Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 67South Africa
GR Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd v V & A Waterfront Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (7471/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 67 (11 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
11 April 2023
Headnotes
and enforced by the court according to their tenor provided only that they are lawful and not contrary to public policy. It is for that reason that showing ‘good cause’ within the meaning of the subsection has been held to be a difficult case to make out.[4]
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## GR Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd v V & A Waterfront Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (7471/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 67 (11 April 2023)
GR Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd v V & A Waterfront Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (7471/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 67 (11 April 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
BENEFITS OF ARBITRATION
ARBITRATION
– Agreement – Setting aside – Good cause shown –
Truly compelling reason must be shown
for relief – Building
project involving several parties – Dispute and claim for
losses arising from uneven floor
– Applicant not showing
good cause why other party should be deprived of benefit of
arbitration agreement and forced
into a foreseeable morass of
litigious uncertainty –
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
,
s 3(2).
Republic of South Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No. 7471 / 2021
Before: The Hon. Mr Justice
Binns-Ward
Date of hearing: 21-22 February
2023
Date of judgment: 11 April
2023
In
the matter between:
GR
SUTHERLAND AND ASSOCIATES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
V
& A WATERFRONT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
MACE
MANAGEMENT SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
VAN
DER MERWE MISZEWSKI ARCHITECTS
Third
Respondent
JACOBS
PARKER ARCHITECTS CC
Fourth
Respondent
RICK
BROWN &
ASSOCIATES
Fifth
Respondent
WBHO
(PTY)
LTD
Sixth
Respondent
GREENLITE
CONCRETE
Seventh
Respondent
THE
SILO
HOTEL
Eighth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
The
applicant, GR Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd (‘Sutherland’),
is a company that carries on business as a firm
of professional
consulting structural engineers. In 2014, it was appointed by
the first respondent, V & A Waterfront
Holdings (Pty) Ltd (‘V
& A’), to be the consulting structural engineer in respect
of a building project to modify
and adapt an old grain silo in the
Victoria and Alfred Waterfront section of the Cape Town harbour
area.
[1]
The undertaking
involved the conversion of the silo into a building that would,
amongst other things, accommodate a luxury
boutique hotel.
[2]
The construction work was done in terms of
a building contract between V & A, qua employer, and WBHO (Pty)
Ltd, the sixth respondent,
qua principal building contractor. When
the work was completed, the space earmarked for the hotel was taken
over by the eighth
respondent, The Silo Hotel (‘the Hotel’).
The Hotel is leasing the relevant part of the building from V &
A
in terms of a contract of lease concluded on 27 November 2014.
[3]
The
second respondent, Mace Management Services (Pty) Ltd (‘Mace’),
was appointed by V & A as the ‘principal
consultant’
and ‘project manager’ in respect of the building
contract. The third, fourth and fifth respondents,
collaborating for the purpose in a joint venture, were engaged by V &
A as executive architects to the project.
[2]
The fifth respondent has reportedly since been liquidated and played
no role in the proceedings. I shall refer collectively
to the
third and fourth respondents, Van Der Merwe Miszewski Architects and
Jacobs Parker Architects CC, respectively, as ‘the
architects’.
[4]
Sutherland
and the second to fifth respondents (hereinafter, where convenient,
collectively referred to as ‘the consultants’)
were
engaged for the project in terms of standard form PROCSA contracts
concluded by V & A severally with each of them.
[3]
PROCSA is an acronym for ‘Professional Consultants Services
Agreement Committee’.
Ex
facie
the covering page of the standard form contract document, it was
recommended for use by the ‘PROCSA™ Constituents’,
viz. the Africa Association of Quantity Surveyors, the Association of
Construction Project Managers, the Association of South African
Quantity Surveyors, Consulting Engineers South Africa, the South
African Black Technical and Allied Careers Organisation, the South
African Institute of Architects and the South African Property Owners
Association. A copy of the agreement between V &
A and
Sutherland was annexed, marked ‘
FA
2
’,
to Sutherland’s founding affidavit in the current proceedings.
[5]
Clause 18 of the PROCSA agreement regulates
the ‘
resolution of disputes
’
between the parties to the agreement. ‘
Party
’
is specially defined in clause 1 to mean ‘[t]he
client
or the
consultant
entering into this
agreement
’.
Clause 18.1 provides: ‘
Should any
dispute whatsoever arise between the
parties
,
then either
party
hereto may declare a dispute by delivering notice of the details
thereof to the other
party
,
which dispute shall be referred to mediation prior to arbitration
’.
