Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 232South Africa
Massbuild (Pty) Ltd t/a Builders Warehouse v Bold Moves 379 (Pty) Ltd and Others (1022/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 232 (31 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Massbuild (Pty) Ltd t/a Builders Warehouse v Bold Moves 379 (Pty) Ltd and Others (1022/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 232 (31 August 2023)
Massbuild (Pty) Ltd t/a Builders Warehouse v Bold Moves 379 (Pty) Ltd and Others (1022/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 232 (31 August 2023)
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sino date 31 August 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: 1022/2021
In
the matter between:
MASSBUILD
(PTY) LTD T/A BUILDERS
Plaintiff
WAREHOUSE
And
BOLD
MOVES 379 (PTY) LTD
First
Defendant
ANDREW
STUART
Second
Defendant
MORNE
GARDINER
Third
Defendant
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY DELIVERED
31
AUGUST 2023
Baartman,
J
[1]
The
Plaintiff issued summons claiming R1 096 433.10 plus interest for
building materials sold and delivered at the instance of the
first
defendant.
The
claim
against
the
second
and
third
defendant
are based
on suretyships. It was in issue whether the first defendant had
entered into a valid credit agreement with the plaintiff.
It was
common cause that the provisions of the National Credit Act
[1]
were not applicable to the agreement.
[2]
The trial commenced before Papier J, who
became indisposed after the
evidence was led. The parties agreed that I should finalise the
matter. Although, I have not had the
benefit of observing the
witnesses, I had access to the transcript and the parties argued the
matter before me. I deal with the
evidence led to the extent
necessary for this judgment.
[3]
It is common cause that the Human Settlements
department of the
Eastern Cape
(the Department)
had awarded a tender to build 1
500 low-cost houses in rural areas to Vuikani Construction and
Transport (Pty) Ltd
(Vuikani)
as the main contractor. Vuikani
ran into trouble when it lost approximately R5 million worth of
building material that the plaintiff
had delivered to it. Vuikani's
credit facility with the plaintiff was overdrawn and the plaintiff
refused further deliveries. The
first defendant came on board as a
subcontractor to build 200 units and rescue the project. The first
defendant successfully applied
for a credit facility with the
plaintiff and the second and third defendants stood surety. The
plaintiff delivered materials as
requested and the account was
initially duly paid.
[4]
It is common cause that R1 096 433.10
is outstanding on the facility.
It is the plaintiff's case that the first defendant is responsible
for the debt. On the contrary,
the defendants allege that either
Vuikani or Tusk Construction Support Services
(Tusk)
is liable
to settle the debt. The defendants sought to join Vuikani and Tusk to
these proceeding through a joinder application.
However, the
plaintiff opposed that application and suggested that third party
proceedings were the appropriate route. The defendants
withdrew the
joinder application, apparently to initiate third party proceedings
but they failed to do so.
# The plaintiff's evidence
The plaintiff's evidence
## [5]
Ms Singh, a director of Tusk, explained that she
dealt with
'compliance and risk for Builders Warehouse' a partner of Tusk. She
said the following about Tusk:
[5]
Ms Singh, a director of Tusk, explained that she
dealt with
'compliance and risk for Builders Warehouse' a partner of Tusk. She
said the following about Tusk:
'Tusk... we have three
different programmes that run under Tusk. The ...backbone of our
company is the finance management and support
programme. This is
where we assist SMME contractors or emerging contractors with
bridging finance and funding in order to facilitate
them with their
projects and we have two other departments or programmes...
We run two other
programmes within Tusk, which is the management programme and this
assists all the departments in government towards
managing their
portfolios in terms of construction and we also have a department
which we deal with condition assessment. .. '
## [6]
Ms Singh said the following about the relationship
between Tusk and
the first defendant:
[6]
Ms Singh said the following about the relationship
between Tusk and
the first defendant:
##
'With construction
project[s] it is not easy for a contractor to have funding upfront to
quote when they have been awarded a project.
