Case Law[2023] ZASCA 95South Africa
Ethekwini Municipality v Cooperativa Muratori and Cementisti - CMC di Ravenna Societa Cooperativa (181/2022) [2023] ZASCA 95; 2023 (6) SA 384 (SCA) (12 June 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – decisions on adjudication of disputes under construction contract – enforcement by court – whether contrary to public policy – specific performance – whether judgment for payment of debt due under decisions is a discretionary remedy.
Judgment
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## Ethekwini Municipality v Cooperativa Muratori and Cementisti - CMC di Ravenna Societa Cooperativa (181/2022) [2023] ZASCA 95; 2023 (6) SA 384 (SCA) (12 June 2023)
Ethekwini Municipality v Cooperativa Muratori and Cementisti - CMC di Ravenna Societa Cooperativa (181/2022) [2023] ZASCA 95; 2023 (6) SA 384 (SCA) (12 June 2023)
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sino date 12 June 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 181/2022
In the matter between:
Ethekwini
Municipality
APPELLANT
and
COOPEPATIVA MURATORI &
CEMENTISTI -
CMC
DI RAVENNA SOCIETA COOPERATIVA
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ethekwini
Municipality
v
Cooperativa
Muratori & Cementisti - CMC di Ravenna Societa Cooperativa
(Case
no 181/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 95
(12 June 2023)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, MOCUMIE, MATOJANE and WEINER JJA
and OLSEN AJA
Heard
:
10 March 2023
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representatives
by email, publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website, and release to SAFLII. The date for
hand down is deemed to be 12
June 2023 at 11h00.
Summary:
Contract – decisions on
adjudication of disputes under construction contract –
enforcement by court – whether
contrary to public policy
– specific performance – whether judgment for payment of
debt due under decisions is a discretionary
remedy.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Durban
(Lopes J sitting as court
of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Olsen AJA (Van der
Merwe, Mocumie, Matojane and Weiner JJA concurring)
[1]
Ethekwini Municipality, the appellant before us, concluded a written
contract with the respondent for
the construction by the latter of
the ‘C9-Cornubia interchange to Meridian Drive’. The form
of contract employed by
the parties was the ‘General Conditions
of Contract for Construction Works (Second Edition, 2010)’. I
will refer to
the parties as they were in the contract, namely as
‘employer’ and ‘contractor’ respectively.
[2]
Something must be said at the outset about the identity of the
respondent. The respondent was the applicant
in the court
a quo
where it was described as ‘CMC Di Ravenna South Africa Branch
(in business rescue)’, a company registered under South
African
law as an external company. In later court documents the epithet ‘in
business rescue’ became ‘in liquidation’.
The
employer raised an issue as to the
locus standi
of the named
party. In the result an application for the amendment of the
contractor’s name to ‘Cooperativa Muratori
&
Cementisti - CMC di Ravenna Societa Cooperativa’ was made and
granted without opposition. The case was argued before
the court
a
quo
, and in this Court, on the basis that the contractor was the
company bearing the amended name. It is an Italian company,
registered
as such in that country. For no disclosed reason the court
papers which have been delivered since the amendment was granted
continue
to use the name in which the contractor was originally
cited. This has been corrected in this judgment,
inter alia
to
avoid confusion, especially in Italy, where the use of the original
incorrect citation may not be easily explained.
[3]
The contract between the parties was a fairly substantial one,
judging from the figures mentioned in
the papers. Expenditure on it
exceeded R300 million. It was concluded in 2015, but cancelled by the
contractor in December 2018.
The cancellation of the agreement was
not challenged by the employer.
[4]
The contract allowed for the submission of unresolved disputes
between the parties to adjudication,
a common feature of construction
contracts. Three referrals to adjudication made by the contractor
gave rise to the present litigation.
The referrals were in each case
to a Mr K B Spence. He delivered two decisions on 8 August 2019 and
one on 10 August 2019. The
contentious elements of the decisions from
the perspective of this litigation are the findings that the employer
must pay the contractor
the sums of R2 049 130.48 and R8 129 492.42,
together with interest thereon as stipulated in the contract.
[5]
The employer failed to comply with the decisions of the adjudicator.
The contractor applied to the high
court for orders making the
decisions orders of court, and for an order directing the employer to
pay the amounts just mentioned
to the contractor. The high court
granted that relief, and subsequently granted the employer leave to
appeal to this Court.
