Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 333South Africa
Wafai and Others v SA Casual Dining Concepts (Pty) Ltd and Another (7609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 333 (6 December 2023)
Headnotes
judgment does not require an examination of the intricacies of Microsoft Word’s track changes function. Rather it turns on the remedies available when one party claims a contract existed and it cancelled it, and the other claims there was no contract at all.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Wafai and Others v SA Casual Dining Concepts (Pty) Ltd and Another (7609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 333 (6 December 2023)
Wafai and Others v SA Casual Dining Concepts (Pty) Ltd and Another (7609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 333 (6 December 2023)
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sino date 6 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 7609/2023
# In the matter between:
In the matter between:
# AMIR WAFAI
AMIR WAFAI
# MYRELL WAFAI
MYRELL WAFAI
# ARIANOGEN
(PTY) LTD
ARIANOGEN
(PTY) LTD
# FIRST APPLICANT
FIRST APPLICANT
SECOND
APPLICANT
THIRD
APPLICANT
AND
SA
CASUAL DINING CONCEPTS (PTY) LTD
STELIO
NATHANAEL
FIRST
RESPONDENT
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Dates
of Hearing:
16 November 2023
Date
of Judgment:
6 December 2023
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
Look out for track changes. That seems to be the lesson others
should learn from this case. Sadly, this application for summary
judgment does not require an examination of the intricacies of
Microsoft Word’s track changes function. Rather it turns on
the
remedies available when one party claims a contract existed and it
cancelled it, and the other claims there was no contract
at all.
### A Franchise Deal Falls
Apart
A Franchise Deal Falls
Apart
[2]
The First Applicant (
Mr Wafai
) and the Second Applicant
(
Mrs Wafai
) are married in community of property. In 2022,
they decided to buy a chicken restaurant franchise. They partnered
with the Second
Respondent (
Mr Nathanael
) to purchase a
Chicking franchise from the First Respondent (
Casual Dining
).
(Mr Nathanael was also the director of Casual Dining.) Chicking, for
those unfamiliar, is a chicken fast food restaurant that
serves
everything from pizzas to wings, rice to wraps, and burgers to
buckets.
[3]
The Wafais first paid a refundable deposit of R250 000 to
Casual Dining. Mr Wafai and Mr Nathanael then formed a company –
the Third Applicant (
Arianogen
) – as the vehicle to own
that franchise. Casual Dining would hold 51% in Arianogen, the Wafais
would hold the other 49%,
and the Wafais would be the only directors.
The heart of the agreement was that Arianogen would pay Casual Dining
R901 600
for the Chicking franchise (the R250 000 deposit
would count as part of that payment if the franchise agreement was
concluded).
[4]
The dispute arises because of changes Mr Wafai made to Casual
Dining’s standard franchise agreement. Mr Nathanael sent Mr
Wafai the standard agreement by email. He sent it in Microsoft Word
because Mr Wafai indicated his attorneys may wish to propose
changes.
Mr Nathanael said he did so on the express understanding that any
alterations to the standard agreement would be pointed
out.
[5]
The Applicants’ version is that the standard form
agreement did not reflect what they had understood the agreement to
be because
it made no provision for Casual Dining to provide a point
of sale system as part of the franchise. Mr Wafai amended the
standard
agreement to include clause 5.1, which provided that Casual
Dining “shall, at its cost, provide a turnkey operation to the
Franchisee, which includes, inter alia, the construction of the
store, and supply all equipment thereto.” They claim the
change
“was clearly marked up and visible to the Defendants. The
changes which had been made to the Franchise Agreement were
patent
and in any event readily visible in Microsoft Word”.
[6]
Mr Nathanael received the document, but
claims that the changes were not brought to his attention, and he was
unaware that any changes
had been made to it. He thought it was just
the standard agreement. On that basis he signed it on behalf of
Casual Dining and the
Wafais signed on behalf of Arianogen.
[7]
The parties then went about implementing the agreement. The
Wafais paid the balance of the R901 600. They looked for a
location.
Initially, they planned to set up shop on Long Street, but
the Wafais thought their restaurant would do better in Salt River.
There
is a dispute about whether Mr Nathanael agreed to this move
South, but nothing turns on it. Arianogen signed a lease for the Salt
River premises. And the Wafais signed a surety to guarantee that
Arianogen would pay its rent under the lease. For its part, Casual
Dining paid for an architect to prepare drawings for the franchise,
which the architect did.
[8]
Things seemed to be going according to plan. Then the
Applicants indicated that they expected, in terms of the contract
that had
been signed, that Casual Dining would provide the point of
sale system. Mr Nathanael was surprised, as the standard form
agreement
did not require Casual Dining to do so. Then he discovered
clause 5.1.
