Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 209South Africa
Amandlagcf Construction CC v Tresso Developments (Pty) Ltd and Others (11087/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 209 (17 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
17 August 2023
Headnotes
then Tresso was “unjustly enriched in the equivalent amount as that set out in the payment certificates”.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Amandlagcf Construction CC v Tresso Developments (Pty) Ltd and Others (11087/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 209 (17 August 2023)
Amandlagcf Construction CC v Tresso Developments (Pty) Ltd and Others (11087/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 209 (17 August 2023)
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sino date 17 August 2023
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Referral for oral evidence –
Fishing
expedition
–
Tresso denied existence of contract and liability for payment –
Applicant could not produce agreement
– Whether party
alleging existence of a tacit agreement can show unequivocal
conduct of other party that proves it
intended to enter into a
contract with it – Affidavits failed to set out any cause of
action against Tresso –
Referral application is a naked
attempt to conjure a case for applicant out of nothing –
Referral to oral evidence
refused – Uniform Rule 6(5)(g).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO. 11087/2022
Before: The Hon. Ms
Acting Justice Hofmeyr
Date of hearing: 16
August 2023
Date of judgment: 17
August 2023
In
the matter between:
AMANDLAGCF
CONSTRUCTION CC
Applicant
and
TRESSO
DEVELOPMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
DECA
CONSULTING ENGINEERS CC
Second
Respondent
ANTON
OBERHOLZER
Third
Respondent
JITW
DEVELOPMENTS (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Judgment handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives on email and released to SAFLII.
HOFMEYR AJ:
Introduction
1
Between October and December 2021, the applicant conducted
earthmoving works on
a property in Wellington, Western Cape. The
property is owned by the first respondent, Tresso Developments (Pty)
Ltd.
2
The applicant thought it had a contract with Tresso to conduct the
works. But when
it asked for payment, none was forthcoming.
3
It then sent a demand to Tresso under section 345 of the Companies
Act 61 of 1973.
In response, Tresso denied that it had any contract
with the applicant and said that it was not liable on any basis to
the applicant.
It then went on to explain that what appeared to have
happened is that the third respondent, Mr Anton Oberholzer, had
presented
himself as a representative of Tresso, when he was not one.
4
In a subsequent letter, Tresso further explained that Mr Oberholzer
was, in fact,
the representative of the fourth respondent, JIWT
Developments (Pty) Ltd, and that JIWT Developments had been trying to
buy the
shares in Tresso for some time but the sale of shares
agreement between the shareholders of Tresso and JIWT Developments
had fallen
through. It then said that it had managed to establish
that Mr Oberholzer had been holding himself out as a representative
of Tresso
and purporting to negotiate on behalf of Tresso when he had
no authority to do so. The second letter concluded on the basis that
the applicant’s claim lay against Mr Oberholzer and/or JIWT
Developments and any attempt by the applicant to sue Tresso would
be
opposed.
5
The applicant clearly did not accept Tresso’s
denial of liability and so launched proceedings against Tresso, Mr
Oberholzer,
JITW Developments and the Engineer on the works, Deca
Consulting Engineers CC.
6
It did so on motion. I shall refer to the
application it launched as “the main application”. The
notice of motion claimed
R1,553,682.17 from Tresso, alternatively the
Engineer. The quantum was made up by the amounts in four payment
certificates that
had been issued by the Engineer. Quite remarkably,
despite citing Mr Oberholzer and JITW Developments as the third and
fourth respondents
respectively, the applicant claimed no relief
against them. It said that it was citing them for “any interest
they may have
in the proceedings”.
7
The founding affidavit set out a case of an
alleged written contract that was entered into between the applicant
and Tresso. In
the alternative to the written contract, the applicant
claimed that either “a valid agreement came into being, on the
same
terms and conditions of the Contract, but for the fact that it
was tacitly concluded” or such contract was ratified by Tresso.
8
The claim against the Engineer was pursued in the
alternative to the claim against Tresso and was based on an alleged
breach of
an implied warranty of authority.
9
There was also one sentence in the founding
affidavit to the effect that if the contractual claim against Tresso
was not upheld,
then Tresso was “unjustly enriched in the
equivalent amount as that set out in the payment certificates”.
10
It
is well established in our law that an application may be dismissed
with costs when the applicant should have realised when launching
the
application that a serious dispute of fact was bound to develop.
[1]
The
court has a wide discretion when it determines such a matter.
[2]
11
Tresso opposed the main application and filed an
answering affidavit consistent with the line it had taken in the
prior correspondence.
