Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 343South Africa
Jones N.O v ABSA Bank Limited (A64/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 343 (1 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
1 November 2024
Headnotes
in abeyance. In a
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Jones N.O v ABSA Bank Limited (A64/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 343 (1 November 2024)
Jones N.O v ABSA Bank Limited (A64/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 343 (1 November 2024)
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sino date 1 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Damages –
Defective goods –
Front-end loader required for
property development – Finance obtained through bank –
Loader delivered was defective
and different machine from that
which plaintiff purchased – Bank could not rely on
settlement agreement where third
party involved – Plaintiff
(deceased) did not abandon his rights – Bank could not rely
on delivery note signed
by plaintiff – Aedilitian remedies
available – Executor entitled to such damages, including
consequential damages,
as he is able to prove.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE NO: A64/2023
In the matter between:
BRADLEY
JONES
N.O.
Appellant
(In his capacity as the
executor of the Estate Late
Clive Andrew Cook, Master
Ref no: 015011/2020)
and
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
Respondent
Bench: P.A.L. Gamble,
D.S. Kusevitsky and D.M. Thulare, JJ
Heard: 24 January 2024
Delivered: 1 November
2024
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via email and release to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be Friday, 1 November 2024 at 12h30.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
In 2008 Mr. Clive Andrew Cook (the deceased)
secured a contract to perform certain earthworks for a property
developer. To do so,
he needed a front-end loader (the loader) and so
he set about procuring a secondhand machine. Through the involvement
of a certain
Mr. Ismail Solomon, a 2003 model Kawasaki Renoster
loader was located in KwaZulu Natal (KZN). The supplier was an
auctioneering
company called Peter Maskell Auctioneers (Maskell)
which had evidently obtained the loader from a firm known as DJ Plant
&
Equipment, (DJ) also in KZN.
2.
The deceased obtained finance for the loader from
the respondent (ABSA) and to this end he concluded an instalment
agreement (the
agreement) as defined under the National Credit Act,
34 of 2005 (the NCA). The agreement recorded that the cash price of
the loader
was R444 600.00 (VAT inclusive) payable through a
deposit of R44 000.00, 3 monthly instalments of R9867.17, 1
instalment
of R64 467.17 and a further 50 monthly instalments of
R9887.17. The deposit was paid to Maskell and the total recoverable
by ABSA under the agreement (inclusive of finance charges) was
R587 427.18.
3.
The deceased signed ABSA’s pro forma
“
Release Note
”
in
respect of the loader on 3 March 2008 and pursuant thereto the loader
was delivered at his business premises at Philippi in Cape
Town
during the latter part of March 2008.
4.
When the loader arrived for delivery aboard a
large flat-bed trailer, it was immediately apparent to Cook that it
had certain obvious
patent defects. The deceased immediately
complained to the driver of the flat-bed that this was not the loader
he had bought and
he was not inclined to take delivery thereof. The
driver would have nothing of it and insisted that the loader be taken
off the
trailer. This task fell to the deceased’s son, Jacques
Cook (Jacques), who realised that the loader had various latent
mechanical
defects as well. For example, the vehicle did not start
properly, it belched black smoke when it eventually did start and its
hydraulic
system did not function properly when Jacques attempted to
lift the bucket before reversing it off the flat bed. In short, the
deceased realized there and then that he had bought the proverbial
“lemon”.
5.
In an endeavour to meet his pressing contractual
obligations to the property developer, the deceased set about
effecting certain
essential repairs to the loader. By July 2008 the
cost of further repairs was estimated at R242 664.96 and it was
considered
to be uneconomical to do so. There was then a meeting in
Cape Town on 23 July 2008 at which certain of the parties attempted
to
resolve the issues arising from the defects in the loader, and to
which I shall refer later.
6.
In the meanwhile, the deceased fell into arrears
under the agreement and on 4 June 2009, after complying with the
requisite prescripts
of the NCA, ABSA issued summons out of the
Wynberg Magistrates’ Court against the deceased for payment of
the amount then
allegedly due under the agreement –
R575 228.03. Given that the deceased alleged a counterclaim
against ABSA which exceeded
the jurisdiction of that court, the
matter was transferred to this Division where the deceased commenced
proceedings by issuing
summons against ABSA for cancellation of the
agreement, payment of damages in the sum of R3 220 376.82
and costs on the
punitive scale. The damages were allegedly for a
loss of profits on the earthmoving contract with the developer.
7.
ABSA’s response to the deceased’s
claim was multifaceted. Firstly, it raised a special plea that the
claim against it
had been settled at the aforementioned meeting of 23
July 2008. Then, it set up various defences to the deceased’s
claims
on the merits, and, lastly, it filed a claim in reconvention
for the amount allegedly due to it under the agreement.
8.
The deceased died on 29 March 2020, after
litis
contestatio,
but before the
commencement of the trial. In the result, the appellant (the executor
of the deceased’s estate) was substituted
as the plaintiff in
the matter. The demise of the deceased deprived the executor of
the evidence of the critical witness
in order to adequately advance
his case.
Notwithstanding
the absence of a crucial witness to advance the case, the executor
resolved to persist with the claim.
He thus had to do the best he could with
the other witnesses available to him and, further, was required to
rely on circumstantial
evidence and inferential reasoning.
9.
The case went to trial in November 2020 before
Mantame J (the Trial Court). The issues for determination were the
merits of the
claim in convention, the special plea and the claim in
reconvention. All issues relating to quantum were held in abeyance.
In a
judgment delivered on 19 March 2021, the Trial Court dismissed
the claims lodged on behalf of the deceased and upheld ABSA’s
claim in reconvention. In the result, the executor was ordered to pay
ABSA the sum of R575 228.03, together with costs on
the party
and party scale.
10.
On 12 September 2022 the Trial Court dismissed the
executor’s application for leave to appeal. He is now before
this Court
with the leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal, pursuant to
an order granted on 13 December 2022. At the hearing of the appeal
the
parties were represented as they were before the Trial Court -
the executor by Advs. M.A. Albertus SC and J.B. Engelbrecht and ABSA
by Adv. M. Greig. The court is indebted to counsel for their
comprehensive heads of argument and the bundle of authorities
prepared
for the hearing of the appeal.
THE DECEASED’S
CASE AS PLEADED
11.
In his heads of argument before this court, Mr.
Albertus was constrained to concede that the untimely demise of the
deceased had
constrained the executor to persist with only three of
the claims originally advanced in the pleadings. These consisted of
the
main claim and two of the three alternative claims pleaded.
Counsel accepted that the second alternative claim, based on the
allegations
made in para’s 8 to 12 of the particulars of claim
relating to various alleged misrepresentations, could no longer be
advanced
in light of the unavailability of the deceased to testify.
12.
For the purposes of background detail only, it is
sufficient to record that the second alternative claim relied on
allegations that
the loader which was delivered to the deceased was
not the same vehicle as the loader which he had been led to believe
he was purchasing.
In this regard it was said that the deceased had
never physically inspected the loader but had relied on a series of
photographs
sent to him by Solomon and/or Mr. Sean Fortune acting in
concert with each other.
The
deceased specifically pleaded that Solomon and Fortune were both
ABSA’s agents.
13.
Finally by way of background, and as noted above,
because the matter went to trial on the merits only with the quantum
standing
over for later determination, the allegations made in regard
to the quantum in para’s 14 to 19 of the particulars of claim
and the response thereto in the plea will accordingly not be
traversed in this judgment.
The Main Claim
14.
The main claim pleaded in the particulars of claim
was set out in para’s 4 and 5 thereof. The agreement was
annexed to the
particulars of claim as Annexure A and I shall refer
to it as such.
“
4.
It was an express and material term of the agreement [annexure A] by
virtue of clause 12
[1]
thereof
that the loader was in a good and roadworthy order and condition and
operable at the time of its purchase.
5. However, contrary to
and in breach of the express term as aforesaid, the loader delivered
by Defendant to Plaintiff was not in
a good and roadworthy order and
condition but in a mechanical state of disrepair and in operable.”
15.
The first alternative claim was based on the
allegations made in paras 6 and 7 of the particulars of claim.
“
6.
Alternatively to paragraphs 4 and 5 above, and only in the event of
this Court finding that it was not an express and material
term of
the agreement that the loader was in a good and roadworthy order and
condition and operable, then and in that event, Plaintiff
pleads that
by virtue of clause 12 thereof, it was an implied and material term
of the agreement that the loader was in a good
and roadworthy order
and condition and operable at the time of its purchase.
7. However, contrary to
and in breach of the said implied term as aforesaid, the loader
delivered by Defendant to Plaintiff was
not in a good and roadworthy
order and condition but rather in a mechanical state of disrepair and
inoperable.”
The first alternative
claim was thus based on the
actio redhibitoria
16.
The third alternative claim was based on the
allegations made in paras 13 and 13.1 – 13.5 of the particulars
of claim.
“
13.
Alternatively to paragraphs 4 to 12 above, and only in the event of
this Court finding that the loader delivered by Defendant
to
Plaintiff was the one sold to him in terms of the agreement (which is
denied), that it was not an express, alternatively, an
implied term
of the agreement that the loader was in a good and roadworthy order
and condition and operable and further, that no
misrepresentations as
aforesaid had been made or if made, were not intentional or negligent
(all of which is denied), then and
in that event, plaintiff pleads
that:
13.1 plaintiff purchased
the loader from Defendant for the purposes of loading and offloading
gravel, sand, dirt and such like at
building and other sites;
13.2 at the time of the
agreement and unbeknown to Plaintiff the loader was latently
defective in that it was in a state of mechanical
disrepair and not
operable;
13.3 by reason of such
defect the loader was substantially unfit for the purpose of loading
and offloading, gravel, sand, dirt and
such like at building and
other sites and in fact inoperable;
13.4
Solomon and Fortune
[2]
were at
all material times aware of the purpose for which Plaintiff had
purchased the loader;
13.5 had plaintiff known
of the defects, he would not have purchased the loader.”
The third alternative
claim is thus based on the
actio empti.
ABSA’S CASE AS
PLEADED
Special plea
17.
In the first instance ABSA put up a special plea
of compromise. For the sake of completeness, the pleading is recited
in full.
“
1.