They do not have access
perhaps to a material facility so Tusk steps in through our
partnerships to enable [a] contractor to perform
and complete his
projects by assisting him with materials on credit through the
partnership as well as assisting him with his labour
payments through
the other partner as the financial arm of the programme '
## [7]
She said the following about the contract
that forms the subject of
this litigation:
[7]
She said the following about the contract
that forms the subject of
this litigation:
##
'The first defendant was
introduced to Tusk by the main contractor so the first defendant is a
subcontractor or was a subcontractor
to the main contractor Vuikani
and Vuikani was a client of Tusk at that point. '
## [8]
Ms Singh said the following regarding a document
headed 'Construction
Support Services Agreement':
[8]
Ms Singh said the following regarding a document
headed 'Construction
Support Services Agreement':
##
'This is a document
entered into between the first defendant... and Tusk. It is a support
services agreement which is signed at
the beginning before Tusk
provides any assistance, whether facilitating material or funding to
[first defendant]. It sets out the
responsibilities and expectations
of each party in this agreement.'
## [9]
Among others, the agreement provides as follows:
[9]
Among others, the agreement provides as follows:
'[The first defendant
(applicant)] hereby appoints Tusk and Tusk agrees to provide [first
defendant] administration and support
services....
[The first defendant]
shall do nothing to represent to any person that it acts as an agent
of Tusk or is authorised to bind Tusk
to any transaction '
## [10] Ms
Singh elaborated:
[10] Ms
Singh elaborated:
'So under this duties of
Tusk, Tusk actually assists the contractor in drawing up a budget.
... we look at the income on the project,
we look at what the labour
costs would be, what their material costs would be in order to
complete the project and of course ensure
that the contract has
profit. Tusk also assists with all the administration duties on
the project. This means we assist with
facilitation of the materials.
We reconcile their accounts on the material orders for them
specifically. We attend and our professionals
attend site visits with
the contractor just to ensure that we provide support and if anything
- issues or challenges arise on site
we are able to lend a hand and
advise the contractor how he should proceed.'
## [11] In
respect of material, the agreement provides as follows:
[11] In
respect of material, the agreement provides as follows:
'Tusk shall have the
right but not the obligation to order any material, labour, plant, or
any other items necessary to carry out
the project. In so doing Tusk
may act as [the first defendant's] agent and will be duly authorised
to bind [the first defendant]
in the placing of such orders.'
## [12] The only exception
would be as follows:
[12] The only exception
would be as follows:
' in extreme
circumstances we would order materials without consent of the
contractor. That would be an exception if we really
had to do that to
save or if I would say save the project to ensure that the project
can continue.'
## [13] In these
proceedings, the plaintiff has alleged that all orders were placed
with the first defendant's consent. The agreement
further provided
that '[the first defendant] shall not deny the right of Tusk so to
act... ' The second and third defendants signed
the agreement on
behalf of the first defendant. The agreement before court was not
signed on behalf of Tusk. Ms Singh suggested
that the original would
have been signed by 'our MD which would be kept at our head office in
our security files'. She was sure
that the Construction Support
Services Agreement had been signed on behalf of Tusk and accepted as
binding.
[13] In these
proceedings, the plaintiff has alleged that all orders were placed
with the first defendant's consent. The agreement
further provided
that '[the first defendant] shall not deny the right of Tusk so to
act... ' The second and third defendants signed
the agreement on
behalf of the first defendant. The agreement before court was not
signed on behalf of Tusk. Ms Singh suggested
that the original would
have been signed by 'our MD which would be kept at our head office in
our security files'. She was sure
that the Construction Support
Services Agreement had been signed on behalf of Tusk and accepted as
binding.
##
[14]
Tusk and the first defendant further concluded a 'Procurement Support
Agreement'. Ms Singh said the following about the
second agreement:
'This agreement more
relates to the application that [the first defendant] would have
signed with Builders for their material supplies
and this ties in
with the responsibilities of each party in [first defendant] and Tusk
and how that facilitation of material -
where Tusk fits in with the
facilitation of material and any requirements that emanates from that
agreement.'
