Case Law[2022] ZACC 21South Africa
Transnet SOC Limited v Total South Africa (Pty) Limited and Another (CCT 114/21) [2022] ZACC 21; 2023 (3) BCLR 333 (CC) (21 June 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
21 June 2022
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## Transnet SOC Limited v Total South Africa (Pty) Limited and Another (CCT 114/21) [2022] ZACC 21; 2023 (3) BCLR 333 (CC) (21 June 2022)
Transnet SOC Limited v Total South Africa (Pty) Limited and Another (CCT 114/21) [2022] ZACC 21; 2023 (3) BCLR 333 (CC) (21 June 2022)
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sino date 21 June 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 114/21
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
SOC
LIMITED
Applicant
and
TOTAL
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
SASOL
OIL (PTY)
LIMITED
Second Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Transnet SOC Limited v Total South Africa (Pty)
Limited and Another
[2022] ZACC 21
Coram:
Madlanga J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J,
Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Madlanga J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
16 November 2021
Decided
on:
21 June 2022
ORDER
On
appeal from the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted only in respect of the questions whether
the variation agreement
was terminable and, if it was, whether it was
terminated validly.
2.
The appeal is allowed and, as a consequence, it is declared that the
variation agreement
was terminable, was terminated validly and came
to an end on 13 September 2020.
3.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg, is set
aside insofar as it relates to the questions
referred to in paragraph 1 and to costs.
4.
Each party must pay its own costs in this Court and in the High
Court.
JUDGMENT
MADLANGA
J (Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ,
Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
An agreement concluded in 1967 for
the transportation of crude oil from Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, to an
inland refinery sited in Sasolburg,
Free State, did not expressly
provide for termination. This agreement entailed what was known as
the neutrality principle. So called
because – in order to
attract the participation, in an inland refinery, of an established
foreign oil company, Total South
Africa (Pty) Ltd (Total) which is
the first respondent – the South African government had to make
a contractual undertaking
that the inland refinery would not be
disadvantaged by the cost of transporting crude oil from Durban to
the inland refinery. Put
differently, the cost had to be structured
such that it was as if the inland refinery was sited at the coast.
[2]
A variation of the 1967 agreement
(variation agreement) was concluded some 24 years later, in
1991, to be exact. Albeit with
a change in the formula, the variation
agreement maintained the neutrality principle on the cost of
transporting crude oil from
Durban to the inland refinery. The
variation agreement also made provision – in vague terms –
for any party to give
at least three years’ notice of its
intention to “disregard the contents of [the variation
agreement] subject to the
arrangement that a full agreement of
conveyance for crude oil is being prepared and that such agreement
will embody the contents
of this [agreement] and supersede this
[agreement]”. In September 2017 the applicant, Transnet SOC Ltd
(Transnet), which
had since stepped into the shoes of the government,
one of the original parties to the 1967 agreement, gave a three-year
notice
terminating the variation agreement. In the main, what is now
at issue before us is whether the variation agreement which, when
looked at cumulatively with the 1967 agreement had been in
existence for some 50 years, is terminable and – if it is
–
whether it has been lawfully terminated. Another issue is whether –
absent cancellation of the contract – claims
for contractual
damages where a refund is sought in respect of amounts that were
allegedly overcharged disclose a cause of action.
[3]
The
matter comes to this Court as an application for leave to appeal
against a judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Local
Division, Johannesburg.
[1]
Background
[4]
Largely, the facts are not
contentious. At the end of World War II there was an increased demand
for petroleum products. Total and
other refineries obtained these
products from refineries located at the coast, mostly Durban,
although some supply also came from
Cape Town. The coastal refineries
did not have the capacity to meet the demand, the greatest of which
was inland. The situation
was made worse by the fact that –
because of apartheid – South Africa was facing isolation. Its
neighbour, the then
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), was subject to an
international oil embargo and depended on South Africa for its supply
of petroleum products.
Fearful of running out of its own supplies,
the apartheid government decided to establish an inland refinery in
Sasolburg. It approached
Total, a French controlled oil company,
France being a country which – according to Transnet –
had “a markedly
pragmatic relationship with apartheid
South Africa”, to participate in this project. Total was
reluctant to accept the
proposal because its plan was to invest with
Mobil, another oil company, in a coastal refinery.
[5]
In
the end, as a pre condition for its participation in the
government’s proposal, Total required an undertaking that
it
would not be placed at a disadvantage compared to a coastal refinery.
The 1967 agreement, whose main feature was the neutrality
principle,
was then concluded. The agreement recorded its purpose as being to
ensure that “an inland refinery will not at
any time be placed
at a disadvantage as regards transportation costs in relation to a
refinery sited at the coast”. It was
constituted by two
letters. The first – dated 2 July 1967 – was from the
Department of Trade and Industry to Total.
The second letter –
dated 3 July 1967 – was a response from Total accepting the
terms of the first letter. A specific
tariff was fixed in the first
letter. Crude oil was to be transported at 40 cents per 100 lbs. The
government and Total were satisfied
that this tariff guaranteed
neutrality.
[2]
The tariff was subject to revision at stipulated intervals.
[6]
The
entity that was to be contractually bound on behalf of the government
was the “Administration”. The Administration
was created
in terms of the Railways and Harbours Control and Management
(Consolidation) Act
[3]
(Railways Act). The Administration was going to be responsible for
the transportation by means of a pipeline of crude oil from
Durban to
the Sasolburg inland refinery.
[7]
On 8 December 1967 the National
Petroleum Refiners of South Africa (Pty) Ltd, commonly known as
Natref, was incorporated to
own the inland refinery at Sasolburg. Its
shares were, and continue to be, held by Total (36.36%) and Sasol Oil
(Pty) Ltd
(Sasol), the second respondent (63.64%). At that time
Sasol, which is now privately owned, was a wholly-owned government
company.
Natref was to refine crude oil exclusively for its
shareholders in proportion to their shareholding.
[8]
The
repeal of the Railways Act by the South African Transport Services
Act
[4]
brought about the creation of a commercial government enterprise
called the South African Transport Services (SATS). SATS replaced
the
Administration and continued to honour the neutrality principle. In
terms of the Legal Succession to the South African Transport
Services
Act,
[5]
Transnet, a wholly-owned government company, succeeded SATS.
Initially Transnet refused to recognise the neutrality principle.
During the late 1980s it announced a 15% increase in the
conveyance of crude oil that was to take effect on 1 January 1991.
This had the effect of breaching the neutrality principle as there
was no increase to tariffs for the conveyance of petrol, diesel
and
avtur (aviation fuel). Total and Sasol would have none of it.
Sasol threatened to build its own pipeline for the transportation
of
crude oil from Durban to the Natref refinery in Sasolburg. It also
indicated its preparedness to purchase Transnet’s pipeline.
The
fruition of any of these options would have meant substantial loss of
revenue by Transnet. This led to a forced change of heart.
Negotiations between Petronet, a division of Transnet, on the one
hand, and Total and Sasol, on the other, resulted in the conclusion
of the variation agreement on 2 December 1991. This agreement
constituted a variation of the 1967 agreement.
[9]
Like the 1967 agreement, the
variation agreement comprised two letters, the first from Transnet
proposing terms and the second from
Total and Sasol accepting the
terms. It maintained the neutrality principle, but on different
terms. The percentage increase of
the tariff for the transportation
of crude oil was pegged to increases in the transportation by
Transnet of
refined
petroleum products. In this regard, clause 1 provides that “the
percentage increase in the crude oil tariff will not
exceed the
weighted average percentage increase of any adjustments of petrol,
diesel and [a]vtur tariffs”.