On or about 23 July 2008 and in Cape Town the Plaintiff (represented
by Roderique Marz), the Defendant (represented by Jasmina
Gasnolar
and/or Sean Fortune), Ismail Solomon (personally) and Peter Maskell
Auctions CC (represented by AJS Grant of Venn, Nemeth
and Hart
Attorneys) entered into a partly written and partly oral,
alternatively purely oral settlement agreement in relation to
the
dispute arising from the alleged defects in the loader referred to in
the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim (“the
settlement
agreement”).
2. The material express,
alternatively, tacit terms of the settlement agreement were as
follows:
2.1 All disputes arising
from the alleged defects in the loader referred to in the Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim were resolved
and/or settled;
2.2 The plaintiff’s
agent, Ismail Solomon, undertook to pay the plaintiff the sum of R
25,000.00 by no later than 29 July
2008 in respect of the alleged
defects in the loader; and
2.3 Both the Defendant
and Peter Maskell Auctions CC had “fallen out of the picture”,
and neither the Plaintiff nor
Ismail Solomon would have any further
claims against the Defendant or Peter Maskell Auctions CC.
2.4 The Plaintiff would
continue to pay the installments due upon, and otherwise comply with,
his obligations in terms of the agreement
with the Defendant of 3
March 2008 (annexure “A” to the particulars of claim).
3. A copy of the written
portion of the settlement agreement/confirmation of the settlement
agreement is attached as annexure “X”.
4. To the extent that the
above settlement agreement is held to be invalid or unenforceable by
virtue of clause 13.1 of annexure
“A” to the particulars
of claim, the Defendant pleads that the operation of this
non-variation clause in the prevailing
circumstances and on the facts
of the case, at the time the court is or will be asked to enforce the
clause, is unreasonable and/or
offends public policy, and is
accordingly void and or voidable. The relevant facts and
circumstances in this regard are the following:
4.1 The settlement
agreement was concluded where all the parties including the Plaintiff
were present in person;
4.2 The settlement
agreement was concluded in circumstances where the plaintiff was
represented by an attorney, or by a party purporting
to be an
attorney, namely, Roderique Marz;
4.3 The settlement
agreement was confirmed in writing in terms of annexure “X”,
and no parties, including the Plaintiff
or Roderique Marz, read any
objection to this confirmation or its terms;
4.4 The settlement
agreement was the outcome of extensive negotiations between the
parties which identified Peter Maskell Auctions
and/or Ismail
Solomon, the Plaintiff’s agent, as the party responsible for
problems the Plaintiff allegedly experienced with
the loader;
4.5 The Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim themselves rely on allegations of express
written clauses in annexure “A”
to the particulars of
claim which do not exist; and
4.6 The attempt by the
Plaintiff to enforce clause 13.1 in the above circumstances is
accordingly not bona fide.
5. The effect of the
settlement agreement is to bar proceedings on the cause of action
pleaded in the Plaintiff’s particulars
of claim.”
ABSA’s Plea on
the Merits
18.
In its plea on the merits in respect of the main
claim, ABSA admitted the conclusion of Annexure A but went on to
allege that that
the aforesaid
pro forma
document entitled “
Release
note and acknowledgement of delivery
”
dated
3 March 2008 and signed by the deceased (which was annexed to the
plea as “P1”), formed part of the agreement.
19.
Then ABSA pleaded that clause 12 did not embrace
the meaning attributed to it by the deceased. It went on to refer to
various clauses
contained in annexure A which it stressed were
express material terms of the agreement. I shall not repeat those
clauses herein
other than the non-variation clause to which ABSA
expressly referred in its plea.
“
13.1.
No addition to, variation, novation or agreed cancellation of any
provision of this agreement shall be binding upon the parties
unless
reduced to writing and signed (or initialed in the case of
modifications on this document) by or on behalf of the Bank by
an
authorized official and the Purchaser.”
20.
ABSA further adverted to the following clauses in
the release note.
“
I
have receive (sic) in good order and condition, to my entire
satisfaction and according to my specification/requirements, the
article described above.
I have compared the
chassis, engine and serial numbers indicated above with the chassis,
engine and serial numbers as indicated
on the article.”
21.
In regard to the first alternative claim (the
actio redhibitoria
)
set forth in para’s 6 and 7 of the particulars of claim, ABSA
pleaded an estopppel in the following terms:
“
8.
Save to state that the loader was delivered by Peter Maskell’s
Auctions CC to the Plaintiff who accepted delivery as the
Defendant’s
agent, the allegations in these paragraphs are denied as if
specifically traversed.
9. The Defendant further
specifically pleads that annexure “P1” signed by the
Plaintiff on 3 March 2008 contains the
following material term:
“
I
herewith warrant that;
I have receive (sic)
in good order and condition, to my entire satisfaction and according
to my specification/requirements, the
article described above [being
a ‘Renoster Kawasaki Front End Loader 20031.1 (sic) have
compared the chassis, engine and
serial numbers as indicated on the
article.”
10. The Plaintiff further
paid a deposit of R 44,000.00 to Peter Maskell’s Auctions CC in
respect of the loader.
11. The Defendant
accordingly pleads that the Plaintiff-
11.1 Warranted that the
loader was in good order and condition and to his entire satisfaction
according to his specifications or
requirements, and that it was the
loader he had purchased; alternatively
11.2 He waived any right
he may have had to allege or claim it was not; further alternatively
11.3 He is estopped from
alleging it was not that:
11.3.1 He represented to
the Defendant that the loader was in fact in good order and condition
when he took delivery thereof and
paid the deposit;
11.3.2 The Defendant
acted on the strength of his representation by entering into the
agreement with the Plaintiff and releasing
the balance of the
purchase price to Peter Maskell’s Auctioneers; and
11.3.3 In so doing the
Defendant acted to its detriment in concluding or finalizing the
agreement and releasing the balance of the
purchase price.”
22.
ABSA pleaded a further estoppel in response to the
allegations made in para 13 and 13.1 – 13.5 of the particulars
of claim
(the
action empti
).
After denying the contents of the paragraph and after repeating the
allegation that the release note constituted a warranty by
the
deceased, i
t alleged
as follows.
“
17.
The Defendant accordingly pleads that the Plaintiff –
17.1 Warranted that the
loader was in good order and condition and to his entire satisfaction
according to his specification or
requirements, and that it was the
loader he had purchased; alternatively
17.2 Waived any right he
may have had to claim or allege that it was not; further
alternatively
17.3 Is estopped from
alleging it was not, on the basis that:
17.3.1 He represented to
the Defendant that the loader was in fact in good order and condition
when he took delivery thereof;
17.3.2 The Defendant
acted on the strength of this representation by entering into and/or
concluding the agreement with the Plaintiff
and releasing the balance
of the purchase price to Peter Maskell’s Auctions CC; and
17.3.3 In so doing the
Defendant acted to its detriment in concluding or finalizing the
agreement and releasing the balance of the
purchase price.”
The deceased’s
replication to ABSA’s special plea
23.
In his replication to
the special plea the deceased admitted conclusion of the alleged
agreement of settlement on the following
basis.
“
Ad
paragraphs 1, 2 and 3
1.
Save to deny that:
1.1.
the plaintiff was represented by Roderique Marz;
1.2.
the settlement agreement or any part thereof was in writing; and
1.3
Ismail Solomon was the plaintiff’s agent,
the
plaintiff admits the allegations herein contained.”
24.
It is, in my
respectful view, of critical importance, when considering the import
of the deceased’s replication to the special
plea, to have
regard to the extent of the admissions made in para 1 thereof. Save
for the limited issue raised under para’s
1.1, 1.2 and 1.3 of
the replication, the remainder of the allegations contained in para’s
1 to 3 of the special plea were
admitted by the deceased. This
means that the deceased admitted the content of para 2.1 of the
special plea, which is to
the following effect-
“
2.1
All disputes arising from the alleged defects in the loader referred
to in the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim were resolved
and/or
settled;”
25.
The import of para
2.1 in the special plea is that the deceased orally agreed to waive
his right to seek redress against ABSA arising
out of the defects
(which were by then common cause) in the loader. The admission by the
deceased of the waiver of this right was
not limited or couched in
terms suggesting that he was not informed of the extent of the rights
he was waiving, as My Colleague
Thulare suggests in the second
judgment. Rather, the allegation by ABSA of the waiver is admitted by
the deceased.
26.
This
admission thus removed waiver from the
lis
between
the parties, ABSA having properly pleaded the waiver in accordance
with the established principles.
[3]
For that reason one sees no suggestion in the cross-examination of
Grant that the deceased was not aware of his rights when he
concluded
the settlement agreement and waived reliance on the aedilitian
remedies as against ABSA.
27.
Importantly, in the
replication the deceased attacked the legality and enforceability of
the settlement agreement on 4 discrete
grounds. viz public policy,
undue influence, formal non-compliance and, ultimately, a resolutive
condition. I shall deal with each
of these separately.
Contra
bonos mores
28.
The first contention
was that the settlement agreement was contrary to public policy.
“
2.
The plaintiff more especially pleads that the settlement agreement
was void and of no legal force and effect, alternatively,
voidable,
on account of the fact that it was contrary to public policy, by
virtue of the fact that its terms were and/or its implementation
was
unfair
and/or
oppressive and/or draconian and/or unconscionable and/or exploitative
and/or immoral, for one or more of the following reasons:
2.1
the parties were in unequal bargaining positions in that:
2.1.1.
The plaintiff was the credit receiver, whilst the defendant, the
credit grantor, under the installment sale agreement;
2.1.2.
The defendant was a large and powerful commercial bank whilst the
plaintiff was a naïve and unsophisticated businessman
with his
highest educational qualification being Standard 8; and
2.1.3.
The defendant (sic) was in arrears with his instalments on the
instalment sale agreement and in no position to dictate terms
to the
defendant on the way forward;
2.2.
the defendant was aware that
:
2.2.1
the plaintiff had purchased the front end loader to carry out a
contract and/or contracts with the view to generating an income;
2.2.2
the front end loader from the time of its delivery to the plaintiff
was in a serious state of mechanical disrepair and as
such, was not
fit for the purpose for which it was purchased; and
2.2.3.
for as long as the front end loader remained unrepaired, the
plaintiff would not be able to carry out his contractual obligations
and hence not be able to earn an income;
2.3
despite the facts set forth in the aforegoing
paragraphs, the defendant persuaded and/or influenced and/or
cajoled
alternatively, was complicit along with Ismail Solomon and attorney
AJS Grant, representing Peter Maskell Auctions CC in
persuading
and/or influencing and/or cajoling the plaintiff to forgo his rights
to judicial redress against defendant in respect
of the defects to
the loader and to accept the sum of R 25, 000.00 from the said Ismail
Solomon in full and final settlement of
his claims against the
defendant, full well knowing that the said sum was grossly inadequate
to cover the costs of repairing the
defects to the loader.”