Clause 18.9 provides that any arbitration shall proceed before a
single arbitrator to be appointed jointly by the
parties, failing
which by either one of the parties. Clause 18.11 records that
the arbitration shall be conducted according
to rules determined by
the arbitrator. Clause 18 has been referred to in the current
proceedings as ‘
the arbitration
agreement
’.
[6]
A dispute, particulars whereof will be
described presently, has arisen between the V & A and
the consultants.
Notices declaring the dispute have been given
by V & A to all of the consultants, but at this stage arbitration
proceedings
are being prosecuted by it only against Sutherland.
Mr L.A. Rose-Innes SC, a senior counsel in practice at the
Cape Bar, was appointed as the arbitrator. Sutherland has
pleaded to the V & A’s statement of claim and the V &
A
has delivered a replication to the plea. Sutherland has also
instituted counterclaims in the arbitration against V &
A.
V & A contested whether the counterclaims fell within the ambit
of the reference to arbitration, but the arbitrator
has given a
reasoned ruling determining that they do. V & A has since
pleaded to the counterclaims.
[7]
In the current proceedings, Sutherland has
applied for orders that –
1.
the arbitration agreement ... embodied in
annexure “
FA 2
”
to the founding affidavit be set aside; alternatively,
2.
the arbitration agreement shall cease to
have effect with reference to the dispute relating to the failure of
the screed flooring
at the Silo Hotel referred to arbitration before
Adv L Rose-Innes SC;
3.
the first respondent, and such other
respondent who elects to oppose this application, be directed to pay
the applicant’s
costs of this application jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved;
4.
granting such further and/or alternative
relief as the above honourable court deems meet.
[8]
The application is brought in terms of
s 3(2)
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
, which provides:
‘
The
court may at any time on the application of any party to an
arbitration agreement, on good cause shown –
(a)
set aside the arbitration agreement;
or
(b)
order that any particular dispute
referred to in the arbitration agreement shall not be referred to
arbitration; or
(c)
order that the arbitration agreement
shall cease to have effect with reference to any dispute referred.
’
[9]
The
provision allows for a negation of the usually hallowed principle of
sanctity of contract often expressed by lawyers through
the maxim
pacta
sunt servanda
(viz. agreements are to be respected). Ordinarily, agreements
competently concluded between contracting parties will be upheld
and
enforced by the court according to their tenor provided only that
they are lawful and not contrary to public policy.
It is for
that reason that showing ‘good cause’ within the meaning
of the subsection has been held to be a difficult
case to make
out.
[4]
[10]
In
De Lange v
Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa for the
time being and Another
[2015] ZACC 35
(24 November
2015); 2016 (1) BCLR 1
(CC);
2016 (2) SA 1
(CC), at para
36, the Constitutional Court expressed itself on
s 3(2)
as
follows: ‘
The question remains
whether
[the applicant]
has
advanced good cause to escape the agreement. The Act is not
particularly helpful on what would make up good cause.
Nor have
our courts expressly defined good cause. It is, however, clear
that the onus to demonstrate good cause is not easily
met. A
court’s discretion to set aside an existing arbitration
agreement must be exercised only where a persuasive
case has been
made out. It is neither possible nor desirable, however, for
courts to define precisely what circumstances
constitute a persuasive
case
’.
[11]
The
Court continued, in para 37, ‘
Absent
infringement of constitutional norms, courts will hesitate to set
aside an arbitration agreement untainted by misconduct
or
irregularity unless a truly compelling reason exists
’.
It illustrated the proposition with the following examples of
situations in which a court might intervene: ‘
where
allegations of fraud are best adjudicated in open court rather than
private arbitration proceedings, or where a party’s
counterclaims affect third parties who were not subject to the
arbitration and in respect of which the arbitrator lacks
investigative
powers
’.
[5]
[12]
The
reason why a truly compelling reason must be shown for relief in
terms of s 3(2) is that arbitration agreements are ordinarily
entered into for the common benefit of the contracting parties, and a
party should not lightly be able deprive another party of
the
benefit. As the majority of the Constitutional Court observed
in
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
[2009] ZACC 6
(20 March
2009); 2009 (4) SA 529
(CC) ;
2009 (6) BCLR
527
(CC), ‘
The
decision to refer a dispute to private arbitration is a choice which,
as long as it is voluntarily made, should be respected
by the courts.
Parties are entitled to determine what matters are to be arbitrated,
the identity of the arbitrator, the process
to be followed in the
arbitration, whether there will be an appeal to an arbitral appeal
body and other similar matters
.’
[6]
[13]
Mindful of the foregoing considerations, it is
evident that whether just cause in the relevant sense has been shown
is ultimately
dependent on the peculiar circumstances of the given
case.