[10]
Total and Sasol explain that the
crude oil transported from Durban to the Natref refinery contains
matter which – in the refining
process – gets removed and
is of no use to them. That matter is not an insignificant addition to
the volumes of crude oil
transported to the Natref refinery. Simply
put, the volumes of refined products that Total and Sasol produce and
sell are less
than the volumes of crude oil transported from the
coast to Natref. If there were to be a 100% charge on the
transportation of
these volumes (i.e. including the unusable matter),
Total and Sasol would be disadvantaged. It is for this reason that
the transportation
of crude oil to Natref was pegged to the weighted
average of refined products, namely petrol, diesel and avtur. In
essence, the
unusable matter is taken out of the equation in costing
transportation.
[11]
The
variation agreement was largely complied with for some years. In 2005
Transnet took the view that the legal landscape had changed
to such
an extent that the variation agreement had been rendered inoperable.
According to it, this was the result of the coming
into force of two
Acts, the National Energy Regulator Act
[6]
and the Petroleum Pipelines Act.
[7]
The National Energy Regulator Act establishes a regulator, the
National Energy Regulator (Nersa) which, amongst others, has the
mandate to undertake the powers of the Petroleum Pipelines Regulatory
Authority set out in the Petroleum Pipelines Act. One of
these
functions is to set or approve tariffs and charges in respect of
conveyance on pipelines.
[8]
The thrust of Transnet’s contention was that, since the power
to set and approve tariffs now vested in Nersa, it had become
legally
impermissible for it to comply with the variation agreement. Put
differently, it no longer lay with Transnet to set tariffs.
[12]
The first tariff in which Transnet
departed from the neutrality principle was the tariff effective from
6 August 2008. This tariff
predated the setting of tariffs by Nersa.
In Transnet’s 2008 determination, the crude oil tariff was
increased by 10.25%
whereas the tariff for petrol, diesel and avtur
was increased by less than 1%. The first tariff determination by
Nersa was effective
from April 2010. The 2010 tariff essentially
observed the neutrality principle. Things changed in Nersa’s
2011 tariff determination;
the crude oil tariff was increased by
about 107% whereas the tariff for petrol, diesel and avtur was
increased by about 80%. Although
subsequent tariff determinations
have essentially observed the neutrality principle, the differential
increases in 2008 and 2011
have obviously had, and still have, annual
knock-on effects.
[13]
Aggrieved by Transnet’s
resolve to subject it to the differential tariffs of 2008 and 2011,
on 16 October 2013 Total brought
suit in the High Court. Under one
claim, it sought a declarator that the variation agreement is valid
and binding and an order
directing Transnet to comply with the
variation agreement by ensuring that increases in tariffs do not
exceed the stipulation in
the agreement. Under another claim Total
sought a refund as contractual damages in the sum of R838 million by
which it alleged
it was overcharged as a result of an alleged breach
of the variation agreement. Transnet defended the action. As part of
its defence
it contended that – in the face of Nersa’s
statutory mandate to determine tariffs for the transportation of
crude oil
on petroleum pipelines – the variation agreement
could no longer be valid and binding. This issue was separated in
terms
of rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court for
determination before the other issues.
[14]
On 4 June 2015 Coppin J decided
the separated issue in Total’s favour and held that the
variation agreement continued
to be valid and binding. With leave of
the High Court, Transnet appealed to the Supreme Court of
Appeal. On 14 September 2016
the Supreme Court of Appeal
held that the variation agreement obliged Transnet to allow
discounts, within the maximum tariffs set
by Nersa, so as to give
effect to the neutrality principle. It too held that the variation
agreement was binding and the appeal
failed. On 9 November 2016
the Constitutional Court dismissed an application for leave to
appeal.
[15]
On 27 July 2017 Sasol entered the
fray, seeking relief against Transnet on substantially similar bases
as Total. The refund claimed
by Total and Sasol totalled just under
R2 billion. According to Transnet, this accounts for almost half of
its profit after tax.
[16]
Plainly as a result of its failure on the separated issue, on
14 September 2017 Transnet wrote letters to Total and Sasol
to the effect that it was giving a three year notice of
termination of the variation agreement. Total and Sasol amended their
particulars of claim by seeking orders directing Transnet to perform
in terms of the variation agreement. This, on the basis that
the
notice of termination amounted to a repudiation, which they did not
accept.
[17]
In addition to defences that traversed factual issues
with regard to what was claimed, Transnet took defences that raised
legal
questions, including questions of interpretation of the
variation agreement. First, it raised a special defence that the
claims
for a refund did not disclose a cause of action (cause of
action defence). This defence was to the effect that – absent
cancellation
of the agreement – recognised remedies in law do
not afford a right to recover allegedly overpaid amounts as damages.
Instead
of cancellation, continued the special defence, enforcement
of the agreement was sought. Second, according to Transnet, to
achieve
neutrality, Total and Sasol were not entitled to derive a
profit from the transportation costs they were being charged. This is
a question of interpretation. Transnet alleged that Total and Sasol
were, in fact, deriving a profit from transportation costs.
Third,
and as was to be expected, Transnet pleaded that its notice of
termination complied with clause 5 of the variation agreement
and
was, therefore, valid.
At this point let me quote
clause 5 of the variation agreement. It says:
“
Each
party shall give the other at least three years notice of any
intention to disregard the contents of this [l]etter of [a]greement
subject to the arrangement that a full agreement of conveyance for
crude oil is being prepared and that such agreement will embody
the
contents of this letter and supersede this letter.”
[18]
The
two actions by Total and Sasol were consolidated. Yet again, there
was a separation of issues in terms of rule 33(4). The issues
that
were to be determined first were the three defences set out in the
preceding paragraph that raised legal questions. The High
Court held
against Transnet on all the issues.
[9]
It refused leave to appeal, and so did the Supreme Court of Appeal.
The
approach to this Court
[19]
Transnet now seeks leave to appeal
from this Court. The application concerns only two of the three
issues that were determined by
the High Court. The first is whether
the variation agreement is terminable and, if it is, whether it has
been lawfully terminated.
What is key to the determination of this
issue is an interpretation of the variation agreement. The second is
whether Total and
Sasol’s claims for a refund do disclose a
cause of action.
[20]
On
the first issue, Transnet argues that the High Court’s holding
on whether the variation agreement is terminable has the
effect of
locking Transnet into an evergreen contract; evergreen in the sense
of existing in perpetuity. It bases this contention
on the High
Court’s view that “[a]bsent the ‘full agreement’
of conveyance of crude oil, any attempt to
cancel the [variation]
agreement is ineffectual and of no consequence”.
[10]
It develops the argument by saying for as long as the parties do not
reach agreement on the terms of the full agreement, it may
not cancel
the variation agreement. According to Transnet, this “perpetuity”
is contrary to public policy which is
informed by sections 195(1)
and 217 of the Constitution.
[11]
Transnet contends that what it calls the perpetuity of the variation
agreement is at odds with the basic values and principles
governing
public administration set out in section 195 of the Constitution. On
this, Transnet lays particular emphasis on the section
195 principles
of accountability, transparency and fairness.
