Case Law[2024] ZASCA 35South Africa
PRASA Corporate Real Estate Solutions v Community Property Company Ltd and Another (384/2023) [2024] ZASCA 35 (28 March 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Contractual claim for payment of amount paid to settle outstanding electricity consumption charges levied by municipality – no contractual relationship established – alternative claim based on unjustified enrichment – essential elements of enrichment claim not established – appeal upheld.
Judgment
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## PRASA Corporate Real Estate Solutions v Community Property Company Ltd and Another (384/2023) [2024] ZASCA 35 (28 March 2024)
PRASA Corporate Real Estate Solutions v Community Property Company Ltd and Another (384/2023) [2024] ZASCA 35 (28 March 2024)
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sino date 28 March 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case
no: 384/2023
In
the matter between:
PRASA
CORPORATE REAL ESTATE
SOLUTIONS
(CRES) APPELLANT
and
COMMUNITY
PROPERTY COMPANY
(PTY)
LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
PRASA v Community Property Company (Pty) Ltd
and Another
(384/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 35
(28 March 2024)
Coram:
GORVEN, MATOJANE and GOOSEN JJA
Heard:
7 March 2024
Delivered:
28 March 2024
Summary:
Contractual claim for payment of amount paid to settle
outstanding electricity consumption charges levied by municipality –
no contractual relationship established – alternative claim
based on unjustified enrichment – essential elements of
enrichment claim not established – appeal upheld.
ORDER
On appeal from:
The
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Durban (Sibiya J, sitting
as a court of first instance):
1
The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2
The order of
the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Goosen
JA (Gorven and Matojane JJA concurring):
[1]
The
Community Property Company (Pty) Ltd (CPC), brought an application in
the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Durban (the
high court)
in which it claimed re-imbursement by the Passenger Rail Agency of
South Africa (PRASA), of approximately R3,2 million
CPC had paid to
settle amounts due to the eThekwini Municipality (eThekwini) for
electricity consumed by PRASA.
[1]
The claim was based on an alleged contract between CPC and PRASA. In
an alternative claim, CPC relied upon the unjustified enrichment
of
PRASA at CPC’s expense.
[2]
The high court, per Sibiya J, found in favour of
CPC on its contractual claim. It found, however, that the claim for
the amounts
accrued between October 2013 and June 2014 had
prescribed. It ordered PRASA to pay an amount of R2 607 472.05,
together
with interest and 75% of CPC’s costs. The appeal is
with the leave of the high court.
Background
[3]
During 2007, Crowie Projects (Pty) Ltd (Crowie Projects),
a property
development company, entered into a joint venture agreement with
eThekwini to develop a tract of land, owned by eThekwini,
in the
northern part of Durban. The land was situated approximately 17
kilometres from the Durban City Centre, opposite an industrial
area
and adjacent to the KwaMashu Highway.
[4]
The development envisaged the construction of an underground
railway
station, a retail shopping centre, residential apartments and a bus
and taxi rank, in what was to be known as the Bridge
City precinct.
The shopping centre was to be constructed above the underground
railway station and the residential apartments above
the shopping
centre. It was envisaged that the bus and taxi rank would be
constructed adjacent to the shopping centre. The development
was to
take place in phases as a sectional title scheme registered under the
Sectional Titles Act, 95 of 1996.
[5]
Crowie Projects purchased two portions of the land from
eThekwini.
These portions were consolidated as Portion 121 of Erf 8, Bridge City
and Crowie Projects took transfer of the property
on 1 November 2007.
On 14 December 2007, Crowie Projects entered into the Railway
Co-ordination and Operation Agreement (the Co-ordination
Agreement)
with the erstwhile South African Rail Commuter Corporation, to which
PRASA is the successor. The agreement regulated
the construction and
operation of an underground railway station and the business of the
shopping centre at Bridge City. Crowie
Projects undertook to
construct a ‘void’ (essentially an underground chamber)
beneath the shopping centre. Upon completion
of the void and
concourse area, PRASA would take transfer of the railway component,
construct the railway station within the void
and fit out the
concourse for its purposes.
