Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 85South Africa
Infovest Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Another v Libra Partners LLC (19524/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 85 (3 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Infovest Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Another v Libra Partners LLC (19524/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 85 (3 May 2023)
Infovest Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Another v Libra Partners LLC (19524/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 85 (3 May 2023)
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sino date 3 May 2023
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 19524/2018
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Hearing:
18 April 2023
Judgment:
3 May 2023
In
the matter between:
INFOVEST
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
First
Plaintiff
STATPRO
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second
Plaintiff
and
LIBRA
PARTNERS
LLC
Defendant
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
The plaintiffs, which are companies
registered in South Africa, instituted proceedings against the
defendant, which is a company
registered in Massachusetts in the
United States of America, in which an order is sought declaring an
agreement purportedly concluded
between the first plaintiff and the
defendant in or about mid-September 2016 to be invalid and of no
force and effect, alternatively,
setting the agreement aside. The
purported agreement is referred to in the pleading as ‘the
Agency Agreement’. The
defendant pleaded to the claim and
delivered a claim in reconvention. Both pleadings have since been
amended. The import of the
plea is a denial that the Agency Agreement
is void or liable to be set aside and the claim in reconvention
includes a claim against
the first plaintiff for payment of monies
alleged to be due in terms to it in terms of the agreement (or an
equivalent ‘verbal/tacit
agreement should the Agency Agreement
have been void) and also for damages consequent upon the alleged
‘repudiation, alternatively
breach’ of the whichever of
the agreements applied. The defendant also claims an order declaring
clause 20 of the Agency
Agreement to be of no force or effect.
[2]
The first plaintiff has noted exceptions to
the iterations of the defendant’s aforementioned pleadings
dated 25 May 2022 on
the grounds that the amended claim in
reconvention (misnamed ‘counterclaim’) ‘contains
insufficient allegations
to establish a claim against the First
Plaintiff’ and both plaintiffs contend that the defendant’s
plea contains allegations
that are vague and embarrassing. According
to the notice of exception, the first and second exceptions described
below were noted
by the first plaintiff, whereas the third to sixth
exceptions described below were noted by both plaintiffs. Mr
Muller
SC, who argued the exceptions, filed
heads of argument that purport to be only on behalf of the first
plaintiff.
[3]
The principles pertinent to the
adjudication of exceptions are well-established and were not in any
way in issue between counsel
when the current matter was argued.
Nothing about the matter requires them to be generally rehearsed in
this judgment and accordingly,
they will be referred to only to the
extent necessary or convenient to support the conclusions I have
reached on the various points
taken by the excipients. Those points
will be addressed in the order in which they were taken in the
plaintiffs’ notice of
exception. I shall refer to them in
numerical order as the first to sixth exceptions.
The
first exception
[4]
The first exception falls to be understood
in relation to the matter pleaded in paragraphs 5 – 9 of the
defendant’s
claim in reconvention.
[5]
Paragraph 5 of the pleading sets forth what
the defendant alleges to have been the material terms of the Agency
Agreement. The pleading
states that the terms set out ‘
were
’,
rather than ‘
are
’,
the material terms. On its face, the wording thereby suggests an
implication by the pleader that the agreement is no longer
extant.
[6]
Paragraphs 6 – 9 of the claim in
reconvention then proceeds as follows:
‘
6.
The first plaintiff repudiated the Agency Agreement, alternatively
the verbal/tacit agreement in that it failed
or refused to:
6.1
make payment to the defendant of the amount
of USD$408,545.45, being the defendant’s share of the licence
fee that is payable
to the defendant in terms of clause 8 of the
Agreement; and/or
6.2
keep the defendant apprised of all
developments relating to the developments of Products and Services;
and/or
6.3
provide pre-sale and sales support to the
defendant; and/or
6.4
provide technical skills and information
for technical implementation, support and implementation consulting
to the defendant; and/or
6.5
inform the defendant of any technical
issues involving or relating to the Products or Services as soon as
the first plaintiff became
aware of it; and/or
6.6
ensure that the defendant has access to
resource support from the first plaintiff.
7.
The defendant performed its obligations in
terms of the Agency Agreement and the verbal/tacit agreement insofar
as performance on
its part was not made impossible by the first
plaintiff.
8.
ACCRUED RIGHTS:
8.1
Pursuant to the conclusion of the Agency
Agreement, alternatively the verbal/tacit agreement, and the
defendant’s performance
of its obligations in terms thereof,
contracts were concluded between and for the benefit of the first
plaintiff and the following
entities:
8.1.1
Triasima;
8.1.2
Atlantic Fund Services; and
8.1.3
FDP.
8.2
The first plaintiff, alternatively an
entity nominated by the first plaintiff, received payment of licence
fees from Triasima, Atlantic
Fund Services and FDP pursuant to the
defendant’s performance and the aforementioned contracts
concluded between such entities
and the first plaintiff.
8.3
The conclusion of the contracts referred to
in paragraph 8.1 above entitled the defendant to the payment of a
share of the licence
fees.
8.4
The defendant’s share of the licence
fees, calculated in terms of clause 8.1.1 of the Agency Agreement,
alternatively the
verbal/tacit agreement, is as follows and it became
due, owing and payable on the dates pleaded below:
8.4.1.
10 September 2018:
Triasima: US$
55 576.85
8.4.2.
30 November 2018:
AFS*:
US$ 10 500.00
8.4.3.
14 January 2019:
FDP:
US$ 19797.42
8.4.4.
1 May 2019:
AFS:
US$ 10 500.00
8.4.5.
10 September 2019:
Triasima:
US$ 55 667.15
8.4.6.
