Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 64South Africa
Eazi Access Rental (Pty) Ltd and Another v Netpractice (Pty) Ltd (8102/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 64 (3 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 May 2022
Judgment
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## Eazi Access Rental (Pty) Ltd and Another v Netpractice (Pty) Ltd (8102/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 64 (3 May 2022)
Eazi Access Rental (Pty) Ltd and Another v Netpractice (Pty) Ltd (8102/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 64 (3 May 2022)
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THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
8102/2020
In
the matter between:
EAZI
ACCESS RENTAL (PTY)
LTD
First Applicant
EAZI
ACCESS RENTAL HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
and
NETPRACTICE
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
Coram:
Rogers J
Heard
on:
25 April
2022
Delivered:
3 May 2022 (electronically at 09h30)
JUDGMENT
ROGERS
J:
Introduction
[1]
The issue in this case is whether a
sum of R1.6 million, which the applicants lent to the respondent
(Netpractice) in terms of written
loan agreements concluded in
February 2013 and April 2015, is or is not repayable, having regard
to the terms of an enterprise
development agreement (ED agreement)
which they concluded in September 2017. The second applicant was the
initial lender. In July
2016, and with Netpractice’s written
consent, the second applicant’s rights, obligations and
interest in the loan agreements
were ceded and assigned to the first
applicant. Since there is no issue about the first applicant’s
substitution in place
of the second applicant, I shall simply refer
to the applicants as Eazi Access, which is a reference to the first
or second applicant
as the context requires.
Events
leading to conclusion of ED agreement
[2]
What
is in issue is the proper interpretation of the ED agreement. It is,
however, necessary to place the ED agreement in context.
It was to
Eazi Access’ advantage to score points for broad-based black
economic empowerment (BEE) in terms of the Codes
[1]
promulgated in terms of the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment
Act (BEE Act).
[2]
One way in
which Eazi Access could score points was to lend money on favourable
terms to a qualifying beneficiary. Netpractice
was a qualifying
beneficiary. This explains the conclusion of the loan agreements.
[3]
The first loan agreement was
concluded on 22 February 2013. In terms of this agreement, Eazi
Access lent Netpractice R1.2 million.
The money was to be repaid as
and when possible but within 26 months, that is by not later than 22
April 2015. The loan would only
attract interest if not repaid on due
date. One of the default events which would entitle Eazi Access to
take earlier enforcement
action was Netpractice’s failure to
provide Eazi Access with certain documents which Eazi Access needed
for its BEE audits.
Netpractice also gave a warranty that the full
value of the loan, multiplied by 1.25, would be recognised as an
enterprise development
contribution in terms of the BEE Act. In
February 2015 the parties concluded an addendum to extend the
repayment period from 26
to 36 months, that is to 22 February 2016.
[4]
The second loan agreement was
concluded on 28 April 2015. In terms of that agreement, Eazi Access
lent Netpractice R400,000. The
money was to be repaid as and when
possible but within 18 months, that is by not later than 22 April
2015. In all other respects
the second loan agreement was on the same
terms as the first.
[5]
On 19 September 2016 the parties
concluded a further addendum to the first loan agreement, and an
addendum to the second loan agreement.
In terms of these addenda, the
repayment period of the first loan was extended from 36 months to 54
months, that is to 22 August
2017, while the repayment period of the
second loan was extended from 18 months to 30 months, that is to 28
October 2017.
[6]
One can assume that in 2013 and
ensuing years, Eazi Access reaped the benefits of BEE points for
enterprise development, as envisaged
in the loan agreements, while
Netpractice enjoyed the benefit of interest-free loans. The ED
agreement was concluded in mid-September
2017, shortly after the
expiry of the first loan’s repayment date and shortly before
the scheduled expiry of the second loan’s
repayment date.
[7]
The immediate prelude to the
conclusion of the ED agreement was an email which Ms
Shernon
Davis, a “senior transformation facilitator”
with a firm called Transcend, sent to Eazi Access’ Ms Catharina
Delport,
on 11 September 2017. She wrote:
“
Unfortunately
the auditor is requesting an Enterprise Development agreement with
Netpractice, not just the loan agreements.
I will draft one today
and back date it. If you could please assist in getting Megan and
Netpractice to sign this some time this
week?”
The
“auditor” mentioned in this email was the auditor
responsible for Eazi Access’ BEE audit.
[8]
Ms Delport promptly replied, “Not
a problem. I will be on it once you send it through. Think it is
better.” About an
hour later, Ms Davis emailed the draft
agreement to Ms Delport with the message, “Please find attached
for signature.”
Ms Delport immediately forwarded, to
Netpractice’s Mr Mpatle Ditabo, the email thread of her
exchanges with Ms Davis and
the attached draft ED agreement, adding
the following message:
“
Please
can you sign the attached agreement and send back a scanned copy for
myself. This is very important for our BEE audit that
is underway.
Please can you treat the matter with high importance.”
The
next day, 12 September 2017, Mr Ditabo emailed the signed agreement
to Ms Delport with the following message:
“
See
attached. Perhaps we should fit in a meeting sometime. I am sure we
participate in other areas such as your procurement spend
etc and
help you
[sic]
maximise
on the program.”