Undue
influence
29.
The second attack on
the settlement agreement is that it was induced through undue
influence.
“
3.
ALTERNATIVELY, to paragraph 2 above, the plaintiff further pleads
that the settlement agreement is void and of no legal force
and
effect, alternatively, voidable, inasmuch as it was procured by the
defendant by way of undue influence on account of the following
facts:
3.1.
the defendant occupied a position of influence over the plaintiff by
virtue of the fact that:
3.1.1.
the parties were in unequal bargaining positions in that the
plaintiff was the credit receiver, whilst the defendant, the
credit
grantor, under the instalment sale agreement; and
3.1.2.
the defendant was a large and powerful commercial bank whilst the
plaintiff was a naïve and unsophisticated businessman
with his
highest educational qualification being Standard 8;
3.1.3
The defendant (sic) was in arrears with his instalments on the
instalment sale agreement and in no position to dictate terms
to the
defendant on the way forward;
3.2.
the defendant’s influence weakened the
plaintiff’s resistance and made his will pliable;
3.3.
the defendant used this influence in an unscrupulous manner and/or
unconscionably to prevail upon the plaintiff to enter into
the
settlement agreement, more sepecially in that:
3.3.1.
to the knowledge of the defendant:
3.3.1.1
the plaintiff was as a result of the loader being inoperable, unable
to earn an income from the use of the loader (as intended)
and as
such lacked the necessary financial means to pay the instalments
claimed by the defendant under the instalment sale agreement;
3.3.1.2.
the plaintiff lacked the financial means to effect the repairs
required to make the loader operational;
3.3.1.3.
the plaintiff faced financial ruin if the loader remained inoperable;
3.3.1.4.
the plaintiff lacked the financial means to instruct an attorney to
advise him regarding the remedies available to him
arising from the
delivery of the defective loader;
3.3.1.5.
the plaintiff was in the circumstances, vulnerable and desperate
enough to take any financial assistance which would enable
him to
getting (sic) the loader operational so that he could start earning
an income;
3.3.2.
at the meeting on 23 July 2008, at which the settlement agreement was
concluded, the defendant, represented by Jasmina Gasnolar,
alternatively, Sean Fortune, represented to the plaintiff and made
him believe that irrespective of the condition of the loader
delivered to him, he was bound by the instalment sale agreement and
was still legally obliged to repay the balance of the purchase
price
advised by the defendant to the plaintiff;
3.3.3.
all the parties at the meeting, other than Roderique Marz, acted in
concert against the plaintiff; and
3.3.4.
The defendant and the other parties at the meeting (excluding
Roderique Marz), represented to the plaintiff and made him
believe
that he had no other remedies available to him, proposing in the
process, that the matter be settled on the basis of Ismail
Solomon
paying him R 25, 000.00 in full and final settlement of his claims
against the Defendant (sic);
3.4.
the settlement agreement was prejudicial to the plaintiff’s
rights and to his detriment;
3.5.
exercising a normal free will, the plaintiff would not have entered
into the settlement agreement;
3.6.
The plaintiff tenders to repay Mr. Solomon the amount of R8 0000.00
(sic) being the amount paid by Mr. Solomon to the plaintiff
pursuant
to the settlement agreement.
Non-Compliance
with Formalities
30.
The third ground of
attack related to an alleged failure to comply with the formalities
prescribed in the contract itself.
“
4.
ALTERNATIVELY, to paragraph 2 and 3 above, the plaintiff pleads that
the settlement agreement is invalid and unenforceable for
non-compliance with the formalities contained in clause 13 of the
agreement.”
Suspensive
/ Resolutive Condition
31.
The last basis for
the attack on the settlement agreement initially sought to rely on
the non-compliance with an alleged tacit suspensive
or resolutive
condition.
“
5.
ALTERNATIVELY, to paragraphs 2 to 4 above, the plaintiff further
pleads:
5.1.
The settlement agreement was subject to a tacit suspensive,
alternatively, tacit resolutive condition, that should Ismail Solomon
not pay the plaintiff the sum of R25,000.00 on or before 29 July
2008, the settlement agreement would be void and of
no force and effect
and the plaintiff would be entitled to all the remedies and/rights
enjoyed by him prior to 23 July 2008 in respect
of the defects in the
loader;
5.2.
By 29 July 2008, and indeed to date, Ismail Solomon has failed to pay
the plaintiff the sum of R 25, 000.00, having only paid
R8, 000.00;
5.3
As a result, the settlement agreement has been rendered void and is
regarded as if it had never existed.”
32.
As already observed,
in argument counsel abandoned any reliance on a suspensive condition
and addressed only the purported resolutive
condition.
33.
In addition to the
special plea, ABSA also filed a plea on the merits, the terms whereof
need not be detailed at this stage. There
was no rebuttal filed by
ABSA to the deceased’s replication and so all of the relevant
allegations contained in the replication
are taken to be denied by
ABSA.
MATERIAL FACTS
34.
A complete and accurate narration of the relevant
facts is not possible, given the absence of testimony from the
deceased and the
dearth of other evidence from the limited witnesses
who testified. Nevertheless, it appears from the record that the
events leading
up to the purchase of the loader and the consequences
after delivery were the following.
35.
The deceased needed the loader to execute his
contract with the property developer. The deceased made contact with
Mr. Solomon
, a person
who procured second-hand earth moving equipment and machinery for
interested buyers. Mr. Solomon apparently had an on-going
working
relationship with Maskell for whom he disposed of earthmoving
equipment and was indebted to them by virtue of an unrelated
transaction. Solomon and Maskell agreed that he would work off part
of that debt by procuring a loader for the deceased: evidently
there
would be a commission payable on the transaction by Maskell which
Solomon
could apply to his credit.
36.
Solomon procured a loader from DJ and supplied it
to Maskell. Maskell then on-sold the loader to ABSA which paid
Maskell and financed
the deal for the benefit of the deceased. The
deceased never physically inspected the loader but was shown
photographs thereof,
probably courtesy of Solomon.
37.
I pause to observe
that just whose agent Solomon was not conclusively resolved on the
evidence. In the special plea, ABSA alleges
he was the deceased’s
agent while in the replication, the deceased says that he was ABSA’s
agent and, as demonstrated
above, accuses him of collusion with
ABSA’s employees (Fortune and Gasnolar) and Grant, all acting
in concert to his (the
deceased’s) detriment.
38.
After the loader had been sourced, a certain Mr.
Bennett, a sworn appraiser, was asked by Solomon to provide a
so-called “desk
top” assessment of the value of the
loader. Bennett never personally inspected the vehicle but relied on
the registration
documents of the loader sourced by Solomon to
provide the deceased with a fair valuation thereof based on
information sourced on
the internet. In evidence before the Trial
Court Bennett said that he had been approached by Solomon and DJ to
provide the valuation.
Evidently, he had no direct contact with the
deceased.
39.
It is not in dispute that the loader which was
delivered to the deceased in Philippi in late March 2008 was not the
same the loader
that was depicted in the photographs that had been
shown to Bennett and emailed to the deceased (care of his wife) on 27
February
2008. That much was apparent from the external defects
depicted on the loader delivered to the deceased – these were
not
visible on the photographs disseminated earlier by Solomon.
The
full extent of the defects (both latent and patent) are fully set out
in the second judgment.
40.
The financing of the vehicle was facilitated
through ABSA’s branch in Claremont, Cape Town which is where,
on 3 March 2008,
the deceased signed Annexure A and the other
documentation necessary to secure delivery of the loader to his
premises in Philippi.
ABSA’s agent at that meeting was Fortune.
41.
The
evidence establishes that, whatever external manifestations or patent
defects
[4]
there may have been
to the loader upon delivery, it was only when the engine was started
up by Jacques in order to drive it off
the low-bed at the deceased’s
premises that its defective mechanical functioning became apparent.
Jacques testified that,
Inter alia, the hydraulics were not fully
functional to the extent that the loading bucket could not lift
properly, its gearbox
was faulty and it belched smoke.
42.
Jacques said that the deceased remonstrated with
the driver of the low-bed regarding the fact that the loader that was
being delivered
was not the loader he had bought. The driver remained
steadfast that he was only doing what he was instructed to do –
to
effect delivery of the loader to the deceased. In the result, the
deceased did not refuse to take delivery of the loader. Rather
he
instructed Jacques to reverse it off the low-bed and he would thus
have been immediately aware of its latent defects as his
son
struggled to get the behemoth to move.
43.
In the result, the deceased kept the loader and
attempted to effect certain running repairs, seemingly in order to
render it basically
functional. To this end certain mechanics who had
worked on the loader over time testified in the Trial Court as to its
defects.
This evidence was not seriously challenged.
44.
The evidence did not reveal that the deceased took
immediate steps vis-à-vis ABSA to address the alleged latent
defects in
the loader. As already stated, during 2008 he took the
loader to various mechanical firms for repair work. He paid for some
of
that work but ultimately he was quoted the amount R242 664,
96 by a company known as Shadan Hydraulics for the anticipated
cost
of further repairs. The deceased did not authorize these repairs and
simply abandoned the vehicle at Shadan’s premises
in Stikland.
45.
Some years later Shadan gave up occupation of the
Stikland premises and the loader remained behind forlornly abandoned
at the mercy
of the elements. During 2015 an agent for the manager of
the Stikland premises, Ms. Cox Jones, testified that she made contact
with the deceased’s erstwhile attorneys enquiring what should
be done regarding the abandon loader. She was told to contact
the
deceased. Ultimately, said Cox-Jones, the machine was cut up and sold
for scrap. The recipient of the proceeds was unknown
to her.
46.
In 2009 the deceased defaulted on his payments to
ABSA, whereafter summons was issued out of the Wynberg Magistrates
Court for delivery
of the loader alternatively payment of the
outstanding capital – the sum of R575 228.03 – together
with interest and
costs on the attorney and client scale. The
deceased lodged a counterclaim in that court in excess of R3m, made
up in the main
of his consequential losses for his inability to use
the loader to discharge his contract with the developer. Because the
counterclaim
exceeded the jurisdiction of that court, the parties
agreed to transfer the matter to this Division where the deceased
issued summons
on the basis set forth in his particulars of claim as
set out above.