[6]
A key element of the Co-ordination Agreement concerned
the
interrelationship between the different components of the development
scheme. Crowie Projects and PRASA recognised that the
operation of a
railway station with ready access to the shopping centre via the
concourse, would positively enhance trade in the
shopping centre. It
was therefore agreed that PRASA would be entitled to share in
potential ‘upside income’, namely
the additional income
generated from the shopping centre because of the development of the
railway station. A formula by which
this additional income would be
calculated was agreed.
[7]
On 12
September 2008, Crowie Projects, and CPC entered into a sale of
business agreement (the SOB),
[2]
in which Crowie Projects sold the Bridge City shopping centre
business to CPC for a purchase consideration of approximately R738
million. The Bridge City shopping centre business consisted of the
rental income to be derived from tenants occupying units within
the
shopping centre. At the time of the conclusion of the SOB, the
shopping centre had not yet been constructed. It was anticipated
that
construction would be completed, and transfer given by 2 November
2009. Provision was, however, made for potential delays
in
which event the last trading commencement date would be 30 April
2010. Registration of transfer of sections 2, 3, 4 and 5 (which
comprised the shopping centre unit) of the Terminus
[3]
sectional title scheme occurred on 31 March 2010. The circumstances
giving rise to the claim made by CPC against PRASA, suggest
that
PRASA operations commenced in 2013.
The
claim
[8]
The dispute arose in July 2017 when CPC presented an
invoice to PRASA
for payment of R3 413 539.53 for consumption charges for
electricity from October 2013. This was met
by the suggestion that
the amount should be set-off against the ‘upside income’
due to PRASA, which was then the subject
of negotiations. CPC
objected to this on the basis that the agreement made no provision
for set-off. Extensive email correspondence
followed until, on 28
February 2018, a meeting was held to attempt to resolve the dispute.
An agreement was reached. The agreement
was, however, subsequently
cancelled.
[9]
CPC initiated its claim against PRASA by notice of motion
on 1 April
2019. It claimed payment of the amount it alleged was due and, if
payment was not made, an order entitling it to disconnect
the
electricity supply to the PRASA section ‘situated within
the…shopping centre’. This latter claim was not
pursued. CPC founded its claim upon the SOB agreement and
clause 17 of the Co-ordination Agreement. It averred it had concluded
a service agreement with eThekwini to supply electricity to the
shopping centre. Electricity was supplied to the portion occupied
by
PRASA via a sub-meter. PRASA was obliged, in terms of clause 17, to
pay for service consumption charges and since those had
been paid by
CPC it was entitled to recover the amount from PRASA. In its founding
affidavit, CPC expressly disavowed any reliance
upon the subsequently
cancelled agreement to settle the dispute and an acknowledgement of
debt as causes of action.
[10]
Its alternative claim was premised on the allegation that PRASA was
unjustifiably
enriched at the expense of CPC because of its
consumption of electricity without payment. CPC was impoverished to
the extent that
it had paid eThekwini. On this basis, CPC claimed
that it was entitled to be compensated by PRASA for the cost of the
electricity
consumed by PRASA over the period.
[11]
PRASA
raised the following defences.
[4]
The first was that clause 17 of the Co-ordination Agreement was a
term of agreement between Crowie Projects and PRASA. CPC therefore
did not, in the absence of a cession, have any contractual right to
claim the money from PRASA. It alleged that, in any event,
since the
claim related to charges raised since October 2013, a substantial
portion of it had become prescribed. Secondly,
on the merits of
the claim, PRASA asserted that it had paid all amounts due to
eThekwini and that it was not in arrears. Finally,
in relation to the
alleged enrichment claim, it averred that any such claim lay against
eThekwini.
