allegations,
the
defendants’ plea is vague and embarrassing. The plaintiff
asserts that the defendants should have pleaded that
(i) the alleged
threat made by the plaintiff was one of considerable evil to the
person concerned, (ii) that the alleged threat
was of an imminent or
inevitable evil and induced fear, and that (iii) the alleged threat
was unlawful or
contra
bonos mores
.
The plaintiff contends that the failure to have pleaded that the
alleged threat was unlawful or
contra
bonos mores
,
means that the Plea remains excipiable. Counsel for the
plaintiff contended that there is further no reasonable basis
to interpret the defendants’ Plea to read that the alleged
threat was unlawful and/or
contra
bonos mores
.
[13]
The
second leg of the exception is that, even if properly pleaded, the
defence of “
economic
duress
”
is not a recognised defence in our law. The plaintiff relies on
Medscheme
Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Another v Bhamjee
2005 (5) SA 339
(SCA) for this proposition. I shall deal with this
issue first.
[14]
During
legal argument, counsel for the plaintiff seemed to accept that
economic duress and/or duress of goods was an accepted defence
in our
law. He rather – and more emphatically - persisted with the
submission that the defence does not avail the defendants
because it
had not pleaded the
essentialia
of such a defence.
[15]
The
concession that economic duress was now a legitimate defence in South
African law was correctly made.
[16]
The
Labour Court in
NEHAWU
v The Public Health and Welfare Sectoral Bargaining Council &
Others
[2002] 3 BLLR 2022
(LC) has held that economic duress is held to be
present when commercial pressure is exerted on a party, amounting to
coercion,
which compels the party to enter into the contract
unwillingly. The Court held that consent is vitiated in these
circumstances.
[17]
In
Medscheme
,
the respondent, a medical doctor, had also signed two AODs in favour
of the second appellant, a medical aid scheme. Under
both AODs,
the respondent undertook to repay the appellant certain sums of money
that he had already claimed from the appellant.
The appellant
had made a threat that if the respondent failed to sign an AOD in
favour of their schemes, they would terminate direct
payment of all
claims to the respondent. According to the respondent,
his economic survival was at risk because it
meant that he would have
to recover his charges from his patients who were members of the
medical aid schemes who would look to
the scheme for reimbursement,
and that this would result in them no longer consulting him.
Because of this threat, the respondent
acknowledged himself to be
indebted to the appellant by signing the AOD.
[18]
The
central issue in
Medscheme
was whether the appellant’s threat to terminate direct payment
to the respondent was
contra
bonos mores
.
The Court
a
quo
had
found that the threat to cause economic ruin was unconscionable and
that it amounted to economic duress. Whilst the SCA found
that the
respondent had signed the AODs in the belief or fear that his failure
to do so placed his medical practise at risk because
of the
appellant’s threat, it overturned the finding of the High Court
on the basis that the threat was neither unconscionable
nor unlawful
in the circumstances, and, that there was accordingly no economic
duress. The Court disagreed with the High Court
that the conclusion
of the AOD was unconscionable,
inter
alia
, on
the basis that the respondent had gained the ability to continue his
lucrative medical practice.
[19]
In
paragraph [18] of the judgment, the SCA however held that:
“
Such
cases are likely to be rare … for it is not unlawful, in
general, to cause economic harm, or even to cause economic
ruin, to
another, nor can it generally be unconscionable to do so in a
competitive economy. In commercial bargaining the
exercise of
free will (if that can ever exist in any pure form of the term) is
always fettered to some degree by the expectation
of gain or the fear
of loss. I agree with van den Heever AJ (in Van den Berg &
Kie Rekenkundige Beamptes at 795E-796A)
that hard bargaining is not
the equivalent of duress, and that is so even where the bargain is
the product of an imbalance in bargaining
power. Something more
– which is absent in this case – would need to exist for
economic bargaining to be illegitimate
or unconscionable and thus to
constitute duress.
”
[20]
Medscheme
recognises that in
certain [rare] cases there can be circumstances which may constitute
economic duress. It held that “
Something
more…would need to exist for economic bargaining to be
illegitimate or unconscionable
”
to constitute this type of duress.
[21]
Duress,
in the ordinary legal sense, means that a person does not act out of
free choice and acts unwillingly for a reason which
has come down to
bear upon him, that he has no choice in the matter (see
Kruger
v Sekretaris van Binnelandse Inkomste
1973 (1) SA 394
(A) at 397 and 398).
[22]
English
authorities have defined economic duress as constituted by
illegitimate commercial pressure exerted on a party to a contract
which induces him to enter into the contract, and which amounts to a
coercion of the will which vitiates his consent (
North
Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd
[1979] AC 704
;
Universe
Tank Ships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers’
Federation
[1982] 2 ALL ER 67
(HL) )
[23]
In
Times
Travel (UK) Ltd v Pakistan International Airlines Corp
[2021] UKSC, a more recent decision of the Supreme Court of the
United Kingdom, the Court held that duress is established when
an
illegitimate threat or pressure causes a claimant to enter into a
contract (at paragraphs 78-80). The question whether the threat
made
was illegitimate, then arises. The Court held that regard must be had
to, amongst other, the behaviour of the threatening
party including
the nature of the pressure which it applies and the circumstances of
the threatened party. In contrast, South
African law requires
the threat to be unlawful and/or
contra
bonos mores
.
The Supreme Court in
Times
Travel
thus defined economic duress as “
concerned
with identifying rare exceptional cases where a demand motivated by
commercial self-interest is nevertheless unjustified
”
(at paragraph 99).