It said there was no contract between it and
the applicant. It said none of its directors lived near the property
on which the
works had been undertaken and that it did not know about
the earthworks until after they had been completed. It emphasised,
again,
that any claim the applicant may have would lie against Mr
Oberholzer and JITW Developments. It took issue with the fact
that the case had been brought on motion when the applicant clearly
knew there was a material dispute of fact prior to launching
the
case.
12
In response, the applicant did not file a replying
affidavit. Instead, it brought an application for a referral to oral
evidence.
It also sought to amend its notice of motion to pursue an
alternative claim against Mr Oberholzer and JITW Developments.
However,
it did not seek to file any further affidavit despite the
fact that the existing founding affidavit did not set out any factual
basis for a claim against Mr Oberholzer or JITW Developments.
Referral to oral
evidence
13
The applicant’s referral application asks
for the following issues to be referred to oral evidence:
13.1
whether
Tresso expressly or tacitly agreed to, or ratified the contract
referenced at paragraphs 13 to 19 of the founding affidavit
and/or
any other agreement which relates to the works conducted by the
applicant;
13.2
whether Tresso expressly or tacitly mandated or
ratified the Engineer acting as its representative in respect of the
Engineer’s
interactions with the applicant;
13.3
whether Tresso should be held liable for the
applicant’s claim; and
13.4
if the answers to the questions above were in the
negative, whether the Engineer, Mr Oberholzer or JITW Developments
should instead
be held liable for the applicant’s claim.
14
Tresso opposed the referral to oral evidence. It
seeks the dismissal of that application, as well as judgment in its
favour in the
main application.
15
The remaining respondents – the Engineer, Mr
Oberholzer and JITW Developments have not opposed either the main
application
or the referral application.
16
The issues before me at this stage of the
proceedings are twofold:
16.1
whether to grant the application for the issues
identified by the applicant to be referred to oral evidence; and
16.2
whether to grant judgment in favour of Tresso.
17
I have not been asked to determine the main
application in relation to the other respondents and I make no
findings in that regard.
Where I refer to the case against the other
respondents, I do so in order to set out the factual background
against which the referral
application must be determined.
Referrals to oral
evidence
18
In
Herbstein and van
Winsen’s The Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa
,
the learned authors give the following description of the types of
cases in which a court will refuse an application for referral
to
oral evidence:
-
“
when it is clear that the sole purpose of
personal examination would be a fishing expedition designed to elicit
admissions that
might supplement the allegations in the supporting
affidavit”;
-
“
when to accede to a request that oral
evidence should be heard would be to direct a roving inquiry with
very loose and vague terms
of reference”; and
-
“
when
oral evidence would enable an applicant to amplify affidavits by
additional evidence where the affidavits themselves, even
if
accepted, do not make out a clear case but leave the case ambiguous,
uncertain, or fail to make out a cause of action at all”.
[3]
19
Any one of these grounds would be sufficient to
dismiss an application for referral to oral evidence. This case is a
remarkable
example of all three.
20
To explain why this is so requires an analysis of
the affidavits in the main application.
Analysis of the
affidavits
21
The applicant’s case against the Tresso in
the founding affidavit amounts to the following:
21.1
The founding affidavit begins with the averment
that at some point in 2021, Tresso called for tenders to conduct
infrastructure
works at its property in Wellington. However, when
Tresso called for a copy of this alleged advertisement under Rule
35(12), the
applicant said it did not have it.
21.2
The applicant then said that it had responded to
Tresso’s advertisement and submitted a tender. However, when
Tresso called
for a copy of the applicant’s tender under Rule
35(12), the applicant said that it did not have a copy.
21.3
The applicant then stated that it signed a written
agreement in the form of “Contract Data” which included
the General
Conditions of Contract Works (Second Edition, 2010).
However, what precisely “Contract Data” is, is never
explained
in the founding affidavit and when Tresso called for this
document in terms of Rule 35(12), the applicant could not produce it.
Instead, it provided an unsigned copy of that portion of the
“Contract Data” that comprised the General Conditions
of
Contract Works – a standard form agreement.
21.4
The Contract Data and General Conditions of
Contract Works were said to comprise “the Contract”. No
other details were
given about “the Contract”. There was
also no averment dealing with who concluded the Contract on behalf of
Tresso.
Although the founding affidavit said that the Engineer issued
a letter of award on behalf of Tresso, the founding affidavit did
not
explain who, representing Tresso, concluded the contract that
followed the letter of award.
21.5
The only interactions that the applicant said it
had during the time that the Contract was concluded were with the
Engineer.
21.6
The applicant then averred that it performed the
work and the Engineer certified the works.
21.7
The applicant then stated that when it was not
paid, it sent a letter of demand to Tresso in terms of section 345 of
the Companies
Act.
