Case Law[2023] ZASCA 12South Africa
JVE Civil Engineers Inc v Blue Bantry Investments 235 (Pty) Ltd and Another (1016/2021) [2023] ZASCA 12 (16 February 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
16 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Arbitration – Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 – review of arbitration award in terms of s 33(1)(b) of the Act – arbitrator exceeded powers – determined two claims in dispute on grounds not pleaded – defence (compromise) pleaded in respect of another claim found to be proved by arbitrator – constituted complete defence to two claims in dispute – artificial and unjust to disregard defence because not specifically pleaded in respect of claims in dispute – appeal dismissed.
Judgment
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## JVE Civil Engineers Inc v Blue Bantry Investments 235 (Pty) Ltd and Another (1016/2021) [2023] ZASCA 12 (16 February 2023)
JVE Civil Engineers Inc v Blue Bantry Investments 235 (Pty) Ltd and Another (1016/2021) [2023] ZASCA 12 (16 February 2023)
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sino date 16 February 2023
# THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Not
Reportable
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 1016/2021
In
the matter between:
# JVE
CIVIL ENGINEERS
INC. APPELLANT
JVE
CIVIL ENGINEERS
INC. APPELLANT
and
# BLUE
BANTRY INVESTMENTS 235 (PTY) LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
BLUE
BANTRY INVESTMENTS 235 (PTY) LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
# PETRUS
BURTON FOURIE N.O SECOND
RESPONDENT
PETRUS
BURTON FOURIE N.O SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
JVE Civil Engineers Inc. v
Blue Bantry Investments 235 (Pty) Ltd and Another
(1016/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 12
(16 February 2023)
Coram:
Van der Merwe, Mocumie and Hughes JJA
and Goosen and Windell AJJA
Heard:
23 November 2022
Delivered:
16 February 2023
Summary:
Arbitration –
Arbitration Act 42
of 1965
– review of arbitration award in terms of
s 33(1)(
b
)
of the Act – arbitrator exceeded powers – determined two
claims in dispute on grounds not pleaded – defence
(compromise)
pleaded in respect of another claim found to be proved by arbitrator
– constituted complete defence to two claims
in dispute –
artificial and unjust to disregard defence because not specifically
pleaded in respect of claims in dispute
– appeal dismissed.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division,
Cape Town (Pangarker AJ sitting as a court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Hughes
JA (Van der Merwe, Mocumie JJA and Goosen and Windell AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the order of the
Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the high court)
dismissing the review
application of an appeal arbitration award. The
appeal is with leave of the high court.
[2]
The appellant is JVE Civil Engineers Inc
(JVE), an engineering company which provided engineering services to
the first respondent,
Blue Bantry Investment 235 (Pty) Ltd (Blue
Bantry), a property developer in the Western Cape Province. The
parties were engaged
in a residential property development on the
farm Groot Phesantekraal, Durbanville, Western Cape Province.
[3]
JVE
sued Blue Bantry in the high court for fees arising from engineering
services it had rendered to Blue Bantry with regards to
this
development. During the course of such litigation, the parties opted
for arbitration proceedings and concluded an arbitration
agreement in
August 2018. They further agreed that the pleadings in the high court
would stand as pleadings in the arbitration.
JVE was unsuccessful in
the arbitration and proceeded to appeal the award which came before
the second respondent, retired Judge
Fourie.
[1]
On
12 December 2019, he dismissed JVE’s appeal. A determined JVE
proceeded to the high court to review the appeal arbitration
award,
raising a number of grounds to have the award reviewed and set aside.
I deal with these grounds further in the judgment.
On 15 June 2021,
the high court dismissed JVE’s review application with costs.
## Background
Background
[4]
A brief background is necessary. The facts
are as follows: Mr van Eeden of JVE and Mr Brink of Blue Bantry had a
longstanding personal
and professional relationship. Blue Bantry
purchased Groot Phesantekraal and sought the assistance and
engineering services of
JVE to develop part of the farm. JVE had
assisted Blue Bantry with engineering services during both Phase 1
and Phase 2 of the
residential development. During the course of
these two phases, no agreement was documented due to their close
relationship.
[5]
During 2008, a change in the ownership
regime took effect at Blue Bantry and for the first time, on 12 May
2008, JVE and Blue Bantry
recorded an agreement in respect of the
engineering services for Phase 3 of the residential development
(Phase 3), in an email,
referred to as the JVE1 agreement. JVE was
thus appointed by Blue Bantry as civil engineers for Phase 3. The
JVE1 agreement set
out the scope of work to be conducted, the
relevant instructions for JVE and the fee and payment structure
applicable to this phase.