[24]
Whilst
the SCA in
Medscheme
found that the conduct of the appellant did not amount to economic
duress, the Court held that there would be no cogent reason
why the
threat of economic ruin should not be recognised as duress in South
African law. This is consistent with the legal concept
of economic
duress which has been recognised in English law (see
North
Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd
and
Universe
Tank Ships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers’
Federation
supra).
[25]
Whilst
Medscheme
has
recognised a defence of economic duress and as correctly pointed out
by Deeksha Bhana in her article titled
The
Future of the doctrine of economic duress in South African contract
law: The influence of Roman-Dutch law, English law and the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
,
2021 Acta Juridica 107
, the SCA did not elaborate on the requirements
for such a defence. All the SCA said in general terms was that “
hard
bargaining is not the equivalent of duress…and that is so even
where the bargain is the product of an imbalance in bargaining
power.
Something more – which is absent in this case – would
need to exist for economic bargaining to be illegitimate
or
unconscionable and thus to constitute duress
”
(at paragraph 18).
[26]
In
his analysis of
Times
Travel
,
Professor Jacques du Plessis suggests that the means used by the
threatening party to create or increase the threatened party’s
weakness or vulnerability, and the benefits that the threatening
party (objectively) obtained due to the threat are considerations
which may determine whether a threat of a lawful act is unlawful. The
learned author is of the view that the complexity of the
enquiry into
the unlawfulness of the threat suggests it may be unwise for South
African law to exclude the possibility of rather
following a
range-of-factors approach. (See Jacques du Plessis,
Lawful
act duress
,
2023 SALJ 733)
[27]
Although
foreign authorities provide much needed guidance and insight into
this undeveloped area of our law, it will be up to our
courts to
develop this jurisprudence to face the realities of modern commercial
and contractual practice reflective of South Africa’s
prevailing constitutional dispensation.
[28]
Despite
the allure of the legal debate, it is not for this Court to determine
the appropriate test to adopt for a defence of economic
duress. This
is for the trial court to determine and to further develop the
jurisprudence in this area of the law.
[29]
The
first exception that economic duress is not a sustainable defence in
South African law, must accordingly fail.
[30]
The
defendants also rely on a defence of
duress
of goods.
This
defence was acknowledged in
Hendriks
v Barnett
1971
(1) SA 765
(NPD). In distinguishing between duress of the
person and duress of goods, the Court held that in a case of duress
of goods
all reasons for fear of bodily danger being absent –
it is impossible to know whether the payment is voluntarily or
involuntarily
made unless some unequivocal objection to the payment
is raised at the time it is made. The Court held that this
contemplates
that there must be some objection to the payment. In the
instant matter, this objection is evidenced by what is pleaded in
paragraph
3.5.2 of the Plea, which is also supported by the email of
10 January 2023.
[31]
As
regards the approach to exceptions, I am guided by
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA), that I should not take an overly technical
approach to exceptions. I am also reminded that exceptions must be
dealt with
sensibly (
Luke
M Tembani & Others v President of the Republic of South Africa &
Another
[2022] ZASCA 70
;
2023 (1) SA 432
(SCA)).
[32]
This
is not a case where there is no cognisable defence which has been
made out on the pleadings. As held by Binns-Ward J
in
Titan
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd & Others v Lanzerak Estate Investments
(Pty) Ltd & Another
(case number 2102/2020, date of judgment: 9 June 2023), a pragmatic
approach is called for, bearing in mind the purpose of an exception;
being to weed out claims that should not proceed to trial because a
cognisable claim or defence, as the case may be, has not been
made
out on the pleadings, or to prevent a claim or defence being
persisted with on pleadings that are vague and embarrassing.
[33]
It
is where pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to determine
the nature of the claim or where pleadings are bad in law
in that
their contents do not support a discernible and legally recognised
cause of action, that an exception is competent.
[34]
The
burden rests on the excipient, who must establish that on every
interpretation that can reasonably be attached to it, the pleading
is
excipiable. The test is whether on all possible readings of the
facts no cause of action may be made out; it being for
the excipient
to satisfy the Court that the conclusion of law for which the
plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every interpretation
that
can be put upon the facts (
Luke
M Tembani
at paragraph [14).
[35]
I
am not persuaded that the Plea is excipiable on the grounds contended
for by the plaintiff. The Plea sets out sufficient facts
which makes
out a defence for economic duress and/or duress of goods.
[36]
Even
if the words “
economic
duress
”
and/or “
duress
of goods
”
were not expressly pleaded, the facts pleaded in paragraphs 3.4. to
3.4.10 of the Plea support a cognisable defence that
the plaintiff
had threatened the defendants and that, but for the threat, the
defendants would not have signed the AODs. The pleaded
facts clearly
support a defence of economic duress. For reasons addressed herein,
the exception that the Plea is vague and embarrassing,
also fails.
[37]
I
accordingly make the following Order:
ORDER:
[a] The
exception is dismissed.
[b] The
plaintiff shall pay the defendants’ costs of the exception.
TJ
GOLDEN, AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
For
the Plaintiff
:
Adv
JH Robbertze
Counsel
for the Plaintiff
Instructed
by Shepstone & Wylie Attorneys
(Ms
J Woker)
For
the Defendant
:
Adv
R Engela
Counsel
for the Defendants
Instructed
by VanderSpuy Cape Town
(Mr
CH van Breda)
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