[6]
The validity of the referral to adjudication of the disputes is not
challenged by the employer. The
decisions of the adjudicator are not
challenged on the basis that there was any deviation from what was
required and permitted
to be done by the adjudicator. The employer
approached the case in the high court, and before this Court on
appeal, on the basis
that the decisions are legitimate, but may
nevertheless in due course be revised .
[7]
The provisions of the contract which operate in such circumstances
are the following.
‘
10.6.1
Either party shall have the right to disagree with any decision of
the Adjudication Board and refer the matter to arbitration
or court
proceedings, whichever is applicable in terms of the contract;
Provided that:
10.6.1.1 The decision
shall be binding on both parties unless and until it is revised by an
arbitration award or court judgment,
whichever is applicable in terms
of the contract.’
A further proviso
regulates the timing and manner of notification of any dispute raised
by a party with regard to the adjudicator’s
decisions.
Compliance with those provisions is on the face of it mandatory. The
employer has notified the contractor that the decisions
are disputed,
and commenced action in the high court to have them revised. The
contractor contends that the employer’s notification
of the
dispute was not in compliance with the provisions of the contract, as
a result of which the adjudication decisions have
become final. In
the view I take of the matter there is no need for that issue to be
decided in this appeal. We were advised during
argument that the
issue features in the pleadings in the action.
[8]
The employer accepts that in the ordinary course the fact that the
decisions are binding on the
parties, as they have been since they
were made, means that the contractor would ordinarily be entitled to
its money now; which
means that the order the contractor sought in
the high court would have been properly granted. But the employer
contends that given
the particular circumstances which prevail in
this case, relief should not have been granted.
[9]
The business and affairs of the contractor are presently conducted
subject to the provisions of
a regime established under Italian law
for the benefit of distressed companies and their creditors, and in
this case imposed under
that law by Italian courts on the application
of the contractor. The regime is described in an affidavit of an
Italian lawyer who
is a specialist in corporate bankruptcy law. His
affidavit is not challenged. Under the regime to which the contractor
is subjected,
the directors continue to perform their functions as
such, with a specific emphasis on the recovery of what is owed to the
company.
The position appears to be that an arrangement with
creditors with a view to achieving the long-term survival of the
contractor
is planned, but bankruptcy is clearly another potential
outcome. These facts or circumstances lie at the centre of the
employer’s
arguments, which rest in the main upon the
proposition that there is a risk that if it pays in accordance with
the adjudicator’s
decisions, and then succeeds in its action to
have the awards overturned, it may not get its money back. This is
not disputed by
the contractor. The risk of liquidation occurring,
according to the contractor’s reply, is ‘an unknown at
this stage’.
[10]
The employer argues that the high court had a discretion to exercise
when asked to grant the money judgments,
either because what the
contractor asked for was an order for specific performance; or
because the enforcement of the decisions
would in this case be
contrary to public policy. (A contention that a discretion to stay
execution exists in terms of rule 45A
of the uniform rules was
rightly not pressed before us, as no question of execution arises
until after an order for payment of
money has been granted.) The
proper exercise of that discretion, the employer argues, ought to
have resulted in the dismissal of
the application.
[11]
It is convenient first to deal with the contention that in the
particular circumstances of this case, the
enforcement of the
adjudication decisions would be contrary to public policy. The
contractor disputes this contention. It points
out that the parties
willingly agreed to a process of adjudication for the interim and
preliminary resolution of disputes between
them, the outcome of which
would affirm or deny the existence of immediately enforceable
obligations. Being the beneficiary of
such obligations, and the
employer having failed to discharge the obligations, the contractor
was entitled to approach the court
for the relief which it sought in
the high court in order to secure the benefit of the provisions of
our law relating to the enforcement
of judgments of our courts. The
high court was relieved of the usual obligation of establishing the
existence of the obligations
in question. That had already been done
through the process of adjudication agreed upon by the parties in the
contract.
[1]
All of this is
common cause between the parties.
[12]
The principal authority relied upon by the employer in support of its
contention that the orders granted
by the high court offend public
policy is
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees of the Oregon Trust and Others
[2]
(
Beadica
).
The facts before the court in
Beadica
bear no resemblance at all to those of this case. They did, however,
afford an opportunity for the Constitutional Court to clarify
the
proper approach to determining:
(a)
whether contractual provisions are in themselves contrary to public
policy and therefore unenforceable;
and
(b)
when a term itself is unobjectionable, whether its enforcement in
particular circumstances would
be contrary to public policy.
