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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2023] ZAWCHC 76
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## Cancape (Pty) Ltd v Stokes (Leave to appeal) (1152/2019)
[2023] ZAWCHC 76 (20 April 2023)
Cancape (Pty) Ltd v Stokes (Leave to appeal) (1152/2019)
[2023] ZAWCHC 76 (20 April 2023)
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sino date 20 April 2023
Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No. 1152/2019
Before: The Hon. Mr
Justice Binns-Ward
Date of hearing:
20 April 2023
Date of judgment:
20 April 2023
In
the matters between:
CANCAPE
(PTY) LTD
Applicant /
Defendant
and
STUART
GUY STOKES
Respondent
/ Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
(Application
for leave to appeal)
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
The
defendant in the action in case no. 1152/2019 has applied for
leave to appeal to the Full Court ‘
against
that part of the order and judgment relating to set-off of the amount
of R146 771,22 and costs
’.
[1]
The judgment concerned was delivered on 28 November 2022. It is
listed on SAFLII,
sub
nom
.
Stokes
v Cancape (Pty) Ltd
[2022] ZAWCHC 241
(28 November 2022); (2023) 44 ILJ 431 (WCC).
The part of the judgment that is relevant for the purposes of the
current application
is in para 35 to 37 thereof.
[2]
The principles applicable in respect of the
determination of applications for leave to appeal are well
established. They are
codified in
s 17(1)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. It is not suggested that the current
matter raises a contentious point of law that usefully might enjoy
the attention of
an appellate court or that there is any comparable
compelling reason why an appeal should be heard. The enquiry is
thus confined
to the point of whether this court is satisfied that
there is a reasonable prospect that another court might on appeal
decide the
issue in question differently.
[3]
The nub of the application is in paragraph
3 of the application, which reads:
‘
Notwithstanding
the learned Judge correctly concluding that the Plaintiff had failed
to prove his contract, the learned Judge erred
in failing to conclude
that the indebtedness of the Plaintiff in respect of his overdrawn
profit-share account in the amount of
R146 771.00 (which amount
was common cause) was liquidated, due and payable and, as a
consequence, was to be set off against
the amount of R287 030.67
(the amount due to the Plaintiff).’
[4]
It is convenient to quote from the
defendant’s counsel’s written submissions in support of
the application:
‘
12.
Set off operates automatically
ipso jure
when:
12.1
two parties are mutually indebted;
12.2
both debts are in balanced existence.
13.
At worst for [the defendant] the debts were in balanced existence
when the learned Judge
concluded that [the plaintiff’s] claim
for his profit-share was not established.
14.
While it is clear from the pleadings and that which was before the
learned Judge, [the defendant],
from the outset, relied upon a
set-off.
15.
Thus, at worst for [the defendant], at the moment the learned Judge
concluded that [the
plaintiff] failed to prove his profit-share claim
axiomatically and consequent upon the agreement that the figures were
common
cause, [the plaintiff] was indebted to [the defendant] in an
amount of R146 771.22 in respect of his overdrawn profit-share.
16.
[The plaintiff] was thus only entitled to payment of the sum of
R140 295.45 calculated
(sic) and, as [the defendant] conceded
its indebtedness to [the plaintiff] as set out above, the set off
applies retrospectively.’
The defendant’s
counsel agreed that the passage that I have quoted articulated the
essence of the defendant’s case in
the application for leave to
appeal. He sought support for the submissions contained in it
in
Schierhout v Union Government (Minister of Justice
1926 AD
286
at 289-290 and
Transkei Development Corporation v Oshkosh
Africa
1986 (1) SA 150
(C) at 153C-G.
[5]
For the reasons that follow, the argument
has not satisfied me that there is a reasonable prospect that it
would be held on appeal
that this court erred in the relevant
respect. On the contrary, it seems to me that counsel has
misunderstood the authority upon
which he relied.