The
appeal
[12]
Only two issues arise for consideration in this appeal. The first is
whether
CPC has a claim in contract to recover the costs of
electricity consumed by PRASA for which CPC had paid. The second, is
whether
CPC has an alternative claim founded on unjustified
enrichment. PRASA’s pleaded reliance upon prescription remained
alive
until the hearing. However, counsel for PRASA correctly
accepted that a claim based on clause 17 of the Co-ordination
Agreement,
could only have arisen when CPC paid eThekwini and
presented to PRASA its invoice for payment. The facts indicate that
payment
was made to eThekwini in 2018. Prescription therefore
simply did not arise. The same applied in relation to the alternative
enrichment claim.
The
contractual claim
[13]
Clause 17 of the Co-ordination Agreement reads as follows:
‘
17.1
[PRASA] shall pay for –
17.1.1
all electricity and water used by it in or on the [PRASA] component;
17.1.2
all refuse removal fees and special refuse removal fees relating to
the [PRASA] component;
17.1.3
any other consumable item or service which [PRASA] may use.
17.2
As the amounts payable in terms of clause 17.1 will be levied or
assessed by a separate meter or a separate sub-meter in respect
of
the [PRASA] component only, the liability of [PRASA] shall be to pay
the amount so levied or assessed.
17.3
If [PRASA] fails to pay any costs referred to in clause 17.1 and 17.2
within 7 days of due date, then, without prejudice to
any other
rights Crowie may have, Crowie shall be entitled to pay such charges
and recover them from [PRASA] provide that Crowie’s
claims will
be supported by invoices (if available) in respect of the charges so
paid.’
[14]
CPC relied upon clause 17.3. It contended that the SOB and
Co-ordination Agreement
properly understood conferred upon it the
rights set out in clause 17. Counsel for CPC accepted that there had
been no cession,
assignment, or delegation of rights by Crowie
Projects, save those rights and obligations which had specifically
been ceded in
terms of the SOB. Its case was, therefore, not based on
any form of cession. It was, rather, that upon a construction of the
SOB
and Co-ordination Agreement, the rights conferred by clause 17
formed part of the business sold to it.
[15]
Clause 3.4 of the SOB referred to the development and operation of
the railway
station as provided in the Co-ordination Agreement. It
provided in relevant part that:
‘
3.4.2
Certain of [Crowie Projects’] rights and obligations contained
in the [Co-ordination Agreement] will be ceded (as an
out-and-out
cession), transferred and made over to [CPC], whilst [Crowie
Projects] will retain certain other rights and obligations.’
[16]
The only out and out cessions contained in the SOB, were those
provided for
in clauses 30 and 31. Clause 30 concerned the cession of
Crowie Projects’ rights to all lease agreements and any other
contracts
of lease and tenancy in respect of the shopping centre.
Clause 31 provided for the cession of rights to builder’s
liens,
guarantees and warranties and rights accrued in cleaning and
security agreements concluded by Crowie Projects.
[17]
Clause
3.4.3 of the SOB envisaged that CPC, as the pending owner of the
shopping centre, and PRASA, as the pending owner of the
void and
railway station, would ‘
need
to enter into agreements to govern and regulate the development and
operation of the Void and Railway Station’.
Clause 3.4.7, in turn, envisaged a tripartite agreement between
Crowie Projects, CPC and PRASA which would regulate the operation
of
the railway station and would cover the ‘costs and expenses
relating thereto.’
[5]
[18]
Clause 25.15 states:
‘
It
is recorded that [CPC] and [PRASA] may agree to a cession
(out-and-out), assignment, delegation and transfer to [CPC] of the
rights and obligations of [Crowie Projects] and [PRASA] as contained
in the [Co-ordination Agreement]. In such event [CPC] hereby
agrees
and undertakes to consent to and to sign all such agreements and
documents as may be necessary to give effect to the cession
contemplated in this clause 25.15…’
[19]
Clause 25.16 stipulates that:
‘
The
agreement/s referred to in 25.13
[6]
above between [Crowie Projects], [CPC] and [PRASA] shall be
tripartite agreement/s that shall specify
inter
alia
–
25.16.1
which rights and obligations [CPC] shall take cession, assignment,
and delegation of;
25.16.2
which rights and obligations [Crowie Projects] shall remain liable
for, to [PRASA]; and
25.16.3
the manner in which the rights and obligations referred to in 25.16.1
and 25.16.2 shall be executed.’