Ms
Delport’s reply was that Eazi Access was doing a “focus
on development” in October, and that they could arrange
a
meeting then.
[9]
The signing of the ED agreement was
not preceded by any oral discussion or negotiation. I understood both
sides to argue the case
on the basis that the ED agreement came into
existence solely in consequence of the emails set out above.
The
ED agreement
[10]
The ED agreement was styled an
“Enterprise & Supplier Development Agreement” but
counsel were agreed that it did
not contain terms dealing with
“supplier development”. The agreement bore the false
pre-typed signature date of 28
February 2017. Clause 1.1 defined the
“signature date” as “the date of signing of”
the agreement by the
party last signing. An outsider would have
understood the “signature date” to be 28 February 2017,
whereas it was in
truth 11 or 12 September 2017.
[11]
The agreement consists of three
clauses. Clause 1.1 defines the “enterprise development period”
as meaning “the
2017 calendar year period immediately following
the signature date, or such longer period as the parties may agree in
writing”.
Clauses 2 and 3 of the ED agreement read as follows:
“
2
INTRODUCTION
2.1 The parties have
agreed in principle that Eazi Access will assist Netpractice as its
enterprise development beneficiary, toward
enabling the growth and
sustainability of the enterprise for the ‘enterprise
development period’
2.2 The assistance
offered is supported by the following process:
2.2.1
The development plan below was informed by the needs analysis
conducted by the parties (annexure 1).
2.2.2
An enterprise development champion, David Miller, will oversee
the
implementation of the enterprise development and update the
development plan on a 6-month basis.
- Eazi
Access undertakes to offer the following contributions:
Eazi
Access undertakes to offer the following contributions:
Date
Contribution type
Contribution format Contribution value
28
Feb 2017 – 27
Feb
2018
Enterprise Development Support Loan outstanding
R1 600 000
2.3.1
This agreement will remain viable between Eazi Access and
Netpractice
for the next 1 years
[sic]
: 28 February 2017 – 27
February 2018. When this time period expires, an option of a renewed
agreement satisfactory to both
parties exist
[sic]
.
2.3.2
It is to the understanding of Eazi Access and Netpractice
that this
financial support is not repayable to Eazi Access, as long as the
terms and conditions of their enterprise agreement
(i.e. time
commitment and quality of services rendered to Eazi Access) are
adhered to.
2.4 Netpractice as the
enterprise development beneficiary undertakes:
2.4.1
That the company is greater than or equal to 51% black owned.
This
status is evidenced through the empowerment declaration is attached
in annexure 2 to this document.
2.4.2
The company is required to report in so far as is relevant
to the
nature of the contributions received, the use and impact of these
contributions in the business. It is understood that this
information
will be used exclusively for the purposes of accurately recording
Eazi Access’ supplier development reporting.
Specifically, the
following information will be shared with the rating agency:
·
Needs analysis
·
Development program with milestones
·
Schedule of activities to address
development areas
·
Allocated Resources.
2.4.3
The company understands that this offer of support is given
for the
enterprise development period herein defined and does not in any way
obligate Eazi Access for continued support outside
this period.
CONFIDENTIALITY
2.5 The undertaking by
Eazi Access not to disclose the confidential information shall not
apply to any confidential information
which becomes known to Eazi
Access from a third party as a matter of right, or is published or
otherwise becomes public property.
3 SUPPORT CLAUSE
The parties undertake at
all times to act in good faith in their dealings with one another in
regard to this MOU, the negotiation
of the formal agreements, and the
manner in which their future relationships will be conducted.”
The
annexures mentioned in clause 2.2.1 and 2.4.1 were not attached to
the agreement and seemingly never came into existence.
Events
subsequent to conclusion of ED agreement
[12]
Later events may bear on the
interpretation of the ED agreement. In October 2017, Mr Ditabo
emailed Ms Delport about the possibility
of a meeting in Johannesburg
on two particular days. She replied that she was busy in a workshop
on those days and that he should
let her know when he would be in
Johannesburg again.
[13]
On 3 December 2017, Ms Delport
emailed Mr Ditabo as follows:
“
As
you know, the current agreement between Eazi Access Rental and
yourselves has expired and the money was refundable in Oct 2017.
Can you please indicate
if you are in the position to repay the money at this point so I can
take discussions further with my CFO
on the way forward with our
relationship.”
When
Mr Ditabo did not reply, she sent a chasing email on 14 December 2017
as follows:
“
Please
can you reply to my previous email.
Can you please send me
your latest financials and confirm if you are in a position to repay
the loan due to us and by when.
We want to discuss the
way forward with … Netpractice and Eazi.”
On
Monday, 8 January 2018, Ms Delport sent an identical chasing email.
Mr Ditabo replied that he would respond by Wednesday. She
sent him a
reminder on 17 January 2018.
[14]
On 18 January 2018, Mr Ditabo sent
Mr Delport the following email:
“
Please
accept my apologies for the delayed response. I am in between
airports at the moment and only getting back to SA on the 31
st
January.