29 November 2019: AFS:
US$ 10 500.00
8.4.7.
14 January 2020:
FDP:
US$ 20 998.65
8.4.8.
29 April 2020:
AFS:
US$ 10 500.00
8.4.9.
10 September 2020: Triasima:
US$ 55 445.60
8.4.10.
31 December 2020:
AFS: US$ 10 500.00
8.4.11.
15 January 2021:
FDP
US$ 27 837.28
8.4.12.
29 April 2021:
AFS
US$ 10 500.00
8.4.13.
15 September 2021:
Triasima
US$ 59,481.35
8.4.14.
30 November 2021:
AFS
US$ 10,500.00
8.4.15.
28 February 2022:
FDP
US$ 29,751.15
8.4.16.
3 May 2022:
AFS
US$ 10,500.00
Total:
US$
408,545.45
(* I have used the
acronym AFS in the table above in place of the pleading’s
reference to ‘Atlantic Fund Services’.)
8.5
In the premises, the plaintiff is liable to
the defendant for payment of licence fees in the amount of US$
408,545.45 which amount
the first plaintiff has failed to pay to the
defendant.
9.
DAMAGES:
9.1
As a result of the first plaintiff’s
repudiation, alternatively breach of the Agency Agreement (25 October
2018), alternatively
the verbal/tacit agreement, the defendant
suffered damages in the amount of US$ 17,749,454.60 which amount is
calculated as follows:
9.1.1.
the first plaintiff would have received
cumulative licence fees in the amount of US$ 51,541,880.00 from sales
generated by the defendant
during 2018 to 2028;
9.1.2.
the defendant would, in terms of clause 8.1
of the Agency Agreement, alternatively the verbal/tacit agreement,
have become entitled
to 35% of such licence fees had it not been for
the first plaintiff’s repudiation, alternatively breach of the
Agency Agreement,
alternatively the verbal/tacit agreement; and
9.1.3.
the defendant’s share, i.e., 35%, of
such licence fees paid to the first plaintiff or an entity nominated
by the first plaintiff,
less the accrued license fees
set
out in paragraph “8.4.” above is US$ 17,749,454.60
((US$51,541,880.00x35%)-US$408,545.45).
9.2
The damages pleaded herein above flow
naturally from the breach of the agreements of the kind forming the
subject matters of the
counter-claim, alternatively were damages that
were within the contemplation of the parties when the agreements were
concluded
and the agreements were concluded on the basis of such
knowledge.’
[7]
The firsts plaintiff’s first ground
of exception is set out in the following terms at paragraphs 6 –
8 of the notice
of exception:
‘
6.
The amended counterclaim contains no allegations as to the manner in
which the First Plaintiff “
breached
”
the agreement.
7.
In addition, an allegation, without more, that the First Plaintiff
“repudiated” and/or “breached”
the agreement
does not in law give rise to a claim for damages calculated on the
basis that the Defendant would have become entitled
to 35% of licence
fees of US$51 541 880 from sales which would have been
generated by the First Plaintiff in the future,
in the period May
2022 to 2028.
8.
Accordingly, the amended counterclaim lacks averments necessary to
sustain the Defendant’s claim for payment of the
sum of
US$17 749 454,60, plus interest thereon.’
The
first plaintiff contends that for those reasons the pleading fails to
make out a cause of action.
[8]
The claim in reconvention has been
carelessly drafted in certain respects but, as amply illustrated in
the jurisprudence on exceptions,
the court and the recipient parties
are required to read the pleadings in a businesslike manner. A
slipshod pleading will withstand
scrutiny on exception so long as the
facts pleaded make out a cause of action or cognisable defence and
the case or defence, as
the case might be, has been stated with
sufficient clarity to inform the other party of the case it has to
meet or plead to.
[9]
In my judgment it is clear enough, when the
pleading is read as a whole, and in the pragmatic manner that is
indicated, that the
respects in which the defendant alleges the first
plaintiff to have been in breach of the Agency Agreement or its
equivalent oral
or tacit agreement are set out in subparagraphs 6.1
to 6.6 of the claim in reconvention. I am not persuaded that the
defendant’s
employment of the verb ‘repudiated’ in
the introduction to paragraph 6 stands in the way of such conclusion,
as the
plaintiffs’ counsel sought to argue. On the contrary,
the content of paragraph 6, read as a whole, is inconsistent with the
import of repudiation and consistent, rather, with the concept of
breach by way of non-performance.
[10]
It is well established that ‘repudiation’,
whilst it is often characterised as a species of ‘breach’,
is
manifested in the indication by a contracting party of its
intention not to perform or accept performance of the contract. That
is a matter of intention; although the existence of an intention to
repudiate is determined objectively, that is as outwardly manifested
seen through the eyes of the innocent party; it is not dependent on
the repudiating party’s subjective state of mind. The
other
well recognised forms of breach of contract are succinctly described
in GB Bradfield,
Christie’s Law of
Contract in South Africa
8
th
ed. (LexisNexis) at p.619:
‘
The
obligations imposed by a contract’s terms are meant to be
performed, and if they are not performed at all, or performed
late,
or performed in the wrong manner, the party on whom the duty of
performance lay (the debtor) is said to have committed a
breach of
the contract or, in the first two cases, to be in
mora
,
and, in the last case, to be guilty of positive malperformance.’
The
instances of non-performance listed in paragraph 6 of the claim in
reconvention are on their face all examples of the first
plaintiff
being in
mora
.
