Case Law[2023] ZASCA 16South Africa
G Phadziri & Sons (Pty) Ltd v Do Light Transport (Pty) Ltd and Another (765/2021) [2023] ZASCA 16 (20 February 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
20 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Contract law – written agreement referring to annexures, but same not attached – whether such renders the agreement void for vagueness.
Judgment
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## G Phadziri & Sons (Pty) Ltd v Do Light Transport (Pty) Ltd and Another (765/2021) [2023] ZASCA 16 (20 February 2023)
G Phadziri & Sons (Pty) Ltd v Do Light Transport (Pty) Ltd and Another (765/2021) [2023] ZASCA 16 (20 February 2023)
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sino date 20 February 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
no:
765/2021
In
the
matter
between:
G
PHADZIRI & SONS (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
DO
LIGHT TRANSPORT (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORT,
LIMPOPO
PROVINCE SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
G Phadziri & Sons (Pty) Ltd v Do Light Transport
(Pty) Ltd and Another
(765/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 16
(20 February
2023)
Bench:
PETSE AP, MOCUMIE and MAKGOKA JJA and SALIE and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
10 November 2022
Delivered:
20 February 2023
Summary:
Contract law – written agreement referring to
annexures, but same not attached – whether such renders the
agreement
void for vagueness.
Tacit
term – duration of agreement subject to occurrence of a
specified event – whether tacit term can be read in to
allow a
party to terminate the agreement on reasonable notice.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo
Division of the High Court,
Thohoyandou
(Ledwaba AJ, sitting as a court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Makgoka
JA (Petse AP, Mocumie JA and Salie and Siwendu AJJA concurring):
[1]
The issue in this appeal is whether an
agreement concluded between the
appellant,
the first respondent and the second respondent
is:
(a) void for vagueness; and (b) necessitates a tacit term to be read
into it as to its duration. The Limpopo Division of the
High Court,
Thohoyandou (the high court) answered both questions in the negative,
and made an order enforcing the agreement. Aggrieved
by that order,
the appellant
appeals
against the decision with
the
leave of the high court. The second respondent did not take part in
the proceedings in the high court, and does not participate
in this
appeal.
[2]
The facts which gave
rise to the dispute are as follows. The appellant, Phadziri &
Sons (Pty) Ltd (Phadziri), and the first
respondent, Do Light
Transport (Pty) Ltd (Do Light), are bus service companies offering
public transport services in the Vhembe
district of Limpopo. Phadziri
is the holder of a number of licences in respect of specific routes,
issued to it by the second respondent,
the Limpopo Department of
Transport (the Department). Up until September 2010, Phadziri used
its licences for public transport
services on those routes. However,
due to its aging bus fleet and other problems, Phadziri was unable to
offer effective and reliable
public transport services as required in
terms of the licences.
[3]
As a result, on 15
September 2010, Phadziri concluded a written agreement with Do Light
(the bilateral agreement) in terms of which
Do Light would, as a
sub-contractor, render the public transport services in Phadziri’s
stead in terms of some of those licences.
The duration of the
bilateral agreement was five years, ‘with a grace period of 3
(three) years’; thus, potentially
totalling eight years. The
bilateral agreement was subject to the approval of the Department,
which subsequently disapproved it.
[4]
Over a week later,
on
23 September 2010,
Phadziri, Do Light
and the Department concluded a tripartite agreement. In terms
thereof,
Do Light would be
Phadziri’s sub-contractor for the road public passenger
services in respect of certain routes. Those were
identified in the
agreement as
the
Maila and Vleifontein routes –
both to and from Louis Trichardt (the affected routes). As to its
duration, the
tripartite
agreement would ‘terminate when
integrated public transport services are introduced for the Vhembe
District of the Limpopo
Province’.
[5]
In terms of the
tripartite
agreement, Phadziri undertook to: (i)
allow Do Light to operate on the affected routes in terms of an
agreed timetable, or as amended
by agreement between the Department
and Do Light; (ii) cede the licences pertaining to the affected
routes for the duration of
the agreement; and (iii) provide Do Light
with the necessary equipment required to enable it to operate on the
affected routes.
Do Light’s obligations included, among other
things, to take over the affected routes and offer the required
transportation
services, as well as ancillary operational issues.
For its part, the Department undertook
to pay the subsidy claims directly to Phadziri and Do Light in
respect of the areas operated
by the parties, respectively.