The employer’s case
involves the second of these enquiries, there being no dispute over
the proposition that the regime of
adjudication established under the
contract is not offensive to public policy.
[13]
With specific reference to
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[3]
and
Botha
and Another v Rich N.O. and Others
,
[4]
the majority judgment in
Beadica
explained that the perception that there is a divergence between the
jurisprudence of the Constitution Court and this Court on
the subject
of public policy in the contractual context is misconceived. The
judgment continued, at para 80, as follows:
‘
It
emerges clearly from the discussion above that the divergence between
the jurisprudence of this Court and that of the Supreme
Court of
Appeal is more perceived than real. Our law has always, to a greater
or lesser extent, recognised the role of equity (encompassing
the
notions of good faith, fairness and reasonableness) as a factor in
assessing the terms and the enforcement of contracts. Indeed,
it is
clear that these values play a profound role in our law of contract
under our new constitutional dispensation. However, a
court may not
refuse to enforce contractual terms on the basis that the enforcement
would, in its subjective view, be unfair, unreasonable
or unduly
harsh. These abstract values have not been accorded autonomous,
self-standing status as contractual requirements. Their
application
is mediated through the rules of contract law including the rule that
a court may not enforce contractual terms where
the term or its
enforcement would be contrary to public policy. It is only where a
contractual term, or its enforcement, is so
unfair, unreasonable or
unjust that it is contrary to public policy that a court may refuse
to enforce it
.
’
[14]
The central thesis of the employer’s argument is that this is a
case where the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
(agreements
are to be observed) should not apply. However,
pacta sunt servanda
is a central element and feature of public policy. It was put this
way in
Beadica.
‘
This
court has emphasised that the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
gives
effect to the “central constitutional values of freedom and
dignity”. It has further recognised that
in
general
public
policy requires that contracting parties honour obligations that have
been freely and voluntarily undertaken.
Pacta
sunt servanda
is
thus not a relic of our pre-constitutional common law. It continues
to play a crucial role in the judicial control of contracts
through
the instrument of public policy, as it gives expression to central
constitutional values.
’
[5]
(Footnotes omitted.)
As
pointed out in
Beadica
that
does not mean to say that
pacta
sunt servanda
is ‘the only, nor the most important principle informing the
judicial control of contracts. The requirements of public policy
are
informed by a wide range of constitutional values’.
[6]
[15]
The case for the employer has been presented upon the basis that
Beadica
, and the cases from which it stems, establish that,
even in the case of a claim for payment of money due in terms of a
contract,
a court has a discretion to grant or refuse the remedy on
public policy grounds. However, the enquiry is not directed at the
exercise
of a judicial discretion. The party resisting enforcement of
such a contractual obligation on public policy grounds has a duty to
place the relevant facts before the court. It is for the court to
decide whether on the facts the enforcement of the obligation
would
be contrary to public policy. If the answer is in the affirmative, no
question of a discretion arises at all. Our courts
may not enforce
contractual obligations when it would be contrary to public policy to
do so.
[16]
The employer has not established that the contractor is actually
insolvent, that is to say that its liabilities
exceed its assets. It
is, however, undisputed that the contractor is financially
distressed. The cause, or the causes, of that
condition are not
apparent on the papers; liquidation is a possibility. All that can be
said, and need be said, is what is conceded
by the contractor: that
there is a risk that if the employer discharges its payment
obligations under the adjudication decisions
and is successful in
having them overturned, it will not be able to recover some or all of
its money.
[17]
The employer adds two considerations to its argument that public
policy is offended by the notion that it
should be subjected to the
risk just described:
(a)
The first is that the contract had already
been terminated at the time the adjudication took place, with the
result that the monetary
awards did not serve the purpose of ensuring
an adequate cash flow for the contractor, enabling it to continue
with work.
(b)
Secondly, it is argued that it would not be
appropriate for scarce public funds to be put at risk despite the
provisions of the
contract.
[18] As
to the first of these considerations, it is answered in the contract
itself. The subject of termination
of the contract is dealt with in
clause 9. The clause has three parts. The first might be loosely
described as being about termination
when there is no fault. It deals
with subjects such as the outbreak of war and states of emergency.
The second part deals with
termination by the employer and is fault
based. The third part deals with termination by the contractor. It is
also fault based.