21.8
The response to the demand were the two letters I
referred to at the beginning of this judgment in terms of which
Tresso denied
any liability for the claimed amount and said that it
did not have a contract with the applicant.
21.9
The applicant endeavoured to explain away these
letters by claiming that they did not clearly set out Tresso’s
position. I
return to this issue later, but for now, it suffices to
point out that on any fair reading of the letters, it was abundantly
clear
that Tresso denied any liability for the works and said that it
did not have a contract with the applicant.
21.10
That is the sum total of the case for the
existence of a written agreement between the applicant and Tresso.
21.11
The founding affidavit then jumped to the
applicant’s alternative case. The applicant said that “if
it is discovered
that the Contract was not countersigned by Tresso”,
then the contract was concluded tacitly”. It is important that
I set out the full factual basis for the tacit contract that then
appeared in the founding affidavit verbatim:
“
It
is beyond comprehension that [Tresso] and or its representatives were
unaware of the fact that we had attended to major construction
work
at its property.
It is beyond
comprehension that the Engineer would have taken all these steps
without a mandate from [Tresso], be it in written
form or otherwise.
…
By allowing the Engineer
to contract with the applicant and by making no attempt to stop the
applicant from attending to the works,
[Tresso] had at least tacitly
agreed to the industry standard agreement, as set out in the
Contract. At the very least [Tresso]
ratified the conduct of the
Engineer, and by implication, the Contract”.
21.12
These three sentences are the entire case for a
tacit agreement.
21.13
Our
law is clear on the requirements for a tacit agreement. The question
is whether the party alleging the existence of a tacit
agreement can
show unequivocal conduct on the part of the other party that proves
it intended to enter into a contract with it.
[4]
21.14
Missing from the averments in the founding
affidavit is any indication of when the applicant, itself, entered
into the tacit agreement
with Tresso. The founding affidavit also
gives no attention to when the tacit agreement is alleged to have
been concluded and it
fails to identify with any precision the act or
omission, on the part of Tresso, that gave rise to the tacit
contract. It also
fails to identify who it was at Tresso, whose
conduct is alleged to have given rise to the conclusion of a tacit
contract.
21.15
The case for the conclusion of a tacit agreement
is therefore a preeminent example of speculation. The tacit agreement
is said to
exist on the basis of what it is incomprehensible did not
occur.
22
The founding affidavit was met with an answering
affidavit from Tresso. It said it never entered into any contract
with the applicant.
It said it only came to learn of the earthworks
in mid-January 2022 after they had been completed and when the
applicant was already
off site. It explained that none of the
directors of Tresso lives in or near the property in Wellington.
23
While it is no doubt correct that Tresso might
have provided a fuller account of its version of the facts, it was
answering a case
of the flimsiest kind. It was meeting a case that
said that Tresso had concluded a written agreement with the applicant
but in
circumstances in which the applicant could not produce the
agreement and could not identify anyone at Tresso who was alleged to
have represented Tresso in concluding the agreement. In the
alternative, it was meeting a case that Tresso had tacitly concluded
an agreement for the works without any specific act or omission, on
the part of any representative of Tresso, being identified
as that
which gave rise to the alleged tacit agreement.
24
The applicant did not file a replying affidavit in
the main application. Despite this, Mr Steenkamp, who appeared for
the applicant,
argued that the affidavit supporting the application
for referral to oral evidence also served as the replying affidavit
in the
main application. But the problem with this approach is that
even if I were to adopt an accommodating approach and regard the
affidavit
supporting the referral application as the replying
affidavit in the main application, it still failed to gainsay the
essential
pillars of Tresso’s factual case.
25
The applicant did nothing to dislodge the three
essential facts on which Tresso’s defence was based:
25.1
it did not conclude a contract with the applicant;
25.2
it only learnt of the earthworks after they were
completed; and
25.3
it was Mr Oberholzer who was holding himself out
as being Tresso’s representative when he was not.
26
The applicant’s affidavits therefore failed
to set up the most basic factual case for either a written or tacit
agreement
with Tresso.
27
Its case for ratification was even weaker, if that
is possible. The case for ratification rested on the conclusory
statement that
there was a ratification. But not a single fact was
advanced on the basis of which it could be concluded that Tresso had
ratified
the contract. On the contrary, the correspondence attached
to the founding affidavit showed that Tresso had unequivocally and
consistently
refused to accept liability for the earthworks.
28
The fact of the matter is that the applicant’s
affidavits failed to set out any cause of action at all against
Tresso.
Evaluation of the
referral application
29
Against that backdrop, the referral application
must be seen for what it is: a naked attempt to conjure a case for
the applicant
out of nothing.