Otherwise I had a look at
the agreement and recent version we signed seems to [state] end of
February as due date … [Be]
that as it may, we are not in a
position to settle and we would love to extend. I will send you
financials as soon as possible
and perhaps we can also arrange a
meeting on the 1
st
or 2
nd
February.”
[15]
It
is common cause that over the period January 2018 to January 2020
Eazi Access and Netpractice engaged in discussions in an attempt
to
agree further written extensions and addenda, but these were
unsuccessful.
[3]
Mr Ditabo
states that in February 2018 he and Mr Kenneth Jones, a business
development expert, met with Ms Delport and Mr Miller
(the
“enterprise development champion” mentioned in the ED
agreement). Mr Miller was present for only a short while.
As far as
Mr Ditabo could tell, Mr Miller thereafter did nothing in relation to
Netpractice. Mr Ditabo introduced Mr Jones to Ms
Delport as a person
who would interact with Eazi Access for the purpose of generating an
enterprise development plan and agenda
and who would explore possible
procurement opportunities with Netpractice and liaise with Eazi
Access’s IT manager to see
whether Netpractice could provide IT
support to Eazi Access.
[16]
Mr
Ditabo states that, after this meeting, Mr Jones made a series of
attempts to meet with Ms Delport, but she seemed to have no
interest
in Netpractice’s enterprise development and did not respond to
his approaches.
[4]
In reply to
these allegations, Eazi Access’s deponent, Mr Kurt Blaize
Wulfsohn, states that Eazi Access considered using
some of
Netpractice’s software services and applications but they were
not “fit” for Eazi Access, so no business
resulted.
[17]
About a year later, on 26 March
2019, Ms Delport emailed Mr Ditabo, asking him to assist with two
documents for Eazi Access’
BEE audit for the year ended
February 2019, namely a “loan confirmation” from
Netpractice, and Netpractice’s
latest BEE certificate. She
attached the form of loan confirmation she needed. On the same day,
Mr Ditabo emailed the required
documents to her. The one document was
a “loan balance confirmation”, signed by Mr Ditabo and
reading thus:
“
We
hereby confirm the loan balance of R1 600 000.00 (One
million six hundred thousand rand) due to Eazi Access Rental
(Pty)
Limited as at the 28 February 2019.”
Ms
Delport, in a replying email, thanked him for the documents, adding:
“
We
might need to sign an addendum to the agreement in place to renew it
till the end of Feb 2020. I will let you know.
Please can you indicate
what your commitment could be towards a repayment on this loan
monthly.”
Mr
Ditabo’s responding email said that closer to his next visit to
Johannesburg he would get in touch to set up a meeting
with Ms
Delport and Mr Miller.
[18]
On 26 November 2019, some eight
months later, Mr Wulfsohn sent an internal email to Ms Delport as
follows:
“
Please
find attached all the updated documents required for signature in
regard to the Netpractice loan and the Enterprise Development
Agreement. Please also note the Extract of Directors meeting which
needs to predate the signed agreement (I have thus dated it
25
November 2019).
I would also suggest if
possible to get the confirmation of the balance on Netpractice
letterhead of the loan of R1.6 million owing
to Eazi Access Rental as
at 29 February 2020 at the same time to avoid having to obtain this
in the New Year (same format as last
year attached). One would have
to date this after 3 March 2020.
Please shout if you
require anything else or have any questions. Thanks for your
assistance herewith.
[19]
The attachments to Mr Wulfsohn’s
email included a new draft ED agreement. On 27 November 2019, Ms
Delport forwarded Mr Wulfsohn’s
email and attachments to Mr
Ditabo with the following message:
“
I
trust you are well.
It is that time again and
we are in the process of getting our documentation ready for the
BBBEE audit for next year.
The company has decided
to extend the loan to you (as attached) if you
[want?]
for a
further period. If you are in agreement please sign the attached and
send back to me.
Please also draft and
send a new confirmation letter as at Feb 2020 (attached an example)
and also send me the latest BBBEE certificate/affidavit
and financial
statements and the latest management accounts.”
[20]
In December 2019 Mr Ditabo
left a voice message for Mr Wulfsohn to call him. Mr Wulfsohn seems
not to have picked up the message.
When this came to light in January
2020, Mr Wulfsohn on 20 January emailed Mr Ditabo in anticipation of
a telephone call. He reattached
the documents previously sent to Mr
Ditabo, adding that
“
[t[he
reason for the update is we need to extend the loan so as to extend
the repayment date and as per requirements of the BBBEE
codes.”
[21]
According to Mr Ditabo, he explained
to Mr Wulfsohn in their telephonic conversation on 22 January that
Netpractice was not prepared
to sign an ED agreement on terms
materially identical to the previous one, given the lack of
enterprise development from Eazi Access
and the manner in which
Netpractice’s attempts to engage with Netpractice had been
disregarded. He conveyed to Mr Wulfsohn
that he was very upset by the
way Eazi Access had treated Netpractice.