## [15] Ms Singh
was adamant that Tusk was a paymaster and a facilitator. She
articulated it as follows:
[15] Ms Singh
was adamant that Tusk was a paymaster and a facilitator. She
articulated it as follows:
##
'... There is no money
from - funds from Tusk in here. We do not provide funding for the
specific project in any way. The requirement
for labour would come
from the other party, Standard Bank, and material would come from in
this instance the Plaintiff, Builders
Warehouse.'
## [16]
Therefore, the agreement provides as follows:
[16]
Therefore, the agreement provides as follows:
'Tusk will raise the
requisition and complete all relevant fields, request for quotations
and Tusk will send out a request for a
quotation to [the plaintiff].'
## [17] Ms Singh
further explained the relationship:
[17] Ms Singh
further explained the relationship:
'...the contractor who is
more involved and also he plays a part in his relationship with the
supplier Builders, he would actually
request the quotation from
Builders on what he requires for his site at that time We
facilitate or assist with the
application in submitting the
application but it is a requirement and this is all done in the name
of the contractor in this instance
(the first defendant].
It is actually the
contractor who prepares his purchase order because the purchase order
needs to be on the contractor's letterhead.
And this was done so the
contractor is aware of the order that he is placing on his letterhead
and his company... '
[18]
Ms Singh clarified the procedure as follows:
'...the contractor would
receive or request his quotation from Builders for the material that
he requires. And together with his
purchase order for that material.
So he would prepare his purchase order verbatim as per the quotation
he received. His purchase
order would have to match the quotation in
value, quantity and description of the items he requires. Tusk
prepares what we call
a payment undertaking and to that payment
undertaking is attached the contractor [the first defendant's]
quotation. This payment
undertaking is signed by the contractor
acknowledging that he is now requesting and placing this order with
Builders and Tusk as
paymaster to facilitate the repayment of that
material once it has been built in, claimed, and paid by the employer
and signed
by the supplier Builders... they would then supply that
specific purchase order received.'
[19]
Ms Singh said that:
'[p]ayment would only
come from funds which had been paid into the account administered by
Tusk. We can only pay those material
once the contractor has put in a
certificate to the employer for payment. That is the only way that
material can be repaid.'
[20]
Ms Singh further said that the first defendant had successfully
applied for a credit facility and that Tusk
had been provided with
the specific account number, 7[…], that only the first
defendant would have been allowed to contract
under. Therefore, Tusk
used that account number only for the first defendant's orders.
[21]
According to Ms Singh, all went well until April 2018 when no further
funds were received in the account from which payments
could be made.
At that stage, the first defendant's account with the plaintiff had
an outstanding debit balance. She was involved
in two unsuccessful
meetings between Vuikani and the defendants to resolve the
outstanding payment issue. She was adamant that
Tusk had only ordered
material on the first defendant's instruction and with a completed
payment instruction signed by first defendant
which served as an
acknowledgment 'that (the first defendant] ordered the material.' She
denied that Tusk ordered material under
the first defendant's account
on behalf of Vuikani.
[22]
Ms Singh said that Mr Gidi was the plaintiff's account manager for
the first defendant's account and that the first defendant
had had
'full access' to the account manager. She said the following about
the account from which payment was to be made:
'Vuikani and Tusk
operated [Standard bank] account with the representatives from both
entities having signing powers. The account
number [in Vuikani's
name] would have been recorded at the Department for payment of funds
on the project. ...payment for suppliers
would be dependent on when
funds came into that account based on work completed by [the first
defendant] and Vuikani.... [Tusk
does not]... withdraw money from
these accounts and pay labour. It has to be done specifically at the
request and on the backing
of a certificate for work that has been
done and this Revolving Account is opened in the name of Vuikani.
Again, because they were
still the main contractor on the account. It
was not Tusk who would just draw money from these accounts.'