[20]
In light of
these clear and unequivocal provisions of the SOB, there is no scope
for a construction of the agreement as having necessarily
encompassed
the acquisition of the rights conferred by clause 17. It was common
ground that none of the envisaged agreements and
deeds of cession
were executed. CPC did not seek to suggest that there existed an oral
or, despite its argument, a tacit cession
of the rights conferred by
clause 17 of the Co-ordination Agreement. The non-variation clauses
62 and 63 of the SOB would militate
against any oral agreement by
which the terms were varied.
[7]
[21]
The clauses
of the SOB dealing with the envisaged cession of rights make it clear
that the parties contemplated one or more cessions,
to facilitate the
effective implementation of the agreement. The existence of such
intention is not sufficient. The parties agreed
that the cession/s
would take place in a specified form to ensure that the subject of
the cession was properly identified, and
its effect clarified.
[8]
They were bound to act in accordance with that agreement. There is
therefore no scope for reliance upon any tacit cession.
[22]
Clause 17 was a term of agreement between Crowie Projects and PRASA.
It follows
that CPC was not entitled to rely on it to claim any
amount from PRASA. The high court’s finding to the contrary
cannot stand.
The
enrichment claim
[23]
The enrichment claim was framed in the broadest of terms. Apart
from
the assertion that PRASA had been enriched by its consumption of
electricity without payment from 2013 to 2017, and that CPC in
turn
had been impoverished to the extent of its payment of the costs of
such consumption to eThekwini, the founding affidavit made
no attempt
to address the elements of enrichment liability. Counsel for CPC
submitted that it was unnecessary to formulate the
claim within the
framework of the recognised
condictiones
, since this Court had
recognised ‘a general enrichment claim’.
[24]
This Court
has accepted, in principle, that there may be scope for the
recognition of enrichment liability which may not fall within
the
strict ambit of specific condiction actions. This much is clear from
the judgments in
McCarthy
Retail Ltd v Shortdistance Carriers CC (McCarthy),
[9]
and
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
(Perry)
.
[10]
It is, however, appropriate to highlight what was said in these
cases. Schutz JA, who authored both judgments, observed in
McCarthy
:
‘
However,
if this Court is ever to adopt a general action into modern law, it
would be wiser, in my opinion, to wait for that rare
case to arise
which cannot be accommodated within the existing framework and which
compels such recognition. If once a general
action is accepted much
less energy, hopefully, will be devoted to the correct identification
of a
condictio
or an
action
than at present and more time to the identification of the elements
of enrichment. This does not mean, however, that the old structure’s
relatively few distinctive rules applying only to particular forms of
action, such as the requirement in the
condictio
indebiti
that the mistake should be reasonable, will disappear.’
[11]
[25]
Perry
was decided upon exception. First National Bank had paid out on a
forged cheque. It sought to recover from several parties on various
causes of action. As against Nedbank, the receiving bank, it relied
upon an enrichment-based claim. The central question on appeal
was
whether the turpitude of a defendant in a claim based on the
condictio
ob turpem vel iniustam causa
was to be established at the time of transfer. Schutz JA referred to
the desirability of a more general focus upon the elements
of
enrichment.
[12]
However,
Schutz JA found support in several old authorities for the conclusion
that knowledge of the illegality of the transaction,
which is
acquired after the transfer, may found the
condictio.
The
learned judge held that to the extent that these authorities did not
go far enough, an extension of the
condictio
to cover such situation would be appropriate.
[13]
Since the excipient bore the onus to establish that the particulars
did not disclose a cause of action upon any interpretation,
the
exception ought to have been dismissed.