[21]
It also submits that the variation
agreement, which – according to the High Court’s
interpretation – is effectively
not terminable, contravenes the
provisions of section 217 of the Constitution. This section decrees
that “[w]hen an organ
of state . . . contracts
for goods or services, it must do so in accordance with a system
which is fair, equitable,
transparent, competitive and
cost-effective”. Transnet submits that Total and Sasol derive a
favourable transportation benefit
provided by means of a finite
public resource, a benefit not enjoyed by other oil companies like
“BP, Shell and Caltex”,
and that this is at variance with
the provisions of section 217 of the Constitution. The outcome of the
High Court’s interpretation
of the variation agreement is,
first, unfair because Total and Sasol’s competitors are not
treated equally. Second, the whole
arrangement is inequitable because
the preferred, privileged and protected position of Total and Sasol
frustrates any possibility
of the empowerment of new entrants. Third,
the agreement – “which perpetuates an apartheid pact with
a foreign entity”
– lacks transparency. Fourth, it is not
competitive because it does not allow the participation of other oil
producers at
the same or better rates. Fifth, it is not
cost effective because it results in the subsidisation of
“profiteering Total
and monopolist Sasol”. The contention
continues that on the High Court’s interpretation, this must
carry on in perpetuity,
and that is not tenable.
[22]
Transnet concludes that the High
Court’s interpretation gives rise to an agreement that is
unenforceable for being contrary
to public policy. It submits that
there is a constitutionally compliant construction. It accepts that –
insofar as it is
founded on sections 195 and 217 – the
public policy argument was “not fully expounded” in the
High Court.
It makes the point that – because it did plead that
the evergreen nature of the variation agreement is contrary to public
policy – it impliedly pleaded constitutional values, as public
policy is now informed by such values. It matters not, therefore,
that specific reference was not made to the two sections, so contends
Transnet.
[23]
On the actual interpretation of
clause 5 of the variation agreement, Transnet submits that the words
– in clause 5 –
“subject to the arrangement that a
full agreement of conveyance for crude oil is being prepared”
do not make the right
to give notice subject to the conclusion of a
full agreement. The effect of such an interpretation, which is the
interpretation
the High Court adopted, is that the parties have the
right to terminate the agreement but, as they do so, they must
simultaneously
conclude a full agreement on the same terms as the one
they are terminating. That, according to Transnet, cannot possibly be
what
clause 5 contemplates. Such an interpretation is not only
contradictory, but it leads to an absurdity. In context, what the
quoted
words mean instead is that clause 5 contemplated that the full
agreement was
in the process of being
prepared
at the time of conclusion of
the variation agreement.
[24]
On
the cause of action defence, Transnet argues before this Court a
point it did not argue before. That point is not even pleaded
as part
of this defence. It makes the proposition that an overcharge cannot
be recovered by means of a damages claim at all.
A
fitting cause of action, so says Transnet, should rather have been
one of unjustified enrichment; the
condictio
indebiti
,
to be exact. Incidentally, Sasol has pleaded the
condictio
indebiti
as
an alternative to the contractual claim
.
For its proposition, Transnet relies on
Affirmative
Portfolios
,
[12]
a case in which it seems – but for failure to show that an
overpayment was excusable – the Supreme of Court of Appeal
would have upheld a claim for a refund founded on the
condictio
indebiti
.
Transnet submits that
Affirmative Portfolios
instances the employment of the
condictio
indebiti
in
seeking refunds for overpayments. Therefore, this is the route Total
and Sasol ought to have followed. It then makes the point
that the
public in general will benefit from a final word from this Court as
to the correctness of its proposition.
[25]
Transnet
persists in its other contention, which is that Total and Sasol could
sue for a refund only if they had first cancelled
the agreement.
Otherwise, as they presently stand, the claims for a refund do not
disclose a cause of action. Transnet argues that
Victoria Falls
[13]
and
Mainline
Carriers
,
[14]
on which the High Court relied in dismissing the cause of action
defence, are distinguishable.
[26]
Lastly, Transnet argues that –
based on the arguments set out above – the question whether the
notice of termination
was issued validly engages both our
constitutional and general jurisdiction. On the other hand, it
submits that the point about
lack of a cause of action engages our
general jurisdiction.
[27]
Total argues that this matter does
not engage this Court’s jurisdiction. In support, it makes the
following arguments. There
is no constitutional issue, since
sections 195 and 217 of the Constitution have been raised for
the first time before this
Court. In any event, these sections do not
assist Transnet. Section 195 informs the interpretation of
substantive provisions
of the Constitution. It does not create
independent rights or obligations, and Transnet has not shown how the
cancellation clause
violates section 195. Section 217 does not
apply because what it prescribes is applicable where an organ of
state
procures
goods or services. Here Transnet is
providing
the service.
[28]
On
the merits, Total argues that in the appeal against Coppin J’s
judgment
[15]
the Supreme Court
of Appeal put paid to Transnet’s arguments about the
impermissibility of the tariff charged in accordance
with the
neutrality principle. Also, there is no evidence on the question
whether the High Court’s interpretation of the
cancellation
clause hinders Transnet from promoting efficient, economic and
effective use of its resources, as contemplated by
section 195. Nor
is there evidence of the extent of such hindrance, if there be any
hindrance. And a violation of section 217 of
the Constitution would,
at best, permit a review and setting aside of the variation
agreement, which Transnet has never sought.
[29]
Total accepts that the cause of
action defence and the point on termination are points of law.
However, it takes the view that both
lack reasonable prospects of
success and are, therefore, not arguable. Also, there is nothing
about them that makes them of general
public importance. The matter
concerns the application of uncontroversial legal tests, and does not
transcend the narrow interests
of the parties involved. Additionally,
Total argues that it is not in the interests of justice to grant
leave to appeal. This matter
has been ongoing for eight years,
offending the principle of finality in litigation and tying the
respondents in unending litigation.
[30]
Total
argues that this Court should dismiss Transnet’s cause of
action defence, since there is no requirement in our law that
a party
suing for damages for breach of contract must first cancel the
contract.
[16]
Total asks this Court to reject Transnet’s contention that its
claim for a refund ought to have been brought under the
condictio indebiti
.
There is no authority for the proposition that a claimant suing for
the return of overpayment must sue in enrichment. In fact,
a claim
under an enrichment action is a claim of last resort, where there are
no other remedies available to a claimant under the
law of
obligations.
[31]
Total contends that Transnet’s
argument that the variation agreement permits cancellation on three
years’ notice must
be rejected. Transnet’s argument, in
essence, asks this Court to ignore the agreement’s requirement
that the right
of cancellation is “subject to the arrangement
that a full agreement of conveyance for crude oil is being prepared
and that
such agreement will embody the contents of this letter and
supersede this letter”. Ignoring that phrase contravenes the
presumption
against superfluity when interpreting contracts,
continues the argument. Total submits that a proper interpretation of
the variation
agreement’s cancellation clause, considering the
text, context and purpose, should lead this Court to the conclusion
that
Transnet repudiated the variation agreement by attempting to
terminate it without any agreement for the conveyance of crude oil
being prepared.
[32]
Additionally, Total argues that
Transnet mischaracterises the condition in the variation agreement
when it argues that the High
Court’s interpretation of the
cancellation clause is absurd as it makes terminating a contract
subject to another agreement
being concluded on identical terms to
the one being terminated. What must be borne in mind, Total submits,
is that the parties
agreed to the neutrality principle being
maintained throughout. As such, so long as it continues to embody the
neutrality principle,
an agreement that would supersede the variation
agreement could conceivably change the manner in which the neutrality
principle
is maintained.
[33]
Sasol’s arguments on
jurisdiction are substantially similar to Total’s.
[34]
On the termination defence, Sasol,
like Total, argues that an interpretation that requires that
conveyance in accordance with the
neutrality principle must always be
in place is informed by the text, context and purpose of the
variation agreement. Sasol illustrates
this with the following.