## [23]
Ms Singh conceded that the first defendant could not deal directly
with
the Department and gave the following explanation:
[23]
Ms Singh conceded that the first defendant could not deal directly
with
the Department and gave the following explanation:
'The
certificate for work done would - because Vuikani is the main
contractor the certificates for work done by [the first defendant]
would have been submitted by Vuikani. [The first defendant] did not
submit their certificates directly to the Department for work
done.
So in terms of actually - if money is received then we are guided by
[the first defendant] and Vuikani as to who actually
had done work on
that particular certificate and lies with contractor [the first
defendant] and Vuikani to discuss and to advise
who actually did work
on each certificate and how the funds should be distributed. It
was not for Tusk to decide who needs
to be paid and how much everyone
needs to be paid.'
[24]
Ms Singh did not deviate from her evidence-in-chief despite thorough
cross-examination.
She said that Eduan Naude was a shareholder of
Tusk at times relevant to this judgment, although he was not involved
in the day-to-day
activities as a director. Mr van Tonder, a former
employee, was no longer involved in Tusk.
[25]
She could not confirm that Mr Naude had done a reconciliation from
which
it appeared that Vuikani owed
the first defendant R1 257 443.37. Nor could she confirm
that a representative of the first defendant, Mr Hilton Chapman
senior, Mr Naude and Mr Sibusisu on behalf of Vuikani had met in
2020
to discuss the first defendant's claim against Vuikani.
[26]
Mr Gidi, the second witness for the plaintiff, one of the plaintiffs
external
sales representatives, looked after the first defendant's
account. He explained his duties as follows:
'It means I would get
enquiries from [the first defendant] do quotations, do invoices. And
visit the site.'
[27]
He was not, however, involved in the credit application; he only got
involved
when the first defendant placed its first order with the
plaintiff. The first defendant was building 200 low costs houses in
Cala
and Mr Gidi paid weekly visits to the site as part of his
duties. His first visit was after the site had been established and,
on that occasion, the second and third defendants were also on site.
Vuikani also had an account with the plaintiff but when the
first
defendant started building, there was no activity on Vuikani's site
and no orders had been received from Vuikani's site.
[28]
Mr Gidi said that Vuikani had a contract for 1 500 houses of which
the first
defendant would complete 200 at its site in Cala. He said
the following about first defendant's process when placing orders:
'I would get a
requisition from the third defendant and I would do a quotation. ...I
would do a quotation as per the requisition,
send a quotation to the
third defendant [to whom he referred as Morne] and [he] would put the
quotation with his order and send
it to Tusk for a payment
undertaking.
I would get an email
saying loaded, that means I need to invoice and order what needs to
be ordered and facilitate delivery.'
[29]
He said from his weekly site visits, it was apparent the first
defendant had used the materials ordered for
the 200 dwellings at the
Cala site. He claimed that he had established good relations with the
first defendant's directors in the
2 years that they were on site in
Cala as he was in daily telephonic contact with them.
[30]
Unexpectedly, the orders dried up. He learnt from the third defendant
that there had been 'issues with the
account and that they were busy
sorting it out...' Mr Gidi had no further involvement with the first
defendant or with Vuikani.
Cross-examination did not elicit anything
more from Mr Gidi.
[31]
Mr Jeffrey Friend, the plaintiff's regional key accounts manager, was
the last witness for the plaintiff.
He was introduced to the first
defendant in 2016. On that occasion, he was on site visits in the
area and paid the first defendant's
site a visit. At that stage, the
first defendant was approximately 10% into its project. He denied
that he had been involved in
persuading the first defendant to take
on the project.
[32]
In cross-examination, he said that he was not involved in this Tusk
project.
He did not know the detail of the agreement between Tusk and
the first defendant but volunteered the following:
'... Tusk coordinates the
project we supply the materials the certificates which are
lodged with the contractor go via Tusk
to the department. The
department pays the money into a joint bank account which are held
between Tusk and the contractor and after
that Tusk then distribute:.
the funds to Standard Bank, ourselves, they take their fee, and they
pay the contractor the balance.'