[14]
The arbitral dispute between Sutherland and
V&A arises from part of the work done to the silo building that
required the floor
levels in the section of the structure that houses
the boutique hotel to be raised above the level of the solid floor
slabs.
That was done using a special type of light-weight
screed. The screeding work was done by a concern called
Greenlite Concrete
(the seventh respondent) in terms of a subcontract
with WBHO (Pty) Ltd. The screed did not function
satisfactorily, with
the result that the floors of the hotel became
uneven. Remedial work at an alleged cost of approximately
R6 million
has been carried out. The remedial work will,
however, apparently provide only a temporary solution and it is
therefore currently
envisaged that further work, expected to cost V&A
approximately R30,6 million in present value (including losses
associated
with the building being out of commission during the
execution of the work), will be required in the future to give a
long-lasting
result. The Hotel had to close its business for
five months while the remedial work to provide a temporary solution
was carried
out.
[15]
The causes of the problem were investigated
by an engineer and architect, one Professor Vernon Collis, who
furnished three
reports on the matter. Collis opined that the
consultants, as well as the sixth and seventh respondents, were each,
in the
several respects identified in his reports, at fault in
respect of the unsatisfactory work. As mentioned, V&A gave
notice
to each of the parties with which it had an arbitration
agreement (including WBHO (Pty) Ltd) of its intention to proceed
against
them. It also issued an invitation to those parties to
agree to proceedings in which the issues could be addressed and
determined
on a consolidated basis as between everyone involved.
Sutherland declined the invitation. V&A has reportedly
concluded
a settlement with the building contractor.
Thereafter, as also mentioned earlier, V&A proceeded only against
Sutherland,
holding in abeyance for the time being any claims it
might also be able to advance against any of the other parties.
[16]
V&A’s claim is founded on an
alleged breach by Sutherland of its contract with V&A. V&A
alleges that had
Sutherland properly performed its obligations under
the contract the defective light-weight screeds would not have been
laid.
It computes its resultant damages in the sum of the
rental it did not receive from the Hotel while the interim remedial
solution
was being implemented (R7,1 million) plus the cost of
the remedial work associated with the initial interim and subsequent
long-lasting solutions. The pleaded claim acknowledges,
however, that Sutherland’s liability is limited in terms of
its
contract with V&A to an amount twice its contract fee; viz.
R14.5 million.
[17]
In its plea to the claim, Sutherland has
denied that the screeding work fell within the ambit of its
contractual responsibility;
and pleaded that in any event any
liability by it was excluded by virtue of clause 7 of its contract
because the primary or direct
responsibility for it lay with the
other consultants or those involved in carrying out the work.
It has also pleaded that
it is excused from liability to V&A
because the failure of the claimant’s principal agent, Mace, to
properly oversee
the renovation was causal of the problem.
Sutherland further pleaded that V&A has ‘assigned’
its claim to
the Hotel and consequently lacks standing to pursue it.
V&A’s counsel consider that the statement of defence is
further susceptible to being interpreted as including a contention by
Sutherland that the claim vests in the Hotel on the basis
that V&A
had acted as the Hotel’s agent in engaging Sutherland as the
consulting engineer. Finally, Sutherland
has pleaded that V&A
is precluded from advancing the claim because in terms of the lease
agreement between V&A and the
Hotel the latter undertook at its
cost to remedy any latent defects in the building after the
completion of the remodelling work.
[18]
Clause 7 of the contract, upon which
Sutherland relies in its plea, provides (in subclause 2) for the
forementioned limitation
in the monetary amount of Sutherland’s
potential liability, and further as follows in relevant part:
‘
7.0
LIMIT OF CONSULTANT’S LIABILITY
7.1
Notwithstanding 6.0, the
consultant
shall specifically not be
liable for the following:
7.1.1 Acts or
omissions of
other consultants
7.1.2
Construction methods, techniques, sequences and procedures employed
by the
contractor(s)
7.1.3 Any
material, component, system, specialist design or workmanship failing
to perform according to the claims of
manufacturers, suppliers,
contractors or subcontractors
7.1.4
Reasonable deviations from any estimates of costs and/or budgets
7.1.5 Failure
by the
contractor
or the
client
to perform in terms of
the
contract
7.1.6 Delays
due to causes beyond the
consultant’s
control
7.1.7 Acts or
omissions of third parties.
...
7.4
The
client
hereby indemnifies the
consultant
against
all claims by third parties which arise out of or in connection with
services
rendered under this agreement:
7.4.1 Which
exceed the maximum amount of compensation in terms of 7.2 and
7.4.2 for the
full amount of any such claims after the period stated in 7.3’.