47.
In the midst of the toing and froing in 2008 to
have the loader repaired, the parties met in Cape Town in an attempt
to resolve
their differences, hence the agreement which forms the
basis of ABSA’s special plea. The details hereof will appear
more
fully hereunder.
IN SUMMARY
48.
At the end of the day, the relevant facts may
briefly be summarized as follows. The deceased bought a loader which
was financed
by ABSA and which was its property: in terms of Annexure
A, the deceased was the purchaser of the loader and ABSA was to
retain
ownership thereof until the deceased had settled his
indebtedness in full. In the event that the deceased elected to
terminate
the agreement at any stage prior to the fulfillment of his
contractual obligations, he was obliged to return the loader to ABSA.
The agreement contains no voetstoots clause nor are there any express
clauses relating to warranties given by the one party to
the other.
49.
The loader which was delivered to the deceased was
not the loader financed under the agreement. In this regard both
Annexure A and
the Release Note made provision for the recordal of
the loader’s engine, chassis, registration and serial numbers,
yet neither
document contained any such detail. Further, on Annexure
A the loader was described as a “Renoster Kawasaki Front End
Loader”
with the year of first registration being recorded as
2003, while on the Release Note it was described as a 2000 model.
50.
There is no dispute that the loader contained
latent defects which affected its ability to function properly, or
put differently,
which rendered it unsuitable for its designated
purpose. This fact is borne out by the evidence of the mechanics who
either worked
on the loader or were asked to quote on the anticipated
cost of further repairs. Furthermore, the evidence on record of
Grant,
who was ABSA’s only witness before the Trial Court,
established that the background to the meeting of 23 July 2008 at
ABSA’s
offices in Cape Town was the following.
“
MR
GRANT
:
What happened, was there was a Clive Cook, and there were a number of
other people involved as well in the series of transactions.
So the
issue was, in relation to Cook and the others, is that the equipment
which had been purchased and delivered to them had
certain defects,
and they were unhappy with the equipment that they had taken delivery
on. And so the discussions were along the
lines of how do we resolve
and how do we deal with those issues in relation to the equipment.”
Mr. Grant went on to
testify later that the deceased had bought the loader “blind”
and was not happy with it because
of it poor condition.
51.
Lastly, it is common cause that the deceased
breached the agreement in early 2009 and that he did not return the
loader to ABSA.
On 6 May 2009 the deceased’s attorneys wrote to
ABSA’s attorneys and informed them that they were instructed by
the
deceased that the loader could be collected at the premises of
Shadan Hydraulics and that the return thereof was tendered without
prejudice to the deceased’s rights. At no stage did the
deceased purport to cancel the agreement in terms: the particulars
of
claim allege that the letter of 6 May 2009 constituted the
cancellation of the agreement, alternatively that the service of
the
summons herein (sometime after 11 November 2009) served as
cancellation thereof.
THE JUDGMENT OF THE
TRIAL COURT
52.
The judgment of the Trial Court is unfortunately
not a model of clarity and the reasoning is sometimes difficult to
follow. At the
conclusion of the judgment, the Trial Court adopted
what might be termed an overarching approach to the various causes of
action
pleaded by the deceased in non-suiting him.
“
F.
FINDING
[80] In the
circumstances, this Court is not convinced that the plaintiff has
presented a proper case for the relief sought. At
the same time, in
the absence of a dispute to the defendant’s arrear instalment
claim in reconvention of an amount of R575 228.03
the claim
succeeds.”
That notwithstanding, I
consider that the following can be gleaned from the judgment.
53.
Firstly, without expressly saying so, the Trial
Court appears to have acknowledged the enforceability of the
settlement agreement
and upheld the special plea.
“
[70]
It might be argued that the agreement was contrary to public policy,
unfair, oppressive and draconian and so on. However, the
plaintiff
did not tender any evidence supporting the suggestions that the
circumstances leading to the conclusion of the settlement
agreement
were unfair, unconscionable and oppressive. These suggestions were
only put to the witnesses to comment who were not
party to this
contract and/or settlement agreement. Again, this court cannot make
its own assumptions on a settlement agreement
that was concluded in
the presence of Mr. Cook. In this situation, it is not open for the
plaintiff to argue legal principles without
which (sic) are not based
on facts.
[71] Moreover, it was not
clear whether Mr. Cook had disavowed the terms of the settlement
agreement that he would not have any
claim against Absa nor Peter
Maskell Auctions CC when he received the part payment of the
settlement agreement and subsequently
claimed damages against Absa.
In addition, there was no suggestion as to what should be done with
the benefit (R8000.00) acquired
by the plaintiff as a result of that
settlement agreement. No authority was produced on whether the
plaintiff is entitled to receive
a benefit under the settlement
agreement and under this claim. In my view, that is impermissible.”
54.
Secondly, in relation to the interpretation of
clause 12 of the agreement and the allegation by the deceased in para
4 of the particulars
of claim that that it was an express term of the
agreement that the loader was in good working order and condition and
fit for
purpose, the Trial Court said the following.
“
[64]
The plaintiff, in its (sic) interpretation of Clause 12 seems to
suggest that it was only ABSA who stated that the loader was
in good
working order. This interpretation sort of loses sight of the fact
that there were two parties to this agreement. This
was an express
and material term of the contract that the loader was in good order
and condition. The plaintiff in agreement with
the defendant agreed
and or warranted that in deed (sic) the loader was indeed in good
working order.”
55.
After
quoting the well-known passage from
Endumeni
[5]
relating to the interpretation of written agreements, the Trial Court
continued –
“
[65]….
Judging from the contract of sale and the release note that was
signed by the plaintiff subsequent thereto, there
is no way that this
court can doubt the fact that the plaintiff was satisfied by (sic)
the loader that he purchased even before
having sight of it. In
D
& H Piping System
(supra)
[6]
,
the SCA held that a delivery note constituted a performance of a
contract. This therefore means that the contract at that stage
was
finalized and the deal was sealed. The Courts are cautioned not to be
tempted to substitute their own interpretation in the
contract, other
than the one that was agreed to by the parties. If Mr. Cook did not
intend to agree to those terms as specified,
he should have simply
refused to sign the said documents.”
56.
The Trial Court appears to have considered that
the clause in the Delivery Note relating to the deceased’s
satisfaction with
the condition of the loader, confirmed a
contractual term that the deceased had accepted that the loader was
in good condition
and working order. The passage in
D
& H Piping
referred to by the Trial
Court reads as follows.
“
[15]
Neither a delivery note nor an invoice is a contractual document i.e.
the type of document in which the recipient would expect
to find
terms and conditions intended to form part of the contract between
the sender of the document and the recipient. Both the
delivery notes
and the invoices received by the appellant’s employees
reflected performance, or part performance, of a contract
already
concluded. Neither constituted an offer to do business. They would
therefore not have required the attention of a person
authorised by
the appellant to negotiate and agree to the terms of any contract
with the respondent. The respondent could accordingly
not reasonably
have expected that they would come to the attention of such a person,
as opposed to the person(s) who would acknowledge
receipt of goods
delivered or process invoices for payment; and this is particularly
so both because the respondent must have known
that the appellant is
a large company, with different employees authorised to perform
different functions on its behalf and also
because, to the knowledge
of the respondent, the terms of its contractual relationship with the
appellant had already been negotiated
with Lombard. Once it is
established that no person authorised to bind the appellant to the
respondent’s general terms and
conditions ever became aware of
them, or could reasonably have been expected to do so, it does not
avail the respondent to point
to the number of occasions on which
such documents were sent to the appellant or the period of time over
which this was done.”
57.
As I read that
dictum,
it
establishes that where the party acknowledging satisfaction with the
condition of the
merx
is someone other than
the person who concluded the agreement, unless the former is
expressly authorized to acknowledge the integrity
of the
merx
on delivery, any
such acknowledgement is legally irrelevant.
58.
But that was not the position here. It was common
cause that Annexure A and the Delivery Note were both signed at
ABSA’s offices
in Claremont on 3 March 2008 by the deceased
personally, yet it was also common cause that the loader was only
delivered to the
deceased at his premises in Philippi during the
second half of March 2008. The question that then arises is what is
to be made
of the acknowledgement by the deceased in the Delivery
Note regarding a non-existent state of affairs? In the absence of
testimony
by the deceased under oath, an answer to that question
could be said to amount to judicial speculation, but, that having
been said,
it is difficult to avoid a conclusion that the deceased
and ABSA were in agreement that the loader described in Annexure A
and
to be delivered thereafter to the deceased was to be in good
working order and condition and fit for purpose.
59.
In
drawing that conclusion, I have regard to the mandated approach to
contractual interpretation that Annexure A must be interpreted
contextually and purposively so as to give it commercial efficacy. In
Capitec
[7]
,
the SCA restated the approach as follows.
“
[25]
Our analysis must commence with the provisions of the subscription
agreement that have relevance for deciding whether Capitec
Holdings’
consent was indeed required. The much-cited passages from
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni
Municipality
(Endumeni)
[8]
offer guidance as to how to approach the interpretation of the words
used in a document. It is the language used, understood in
the
context in which it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the
provision that constitutes the unitary exercise of interpretation.
I
would only add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not
be used in a mechanical fashion. It is the relationship
between the
words used, the concepts expressed by those words and the place of
the contested provision within the scheme of the
agreement (or
instrument) as a whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to
which a coherent and salient interpretation
is determined. As
Endumeni emphasised, citing well-known cases, ‘[t]he inevitable
point of departure is the language of the
provision itself’.”
60.
As counsel for the deceased argued, and in the
absence of a
voetstoots
clause
in the agreement, one cannot reasonably undertake to keep a
merx
in good working order and condition
unless it has been delivered to one in that state. Had there been a
voetstoots
clause
the situation may have been otherwise and it might have been open to
ABSA to argue that, whatever the condition of the loader
on delivery,
it was the deceased’s obligation to maintain it in good
condition and working order.
61.