Having set out in clause 9.3.1 the circumstances in
which the contractor may cancel the contract, clause 9.3.2 provides
as follows:
‘
9.3.2
Upon such termination:
9.3.2.1 All the
provisions of the contract, including this clause, shall continue to
apply for the purpose of:
9.3.2.1.1 resolving any
dispute, and
9.3.2.1.2 determining the
amounts payable by either the employer or the contractor to the other
of them.’
The employer’s
argument ignores the import of clause 9.3.2.1. In my view, the
argument that cancellation of the contract bolsters
the employer’s
case concerning the risk of not recovering its money is without
merit.
[19]
The second of the above additional considerations, namely that it is
public funds being put at risk, is equally
unhelpful to the
employer’s case. The Constitutional Court had this to say in
Beadica
:
‘
[84]
Moreover, contractual relations are the bedrock of economic activity
and our economic development is dependent, to a large
extent, on the
willingness of parties to enter into contractual relationships. If
parties are confident that contracts that they
enter into will be
upheld, then they will be incentivised to contract with other parties
for their mutual gain. Without this confidence,
the very motivation
for social coordination is
diminished. It is
indeed crucial to economic development that individuals should be
able to trust that all contracting parties will
be bound by
obligations willingly assumed.
’
(Footnotes
omitted.)
The employer asks us to
privilege public funds at the cost of private entities which contract
with public ones. Whilst, given the
profit motive, such an approach
may not entirely disincentivise persons from contracting with public
entities, it might reasonably
be expected to incentivise the charging
of a premium to public entities, to cover the risk inherent in
contracting with a party
which may be afforded a privileged status by
the courts in the adjudication of contractual disputes. That cannot
be in the public
interest.
[20] In
presenting the argument for the employer counsel was unable to move
beyond the mere assertion that granting
the contractor its relief, as
was done in the high court, is contrary to public policy. The
assertion amounts to the proposition
that putting the employer at the
risk complained of it is so unfair, so unreasonable and so
inequitable as to lead to the conclusion
that to do so would be in
conflict with public policy.
[21] In
my view, a closer examination of the situation leads to a contrary
conclusion:
(a)
We are not dealing with parties which
concluded a contract from unequal bargaining positions.
(b)
No
constitutional values have been identified by the employer as
implicated to its advantage in the consideration of public policy
in
this case. On the contrary, it appears to me that the only
constitutional values involved here are those which have been held
to
support the enforcement of contracts.
[7]
(c)
As to equity, what is proposed by the
employer is that it should be released from its existing contractual
obligation to pay because
there is a risk that it may in due course
acquire a right to payment which the contractor may be unable to
meet. There is an imbalance
in that contention favouring the employer
at the expense of the contractor, which is not
prima
facie
equitable. One must add to that
the fact that the major money judgment sought and obtained by the
contractor (payment of a little
over R8 million) is in fact the sum
of five monthly interim certificates duly issued for payment by the
employer to the contractor,
which the employer refused to pay in
breach of the contract. The certificates all predated the
cancellation of the contract. According
to the adjudicator’s
report the contractor terminated the contract asserting that the
non-payment of these interim certificates
was a material breach of
the contract.
(d)
The
availability of adjudication, notwithstanding the cancellation of the
contract, has already been dealt with above. The provision
is itself
not unreasonable. Bare reliance on unreasonableness (or equity or
fairness for that matter) is not sufficient to deny
the relief the
provision is intended to provide, even when peculiar circumstances
have arisen which suggest that the operation
of the provision may not
be as equitable as might have been hoped. Something more is required
to engage public policy. Here the
employer, in fact, does no more
than invite this Court to reach and act on a subjective view that
enforcing the awards would be
unfair, unreasonable and unduly harsh.
However, ‘
[t]he
enforcement of contractual terms does not depend on an individual
judge's sense of what fairness, reasonableness and justice
require.
To hold otherwise would be to make the enforcement of contractual
terms dependent on the “idiosyncratic inferences
of a few
judicial minds”.’
[8]
(e)
As counsel for the contractor has correctly
argued, the risk of insolvency, or of a contracting party falling
into distressed financial
circumstances, is an ordinary commercial
one. The employer accepted this risk when it entered into the
contract with the contractor,
which is a standard contract in the
industry. Ultimately the employer seeks to be released from its
obligation under the contract,
simply because this risk may
eventuate. Public policy clearly does not justify that.
(f)
It cannot be overlooked that the only
objective assessments of whether the money in question is owed by the
employer are to be found
in the adjudicator’s reports and in
the payment certificates issued under the contract by the engineer
acting as the employer’s
agent.