[33]
Mr Friend did not know whether the first defendant had been
approached by Mr
van Tonder to assist Vuikani.
# The defence witnesses
The defence witnesses
[34]
The third defendant had been in the building industry for 30 years
and was a director
of the first defendant at times relevant to these
proceedings. He said that the first defendant was 'specifically
created to do
Government contracts, RDP housing, hospitals - all that
kind of project.' He said the following about the first defendant's
involvement
in the project:
'We were obviously
working in RDP housing projects in the Eastern Cape doing work for
other companies, and we met Jurgen van Tonder.
... representative of
Tusk at some of the sites that they were involved with at the
time....2016... We were involved with projects
there in Cala for
another contractor, ... [van Tonder] approached us in July 2016 and
told us that they had run into trouble with
the contract of Vuikani
in the Cala area and if we would not be able to assist them to try
and resolve the issues there.
We then were explained
the whole Tusk facility that materials would be supplied by Massmart,
the labour money would be withdrawn
from their Standard Bank partner
to keep the production going. The claims then paid by Government
would go into a Vuikani/Tusk
account, whereas Tusk will pay then the
supplier, Massmart, and we will get our labour portion, as we were
appointed as labour
only contractors. We had to supply the plant, the
truck, the materials would be delivered to a central point in the
Cala Ward and
it was our responsibility to move the materials where
needed and to utilise the materials and put it into milestones. The
claim
would then be processed, sent to the Department for payment,
and the Department would pay the joint account of Vuikani and Tusk.'
[35]
He understood that Vuikani had run into trouble due to lack of
expertise and had lost R5 million worth of
material that had been
delivered at its request. They met the main contractor and discussed
the way forward. Importantly, he said,
'and we signed all the
necessary documents' being the subcontract agreement that Tusk had
drafted. The plaintiff was not represented
at that meeting as it
intended to use Vuikani's credit facility. However, the facility was
overdrawn and they could not get materials
to operate profitably at
the Cala site.
[36]
Tusk then suggested that a credit application be done for the first
defendant. So, in September 2016, Mr
van Tonder brought the necessary
documents to complete for the credit application which documents were
signed on site. He bemoaned
the process as follows:
'[no credit checks were
done] Nothing whatsoever, because it was never our responsibility for
material. What happened to Vuikani,
if they made it clear to me that
I was going to be responsible for material in the rural villages
there is no ways I would have
been or would have gotten myself
involved in that contract. Because it was a Tusk facility the
responsibility was always going
to be with Tusk, as they have put it
in the ABC.'
[37]
The third defendant acknowledged that he had signed the agreements at
issue in these proceedings. Thereafter,
Tusk prepared quarterly
budgets for the first defendant. However, the first defendant did not
receive monthly statements before
there was a short fall, 2 years
into the project. He further confirmed that claims were submitted
through Vuikani as the main contractor
with the Department. He
insisted that the first defendant was only a labour subcontractor
although he confirmed the order process
as Mr Gidi had testified.
[38]
Sadly, he said there should have been sufficient funds to complete
the project as 'Government projects are profitable
projects if
managed correctly because Government always pays.' He said that
Vuikani owed the first defendant R1.2 million and once
that had been
paid, the first defendant would settle the account with the
plaintiff.
[39]
In cross-examination, he said that the second defendant had completed
the credit application in his presence.
He admitted the first
defendant’s resolution authorising him and the second defendant
to represent it in concluding the credit
application. He conceded
that he knew that he was required to 'stand as surety and bind
[himself] as surety on the document.' He
signed to keep the project
going.
[40]
At the time, Mr Dotwana was also a director of the first defendant
and refused
to enter into a suretyship agreement when requested.