The judgment of the Trial Court deals with the
test for the incorporation of tacit and implied clauses into the
agreement and aspects
of the
actio empti
and
actio
redhibitoria
(the aedilitian remedies)
but there are no conclusive findings as to the applicability or not
of these remedies. I accept that the
aedilitian remedies were
available to the deceased in the event that the loader was latently
defective
and I agree
with the exposition of the law relating to the aedilitian remedies as
set forth in the second judgment.
THE SPECIAL PLEA
62.
Although a number of witnesses were called to
testify in support of the deceased’s case, no one dealt with
the meeting held
on 23 July 2008 and the agreement, which it is
common cause, was concluded there. The sole witness for ABSA was
Grant who testified
in November 2020 about his recollection of events
more than 12 years earlier. His memory was understandably vague and
in the witness-box
he referred to his contemporary notes taken during
the meeting to refresh his memory and a letter dated 26 July 2008 to
ABSA. His
notes were limited as the file in the matter had been
destroyed by the firm with which he had practiced at the time.
63.
Grant told the court that he was an attorney with
more than 15 years’ experience and represented Maskell, a
long-standing
client who ran an auctioneering business in KZN.
Present at the meeting were the deceased who was accompanied by a
certain Rodney
Mars (also sometimes referred to as “Marz”),
who Grant understood to be a para-legal of some sort assisting the
deceased.
ABSA was represented by Fortune and
an
employee later identified as Ms.
Jasmina Gasnolar. Solomon was there and was later described by Grant
as “
the agent involved in the
transaction that was under scrutiny”.
64.
Grant told the Trial Court of the purpose of the
meeting.
“
MR
GRANT
…
So
the issue was, in relation to Cook and the others, is that equipment
which had been purchased and delivered to them had certain
defects,
and they were unhappy with the equipment that they had taken delivery
of. And so the discussions were along the lines
of how do we resolve
and how do we deal with those issues in relation to the equipment.”
He went on to describe
ABSA’s role in the meeting as “
fairly passive.
”
65.
Grant explained that at the meeting Solomon
produced the photographs of the loader which had been shared earlier
with the deceased
and which was the subject of the sale. He testified
regarding the deceased’s dissatisfaction expressed at the
meeting with
the quality of the loader which was delivered to him,
according to Grant, on 28 March 2008. He further testified that the
deceased
had described how the loader had functioned for a week or so
and how, thereafter, various problems arose. These were all described
with reference to mechanical defects – not related to the
external appearance of the loader – which effectively rendered
the machine inoperable. He noted that on 21 July 2008 the deceased
had obtained a quote for R242 000 to repair the loader.
66.
Grant further testified that Solomon, who stayed
in the Western Cape, was known to his client, Maskell, and that they
had done business
in the past. Solomon evidently owed Maskell money
from previous dealings and in order to settle that debt, the
following arrangement
was put in place.
“
MR
GRANT:
So
the idea would be that Solomon would introduce to Maskell equipment
and the buyer; Maskell would purchase that equipment, and
then he
would sell it on at a mark-up. So, for example, if he bought an item
of equipment, say for R100 000 that had been referred
to him by
Solomon, he would then sell the same item of equipment, say for
R120 000…. And then the profit, the R20 000
would be set
off… [against]…the debt owed by Solomon to…
Maskell.
The transaction with the
deceased was said to be such a deal.
67.
Grant testified that an agreement was concluded at
the meeting involving the deceased and Solomon. ABSA and Haskell were
not parties
thereto. The salient terms of this agreement, which was
concluded orally and to which I shall refer further as the settlement
agreement,
were later recorded in a letter which Grant sent to ABSA
on 28 July 2008. It reads as follows:
“
Dear
Sir
CLIVE COOK –
FRONT END LOADER
1. I refer to the
meeting held at your offices on 23 July 2008 and confirm that we
represent Peter Maskell Auctions CC.
2. We confirm that
the ‘dispute’ arising from the sale and financing of the
front end loader has been settled.
3. In terms of the
settlement, the buyer’s agent, Ismail Solomon, has undertaken
to pay to the buyer (Clive Cook) the
sum of R 25 000, 00 by no later
than 29 July 2008. This payment is in respect of the alleged defects
in the front end loader.
4. Both Absa and
Peter Maskell Auctions CC have now ‘fallen out of the picture’
and neither Solomon nor Clive
Cook shall have any claims against ABSA
or Peter Marshall Auctions CC.
Yours faithfully “
68.
The letter makes plain that Grant understood that
Solomon was the deceased’s agent and that the settlement was
concluded on
that basis - between the deceased as principal and
Solomon as his agent. Pursuant to that agreement, the deceased would
look to
Solomon to make good for any amounts recoverable from the
seller under the aedilitian remedies while his obligation to ABSA
under
the instalment agreement would remain in place.
69.
It is significant to note that on the day after
the meeting, 24 July 2008, the deceased also wrote to ABSA as
follows.
“
To:
Shaun
From: Clive Cook
According to our meeting
with Mr. I. Solomon and myself, the agreement that we reached is that
we would fix only the main moving
part.
We contacted the mechanic
[Russell] which (sic) was introduced by Ismail. He indicated that it
would take approximately five weeks,
to complete what was discussed.
As for what was arrange
(sic) in the meeting, and the mechanics report, we are looking at the
end of September/October with instalments.
Yours sincerely”
70.
Grant concluded his evidence by explaining that
the discussion at the meeting, which he said was fairly cordial,
concerned the complaints
that the deceased had about the condition of
the loader. As he saw it, the problem was that the deceased had
“
bought the equipment blind
”
and was unhappy with what he had bought on account
of its condition.
71.
The cross-examination of Grant was protracted but
revealed little that was new. Mr. Albertus was understandably
hamstrung in his
questioning of this witness by the absence of his
deceased client whose instructions and evidence were central to the
various defences
put
up
in the replication to the special plea. The thrust of the
cross-examination was nevertheless two-pronged.
72.
Firstly, it was suggested that Grant’s
assumption that Solomon was the
agent
of the deceased was wrong and that he was in fact the agent of
Maskell. This is in conflict with the allegation made by the
deceased
in para 8.1 of his amended particulars of claim, in which he claimed
that Solomon was ABSA’s agent or employee.
In any event, Grant
remained resolute that he had considered that Solomon was the
deceased’s agent and in the absence of
any evidence to gainsay
that stance, I consider that there is no compelling reason to reject
this view. At the end of the day,
however, the question of agency is
not material to the issues before this Court.
73.
The second point in
cross-examination related to the suggestion that the contract was
clearly oppressive and essentially foisted
upon the deceased. Mr.
Albertus alluded to the fact that there was an allegation attributed
to the deceased that there was a quote
for repairs to the loader in
the sum of R242 000. In light thereof, said counsel, the
decision to agree to a settlement of
R25 000 was probably
attributable to the deceased having been placed under undue pressure
to settle. Counsel did not identify
the party (or representative) who
was alleged to have applied such undue pressure but it can only have
been ABSA because that is
the party against whom the defence is
raised. However, it was not suggested by Mr. Albertus in
cross-examination that Fortune had
behaved improperly in concluding
the agreement on behalf of the bank; this notwithstanding the
allegation in para 8.1 of the amended
particulars of claim that
Fortune acted in concert with Solomon as ABSA’s agent or
employee.
74.
I am not persuaded that there is any merit in the
second point. Firstly, there are no obvious conclusions that can
readily be drawn
from the objective facts which point to undue
influence or the bending of the will of the deceased. On this score,
it must be borne
in mind that the deceased was accompanied to the
meeting by Mars who was considered by Grant to have some modicum of
legal experience.
Moreover, there was no attempt to present the
evidence of Mars to sustain the inference that Mr. Albertus sought to
draw, nor was
there any evidence that Mars was unavailable to testify
on behalf of the
deceased.
Secondly, and importantly,
in a defence of this nature, evidence of the state of mind of the
contracting party subjected to undue
influence will invariably be
crucial. Once again the absence of the deceased as a witness is a
critical consideration in this regard.
75.
Thirdly, there is the email sent by the deceased
to Fortune on 24 June 2008 in which he offers some insight into the
reason for
his agreement to settle on R25 000 against a
quotation for R242 000 to fix the loader. The tenor of the email
is that
only limited repairs were to be done - “
to
fix the main moving part
” –
in
order to render the loader functional to the extent that it would
enable him to use it to perform under the contract with the
developer
and
, most
importantly, to resume payment of the monthly instalment under the
agreement by September/October 2008. The email might be
interpreted
to suggest that the cost of repairs in the sum of R242 00 was
considered to have covered more than just essential repairs.
76.
In
para 4 of the second judgment there is reference to a passage in
Sasfin
[9]
.
I adopt that
dictum
which
holds that the power to declare contracts to be contrary to public
policy is a power to “be exercised sparingly and
only in the
clearest of cases”. That approach was confirmed as
follows by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Pridwin
[10]
.
“
[27]
The relationship between private contracts and their control by the
courts through the instrument of public policy, underpinned
by the
Constitution, is now clearly established. It is unnecessary to rehash
all the learning from our courts on this topic. It
suffices to set
out the most important principles to be gleaned from them:
(i)
Public policy demands that contracts freely and consciously entered
into must be honoured;
(ii)
A court will declare invalid a contract that is prima facie inimical
to a constitutional value or principle, or otherwise contrary
to
public policy;
(iii)
Where a contract is not prima facie contrary to public policy, but
its enforcement in particular circumstances is, a court
will not
enforce it;
(iv)
The party who attacks the contract or its enforcement bears the onus
to establish the facts;
(v)
A court will use the power to invalidate a contract or not to enforce
it, sparingly, and only in the clearest of cases in which
harm to the
public is substantially incontestable and does not depend on the
idiosyncratic inferences of a few judicial minds;
(vi)
A court will decline to use this power where a party relies directly
on abstract values of fairness and reasonableness to escape
the
consequences of a contract because they are not substantive rules
that may be used for this purpose.” (Internal references
omitted)
77.
This
dictum
in
Pridwin
was
endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
Beadica
[11]
,
albeit with limited qualification in respect of the principle of
restraint mentioned by the Supreme Court of Appeal in subpar
(v)
above.
“
[88]
The second principle requiring elucidation is that of “perceptive
restraint”, which has been repeatedly espoused
by the Supreme
Court of Appeal. According to this principle a court must exercise
“perceptive restraint” when approaching
the task of
invalidating, or refusing to enforce, contractual terms. It is
encapsulated in the phrase that a “court will
use the power to
invalidate a contract or not to enforce it, sparingly, and only in
the clearest of cases”.