Transnet operates the only pipeline connecting Natref to Durban. When
concluding the variation agreement,
the parties understood that the
continuation of pipeline services to Natref would always be essential
to the operation of Natref
for as long as no alternative existed. The
parties, therefore, understood that this was no ordinary commercial
agreement, which
could be cancelled with the parties going their
separate ways. Sasol submits that a key purpose of the variation
agreement that
Transnet ignores is that it regulates a relationship
in terms of which the Natref shareholders are dependent on Transnet’s
pipeline and which is characterised by long term reciprocal
obligations that the parties undertook to one another. Transnet
also
has no right to cancel on reasonable notice since the agreement
expressly provides a period of notice. And Sasol submits that
public
policy considerations do not bypass the accepted approach to
contractual interpretation. There is, in any event, nothing
about the
cancellation clause that is contrary to public policy.
[35]
On the cause of action defence,
Sasol contends that the well-established position in our law is that
an enrichment claim is not
sustainable where there is a contractual
basis for the claim. And the respondents’ claims have a clear
contractual origin.
The variation agreement imposes an obligation on
Transnet, when it increases the crude oil tariff, not to exceed a
prescribed ratio.
Transnet breached this obligation by publishing a
higher tariff and Sasol (under protest) paid this amount. Sasol’s
main
claim then, is not that it made payments because of an error or
a mistaken belief that the payments were owing. Instead, it made
payments in accordance with Transnet’s official published
tariffs, and its damages therefore arise because Transnet set those
official tariffs in breach of its obligations under the variation
agreement. Sasol submits that it plainly has a valid contractual
claim. That claim arises from Transnet’s positive
malperformance of its tariff setting obligations under the variation
agreement,
an agreement which, according to the Supreme Court of
Appeal, remains valid and binding.
Jurisdiction
and leave to appeal
[36]
Does
this Court have jurisdiction? That question must be answered in
relation to each of the two issues before us. I start with
the cause
of action defence. As stated a few times before, Transnet pleaded
that a contract must be cancelled in order for a party
to claim a
refund for a breach of that contract. It persists in that argument.
Transnet did not suggest that this issue engages
our constitutional
jurisdiction. I need say no more about that. Transnet invoked our
general jurisdiction. In terms of section 167(3)(b)(ii)
of the
Constitution the general jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court
is engaged if a “matter raises an arguable
point of law of
general public importance which ought to be considered by that
Court”. In
Paulsen
this Court held that “[t]he notion that a point of law is
arguable entails some degree of merit in the argument. Although
the
argument need not, of necessity, be convincing at this stage, it must
have a measure of plausibility.”
[17]
[37]
Total
and Sasol allege that Transnet charged them a rate that was more than
the weighted average of increase on the conveyance of
petrol, diesel
and avtur. This was in breach of the variation agreement, they aver.
I will return to the question whether the overcharge
constituted a
breach. Total and Sasol seek repayment of the amounts overcharged as
contractual damages. They seek to be placed
in the position they
would have been in but for the breach.
[18]
On first principles, there is nothing the matter with their claims.
Well over a century ago Innes CJ said as much in
Victoria Falls
.
[19]
The context in which this was said may be different, but I do not see
why the principle must not find application. All that Total
and Sasol
are asking for now is to “be placed in the position [they]
would have occupied had the contract been performed,
so far as
[could] be done by the payment of money, and without undue hardship
to [Transnet]”.
[20]
[38]
There
is no reason whatsoever for the contract first to be cancelled for
Total and Sasol to be able to claim damages. Authority
for the
general principle that a party can claim specific performance
together with damages for defective or late performance is
to be
found in cases like
Silverton
Estates
,
[21]
Sunjeevi
,
[22]
Allers
[23]
and
Dominion
Earthworks (Pty) Ltd
.
[24]
It is worth noting that the judgment in
Silverton Estates
was
penned by Innes CJ. So, his later judgment in
Victoria
Falls
is
unlikely to have been intended to conflict with this general
principle.
[25]
I might add that opting to stand by the contract and claiming
specific performance together with damages are not inconsistent
remedies which – in accordance with the principle set out in
Gouws
– are impermissible. Beyers JA held in
Gouws
:
“
I
am not aware of any general proposition that a plaintiff who has two
or more remedies at [her or] his disposal must elect at a
given point
of time which of them [she or] he intends to pursue, and that,
having elected one, [she or] he is taken to have
abandoned all
others. Such a situation might well arise where the choice lies
between two inconsistent remedies and the plaintiff
commits [her- or]
himself unequivocally to the one or other of them.”
[26]
[39]
Also worth noting is the fact that
cancellation cannot be had merely out of a wish to have it. A party
may cancel on the basis of
a breach, if the breach is material or, as
Kerr says, major. Kerr says:
“
Parties
to a contract are bound together in a legal relationship. Termination
of the legal relationship is clearly an important
step. Because it is
so important it may not be taken if the breach is a minor one only. .
. . [E]very major breach entitles the
aggrieved party to terminate
the relationship by cancelling the contract.”
[27]
Quoting
Swartz
and Son (Pty) Ltd
he continues:
[28]
“
A
breach is a major one if it ‘goes to the root of the contract’,
or affects a ‘vital part’ of the obligations
or means
that there is no ‘substantial performance’. It amounts to
saying that the breach must be so serious that it
cannot reasonably
be expected of the other party that [she or] he should continue with
the contract and content [herself or] himself
with an eventual claim
for damages.”
[29]
Where,
on this basis, the aggrieved party is not entitled to cancel the
contract, the law not only permits but confines the aggrieved
party
to a claim for damages to compensate it for the delinquent party’s
malperformance.
[40]
Thus, it is mistaken of Transnet to
suggest that cancellation of the variation agreement would have been
available at will to Total
and Sasol in order for them to then claim
the refund.
[41]
In sum, the point is not arguable.
[42]
What of Transnet’s new
argument raised for the first time before us that amounts overcharged
cannot be recovered by a claim
for damages at all? May we entertain
it?
[43]
The
only authority that Transnet relied on in support of this argument is
Affirmative Portfolios
.
Its argument amounted to no more than that in that case the
condictio indebiti
was employed. As Total argued, it does not follow that no other cause
of action is competent. There may be more than one possible
cause of
action in respect of the same set of facts. That much is trite. Thus,
there is a missing link in Transnet’s reasoning.
In oral
argument, Sasol was engaged in a debate that raised the following
issues, perhaps not in as much detail as I set them out
here; but the
substance is the same. An argument may be made that in order to claim
contractual damages, an aggrieved party must
establish that the other
has been guilty of a breach of the contract. It may then be argued
that the fact that a contract provides
that the price for an ongoing
supply of goods or services will be X amount does not mean that the
creditor commits a breach of
contract if it sends invoices to the
debtor for an amount in excess of X amount. Conceivably an insistence
by a creditor in charging
more than the agreed price, coupled with a
refusal to supply except at the higher price, could be a repudiation
justifying cancellation
of the contract.
[30]
But unless the repudiation is accepted (leading to cancellation of
the contract), repudiation is, as has been said in the cases,
a
“thing writ in water”.
[31]
The other party can ignore it and insist on compliance with the
contract.
[44]
In countering this, Sasol put up a
plausible argument, and I put it no higher. It submitted that this is
not merely about an overcharge.
It is not just a case of wrong
invoicing. The overcharge arises from an antecedent breach; the
determination of a new tariff. The
“wrong” invoicing is
pursuant to that determination. That determination is a breach, as it
is at variance with the
agreement on how tariffs would be increased.
Setting tariffs in a particular manner was a contractual obligation
that rested on
Transnet. I cannot make light of this argument.
Transnet’s performance was not only about the conveyance of
crude oil from
Durban to Natref. It was also about periodically
increasing tariffs in the manner stipulated in the variation
agreement. It may
well be mistaken, therefore, to view this as a case
of a mere overcharge.