[22]
On 23 January 2020, Mr Wulfsohn
emailed Mr Ditabo, saying that he was sorry that Mr Ditabo had been
left feeling offended and frustrated,
and he apologised for
Mr Ditabo’s “poor experience” with Eazi
Access. He told Mr Ditabo that he would raise
it with Eazi Access’s
new CFO, and that he was happy to manage Eazi Access’ future
dealings with Mr Ditabo. He concluded:
“
To
confirm our discussions and the way forward, we agreed that you will
call Rudi
[5]
to discuss the
matter with him and also forward the documents for signature to your
legal team for review. You will then revert
to me in 8 weeks’
time on the matter in order to finalise the way forward.”
[23]
The draft contracts sent to Mr
Ditabo comprised a new ED agreement and addenda to the loan
agreements. In terms of the loan addenda,
the repayment period of the
first loan was extended from 54 months to 102 months, that is to 22
October 2021, while the repayment
period of the second loan was
extended from 30 months to 76 months, that is to 28 August 2021.
[24]
The new ED agreement defined the
“enterprise development period” as “the 2019 and
2020 calendar years, or such
longer period as the parties may agree
in writing”. Clauses 2 and 3 were substantially similar to the
previous ED agreement.
Clause 2.1 of the new draft was a recordal of
the old ED agreement between the parties. Clauses 2.2 to 2.6 of the
new draft were
adaptations of clauses 2.1 to 2.5 of the old ED
agreement. The new draft no longer referenced an annexure 1 in clause
2.3.1. The
new “enterprise development champion” was Mr
Marcus Coetzee, and the reference to updating the development plan on
a six-monthly basis was jettisoned. Clauses 2.5, 2.6 and 3 of the
draft were identical to the old agreement. Clause 2.4 of the new
draft read as follows:
“
2.4
Eazi Access undertakes to offer the following contributions:
Date
Contribution type
Contribution format
Contribution value
1
March 2019 to
31
July 2021 (Enterprise Development
Support) Interest
Free Loan
R1,6
million as per loan agreements
2.4.1
This agreement will remain effective between Eazi Access
and
Netpractice for the period: 1 March 2019 – 31 July 2021
notwithstanding date of signature of this agreement. When this
time
period expires, an option of a renewed agreement satisfactory to both
parties exists.
2.4.2
It is to the understanding of Eazi Access and Netpractice
that this
financial support of a waiver of interest on the loan amount is not
repayable to Eazi Access subject to the terms of
the loan agreements
and the addendums thereto.”
[25]
In a telephonic discussion between
Mr Wulfsohn and Mr Ditabo in February 2020, the latter – for
the first time, according
to Mr Wulfsohn – denied that
Netpractice had any liability to Eazi Access under the loan
agreements, claiming that Eazi Access
had “written off”
the loan amounts. There were unsuccessful settlement negotiations,
leading to a letter of demand
in March 2020 and the issuing of the
present application at the end of June 2020.
The
parties’ contentions
[26]
Eazi Access’ contends that the
ED agreement merely extended the interest-free loans to 27 February
2018 in a format acceptable
to its BEE auditors. Some of the language
of the draft supplied by Ms Davis was, it was submitted, ill-suited
to the uncomplicated
relationship between the parties. They did not
require the needs analysis referred to in clause 2.2.1 – that
had been done
when the loans were initially advanced in 2013 and
2015. Since the enterprise development contribution was simply to
allow loans
to remain outstanding at no interest, there was no real
need for an enterprise development champion or the updating of a
development
plan.
[27]
Netpractice contends that the ED
agreement brought about a fundamental change in the commercial
relationship between the parties.
The effect of clause 2.3.2, so it
was contended, was to cause Netpractice’s loan indebtedness to
fall away at the end of
the enterprise development period on 27
February 2018, provided up to that time it complied with its
obligations under the ED agreement.
Those obligations were admittedly
modest – to retain black ownership of 51% or more and to report
to Eazi Access in accordance
with clause 2.4.2. In argument,
Netpractice’s counsel submitted that, subject to Netpractice’s
compliance with these
obligations, the interest-free loan was
converted to a grant when the enterprise development period ended on
27 February 2018.
Interpreting
the ED agreement
[28]
Contractual
interpretation is a unitary exercise in which the court seeks to
ascertain the parties’ meaning as expressed in
the language of
their contract. The search for the parties’ meaning is informed
by the ordinary grammatical meaning of their
language, unless such
meaning gives rise to an absurdity. The language of a contract is,
however, no longer understood to have
a self-defining ordinary
grammatical meaning which can be rightly discerned by simply reading
the contentious words. From the outset,
those words must be read in
the context of the contract as a whole and with due regard to the
contract’s apparent purpose
and such circumstances giving rise
to the conclusion of the contract as were known to both parties. A
meaning that frustrates the
apparent purpose of the contract or that
leads to results which are not businesslike or sensible should not be
preferred where
an interpretation which avoids these consequences is
reasonably possible.
[6]
It is
also permissible to have regard to the parties’ subsequent
conduct if this casts light on their shared understanding
of the
contract’s meaning.