[6]
For about eight years after it was
concluded, the tripartite agreement was implemented without any
problems. However, towards the
end of September 2018, Phadziri
asserted that the agreement had terminated. It demanded back the
licences it had ceded to Do Light,
as well as the right to operate on
the affected routes. Do Light rebuffed Phadziri’s demands, and
pointed out that the tripartite
agreement would only terminate upon
the implementation by the Department of the integrated public
transport services. Efforts to
resolve the impasse between the
parties, including interventions by the Department, failed to bear
fruit.
[7]
At the beginning of August 2019,
Phadziri commenced operating on the affected routes in competition
with Do Light. In response,
Do Light launched a two-part application
in the high court, and obtained, in part A, an urgent interim order
interdicting Phadziri’s
conduct. The interim order was to
operate with immediate effect pending the determination of part B of
that application. When part
B came before it, the high court granted
an order declaring that the
tripartite
agreement:
(a)
was valid and
enforceable until the introduction of the
integrated
public transport services
by
the Department,
or until it was
lawfully terminated
;
and (b) had superseded the bilateral agreement. In coming to that
conclusion, the high court rejected the thrust of Phadziri’s
two-pronged submission, namely that
the
tripartite agreement was void for vagueness, alternatively that a
tacit term should be read into it as to its duration to remedy
the
perceived vagueness.
[8]
In this Court, Phadziri persisted with
these submissions. In support of the contention for vagueness,
Phadziri relied on the fact
that two documents referred to as
annexures 1 and 3 in the tripartite agreement were not attached to
it. Because of this omission,
asserted Phadziri, the routes which it
had ceded to Do Light in terms of the tripartite agreement could not
be identified.
[9]
Annexure 1 is referred to in clause 3.1
of the tripartite agreement under Phadziri’s obligations. The
clause provides:
‘
To
allow [Do Light] to operate from Vleifontein and Maila to Makhado
(Louis Trichardt) in terms of the timetable as attached as
annexure
1, or as amended by agreement between the Department and Do Light.’
Annexure
3 appears in clause 4.8
[1]
of
the tripartite agreement under Do Light’s obligations, and it
reads as follows:
‘
Cash
journey tickets will be sold to passengers on the affected routes as
per the fare tables as attached in . . . annexure 3, or
as agreed
to.’
[10]
These two annexures clearly refer to a
timetable in terms of which Do Light would operate its busses on the
affected routes. ‘Timetable’
as defined in s 1 of the
National Land Transport Act 5 of 2009 (the Act) means:
‘
[A]
published document informing passengers of headways (intervals
between departures or the passing of vehicles), or times when
and
places where public transport services are available, indicating at
least origin and destination points and significant intermediate
locations along the route.’
[11]
The question to be determined is whether
the omission of the annexures renders the agreement not capable of
implementation. To answer
that question, the clauses in which the
annexures are mentioned should not be read in isolation, but as part
of the whole agreement.
On a plain reading of the tripartite
agreement, what was to be ceded were the licences, which reflected
the affected routes, identified
in clause 3.1 as ‘Vleifontein
and Maila to Makhado (Louis Trichardt)’. Clause 3.2 obliged
Phadziri to ‘cede the
permits/operating licences pertaining to
the affected routes’ for the duration of the agreement. The
effect of Phadziri ceding
the licences in terms of clause 3.2 to Do
Light was that the latter would step into the shoes of Phadziri and
transport passengers
in terms of the licences, as Phadziri had done
before the conclusion of the tripartite agreement.
[12]
It
is trite that a provision in a contract must be interpreted not only
in the context of the contract as a whole, but also to give
it a
commercially sensible meaning.
[2]
The principle requires a court to construe a contract in context –
within the factual matrix in which the parties operated.
[3]
Recently,
in
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court emphasised that
a
court interpreting a contract has to, from the onset, consider the
contract’s factual matrix, its purpose, the circumstances
leading up to its conclusion, and the knowledge at the time of those
who negotiated and produced the contract.
[5]
[13]
In the
present case,
before the
tripartite agreement was concluded, Phadziri and Do Light were
competitors in the public transportation services sector.
Phadziri
was at the risk of losing the licences issued to it by the
Department, because of its inability to deliver effective services.
To avoid that eventuality, Phadziri approached Do Light to come to
its rescue as a sub-contractor. It follows that it was in Phadziri’s
interest that the agreement was implementable.
[14]
Thus, when the tripartite agreement was
concluded, Phadziri must have had a timetable used in conjunction
with its licences. Accordingly,
it knew of the ‘origin and
destination points and significant intermediate locations along the
route’. It is therefore
contrived for it to now suggest that
the routes were not known, because the timetable was not attached to
the tripartite agreement.