The words in bold print
are specially defined in clause 1 of the agreement. ‘
Contract
’
is defined to mean ‘
an agreement entered into between the
client
[V&A]
and a
contractor
for the execution of the works or part thereof
’.
‘
Contractor
’ is defined as ‘
the entity or
entities entering into
contract(s)
with the
client
for the execution of the
works
or part thereof
’. (WBHO (Pty) Ltd was the
‘
contractor
’ in respect of the silo project.)
‘
Consultant
’ means ‘
the contracting
party named in the
schedule
providing the
services
’. ‘
Other Consultants
’
means ‘
entities or third parties acting on behalf of the
client
to provide professional or specialist
services on any aspect of the
project
’.
Mace and the architects were accordingly ‘other consultants’
within the meaning of the agreement between
V&A and Sutherland.
‘
Services
’ means ‘
the duties and
functions of the
consultant
set out in
Annexure B
’.
[19]
It
will be for the arbitrator to determine the effect of clause 7.1 on
the pleaded claim. It is relevant for present purposes,
however, to observe that clause 7.1.1 appears to have the effect of
materially limiting the possibility of concurrent liability
by any of
the consultants to V&A for damages occasioned by the breach by
any of them of their respective contracts. When
read with
clause 6 of the agreement (‘Consultant’s
Obligations’),
[7]
the
clause appears to have a compartmentalising effect on the extent of
the respective consultants’ contractual obligations
and
attendant potential liability. The clause is plainly intended
to operate in the consultants’ favour by affording
each of them
the protection of a type of ringfenced exposure to liability for
breach of contract. The apparent effect is
to restrict the
possibility of any of the consultants being involved in litigation in
which the predominant cause of any damage
sustained by the client is
the breach of its discrete contractual obligations by another
consultant.
[20]
It
seems to me that the situation in the current matter as between V&A
and the parties with which it contracted in relation
to the silo
building project is comparable to that which obtained in
Van
Immerzeel & Pohl and Another v Samancor Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 79
(30 November
2000); 2001 (2) SA 90
(SCA);
[2001]
2 All SA 235
(A),
2001 CLR 32.
The consultants and the building
contractor may be independently liable for the same or similar
damage, but the V&A’s
causes of action against them are
separate and independent based upon separate if interconnected
contracts.
[8]
Subject to
the possible effect of clause 7 of the respective PROCSA agreements,
V&A is entitled to choose against which
contractor or contractors
to proceed in respect of the damage. As Farlam AJA noted in
Van
Immerzeel & Pohl
at para 79, there is ‘
no
legal principle which compels a plaintiff in a case such as this to
excuss, as it were, one contract breaker before suing or
recovering
compensation from the other
’.
V&A is, of course, nonetheless precluded from recovering in total
from any party it might choose to sue more
than the amount of its
loss; in other words, double recovery is not permitted.
[21]
Absent
a contractual basis for such liability, a person who is liable to
compensate another in damages for breach of contract does
not enjoy a
right to claim a contribution from another contracting party whose
breach might have contributed to the claimant’s
loss or for an
abatement on account of the claimant’s fault.
[9]
We do not in this country have legislation like the United Kingdom’s
Civil Liability (Contribution) Act (c47) of 1978,
which, subject to
the provisions of the statute, allows ‘
any
person liable in respect of any damage suffered by another person
[to]
recover
contribution from any other person liable in respect of the same
damage (whether jointly with him or otherwise)
’
irrespective of ‘
the
legal basis of his liability, whether tort, breach of contract,
breach of trust or otherwise
’.
[22]
The position as between joint wrongdoers in
delict under the common law and the Apportionment of Damages Act 34
of 1956 is distinguishable
when the context in which the damages in
issue were sustained was contractual; see
Thoroughbred
Breeders’ Association of South Africa v Price Waterhouse
[2001] ZASCA 82
(1 June 2001);
[2001] 4 All SA 161
(A) from para 66
and
Nedcor Bank Limited v Lloyd-Gray
Lithographers (Pty) Limited
[2000]
ZASCA 166
(8 September 2000);
[2000] 4 All SA 393
(A) at para 10-12.
[23]
In its counterclaim, Sutherland has sought
an award declaring that V&A ‘
indemnifies
[it]
against
all and any claims of the Silo Hotel arising from the Lightweight
Screeds dispute directly and/or indirectly, either generally
or more
particularly as currently formulated and/or still to be formulated in
the particulars of claim of the Silo Hotel
’.