[7]
The language of the ED
agreement
[29]
In clause 2.3, the format of the
contribution which Eazi Access was making was described as “loan
outstanding”, with
a value of R1.6 million. It was not
described as a “grant”. The historical context known to
both parties was that the
“loan outstanding” was the sum
of R1.6 million already advanced in terms of the loan agreements of
2013 and 2015. The
ED agreement did not state that the previous loan
agreements were being cancelled or that their terms, on matters not
expressly
regulated by the ED agreement, were no longer operative.
[30]
Clause 2.3.1 specified a one-year
period during which the ED agreement would remain “viable”.
In context, “viable”
here must mean “in operation”.
Importantly, clause 2.3.1 went on to say that when the enterprise
development period
ended on 27 February 2018, “an option of a
renewed agreement satisfactory to both parties exist[s]”. The
word “renewed
indicates a renewal dealing with the same
subject-matter, namely the outstanding loan of R1.6 million. If, as
Netpractice would
have it, the loan would be converted to a
non-repayable grant at the end of the enterprise development period,
there would be nothing
to “renew”. Of course, the parties
could always conclude a different ED agreement in respect of some
other enterprise
development contribution, but they would have been
free to do so anyway, regardless of whether the existing ED agreement
was still
in force or had expired.
[31]
Clause 2.4.3 expressly stated that
the enterprise development support offered in the ED agreement was
given only for a one-year
period and did not in any way obligate Eazi
Access to grant “continued support outside this period”.
Self-evidently,
Eazi Access would not have been obliged to grant
Netpractice other enterprise development support, that is support
unrelated to
the outstanding loan of R1.6 million. It would have been
unnecessary to make so obvious a point in the contract. More
naturally,
clause 2.4.3 was emphasising to Netpractice that Eazi
Access would be under no obligation to allow the loan amount of R1.6
million
to remain outstanding on an interest-free basis after 27
February 2018.
The purpose of the ED
agreement
[32]
The purpose of the ED agreement was
twofold. First, it had the same purpose as the loan agreements,
namely to provide financial
support to a BEE beneficiary on
favourable terms while allowing the lender to earn BEE points.
Second, and uniquely, it was intended
to formulate the parties’
contract in terms acceptable to Eazi Access’ BEE auditors. This
latter circumstance was known
to Mr Ditabo, because the email thread
starting with Ms Davis’ first email to Ms Delport on 11
September 2017 was forwarded
to him when he was asked to sign the
agreement.
[33]
As
to the first of these purposes, both an interest-free loan and a
grant would have given Netpractice favourable financial support
while
allowing Eazi Access to earn BEE points.
[8]
In argument, Netpractice’s counsel referred to the part of the
Codes dealing with enterprise and supplier development.
[9]
In the formula for calculating the value of enterprise development by
way of financial contributions,
[10]
a grant and an interest-free loan both use the amount of the grant or
outstanding loan as the starting point. In the case of a
grant,
however, the “benefit factor” applied to the capital
amount is 100% whereas in the case of an interest-free
loan it is
only 70%. Netpractice’s counsel inferred from this that Eazi
Access would earn more BEE points by making a grant
than by merely
allowing an interest-free loan to remain outstanding.
[34]
Neither the affidavits nor the
attached correspondence mention the supposed superior BEE scoring
which Eazi Access could earn by
converting the outstanding loan into
a grant. There is simply no evidence that Eazi Access had any such
intention or that Mr Ditabo
believed Eazi Access to have any such
intention. The initiative for executing the ED agreement came from
corporate advisors in
order to satisfy Eazi Access’ BEE
auditors. Since an interest-free loan was a qualifying form of
enterprise development for
purposes of the Codes, the BEE auditors
would have had no reason to insist that the loan be converted to a
grant. There is nothing
to suggest that the draft ED agreement which
Ms Davis supplied was intended to bring about such a result.
[35]
Furthermore,
since the distinction between grants and interest-free loans, for
purposes of the Codes, was not canvassed in the papers,
the argument
by Netpractice’s counsel – that Eazi Access’ BEE
scoring would have been optimised by converting
the loan to a grant –
cannot be accepted as necessarily correct. In reply, Eazi Access’
counsel argued that the BEE
points scored for making a grant were
presumably scored only in the year in which the grant is made. In the
case of an interest-free
loan, by contrast, the financial support
continues to be granted for as long as the loan is allowed to remain
outstanding.
[11]
Over two or
more years, the BEE points which Eazi Access could score by allowing
an interest-free loan to remain outstanding would
exceed the points
scored by a once-off grant. We also do not know how big a part Eazi
Access’ enterprise development contribution
to Netpractice
played in Eazi Access’ overall BEE score. There is no evidence
to justify the inference that the enhanced
BEE value of financial
support to Netpractice would have been sufficient to induce Eazi
Access to write off the loan of R1.6 million
at the end of February
2018.
[12]
[36]
As to the second purpose, I have
already touched on the significance of the fact that the spur for the
conclusion of the ED agreement
was a requirement from Eazi Access’
BEE auditors. The ED agreement was not concluded because the parties
themselves saw the
need for a change. Furthermore, upon receipt of
the draft agreement from Ms Davis, neither party engaged in
substantive discussions.