On any conceivable basis, when Phadziri
invited Do Light to be its sub-contractor, both knew about the
timetable for Do Light’s
scheduled trips on the affected
routes.
As
to the purpose of the tripartite agreement, a
part
from the commercial efficacy it afforded to Phadziri, its overall
purpose was to avoid the collapse of public road transportation
services on the affected routes.
[15]
Furthermore,
our law inclines to preserving, instead of destroying, a contract
which the parties seriously entered
into
and considered capable of implementation.
[6]
In
Hoffmann
and Carvalho v Minister of Agriculture
,
[7]
the court observed:
‘
.
. . [T]he Courts are very willing to treat a contract as having been
concluded if the parties think they have made a binding contract
(as
they undoubtedly did in this case). Where parties intend to conclude
a contract, think they have concluded a contract, and
proceed to act
as if the contract were binding and complete, I think the Court ought
rather to try to help the parties towards
what they both intended
rather than obstruct them by legal subtleties and assist one of the
parties to escape the consequences
of all that he has done and all
that he has intended; except, of course, where parties have not
observed statutory formalities
required in certain contracts, such as
in a contract for the sale of fixed property.’
[8]
[16]
This
approach was also
emphasised
in
Soteriou
v Retco Poyntons (Pty) Ltd
,
[9]
where it was remarked that courts
are
‘reluctant to hold void for uncertainty any provision that was
intended to have legal effect’. With reference to
English
cases, this Court said that: ‘. . . [t]he problem for a Court
of construction must always be so to balance matters
that, without
the violation of essential principles, the dealings of men may as far
as possible be treated as effective, and that
the law may not incur
the reproach of being a destroyer of bargains’.
[10]
[17]
There
is also authority for the proposition that the conduct of the parties
in implementing an agreement may provide clear evidence
as to how
reasonable business persons construed a disputed provision in a
contract. This Court explained this in
Comwezi
Security Services v Cape Empowerment Trust
[11]
(
Comwezi
)
thus:
‘
In
the past, where there was perceived ambiguity in a contract, the
courts held that the subsequent conduct of the parties in
implementing
their agreement was a factor that could be taken into
account in preferring one interpretation to another. Now that
regard
is had to all relevant context, irrespective of whether there
is a perceived ambiguity, there is no reason not to look at the
conduct
of the parties in implementing the agreement. Where it is
clear that they have both taken the same approach to its
implementation,
and hence the meaning of the provision in dispute,
their conduct provides clear evidence of how reasonable business
people situated
as they were and knowing what they knew, would
construe the disputed provision.’
[12]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[18]
In
Capitec
Bank v Coral Lagoon Investments
[13]
(
Coral
Lagoon
), this
Court cautioned that the passage in
Comwezi
referred
to above, should not be understood ‘
as
an invitation to harvest evidence, on an indiscriminate basis, of
what the parties did after they concluded their agreement’,
[14]
and pointed out that such evidence ‘must be relevant to an
objective determination of the meaning of the words used in the
contract’.
[15]
[19]
The upshot of these authorities is that
the tripartite agreement should be preserved and enforced. I have no
doubt
that
the parties seriously entered
into the tripartite agreement and considered it capable of
implementation, and, in fact, implemented
it. I also consider, on the
authority of
Comwezi
and
Coral Lagoon
,
that the evidence of how the parties conducted themselves in
implementing the tripartite agreement is relevant to the
determination
of how they understood their obligations in terms
thereof, despite the missing annexures.
[20]
Save for the timetable in respect of
route 7, which was rectified per the order of 18 May 2020 at the
instance of Phadziri, the
parties had a meeting of the minds as to
the routes in respect of which licences had to be ceded. Phadziri
relied on this rectification
to support its assertion that the routes
could not be identified. I disagree. In my view, it points in the
opposite direction,
when one considers that a total of eight licences
were ceded, and it was only in respect of one that clarity had to be
sought from
the court. What is more, if Phadziri is correct in its
stance, it would have approached the court to rectify the routes in
respect
of all the licences. The fact that it sought rectification in
respect of only one, erodes its assertion. As mentioned already, the
tripartite agreement was concluded in September 2010, and for close
to eight years thereafter, it was implemented without any issues.
[21]
In
my judgment, this is a case where ‘the Court ought rather to
try to help the parties towards what they both intended rather
than
obstruct them by legal subtleties and assist one of the parties to
escape the consequences of all that he has done and all
that he has
intended’.