[14]
[26]
These
judgments are therefore not authority for the proposition that a
plaintiff is now entitled to rely upon general assertions
to support
a claim for unjustified enrichment. They recognise the need, where
necessary, to focus attention on the essential elements
which may
give rise to liability. They by no means excuse a plaintiff from
pleading and establishing a proper basis upon which
enrichment
liability made be founded. That is the approach adopted in several
cases which have come before this Court. In each
instance it has
considered whether the requirements of one or other of the
established
condictiones
,
upon which reliance was placed, were met, or could be met by
extension.
[15]
[27]
Enrichment
liability is premised upon four essential elements: the defendant
must be enriched; the plaintiff must be impoverished;
the defendant’s
enrichment must be at the expense of the plaintiff; and the
enrichment must be without cause (
sine
causa
).
[16]
What is the essence of the claim advanced by CPC against PRASA? It is
this: CPC supplied PRASA with electricity for which CPC was
obliged
to pay in terms of a service agreement it had concluded with
eThekwini. PRASA’s failure to pay what CPC for the electricity
it consumed, caused it to be enriched at the expense of CPC when CPC
paid what it was obliged to pay to eThekwini.
[28]
Nothing is known about the basis upon which CPC supplied electricity
to PRASA.
That conduct is inconsistent with clause 17, to the
extent that clause 17 envisaged that PRASA would contract with
eThekwini directly.
What is known is that it was anticipated that
agreements would be concluded between CPC and PRASA to address the
situation which
has now arisen. For reasons which are unknown, those
agreements were not concluded despite the lapse of more than a decade
since
the factual necessity arose in 2013. Facts which explain the
circumstances in which and the reasons for the underlying transfer
sine causa,
would, in my view, need to be considered in order
to determine whether enrichment liability is established. In this
case there
are none. But even if it was accepted that, notionally, a
case has been made out that PRASA’s retention of the benefit of
the supply of electricity without payment means that it was enriched
sine causa,
CPC’s reliance upon a species of enrichment
must fail at the level of the failure to prove that it was
impoverished.
[29]
The SOB included an indemnity provided by Crowie Projects to CPC in
relation
to costs or expenses incurred by CPC in consequence of the
operation of the railway station by PRASA. I have referred to clauses
3.4.3 and 3.4.7 of the Co-ordination Agreement which envisaged the
conclusion of agreements between CPC and PRASA to regulate the
operation of the railway station, including costs and expenses. The
SOB records that it was initially intended that these agreements
be
concluded before the SOB took effect and that they would serve as
suspensive conditions. The agreement records, however, that
CPC
waived the requirement. In recognition that by so doing, CPC had
exposed itself to risk if agreement was not reached with PRASA,
clause 3.4.6 provided that:
‘
[Crowie
Projects] has agreed to be liable to [CPC] for certain agreed
expenses (such as those in clause 3.4.8), that may have to
be
incurred in respect of matters upon which [CPC] and [PRASA] are
unable to agree on, in the manner contemplated in this Agreement.’
[30]
The matters
referred to in clause 3.4.8 are ‘all cleaning,
operational
and
security expenses that are incurred and which are directly or
indirectly attributable to the Void’.
[17]
It is not necessary to conclude definitively that the expenses
incurred by CPC in defraying the costs of electricity consumed by
PRASA, would fall within the ambit of the liability undertaken by
Crowie Projects. No obvious impediment suggests itself.
That,
however, is not the point. In the context of seeking to establish a
claim based upon enrichment, the onus to establish the
elements of
liability rested upon CPC. In the light of the contractual
indemnity provided by Crowie Projects, CPC was required
to establish
that such claim was not available to it. In the absence of such
averment or proof, it cannot be found that CPC has
been impoverished.
[31]
It follows that even if this Court was inclined to countenance CPC’s
claim as one of enrichment (which we do not hold), it could not
succeed. In the circumstances the appeal must be upheld.