[6]
Whilst the defendant’s counsel is
correct, as indeed noted in the principal judgment, that the various
component amounts used
in the contesting calculations were not in
issue at the trial, the way in which they fell to be used in
determining the plaintiff’s
case was, however, very much in
dispute. Everything depended on what the terms of the contract
between the parties were.
[7]
If the plaintiff had established the
contract in the terms that he alleged, he would have succeeded in his
claim for R753 689.67.
This court held that he failed to
discharge the onus in that regard, and granted judgment in his favour
only in the amount that
the defendant admitted owing him. This
court recorded (in para 34 of the principal judgment) that if
the plaintiff’s
claim had been entirely reliant on his pleaded
version of the contract it would have made an order of absolution
from the instance.
[8]
The gist of the defendant’s complaint
is that the court, in granting judgment in the plaintiff’s
favour in the amount
that the defendant admitted having been indebted
to him, misdirected itself by not setting off the amount of
R146 771.22 in
which the defendant had alleged the plaintiff’s
profit-share account had been overdrawn. The defendant’s
counsel
argued that it followed ‘
axiomatically
’
from this court’s conclusion that the plaintiff had failed to
establish the existence of the contract alleged in his
particulars of
claim that the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in the amount
in which
the defendant
alleged that the plaintiff’s profit-share account was
overdrawn.
[9]
Counsel’s proposition does not bear
scrutiny. It was
not
common cause that the plaintiff’s profit-share account was
withdrawn. The profit-share account would only be overdrawn
if
it were established that
the defendant’s
version of the contract applied. The plaintiff put the
defendant’s version of the contract in issue. If the
defendant had pleaded set-off, as it behoved it to have done if it
wished to rely on that defence,
it
would have attracted the onus to establish its version of the
contract. The court’s finding that the plaintiff had
failed to prove the existence of the contract
he
relied on, did not expressly or by necessary implication contain
within it a finding that
the defendant
had established the existence of a different contract – one
that the plaintiff denied. Put differently, a failure by
the
plaintiff to discharge the onus in respect of
his
claim did not discharge the onus that
the defendant
would have borne to establish the contract that was necessary for a
defence of set-off to have succeeded.
[10]
The pertinent principles were expressed by
Innes CJ with customary clarity in
Schierhout
supra loc. cit.:
‘
The
doctrine of set off with us is not derived from statute and regulated
by rule of court, as in England. It is a recognised principle
of our
common law. When two parties are mutually indebted to each other,
both debts being liquidated and fully due, then the doctrine
of
compensation comes into operation. The one debt extinguishes the
other
pro tanto
as effectually as if payment had been made.
Should
one of the creditors seek thereafter to enforce his claim, the
defendant would have to set up the defence of
compensatio
by bringing the facts to the notice of the court as indeed the
defence of payment would also have to be pleaded and proved.
But, compensation once established, the claim would be regarded as
extinguished from the moment the mutual debts were in existence
together. (Underlining supplied for emphasis.)
[11]
The defendant did not plead set off.
Had the defendant done so, it would have had to prove that the
contract between the parties
not only entitled the plaintiff to share
in the company’s profits, but also obliged him to share in its
losses. For
it is only if there was a contract in the terms
contended for
by the defendant
that the plaintiff could have incurred a debt to the defendant
arising from a liability to share in the company’s losses.
[12]
Had the defendant pleaded set off, the
issues in the trial would have been different. This may be
illustrated by pointing
out that if set off been a pleaded issue I
would not have said, at para 30 of the principal judgment, ‘[t]
he
incidence of the onus, and the weight of the objective evidence made
it understandable that the defendant would not feel it necessary
to
call Adams
’. Had set off
been a pleaded issue, it would have been one in respect of which the
defendant,
not
the plaintiff, bore the onus. It would also have been an
incidence of the case which would have raised the question whether
an
adverse inference could be drawn against the defendant for not
calling Mr Adams. The question was not raised because the
defence was not pleaded, and a determination whether the defendant
had discharged the related onus did not fall to be made.
[13]
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs (on the High Court tariff).
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
[1]
I
quote from the notice of application.
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