[16]
Clauses
3.1 and 4.8 must be read so as to give them, and the tripartite
agreement, a commercially sensible meaning.
[17]
[22]
For all of the above reasons, and on the
basis of the authorities referred to, I conclude that the high court
was correct in holding
that the tripartite agreement is not void for
vagueness.
[23]
Turning
now to whether a tacit term should be read into the agreement as to
its duration, I consider first the approach adopted
in
Transnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
[18]
(
Rubenstein
).
There, this Court considered an agreement with a termination clause
similar to the one in the present case. The respondent
was
given the exclusive right to operate a jewellery boutique on one of
the businesses of the appellant, the Blue Train.
The
contract specifically provided for termination on the privatisation
of the Blue Train.
It
later
became
apparent that the privatisation was not going to happen.
T
he
appellant argued that it was necessary to read into the contract a
term that if privatisation did not occur, the contract would
be
terminable on reasonable notice. This, the respondent submitted, was
to avoid locking the parties in an indefinite contract,
which was
clearly never their intention.
[24]
This
Court explained that when a contract was terminable upon the
happening of an uncertain future event, in the absence of evidence
as
to what the parties intended, it was not possible to impute into such
a contract a term which was in conflict with the parties’
express agreement as to its duration. This followed from the
principle that a tacit term may not be imputed into a contract if
it
would be in conflict with its express provisions.
[19]
On the facts, it was found that there was thus no common underlying
supposition or assumption as to the termination of the contract,
should privatisation not occur. Accordingly, the appeal was
dismissed.
[25]
In the present case, the tacit term
which Phadziri maintains should be read into the tripartite agreement
is that its duration was
terminable on reasonable notice after eight
years. Initially, Phadziri predicated this on its stance that the
tripartite agreement
was based on the bilateral agreement, which, as
mentioned already, had a duration of eight years. In the high court,
Phadziri abandoned
this stance, correctly in my view, and accepted
that the tripartite agreement had superseded the bilateral agreement.
The significance
of this is that the premise of the initial argument
(that the tripartite agreement was based on the bilateral agreement)
was no
longer open to Phadziri.
[26]
However, that did not deter Phadziri. In
this Court, it had a further string to its bow. As mentioned already,
in
Auckland Park Theological Seminary
it was held that in interpreting a
contract, reliance may be placed on the evidence of the circumstances
leading to its conclusion,
and the context in which it was concluded.
Relying on that principle,
Phadziri
held up: (a) the provisions of the National Land Transport Act 5 of
2009 (the Act); and (b) government resolutions on the
implementation
of the integrated public transport system,
as the
contextual setting within which the tripartite agreement was
concluded, to press for a tacit term to be read in thereto.
[27]
As to (a), Phadziri’s argument was
this. Sections 34 and 35 of the Act provide for five-year National
Strategic Frameworks
and five-year Provincial Strategic Frameworks,
respectively, to be put in place with a view to preparing integrated
public transport
plans. The plans must be developed in terms of s 36
of the Act with a view to establish a public transport system.
Section 40 of
the Act obliges provinces to take steps as soon as
possible after the commencement of the Act to integrate contracted
bus services
in their areas into the larger public transport system.
[28]
According to Phadziri, these provisions
envisaged that an integrated public transport system could be put in
place not long after
the coming into force of the Act in 2009. This
would be relatively shortly before the tripartite agreement was
concluded in September
2010. This, it submitted, ‘created an
impression which all the persons in the position of the three parties
would have been
aware of that the integrated transport services might
be implemented not long after a period of five years’ if all
went smoothly,
with three additional years, with delays.
[29]
It
was then submitted that the officious bystander
[20]
would have detected that when the parties opted for the duration
linked to the implementation of the integrated public transport
system, they had failed to discuss the possibility of long and
repeated delays, as the implementation required co-operation of
all
three tiers of government. According to Phadziri, it is not
unrealistic that the officious bystander would have foreseen delays,
and suggested a tacit clause to the effect that the duration of the
tripartite agreement would be terminable on reasonable notice
by any
of the parties after eight years.
[30]
I do not think that these provisions
support the tacit term agitated for by Phadziri. It has simply failed
to furnish evidence that
the minds of those who represented the
parties at the conclusion of the agreement were directed to these
provisions. In the negotiations
leading to the conclusion of the
agreement, Phadziri was represented by Mr Tshikume Phadziri. But he
did not depose to any affidavit
to support Phadziri’s
submissions. Instead, the answering affidavit, which is silent on the
tacit term, was deposed to by
Mr Khangweni Patrick Phadziri. When the
issue was first raised in Phadziri’s supplementary answering
affidavit, the deponent
was its attorney, Mr André Naudé.