[22]
The argument that the order granted in the court
a quo
is one
which offends public policy must be rejected.
[23]
I turn to the argument advanced by the employer for the proposition
that this case is one about specific
performance, as a result of
which the court has a discretion to grant or refuse it, as discussed
and explained in
Haynes
v Kingwilliamstown Municipality
[9]
(
Haynes
)
and
Benson
v SA Mutual Life Assurance Society
[10]
(
Benson
).
The
facts and circumstances relied upon by the employer in this regard
are no different to those already discussed above. The essence
of the
argument is that specific performance may be refused in the exercise
of a judicial discretion when to grant it would cause
unreasonable
and undue hardship to be visited upon the person against whom it is
sought to be enforced.
[11]
It
is argued that this is such a case, despite the fact that the
judgment sought by the contractor is for payment of a money debt
presently due, owing and unconditionally payable, and despite the
fact that there is no alternative or substitute relief which
can be
granted in such a case without the court in effect rewriting the
contract to create one. The court is being asked to deny
the only
remedy available to the contractor, notwithstanding that the
contractor’s right to the remedy has been established.
[24]
The parties agreed before the high court that there were three issues
to be decided. The first was whether
the order sought by the
contractor was one for specific performance. The second was whether
the court had a discretion to grant
or refuse the order for the
payment sought by the contractor, and the third was whether that
discretion (if it exists) dictated
the grant or refusal of the
relief. These questions were answered by the learned judge as
follows.
‘
(a)
Inasmuch as specific performance is one of the remedies for breach of
contract, which
includes
orders both
ad factum praestandum
(an order to perform a specific act) and
ad
pecuniam
solvendum
(an order to pay money in
performance of a party’s contractual
obligations),
the order prayed in the notice of motion is one for specific
performance.
(b)
I do not believe that I am entitled to exercise my discretion where
no other remedy
is sought, save payment of a contractual obligation,
and where no other remedy is available to the applicant.
(c)
Accordingly, I must grant the order
sought.’
[25]
The question which arises immediately is whether it is correct that
the judge had a discretion to exercise at all.
In ordinary language,
one can undoubtedly say that any order enforcing a specific
obligation due to be performed in terms of a
contract, including one
for the payment of money, is an order for specific performance. (I
will refer to that sense of the term
as ‘specific performance
in the wide sense’.) However, that is not the sense in which
the term has been used in our
law consistently, judging from reported
judgments, since the nineteenth century in the context of the
discretion to grant or refuse
an order for specific performance. In
this sense the term is used to denote an order for the performance of
a contractual obligation
to do something; that is an order of
‘specific performance
ad
faciendum’
,
[12]
or more frequently, an order
ad
factum praestandum.
[26]
When the contract provides for the performance of an act by the
guilty party, the innocent party may sue for performance
of the act,
seeking an order
ad
factum praestandum.
A tender of payment of damages for non-performance of the act is not
a defence to such a claim. The position is as set out in
Farmers'
Co-Operative Society v Berry
[13]
(
Farmers'
Co-Operative Society
)
,
a case in which an order
ad
factum praestandum
was sought:
‘
Prima
facie
every
party to a binding agreement who is ready to carry out his own
obligation under it has a right to demand from the other party,
so
far as it is possible, a performance of his undertaking in terms of
the contract. As remarked by KOTZE, C.J., in
Thompson
v Pullinger
(1
O. R., at p. 301), "the right of a plaintiff to the specific
performance of a contract where the defendant is in a position
to do
so is beyond all doubt." It is true that Courts will exercise a
discretion in determining whether or not decrees of
specific
performance should be made. They will not of course, be issued where
it is impossible for the defendant to comply with
them. And there are
many cases in which justice between the parties can be fully and
conveniently done by an award of damages.
But that is a different
thing from saying that a defendant who has broken his undertaking has
the option to purge his default by
the payment of money. For in the
words of
Storey
(
Equity
Jurisprudence,
Sec.
717 (a)), "it is against conscience that a party should have a
right of election whether he would perform his contract
or only pay
damages for the breach of it." The election is rather with the
injured party, subject to the discretion of the
Court. Now it is not
necessary for the purposes of this case to lay down any general rule
as to when a Court will and when it will
not decree the specific
performance of a contract. Because it is clear that where, owing to
the difficulty of assessing damages
or otherwise, it is not possible
to do justice by an order for the payment of money, and where it is
in the power of a defendant
to carry out his undertaking, then such a
decree is the only appropriate remedy.’