The particulars of claim of the Silo Hotel is the founding pleading
in an action instituted in this court by the
Hotel under case no.
5619/22, which will be described presently.
[24]
Sutherland also makes a contingent
counterclaim in delict for damages against V&A in any amount that
it might be ordered to
pay to the latter in respect V&A’s
claim in convention founded in contract. It is not for this
court to determine
them, but I do not think it would be unreasonable
to describe the pleaded bases for the delictual claim as ‘creative’.
It is advanced on a twofold basis. Firstly, that were the
contingency of a contractual damages award against it in favour
of
V&A realised, the latter would be delictually liable to it for
negligently appointing an allegedly incompetent party (Mace)
as its
principal agent and principal consultant to administer the works
contract. Secondly, it alleges that V&A, as Mace’s
principal, is vicariously liable for Mace’s alleged breach of
its contract with V&A, which Sutherland alleges gave rise
to a
delictual liability by Mace to any of the other consultants who were
consequently rendered liable to V&A in contract.
[25]
Mace, two of the three architects cited by
Sutherland in the current application, WBHO (Pty) Ltd and Arup (Pty)
Ltd (described as
one of the project engineers on the Grain Silo
project), as well as Sutherland itself, have been cited as defendants
in the Hotel’s
action. The Hotel’s pleaded claim is
founded in delict, it being alleged that the defendants had been
under a duty
in law ‘
to ensure
that the redesign and reconstruction of the Grain Silo resulted in
the building being suitable for use by the Hotel as
a luxury hotel
’
and that they had negligently breached that duty by ‘
inter
alia
: (1)
failing
to comply with the National Building Regulations and
(2)
failing, as the case may be, to
specify, design and/or build a compliant floor, and instead
delivering a non-compliant, lightweight
polystyrene floor which was
not fit for purpose
’. The
Hotel claims damages in respect of its estimated financial loss by
reason of its inability to trade during the
period that the hotel
premises were closed for the implementation of the forementioned
temporary solution and the period it will
be closed when the work to
effect a permanent solution is undertaken. Sutherland points
out that inasmuch as V&A relies
on the Collis reports in its
claim against Sutherland, so does the Hotel in its action proceedings
against the defendants in case
no. 5619/22.
[26]
For whatever it might be worth (which is
unclear), the Hotel’s particulars of claim in the action
contains the following statement:
‘
The
Plaintiff has not claimed in this action for damages pertaining to
the estimated cost of the permanent flooring solution itself,
as V&A
Holdings, the landlord of the building, has undertaken to cover the
costs of implementing the permanent solution, and
has also itself
demanded that the professional team cover the estimated costs of the
repair. The Plaintiff does however reserve
the right to do so
in future should this become necessary.’
[27]
Notice of an intended exception has been
given by some of the defendants to the Hotel’s pleaded claim in
delict for compensation
for pure economic loss. It is not for
this court to pre-empt the outcome of the exception. It is,
however, relevant
for this court to take a view on its prospects of
success for the purpose of weighing whether good cause has been shown
by Sutherland
for the setting of aside of the arbitration proceedings
for Sutherland relies, in part, on the incidence of the Hotel’s
action
in support of its application. I agree with the
submission by counsel for the architects that if the exception were
upheld
that would likely be the end of the Hotel’s action
because the result would strike at the very foundation of its claim
in
delict, and the Hotel has no contractual relationship with any of
the defendants. (As it happens, proceedings in the Silo
Hotel
action appear - perhaps unsurprisingly - to have ground to a halt.)
[28]
Where
culpable conduct causes pure economic loss, there is no presumption
of wrongfulness. The claimant has to persuade the
court that
considerations of public and legal policy in accordance with
constitutional norms impel the characterisation of the
conduct in
issue as wrongful for the purposes of an Aquilian action.
[10]
It is well documented that the courts have shown notable cautiousness
in extending the Aquilian action to claims for pure
economic
loss.
[11]
In
Lillicrap,
Wassenaar and Partners v Pilkington Brothers (SA) (Pty) Ltd
1985 (1) SA 475
(A) at 504F-G, the appeal court observed that our
courts will ‘
not
extend the scope of the Aquilian action to new situations unless
there are positive policy considerations which favour such
an
extension
’.
[29]
Concern
about creating limitless liability is a frequently cited reason for
this policy of restraint, but it is not the only one.
In
Country
Cloud
(CC), the relevant enquiry was stated to be ‘
do
these
[legal and public]
policy
considerations require that harm causing conduct should be declared
wrongful and consequently render the defendant liable
for the loss,
or do they require that harm should remain where it fell, ie with the
plaintiff?
’.