Instead, he resigned as he 'told us... he does not want to be
involved with
Tusk... ' The third defendant was adamant that the
first defendant had only been a labour subcontractor- 'R26 000 for
the labour
and multiply that by 200 units and that was our actual
contract value... ' He insisted that Tusk or Vuikani was responsible
to
settle the plaintiff's account and that the first defendant was
not involved in that process.
[41]
Mr Chapman senior, a retired director of the first defendant, said
that the
second and third defendants had approached him to assist
with RDP housing as they needed finance. He agreed. He understood
that
they would provide labour only and that the plant and equipment
were necessary to transport material. He knew that the second and
third defendants had signed the credit application prior to his
involvement. He also knew about Vuikani's misfortunes. He said
that
the third defendant had signed most of the purchase orders although
his son, also one of the first defendant's directors,
had signed
some. He said that the first defendant had completed the required
paperwork and submitted claims to the Department on
behalf of
Vuikani; the Department in turn paid into Vuikani's account from
which Tusk made payment. Later, the second and third
defendants left
the project, leaving the Chapmans to continue. He said that Vuikani
owed the first defendant approximately R1.3
million for work done. He
attended several meetings with representatives of Tusk and Vuikani to
resolve the outstanding issue.
[42]
There was agreement that Vuikani owed the first defendant R1 393
433.30. Vuikani
undertook to settle the debt but paid only R500 000.
The first defendant paid R300 000 to the plaintiff and used the
balance on
another project it had with Vuikani. Mr Chapman said that
if he received further payments from Vuikani, he would pay the
plaintiff
to settle the account. He said that was the agreement
reached among the parties in the meeting leading up to Vuikani
admitting
it owed the first defendant and the latter undertaking to
settle the plaintiff's account from payments received from Vuikani.
[43]
In cross-examination, he said that the first defendant had a labour
contract
with Vuikani, therefore the plaintiff's debt should be
settled by either Vuikani or Tusk. He was adamant that the first
defendant
was not liable to the plaintiff. However, he agreed that
Tusk was only the paymaster and would only handle money that came
into
the joint account. He felt strongly that the reconciliation that
the parties accepted indicated that the first defendant had done
work, submitted claims to the Department and the latter in turn paid
so Vuikani had the money and so should have settled the debt.
The
first defendant built 160 of the 200 houses it had undertaken to
build. He agreed that the first defendant had received approximately
R19 million in respect of the subcontract. Mr Chapman had done a
reconciliation from which it appeared that Vuikani still owed
the
first defendant R1 894 000.
[44]
When pressed, he agreed with the following proposition:
'...in terms of your
budget the price you were getting per unit that was included in your
pricing, the amount that would [be] paid
towards [the first
defendant] into the kitty administered by Tusk, and that amount
included R19 million included materials and
labour.'
[45]
Mr Chapman was adamant that Vuikani owed the first defendant
approximately
R1.8 million and that upon receipt of it, the first
defendant would settle the debt owed to the plaintiff. He would also
accept
the outstanding amount from Tusk and settle the plaintiffs
account. He said that Tusk should not have run out of money unless it
had used the money for another project - there was no excuse for the
shortfall.
# Discussion
Discussion
[46]
It is common cause that the plaintiff is owed the amount claimed for
material delivered to the first defendant's
site at its request. It
is further common cause that the first defendant's representatives
authorised each payment that Tusk made
in respect of materials. It
follows that the first defendant conducted its business in accordance
with the terms of the agreement
with the plaintiff. The second and
the third defendants realised that the first defendant needed its own
credit facility when they
could not obtain material through Vuikani's
facility. They had been in the building industry for many years and
understood the
import of the agreements they entered into. The
defendants appeared to have a legitimate dispute with Tusk and
Vuikani but failed
to join them to these proceedings. I am not called
upon to pronounce on the merits or demerits of that failure.
Nevertheless, the
defendants cannot use their dispute with third
parties to escape the obvious consequences of the failure to have
performed in terms
of the first defendant's credit facility with the
plaintiff.