None of the deponents was part of those negotiations. The result is
that there
is no evidence that the parties had meant for the duration
of the tripartite agreement to be anything other than what it
expressly
says.
[31]
As to (b), Phadziri referred to the
resolutions taken at a meeting on 6 May 2015, held between the
Minister of Transport (the Minister)
and provincial members of the
executive committee (MECs) responsible for transport. The resolutions
are summarised in a letter
dated 1 June 2015 from the Minister to the
relevant MEC in Limpopo. However, a simple regard to those
resolutions shows that they
have no bearing whatsoever on the
negotiations which preceded the conclusion of the tripartite
agreement. The resolutions refer
in general terms to the government’s
policy of introducing an integrated public transport system
throughout the country and
the provinces’ role in it. They do
not specifically refer to any area, like the Vhembe district, where
the affected routes
are. There is also no suggestion in any of the
resolutions that the integrated public transport system in any given
province or
district would be implemented within five years after the
Act had come into force. They therefore shed no light on the
intention
of the parties.
[32]
Thus, as was the case in
Rubenstein
,
in the absence of evidence as to what the parties intended, the
express duration term of the tripartite agreement should be preserved
and honoured. The term which Phadziri seeks to impute into the
agreement is in conflict with its express term as to its duration.
It
follows that the tripartite agreement is enforceable until the
implementation of the integrated public transport services by
the
Department. Although there has been a delay in implementation, unlike
in
Rubenstein
,
there is no evidence that the Department has abandoned the project.
[33]
In all the circumstances, the appeal
must fail. As to costs, Do Light employed, and sought costs of, three
counsel. However, I do
not think that this matter warranted the
employment of more than one counsel.
[34]
In
the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
__________________
T
M MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
J
L van der Merwe SC (with him I M Hlalethoa)
Instructed
by:
Coxwell,
Steyn, Vise and Naudé, Thohoyandou
Horn
& Van Rensburg Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
U
B Makuya (with him M C Netshiendeulu and
L
M Magau)
Instructed
by:
Erasmus
Motaung Incorporated, Roodepoort
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Clause 4.5 refers to annexure 2, which in turn deals with the rates
at which passengers would purchase tickets from Do Light.
There does
not seem to be any dispute around this.
## [2]Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Germiston Municipal Retirement Fund[2009] ZASCA 154; 2010 (2) SA 498 (SCA); [2010] 2 All SA 195 (SCA)
(Germiston
Municipal Retirement Fund)
para 13.
[2]
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Germiston Municipal Retirement Fund
[2009] ZASCA 154; 2010 (2) SA 498 (SCA); [2010] 2 All SA 195 (SCA)
(
Germiston
Municipal Retirement Fund
)
para 13.
[3]
Ibid.
[4]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) para
66.
[5]
Ibid.
[6]
Genac
Properties JHB (Pty) Ltd v NBC Administrators CC
[1991] ZASCA 188
;
1992
(1) SA 566
(A) at 579F-H.
[7]
Hoffmann
and Carvalho v Minister of Agriculture
1947 (2) SA 855
(T) (
Hoffmann
).
[8]
Ibid at 860.
[9]
Soteriou
v Retco Poyntons (Pty) Ltd
1985
(2) SA 922 (A).
[10]
Ibid at 931G-H.
[11]
Comwezi
Security Services (Pty) Ltd and Another v Cape Empowerment Trust Ltd
[2012]
ZASCA 126 (SCA).
[12]
Ibid
para
15.
[13]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021] ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA).
[14]
Ibid
para 48.
[15]
Ibid.
[16]
Hoffmann
at
860.
[17]
Germiston
Municipality Retirement Fund
fn
9 above, para 13.
[18]
T
ransnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
2006
(1) SA 591 (SCA); [2005] 3 All SA 425 (SCA).
[19]
Ibid paras 13, 18 and 19.
[20]
The so-called ‘officious bystander’ test is often
applied, which originates from English law and has found application
in our law. The essence of which is that were an officious bystander
to suggest some express provision for a term in their agreement,
it
would be one which the parties would readily agree was their
intention.
sino noindex
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Strategic Partners Group (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Liquidators of Ilima Group (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (1291/2021) [2023] ZASCA 27; [2023] 2 All SA 658 (SCA) (24 March 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 27Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar