Case Law[2024] ZASCA 99South Africa
Krohne (Pty) Ltd v Strategic Fuel Fund Association (476/2023) [2024] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Arbitration law – whether the appellant’s claim, based on the enforcement of an arbitral award is founded on a valid cause of action – whether the trigger event in the arbitral award has occurred – whether the paragraphs of the appellant’s replying affidavit as set out in the respondent’s strike-out application falls to be struck out.
Judgment
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## Krohne (Pty) Ltd v Strategic Fuel Fund Association (476/2023) [2024] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2024)
Krohne (Pty) Ltd v Strategic Fuel Fund Association (476/2023) [2024] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2024)
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sino date 14 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
ARBITRATION – Award –
Third-party
report
–
Metering
systems for oil reserves – Dispute over accuracy of system –
Settlement agreement referring issue to
third-party expert –
Settlement agreement endorsed by arbitrator who issued it as
interim award – Claim for payment
by supplier based on
findings in expert report – High Court erred in concluding
that expert report was not final and
binding between the parties –
The finding in expert report constituted the cause of action –
Matter remitted
to High Court to be determined on the merits –
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 476/2023
In the matter between:
KROHNE (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
STRATEGIC FUEL FUND
ASSOCIATION
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Krohne
(Pty) Ltd v Strategic Fuel Fund Association
(Case no
476/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 99
(14 June 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MOTHLE and MOLEFE JJA and
SMITH and MBHELE AJJA
Heard:
9 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, publication
on the Supreme Court of Appeal website and
released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of the judgment
is deemed to be
14 June 2024 at 11h00.
Summary:
Arbitration law –
whether the appellant’s claim, based on the enforcement of an
arbitral award is founded on a valid
cause of action – whether
the trigger event in the arbitral award has occurred – whether
the paragraphs of the appellant’s
replying affidavit as set out
in the respondent’s strike-out application falls to be struck
out.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Wanless AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the
costs of the application for leave to appeal, such costs to include
the costs consequent
upon the employment of two counsel.
2
Orders 1 to 4 of the high court are set aside and
replaced with an order in the following terms:
‘
The
second point in limine raised by the respondent is dismissed with
costs, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the
employment
of two counsel.’
3
The matter is remitted to the high court to be
determined on the merits.
JUDGMENT
Mothle
JA (Nicholls and Molefe JJA and Smith and Mbhele AJJA concurring)
[1]
The crisp issue in this appeal is whether the appellant’s claim
against the respondent, based on the enforcement of an arbitral award
(‘the interim award’), is founded on a valid cause
of
action.
[2]
Krohne (Pty) Limited (the appellant) instituted motion proceedings in
the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high
court), wherein it claimed payment of the agreed outstanding balance,
with interest, in terms of a service contract concluded with the
Strategic Fuel Fund Association (the respondent). The high court
dismissed the claim on the basis that the appellant did not have a
valid cause of action. The high court issued the following orders:
‘
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. The Applicant is to
pay the costs of the application, such to include the costs of two
counsel.
3. The interlocutory
application instituted by the Respondent for the striking out of
paragraphs 5.2, 5.7, 5.12 to 5.14 and 8 to
12.7 of the Applicant’s
undated replying affidavit, deposed to by Mr George Topper and filed
on the 15
th
of May 202[0], is postponed sine die.
4. Each party is to pay
their own costs in respect of the aforesaid interlocutory
application.
5. The Respondent is to
pay to the Applicant the sums of 60 689.50 US Dollars (or the
equivalent in South African rands); R150 799.91;
67 859.49
Euros (or the equivalent in South African rands) and 10 264.35
British Pounds (or the equivalent in South African
rands).
6. The Respondent shall
pay to the Applicant interest on the amounts as set out in paragraph
5 above calculated at the rate of 10%
per annum from the 27
th
of October 2019 to the date of final payment, both days inclusive.
7. The Respondent shall
pay the costs in respect of the application by the Applicant insofar
as same pertain only to the amounts
as set out in paragraph 5
hereof which will be determined by the Taxing Master, such to include
the costs of two Counsel.’
[3]
The appellant successfully applied for leave to appeal paragraphs one
to four (excluding paragraphs five and six) of the order of the high
court. It is thus with leave of the high court that this appeal
is
before us.