[11]
To the extent that the position is rendered
confusing by the defendant’s use, in conjunction with each
other, of the terms
‘repudiate’ and ‘refused’,
which is language more suggestive of ‘repudiation’ than
it is of
‘breach’ in the sense described in the passage
from
Christie
,
the plaintiffs might have been entitled to complain that the pleading
was vague and embarrassing. They did not. The first plaintiff’s
counsel made it clear, however, that its first ground of exception
was directed only at the inadequate pleading of a case based
on
breach
of
contract and was not related in any way to the issue of
repudiation
.
[12]
There is more substance in the complaint
articulated in paragraphs 7 and 8 of the notice of exception.
[13]
It is plain, when the claim in reconvention
is read as a whole, that the sum claimed by the defendant is
comprised of two components,
viz
.
(i) US$408,545.45 in respect of its so-called ‘accrued
rights’ in terms of the contract and (ii) the balance
in
respect of the share of licence fees that the defendant ‘would
have received’ or ‘would have become entitled
to’
in terms of the contract during the period May 2022 to 2028 ‘had
it not been for the first plaintiff’s repudiation,
alternatively breach of the Agency Agreement, alternatively the
verbal/tacit agreement’.
[14]
The first mentioned component is pleaded in
paragraph 8 of the claim in reconvention. The first ground of
exception is not directed
at the first component, advisedly so. It is
clear, if paragraphs 6.1 and 8 of the claim in reconvention are read
contextually,
that the sum of US$408,545.45 is an amount that the
defendant alleges that it had already become entitled to in terms of
clause
8 of the Agency Agreement or the equivalent provision in the
alternative contract. The breach concerned is the first plaintiff’s
failure or refusal to pay the amount. It is cognisably a claim for
specific performance, which no doubt explains the pleader’s
distinction of the amount for the purposes of pleading from the
balance, which is claimed as ‘damages’. It might be
clumsily pleaded, but there is no doubting that a cause of action has
been made out in respect of the first component.
[15]
The position is different in respect of the
second component (which is the subject matter of the relief claimed
in terms of prayers
4 and 5 of the claim in reconvention). The
correctness of the assertion in paragraph 7 of the notice of
exception that ‘an
allegation, without more, that the First
Plaintiff “repudiated” and/or “breached” the
agreement does not
in law give rise to a claim for damages calculated
on the basis that the Defendant would have become entitled to 35% of
licence
fees of US$51 541 880 from sales which would have
been generated by the First Plaintiff in the future, in the period
May 2022 to 2028’ cannot be gainsaid.
[16]
A repudiation puts the innocent contracting
party to an election. The innocent party can elect to enforce the
contract and claim
specific performance, or it can choose to accept
the repudiation and terminate the contract. That much is trite.
[17]
An
election to enforce the contract would allow the innocent party to
claim whatever payment was then due in terms of the contract
plus the
damages, if any, sustained as a result of the guilty party’s
delayed performance. Where the breach consists of a
failure to make
payment, the damages in question are ordinarily awarded by way of an
order for interest
ex
tempore morae
.
[1]
If the contract does not specify the due date for payment, the
innocent party would have to place the defaulting debtor in
mora
by making a demand for payment. The position in respect of a claim
for contractual damages of an innocent party who has elected
not to
accept a repudiation is indistinguishable from that of a party who
claims damages for ‘breach’ of contract in
any of the
senses described in the passage in
Christie
quoted in paragraph [9]
above.
There is no allegation in the claim in reconvention that the
defendant placed the first plaintiff in
mora
.
[18]
Absent some very unusual provision in the
contract, enforcement of the contract would not, entitle the innocent
party to claim upfront
an amount that it might anticipate becoming
entitled to in the future during the remaining term of an executory
contract. Yet,
on one reading of the passage in the defendant’s
claim in reconvention quoted above, that is what the defendant
appears to
be seeking to do. If there is a basis for such a claim
(very out of the ordinary as it would be) in the current matter, the
defendant
has failed to plead it. I was unable to find any in the
terms of the Agency Agreement (an incomplete copy of which was
annexed
to the plaintiffs’ declaration), and none was pointed
out to the court during argument.
[19]
An election by the innocent party to accept
the repudiation and terminate the contract would put it in a position
to be able to
claim damages. Ordinarily, the innocent party’s
damages would be in the sum necessary to place it in the position
financially
in which it would have been had there been proper
performance of the contract. In the case of an executory contract,
the computation
of its damages would take into account payments that
the innocent party would have received in the remaining term of the
contract
had it not been cancelled. The use of the subjunctive tense
in paragraph 9.1 of the claim in reconvention suggests that this is
the type of scenario that the pleader had in mind. There is, however,
no allegation in the pleading that the defendant accepted
a
repudiation by the first plaintiff, assuming such had been adequately
pleaded. As noted earlier, the language of paragraph 6
of the claim
in reconvention is in any event more consistent with a reliance on
breach than on repudiation. On the other hand,
if it was the
pleader’s intention to found the claim in prayers 4 and 5 on a
cancellation of the contract pursuant to the
first plaintiff’s
failure to perform (ie ‘breach’) after having been placed
in
mora
,
the necessary allegations to support that are also lacking.
[20]
Accordingly,
whether predicated on a breach or a repudiation of the agreement, the
pleaded facts do not make out a cause of action
in respect of the
defendant’s counterclaim for damages in the sum of
US$ 17,749,454.60.
[2]
The
first plaintiff’s first ground of exception will therefore be
upheld to that extent.
The second
exception
[21]
The second exception concerns the
defendant’s claim, in terms of prayer 3 of the claim in
reconvention, for an order that
‘clause 20 of the Agency
Agreement is contrary to public policy and/or is (
sic
)
unenforceable against the defendant’. Clause 20 of the Agency
Agreement provides, s.v. ‘
NO
CONSEQUENTIAL LOSSES
’ –
‘
Under
no circumstances whatsoever shall any Party be liable for any
indirect, extrinsic, special, penal, punitive, exemplary or
consequential loss or damage of any kind whatsoever or howsoever
caused (whether arising under contract, delict or otherwise and
whether the loss or damage was actually foreseen or reasonably
foreseeable), including but not limited to any loss of commercial
opportunities or loss of profits, and whether as a result of
negligent (including grossly negligent) acts or omissions of such
Party or its servants, agents or contractors or other persons for
whose actions such Party may otherwise be liable in law.’
[22]
The allegations pleaded in support of the
claim are contained in paragraph 10 of the claim in reconvention,
which reads as follows:
‘
10.
The enforcement of clause 20 of the Agency Agreement would be unfair,
unreasonable and unjust to the extent that
it would be contrary to
public policy by reason of the following:
10.1. no equality
in contract existed when the Agency Agreement was concluded;
10.2. when the
Agency Agreement was concluded between the first plaintiff and the
defendant, it was not contemplated by those
parties that the first
plaintiff’s business would be transferred to another entity in
the StatPro Group of companies;
10.3. the
plaintiffs, in collaboration with other entities in the StatPro Group
of companies, transferred the first plaintiff’s
business to
other entities after the defendant had indicated that it intended
enforcing its rights in terms of the Agency Agreement;
and
10.4. the directors
of the plaintiffs acted in a mala fides manner in dealing with the
first plaintiff’s business, the
aim of which actions was to
render the defendant unable to enforce its rights in terms of the
contract and/or unable to claim damages.’
[23]
The first plaintiff stated in paragraph 11
of the notice of exception that ‘the Defendant is precluded by
clause 20 of the
Agency Agreement from recovering the amounts claimed
in claims 4 and 5’. (‘Claims 4 and 5’ is a
reference to
the equivalently numbered prayers in the claim in
reconvention, in terms of which the defendant seeks orders against
the plaintiffs
for contractual damages in the sum of US$
17,749,454.60 and interest thereon
a
tempore morae
.) The defendant, however,
makes no such allegation in its pleading. Indeed, it is not apparent
on the pleading why the defendant
is seeking a declaratory order.
[24]
It is by no means clear to me that the
first plaintiff’s statement is well-founded – certainly
to the extent that it
implies a construction of the clause that would
exclude a contractual claim for what is variously labelled as
‘direct’
(as distinct from ‘indirect’),
‘intrinsic’ (as distinct from ‘extrinsic’) or
‘general’
(as distinct from ‘special’)
contractual damages – but the point, in any event, is one that
might appositely
be taken in a plea rather than an exception. Clause
19 of the Agency Agreement appears to be directed at excluding claims
by either
party for special contractual damages, whereas clause 20 is
directed at the waiver by the parties of any claims against each
other
for ‘consequential loss’. What the distinction is
between the potential claims covered by clause 19 and those at which
clause 20 appears to be directed might be the subject of some debate.
It is evident, however, that both clauses manifest what might
be
labelled as
pacta de non petendo
(agreements not to sue). The question raised by the exception is
whether the pleading makes out a cause of action for an order
declaring the
pactum de non petendo
in clause 20 to be contrary to public policy.
[25]
The meat of the second exception is
contained in paragraphs 13 and 14.1 of the notice of exception, which
go as follows:
‘
13
The allegations in paragraphs 10.1 to 10.4 [of the claim in
reconvention] do not, individually or cumulatively,
sustain the
allegation that enforcement of clause 20 of the Agency Agreement
would be unfair, unreasonable and unjust to the
extent that it would
be contrary to public policy, in that:
13.1 The
allegation in paragraph 10.1 (“no equality in contract”)
does not constitute a basis not to enforce
clause 20; and, in any
event, ex facie the terms of the Agency Agreement, the allegation is
manifestly false and divorced from
reality.
13.2 The
allegation in paragraph 10.2 (“
transfer of the First
Plaintiff’s business to another entity
”) is
irrelevant and furnishes no basis for the non-enforcement of clause
20 on the grounds of public policy.
13.3 The
allegation in paragraph 10.3 (“
transfer of the First
Plaintiff’s business after the Defendant had indicated that it
intended enforcing its rights
”) is irrelevant and furnishes
no basis for the non-enforcement of clause 20 on the grounds of
public policy.
13.4 The
allegation in paragraph 10.4 (“
the directors of the
Plaintiffs acted in a mala fide manner for the purpose alleged
”)
is irrelevant and furnishes no basis for the non-enforcement of
clause 20 on the grounds of public policy.
14
Accordingly:
14.1 the
allegations in paragraph 10 of the amended counterclaim are
insufficient to sustain claim 3; ...’
[26]
The principles that the courts will apply
in determining whether a contract or contractual provision should not
be enforceable for
being contrary to public policy have quite
recently been reviewed by the Constitutional Court
in
Beadica 231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon
Trust and Others
[2020] ZACC 13
(17
June
2020); 2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC). The Court
there affirmed its earlier judgment in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
(4 April
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007);
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC).
[27]
In
Beadica
,
the Constitutional Court accepted the summary of ‘the
relationship between private contracts and their control by the
courts
through the instrument of public policy, underpinned by the
Constitution’ given in the appeal court’s judgment in
A
B and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
[2018] ZASCA 150
(1 November 2018);
[2019] 1 All SA 1
(SCA);
2019 (1)
SA 327
(SCA);
2019 (8) BCLR 1006
(SCA), at para 27,
[3]
viz –
(i)
Public policy demands that contracts freely and consciously entered
into must be honoured [‘
pacta sunt servanda
’];
(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.