JVE’s claims against Blue Bantry are
in relation to this agreement in respect of Phase 3.
[6]
As I shall demonstrate, this matter
concerns engineering fees in respect of external bulk infrastructure
services. Municipalities
levy Bulk Infrastructure Contribution Levies
(BICL) from developers in respect of the use of existing municipal
bulk infrastructure
services for new residential developments. These
bulk infrastructure services relate to water, stormwater, sewage and
roads. When
the existing infrastructure requires upgrades or
additions, the developer is expected to erect or install such
services, for which
the developer would be compensated by receiving
BICL credits from the municipality.
[7]
Clause 6 of the JVE1 agreement read as
follows:
‘
Fees
for external services will be paid at 100% of the [Engineering
Council of South Africa (ECSA)] rate if it can be fully recovered
from the bulk services contributions otherwise a 20% discount will
also apply here. Interim payments will be calculated at the
20%
discount. 100% fee scenario will therefore only apply if the bulk
services contributions exceeds the cost obligation to infrastructure
provided by the client/developer.’ (As interpreted by the
respondent.)
[2]
The ‘bulk services
contributions’ in clause 6 referred to BICL credits. This
clause thus meant that JVE would receive
80% of the ECSA tariff for
work related to external services, unless BICL credits exceeded the
costs of the infrastructure provided
by Blue Bantry, in which case
the additional 20% would become payable. The parties were also ad
idem that in terms of the ECSA
tariff a 1.25 multiplication factor,
which would translate to a 25% addition to fees, applied where the
work concerned constituted
alterations to existing work.
[8]
During the course of Phase 3, Blue Bantry
and the City of Cape Town concluded a new service agreement in
December 2008 (Service
Agreement 2008). It extended the scope of BICL
credits available to Blue Bantry, as follows:
‘
7.
Cost of bulk services versus development contributions Table 5
. . .
7.1
COMPANY must fund the payment of the
municipal services (as detailed in Table 5) on the basis of completed
work as certified by
the consultants, from own sources: provided that
the amount due by COMPANY to the City in respect of bulk services
contributions,
will be credited with the approved capital costs. This
includes all bulk services contributions (roads, water, sewage and
stormwater)
that have not been levied as on 1 December 2008.See Table
6.
7.2
Any additional infrastructure provided by
the COMPANY which exceeds bulk contributions as detailed in Table 6
will be carried forward
and refunded by the City in terms of credit
on bulk service contributions for any further development by the
COMPANY or any nominated
entity of the COMPANY’s choice for
development in the northern corridor area (As currently defined by
The City of Cape Town).
The monetary value of the additional
infrastructure will be calculated by converting the value into
current equivalent development
contributions for residential erven
and/or commercial area and/or industrial area. Once bulk
infrastructure contributions levies
are payable for future
development as mentioned above, the credit due to COMPANY or his
nominated entity will become claimable
in part or in total.
7.3
For the avoidance of doubt it is
specifically agreed that the [intention] above is to compensate the
company for its loss of interest
on the capital expenditure [through]
the benefit of having year to year growth in value of the credits for
bulk contribution obligations.
. . .’
## Arbitration proceedings
Arbitration proceedings
[9]
Before the commencement of the arbitration
proceedings, the parties narrowed the issues for determination and
compiled a document
headed ‘Points of Dispute’. In terms
thereof, certain issues stood over for later determination. The
remaining issues
concerned claims by JVE for fees for external
services, fees for internal services and damages for alleged breach
of contract.
The claims for external services included a claim for
the additional 20% fees under clause 6 (the BICL claim), as well as a
1.25
multiplication factor fee claim in respect of alterations to
existing work (the 1.25 multiplication factor claim).
[10]
The BICL claim was squarely based on clause
6 of the JVE1 agreement. JVE contended that the condition that
entitled it to the additional
20% fees had been fulfilled,
irrespective of or because of the effect of the Service Agreement
2008. It is unnecessary to relate
the particulars of these
contentions. In respect of the 1.25 multiplication factor claim JVE’s
case was that the claimed
fees related to work that constituted
alterations to existing work and that the relevant requirements of
the ECSA tariff had been
met. These allegations were eventually
conceded by Blue Bantry. As part of its answer to the damages claim,
in para 8.2.4 of its
amended plea, Blue Bantry pleaded the conclusion
of a separate subsequent agreement, as follows:
‘
Between
20 August 2009 and 7 September 2009 the parties met so as to discuss
the Plaintiff’s fees as aforesaid. The Plaintiff
was
represented by the said Van Eeden and the Defendant by the said
Hooper and Brink. At this meeting Brink and Hooper advised
Van Eeden
that, whilst he was not entitled to the payment of the 20% discount
and/or 25% surcharge, the Defendant would pay him
these amounts if
and when they were recovered from the municipality. Plaintiff agreed
thereto.’