[89]
This principle follows from the notion that contracts, freely and
voluntarily entered into, should be honoured. This Court
has
recognised as sound the approach adopted by the Supreme Court of
Appeal that the power to invalidate, or refuse to enforce,
contractual terms should only be exercised in worthy cases.
[90]
However, courts should not rely upon this principle of restraint to
shrink from their constitutional duty to infuse public
policy with
constitutional values. Nor may it be used to shear public policy of
the complexity of the value system created by the
Constitution.
Courts should not be so recalcitrant in their application of public
policy considerations that they fail to give
proper weight to the
overarching mandate of the Constitution. The degree of restraint to
be exercised must be balanced against
the backdrop of our
constitutional rights and values. Accordingly, the “perceptive
restraint” principle should not
be blithely invoked as a
protective shield for contracts that undermine the very goals that
our Constitution is designed to achieve.
Moreover, the notion that
there must be substantial and incontestable “harm to the
public” before a court may decline
to enforce a contract on
public policy grounds is alien to our law of contract.”
(Internal references omitted)
78.
The
earlier Constitutional Court authority referred to in
Beadica
at
[89] is
Barkhuizen
[12]
where the Court noted the following.
“
[70]
While it is necessary to recognise the doctrine of pacta sunt
servanda, courts should be able to decline the enforcement of
a time
limitation clause if it would result in unfairness or
would
be unreasonable. This approach requires a person in the applicant’s
position to demonstrate that in the particular circumstances
it would
be unfair to insist on compliance with the clause. It ensures that
courts, as the Supreme Court of Appeal put it,
“
employ
[the Constitution and] its values to achieve a balance that strikes
down the unacceptable excesses of ‘freedom of contract’,
while seeking to permit individuals the dignity and autonomy of
regulating their own lives.”
And
this entails, the Supreme Court of Appeal explained,
“
that
intruding on apparently voluntarily concluded arrangements is a step
that judges should countenance with care, particularly
when it
requires them to impose their individual conceptions of fairness and
justice on parties’ individual arrangements.”
[71]
This is a sound approach.” (Internal references omitted)
79.
The mandated approach
is therefore that the party which seeks to advance the contention
that a contract is contrary to public policy
bears the onus of
establishing the facts upon which it seeks to rely. In this case the
deceased adduced no such evidence and the
reliance in the second
judgment merely on the allegations made in the replication is, with
respect, misplaced. Pleadings are the
articulation of a party’s
envisaged case, not the evidence. In my respectful view, without any
evidential basis having been
established on behalf of the deceased,
this Court cannot begin to consider whether the settlement agreement
is contrary to public
policy.
80.
Similarly, despite
the far-ranging allegations of impropriety and collusion made in the
replication, the appellant adduced no evidence
to sustain the claims
that the deceased was subjected to undue influence in concluding the
settlement agreement. In the result,
the first and second grounds of
defence to the special plea raised in para’s 2 and 3 of the
replication must fail.
81.
The third leg of the
replication to the special plea is that the settlement agreement is
not enforceable for want of compliance
with clause 13 of Annexure A.
The argument advanced by Mr. Albertus was
that
the settlement agreement constitute
d
an “
addition
to
”
, “
variation
”
or “
agreed
cancellation
”
of a provision of
the agreement, as contemplated in clause 13.1 of Annexure A. The
argument proceeds as follows.
82.
Annexure A is an agreement of sale in which ABSA
was the seller and the deceased the purchaser. The agreement contains
no voetstoots
clause and so it is to be imputed that it was an
implied term of the agreement that ABSA warranted that the loader was
free of
latent defects and fit for purpose. In that event, so it was
argued, the aedilitian remedies (whether under the
actio
empti
or the
actio
redhibitoria
) would have been available
to the deceased in the event that the loader was found to be suffer
from latent defects. By concluding
the settlement agreement, and
exonerating ABSA from any liability for the latent defects in the
lo
ader, it was
submitted that the deceased had effectively varied
the agreement by consenting to an alteration to the legal
consequences of the
contract – in effect waiving his
entitlement to rely on the aedilitian remedies.
83.
Clause
13.1 is a non-variation clause of the sort contemplated in
Shiffren
[13]
.
Such clauses have traditionally been strictly enforced by the courts
and have survived constitutional scrutiny
[14]
.
However, it has repeatedly been held that the rule in
Shiffren
does
not apply in circumstances where one party waives its accrued rights
under a contract.
[15]
The
decision in
Academy
of Learning
[16]
relied on by Mr. Albertus is thus distinguishable on the facts. In
that matter the non-variation clause included the phrase “
and
no interpretation, change, termination or
waiver
of
the provisions of this agreement…will be binding upon the
parties unless in writing and signed by [both parties]
”
.
The learned judge, after citing
Hillsage
Investments
and
Impala
Distributors,
was
of the view that the clause in that matter was wide enough to cover
an oral waiver, which thus was required to be in writing.
84.
In the
present matter, the non-variation clause does not require a waiver of
rights accruing under the agreement to be reduced to
writing and
signed by both parties. In
Impala
Distributors
[17]
the Full Court stressed that a waiver of a right similar to that
exercised by the deceased in this matter was a unilateral act
by
exercised by a party in respect whereof the consent of the other
contracting party was not required. It is a unilateral act
which can
exist alongside the contract and its non-variation clause.
85.
In the present matter, I have accepted that the
aedilitian remedies were available to the deceased at the time of the
meeting of
22 July 2008 given that –
(i)
it was not in dispute that the loader was latently
defective;
(ii)
that there was no voetstoots clause in Annexure A;
and
(iii)
that the effect of clause 12.1, read in the
context of the Delivery Note, constituted a warranty by ABSA that the
loader was free
of latent defects and fit for purpose.
86.
Notwithstanding the availability of those
remedies, the deceased decided not to avail himself thereof but
settled rather for the
payment of the sum of R25 000 by Solomon,
who was not a party to the agreement. And, importantly, that decision
to look to
Mr. Solomon for payment in respect of the repairs to the
loader was conveyed to ABSA in writing by the deceased on 24 July
2008
and in more detail by Grant on 26 July 2008. Further, the
deceased embraced the
settlement agreement by accepting the part payment of R8000
made by Solomon towards the agreed sum of R25 000.
87.
In the circumstances, I conclude that the deceased
is not entitled to rely on the provisions of clause 13.1 to avoid the
consequences
of the
common
cause
settlement
agreement.
88.
Lastly, there is the allegation in the replication
that the settlement agreement was subject to either a suspensive or a
resolutive
condition linked to the initial payment by Solomon of the
sum of R8 000. During the cross-examination of Grant, Mr.
Albertus
abandoned any reliance on a suspensive condition, noting
that the operation of the settlement agreement had not been
suspended:
rather, counsel accepted that it had been implemented when
the deceased accepted the payment of R8 000 from Solomon.
89.
The cross-examination turned to the issue of
whether the settlement agreement contained a resolutive ag
reement.
It was argued that when Solomon failed to pay the balance, the
alleged condition was triggered and the settlement agreement
was
voided and thus
of no force and
effect. The argument is based on legal sophistry and not evidence. On
a plain reading of the written recordal of
the oral agreement in
Grant’s letter of 26 July 2008, there is no basis to conclude
that the stipulation that Solomon would
pay the full agreed amount by
a fixed date was anything other than a term of the settlement
agreement relating to payment.
90.
But the argument does not end there. In
cross-examination Mr. Albertus, in pressing for a resolutive
condition, invited Grant to
comment on his understanding of the basis
for payment.
The
witness
conceded
that he had a fair understanding of the law of contract and was
adamant, having witnessed the conclusion of the settlement
agreement
and made contemporaneous notes thereof, that there was no room for an
interpretation that the settlement agreement embraced
a resolutive
condition.
“
MR.
GRANT
:
Well, I’m telling you that it – that payment term was not
a resolutive condition.”
AGENCY
91.
In the third
judgment, My Colleague Kusevitsky concurs in the second judgment for
the reasons contained therein and further raises,
by way of an
apparent
obiter
dictum
,
the issue of the agency of Solomon as a potential bar to the
conclusion of the settlement agreement. In para 1 of the special
plea, ABSA does not seek to rely on the agency of Solomon for the
conclusion of the agreement but rather alleges in para 2.2 that
Solomon (
qua
agent)
undertook to pay his principal (the deceased) the sum of R25 000.00
in respect of the latent defects in the loader.
92.
As already pointed
out, the allegations in para 2.2 are admitted by the deceased, save
that it is denied that Solomon was his agent.
The deceased’s
case on the pleadings is that Solomon was ABSA’s agent, while
later (as pointed out earlier) during
cross-examination counsel
suggested to Grant that he was Maskell’s agent. But whatever
the correct position in law may be,
the deceased admitted in the
replication that the agreement was that Solomon would pay the
deceased and he (the deceased) would
no longer enjoy any claim
against ABSA arising out of the latent defects. It is for this reason
that I contend that the question
of agency is legally irrelevant in
this matter.
CONCLUSION
93.
In the light of the aforegoing, I am persuaded
that the special plea should be upheld and that the deceased is bound
by the settlement
agreement as alleged. Consequently, the deceased
enjoys no claim against ABSA arising from the latent defects in the
loader and
the appeal against the dismissal of the claim in
convention falls to be dismissed
94.
As regards ABSA’s claim in reconvention, the
Trial Court held that, “
in the
absence of a dispute to the defendant’s arrear instalment claim
in reconvention of an amount of R575 228.03 the
claim succeeds
”
and judgment was granted in favour of ABSA in that
amount.
95.
During several pre-trial conferences, and at the
commencement of proceedings before the Trial Court, the parties
agreed on a separation
of issues. These included determination of the
special plea and the allegations made in para’s 1 to 13 and
15.1 of the particulars
of claim and the defendant’s claim in
reconvention. It was expressly agreed that the quantum of the
deceased’s claim
would stand over for later determination.
96.
I do not understand the agreement regarding the
holding in abeyance of the quantum of the claim in convention to
include the quantum
of the claim in reconvention. The notice of
appeal does not seek to attack the finding of the quantum ordered on
the claim in reconvention
– it is only the finding in respect
of the determination of the merits of that claim which is attacked.
Furthermore, neither
party suggested in either the heads of argument
or in oral argument before us that the quantum of the claim in
reconvention was
incorrectly determined. In the result the finding of
the Trial Court on the claim in reconvention is correct and must
stand.