[28]
In para 83-90 of
Beadica
,
the Constitutional Court ‘further elucidated’ two of the
points listed in
Pridwin
.
[29]
In para 87, the majority judgment
explained, with reference to the first point on the list in
Pridwin
,
that: ‘...
pacta sunt servanda
is not the only, nor the most important principle informing the
judicial control of contracts. The requirements of public policy
are
informed by a wide range of constitutional values. There is no basis
for privileging
pacta sunt
servanda
over other
constitutional rights and values. Where a number of constitutional
rights and values are implicated, a careful balancing
exercise is
required to determine whether enforcement of the contractual terms
would be contrary to public policy in the circumstances
’.
The explanation was supplemented with a footnote comment (in fn. 200)
that ‘
This is not to say that a
constitutional right must be implicated for a contractual term to be
contrary to public policy.
’
[30]
With
reference to the fifth point listed in
Pridwin
,
the majority judgment in
Beadica
cautioned
that the principle should not serve as a means for courts to shirk
their constitutional duty. At para 90, the majority
held ‘...
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
’.
(The import of the last sentence was illustrated with reference to
para 158 of the minority judgment of Froneman J where
reference was
made to the Appellate Division jurisprudence regarding public policy
in restraint of trade matters,
[4]
as well as to
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
1989 (1) SA (A), which, it will be recalled, involved findings that
the unduly oppressive effect of a contract on an individual’s
private rights rendered its enforcement contrary to public policy.)
[31]
A two-stage enquiry was described in
Barkhuizen
.
Its character was described in
Beadica
at para 37 in the following way: ‘
The
first stage involves a consideration of the clause itself. The
question is whether the clause is so unreasonable, on its face,
as to
be contrary to public policy. If the answer is in the affirmative,
the court will strike down the clause. If, on the other
hand, the
clause is found to be reasonable, then the second stage of the
enquiry will be embarked upon. The second stage involves
an inquiry
whether, in all the circumstances of the particular case, it would be
contrary to public policy to enforce the clause.
The onus is on the
party seeking to avoid the enforcement of the clause to “demonstrate
why its enforcement would be unfair
and unreasonable in the given
circumstances.” The majority emphasised that particular regard
must be had to the reason for
non-compliance with the clause
’.
(Footnotes omitted.)
[32]
It
has not been pleaded, nor in my view could it have plausibly been
argued, that the clause is so unreasonable, on its face, as
to be
contrary to public policy. That moves the focus onto whether the
pleading sets out circumstances which, if established, could
impel
the conclusion that it would be contrary to public policy to enforce
the clause. The only circumstances pleaded in the claim
in
reconvention are those set out in paragraph 10.1 to 10.4 thereof,
quoted above.
[5]
[33]
The first plaintiff’s counsel
submitted that ‘there is no general principle to the effect
that the contract or, as in
this particular case, a particular clause
in the contract, will not be enforced because “no equality in
contract existed”
when the contract was concluded’. That
must be right, for otherwise it would not be open to anyone to make
an agreement with
another party with greater or lesser bargaining
power. What about employment contracts or mortgage loan agreements
with banks,
for example? Could it be said that they should be
unenforceable merely because of the inequality of the contracting
parties? Obviously
not. Demonstrating in a given case that such
contracts should not be enforced as being contrary to public policy
would require
something more. It would require proof that the
operation of the given contract according to its tenor would be
legally or societally
unacceptable for some objectively identifiable
reason; for example, that it would unjustifiably impinge on an
inalienable constitutional
right, be inconsistent with the rule of
law (the old case of
Nino Bonino v De
Lange
1906 TS 120
affords an example)
or bear unacceptably onerously on a party (as illustrated, for
example, in
Sasfin
supra, where the features of a cession
in
securitatem debiti
executed in favour
of Sasfin by its debtor (Beukes) that impelled the conclusion that
the agreement offended against public policy
were described by the
court as follows: ‘
This follows
from the provisions in clause 3.4 that Sasfin would be "entitled
but not obliged" to refund any amount to
Beukes in excess of
Beukes' actual indebtedness to Sasfin. As a result Beukes could
effectively be deprived of his income and means
of support for
himself and his family. He would, to that extent, virtually be
relegated to the position of a slave, working for
the benefit of
Sasfin (or, for that matter, any of the other creditors). What is
more, this situation could, in terms of clause
3.14, have continued
indefinitely at the pleasure of Sasfin (or the other creditors).
Beukes was powerless to bring it to an end,
as clause 3.14
specifically provides that "this cession shall be and continue
to be of full force and effect until terminated
by all the
creditors". Neither an absence of indebtedness, nor reasonable
notice to terminate by Beukes in those circumstances
would, according
to the wording of clause 3.14, have sufficed to bring the deed of
cession to an end.
’).
[34]
The defendant sought to supply that
‘something more’ in subparagraphs 10.2 to 10.4 of its
claim in reconvention. The
allegations pleaded there imply conduct by
the first plaintiff directed at thwarting the enforcement of the
Agency Agreement by
the defendant. They have no recognisable
relationship with or connection with clause 20, which, as mentioned,
contains a mutual
waiver by the parties of any right to claim for
‘consequential loss’ from each other. It has not been
suggested that
clause 20 excludes the defendant’s right to sue
to enforce the agreement. (And, although it is not a question for
decision
at this stage, as indicated above it in any event seems to
me that the clause does not exclude the right of an innocent party to
the contract to claim general, direct or intrinsic contractual
damages from a defaulting party.)
