Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 251South Africa
Yacht Hardware CC t/a Harken South Africa v Zenith International (Proprietary) Limited (A139/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 251 (2 December 2022)
Headnotes
HEADNOTE: Contract – Interpretation – Indemnity clause – Express and plain words as point of departure – Court a quo allowing evidence to vary and contradict terms – Considered inadmissible evidence under the guise of context, for purposes of interpreting the clauses.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Yacht Hardware CC t/a Harken South Africa v Zenith International (Proprietary) Limited (A139/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 251 (2 December 2022)
Yacht Hardware CC t/a Harken South Africa v Zenith International (Proprietary) Limited (A139/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 251 (2 December 2022)
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sino date 2 December 2022
HEADNOTE:
Contract – Interpretation – Indemnity clause –
Express and plain words as point of departure –
Court a quo
allowing evidence to vary and contradict terms – Considered
inadmissible evidence under the guise of context,
for purposes of
interpreting the clauses.
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
REPORTABLE
Case
Number: A139/2022
In
the matter between:
YACHT
HARDWARE CC t/a HARKEN SOUTH AFRICA
APPELLANT
and
ZENITH
INTERNATIONAL (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Erasmus J and De Wet AJ
Judgment:
De Wet AJ
Date
of hearing:
12 October 2022
Date
of Judgment: 2 December 2022
JUDGMENT
(handed
down electronically, via email)
DE
WET, AJ
[1]
This matter concerns the interpretation of indemnity clauses
contained in a contract
of sale concluded between the parties during
September 2019. The appellant claimed specific performance from the
respondent in
terms of clause 9.2 in the court
a quo,
who
dismissed the claim after allowing and considering extensive evidence
regarding the intention of the parties when entering into
the
agreement. It is against this decision the appellant now appeals.
[2]
For ease of reference the parties are referred to as in the court
a
quo
.
Brief
factual background
[3]
The facts underlying this appeal are common placed and if considered
in totality (regardless
of whether the court
a quo
allowed and
considered inadmissible evidence or not), depicts the normal
situation where parties negotiate and finally reach an
agreement
which is embodied in a written document signed by both parties.
[4]
The plaintiff, a close corporation based in South Africa, obtained
the right to exclusively
manufacture and distribute marine products
under the name of Harken in South Africa. Harken is a USA based
company who specialises
in the design, manufacture and sale of marine
hardware and accessory products.
[5]
The sole member of the plaintiff, Mr Roux, passed away on 10 May
2018. In terms of
his will, Mr Roux appointed Mr Venter, the
accounting officer of the plaintiff, as his executor. He bequeathed
to each of his three
daughters 30% of his membership in the plaintiff
and he left the remaining 10% thereof to one Knoetzen, who was an
employee of
the plaintiff at the time.
[6]
On 5 September 2019 the plaintiff, represented by Mr Venter and Mr
Knoetzen, who was
acting as nominee for a company to be formed,
concluded a written contract pertaining to the sale of the assets and
stock belonging
to the plaintiff (“the contract of sale”)
[1]
.
[7]
Mr Knoetzen nominated the defendant as the purchaser and it duly
accepted the nomination.
[8]
The relevant clauses for purposes of this appeal are clause 9.1 and
9.2 of the contract
of sale which reads as follows:
“
9.1
Without prejudice to any of the rights of the Purchaser in terms of
this agreement, the Seller indemnifies the Purchaser
against all
loss, liability, damage, costs or expense (whether actual, contingent
or otherwise) which the Purchaser may suffer
as a result of or which
may be attributable to any liability (including any liability for
taxation, whether actual, uncertain or
contingent) or obligation of
the Seller which arose prior to the effective date, it being
specifically recorded and agreed that
the Purchaser does not assume
any of the Seller’s liabilities incurred as at or prior to the
effective date”.
(“the first indemnity clause”)
and
9.2
In light of the fact that the Purchaser is not taking on the
employees of the Seller, the Purchaser indemnifies
the Seller against
any claims brought by employees for compensation of whatsoever nature
due to the termination.”