This strongly suggests that they did not see
the ED agreement as fundamentally changing the nature of their
commercial relationship.
One can infer, from the terms of the draft
supplied by Ms Davis, that the BEE auditors required the provider of
enterprise development
finance not to be a passive funder but to be
an active participant in the development of the beneficiary’s
enterprise; and
that they required the beneficiary to report more
fully to the funder than was provided for in the loan agreements.
These features
did not require the funding to be converted from loans
to a grant.
[37]
These considerations lead me to
conclude that clause 2.3.2 is to be interpreted as meaning that the
“financial support”
constituting the enterprise
development contribution, that is the “loan outstanding”
of R1.6 million, would not, during
the enterprise development period,
be repayable as long as Netpractice complied with the terms and
conditions of the ED agreement.
The terms and conditions of the ED
agreement were, in the absence of a renewal, only binding on the
parties during the defined
enterprise development period. It was
ongoing compliance during that period (“as long as”)
which was the condition
on which the loan would be allowed to remain
outstanding. If, during the currency of the ED agreement, there
ceased to be compliance,
the loan would be immediately repayable, and
Netpractice would no longer benefit from the suspension to 27
February 2018. This
served the important function of ensuring that
Netpractice would not be entitled to the ongoing use of interest-free
money if Eazi
Access was, due to Netpractice’s non-compliance,
no longer entitled to the envisaged BEE points. There had to be
reciprocity
of benefit. This was a continuation, in different
language, of the understanding contained in clauses 6.1.2 and 6.1.6
read with
clause 9 of the loan agreements.
Subsequent
conduct
[38]
This interpretation is reinforced by
the parties’ later conduct. Over the period 3 December
2017-17 January 2018, Ms
Delport sent Mr Ditabo four emails which
conveyed in unambiguous language that Eazi Access regarded the loans
as repayable. Ms
Delport paid so little attention to the ED agreement
that in her first email she said that the loans had become repayable
in October
2017, thus disregarding the extension to 27 February 2018
brought about by the ED agreement. Be that as it may, it was not
until
18 January 2018 that Mr Ditabo responded. When he did respond,
he did not say that the sum of R1.6 million was not a repayable loan.
What he said was that in terms of the most recently signed agreement
(he was obviously referring to the ED agreement), the due
date for
repayment of the loans was only at the end of February 2018 (that is,
the money had not become repayable in October 2017,
as Ms Delport’s
first email said). And he did not claim that if Netpractice continued
to comply with the ED agreement for
the last few weeks of the
enterprise development period, it would not have to repay the money
at all. Instead, he said that Netpractice
was not in a position to
“settle” (that is, repay the loan) “and we would
love to extend”. No doubt in
order to motivate an extension, he
promised to send Eazi Access its financial statements as soon as
possible.
[39]
More than a year later, on 26 March
2019, Mr Ditabo was content to sign a document confirming a loan
balance of R1.6 million due
to Eazi Access as at 28 February 2019. He
knew that this was a document on which Eazi Access would rely in its
BEE audit.
[40]
It
is also common cause that over the period January 2018-January 2020
the parties were engaged in negotiations about “written
extensions and addendums”,
[13]
or – as Mr Ditabo himself put it in his answering affidavit –
“good faith efforts to renew the [ED agreement].
[14]
As I have previously observed, if the loans ceased to be repayable at
the end of the enterprise development period on 27 February
2018,
there were no contracts requiring renewal, extension or addenda. They
had all fallen away. This terminology would be inapposite
to describe
negotiations about a new enterprise development contract unrelated to
the outstanding loan of R1.6 million.
[41]
Mr Ditabo’s email of 18
January 2018, the loan confirmation, and the ongoing negotiations for
a renewal or extension, reflect
a state of mind which accords with
the interpretation of the ED agreement for which Eazi Access
contends. It is irreconcilable
with the stance Mr Ditabo adopted with
Mr Wulfsohn in February 2020 and with which he now persists. One
cannot but wonder whether
his belated volte-face was brought about by
an argument suggested to him by a lawyer.
[42]
In
the answering affidavit, Mr Ditabo has given a garbled explanation
for having signed the loan confirmation. He says that he “had
to provide” such a letter, as it was one of the source
documents Eazi Access needed to claim enterprise development points.
He believed that Eazi Access was entitled to claim those points. He
had no objection to providing the confirmation, as “this
was
the very benefit [Eazi Access] was entitled to for having concluded
the [ED agreement]”. He claims that his understanding
at the
time (March 2019) was that the sum of R1.6 million had been
“subsumed” by the ED agreement, which had stipulated
that
the amount was not repayable provided Netpractice complied with its
obligations under the ED agreement. Although the signed
confirmation
“confirmed the loan amount under the [ED agreement]”, it
did not state that the amount of R1.6 million
was repayable or that
interest was accruing on it: “The letter confirmed no more than
the obligation under the [ED agreement”].