[35]
In his written submissions, counsel for the
defendant stressed that it was incumbent on a court seized of
determining whether a
contract was contrary to public policy to have
regard to ‘
all the particular
facts and circumstances of
[the]
case
’
and proceeded –
‘
The
particular facts and circumstances relevant to clause 20 of the
written agency agreement should be considered by the trial court
when
deciding whether the clause should be enforced.
A decision by a court
deciding an exception whether it would or would not be contrary to
public policy to enforce clause 20, without
hearing the evidence,
would be premature. It should be borne in mind that the pleading only
contains the
facta probanda
while the trial court will have
the benefit of the
facta probantia
.’
[36]
The argument misses the point. In the
context of the absence of a contention that the clause is contrary to
public policy on its
face, this court is not seized of the task of
deciding whether it is. The question before this court is whether the
pleaded facts
make out a triable case in support a claim for a
declaration that it is.
[37]
For
the reasons stated in paragraphs [33]
and
[34]
above,
and accepting that the facts pleaded in paragraph 10 of the claim in
reconvention are what the defendant asserts to be the
facta
probanda
,
the pleading does not make out a cognisable case for the relief
claimed in prayer 3 thereof. The argument that some or other,
as yet
unidentified, evidence might come out in the wash at the trial to
support the claim cannot prevail.
[6]
The pleadings are required to define the parameters of the case being
sent to trial. They are as much for the court as the litigants.
If
the parameters of the case are not sufficiently apparent on the
pleadings, how is the trial judge to manage the proceedings
effectively, and how are the opposing parties to know the case they
must come to trial ready to meet?
[38]
The second exception will therefore be
upheld.
[39]
It is strictly unnecessary, in view of the
conclusions reached on the first and second exceptions, to deal with
the other grounds
of exception (the third and fourth exceptions,
respectively) raised by the plaintiffs on the basis that certain
allegations in
the claim in reconvention are vague and embarrassing.
I shall do so, however, so that the court’s findings in that
regard
might assist if the defendant avails of the opportunity that
will be afforded to it, pursuant to the conclusions already reached,
to amend the pleading.
The third exception
[40]
In paragraph 7 of its claim in
reconvention, the defendant pleaded –
‘
The
defendant performed its obligations in terms of the Agency Agreement
and the verbal/tacit agreement insofar as performance on
its part was
not made impossible by the first plaintiff.’
[41]
The first plaintiff contends in its notice
of exception that the allegation in paragraph 7 of the claim in
reconvention is vague
and that it is embarrassed in pleading thereto
because the defendant had not pleaded –
‘
1.
What is meant by the allegation that the Defendant performed its
obligations “insofar as performance on its part
was not made
impossible by the First Plaintiff”; and/or
2.
When, where and in what manner performance on its part was made
impossible by the First Plaintiff.’
[42]
In my judgment, it is evident, when the
pleading is read as a whole, that the purpose of paragraph 7 of the
claim in reconvention
was merely to plead that the defendant had
complied with its obligations under the contract(s). It was necessary
for it to do that
to be able enforce its alleged rights under the
contract. It was not necessary for the defendant to plead that it had
not performed
what was impossible for it to have performed under the
contract, for obviously it could have been under no obligation to
have done
so. There is nothing in the pleaded case that would confuse
or embarrass the plaintiffs from denying, if that is what they
contend
to be the position, that the defendant had performed its
obligations under the contract(s).
[43]
I have not been persuaded that the pleading
of paragraph 7 leaves the plaintiffs uncertain of the case they are
called upon to meet
or in material uncertainty as to how to plead to
it.
[44]
The third exception will therefore be
dismissed.
The fourth exception
[45]
The fourth exception is about the
impenetrable reference, in parentheses, in paragraph 9.1 of the claim
in reconvention (quoted
in paragraph [6]
above)
to the date 25 October 2018. There is no doubting that the
significance of the date is not apparent on the pleading.
In my
judgment, the plaintiffs cannot reasonably be expected to plead to
paragraph 9.1 without clarification of the import
of the
reference to the date mentioned there. The first plaintiff’s
contention that the pleading is vague and embarrassing
in the respect
is well-founded. The fourth exception will be upheld, accordingly.
[46]
The remaining exceptions, also on the
grounds of vagueness and embarrassment, concern the defendant’s
plea to the claim in
convention.
The fifth exception
[47]
In paragraphs 5 – 7 of their
declaration, the plaintiffs alleged the ‘purported’
conclusion of the Agency Agreement
on the first plaintiff’s
behalf by one Kemper. Further on in the pleading it is alleged that
Kemper acted fraudulently and
without authority.
[48]
In subparagraphs 2.4 and 2.5 of its plea,
under the subheadings ‘Ostensible Authority’ and
‘Estoppel’, respectively,
the defendant responded as
follows to the plaintiffs’ allegation that Kemper had not been
authorised to act on the first
plaintiff’s behalf in concluding
the agreement:
‘
OSTENSIBLE
AUTHORITY:
2.4.
In the alternative to sub-paragraphs 2.2 and 2.3 above, and should it
be found that Kemper did
not have actual authority to conclude
binding agreements, including the Agency Agreement, on the first
plaintiff’s behalf
(which is denied), the defendant pleads as
follows:
2.4.1.
at all relevant times hereto and in particular on 9 November 2015, 9
May 2016 and 15 September 2016, the
first plaintiff, duly represented
by Kemper and one or more of the other directors of the first
plaintiff, conducted itself in
a manner that misled the defendant’s
representatives into reasonably believing that Kemper had actual
authority to conclude
binding agreements, including the Agency
Agreement, on the first plaintiff’s behalf with the defendant
(hereinafter ‘the
misrepresentation’);
2.4.2.
the misrepresentation led to an appearance that Kemper had the
necessary actual authority to conclude binding
agreements, including
the Agency Agreement, on behalf of the first plaintiff with the
defendant;
2.4.3.
the defendant reasonably acted upon the ostensible or apparent
authority of Kemper and, on that basis,
concluded the Agency
Agreement with the first plaintiff; and
2.4.4.
in the premises, the first plaintiff is bound by the conduct of
Kemper and its other directors referred
to in paragraph 2.4.1 above
and by the terms of the Agency Agreement concluded between the first
plaintiff and the defendant.