[14]
[27]
One of the principles which emerges from
Farmers'
Co-Operative Society
,
and equally from
Haynes
and
Benson
,
is that the discretion the court has to deny an order
ad
factum praestandum
rests on the existence of a choice between two remedies. The one is
to order performance. The other closes the door on enforcement
of the
acknowledged right to performance, on the basis that the remedy of
damages for non-performance is available to the plaintiff.
[28] From the
first edition of RH Christie
The Law of Contract in South Africa
(1981) at 505–510, to the current one, GB Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
8 ed at 14.2 (‘
Christie
’),
the learned authors have espoused the principle that an order
enforcing a contractual obligation
ad pecuniam solvendum
is as
much an order for ‘specific performance’ as one enforcing
a contractual obligation
ad factum praestandum.
[29]
In the first edition
Ras
and Others v Simpson
[15]
was
cited as authority for the proposition, and later
Leviseur
& Co. v Highveld Supply Stores
[16]
was
added. In my view the observations made in those judgments amounted
to no more than that an order for the payment of a contractual
debt
amounted to specific performance in the wide sense, and they may be
accepted as far as they go. There was no issue in those
cases as to
whether the grant of a money judgment was a discretionary remedy, nor
any occasion to equate or contrast orders
ad
factum praestandum
and
ad
pecuniam solvendum.
These
judgments, therefore, do not provide an answer to the question
whether a discretion to grant or refuse an order for specific
performance arises when payment of a money debt is claimed.
[30]
It is not entirely clear what
Christie
says in this regard at 658–659 of the 8th edition. To the
extent that the author could be understood as answering this question
in the affirmative, it has to be pointed out that none of the cases
referred to in this regard provides authority for that proposition.
These are
South
African Harness Works v South African Publishers Ltd
[17]
(
Harness
Works
),
Industrial
and Mercantile Corporation v Anastassiou Brothers
(
Industrial
and Mercantile Corporation
)
[18]
and
Unibank
Savings and Loans Limited v ABSA Bank Limited
(
Unibank
Savings and Loans
).
[19]
[31] As
Christie
recognises, the judgment in
Harness Works
is
devoid of any reference to the exercise of a judicial discretion or
to ‘specific performance’. It rests upon the
erroneous
proposition that a contracting party can bring a contract to an end
by a unilateral act of unlawful repudiation. The
judgment is no
authority for the proposition that where a plaintiff seeks, and has
established a right under a contract to, a judgment
sounding in
money, the court has a discretion to refuse the remedy and insist
that the plaintiff be satisfied with damages.
[32]
Industrial and Mercantile Corporation
involved a contract for the supply and
installation of certain machinery and equipment for a shopkeeper at a
fixed price. The shopkeeper
repudiated the contract, and the
plaintiff sued for the price, tendering performance. The judgment was
granted. The issue as to
whether there was a discretion to refuse a
judgment sounding in money was not raised. What was raised belatedly
was an argument
that judgment for the price ‘against delivery
and installation by the plaintiff’ should not be granted
because of difficulties
which might be experienced in determining
whether the acts upon performance of which the money order was
conditional had been performed.
Ultimately this judgment says no more
on this point than that the court should avoid becoming ‘supine
and spineless in dealing
with the offending contract breaker by
giving him the benefit of paying damages rather than being compelled
to perform that which
he had undertaken to perform’, and that
the plaintiff was entitled to an order for specific performance. It
cannot be said
to have recognised a discretion to refuse specific
performance of a claim
ad pecuniam
solvendam
.
[33]
The facts in
Unibank Savings and Loans
,
simply stated, were the following. A contract was concluded between
ABSA Bank and Unibank in terms of which certain employees
of ABSA
would be seconded to Unibank for a fixed period. ABSA would pay its
employees so seconded, but Unibank would reimburse
ABSA for that
expenditure. Unibank repudiated the contract. ABSA refused to accept
the repudiation and tendered the services of
the employees. After the
relevant period of employment had passed ABSA sued for the
reimbursement to which it was entitled in terms
of the contract
between the two parties. The court of first instance granted the
order sought. An appeal against that order was
dismissed by a
majority. The majority judgment (para 5) indicates that it dealt with
the matter on the basis that ABSA’s
claim was for the
enforcement of the obligation to reimburse and the assumption that
the difference between that and the enforcement
of a contract of
employment was immaterial. This at least smacks of enforcement of an
obligation to act. In the circumstances the
decision that there was
no ground for interference with the exercise of the discretion of the
court of first instance could hardly
constitute authority for the
proposition under consideration.