[45]
Indeed, as one observes from the
pleadings, the basis for the claims for a refund is this. First, for
2008 Transnet breached the
variation agreement by increasing the
tariff for the conveyance of crude oil by 10.25%, whilst the increase
in respect of petrol,
diesel and avtur was less than 1%. Second, for
2011 the respective increases were about 107% and 80%. According
to Total and
Sasol, that breach continues because even on those
occasions when increases were based on the stipulated weighted
average, the 2008
and 2011 breaches increased the base levels on
which the succeeding years’ “neutral” increases
were calculated.
It seems to me, therefore, that authorities, if any,
on the mere invoicing of a wrong price may well not be on point.
[46]
An
argument may be made that any loss which Total and Sasol suffered by
paying the increased amounts was caused not by the fact
that the
increased amounts were wrongly charged, but by their decision to pay
the increased amounts. A possible counter is that
they did not have
much choice. As they say, they paid the extra amounts under protest.
That is understandable. It does not seem
that they had the luxury of
an option to litigate and seek specific performance in accordance
with the variation agreement. Had
they not paid, they faced the
prospect of Transnet halting the conveyance of crude oil with
disastrous consequences for refining
operations at Natref. It is so
that there are judgments that have held that the making of payment
under protest can be a precursor
to a
condictio
indebiti
.
[32]
But if – as Sasol argued – there was, in fact, a breach,
would this inexorably wipe out any possibility of a claim
for
contractual damages?
[47]
I raise all these arguments
tentatively and not to decide them one way or the other. I do so to
demonstrate that there are, at this
stage, imponderables on an issue
that was raised for the first time in this Court. We did not get much
on it by way of authorities
from the parties. And had the matter been
raised before the High Court, we would have benefitted from a
judgment of that Court.
We should be wary not readily to entertain
issues that are raised for the first time before this Court. And this
is especially
so in the case of matters which, as this one does,
concern the common law. Cameron J had this to say in
Tiekiedraai
:
“
A
considerable road hump in Tiekiedraai’s way is that this Court
is wary of deciding issues as a court of first and last instance.
This is especially so in questions of common law doctrine, where this
Court often solicits the views and expertise of the Supreme Court
of Appeal. . . . Related is the respect this Court pays to the views
of the High Court and of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
Our
precedents say that this Court functions better when it is assisted
by a well-reasoned judgment (or judgments) on the point
in
issue.”
[33]
[48]
For
these reasons, I conclude that – although the issue is arguable
– it is not one “which ought to be considered
by [this]
Court”.
[34]
It is simply not in the interests of justice for us to consider the
issue. In
Paulsen
we held that the words “which ought to be considered by that
Court” are about the interests of justice factor.
[35]
We said, “If – for whatever reason – it is not
in the interests of justice for this Court to entertain what
is
otherwise an arguable point of law of general public importance, then
that point is not one that ‘ought to be considered
by [this]
Court’.”
[36]
[49]
So, I leave the question open.
[50]
I next consider whether the question
of the validity of the notice of termination does engage our
jurisdiction. To recapitulate,
Total and Sasol argue that clause 5 of
the variation agreement, which allows parties to “disregard”
(for which, plainly,
we must read “terminate”) the
agreement, is subject to a condition that the parties are preparing a
“full agreement”
embodying the contents of the variation
agreement; there cannot be cancellation without preparation of a full
agreement. Transnet,
on the other hand, argues that the clause
requires that a three-year notice of termination be given, but that
the variation
agreement and, therefore, this termination clause were
meant to be superseded by a “full agreement” concluded by
the
parties. In terms of the variation agreement this full agreement
had to embody the contents of the variation agreement. Of course,
the
full agreement was never concluded. Thus, argues Transnet, as the
provision to terminate on three-years’ notice is extant,
it is
entitled to terminate on such notice and has validly terminated the
agreement.
[51]
Without
doubt, the interpretation of the termination clause is a point of law
and, as I will show later, Transnet’s argument
on it is
plausible. Put differently, the argument has reasonable prospects of
success. That makes it arguable.
[37]
The next question is whether the point is of general public
importance.
[52]
This
Court in
Paulsen
held that for a point to be of general public importance it need not
implicate the interests of society as a whole but “it
must
transcend the narrow interests of the litigants and implicate the
interest of a significant part of the general public”.
[38]
Does the question at hand meet that test? I think the answer lies in
the consideration of a number of factors. These are they.
Transnet is
a public entity administering an economically strategic and crucial
piece of public infrastructure. As Transnet avers,
the infrastructure
is finite. If the correct interpretation of clause 5 is that the
variation agreement cannot be terminated, that
means this
infrastructure will be locked into this perpetual contract on terms
which, according to Transnet, are unfavourable.
And this is in
circumstances where one of the objects of the Petroleum Pipelines
Act is the promotion of equitable access
to pipelines.
[39]
I must not be understood to be pronouncing on whether the terms are,
indeed, unfavourable to Transnet. It is well established that
jurisdiction is determined not on the substantive merits but on the
pleadings.
[40]
Crucially and as shown presently, on Total’s interpretation of
clause 5, the variation agreement is evergreen. Total argued
that for
as long as the circumstances that informed the inclusion of the
neutrality principle in the 1967 and variation agreements
exist,
the present agreement cannot be cancelled. The main circumstance
worth mentioning is the fact that Natref is sited inland
and it
sources its crude oil from the coast (Durban, to be exact), whereas
its competitors are located at the coast. It was that
locational
difference that informed the introduction of the neutrality
principle. That will never change. Therefore, on Total’s
interpretation of clause 5, the variation agreement is, indeed,
evergreen. And that this is Total’s position was put
beyond
question during a fairly lengthy debate in oral argument.
[53]
So, on this argument, an
economically strategic, crucial and finite piece of public
infrastructure is locked into a contractual
arrangement that may well
be perpetual. A combination of this and the couple of other factors
referred to in the preceding paragraph
certainly does make this a
matter of general public importance. The public interest is
implicated. Thus, the matter evidently transcends
the narrow
interests of the litigants. And that calls for an interpretation of
clause 5.
[54]
Due to the particular public
interest that the matter implicates and the fact that Transnet’s
interpretation bears reasonable
prospects of success, the matter
ought to be considered by this Court. Thus, leave to appeal is
granted for this Court to determine
only the question whether the
notice to terminate the variation agreement was issued validly. This
question requires us to interpret
clause 5 of the variation
agreement.
Termination
[55]
Disagreement
between the parties arises from the phrase in clause 5 “
subject to
the arrangement that a full agreement of conveyance for crude oil
is
being prepared
and that such agreement will embody the contents of this letter and
supersede this letter”. (Emphasis added.) Total and Sasol
are
not in agreement on this. Sasol argued that the term “subject
to”
reflects
a condition applicable to any party intending to terminate the
variation agreement. Largely,
[41]
Sasol’s interpretation coincides with that of the
High Court.
Sasol
does
not contend that there is a perpetual obligation on Transnet to
provide crude oil conveyance in accordance with the variation
agreement. On perpetuity,
the
High Court held as much. It also held that all that is required of a
party wishing to terminate the agreement is to show that
a new,
“full” agreement is being prepared. The High Court put it
thus:
“
That
the variation agreement is not in perpetuity appears from the terms
of the agreement that specifically spell out on what basis
the terms
of the variation agreement may be disregarded. So long as a full
agreement of conveyance for crude oil
is
being prepared
and such agreement will embody how the tariff is set out, either
party is entitled to give the other party three years’ notice
of its intention to disregard the terms of the variation
agreement.”
[42]
(Emphasis added.)
[56]
From this, it is clear that there
need not be a finalised draft “full” agreement. It is
enough if it is being prepared.
[57]
The
High Court continues and says something which, as Transnet correctly
observed, contradicts this. It says “[a]bsent the
‘full
agreement’ of conveyance of crude oil, any attempt to cancel
the [variation] agreement is ineffectual and of
no consequence”.
[43]
It continues:
“
That
Transnet’s purported three-year notice given to both Total and
Sasol was unaccompanied by such ‘full agreement’
is
undisputed. That being the case, the purported termination was
invalid. It is ineffectual and of no moment.”
[44]
[58]
Now the judgment seems to require
more than that a full agreement should be in the course of
preparation. The notice of termination
must be accompanied by a
“full” agreement.
[59]
Sasol embraces that part of the
judgment that insists on a full agreement. It says its idea of a full
agreement that “
is being prepared
”
is a draft agreement prepared by Transnet “embod[ying] the
contents of [the variation agreement]”, and which
Transnet must
then hand over to Total and Sasol before giving notice to terminate
the agreement. According to Sasol, if this condition
is satisfied, it
is only then that any party to the agreement may give the three-year
notice of termination. It matters not that
the other parties will not
have made an input to the preparation of the agreement, let alone
agreed to it. As soon as the unilaterally
prepared document is in
existence and has been given to Total and Sasol, the entitlement to
terminate is triggered.
[60]
Although
writing in the context of statutory interpretation, Majiedt AJ
said, in
Cool
Ideas
,
“[a] fundamental tenet of statutory interpretation is that the
words in a statute must be given their ordinary grammatical
meaning,
unless to do so would result in an absurdity”
[45]
but that there are three important interrelated riders. These include
that “statutory provisions should always be interpreted
purposively”.
[46]
Likewise, in
Endumeni
Wallis JA said:
“
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.”
[47]
[61]
Here is the outcome that Sasol’s
interpretation leads to. If desirous to terminate the agreement, all
that Transnet need do
is to prepare a “full” agreement
and hand it over to Total and Sasol. It is only if the two entities
have this draft
agreement that a notice of termination may be issued.
The two documents (the draft agreement and the notice of termination)
may
even be handed over simultaneously. At a purposive level, it is
difficult to understand this submission. Its effect is this. Before
delivery by Transnet of a new full draft agreement to Total and
Sasol, the parties cannot give the three year notice to cancel.
But as soon as Transnet delivers this new draft agreement and without
more, the right to terminate is triggered. One may ask rhetorically:
in practical terms, what is the difference between these two
scenarios, regard being had to the fact that in both there is not
a
concluded agreement? The “full” agreement may or may not
be acceptable to Total and Sasol. If not acceptable, it
will never
become an agreement. Mere “preparation” and delivery of a
full draft agreement to the other parties does
the trick.
[62]
Sasol submitted that the notice
clause gave the parties three years to try to come to terms on the
full draft agreement. If they
did not come to terms, the notice of
termination would take effect at the end of the three-year period. If
they did come to terms,
the notice of termination would fall away,
because the variation agreement would be superseded by the full
agreement. Sasol accepted
that Transnet could permissibly include, in
the full draft agreement, the three-year notice provision contained
in the variation
agreement. This would mean that, upon conclusion of
the full agreement, Transnet could again give a three-year notice of
termination,
this time in terms of the full agreement rather than the
variation agreement.
[63]
Transnet submitted, correctly, that
this interpretation is not only contradictory, it leads to an
absurdity; a glaring one at that,
I might add.
Endumeni
held:
“
[W]here
the context makes it plain that adhering to the meaning suggested by
apparently plain language would lead to glaring absurdity,
the court
will ascribe a meaning to the language that avoids the absurdity.
This is said to involve a departure from the plain
meaning of the
words used. More accurately it is either a restriction or extension
of the language used by the adoption of a narrow
or broad meaning of
the words, the selection of a less immediately apparent meaning or
sometimes the correction of an apparent
error in the language in
order to avoid the identified absurdity.”
[48]
[64]
Total argues that, properly
construed, the variation agreement provides that so long as the
circumstances that necessitated the
introduction of the neutrality
principle continue to exist, the variation agreement cannot be
terminated. What this means is that
as long as Natref is located
inland and sources crude oil from the coast, the variation agreement
cannot be terminated. In essence
then, Total contends for a situation
where Transnet is locked into this contractual relationship in
perpetuity or, at the very
least, beyond the foreseeable future.
[65]
This interpretation is not viable.
It strikes a line right across the provision for a three year
notice period to terminate.
If what is of paramount importance is a
change in the circumstances that necessitated the introduction of the
neutrality principle,
it passes more than strange that the agreement
is not direct on this. It would have been a matter of relative ease
for the parties
to stipulate that, unless there is a change in the
circumstances that gave rise to the need for the neutrality
principle, notice
of termination cannot not be given. What the
agreement does instead is clearly to make provision for the parties
to terminate on
three years’ notice. But Total relegates that
into nothingness.
[66]
In an attempt to avoid this, Total
submitted
that the three-year notice period allows the parties to “iron
out” the terms of the agreement, but that if
after three years
they cannot agree on the terms, nothing happens. Furthermore, Total –
unlike Sasol – did not accept
that the full agreement, if
concluded, could itself contain a clause permitting termination on
three years’ notice.
[67]
The
upshot of Total’s argument is that the parties cannot terminate
the variation agreement notwithstanding the three-year
notice. If
there is no full agreement to supersede the variation agreement, the
three-year notice period will have served no purpose,
except as some
sort of obligatory negotiation period. If the variation agreement is
superseded by a concluded full agreement, the
latter agreement itself
cannot permissibly be one capable of termination on three years’
notice. Not only is this interpretation
glaringly absurd, it renders
the dominant part of clause 5 unnecessary and irrelevant. The
Appellate Division in
Golden
Dumps
,
albeit in the context of interpreting legislation, affirmed the
general rule of construction that, as far as possible, meaning
is to
be given to every word and that no word, phrase or sentence should
easily be found to be superfluous.
[49]
As I say, Total’s interpretation is as good as not giving
meaning to the words that provide for a three-year notice.
[68]
A
viable interpretation is one that factors into the contextual setting
the history of the neutrality principle.
The
original agreement was concluded in 1967. That agreement was silent
both on its duration and on the giving of a notice of termination.
If
it was not intended to be a contract that would exist in perpetuity,
it would be terminable on reasonable notice. In
Putco
Smalberger AJA said “[w]here an agreement is silent as to its
duration, it is terminable on reasonable notice in the absence
of a
conclusion that it was intended to continue indefinitely”.
[50]
[69]
In
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
Streicher JA held that “[i]n my view, the Court
a
quo
correctly
decided that the contract was terminable on reasonable notice.
Whether it was is a matter of construction”.
[51]
Likewise, in
Plaaskem
[52]
Hancke AJA – relying on
Putco
,
[53]
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
[54]
and
Trident
Sales
[55]
– came to the same conclusion.
[56]
Trident
Sales
says this is a question of interpretation; there is no presumption
one way or the other.
Plaaskem
does point to some academic discontent with the lack of a bias in
favour of the right to terminate on reasonable notice.
[57]
It says “concern has been raised regarding the fact that
parties could be bound in perpetuity”.
[58]
I need not get into that apparent legal controversy. Nor need I
engage in an exercise of construction as envisaged in
Putco
,
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
,
Plaaskem
and
Trio
Engineered Products
[59]
on whether the 1967 agreement was to exist in perpetuity or was
terminable on reasonable notice. Not when that agreement was varied
by the 1991 variation agreement, the latter being what is
litigated before us.