[15]
[43]
This confusing explanation does not
make sense. If Netpractice only had to comply with the ED agreement
until the end of the enterprise
development period, and if, at that
point (27 February 2018), the erstwhile loan ceased altogether to be
repayable, the loan (which
had, on this version, been converted to a
grant by the end of February 2018), was irrelevant to Eazi Access’
BEE score for
the period March 2018-February 2019; and in any event,
Netpractice was under no contractual obligation to provide BEE
documentation
to Eazi Access as at March 2019. Mr Ditabo does not
explain the meaning of his cryptic sentence that the confirmation
letter “confirmed
no more than the obligation under the [ED
agreement]”. That sentence must mean that he believed in March
2019 that there
remained in existence, as at 28 February 2019, an
obligation by Netpractice to Eazi Access in respect of the sum of
R1.6 million.
[44]
Counsel for Netpractice submitted
that, because negotiations continued between the parties over the
period January 2018-January
2020, Mr Ditabo’s email and his
signing of the loan confirmation were explicable on the basis that he
expected the parties
to come to terms. I cannot accept that
submission. First, it is not a version which Mr Ditabo himself has
put up. Second, if Mr
Ditabo thought the ED agreement had the effect
for which he now contends, he could not have been expecting a further
agreement
dealing with the erstwhile loan of R1.6 million, because it
would have become a non-refundable grant at the end of February 2018.
Even if he expected the parties to conclude a new agreement relating
to some other form of enterprise or supplier development,
such
expectation would have been no basis for his treating the sum of R1.6
million as a repayable loan. The ongoing negotiations,
as he himself
admitted in the present proceedings, were negotiations about “further
written extensions and addendums”,
not negotiations about a new
enterprise or supplier development.
[45]
Counsel
for Netpractice argued that the changes in the new draft sent to
Netpractice on 27 November 2019 show that the earlier signed
ED
agreement must have meant something different. I disagree. For
present purposes, the most important feature of the new draft
is the
clear assumption that the sum of R1.6 million still remained owing as
a loan. The drafter could not have thought that the
previous
agreement provided for a discharge of the loan indebtedness. It was
Mr Ditabo who attached the new draft to his answering
affidavit. He
did not highlight any change in wording. On the contrary, he said
that the new draft was “materially similar
to” the old ED
agreement.
[16]
He claimed that
Netpractice could not sign a new ED agreement on those terms, because
it would create the misleading impression
that Eazi Access was
providing enterprise development to Netpractice, “whereas
absolutely no such support was being provided”.
He did not say
that the new draft was unacceptable because it revived a discharged
indebtedness.
[46]
Because the answering
affidavit did not highlight and attach significance to changes in
formulation, the changes were not addressed
in the replying
affidavit. The result is that there is no evidence as to why the
changes were made or of the extent, if any, to
which they gave effect
to the ongoing negotiations between the parties. The main changes in
clauses 2.3 and 2.4 were to emphasise
the interest-free nature of the
loan and to make explicit reference to the loan agreements. The old
agreement, while clearly referencing
the money lent under the loan
agreements, had failed to spell this out. There was thus, for
example, no explicit statement in the
old agreement that until 27
February 2018 the loan amount would not attract interest nor any
provision as to the rate of interest
which would apply as from 27
February 2018 or as from any earlier date on which Netpractice fell
into breach. Particularly in the
absence of a whole-contract clause
in the signed ED agreement, there is no difficulty in concluding that
the loan agreements continued
to be operative save where their terms
were inconsistent with the ED agreement, but one can understand why
the drafter of the new
agreement might have thought it best to say so
explicitly. In the absence, however, of evidence, this is
speculation.
Conclusion
and order
[47]
For these reasons, the application
must succeed. The amount which Netpractice must pay, inclusive of
interest up to the end of May
2020, has been properly established by
certificates which Netpractice has not challenged.
[48]
As to costs, the loan agreements
entitle Eazi Access to claim costs “as between attorney and own
client”, and Eazi Access
sought such an order. Leaving aside
the question whether the word “own” in this formulation
has any meaning and can
be the subject of a court order, the
contractual provisions do not deprive the Court of its discretion on
the matter of costs.
I do not think that costs on any special scale
should be awarded.
[49]
My reason for confining Eazi Access
to party and party costs is this. In the founding affidavit, Mr
Wulfsohn alleged that the ED
agreement was concluded “on or
about 28 February 2017”, and this allegation was confirmed by
the person who signed
the ED agreement on Eazi Access’ behalf.
This allegation was false. Eazi Access failed to disclose the emails
of September
2017 which gave rise to the signing of the agreement on
11 or 12 September 2017. This was disreputable, as was the backdating
of
the ED agreement. Depending on the circumstances, parties may
properly agree that their contract will be effective from a date
earlier than the date on which it is concluded, but it is never
acceptable to misrepresent the date on which a contract is signed.
The backdating in this instance was clearly intended to be relied
upon by the BEE auditors as evidence that on 28 February 2017
the
parties had committed themselves to act, for a one-year period, in
accordance with the terms of the ED agreement. In truth,
the ED
agreement was concluded at a time when only slightly more than five
months of the enterprise development period remained.