[9]
On 23 November 2022, Casual Dining wrote to the Applicants. It
claimed Casual Dining had not contemplated the clause, that it had
been “‘discreetly’ inserted”, and accused the
Wafais of “taking a ‘fat chance’ to acquire
a free
business”. It explained that Casual dining “is not in the
business of providing free franchised businesses to
franchisees and
this was clearly not what the Franchisor intended”. As a result
“there was no common intention, nor
a meeting of the minds
regarding the terms of the Franchise Agreement”. Casual Dining
therefore terminated the agreement.
But it left open the possibility
of continuing with the franchise if the Wafais were willing to
conclude “a standard Chicking
franchise agreement”.
[10]
The Applicants’ attorney responded on 21 December 2022.
They denied they had surreptitiously inserted the offending clause.
But they too indicated that they wished to proceed with the
agreement. On their version, they refused to accept what they
regarded
as Casual Dining’s repudiation of the franchise
agreement. Unfortunately, the parties failed to reach any new
agreement.
[11]
Instead in May 2023, the Wafais and Arianogen launched an
action against Casual Dining and Mr Nathanael consisting of three
claims:
[11.1]
The
return of the R901 000 that the Wafais had paid;
[1]
[11.2]
Damages caused to them as guarantors for Arianogen’s
obligations under the lease agreement; and
[11.3]
Loss of profit flowing from representations that Mr Nathanael
is alleged to have made.
[12]
Only the claim for the return of the
R901 000 was pursued in these summary judgment proceedings. The
manner in which that claim
was pleaded is important.
[13]
The Applicants regarded the letter of 23
November 2022 as a repudiation of the franchise agreement. They
initially refused to accept
it. But, so they plead, “the
Defendants persist with their repudiation”. Therefore, in their
particulars of claim,
the Applicants stated that they “have now
elected to accept the aforesaid cancellation/repudiation”. As a
result they
claim that they “are entitled to restitution of the
R901 000 which they paid to” Casual Dining. It is a claim
for cancellation and restitution.
[14]
The Respondents opposed the action and
filed a plea. How did they answer the claim for restitution? They
admit receiving the R901 600.
They admit that the franchise
agreement was signed.
[15]
But they deny that the written agreement
reflected the actual agreement between the parties. They allege that
the parties agreed
that no alterations to the standard agreement
would be made unless they were expressly pointed out to the other
party. They deny
that the alterations the Applicants made were
clearly visible, or were pointed out to Casual Dining. And they deny
that Casual
Dining accepted the alterations.
[16]
They plead that Arianogen or Mr Wafai
“misrepresented to the defendants that the contract was
unaltered,
alternatively
,
failed to point out to the defendants the respects in which the
document was altered while it/they had a legal obligation to do
so
before the signature thereof”.
[17]
The Respondents also deny that the
Applicants cancelled the franchise agreement – if there was an
agreement, then the Respondents
claim they cancelled it in the letter
of 23 November 2022. They also pleaded that Arianogen “has
failed to tender restitution
of the benefits which it had received
under the alleged franchise agreement and accordingly is legally
precluded from claiming
restitution.”
[18]
The Respondents do not expressly deny that
there was an agreement. However, to my mind, the plea is open to that
interpretation,
particularly when it is read with the letter of 23
November 2022, and the response to the application for summary
judgment.
### The Application for
Summary Judgment
The Application for
Summary Judgment
[19]
The Applicants now seek summary judgment.
Their argument is that, whether there was a contract or not, and
whoever cancelled the
contract, they are entitled to the return of
the R901 000 they paid, and for which they ultimately received
nothing. They
also contend that their failure to tender the
restitution of benefits does not preclude their claim because the
Respondents failed
to identify any benefits that the Applicants
received from the franchise agreement. “There were none”,
they assert.
[20]
The claim for R901 000 is only against
Casual Dining, and only it opposes the application for summary
judgment. It asserts
the following defences:
[20.1]
There was no consensus and therefore no
contract. The Applicants’ claim is bad because the only claim
they have pleaded depends
on the existence of a contract.
[20.2]
If there is an agreement, the franchise
agreement is voidable due to a misrepresentation by Arianogen
(failing to draw attention
to the track changes). It was Casual
Dining as the innocent party that was entitled to cancel it, which it
did on 23 November 2022.
The Applicants’ purported cancellation
was of no effect.
[21]
Casual Dining also raised certain
preliminary defences:
[21.1]
It argues that the Applicants failed to
comply with rule 32(2)(b) because they did not identify the points of
law they rely on,
or explain why the plea does not raise a defence.