[4]
It is common cause between the parties that the respondent was
established
in 1964 as a
s 21
non-profit company. It acquires,
maintains, monitors and manages South Africa’s strategic energy
feedstocks and carriers,
in order to ensure security in the supply of
energy. The respondent’s oil storage installation at the
Saldanha Terminal comprises
six in-ground concrete storage tanks,
with a combined capacity of 45 million barrels of oil. A crucial
aspect of the respondent’s
function is to be able to measure
accurately the precise volume of crude oil that is discharged into
the tanks and subsequently
exported out. To achieve this mandate, in
February 2011, the respondent issued a tender, to procure service
providers. The appellant
entered the competitive bidding process.
[5]
The appellant is an international manufacturer of custody metering
systems,
which in January 2012, successfully tendered for the supply,
installation and commissioning of the metering system at the Saldanha
Terminal. In terms of the contract concluded with the respondent, the
appellant’s services included ‘…
the designing,
calibration and installation of metering cabinets, flow computers and
master metering skids and all associated electrical
reticulation,
including necessary and associated equipment for the system’
(the KOG metering system). It was a term of the contract that payment
for the services would be made in tranches, with the final
10% being
retained as a performance retention fee, payable upon completion and
certification of the appellant’s performance
of the services.
[6]
A dispute arose between the appellant and the respondent in regard to
the accuracy of the KOG metering system. The appellant contended that
it had completed its task as contracted and was entitled to
payment
of the 10% balance of the contract price. On demand of such payment,
the respondent raised the query that the installed
system did not
operate within the specification agreed to in the contract, which is
within the accuracy range of 0.3% (positive
or negative), as set out
in the International Metrology Organisation Standard OIML R117-1,
2007 Edition,
Section 2.4
Accuracy Classes.
[7]
The parties agreed to
refer that dispute to arbitration as per Clause 17
[1]
of the contract. An arbitrator, Advocate CHJ Badenhorst SC was
appointed and at the commencement of the arbitration, the parties
reached a settlement agreement, whereby they agreed to refer the
question of the accuracy of the KOG metering system to a third-party
expert for determination. The settlement agreement was endorsed by
the arbitrator, who issued it as an interim award
.
Of
significance, the interim award, whose material terms are stated as
follows:
‘
1. The arbitration
is postponed
sine
die
.
2. The costs of the
arbitration are reserved . . .
5. Within 30 days from
date hereof the parties shall jointly nominate and appoint an
appropriately qualified and experienced specialist
from an
independent third party (intended to be SGS) (“the independent
expert”). The findings of the independent expert
shall be final
and binding on the Claimant and Respondent…
6. The terms of reference
of the independent expert shall be:
6.1 to conduct an
assessment of the system to establish whether the system operates
within the specification agreed to by the parties
in their agreement
[contract], and within the accuracy range of 0.3% (positive and
negative) as set out in OIML R117-1 edition,
section 2.4
Accuracy
Classes and the South African National Standards; and
6.2 to ascertain why the
meter readings obtained by the Claimant’s [as in the
arbitration] Krohne meters and the static measurements
obtained by
the Respondent’s [in the arbitration] current system are so far
apart, and to make recommendations of what measures,
if any, can be
implemented so as to bring the conflicting measurements as close
together as possible. . .
8. In the event of the
independent expert concluding that the system operates as set out in
paragraph 6.1 above, within 30 days
of such determination, the
Respondent shall:
8.1 reimburse the
Claimant that portion of the independent expert’s costs paid by
the Claimant;
8.2 pay the capital sum
of R 7 669 363.74 claimed in prayer 3 of the Statement of
Claim, together with mora interest thereon
calculated at the rate of
9.5% per annum from 1 April 2014 to date of payment; and
8.3 pay the Claimant’s
legal costs of the arbitration proceedings as either agreed or taxed
. . .
10. The Respondent
undertakes to pay to the Claimant the full amount of R7 669 363.74
once the independent expert certifies
that the system operates as set
out in paragraph 6.1 . . .’
[8]
The parties appointed SGS Gulf Limited (SGS) as the third-party
expert.
The terms of reference of the independent expert are stated
in clause 6 of the interim award. SGS consultant, Mr Jim McCabe,
conducted the design review of the KOG metering System in stages,
issuing a report at the end of each stage, with the first report
dated 19 October 2017. SGS’s Final Report was issued on 20
September 2019.
[9]
On 14 October 2019, the appellant’s attorneys, represented by
Mr
Alan Jacobs, sent an email to the respondent’s attorneys,
which read in part thus:
‘
Dear
Marius [‘Diemont’]
Further
to the report received from SGS and their findings, I refer you
specifically to their summary at point 2 which is entitled
“Management summary”.
You
will note that the last paragraph under this heading confirms that my
client’s metering systems operate within the specification
agreed to by the parties.
In
view of the above confirmation, kindly let me have payment from your
client of the total
capital balance outstanding
including
interest which my client has calculated, and I attach the
calculation, demonstrating the outstanding amount of R12 745 881.89
. . .’
[10]
The appellant received no response from the respondent’s
attorneys, even after a
reminder in the e-mail of 12 November 2019.
The appellant then issued an application in the high court in which
he claimed payment
on the basis of the SGS report, contending that
the report disposed of the dispute between the parties. The
respondent filed an
answering affidavit in which it stated that the
certificates issued by SGS ‘do not serve as evidence of a
certification by
SGS of
the operation of the system,
but
merely of the manner in which it was designed and installed by
Krohne, which is not the subject of the dispute referred to in
the
settlement agreement’. (Emphasis added.)
[11]
The respondent, in the answering affidavit, in essence raises two
contentions in opposition
to the appellant’s claim. The first,
with reference to clause 8 of the settlement agreement (the interim
award), is that
‘
In the event of the independent expert
[SGS] concluding that the system operates as set out in paragraph 6.1
[of the mandate]
above
[i.e. within the specification
agreed upon in terms of the agreement, and within the accuracy range
of 0.3% (positive or negative),
within 30 days of such determination,
the Respondent [SFF] shall: reimburse the Claimant . . .’ This
was the trigger event
for payment of the retention amount, as
foreshadowed in the settlement agreement. (Emphasis added.)
[12]
Second, and related to the trigger event, was the question whether
after the trigger event
had been met, would there still be
outstanding issues in dispute between the parties, which would
require adjudication by the arbitrator?
The high court determined the
matter on a completely different question which was not the central
dispute in the affidavits. It
was a question raised in the
respondent’s argument, namely whether the appellant was barred
from advancing a cause of action
based on the arbitral award.
[13]
In dismissing the application, the high court reasoned and found in
paragraphs 30, 31,
32, 35, 36 and 38, respectively, of its judgment
thus:
‘…
The
parties did not elect to place their dispute before a court which
potentially could have given rise to the appointment of referee.
Neither did they elect, without going to arbitration,
to
appoint an expert whose decision would be binding upon them and
finally resolve the dispute
.
So it is to the provision of the
Arbitration Act that
this Court must
look in order to decide whether the Applicant can rely on the Final
Report by the expert to seek payment by the
Respondent of the capital
amount in terms of the Interim Award.
The crisp question then
becomes whether the Interim Award complies with the provisions of the
Arbitration Act or
is in conflict therewith.
The answer thereto is
that the Interim Award is patently in conflict with material
provisions of the
Arbitration Act.
To begin, the very definition
of “
arbitration proceedings
” makes it clear that
these proceedings are ones which are
conducted by an
arbitration tribunal
for the settlement
by arbitration
of a dispute which has been referred to arbitration in terms of an
arbitration agreement. . .
In addition thereto, no
provision was made in the Interim Award for the findings of the
expert (in whatever form these findings
were eventually contained) to
be brought before the Arbitrator to be made an award as defined in
the
Arbitration Act. Hence
, there was no compliance with the
peremptory provisions of subsection 24(1) of the
Arbitration Act
. . .
Of course, what
would
have been permissible was for the parties to have agreed, with the
consent of the Arbitrator, to seek the opinion of an independent
expert on the workings of the system. This opinion could have proven
invaluable to assist the Arbitrator in resolving the dispute.
Of
course, it could also have had the practical effect of either
bringing about a settlement of the dispute between the parties
or, at
the very least, narrowing the technical issues in dispute between the
parties. But this report could never be final and
binding upon the
parties in terms of the
Arbitration Act. It
is for this reason, as
pointed out by Adv Jamie SC, that the Arbitrator possibly made the
orders in the Interim Award whereby the
arbitration proceedings were
postponed
sine die
and the costs of the arbitration
proceedings were reserved. . .
Most importantly, the
present application would never have seen the light of day and the
various grounds of opposition, as raised
by the Respondent (not
without merit), would have been avoided (as would the incurring of
costs). The aforegoing confirms (if confirmation
is necessary) the
correctness of the finding by this Court that the point taken by the
Respondent that the Applicant is barred
from advancing a cause of
action based on the enforcement of an arbitral award, is a good one.
In light of the finding
by this Court that the Applicant has no valid cause of action in
respect of its claim for the capital sum,
it is not necessary for
this Court to deal with the remaining grounds of opposition raised by
the Respondent thereto. This is so
(despite this Court spending a
great deal of time considering same) since the finding made disposes
of the claim in respect of
the capital sum in its entirety.’
[14]
Before dealing with the high court’s reasoning and conclusion
as quoted above, it
is apposite to revisit the trite concept of the
arbitration. The Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 (the Act), defines an
arbitration agreement
as ‘a written agreement providing for the
reference to arbitration of any existing dispute or any future
dispute relating
to a matter specified in the agreement, whether an
arbitrator is named or designated therein or not’. Section 3(1)
of
the Act provides that ‘[u]nless the agreement otherwise
provides, an arbitration agreement shall not be capable of being
terminated except by consent of all the parties thereto’.
[15]
This Court in
Total
Support Management (Pty) Ltd and Another v Diversified Health Systems
(SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[2]
stated as follows: ‘The hallmark of arbitration is that it is
an adjudication, flowing from the consent of the parties to
the
arbitration agreement, who define the powers of adjudication, and are
equally free to modify or withdraw that power at any
time by way of
further agreement. This is reflected in s 3(1) of the Act.’
An arbitration is thus a product of an agreement.
[16]
It is common cause, that the parties
agreed
in the contract of
service, to have an arbitration clause, in this case clause 17
of the contract. It is further common cause
that when a dispute was
declared, the parties
agreed
to resolve the dispute through
arbitration. They activated clause 17 of the contract. Prior to
the commencement of the arbitration,
they entered into a settlement
agreement,
to refer the essence of the dispute to an
independent expert. The settlement agreement was made an interim
award by the arbitrator,
which in terms of s 1 of the Act, is an
award. Therefore, the arbitration’s jurisdiction, powers,
procedures and processes
were driven by
agreement
and consent
between the parties to the dispute. (Emphasis added.)
[17]
The high court erred in its approach when it digressed from the main
dispute raised in
the papers, and dealt with a collateral issue
raised in argument, styled as a point in
limine
. The issue
before the high court was not the validity or otherwise of the
interim award. The issue before the high court was whether
the SGS
report concluded that the system operated as set out in clauses 8, 9
and 10, read with clause 6.1 of the interim award.
Clause 10 of
the interim award was the agreed condition precedent to the payment
being affected, in terms of the interim award.
The high court thus
misconstrued the issue to be decided before it.
[18]
The high court also erred in concluding that the SGS report was not
final and binding between
the parties. It is evident from clause 5
of the interim award, that the SGS report would be final and binding
on the parties.
Clause 5 of the interim award provides that ‘the
findings of the independent expert shall be final and binding on the
Claimant and Respondent.’ It is the finding in the final report
of SGS which constitutes the cause of action.
[19]
The high court further erred in stating the following: ‘The
crisp question then becomes
whether the Interim Award complies with
the provisions of the
Arbitration Act or
is in conflict therewith.
The answer thereto is that the Interim Award is patently in
conflict with material provisions of the
Arbitration Act.’
The
learned Judge was not aware of two important sources of law dealing
with this issue. First, in terms of the definitions in s 1
of
the Act, ‘award includes an interim award.’ The
settlement agreement signed by the appellant and the respondent
to
refer the dispute to an independent expert, was endorsed as an award
by the arbitrator, Mr Badenhorst SC. (Emphasis added.)
[20]
Second, this Court has
endorsed the principle that it is permissible for an arbitrator to
record a settlement agreement concluded
by the parties to the dispute
before him or her, as an award in terms of common law. In
Bidoli
v Bidoli and Another
[3]
(
Bidoli
),
three brothers had conducted business together with their father in
separate entities. Disputes arose between the brothers which
were by
agreement, referred to arbitration. On the day of commencement of the
arbitration, the parties met and reached a settlement
agreement,
which they signed. Three days later, one of the parties requested the
arbitrator to re-open the arbitration, stating
that he was
dissatisfied with the settlement agreement. He explained that he
signed the settlement agreement by mistake, but the
arbitrator
informed him that he intended to make the settlement agreement his
award and he was at liberty to raise his objection
at court. When an
application was made to the Western Cape Division of the High Court,
Cape Town (the Western Cape high court),
for the arbitral award to be
made an order of court, the dissatisfied party opposed the
application and sought an order declaring
the award and the
settlement agreement void
ab
initio,
alternatively,
that it be declared void and the arbitration hearing be re-opened.
After considering the arguments, the Western Cape
high court held:
‘
I
accordingly agree with the submission of [counsel], that, upon the
settlement of their disputes by the parties, the arbitrator’s
appointment was at an end, for there was nothing left for him to
decide in terms of the referral to arbitration. The publication
of
any award thereafter, which merely incorporates the settlement
concluded by the parties, did not, in my opinion, bring about
a valid
award which may be made an order of court in terms of
section 31
of
the
Arbitration Act. Nor can
it, in terms of our common law, be
regarded as a valid arbitral award.’
[4]
[21]
Bidoli
came
on appeal in this Court where the decision of the Western Cape high
court was reversed. This Court, following a section of
an English
statute on arbitration, accepted the principle that ‘where the
parties settle their dispute in the course of the
arbitration it
enables the arbitrator to issue an award recording the terms agreed.
An agreed award thus has the status and effect
of any other award on
the merits. Accordingly, an agreed award is enforceable even though
the arbitrator has not actually made
a decision but simply recorded
the agreed terms.’
[5]
[22]
Where the parties to a dispute referred to arbitration reach a
settlement agreement on
the main issue in the dispute, that could
result in the arbitration proceedings being redundant, as there would
be no further dispute
to adjudicate. This question would be best
answered with reference to the circumstances of each case, primarily
on the merits.
In this instance the high court did not deal with
the merits. This Court therefore declines to adjudicate the merits as
it
is not a court of first instance. An appropriate order in this
regard would be to refer the matter back to the high court for the
adjudication of the merits.
[23]
In this case the high court erred in law and fact, in dismissing the
appellant’s
claim on a point
in limine
. The parties
agreed in clause 5 of the interim award that the final report of
the independent expert will be binding on them.
The appellant’s
cause of action is therefore founded on that report. The appeal
should therefore succeed and the order of
the high court should be
set aside. As regards the costs, these should follow the result.
[24]
The following order shall issue:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the
costs of the application for leave to appeal, such costs to include
the costs consequent
upon the employment of two counsel.
2
Orders 1 to 4 of the high court are set aside and
replaced with an order in the following terms:
‘
The
second point in limine raised by the respondent is dismissed with
costs, such costs to include the costs consequent upon the
employment
of two counsel.’
3
The matter is remitted to the high court to be
determined on the merits.
_____________________
S P MOTHLE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For appellant:
A. G Sawma SC with D.L Williams
Instructed by:
Alan Jacobs & Associates, Johannesburg
Lovius
Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For respondent:
I Jamie SC with L Stansfield
Instructed by:
Webber Wentzel Attorneys, Cape Town
Phatshoane
Henny Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Clause
17 provides that disputes shall be resolved and determined by an
arbitrator whose decision ‘shall be final and binding,
and
save in the case of manifest error, shall not be subject to appeal
and/or review.’
[2]
Total
Support Management (Pty) Ltd and Another v Diversified Health
Systems (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2002]
ZASCA 14
;
2002 (4) SA 661
(SCA) at para 25.
[3]
Bidoli
v Bidoli and Another
[2011]
ZASCA 82; 2011 (5) SA 247 (SCA).
[4]
Bidoli
v Bidoli
[2010]
ZAWCHC 39
para 28.
[5]
Bidoli
v Bidoli and Another
[2011]
ZASCA 82
;
2011 (5) SA 247
(SCA) para 8.
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