[70]
Suffice
it to say, if the 1967 agreement was terminable on reasonable notice,
in the beginning the notice period would probably
have been quite
lengthy; probably much longer than the contentious three years
stipulated in clause 5 of the variation agreement.
I will not venture
a view on how much longer, as that is a question that turns on the
circumstances of each case, and one determinable
upon an
interpretation of the contract concerned.
[60]
But the notice period would have been considerably longer
because
if the Natref shareholders were not going to have access to the then
Administration’s pipeline, they might have needed
to construct
one of their own, and there might have been questions of recouping
the cost of their investment, and so forth. Indeed,
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
says at least one of the purposes of giving a notice of termination
is to afford the other party “sufficient time in which
reasonably to manage its own affairs”.
[61]
[71]
In 1991 – when the variation
agreement was concluded – the context was different. The 1967
agreement had been in place
for 24 years. Circumstances could not
possibly have been the same as those that prevailed in 1967 relative
to the nature of the
necessary notice before termination; that is, if
the 1967 agreement was terminable on notice. Possibly – if not
probably
– as at 1991, Total and Sasol had not only recouped
their cost of investment, but had even realised a return on their
investment.
To the extent that I may be
criticised
on
the basis that this is speculative, the reality is that in 1991
circumstances simply could not have been the same as in 1967.
That is
the context in which we must construe clause 5 of the variation
agreement. That is the context in which we must assess
Total’s
argument, the effect of which is to render the variation agreement
not terminable. In that context, it does make
sense that –
after 24 years of its existence – the parties decided that
the neutrality principle should be terminable
on three years’
notice. This must have been on the basis that they considered the
three year notice period to be reasonable.
And the right
expressed in clause 5 to give a three year notice to disregard
the agreement means a three-year notice of termination.
[72]
I have already demonstrated that the
conditionalities suggested by Total and Sasol are untenable. So, what
qualification there may
be, if any, to the entitlement to give notice
of termination must flow from the words in clause 5: “
subject
to the arrangement that a full agreement of conveyance for crude oil
is being prepared and that such agreement will embody
the contents of
this letter and supersede this letter
”
.
What does this mean?
[73]
It seems to me that the contracting
parties were not adding a suspensive condition to the cancellation
clause. They were merely
recording
that at the time of concluding the variation agreement a full
agreement was being prepared and that – upon conclusion – it
would automatically replace the variation agreement. The words
“subject to” appeared in a two-page letter from a
business
executive, not in a detailed contract drafted by lawyers.
There is no reason to assume that the “subject to”
formulation
was used in a technical legal sense as introducing a
suspensive condition.
[74]
This
is buttressed by the second of the two components of the variation
agreement, the second letter penned by Total and Sasol.
In response
to the first letter penned by Mr Crowley of Petronet,
[62]
which contained the actual neutrality principle, Total and Sasol
wrote that “[their] understanding is that these conditions
[for
which we must obviously read “terms”] will now be
incorporated in an encompassing agreement between [them]selves
and
Petronet”. This is consistent with the phrase “a full
agreement
is
being prepared”, used in the phrase that opens with “subject
to”. Of course, a full agreement was never concluded.
The
contractual relationship between the parties continues to be governed
by the variation agreement. That means the provision
in clause 5 that
entitles the parties to terminate on three-years’ notice
remains operative. Therefore, Transnet was perfectly
entitled to
invoke it and give the requisite three year notice of
termination.
[75]
This interpretation avoids much of
the difficulties the interpretations proffered by Total and Sasol
encounter.
[76]
Endumeni
held:
“
Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the 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.”
[63]
[77]
The factors referred to are those
set out in the earlier quotation from this judgment, namely 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. The interpretations advocated by
Total and Sasol are impractical,
insensible and unbusinesslike. They
simply do not make the cut.
[78]
That leads to the conclusion that
the notice of termination was issued validly. Since it was issued in
September 2017, the variation
agreement came to an end in
September 2020. That, however, does not in itself mean that
Transnet no longer has an obligation
to convey crude oil to Natref,
only that the conveyance is no longer regulated by contract. There is
nothing in the papers to suggest
that Transnet wishes to terminate
the use of the pipeline by Total and Sasol. The main point of
contention between the parties
has been whether the tariff for use of
the pipeline should continue to be based on the neutrality principle.
Transnet’s licence
to operate the pipeline is not before us,
but section 20(1)(f) of the Petroleum Pipelines Act provides
that a petroleum pipeline
may be licensed for either crude oil or
petroleum products, or both, “as long as sufficient pipeline
capacity is available
for crude oil to enable the uninterrupted
operation of the crude oil refinery located at Sasolburg, to operate
at its normal operating
capacity at the commencement of this Act and
for so long as that refinery continues as a going concern”.
Public law remedies
may well be available to Total and Sasol if
Transnet or Nersa, when making decisions regarding access to, and the
terms for use
of, the pipeline, fail to observe the legal constraints
on the exercise of their powers.
Costs
[79]
The appeal succeeds only to the
extent of the questions whether the variation agreement was
terminable and, if it was, whether it
was terminated validly. While
Transnet enjoys this success, Total and Sasol have succeeded on the
cause of action defence. It seems
fair that in this Court each party
must pay its costs. That must be the case in the High Court as well.
That means the High Court’s
costs order must be set aside.
Order
[80]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted only in respect of the questions whether
the variation agreement
was terminable and, if it was, whether it was
terminated validly.
2.
The appeal is allowed and, as a consequence, it is declared that the
variation agreement
was terminable, was terminated validly and came
to an end on 13 September 2020.
3.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg, is set
aside insofar as it relates to the questions
referred to in paragraph 1 and to costs.
4.
Each party must pay its own costs in this Court and in the High
Court.
For
the Applicant:
J J Gauntlett SC QC, K Pillay SC, F B Pelser, Y S Ntloko
and N Nyembe i
nstructed by Webber
Wentzel
For the First
Respondent:
A E Bham SC, J Babamia SC and K Hofmeyr SC instructed by Norton
Rose Fulbright South Africa Incorporated
For the Second
Respondent:
T Ngcukaitobi SC, D Turner and M Mbikiwa instructed by Mchunu
Attorneys
[1]
Total
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Transnet SOC Ltd
,
unreported judgment of the Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg, Case No
2013/38820 (9 October 2020) (High Court judgment).
[2]
In
this regard, the first letter said the tariff “appears to be
suitable in placing the [inland] refinery in a balanced
transport
position
vis-à-vis
the coastal refineries on the situation as assessed”.
[3]
70
of 1957.
[4]
65
of 1981.
[5]
9
of 1989.
[6]
40
of 2004.
[7]
60
of 2003.
[8]
Section
4(f) of the Petroleum Pipelines Act.
[9]
High
Court judgment above n 1 at para 55.
[10]
Id
at para 66. The judgment goes on to say:
“
That
Transnet’s purported three years’ notice given to both
Total and Sasol was unaccompanied by such ‘full
agreement’
is undisputed. That being the case, the purported termination was
invalid. It is ineffectual and of no moment.”
[11]
Section
195(1) of the Constitution provides:
“
(1)
Public administration must be governed by the democratic values and
principles enshrined
in the Constitution, including the following
principles:
(a)
A high standard of professional ethics must be promoted and
maintained.
(b)
Efficient, economic and effective use of resources must be promoted.
(c)
Public administration must be development-oriented.
(d)
Services must be provided impartially, fairly, equitably and without
bias.
(e)
People’s needs must be responded to, and the public must be
encouraged to
participate in policy-making.
(f)
Public administration must be accountable.
(g)
Transparency must be fostered by providing the public with timely,
accessible and
accurate information.
(h)
Good human-resource management and career-development practices, to
maximise human
potential, must be cultivated.