[12]
There has been some reluctance to regard the foreseeability of harm
as a determinant criterion in the decision whether conduct
causing
pure economic loss is wrongful.
[13]
[30]
The cases show that the ability of the
claimant to have protected itself by contractual provision has been
an important consideration
in determining whether the defendant’s
negligent act or omission should be characterised as wrongful for the
purposes of
a delictual claim; see for example
Trustees,
Two Oceans Aquarium Trust v Kantey & Templer (Pty) Ltd
[2005] ZASCA 109
(25 November 2005);
[2007] 1 All SA 240
(SCA);
2006
(3) SA 138
(SCA) and consider the repeated endorsement by our higher
courts of the observations of McHugh J in
Perre
v Apand (Pty) Ltd
[1999] HCA 36
;
(1999)
198 CLR 180
at para 118.
[31]
McHugh J said ‘
Cases
where a plaintiff will fail to establish a duty of care in cases of
pure economic loss are not limited to cases where imposing
a duty of
care would expose the defendant to indeterminate liability or
interference with its legitimate acts of trade. In many
cases, there
will be no sound reason for imposing a duty on the defendant to
protect the plaintiff from economic loss where it
was reasonably open
to the plaintiff to take steps to protect itself. The vulnerability
of the plaintiff to harm from the defendant’s
conduct is
therefore ordinarily a prerequisite to imposing a duty. If the
plaintiff has taken, or could have taken steps to protect
itself from
the defendant’s conduct and was not induced by the defendant’s
conduct from taking such steps, there is
no reason why the law should
step in and impose a duty on the defendant to protect the plaintiff
from the risk of pure economic
loss.
’
The observation was endorsed in
Cape
Empowerment Trust Ltd v Fisher Hoffman Sithole
[2013] ZASCA 16
(20 March 2013);
[2013] 2 All SA 629
(SCA);
2013 (5)
SA 183
(SCA) at para 28 (also in my judgment in the court of first
instance under the same case name at
[2005] ZAWCHC 10
(28 January
2005)
[2005] ZAWCHC 10
; ;
[2005] 1 All SA 654
(C) at para 74),
Country
Cloud
(SCA) supra, at para 30 and
Country Cloud
(CC) supra, para 51 in fn 54.
[32]
The provision of accommodation for its
enterprise in the silo building that was fit for purpose was
primarily a matter for arrangement
between the Hotel and its
landlord. In its lease agreement with V&A, the Hotel waived
any right of action against its
landlord for any latent defects in
the reconstructed silo. I am unaware of any case in which a
delictual claim has been upheld
in a situation closely comparable to
the facts alleged in the Hotel’s particulars of claim.
[33]
It
is incumbent upon a claimant for delictual damages for pure economic
loss to plead the facts it relies upon to support the required
conclusion that the defendant’s causal conduct was wrongful;
cf.
Fourway
Haulage SA (Pty) Ltd v SA National Roads Agency Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 134
(26 November
2008); 2009 (2) SA 150
(SCA) ;
[2009] 1
All SA 525
(SCA) at para 14. That is a requirement that renders
statements of claim in such matters readily amenable in appropriate
circumstances
[14]
to
determination on exception. Sutherland has in the current
proceedings not clearly identified any facts, other than the
interconnectedness of the separate contractual relationships between
the various parties, that for public and legal policy reasons
might
support the required findings of wrongfulness in the delictual claims
that it posits, nor for that matter has the Hotel in
its particulars
of claim. I consider that the exception against the Hotel’s
action enjoys very reasonable prospects of success.
[34]
The existence of the action has
consequently not weighed with me persuasively as a factor in favour
of the application. It
is any event by no means certain, even
were the Hotel’s action in delict to proceed, that it would be
consolidated with an
action founded in contract instituted by V&A
against Sutherland in lieu of the currently pending arbitration
proceedings.
On the contrary, for the reasons discussed
earlier, there is good cause to doubt that the Hotel’s action
will ever come to
trial. But even were the Hotel’s action
to proceed, its subject matter is materially different from V&A’s
claim against Sutherland. The Hotel claim concerns the income
it allegedly has lost and will in the future lose through its
inability to use the hotel accommodation while remedial work is
carried out. V&A’s claim against Sutherland is
concerned with other matters; namely, the cost of the remedial work
required to provide the temporary and permanent solutions to
the
defective screeding work and the loss of rental for the accommodation
while the remedial work is carried out.
[35]
Furthermore, any determination by the
arbitrator pursuant to Sutherland’s counterclaim that V&A
is bound by clause 7.4
of their contract to indemnify Sutherland
against any liability to the Hotel would be binding as between V&A
and Sutherland.