(“the second indemnity
clause”)
[9]
Following the conclusion of the contract, and prior to 12 September
2019, the effective
date stipulated in the contract of sale, the
plaintiff, represented by Mr Venter, gave two of the plaintiff’s
employees,
namely Kesse and Barrish
[2]
,
notice of the termination of their contracts of employment on the
effective date. Kesse and Barrish referred disputes to the Commission
for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (“CCMA”)
against the plaintiff. Barrish cited the defendant as a second
respondent in his referral. During conciliation at the CCMA, the
plaintiff and the disgruntled employees reached a settlement in
respect of their claims and the plaintiff, in terms of this
settlement, paid these employees during November 2019 the total
amount
of R 324 010.
[10]
The plaintiff then proceeded, in terms of clause 9.2 of the contract
of sale, to claim the amounts
paid to the employees from the
defendant. The defendant denied liability and the plaintiff
instituted a claim in the court
a quo.
In its plea, the
defendant
inter alia
alleged that:
10.1 The claim did
not resort under clause 9.2 of the contract but under the general
indemnity in favour of the defendant
contained in clause 9.1, as the
plaintiff gave notice of termination to the two employees prior to
the effective date;
10.2 The business
of the plaintiff did not terminate; and
10.3 Clause 9.2
pertains to an indemnity in favour of the plaintiff with reference to
the employees of the defendant.
[11]
The court
a quo
allowed extensive evidence in respect of the
intention of the parties when entering into the contract of sale. On
perusal of the
evidence, it however appears that the following
essential aspects were common cause:
11.1 At the time
the contract of sale was concluded on 5 September 2019, the plaintiff
had four employees: Knoetzen, Batt,
Kesse and Barrish. Knoetzen and
Batt negotiated the right to use the Harken name and established the
defendant.
11.2 The defendant
did not want to take over the business of the plaintiff as a going
concern, and did not want to take over
the other two employees of the
plaintiff, Kesse and Barrish.
11.3 The
plaintiff’s business terminated after the sale of its assets
and stock. In this regard Mr Knoetzen testified
that “…without
the name [Harken] we can close our doors and walk away”
[3]
and further expressly agreed that the business of the plaintiff would
be terminated on the effective date
[4]
.
11.4 Following the
conclusion of the contract of sale, Mr Venter notified Kesse and
Barrish that their employment with the
plaintiff is terminated as at
the effective date.
11.5 Kesse and
Barrish registered claims with the CCMA.
11.6 The plaintiff
settled the claims submitted to the CCMA by Kesse and Barrish for
R160 000 and R164 010 respectively, the
sum total of R324 010 being
the amount claimed by the plaintiff from the defendant.
The
legal position
[12]
The plaintiff claimed specific performance of clause 9.2 of the
contract of sale. As the contract
places no reciprocal duty on the
plaintiff in terms of the indemnity clause, the plaintiff needed to
prove the contract, its terms
and non-performance by the defendant in
order to succeed with its claim.
[5]
These elements were all common cause. The court
a
quo
consequently
had to decide whether clause 9.1 or 9.2 was applicable to the
plaintiff’s claim. This is a question of interpretation.
[13]
The contextual approach to contractual interpretation is now mostly
settled and “
(the)
inevitable point of departure
(in
interpreting a contract)
is
the language of the provision itself”
as
it was explained by the SCA in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality.
[6]
[14]
Recently in the matter of
Z
v Z
[7]
the SCA, albeit in the context of the interpretation of statutes,
reiterated that words must be given their ordinary grammatical
meaning, unless to do so would result in absurdity.
[15]
In the matter of
Tshwane
City v Blair Atholl Homeowners Association
[8]
the SCA explained that the court has moved away from a narrow peering
at words in an agreement and has stated on numerous occasions
that
words in a document must not be considered in isolation. Restrictive
consideration of words without regard to context should
therefore be
avoided. It was consequently held that the “distinction between
context and background circumstances has been
jettisoned with
reference to the matter of
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd and Another
2009 (4) SA 399
(SCA) at 409I -410A.
[16]
The Court further noted that “
Since this court’s
decision in Endumeni, we are seeing a spate of cases in which
evidence is allowed to be led in trial courts
beyond the ambit of
what is set out in the preceding paragraph. We are increasingly
seeing witnesses testify about the meaning
to be attributed to words
in legislation and in written agreements. That is true of the present
case in which, in addition, evidence
was led about negotiations
leading up to the conclusion of the ESA.”