97.
Had this judgment held the majority, I would have
ordered that the appeal be dismissed with costs.
GAMBLE, J
THULARE J
98.
I have read the judgment of Gamble J. The facts
and the applicable law appear from that judgment. In my view, the
facts and the
application of the law thereto established the
availability of the two aedilitian remedies, to wit, the action empti
and the actio
redhibitoria, to the appellant. The loader delivered
was not the one identified on the photographs sent but rather another
loader
of the same vintage, make and colour which was not in a good
and roadworthy order and condition but rather in a mechanical state
of disrepair and inoperable and was substantially unfit for the
purpose for which it was sought. Had Cook known the defects he
would
not have purchased that loader as he would not be able to discharge
his contractual obligations to third parties because
of the
inoperability of the loader and would as a result suffer damages in
the form of loss of profits.
99.
I have my doubts that Solomon and Maskell could
always be said to have been the agents of Cook. Cook could not source
from and deliver
the loader to himself. It is amongst others from
this point of agency, and its importance in the approach to the
alleged compromise,
that I am unable to agree with Gamble J. The
developments leading up to the 23 July meeting, which founded ABSA’s
special
plea, formed the body of evidence that showed that both
Solomon and Maskell acted interchangeably by their own name, on
behalf
of Cook and on behalf of ABSA. It was for that reason that it
was necessary that the meeting was attended by the four, to wit Cook,
Solomon, Maskell and ABSA. Against this background, agency, both in
respect of the agreement and the settlement, was very central
to the
dispute. Although Grant used the plural and created the impression
that the others were also unhappy, the only person at
that meeting
who was unhappy with the loader delivered was Cook. At that meeting,
it was Cook who expressed dissatisfaction with
the loader delivered,
which he bought from ABSA.
100.
The parties to the sale agreement, in which the
agreement founded the delivery of a loader that caused the
displeasure of Cook,
were Cook and ABSA. In my view, the oppression
in the making of that 23 July agreement emerged in that the agreement
absolved ABSA
where its agents, Maskell and Solomon, delivered an
inoperable loader to Cook. The agreement was unconscionable in that
two days
before that meeting, Cook had obtained a quote for R242
000-00 to repair the loader, and ABSA’s agent Solomon, at that
meeting,
had undertaken to pay him R25 000 in respect of the alleged
defects, and the agreement was that ABSA and Maskell fell out of the
picture and neither Solomon nor Cook would have any claim against
them. The sum was grossly inadequate to cover the costs of repairing
the defects to the loader. Without any quote and evidential basis,
the amount of R25 000 was proposed to fix only the moving part.
This
amount is advanced by Solomon, who had previously provided a
‘desk-top’ assessment of the value of the loader
by a
sworn appraiser who never inspected the loader but relied on
information from the internet and documents supplied by Solomon.
Cook
had described the manner in which the loader was delivered in a
mechanical state of disrepair and inoperable as including
that the
motor turned but after having been started 3 times, the starter burnt
out, the motor started only in the first three occasions,
the
suspension did not work properly as the bushes were badly worn, the
electrical circuitry did not work properly as there were
no
wires/cables leading to the lights and the loom which controls the
electrical circuitry was in a state of disrepair, the motor
delivered
power to the axles and power was delivered from the axles to the
wheels but there was resistance to free movement, the
hydraulic
system did not work properly. There was initially no hydraulic oil in
the machine. When the machine was filled with 75
litres of hydraulic
oil and started, it spewed out oil. Cook was compelled to repair the
hydraulic system and after such repairs
were effected, the system
worked shortly whereafter it packed up on account of there being
metal sworf in the hydraulic lifters.
The braking system was
extremely weak and in addition thereto, there was no functional
handbrake. The controls and accoutrements
in the cab did not work
properly on account of a faulty loom. The gearbox and shifters did
not work properly, the gearbox was leaking
oil and could not reach
top gear. The tyres were smooth with holes and bubbles present on the
surface. The door on the driver’s
side could not open and close
and the passenger door had no locking mechanism whatsoever. The cab
seat was broken and locked permanently
in a fixed position and thus
not amenable to any adjustment. The air conditioner did not work.
None of the lights on the loader
worked. There were no mirrors. There
was no window in the passenger door whilst the window in the driver’s
door was cracked
and hanging. The bucket was completely rotten with
big holes and in addition was wobbly. The radiator had no cover and
was blocked
due to oil leaks from the engine and the hydraulic
system. The steering was worn and unstable. The cab was rusted and
the wheel
rims were rusted.
101.
In
Sasfin (Pty) Ltd v
Beukes
1989 (1) SA 1
(A) at page 9B-E
it was said:
“
No
court should therefore shrink from the duty of declaring a contract
contrary to public policy when the occasion so demands. The
power to
declare contracts contrary to public policy should, however, be
exercised sparingly and only in the clearest of cases,
lest
uncertainty as to the validity of contracts result from an arbitrary
and indiscriminate use of the power. One must be careful
not to
conclude that a contract is contrary to public policy merely because
its terms (or some of them) offend one's individual
sense of
propriety and fairness. In the words of Lord Atkin in Fender v St
John-Mildmay
1938 AC 1
(HL) at 12 ([1937]
3 All ER 402
at 407B - C),
'the doctrine should only
be invoked in clear cases in which the harm to the public is
substantially incontestable, and does not
depend upon the
idiosyncratic inferences of a few judicial minds'
D
(see also Olsen v Standaloft
1983 (2) SA 668
(ZS) at 673G). Williston
on Contracts 3rd ed para 1630 expresses the position thus:
'Although the power of
courts to invalidate bargains of parties on grounds of public policy
is unquestioned and is clearly necessary,
the impropriety of the
transaction should be convincingly established in order to justify
the exercise of the power.'
In grappling with this
often difficult problem it must be borne in mind that public policy
generally favours the utmost freedom
of contract, and requires that
commercial transactions should not be unduly trammelled by
restrictions on that freedom.
'(P)ublic policy demands
in general full freedom of contract; the right of men freely to bind
themselves in respect of all legitimate
subject-matters'”
The absolution of ABSA,
taking advantage of an obviously naïve, ordinary and innocent
member of the public, who engaged with
ABSA clearly without effective
legal representation, resulted in harm to a member of the public,
which is substantially incontestable.
ABSA delivered an inoperable
loader to a member of the public, and ABSA’s driver refused to
return the loader back to ABSA
when the member of the public refused
to receive it in its inoperable state. To enforce the agreement under
these circumstances
is unduly harsh and oppressive. I am unable to
find how the letter of Cook the day after the meeting in any way
helped ABSA, as
regards the attainment of simple justice between man
and man, on the interests of the community on economic expedience.
Cook bought
a loader to conduct business. ABSA delivered a lemon,
sought to be absolved and needs to be paid in full as if it delivered
a loader
fit for purpose. This is a bargain that a court has a duty
to invalidate. It would be unreasonable and unfair to enforce the
agreement.
ABSA cannot gain an advantage from an unacceptable excess
of the freedom to contract.
102.
In
Phoenix Salt
Industries (Pty) Ltd v The Lubavitch Foundation of Southern Africa
(330/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 107
(3 July 2024) it was
said at para 15 and 16:
[15] The issue,
therefore, in this appeal is whether Phoenix Salt through the Krok
Brothers waived its right to claim the remaining
loan amount from
Lubavitch, if so, whether such a waiver is competent in the face of
the non-variation clause. A waiver denotes
a voluntary abandonment of
a known existing right, benefit or privilege which if it were not for
such waiver the party would have
enjoyed it. It should be a
deliberate abandonment either expressly or by conduct plainly
inconsistent with an intention to enforce
such right [R H Christie
Çhristie’s The Law of Contract in South Africa 8 ed
(2022) at 532. See also: Alfred McAlpine
& Son (Pty) Ltd v
Transvaal Provincial Administration
1977 (4) SA 310
(T) at 323-324].
The principle that a person may denounce any right or privilege
available to him provided such a waiver is not
prohibited by law or
does not offend public policy, is well established in our law [SA
Eagle Insurance Co Ltd v Bavuma
1985 (3) SA 42
(A) 49G-H; Ritch and
Bhyat v Union Government (Minister of Justice)
1912 AD 719
at 734-735
where the court held:
‘
The
maxim of the Civil Law (C.2, 3, 29), that every man is able to
renounce a right conferred by law for his own benefit was fully
recognised by the law of Holland. But it was subject to certain
exceptions, of which one was that no one could renounce a right
contrary to law, or a right introduced not only for his own benefit
but in the interests of the public as well. (Grot., 3, 24,
6; n. 16;
Schorer, n. 423; Schrassert, 1, c. 1, n. 3, etc.). And the English
law on this point is precisely to the same effect.’]
The existence of a waiver
can be traced from the conduct of the parties. Whether there was a
waiver or not is a matter of evidence.
103.
This Court in
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere [SA Sentrale
Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
1964
4 All SA 520
(A);
1964 (4) SA 760
(A) at 765.] (Shifren) laid down a
principle governing the non-variation clauses in agreements. In terms
of this principle, once
parties to a written agreement agree that an
agreement cannot be altered unless certain conditions are met, no
amendment will be
valid unless the prescribed condition has been met.
The principle was reaffirmed in
Brisley
v Drotsky
, [
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA)] where
this Court held that the purpose of non-variation clause was to
curtail disputes and protect both parties to the contract.
The
Shifren principle did not create a ‘strait jacket’, which
impact, courts should attempt to soften as a few cases
demonstrated.
The principle in its simplest interpretation, simply reinforced the
rights of individuals to freely contract and
be held to contracts
they freely concluded. Importantly, for purposes of this appeal,
Shifren did not determine whether the non-variation
clause precludes
a waiver.”
I am not persuaded that
Cook was informed that the actio empti and the actio redhibitoria
were available to him as remedies in this
case, against ABSA, where
the loader had latent defects. I am not persuaded that Cook, of his
own free will, informed of the available
remedies against ABSA,
voluntarily abandoned existing rights which he knew about. In my
view, Cook cannot be said to have abandoned
his rights consciously
and intentionally after careful consideration and unhurried
engagement. Cook did not deliberately and seriously,
after careful
thought as an informed and thus capable person having investigated
and considered, with the intention that ABSA’s
obligations
towards him as regards the loader would immediately cease, waive his
rights. I do not understand Cook’s pleadings,
as a whole, to be
an unequivocal admission of a waiver in the manner that Gamble J
interpreted it.