[34]
My research uncovered only one judgment that recognised a discretion
to refuse an order for specific performance
of a money claim, namely
Morettino
v Italian Design Experience CC
[20]
(
Morettino
)
.
Morettino
involved
a contract for the supply and installation of kitchen units by the
plaintiff at a price of R120 000, an initial deposit
of R60 000 being
payable. A few weeks after having concluded that contract, and not
yet having paid the deposit, the buyer (defendant)
signed a contract
with another supplier at a much lower price, and those units were
installed. The defendant repudiated the agreement
with the plaintiff
which then sued for the deposit. Notwithstanding the finding that the
contract remained in force, the appeal
court nevertheless refused to
allow the judgment for payment of the deposit granted by the trial
court, to stand. It held that
the money claim was one for specific
performance, and that the court could refuse it in the exercise of a
discretion. The court
upheld the appeal on the basis that the work to
be done under the contract would involve the wasteful and
unproductive use of resources
on a facility for which the buyer no
longer had any use. On the question as to whether the discretion
existed, the learned judge
referred to
Christie
and the cases referred to there. For the reasons already mentioned,
they do not provide authority for such a discretion and this
judgment
should not be followed.
[35] In my
view the judgments discussed either offer no support, or are flawed
authority, for the proposition that a
court has a discretion to
refuse judgment for payment of a contractual debt on the basis that
such a claim is to be equated to
a claim to enforce a contractual
obligation to perform an act. This Court has, for more than a
century, laid down that the discretion
to grant or refuse an order
for specific performance arises when a claim
ad factum praestandum
is made and an alternative of awarding damages is available. As I
have demonstrated, there is no authority to the contrary. I need
not
consider whether an order for payment of a contract price against
performance of a plaintiff’s obligation to act, could
be
classified as an order for the defendant to accept the performance
and thus, in effect, an order
ad factum praestandum
. We were
not asked to develop the law by extending the discretion to the
enforcement of all contractual obligations. For the reasons
that
follow I, in any event, do not perceive any basis or need to do so.
[37]
An order to perform an act (
ad
factum praestandum
)
may prove difficult to enforce. The spectre of contempt proceedings
as a consequence of non-compliance with an order
ad
factum praestandum
hovers over proceedings in which a party seeks such an order which
may have become difficult to perform, or even impossible to
perform,
despite the fact that the obligation continues to subsist. Those, and
perhaps some of the other considerations of the
type furnished as
examples in
Haynes
,
[21]
are the origin of the principle in our law that, whilst a plaintiff
has a right to claim specific performance of an act, as opposed
to
damages for non-performance, the court has a discretion in an
appropriate case to refuse to enforce performance, leaving the
plaintiff to claim damages for
non-performance. It is
difficulties arising with respect to the order for performance of the
act which generate the need for a discretion.
No such difficulties
arise in the case of money judgments.
[38]
The very essence of the strict or true discretion
involved, is the choice between permissible alternatives.
[22]
Such a discretion could not exist in the absence of a choice between
alternatives. A claim for payment of money due under a contract
has
no alternative, and consequently generates no choice as to remedy
which might engage the exercise of the court’s discretion,
as
is the case when the claim is for the performance of an act. That
being the case, the grant of an order
ad
pecuniam solvendum
is not the product of the exercise of a discretion. Put otherwise, an
order for payment of a contractual debt is not a discretionary
remedy.
[39]
It should be added that there is a resonance between the statement by
Hefer JA in
Benson
,
that ‘[a]nother principle is that the remedy of specific
performance should always be granted or withheld in accordance
with
legal and public policy’,
[23]
and the statement in
Beadica
that ‘
[i]t
is only where a contractual term, or its enforcement, is so unfair,
unreasonable or unjust that it is contrary to public policy
that a
court may refuse to enforce it.
’
[24]
Amongst the grounds listed in
Haynes
on
which courts have in the past exercised a discretion to refuse orders
ad
factum praestandum
are these: where damages would be adequate compensation; where
enforcement would cause the defendant unreasonable hardship; where
the contract itself is unreasonable; where the enforcement order
would cause injustice or be inequitable. It is consistent with
Beadica
and
Benson
that pleas against enforcement of contractual obligations on such
grounds must be founded on public policy, even when the obligation
in
question may be the performance of an act.