There is no possibility in such an event that
the court seized of the Hotel’s action might have to determine
the same question.
Similarly, were the arbitrator to uphold
Sutherland’s allegation that V&A lacks standing to advance
the claim that it
has brought against the applicant, that would be
the end of the matter as between those parties.
[36]
A fundamental difficulty with Sutherland’s
application, which were it to be granted would compel V&A to
proceed by action,
is that upholding it would not affect the several
arbitration agreements that V&A has with the other consultants
and the building
contractor. V&A could not join any of
those parties in the contemplated action without the material risk of
a special
plea of arbitration being raised against it. As
pointed out by the respondents’ counsel, success in the
application
consequently would not, of itself, achieve Sutherland’s
declared purpose of facilitating the containment of any litigation
between the parties concerning the defective screeding work in a
single action in the High Court. On the contrary, it would
likely result in various other proceedings related to the several
arbitration agreements in existence, the nature and outcome of
which
are unpredictable. These factors militate trenchantly against a
finding that Sutherland has shown good cause why V&A
should be
deprived of the benefit of its arbitration agreement and forced
instead into a readily foreseeable morass of litigious
uncertainty.
[37]
Counsel for Sutherland argued, however,
that if the arbitration were set aside and V&A’s claim
against it were then to
be prosecuted by way of action, Sutherland
would join the other parties involved in the silo project; it was
submitted in oral
argument that ‘in an action, everyone would
be joined or would intervene’. I found it noteworthy,
however, that
the argument gave little attention to the basis upon
which this allegedly desirable inclusivity was to be achieved.
[38]
There is no direct contractual relationship
between Sutherland and the other consultants or the building
contractor. Any duty
by any of those parties not to act
negligently was a duty owed in contract to V&A as the employer.
The only conceivable
basis for a claim by Sutherland against the
other consultants or the building contractor to ameliorate the effect
of an award or
judgment against it on V&A’s claim against
it would lie in delict, which explains the character of the continent
counterclaim
by Sutherland described in paragraph 24 above. The
considerations pertaining to delictual claims for pure economic loss
have
already been discussed above. I am, to say the least, very
doubtful about the viability of any such delictual claim.
[39]
All the foregoing considerations suggest
that the bases for the other proceedings that Sutherland contends
should be taken into
account to show that there is good cause to
grant its application in terms of s 3(2) are tenuous.
Accordingly, as a
matter of probability, the postulate that if the
relief is not granted Sutherland will become embroiled in multiple
proceedings
involving the same evidence, unnecessarily incur
duplicated costs, be exposed to prejudicial ‘procedural
jockeying’
and possibly conflicting decisions seems to me
unlikely to materialise. In the result, the case the applicant
has made out
is not a compelling one.
[40]
The applicant and the first respondent each
availed of the services of two counsel and the third and fourth
respondents engaged
senior counsel. The engagement of two
counsel was reasonable in my view. The third and fourth
respondents sought an
order allowing the fees of senior counsel.
I am aware that orders to that effect have sometimes been made in
recent times.
In my opinion, however, such orders are
inappropriate. The amount in which counsel’s fees fall to
be taxed and allowed
is properly a matter for decision by the taxing
master. It will be sufficient for the court to record, as I
hereby do for
the taxing master’s guidance, that the engagement
of senior counsel in the case was reasonable.
[41]
An order is made in the following terms:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant shall be liable for the costs
of suit of the first, third and fourth respondents, such costs to
include the fees of
two counsel where such were engaged.
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
G.
Walters
A.J.
van Aswegen
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Norton
Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc.
Cape
Town
First
respondent’s counsel:
J.C.
Butler SC
A.
Morrissey
First
respondent’s attorneys:
Everinghams
Attorneys
Cape
Town
Third
and fourth respondents’ counsel:
P.
Ellis SC
Third
and fourth respondents’ attorneys:
Savage
Jooste & Adams
Pretoria
Bailey
Haynes Inc
Cape
Town
[1]
The
deed of contract was executed only in or about June 2015. The
effective date was stipulated to be 1 March 2015.
[2]
The
design architect was Heatherwick Studio Ltd. The fifth
respondent, Rick Brown and Associates was also separately engaged
as
the ‘
hotel
fitout architect
’.
The members of the joint venture comprising the third, fourth and
fifth respondents were nominated as ‘
the
Architect
’
in the JBCC format principal building agreement concluded between V
& A and WBHO.
[3]
With
tailormade ‘amendments and/or additions’ as provided for
in clause A.20 of the standard form contract document.