[21.2]
It complains that by claiming for both
restitution of the R901 000, and loss of profit, the Applicants
have impermissibly raised
mutually destructive claims.
[22]
The
basic question in summary judgment proceedings is whether the
respondent has “a defence which is both bona fide and good
in
law”.
[2]
The
prospects the defence will succeed are irrelevant; it need only show
a defence raised in good faith which, if it was established
at trial,
would answer the claim.
[3]
[23]
I do not intend to traverse all Casual
Dining’s defences; there is one that, to my mind, is decisive.
### A Defence to the Pleaded
Claim
A Defence to the Pleaded
Claim
[24]
The Applicants have pleaded a case which
rests on the existence of a contract. They allege that the tracked
amendments were part
of the contract, that Casual Dining refused to
comply with the contract, that it was entitled to cancel the
contract, and it is
now entitled to restitution of the moneys paid.
They have not pleaded a claim, even in the alternative, in unjust
enrichment.
[25]
But Casual Dining denies that contract
exists because Arianogen or Mr Wafai misrepresented the content of
the agreement. Whether
they did or not seems at least arguable based
on what is before me.
[26]
If
they did misrepresent the content of the contract, there are two
possibilities. If the mistake was so fundamental that there
was no
assent at all, then there was no contract and it is void ab initio.
If the mistake was not so fundamental, then Casual Dining
had an
election; to stand by the contract, or claim rescission.
[4]
[27]
I
focus only on the first possibility. Mr Nathanael attests that he
believed he was signing Casual Dining’s standard form
franchise
agreement, and that he would not have signed the agreement had he
known it included the new clause. It seems at least
arguable to me
that this mistake was so fundamental that there was no meeting of
minds, and therefore no contract. There is a significant
difference
between providing a franchise, and providing a “turnkey
operation”. Not only would the cost be different,
the
thing
being
sold is different.
[5]
[28]
If Casual Dining can establish all this at
trial – a misrepresentation, that induced the contract, that
was so fundamental
there was no agreement – then it will have
an absolute defence to the claim as pleaded. That claim is framed as
one for restitution.
It relies on the existence of the contract, and
the cancellation of that contract by Arianogen. If there was no
contract, the claim
for cancellation and restitution must fail.
[29]
The Applicants do not contend that it will
not be possible at trial for Casual Dining to establish that there
was no contract. They
argue it would make no difference because they
would still be entitled to the return of the R901 000. But it
does
make a difference. If there is no contract, then the Applicant’s
case – as pleaded – will fail.
[30]
The Applicants likely have an alternative
claim of unjust enrichment. They could plead an alternative claim
that, if there was no
contract because there was no meeting of the
minds, that Casual Dining has been unjustifiably enriched by
R901 000, and they
are entitled to payment of that amount. But
the Applicants have
not
pleaded that case. They have only pleaded a case resting on
cancellation of a contract. To that case, the Respondents have a bona
fide defence.
[31]
It is not necessary to consider the merits
of the Respondents’ technical defences to summary judgment, or
the bona fides of
its other defences on the merits. The existence of
one bona fide defence is enough to justify refusing summary judgment.
[32]
There is no reason that costs should not
follow the result. Casual Dining sought a special costs award in
terms of rule 32(9)(a).
I do not think such an order is justified.
While I do not uphold the application for summary judgment, I do not
believe it was
abusive in the manner that rule contemplates.
[33]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1.
That the application for summary judgment
is dismissed.
2.
That the Applicants shall pay the First
Respondent’s costs.
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicants:
Adv
P Tredoux
Attorneys
for Applicants
JG
Swart Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for First Respondent:
Adv
BH Steyn
Attorneys
for Applicant
Christo
Coetzee Attorneys
[1]
The extra R600 seems to have got lost somewhere along the way.
[2]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1979
(1) SA 418
(A) at 426C.
[3]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 624
(WCC) at para 13.
[4]
Brink v
Humphries & Jewell (Pty) Ltd
2005
(2) SA 419
(SCA) at para 2 (“The law recognises that it would
be unconscionable for a person to enforce the terms of a document
where
he misled the signatory, whether intentionally or not. Where
such a misrepresentation is material, the signatory can
rescind
the contract because of the misrepresentation, provided he
can show that he would not have entered into the contract if he had
known the truth. Where the misrepresentation results in a
fundamental mistake, the 'contract' is void
ab
initio.
”)
[5]
See, for example,
Maresky
v Morke
L
1994 (1) SA 249
(C) where mistake as to the nature of the merx meant
the contract was void ab initio.
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