[32]
The following order will issue:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
__________________
G GOOSEN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants:
D J Saks
Instructed
by:
Woodhead Bigby
Attorneys Incorporated, La Lucia
Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein
For the first
respondent: M C Erasmus SC, N J Khooe and A Efstratiou-Jooste
Instructed
by:
Mark Efstratiou
Incorporated, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
The claim was brought against the PRASA Corporate Real Estate
Solutions (PRASA Cres), which was described as a division of PRASA.
The case was, however, conducted on the basis that the contractual
relationships were with PRASA and that PRASA had consumed
the
electricity for which payment was sought. The difference in
corporate identity was not raised by PRASA Cres as a defence.
In the
circumstances, nothing turns upon any distinction that there may be
between PRASA Cres and PRASA.
[2]
The agreement included a third party, namely Azarin Properties 9
(Pty) Ltd (Azarin), a wholly owned subsidiary of Crowie Projects.
Azarin’s
participation in the agreement related to the potential acquisition
of a minority share in the shopping centre
business, CPC agreed to
sell 20% of the shopping centre business to Azarin, which sale would
take effect on the date of transfer
of the sections. The sale of 20%
of the business to Azarin was subject to a suspensive condition
requiring the provision of an
irrevocable bank guarantee 30 days
before the date of transfer. In the event of a failure to deliver
the guarantee, the sale
of the share would lapse and the purchase
price for the shopping centre business would reduce by R20 million.
It appears from
the deed of transfer that the purchase price was in
fact reduced. Azarin therefore did not acquire a share of the
business.
[3]
Whereas the Co-ordination Agreement referred to the envisaged
sectional title scheme as the Bridge City scheme, the scheme was
in
fact registered as The Terminus. The deed of transfer
indicates that the purchase price was R718 million, indicating
that
the purchase of a share of the business by Azarin did not proceed.
[4]
One other defence pleaded
in
limine
was based upon an obvious error in the founding affidavit. CPC had
stated that the SOB was concluded on 12 September 2018, whereas
it
was plainly concluded on 12 September 2008. PRASA nevertheless
framed a challenge to CPC’s
locus
standi
to institute a claim which had arisen prior to 2018. It was not
pursued before the high court.
[5]
Clause 25.13 of the SOB specified the matters to be dealt with in
the envisaged tripartite agreement/s. These included an agreement
on
the operational aspects that affect or impact both the shopping
centre and the railway station, and agreement on the financial
aspects that affect both, including possible
pro
rata
cost sharing.
[6]
The reference to clause 25.13 appears in context to be an error and
may have been intended to be a reference to clause 25.15.
[7]
See
Yarram
Trading CC t/a Tijuana Spur v Absa Bank Limited
[2006] ZASCA 132
;
2007 (2) SA 570
(SCA) para 24.
[8]
See
Lief
NO v Dettman
1964 (2) SA 252
(A) at 275D-E where Wessels JA said:
‘
In
my opinion, however, it is not sufficient to show that the parties
contemplated a cession; it must be shown that they effected
a
cession. It must appear that the parties took legally effective
steps,
where such are required
, to transfer the subject
matter of the cession from the cedent to the cessionary, so that the
former is divested of his rights,
which thereafter vest exclusively
in the cessionary.’ (Emphasis added).
[9]
McCarthy
Retail Ltd v Shortdistance Carriers CC
2001 (3) SA 482 (SCA).
[10]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA).
[11]
McCarthy
para 10.
[12]
Perry
para 23.
[13]
Ibid para 28.
[14]
Ibid paras 6 and 30.
[15]
See
Afrisure
CC and Another v Watson NO and Another
[2008] ZASCA 89
;
2009 (2) SA 127
(SCA) para 4;
Capricorn
Beach Home Owners Association v Potgieter t/a Nilands and Another
[2013]
ZASCA 116
;
2014 (1) SA 46
(SCA) para 20 – 21 (
Capricorn
Beach
);
Van
Niekerk v Liberty Group Limited
[2020] ZASCA 65
para 28 – 31.
[16]
McCarthy
(per
Harms JA para 2) at 496E;
Capricorn
Beach
para
20.
[17]
My emphasis.
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