[11]
In both the arbitration and its appeal, JVE
was unsuccessful. As I shall explain, it is only necessary to
consider the reasoning
and findings of the appeal arbitrator. Only
the BICL and 1.25 multiplication factor claims remain relevant to the
appeal. The appeal
arbitrator held that the Service Agreement 2008
had amended the JVE1 agreement, which precluded reliance on clause 6
as a cause
of action. He proceeded to hold that the contents of para
8.2.4 of the amended plea had been proved and had, in fact, been
admitted
in evidence by Mr van Eeden. As it was common cause that the
relevant amounts had not been recovered from the City of Cape Town,
the appeal arbitrator held that the 1.25 multiplication factor claim
was premature and had to fail.
## In the high court
In the high court
[12]
In terms of s 33(1) of the Arbitration Act
42 of 1965 (the Act), an award may be reviewed and set aside where
(
a
) an
arbitrator has misconducted themselves in relation to their duties as
arbitrator or (
b
)
where an arbitrator has committed a gross irregularity or exceeded
their powers in arbitration proceedings or (
c
)
where an award was improperly attained. In the high court, JVE sought
to have the decision of the appeal arbitrator set aside
in terms of s
33(1)(
b
).
[13]
In the review proceedings before the high
court JVE acknowledged that an arbitrator was ‘entitled to be
wrong’. It contended,
however, that the appeal arbitrator had
exceeded his powers and/or committed a gross irregularity in the
conduct of the proceedings
by determining the two relevant claims on
a basis not pleaded at all (the amendment of JVE1 agreement) and not
pleaded in answer
to these claims (para 8.2.4 of the amended plea).
[14]
The high court found that the appeal
arbitrator ‘considered the arbitrator’s approach and
findings, [in relation to]
paragraph 8.2.4 of the amended Plea’
with reference to the concession of Mr Van Eeden during cross
examination. It concluded
that ‘[t]he aspect regarding the oral
agreement concluded between the parties in August/September 2009, and
on which evidence
was lead, was specifically pleaded at paragraph
8.2.4 of the amended Plea’. Thus, the high court dismissed the
review application,
as it found that the appeal arbitrator acted
within his powers when he made his finding as regards the oral
agreement.
## The
law
The
law
[15]
The
terms of the Act, though no specific mention is made of appeal
arbitrations, ‘clearly enable an agreement to refer an
arbitrator’s award to an appeal body, and the provisions of the
Act must apply to an appeal tribunal, and its award, in the
same way
as they do to an arbitration and an arbitral award.’
[3]
It
follows that should the appeal arbitration award be set aside on
review, the original arbitration award would not be revived
or
reinstated, but s 33(4) of the Act finds application. It provides
that in such a case the dispute must at the request of any
of the
parties be submitted to a new arbitration tribunal constituted in the
manner directed by the court.
[16]
Harms
JA, in
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[4]
,
said the following:
‘
The
fact that the arbitrator may have either misinterpreted the
agreement, failed to apply South African law correctly, or had regard
to inadmissible evidence does not mean that he misconceived the
nature of the inquiry or his duties in connection therewith. It
only
means that he erred in the performance of his duties. An arbitrator
‘has the right to be wrong’ on the merits
of the case,
and it is a perversion of language and logic to label mistakes of
this kind as a misconception of the
nature
of the inquiry
–
they may be misconceptions about meaning, law or the admissibility of
evidence but that is a far cry from saying that they
constitute a
misconception of the nature of the inquiry. To adapt the quoted words
of Hoexter JA: It cannot be said that the wrong
interpretation of the
Integrated Agreement prevented the arbitrator from fulfilling his
agreed function or from considering the
matter left to him for
decision. On the contrary, in interpreting the Integrated Agreement
the arbitrator was actually fulfilling
the function assigned to him
by the parties, and it follows that the wrong interpretation of the
Integrated Agreement could not
afford any ground for review by a
court.’