Even then, both
parties seem to have disregarded the terms of the ED agreement, and
their contract proclaimed the existence of
annexures which did not in
truth exist.
[50]
Thus, as a mark of the Court’s
disapproval, I will confine Eazi Access to ordinary costs. Its
conduct is not so egregious,
however, as to disentitle it to costs
altogether, having regard
inter alia
to the fact that Netpractice was itself partially complicit in the
misrepresentations made in the ED agreement and that it has
opposed
the application on a basis I regard as contrived.
[51]
The following order is made:
1.
The respondent shall pay to the first applicant:
(a) an
amount of R1,354,765; and
(b)
interest thereon at the rate of 7.25% per annum, calculated from
1 June 2020 to date of final payment;
(c)
an amount of R451,588.33;
(d)
interest thereon at the rate of 7.25% per annum, calculated from
1 June 2020 to date of final payment.
2.
The respondent must pay the applicants’
costs.
O
L ROGERS
Judge
of the High Court
For
the Applicants: W
Strobl instructed by LDA Incorporated Attorneys.
For
the Respondent:
G
Kairinos SC instructed by TWB – Tugendhaft Wapnick Banchetti &
Partners.
[1]
At
the time of the 2013 and 2015 loans, the applicable Codes then in
force would have been the Codes of Good Practice on Broad-Based
Black Economic Empowerment, 2007 (as amended). These Codes were
substituted, with effect from 1 May 2015, by the Codes of Good
Practice on Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment, 2013. These
various Codes were promulgated in terms of section 9(1) of the
BEE
Act.
[2]
53
of 2004.
[3]
Paras
43-4 of the founding affidavit, admitted in para 80 of the answering
affidavit. The record does not include any correspondence
which came
into existence during these negotiations.
[4]
There
are emails in the record sent by Mr Jones to Ms Delport on 19
February 2018 and 9 April 2018.
[5]
This
may be a reference to Mr Rudi Stumpf. In his answering affidavit, Mr
Ditabo states that Netpractice's relationship with Eazi
Access began
in late 2012/early 2013 when he was approached by Mr Stumpf
“who was associated with the second applicant”.
Mr
Stumpf introduced Mr Ditabo to Mr Wulfsohn.
[6]
These
principles are by now trite. For recent expositions, see
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
[2021]
ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2021
(8) BCLR 807
(CC) at paras 65-9 and
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA);
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA) at
paras 39-51.
[7]
MTK
Saagmeule (Pty) Ltd v Killyman Estates (Pty) Ltd
1980
(3) SA (A) at 12F-H;
Grobler
v Oosthuizen
2009
(5) SA 500
(SCA) at para 14; and
Comwezi
Security Services (Pty) Ltd v Cape Empowerment Trust Ltd
[2012] ZASCA 126
at para 15.
[8]
The
measurement of enterprise and supplier development is dealt with in
Amended Code Series 400 of the 2013 Codes. Item 9.1 of
Series 400
lists the non-exhaustive forms which enterprise and supplier
development may take.
[9]
Counsel
referred to the current version of the Amended Code Series 400. This
includes a substantial amendment promulgated on 31
May 2019, which
took effect on 30 November 2019, i.e. after the conclusion of the ED
agreement. Nevertheless, in the respects
mentioned by counsel, the
form of Amended Code Series 400 in September 2017, when the ED
agreement was concluded, seems to have
been materially the same as
the current version.
[10]
See
Annexe 400B to Amended Code Series 400.
[11]
Whether
that is correct, in the light of item 4.11 of Amended Code Series
400, is not something on which I feel able to venture
an opinion.
Item 4.11 provides that where
“
[c]ontributions
,
programmes and/or initiatives that span over multiple years, the
total contribution amount must be divided by the number of
years,
and the average per year is then to be utilised for the annual
contribution”. Assuming that this applies to interest-free
loans, it is unclear how one would deal with the case of an
interest-free loan which is initially advanced for only one year,
with extensions being negotiated annually.
[12]
At
all material times (i.e. until the amendment of Amended Code Series
400 came into force on 30 November 2019), enterprise and
supplier
development carried a maximum score of 40 points out of 109 points;
and of those 40 points, a maximum of 5 points could
be scored for
enterprise development in the form of financial contributions, the
remaining 35 points being available for enterprise
and supplier
development in the form of preferential procurement and supplier
development. In Eazi Access’s BEE certificate
issued on 20
April 2020 (record 132), it scored a total of 89.25 points out of a
potential 109 points, of which 36.97 out of
40 were scored for
enterprise and supplier development. At most, 5 of those 36.97
points were attributable to financial support,
and of course Eazi
Access might have financially supported a number of qualifying
beneficiaries, not only Netpractice. It is
unknown how many, if any,
of the 5 points were attributable to Eazi Access’ loan to
Netpractice.
[13]
Founding
affidavit at paras 43-4, admitted in answering affidavit at para 80.
[14]
Para
5 of the answering affidavit.
[15]
Answering
affidavit at paras 39-40.
[16]
Answering
affidavit at para 47.
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