ESTOPPEL:
2.5.
As an alternative to sub-paragraphs 2.2 to 2.4 above, and should it
be found that Kemper did
not have actual or ostensible authority to
bind the first plaintiff and to conclude the Agency Agreement on its
behalf (which is
denied), the defendant pleads as follows:
2.5.1.
at all relevant times hereto but in particular from 9 November 2015
to 15 September 2016, the first plaintiff,
duly represented by Kemper
and other directors of the first plaintiff, by way of their conduct,
both express and by way of silence
or inaction, represented to the
defendant’s representatives that Kemper had the necessary
authority to conclude binding agreements
on the first plaintiff’s
behalf, including the Agency Agreement forming the subject matter of
this case;
2.5.2.
the representations were made by the first plaintiff, represented as
pleaded in paragraph 2.5.1 above,
to the defendant’s duly
authorised representatives and directors;
2.5.3.
the first plaintiff, duly represented as pleaded in paragraph 2.5.1
above, did expect, alternatively must
reasonably have expected, that
its conduct may mislead the defendant to reasonably believe that
Kemper had the necessary authority
to conclude binding agreements on
the first plaintiff’s behalf, including the Agency Agreement;
2.5.4.
the defendant reasonably acted upon the truth of the representation;
2.5.5.
the defendant acted to its prejudice by concluding the Agency
Agreement, by performing its obligations
in terms thereof and by
being the effective cause of agreements concluded by and/or for the
benefit of the first plaintiff with
third parties on the basis of
which agreements the defendant earned and would have continued to
earn fees; and
2.5.6.
in the premises, the first plaintiff is estopped from relying on a
lack of authority on the part of Kemper
to conclude the Agency
Agreement and bind the first plaintiff thereto.’
[49]
The fifth ground of exception raised by the
plaintiffs is that the plea is vague and embarrassing because it
‘does not identify
the “
other
directors of the First Plaintiff
”
to which reference is made in subparagraphs 2.4.1, 2.5.1 and 2.5.2.
[50]
In my judgment, the omission is not one
that prejudices the plaintiffs’ ability, if so advised, to
replicate to the plea,
nor does it leave the plaintiffs in any doubt
about the issues for trial. The plaintiffs will be able to obtain the
missing particularity
in due course through a request for trial
particulars.
[51]
In the result, the fifth exception will be
dismissed.
The
sixth exception
[52]
The first plaintiff’s sixth exception
was stated in the following terms in paragraphs 25 – 30 of
their notice of
exception:
‘
25
In response to the Plaintiffs’ allegation in paragraph 9.1 of
the particulars of claim (to the effect
that Stillwell, Kemper and
Burke fraudulently backdated the signature date of the agreement to
reflect a signature date of 9 May
2016, when in fact it was signed on
or about 14 and 16 September 2016), in paragraph 5.1 of the amended
plea the Defendant admits
that the agreement was back-dated to
reflect 9 May 2016 as the signature date.
26 In
paragraph 7 of the amended plea the Defendant pleads that the
backdating of the agreement to 9 May 2016
occurred “pursuant to
and against the backdrop of the following facts:”, being the
allegations contained in paragraphs
7.1 to 7.10.
27 In
paragraph 7.3 of the amended plea the Defendant pleads reference to a
period up to and including October
2018.
28 In
paragraph 7.10 the Defendant pleads reference to an event which
allegedly occurred in November 2016.
29 On
the face of it, events which post-date September 2016 do not and
cannot have any relevance to the backdating
of an agreement to 9 May
2016 of an agreement concluded in September 2016.
30
Accordingly, these allegations are vague and the Plaintiffs are
embarrassed in pleading thereto.’
[53]
Paragraph 7 of the defendant’s plea
reads as follows:
‘
7.
The conclusion of the Agency Agreement and the insertion at the
instance of the first plaintiff’s duly
authorised
representative, Mr Kemper, of the date of 9 May 2016 as the signature
date occurred pursuant to and against the backdrop
of the following
facts:
7.1.
the first plaintiff and its products were not known in the United
States of America or Canada prior to October
2015;
7.2.
the first applicant had no agent or representative in the USA or
Canada prior to October 2015;
7.3.
during the period October 2015 to October 2018 the first plaintiff
allowed the defendant to represent itself
as ‘Infovest USA’,
to sell the first plaintiff’s products in the USA and Canada
and approved such representation
and sales by the defendant;
7.4.
after discussions beginning in October 2015, during November 2015 the
commercial collaboration between the
first plaintiff and the
defendant and the defendant acting as the first plaintiff’s
agent in the USA and Canada, had developed
and solidified
sufficiently for the terms of such collaboration and agency to be
included in a document drawn up by the first plaintiff’s
representatives and termed ‘Heads of Agreement’, a copy
of which is attached hereto and marked “A”. The
Heads of
Agreement will be referred to hereinafter as ‘the HOA’;
7.5.