30
It would be hard to find a clearer case of a
fishing expedition. Having failed to set out a factual basis for a
claim against Tresso,
after the answering affidavit was filed, the
applicant amended its notice of motion to add a claim against Mr
Oberholzer and JITW
Developments but then put up no factual case for
why they would be liable to the applicant. Instead, it launched a
referral application
in the hope that it would provide the applicant
with the factual case it needed to pursue a claim against these
parties.
31
Finally, the manner in which the applicant
identified the issues for referral to oral evidence, again, exposed
its true motivations.
It sought a referral to oral evidence on
whether Tresso was liable to it and if not Tresso, then which of the
remaining respondents
was liable to it. But these are not discrete
issues to be resolved by a focussed referral to oral evidence; they
are the conclusions
a court is required to reach at the end of the
case.
32
There is no basis to grant the referral
application. It violates every principle that the courts have laid
down for the proper exercise
of their discretion under Uniform Rule
6(5)(g).
The main application
33
That leaves the question whether judgment should
be entered in favour of Tresso in the main application. I have set
out above, the
palpable inadequacies in the applicant’s own
case against Tresso. When those failings are considered alongside the
fact that
the applicant was unable to dislodge any of the pertinent
facts set out by Tresso in its answering affidavit, the result is
inevitable.
The applicant’s case against Tresso must be
dismissed.
34
In the event of its success, Tresso sought costs
of two counsel on an attorney and client scale. I do not see a basis
for the costs
of two counsel. The issues in the case were legally and
factually simple. The applicant was represented by one counsel. I
shall
therefore limit the costs to the costs of one counsel.
35
In
so far as the punitive scale of costs is concerned, in
Public
Protector
,
the Constitutional Court confirmed that costs on an attorney client
scale are usually awarded when a court wishes to mark its
disapproval
at the conduct of a litigant.
[5]
In
this case, the applicant had received two letters from Tresso’s
attorney prior to the litigation in which it stated, in
no uncertain
terms, that it denied any liability to the applicant and informed the
applicant that its claim lay against Mr Oberholzer
and JITW
Developments. It is clear that, at that stage, the applicant knew it
had no case against Tresso because it failed to make
one out in its
own founding affidavit. Despite this, however, it proceeded to launch
the main application.
36
The applicant’s attempt to explain away this
pre-litigation correspondence was nothing short of contrived. It
claimed that
the letters did not disclose Tresso’s response to
the case against it. However, it is not possible to read the letters
and
come away with any understanding other than that Tresso denied
liability to the applicant, refuted the claim that it had a contract
with the applicant, and pointed to Mr Oberholzer and JITW
Developments as the likely defendants.
37
Despite this knowledge, the applicant, for reasons
known best to it, did not bring a case against either Mr Oberholzer
or JITW Developments.
It cited them, but pursued no relief against
them. It later thought that it could cure this problem by amending
its notice of motion
to seek relief against them, but without any
factual case made out for their liability. Instead, it decided to
cure the absence
of any factual case against Mr Oberholzer and JITW
Developments by seeking a referral to oral evidence to enable it to
find a case
against them.
38
This is nothing short of abusive litigation. It
deserves the court’s censure.
Order
39
I therefore make the following order:
(a)
The applicant’s application for a referral
to oral evidence is refused, with costs on an attorney and client
scale.
(b)
The applicant’s main application against the
first respondent is dismissed, with costs on an attorney and client
scale.
K HOFMEYR
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv
J P Steenkamo
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Ryan
Hall Attorneys
First
Respondent's counsel:
Adv
R S van Riet SC
Adv
JL van Dorsten
First
Respondent's attorneys:
DFG
Attorneys
[1]
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949
(3) SA 1155
(T) 1162;
Conradie
v Kleingeld
1950
(2) SA 594
(O) 597;
Blend
v Peri-Urban Areas Health Board
1952
(2) SA 287
(T) 291H-292B, 292C-F;
Adbro
Investment Co Ltd v Minister of the Interior
1956
(3) SA 345
(A) at 349-350, 352;
Seloadi
v Sun International (Bophuthatswana) Ltd
1993
(2) SA 174
(B) 191H-192D
[2]
Food
& Nutritional Products (Pty) Ltd v Neumann
1986
(3) SA 464
(W) 470A-C
[3]
Ciller’s
et al
Herbstein
& van Winsen’s The Civil Practice of the High Courts of
South Africa
5
th
ed
(2009) 463-464
[4]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Metgovis (Pty) Limited
2019
(5) BCLR 533
(CC) para 26
[5]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) para 223
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