[16]
Recently and in the matter of
Capitec
Holdings Limited v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
[9]
,
the SCA again commented as follows with regards to courts allowing
evidence beyond the ambit of the approach set out in
Endumeni:
“
None
of this would require repetition but for the fact that the judgment
of the High Court failed to make its point of departure
the relevant
provision of the subscription agreement. Endumeni is not a charter
for judicial constructs premised upon what a contract
should be taken
to mean from a vantage point that is not located in the text of what
the parties in fact agreed. Nor does Endumeni
licence judicial
interpretation that imports meaning into a contract so as to make it
a better contract, or one that is ethically
preferable”
[17]
In the matter of
Choisy-Le-Roi
(Pty) Ltd v Municipality of Stellenbosch and Another
[10]
,
Binns-Ward J, with reference to the decision of
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[11]
,
held that in a contractual context an enquiry into the meaning of a
text should be directed at determining, within the limits
defined by
the language the parties have chosen to use, what the parties had
intended. He further held that in the context of statutory
interpretation the rule of law requires the statutory text to speak
for itself and that a person cannot be expected, in the context
of
legislation, to have to “dig into its drafting history to find
out whether it really bears the meaning that its language
conveys…”
[12]
As
pointed out in
Choicy-Le-Roy
(supra), I am of the view that the court
a
quo
should not have delved into the intention of the parties and why
certain clauses were included or excluded during settlement
negotiations.
Analysis
[18]
It appears from clause 9.2 itself, that it was included to provide
for the fact that the defendant
had elected not to take over the said
employees of plaintiff resulting in such employees’ employment
having to be terminated
by the plaintiff. To regulate the situation
where such employees may bring a claim for compensation of whatsoever
nature against
the plaintiff arising therefrom, clause 9.2
specifically provides for and refers to claims of the (former)
employees of the plaintiff
whose employment was to be terminated as a
result of the contract of sale being concluded, and the defendant not
taking over such
employees as part of the sale transaction.
[19]
Further to this, clause 1.2.2 of the contract of sale defines
“business” as “shall
mean the business Harken SA
which the Seller conducts at the premises at 46 Marine Drive, Paarden
Island, Cape Town, 7405”
and clause 2 of the contact of sale,
states that the plaintiff sold the assets and stock, and “the
right to use the name
‘Harken SA’ to the Purchaser”.
Thus, by selling the assets and stock as well as the right to use the
name ‘Harken
SA’, the plaintiff’s business as
defined in clause 1.2.2 was effectively terminated.
[20]
Against this background, the court
a quo
simply disregarded
the fact that it should use the express and plain words of clause 9.2
of the contract of sale as its point of
departure. Instead, it veered
down a slippery slide of what the parties’ opinions were
pertaining to the meaning of clauses
9.1 and 9.2 of the contact of
sale and further, allowed and considered, evidence which was brought
to vary, add to or contradict
the written terms of the contract of
sale.
[21]
In reaching its conclusion, the court
a quo
misdirected itself
in allowing and considering inadmissible evidence under the guise of
context, for purposes of interpreting clauses
9.1 and 9.2 of the
contract of sale, as a plain reading of clause 9.2, shows that the
defendant had indemnified the plaintiff in
respect of any claims by
employees, such as Kesse and Barrish “
in light of the fact
that Purchaser is not taking on the employees of the Seller…”.
As set out in the
University of Johannesburg
(supra), the
parol evidence rule still renders extrinsic evidence inadmissible if
it is tendered to add to or modify the meaning
of a document which
was intended to provide a complete memorial of a jural act. Clause
9.2 contains no ambiguity and if the correct
approach was adopted by
the court
a quo
, from the outset, the costs and legal
resources employed in determining this relatively small claim would
not have resulted.
[22]
Insofar as the court
a quo
held that clause 9.1 is applicable,
a comparison of clause 9.1 and 9.2 shows that clause 9.1 deals with
an indemnity by the plaintiff
in favour of the defendant for any
general claims pertaining to loss, liability, damage, costs or
expenses without prejudice to
any rights of the plaintiff in terms of
the agreement, whilst clause 9.2 deals with an indemnity by the
defendant in favour of
the plaintiff against any claims brought by
employees due to the termination of the business and “
in
light of the purchaser not taking on the employees of the Seller”
.