104.
For these reasons, I am not persuaded that Cook
was bound by the settlement agreement. In any event, the alleged
settlement was
between Cook and Solomon, and not with ABSA as it
should have been. I am persuaded that the deceased had a claim
against ABSA arising
from the latent defects in the loader and the
appeal against the dismissal of the claim in convention should be
upheld. It follows
that ABSA’s claim in reconvention as well as
the special plea should fail. I would make an order upholding the
appeal with
costs, such costs to include the ciosts of two counsel
where so employed. In the result I concur in the order proposed by
Kusevitsky
J in the third judgment.
THULARE,
J
KUSEVITSKY, J
105.
I have had the opportunity of perusing the
judgments of Gamble J and Thulare J and am in agreement with the
conclusion reached by
Thulare J. I do, however, wish to add two
observations thereto.
106.
Absa put up a special plea of compromise. It
averred
inter alia
that
the material express and/or tacit term of the settlement agreement
relied upon was that Plaintiff’s agent, Ismael Solomon,
undertook to pay the Plaintiff the sum of R 25 000.00 by no
later than 29 July 2008 in respect of the alleged defects
in the
loader.
107.
In my view, in order for Absa to be successful in
its special plea, it has to show that the settlement agreement of
compromise is
valid and binding between the parties in the main
action. Only once this is established can the enquiry commence as to
whether
or not the agreement so concluded offends public policy.
That is not to say however that the former is an absolute
pre-requisite
in establishing whether a contract offends public
policy. It is a trite principle that contracts should not be
contra
bonos mores
.
108.
It is
trite that agreements of compromise are generally made between the
very same parties to the dispute which is sought to be
compromised.
The effect of a compromise is the same as res iudicata on a judgment
given by consent.
[18]
It
is an absolute bar to an action on the cause of action compromised,
but not on any claim not included in the compromise.
The practical
effect of a settlement agreement of compromise is that there is no
longer any dispute or lis between the parties.
[19]
Furthermore, the general principles relating to compromise are
applicable thereto. In
The
Road Accident Fund v Taylor
[20]
and
other matters
,
the court stated the following in this regard:
“
The
essence of a compromise (transactio) is the final settlement of
disputed or uncertain rights or obligations by agreement. Save
to the
extent that the compromise provides otherwise, it extinguishes the
disputed rights or obligations. The purpose of a compromise
is to
prevent or put an end to litigation. Our courts have for more than a
century held that, irrespective of whether it is made
an order of
court, a compromise has the effect of res iudicata (a compromise is
not itself res iudicata (literally ‘a matter
judged’) but
has that effect).”
109.
In
casu, the
lis
was
between Mr Cook, who bought the loader and Absa, who provided the
finance thereto. Generally, a settlement agreement would be
inter
partes
the
dispute, in this case between Absa and Mr Cook. In
Legal
Aid v Magidiwana
2015
(2) SA 568
(SCA), the court held that once the parties have disposed
of all disputed issues by agreement
inter
se
,
it must logically follow that nothing remains for a court to
adjudicate upon and determine.
[21]
110.
If a settlement agreement is concluded by a person
not a party to the lis, then the onus is on the party relying on the
settlement
agreement to prove the authority of the third party to
enter into the settlement agreement in its stead or otherwise. In his
judgment,
Gamble J opines that the question of agency does not arise.
I respectfully disagree. It is common cause that Cook needed the
loader
to fulfil his contractual obligations and contacted Solomon
who was a broker in earthmoving equipment. To the extent that
Solomon procured the defective loader, in my view, his mandate as
‘agent’ ended as soon as the goods were procured
and
delivered to the supplier.
111.
When the settlement agreement was entered into,
present was Cook and Marz, representatives of Absa, Solomon and
Grant, representing
Maskell Auctioneers. According to the special
plea, the averment is made that Solomon was Cook’s agent and in
that capacity,
undertook to pay Cook the sum of R 25 000.00, a sum
ostensibly to cover only the repairs of the ‘main moving part’.
In my view, this was a dispute between Cook and Solomon who
ostensibly hoodwinked Cook by providing via Maskell and Absa, a lemon
of a product, which was financed by Absa. Absa failed to do its due
diligence.
112.
Thus, the substance of the compromise as between
Cook and Solomon was for payment of monies by the latter to the
former. The effect
of this agreement was to settle a dispute between
Cook and a third party and the settlement, once concluded, formed the
basis of
any rights and duties of the parties, and any earlier
obligation or liability inter se fell away. If there was a breach of
the
compromise, the aggrieved party had recourse based on the
agreement of compromise. In other words, as between Cook and Solomon.
The compromise between Cook and Solomon could never have substituted
Absa for Solomon as the seller of the
merx
.
In casu, the main action is between Cook and Absa and there can be no
privity of contract
qua
Solomon. The contract is binding as between Cook,
the debtor purchaser and Absa, the creditor. There also does not seem
to be a
cession of rights between Absa and Solomon. Thus, any
agreement to waive rights must specifically be between the
contracting parties
in the main action.
113.
Furthermore,
Cooks right to restitution flows from the contract to which Solomon
was not a party. The object of obtaining restitution
is, as far as
possible, to restore the position which existed prior to the
conclusion of the contract.
[22]
Generally a court will be slow to countenance a contract seemingly
concluded in bad faith by a third party to the main action,
the
effect of which would be the relinquishing of rights by the debtor in
favour of the creditor. There is therefore in my view,
no basis in
law upon which Solomon, not a party to the main lis, could have been
a party to the settlement agreement of compromise,
as a third party,
without agency or novation, thereby absolving Absa from any remedies
that Cook would have had against it.
114.
Finally, with regard to the Plaintiff’s
claim regarding the merits, the court a quo held that the ‘release
note indicates
that the plaintiff was required to confirm that he was
satisfied with the condition of the loader and that it was in
accordance
with his entire satisfaction and according to his
specification/requirements’ and that ‘in the absence of
evidence
from the plaintiff to that effect, the plaintiff’s
allegations are simply untenable’. This finding too cannot
stand.
It is common cause that Absa required the delivery note to be
signed by Cook prior to them releasing the funds to Maskell and weeks
before the actual goods were delivered to Cook. It does not behove
Absa to rely on the delivery note to absolve it of its liability.
As
a consequence, I am in agreement that the Aedilitian remedies are
available to the Appellant.
115.
For the reasons advanced I too would uphold the
appeal and make the following order:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs of the proceedings
to date, such costs to include the costs of two counsel where
employed.
2.
The Respondent’s claim in reconvention is
dismissed with costs, such costs to include the cost of two counsel
where employed.
3.
The Appellant is entitled to such damages,
including consequential damages as he is able to prove at a later
hearing.
KUSEVITSKY, J
GAMBLE, J:
ORDER OF COURT:
In the circumstances the
following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs of the proceedings
to date, such costs to include the costs of two counsel where
employed.
2.
The Respondent’s claim in reconvention is
dismissed with costs, such costs to include the cost of two counsel
where employed.
3.
The Appellant is entitled to such damages,
including consequential damages as he is able to prove at a later
hearing.
GAMBLE, J
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant
Advs.
M.A.Albertus SC et J.B.Engelbrecht
Instructed
by Jones Attorneys Inc.
Cape
Town.
For
the respondent
Adv.
M. Greig
Instructed
by Webber Wentzel
Cape
Town.
[1]
It
should be noted that, while reference is made in the particulars of
claim to “clause 12”, it is really only clause
12.1 of
Annexure A which has any relevance to the allegations made in paras
4 and 5. It reads as follows.
“
12
THE GOODS
The
Purchaser will –
12.1 keep the goods in
his possession and control and maintain them in good and roadworthy
order and condition, not allow them
to be used by another person or
body nor allow any unqualified or unlicensed driver or operator to
use the goods and not remove
the goods from the Republic of South
Africa without the prior written consent of the Bank.”
[2]
This is a reference to
the aforesaid Ismail Solomon and Sean Fortune
,
the alleged agents of ABSA.
[3]
See
for example,
Laws
v Rutherford
1924
AD 261
at 263 and
Feinstein
v Niggli and another
1981
(2) SA 684
(A) at 698 F-G
[4]
It was said that there
was, for example, damage to the door and the mirrors, that the tyres
were in poor condition and that the
loading bucket was rusted.
[5]
Natal Joint Municipal
Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18]
[6]
D & H Piping
Systems (Pty) Ltd v Trans Hex Group Ltd and another
[2006] ZASCA 29
;
2006
(3) SA 593
(SCA) at
[15]
. This para in that judgment was cited by
the Trial Court in para [56] of the judgment herein.
[7]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and others v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
ltd and others
2022
(1) SA 100 (SCA)
[8]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18]
[9]
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
1989
(1) SA 1
(A) at 9B-E
[10]
AB
and another v Pridwin Preparatory School and others
2019
(1) SA 327
(SCA) at [27]
[11]
Beadica
231 CC and others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and others
2020
95) SA 247
(CC) at [82]
[12]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007
(5) SA 323
(CC) at
[70]
– [71]
[13]
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shiffren
1964
(4) SA 760
(a)
[14]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002
(4) SA 1
(SCA) at [6] – [10]
[15]
Hillsage
Investments (Pty) Ltd v National Exposition (Pty) Ltd and others
1974
(3) SA 346
(W) at 354F;
Impala
Distributors v Taunus Chemical Manufacturing Co.(Pty) Ltd
1975 (3) SA 273
(T) at
278A-B;
Van
As v Du Preez
1981
(3) SA 760
(T) at 763H – 765A;
Miller
and another NNO v Dannecker
2001
(1) SA 928
(C) at [15]
[16]
Academy of Learning
(Pty) Ltd v Hancock and others
2001
(1) SA 941
(C) at [36]
[17]
At
277C -G
[18]
Van
Zyl v Niemann 1964
(4)
SA 661 (A).
[19]
Legal Aid v
Magidiwana
2015
(2) SA 568
at para 20.
[20]
1136-114/2021)
[2023]
ZASCA 64
(8 May 2023) at para 36.
[21]
a
t
579E.
[22]
See Van Zyl v Credit
Corporation of SA Ltd
1960 (4) SA 582
(A).
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