during the period 1 March 2016 to 7 March 2016 the plaintiffs’
duly authorised representatives, Messrs
Wheatley, Peddar and Kemper
in particular, together with the defendant’s Mr Stillwell,
developed certain rules (hereinafter
the “Rules of Engagement’)
to regulate the commercial collaboration between the first plaintiff
and the defendant and
to regulate the sale of the first plaintiff’s
products in the USA and Canada by the defendant, acting as agent of
the first
plaintiff. This included the understanding that any
opportunities uncovered by sales people of the second plaintiff and
related
companies (e.g. StatPro Inc. and Statpro Canada Inc) for the
first plaintiff’s products in USA and Canada would be passed
exclusively to the defendant. A copy of the Rules of Engagement,
accepted and approved by the first and second plaintiffs and the
defendant, is attached hereto and marked “B”;
7.6.
the first and second plaintiffs and the defendant all considered
themselves bound by the HOA (from November
2015 to 15 September 2016)
and the Rules of Engagement (from March 2016 to 15 September 2016)
and acted in a manner consistent
with them being bound by the terms
thereof;
7.7.
the first and second plaintiffs and the defendant all gave effect to
the HOA (from November 2015 to 15 September
2016) and the Rules of
Engagement (from March 2016 to 15 September 2016);
7.8.
from November 2015 to 15 September 2016 the defendant acted as the
first plaintiff’s sole agent in
the USA and Canada;
7.9.
from November 2015 to 15 September 2016 the defendant promoted,
marketed and sold the first plaintiff’s
products in the USA and
Canada and rendered services to the purchasers of the first
plaintiff’s products on behalf of the
first plaintiff; and
7.10. in November
2016 the first plaintiff paid fees to the defendant in accordance
with the HOA and the Rules of Engagement,
fees arising from the sale
of the first plaintiff’s products to Triasima Portfolio
Management Inc (hereinafter ‘Triasima’),
this being the
defendant’s first client that they signed on.’
[54]
There is no merit in the first plaintiff’s
complaint. The course of conduct pleaded in subparagraph 7.3 of the
plea was a
continuing course of conduct that commenced before the
execution of the Agency Agreement and continued after it. There is
nothing
vague or embarrassing about the allegation. It is the
continuing course of conduct that formed part of the alleged
‘backdrop’
to the execution of the agreement. That it
continued for a period after the execution of the agreement is
neither here nor there.
Similarly, the payment of fees in November
2016 alleged in subparagraph 7.10 is conduct by the first plaintiff
related to the HOA
alleged concluded in November 2015, well before
the execution of the Agency Agreement in September 2016. The relevant
‘backdrop’
is not only the conclusion of the HOA but also
the parties’ performance in terms of the HOA. It is immaterial
in the context
of the pleaded facts that the alleged performance
post-dated the execution of the Agency Agreement.
[55]
The sixth exception will therefore be
dismissed.
Costs
[56]
The overall result of the exception
proceedings is a mixed bag. The first plaintiff has been
substantially successful with regard
to its exceptions to the
defendant’s claim in reconvention, but unsuccessful in respect
of its exceptions to the defendant’s
plea. The focus of
argument at the hearing and in the heads of argument was,
understandably, on the questions whether the defendant
had made out
causes of action in respect of the relief claimed in prayers 3, 4 and
5 of the claim in reconvention, matters in respect
of which the
plaintiffs have proven to be successful. In all the circumstances I
consider that it would be just to order that the
defendant pay 75
percent of the first plaintiff’s costs of suit in the exception
proceedings.
[57]
An order will issue in the following terms:
1.
The first plaintiff’s exceptions (ie
the abovementioned first and second exceptions) to the claims in
prayers 3, 4 and 5 of
the defendant’s amended claim in
reconvention, dated 25 May 2022, on the grounds that no causes of
action are made out, are
upheld.
2.
Insofar as remains necessary, the
abovementioned fourth exception to the defendant’s amended
claim in reconvention on the
ground of vagueness and embarrassment is
also upheld.
3.
Insofar as remains necessary, the
abovementioned third exception to the defendant’s amended claim
in reconvention on the ground
of vagueness and embarrassment is
dismissed.
4.
The abovementioned fifth and sixth
exceptions to the defendant’s amended plea dated 25 May 2022
are dismissed.
5.
The defendant is afforded 20 days from the
date of this order to further amend its claim in reconvention.
6.
The defendant shall be liable to pay 75
percent of the first plaintiff’s costs of suit in the exception
proceedings.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Excipient
/First plaintiff’s counsel: I.
J. Muller
SC
Excipient/Plaintiffs’
attorneys: Bowman
Gilfillan Inc
Cape Town
Respondent
/ Defendant’s counsel: D.J.
Coetsee
Respondent
/ Defendant’s attorneys: Adams
& Adams Attorneys
Cape Town
[1]
‘
From
the time of the delay’. ‘
Mora
’
is the Latin word for ‘delay’.
[2]
The
arithmetical calculation in para 91.3 of the claim in
reconvention appears in any event to be incorrect, but nothing
turns
on that for current purposes.
[3]
Drawing
on the authorities cited in footnotes 7 – 12,
Barkhuizen
supra,
Bredenkamp
& others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2010
(4) SA 468
(SCA
),
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
1989
(1) SA (A)
and
Potgieter
& another v Potgieter NO & others
2012
(1) SA 637
(SCA)
.
[4]
Magna
Alloys & Research (SA) (Pty) Ltd. v Ellis
[1984]
ZASCA 116; 1984 (4) SA 874 (A).
[5]
In
paragraph [21].
[6]
Cf.
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority SA
[2005] ZASCA 73
(9 September 2005);
[2006] 1 All SA 6
(SCA);
2006
(1) SA 461
(SCA), at para 3.
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