[4]
Metallurgical
and Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
1971
(2) SA 388
(W) at 391E-F. In
The
Rhodesian Railways Ltd v Mackintosh
1932 AD 359
at 375, it was remarked that a ‘
very
strong case
’
had to be made; see also
Universiteit
van Stellenbosch v JA Louw (Edms) Bpk
1983 (4) SA 321
(A) at 334A.
[5]
In
footnote 34. The approach that a party against whom
allegations of fraud are made should, if it so desires, be permitted
to have the case determined in open court rather than in private
arbitration was discussed in
Metallurgical
and Commercial Consultants
supra, at 393; see also
Sera
v De Wet
1974 (2) SA 645
(T) at 654
fin
-655.
In
Sera
’s
case, the considerations that appear to have weighed with the Court
in its decision to grant an application in terms
of s 3(2) were
the suggestion that the architect employed by one of the parties had
been party to fraudulent conduct coupled
with the fact that the
arbitrator called upon to determine the question was of the same
profession. That gave rise to what
Viljoen J considered to be
a reasonable apprehension by the applicant that he would not be
treated fairly. In addition,
the dispute involved questions of
law that the Court considered should preferably be decided by a
court of law. It is difficult
to see how the latter
consideration could ever apply in a matter in which the arbitrator
is a senior legal practitioner.
[6]
In
para 219.
[7]
Clause
6 provides:
‘
6.1
The
consultant
shall generally provide the
services
reasonably required set out in Annexure B in relation to the
scope
of work
in the
schedule
6.2
The
consultant
shall exercise reasonable professional skill,
care and diligence in the performance of the obligations in terms of
this
agreement
6.3
Where the
services
assigned to the
consultant
include
the obligation to certify, or to exercise discretion or quasi
arbitrational functions in carrying out the
services
, the
consultant
shall be obliged to exercise such obligations,
discretions and functions in an independent professional manner
acting with reasonable
skill, care and diligence with regard to all
interests involved
6.4
The
consultant
shall not make any material alteration, or
addition to, or omission from the approved design, budget or
programme without the
consent of the
client
and/or the
principal consultant
except when required to do so by any
applicable law or when arising from an emergency. In such
circumstances, the
consultant
will notify the
client
,
principal consultant
and other
consultants
as soon as
practicable of the action taken
6.5
The
consultant
shall
cooperate in absolute good faith, comply with and accurately and
timelessly adhere to all reasonable requests by the client,
principal consultant
,
principal agent
and other
consultants
.
’
[8]
Van
Immerzeel & Pohl
at para 76-81; cf. also
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
Inc and Others v National Potato Co-operative Ltd and Another
[2015]
ZASCA 2
(4 March 2015);
[2015] 2 All SA 403
(SCA) at para 62
[9]
It
is, with respect, not clear on what basis the court in
Turn
Around
Investments
7 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Marcus Smit Architects CC and Another
2023 (1) SA 300
(WCC), to which counsel referred in argument, gave
judgment against two contractors who were liable to the plaintiff
for the
same damage arising out of the breach of two independent
albeit interconnected contracts ‘
jointly
and severally
’.
A joint and several liability implies a right by the party paying
more than his share to claim a contribution in
respect of the excess
from the other liable party. The order appears to have been
made consistently with the relief sought
in the summons, but the
existence of a legal basis for ‘
joint
[as
distinct from concurrent]
liability
’
between the first and second defendants in that matter does not
appear to have been considered.
[10]
Esorfranki
Pipelines (Pty) Ltd v Mopani District Municipality
[2022]
ZACC 41
(30 November 202;
2023 (2) BCLR 149
(CC);
2023 (2) SA 31
(CC) at para 28-29.
[11]
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development,
Gaute
ng
[2014] ZACC 28
(3 October
2014); 2015 (1) SA 1
(CC);
2014 (12)
BCLR 1397
(CC) at para 23, where Khampepe J noted ‘...
our
law is generally reluctant to recognise pure economic loss claims,
especially where it would constitute an extension of the
law of
delict
’.
[12]
In
para 18.
[13]
Country
Cloud
(SCA) supra, at para 27, but see
Country
Cloud
(CC) supra, at para 41.
[14]
An
exception would obviously not be appropriate where the relevant
‘duty in law’ alleged to have been breached is
one
already established by the jurisprudence, see e.g.
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority
SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at para 15 with reference to the duty of a
collecting bank to owner of a cheque established in
Indac
Electronics (Pty) Ltd v Volkskas Bank Ltd
[1991] ZASCA 190
;
1992 (1) SA 783(A).
sino noindex
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