(i)
Public administration must be broadly representative of the South
African
people, with employment and personnel management practices
based on ability, objectivity, fairness, and the need to redress the
imbalances of the past to achieve broad representation.”
And
section 217 provides:
“
(1)
When an organ of state in the national, provincial or local sphere
of government, or any
other institution identified in national
legislation, contracts for goods or services, it must do so in
accordance with a system
which is fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost-effective.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not prevent the organs of state or institutions
referred to
in that subsection from implementing a procurement
policy providing for—
(a)
categories of preference in the allocation of contracts; and
(b)
the protection or advancement of persons, or categories of persons,
disadvantaged
by unfair discrimination.
(3)
National legislation must prescribe a framework within which the
policy referred
to in subsection (2) must be implemented.”
[12]
Affirmative
Portfolios CC v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2008]
ZASCA 127; 2009 (1) SA 196 (SCA).
[13]
Victoria
Falls and Transvaal Power Co Ltd v Consolidated Langlaagte Mines Ltd
1915 AD 1.
[14]
Mainline
Carriers (Pty) Ltd v Jaad Investments CC
1998 (2) SA 468
(C).
[15]
Total
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Transnet SOC Ltd
,
unreported judgment of the Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg, Case
No 38820/2013 (4 June 2015).
[16]
See
for example
Victoria
Falls
above
n 13 at 22;
Trotman
v Edwick
1951 (1) SA 443
(AD) at 449B-C;
Holmdene
Brickworks (Pty) Ltd v Roberts Construction Co Ltd
1977 (3) SA 670
(A) at 687B-C; and
Mainline
Carriers
above
n 14 at paras 14, 16, 18, 20-4, 35-8 and 55-60.
[17]
Paulsen
v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Limited
[2015] ZACC 5
;
2015 (3) SA 479
(CC);
2015 (5) BCLR 509
(CC) at para
21.
[18]
I
deal with the question whether this is a breach shortly. It is not
necessary to do so under the question whether cancellation
of the
contract is a prerequisite for seeking a refund.
[19]
Victoria
Falls and Transvaal Power
above n 13 at para 22.
[20]
Id.
See also
MTN
Service Provider (Pty) Ltd v Belet Industries CC t/a Belet Cellular
[2021] ZASCA 7
;
2021 JOL 49370
(SCA) at para 46.
[21]
Silverton
Estates Co v Bellevue Syndicate
1904
TS 462
at 470.
[22]
Sunjeevi
v Wood
1909
NLR 76
at 78.
[23]
Allers
v Rautenbach
1949 (4) SA 226
(O) at 232.
[24]
Dominion
Earthworks (Pty) Ltd v M J Greef Electrical Contractors (Pty) Ltd
1970 (1) SA 228
(A) at 234E 235C.
[25]
See
also De Wet and Van Wyk
Kontraktereg
en Handelsreg
5 ed (LexisNexis, Durban 1992) vol 1 at 167 8; Kerr
The
Principles of the Law of Contract
6 ed (LexisNexis, Durban 2004) at 697; and Christie
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
7 ed (LexisNexis, Durban 2011) at 626-7.
[26]
Montesse
Township and Investment Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Gouws N.O.
1965 (4) SA 373
(A) at 380H.
[27]
Kerr
above n 25 at 602. Also see Christie above n 25 at 608 where the
following appears:
“
[I]t
has been universally accepted that a sufficiently serious breach of
a sufficiently important term will justify cancellation
without the
necessity of proving an intention to repudiate . . . .”
[28]
Kerr
id at 602-3.
[29]
Swartz
and Son (Pty) Ltd v Wolmaransstad Town Council
1960 (2) SA 1
(T) at 4F-G.
[30]
See
Nash
v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd
1985 (3) SA 1
(A) at 22D-E.
[31]
See
Howard
v Pickford Tool Co Ltd
[1951] 1 KB 417
(CA) at 421. See also
Culverwell
v Brown
1990 (1) SA 7
(A) at 28D-E;
Sandown
Travel (Pty) Ltd v Cricket South Africa
2013
(2) SA 502
(GSJ) at para 52; and
Comwezi
Security Services (Pty) Ltd v Cape Empowerment Trust Ltd
[2014] ZASCA 22
;
[2016] JOL 35526
(SCA) at para 1.
[32]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v First National Industrial Bank
[1990] ZASCA 49
;
1990
(3) SA 641
(A) at 656C and
Kernsig v Absa
[2015]
ZAWCHC 122
at paras 51-2.
[33]
Tiekiedraai
Eiendomme (Pty) Limited v Shell South Africa Marketing (Pty) Limited
[2019] ZACC 14
; 2019 (7) (CC);
2019 (7) BCLR 850
(CC) at paras
19-20.
[34]
Section
167(3)(b)(ii) of the Constitution.
[35]
Paulsen
above n 17 at para 30.
[36]
Id.
[37]
Paulsen
above n 17 at paras 25-6.
[38]
Id
at para 26.
[39]
Section
2(d).
[40]
Gcaba v
Minister of Safety and Security
[2009] ZACC 26
;
2010 (1) SA 238
(CC);
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC) at
para 75;
Chirwa
v Transnet Limited
[2007] ZACC 23
;
2008 (4) SA 367
(CC);
2008 (3) BCLR 251
(CC) at
paras 155 and 169; and
Fraser
v ABSA National Bank Limited (National Director of Public
Prosecutions as Amicus Curiae)
[2006] ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC);
2007 (3) BCLR 219
(CC) at para
40.
[41]
I
say “largely” because the High Court’s
interpretation goes further, and I do not understand Sasol to share
everything that the High Court held.
[42]
High
Court judgment above n 1 at para 66.
[43]
Id.
[44]
Id.
[45]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[2014] ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) at
para 28.
[46]
Id.
[47]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18.
[48]
Id
at para 25. See also
Cool
Ideas
above n 46 at para 28.
[49]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd
[1993] ZASCA 89
;
1993 (4) SA 110
(A) at 116F 117A.
[50]
Putco
Ltd v TV & Radio Guarantee Co (Pty) Ltd
1985 (4) SA 809
(A) at 827I.
[51]
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries Ltd v Rond Vista Wholesalers
2004 (1) SA 538
(SCA);
[2003] 4 All SA 95
(SCA) at 543H.
[52]
Plaaskem
(Pty) Ltd v Nippon Africa Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
2014
(5) SA 287 (SCA).
[53]
Putco
above n 50
[54]
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
above n 51.
[55]
Trident
Sales (Pty) Ltd v AH Pillman & Son (Pty) Ltd
1984
(1) SA 433 (W).
[56]
Plaaskem
above n 52 at paras 11-5.
[57]
Id
at para 12. In the same paragraph it quotes AR Carnegie in
“Terminability of Contracts of Unspecified Duration”
(1969) 85 LQR 392
at 411–2 who says:
“
By
holding the parties bound forever in such circumstances, the rule
would impose on the party to whom the contract becomes
disadvantageous an excessively severe penalty for the misdemeanour
of careless craftsmanship. Moreover, considerations of commercial
convenience have been predominant among the principles informing the
development of the law of contract; and as McNair J
has in
effect argued, commercial prudence is much more likely to indicate
that a contract should be determinable than that it
should endure
perpetually.”
[58]
Plaaskem
id.
[59]
Trio
Engineered Products Inc v Pilot Crushtec International (Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZAGPJHC 447;
2019 (3) SA 580
(GJ).
[60]
See
Amalgamated
Beverage Industries
above n 51 at para 17.
[61]
Id
at para 18.
[62]
As
I said, Petronet was a division of Transnet.
[63]
Endumeni
above n 47 at para 18.
sino noindex
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