[40]
Allowing courts a general discretion to refuse judgments for
contractual money debts, perhaps ‘in the interests
of justice’
or to ‘avoid undue hardship’, gets perilously close to
rendering the simplest instances of judicial
enforcement dependent
on
the ‘idiosyncratic inferences of a few judicial minds’.
[25]
The
power of a court to refuse judgment for a money claim arising from
contract, when to grant it would be contrary to public policy,
is a
sufficient brake on excesses. The ambit of that relief has been
carefully delineated, as has its position under the Constitution.
Allowing the courts to refuse such a judgment in the exercise of a
discretion may disturb the vital balance set in our public policy
rules which are designed,
inter
alia,
to ensure that the public interest in the values underlying the
doctrine of
pacta
sunt servanda
are adequately served and protected.
[41] I
conclude that there is no merit in the employer’s argument that
the contractor has made a claim for specific
performance which
engages the discretion which our courts have to grant or refuse such
orders when the contractual obligation sought
to be enforced is one
ad factum praestandum.
[42] Finally,
counsel for the employer argued that the employer should have
succeeded in the high court because the
money claims which are the
subject of the adjudication awards had been overtaken by subsequent
certificates or a certificate issued
by the engineers in terms of the
contract. The documents relied upon for this were put up with the
employer’s answering affidavit.
A reading of those documents,
insofar as they can be understood, does not generate a conclusion to
the advantage of the employer.
The deponent to the answering
affidavit has not explained how the documents should be read in order
to generate the conclusion
contended for, which appears to be in
effect that set-off has occurred. The alleged defence was
inadequately pleaded by the employer
in six lines of the affidavit
which constitute no more than bare assertions. (In reply to these
contentions of the employer the
contractor has gone so far as to
assert that on this issue the employer ‘deliberately seeks to
deceive’ the court.
No finding on that issue is necessary for
the disposal of this appeal.)
[43] In the
circumstances, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
____________________
P J OLSEN
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
Mr
PJ Wallis SC
Ms
SBR Lushaba
Instructed
by:
Strauss
Daly Attorneys
Bloemfontein
and Durban
For
respondent:
Mr
BM Slon
Instructed
by:
Nicqui
Galaktiou Inc, Johannesburg
Claude
Reid Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Framatome
v Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd
[2021]
ZASCA 132
;
2022 (2) SA 395
(SCA) para 23;
Murray
& Roberts Ltd v Alstom S&E Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2019] ZAGPJHC 300;
[2019] 4 All SA 495
(GJ);
2020 (1) SA 204
(GJ)
para 69.
[2]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees of the Oregon Trust and Others
[2020]
ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC) (
Beadica
).
[3]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 223
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC).
[4]
Botha
and Another v Rich N.O. and Others
[2014] ZACC 11; 2014 (4) SA 124 (CC); 2014 (7) BCLR 741 (CC).
[5]
Beadica
para 83.
[6]
Ibid para 87.
[7]
Ibid
para 83.
[8]
Ibid para 81.
[9]
Haynes
v Kingwilliamstown Municipality
1951 (2) SA 371 (A).
[10]
Benson
v SA Mutual Life Assurance Society
1986
(1) SA 776 (A).
[11]
Haynes
at 378H-379A.
[12]
Schierhout
v Minister of Justice
1926 AD 99
at 111.
[13]
Farmer’s
Co-operative Society v Berry
1912 AD 343.
[14]
Ibid at 350-351.
[15]
Ras
and Others v Simpson
1904 TS 254.
[16]
Leviseur
& Co. v highveld Supply Stores
1922 OPD 233.
[17]
South
African Harness Works v South African Publishers Ltd
1915
CPD 43.
[18]
Industrial
and Mercantile Corporation v Anastassiou Brothers
1973
(2) SA 601 (W).
[19]
Unibank
Savings and Loans Limited v ABSA Bank Limited
2000
(4) SA 191 (W).
[20]
Morettino
v Italian Design Experience CC
[2000] 4 All SA 158 (W).
[21]
Haynes
at
378H.
[22]
Benson
at
781I-782A.
[23]
Benson
at 783D.
[24]
Beadica
para 80.
[25]
Beadica
para 81;
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
[1988]
ZASCA 94
;
[1989] 1 All SA 347
(A);
1989 (1) SA 1
(A) at 9C-D.
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