[5]
[17]
I
am also mindful of what Wallis JA stated in
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport & Construction (Pty)
Ltd
,
[6]
that
‘[i]t suffices to say that where an arbitrator for some reason
misconceives the nature of the enquiry in the arbitration
proceedings
with the result that a party is denied a fair hearing or a fair trial
of issues that constitutes a gross irregularity.
The party alleging
the gross irregularity must establish it. Where an arbitrator engages
in the correct enquiry, but errs either
on the facts or the law, that
is not an irregularity and is not a basis for setting aside an award.
If the parties choose arbitration,
courts endeavour to uphold their
choice and do not lightly disturb it. The attack on the award must be
measured against these standards.’
[7]
[18]
An arbitrator has only the powers afforded
to her or him in terms of the relevant arbitration agreement; the
arbitrator has no inherent
power. Lewis JA articulated this as
follows:
‘
In
my view it is clear that the only source of an arbitrator’s
power is the arbitration agreement between the parties and
an
arbitrator cannot stray beyond their submission where the parties
have expressly defined and limited the issues, as the parties
have
done in this case to the matters pleaded. Thus the arbitrator, and
therefore also the appeal tribunal, had no jurisdiction
to decide a
matter not pleaded . . . It is of course possible for parties in an
arbitration to amend the terms of the reference
by agreement, even
possibly by one concluded tacitly, or by conduct . . .’
[8]
[Footnotes omitted]
[19]
I now turn to consider the grounds raised
by JVE in the review application before the high court.
## Discussion
Discussion
[20]
In this matter the arbitration agreement
limited the powers of the arbitrator to the determination of the
issues as defined in the
pleadings. It is common cause that it was
not a pleaded issue that the Service Agreement 2008 had amended the
JVE1 agreement. In
dismissing the BICL claim on this basis, the
appeal arbitrator exceeded his powers. In the result he did not apply
his mind to
whether the condition in clause 6 had been fulfilled as
alleged. It is also clear that para 8.2.4 of the amended plea was
pleaded
as part of the defence to the damages claim and not
specifically to the two claims under consideration. The question is
whether
these factors justified the review and setting aside of the
appeal arbitration award. For the reasons that follow, I am of the
view that the answer to the question must be ‘no’.
[21]
It is important to have regard to the
nature of the agreement referred to in para 8.2.4 of the amended
plea. Mr Brink on behalf
of Blue Bantry at the time denied liability
towards JVE for the BICL and 1.25 multiplication factor claims. He
nevertheless offered
to pay these amounts if and when they were
recovered from the City of Cape Town. Mr van Eeden on behalf of JVE
expressly accepted
the offer. Thus, a compromise was entered into in
respect of these claims. The compromise constituted a complete
defence to the
claims. It would be wholly artificial and unjust to
disregard the pleaded and proved compromise simply because it had not
been
pleaded directly in answer to these claims. Put differently, it
could not in the circumstances be said that the appeal arbitrator
failed to afford the parties a fair hearing. Consequently, the
dismissal of these claims did not amount to a gross irregularity
within the meaning of s 33(1)(
b
).
Order
[22]
Consequently, I make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
W
HUGHES
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant: C Joubert SC
Instructed
by: Laas
& Scholtz Inc., Cape Town Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
the Respondent: Roelof Van Riet SC S Miller
Instructed
by:
Roelof Feenstra Inc., Cape Town Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
The
second respondent, Judge Fourie, did not partake in the appeal.
[2]
Record
Vol 1 p 143: ‘6. Fooie vir eksterne dienste sal teen 100% van
ECSA tarrief betaal word SLEGS indien dit ten volle
kan verhaal word
van die grootmaat dienste bydraes andersins sal 20% afslag ook hier
geld. Interim betalings sal bereken teen
die 20% afslag. 100% fooi
scenario sal dus slegs van toepassing wees indien die
grootmaatdienstebydraes die koste verpligtinge
om infrastruktuur te
voorsien deur die klient/ontwikkelaar oorskry.’
[3]
Hos+Med
Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe ya Pelo Healthcare and Others
[2007]
ZASCA 163
;
2008 (2) SA 608
(SCA) (Hos+Med Medical Aid Scheme) para
3.
[4]
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd [2006] ZASCA 112; 2007 (3) SA 266
(SCA).
[5]
Ibid
para 85.
[6]
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport & Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZASCA 23
;
[2018
(5) SA 462 (SCA)
(Palabora Copper).
[7]
Ibid
para 8.
[8]
HOD+MED
Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe Ya Bophelo Healthcare Marketing &
Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2007] ZASCA 163
;
2008 (2) SA 608
(SCA) para 30.
sino noindex
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