[23]
There can, in my view, be no doubt that the claims of Kesse and
Barrish, who were admittedly
both previously employees of the
plaintiff and had lost their employment due to the termination of the
business and the fact that
the defendant did not want to take over
their employment contracts, fall squarely within the ambit of clause
9.2 of the contract.
[24]
The evidence of Mr Knoetzen, that in his opinion clause 9.2 meant
that should his or Mr Batt’s
services with the defendant
terminate for any reason, the plaintiff would be indemnified in
respect of any claims by them (and
not Kesse or Barrish), was simply
far-fetched and contrary to the clear wording of the contract of
sale.
[25]
In respect of whether, within the context of clause 9.2, the business
of the plaintiff terminated,
the common cause facts speaks for
themselves: without the assets and stock which includes the name
Harken, there was no business.
The business terminated on 12
September 2019 and the defendant indemnified the plaintiff in respect
of any claims by its previous
employees, Kess and Barrish. Mr Venter
did not need to inform nor did he need to obtain the consent of the
defendant in order to
settle the claims of these employees at the
CCMA in order to rely on the indemnity clause. The evidence in the
court
a quo
pertaining to whether or not the defendant was
aware of the claims by employees of the plaintiff and had agreed to
the amount settled
upon for purpose of their claims, similarly
unnecessarily burdened the proceedings in the court
a quo
.
[26]
Accordingly, the payments made by the Plaintiff in respect of the
said employees’ claims,
were payments made in respect of claims
by employees, as provided for in terms of clause 9.2 of the sale
agreement, which payments
are covered by the Indemnity provided by
the defendant contained in clause 9.2 of the agreement.
[27]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following:
2.1
The defendant is ordered to make payment to the plaintiff in the
amount of R324 010.00;
2.2
The defendant is ordered to pay interest on the aforementioned amount
calculated at the rate of 7,25%
per annum from 26 August 2020 to date
of payment; and
2.3
The defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs in the
action.
A
De Wet
Acting
Judge of the High Court
I
agree:
N
Erasmus
Judge
of the High Court
IT
IS SO ORDERED
Counsel
for Appellant:
Adv. D Coetzee
Attorneys
for Appellant:
Werksmans
J
Niemand – email
jniemand@werksmans.com
Attorneys
for Respondent:
Abiding
Hancock
Attorneys
Email
law@hancock.co.za
[1]
In terms of clause 1.2.1 of the contract of sale,
assets and stock is defined as the movables, fixtures, fittings
and
stock in trade of the seller as set out in schedule “A”
used by the seller in conducting the business. Schedule
“A”
consists of 3 motor vehicles, all equipment and office furniture in
the premises on the effective date, shelving
in the premises on the
effective date, computer equipment on the effective date, all stock
in trade fully paid by the seller
on the effective date, the website
being
www.harken.co.za
and
the telephone number to transferred to the purchaser.
[2]
It is common cause that the other two employees
of the plaintiff at the time of the parties entering into
the
contract of sale, was Knoetzen and Batt, who negotiated with Harken
to obtain the exclusive right to distribute their products
in South
Africa under the name of the defendant.
[3]
Record Vol 2 page 127, lines 10-11
[4]
Record Vol 2 page 187, lines 1-10
[5]
RM Van de Ghinste & Co (Pty) Ltd v Van de Ghinste 1980 (1) 250
(C) at 253H – 254 B
[6]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18 it was held that:
“Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light
of the document as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration must
be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of
grammar and syntax, the context in which
the provision appears; the
apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known to
those responsible for its production.
Where more than one meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighted in light of all these
factors. The process is objective,
not subjective. A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the
document. The inevitable point of departure is the language of the
provision itself, read in context
and having regard to the purpose
of the provision and the background to the preparation and
production of the document”.
[7]
(556/2021
[2022] ZASCA 113
(21 July 2022) at
paragraphs 7 and 15.
[8]
2019
(3) SA 398 (SCA).
[9]
2022
(1) SA 100 (SCA)
[10]
2022(5) SA 461 (WCC)
[11]
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) (11 June 2021)
[12]
See paragraph 38 of the judgment in this regard.
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