[47]
Nor can the
second and third defendants avoid the consequences of the suretyship
agreements they entered into. The third defendant
admitted that he
had signed and intended to sign as surety although his signature
appears above 'Witness'. He initially sought
to use that technicality
to escape liability; commendably, once under oath, he fairly conceded
that he had intended to stand surety
as that was necessary to keep
the project going. The plaintiff sought rectification of the 'Deeds
of Suretyship annexed to the
Particulars of Claim to reflect that the
Third Defendant signed the Deed of Suretyship as a surety.'
Rectification presupposes
a common intention
[2]
;
as
indicated, the facts show that the second and third defendants
intended to enter into the suretyship agreements.
[48]
It is inexplicable that the defendants did not foresee the obvious;
their confidence in Vuikani and Tusk to manage the
purse without any
input from them was illogical. Vuikani had mismanaged R5 million
worth of material under the guidance of Tusk.
Therefore Mr Dotwana, a
former director of the first defendant, resigned in the following
circumstances as the third defendant
explained in evidence:
'Third Defendant: He [Mr
Dotwana] just told us verbally that he does not want to be involved
with Tusk because he heard so many
stories about them at the time.'
[49]
I intend to grant the prayer for rectification so that the Deed of
Suretyship annexed to the Particulars
of Claim reflect that the third
defendant signed as 'surety' not 'witness'.
[50]
Ms Seton, the defendants' counsel, correctly submitted that the issue
before court was whether the parties
had entered into a valid credit
agreement. They did. As indicated above, the provisions of the NCA do
not apply to the agreement.
The first defendant requested materials
from the plaintiff in accordance with the terms of the credit
facility it had applied for.
The plaintiff delivered in terms of the
agreement and sought and received payment in terms of the agreement.
The first defendant
indemnified Tusk in each order request.
Therefore, the defendant's claim that Tusk can be held liable for
payment of the plaintiff's
account is illogical.
[51]
Harms AJA
[3]
,
with
reference to the relevant authorities, endorsed the position in our
law as follows:
The law, as a general
rule, concerns itself with the external manifestations, and not the
workings, of the mind of parties to a
contract...
"If, whatever a
man's real intention may be, he so conducts himself that a reasonable
man would believe that he was assenting
to the terms proposed by the
other party, and that other party upon the belief enters into the
contract with him, the man thus
conducting himself would be equally
bound as if he had intended to agree to the other party's
terms."'(internal footnotes
omitted.)
[52]
It is common cause that an amount is owing in respect of material
requested
and delivered. The payment undertaking which H Chapman, one
of first defendant's directors, signed on 3 April 2018 indemnifies
Tusk against 'any claim resulting from the late payment or
non-payment by the Employer of any and all money due... ' The
subjective
reservations that the defendants held do not alter the
consequences of their outward actions and declared intent when they
applied
for the credit facility and acted in accordance with the
terms of the agreement.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[53]
I am
persuaded that the plaintiff has met the civil standard of proof
[4]
and grant the following relief:
(a)
Rectification is granted so that the Deed of Suretyship annexed
to
the Particulars of Claim reflects that the third defendant signed the
Deed of Surety as a 'surety'.
(b)
The first, second and third defendants, jointly and severally,
the
one paying the others absolved, are directed to pay the plaintiff an
amount of R1 096 433.10.
(c)
Interest is due on the judgment amount at the rate of 2% per month,
calculated daily and
compounded monthly from 16 October 2020 to date
of final payment.
(d)
The defendants are to pay the plaintiff's costs of suit on an
attorney and client scale.
Baartman,
J
[1]
National Credit
Act
34
of
2005
(NGA).
[2]
Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty)Ltd (formerly known
as
Sonarep
(SA) (Pty) Ltd) v Pappadogianis
[1992]
2 All SA 114 (A).
[3]
Ibid page 118.
[4]
Pather
and another v Financial Services Board and others
[2017]
4 All SA 666
(SCA).
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