Case Law[2023] ZASCA 99South Africa
MEC: Police, Roads and Transport Free State Provincial Government v Bovicon Consulting Engineers CC and Another (278/2022) [2023] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: In duplum rule – post-judgment interest not disallowed by in duplum rule after arrear interest ceased to accrue when unpaid arrear interest equalled the capital debt whilst litigation still pending.
Judgment
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## MEC: Police, Roads and Transport Free State Provincial Government v Bovicon Consulting Engineers CC and Another (278/2022) [2023] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2023)
MEC: Police, Roads and Transport Free State Provincial Government v Bovicon Consulting Engineers CC and Another (278/2022) [2023] ZASCA 99 (14 June 2023)
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sino date 14 June 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case No: 278/2022
In
the matter between:
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL:
POLICE,
ROADS AND TRANSPORT,
FREE
STATE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
APPELLANT
And
BOVICON
CONSULTING ENGINEERS CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
P
ROODT NO
(SHERIFF
BLOEMFONTEIN EAST)
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
MEC: Police, Roads and
Transport Free State Provincial Government
v Bovicon Consulting
Engineers CC
and
Another
(278/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 99
(14 June 2023)
Coram:
PETSE AP and GORVEN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and KATHREE-SETILOANE
and MASIPA
AJJA
Heard
:
12 May 2023
Delivered
:
14 June 2023
Summary:
In
duplum
rule – post-judgment interest not
disallowed by
in duplum
rule after arrear interest ceased to
accrue when unpaid arrear interest equalled the capital debt whilst
litigation still pending.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein
(Daniso J
,
sitting as court of first instance):
1
Paragraph 5 of the high court’s order is set aside and
substituted
with the following:
‘
5. The applicant
is ordered to pay interest on the amount of R2 343 549.66,
calculated at the prescribed interest rate prevailing
on 6 December
2019 from that date until the date of final payment, less the amount
ordered in paragraph 4 above.’
2
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Petse
AP and Masipa AJA (Gorven JA, Mabindla-Boqwana JA and
Kathree-Setloane AJA concurring):
[1]
In
Linton
v Corser
[1]
Centlivres CJ aptly observed that 'To-day interest is the life-blood
of finance, and there is no reason to distinguish between
interest
ex
contractu
and interest
ex
mora
'.
[2]
This statement is as valid at the present time as it was more than
seven decades ago. This appeal is essentially about
mora
interest. In particular, it concerns the issue of whether the
operation of the
in
duplum
rule disentitled the first respondent, Bovicon Consulting Engineers
CC (Bovicon), to post- judgment interest on the amount
owed to
Bovicon. The Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein, per
Daniso J, (the high court) granted an order in Bovicon’s
favour
against the Member of the Executive Council: Police, Roads and
Transport - Free State Provincial Government (the MEC) for
payment of
post-judgment interest accruing to the amount owed to Bovicon by the
MEC. Thus, in effect, holding that Bovicon was
entitled to
mora
interest on the judgment amount for as long as it remained unpaid.
[2]
The facts of this case are simple. On 19 August 2014, Bovicon issued
summons against
the MEC for payment of the amount of R1 171 774.83
for services rendered by it to the Department of Police Roads and
Transport (the Department) during the period from May 2012 to March
2013. In addition, Bovicon sought interest on the amount claimed
calculated at the rate of 15.5% from the due date of each invoice to
the date of final payment. The last invoice became due and
payable on
31 March 2013. On 12 September 2019, the amount of accrued interest
equalled the capital debt. It was thus capped by
the operation of the
in duplum
rule which increased the total amount owing, as at
12 September 2019, to R2 343 549.66.
[3]
The matter served before Chesiwe J who, on 5 December 2019, ordered
the MEC to pay
to Bovicon the amount of R1 171 774.83
together with interest on the said amount ‘from the due date of
each invoice
to date of final payment.’ On 14 July 2020, seven
months after the judgment, the Department paid to Bovicon an amount
of
R2 343 549.66. Bovicon contended that it was entitled to
post-judgment interest that had accrued from 6 December 2019
to 14
July 2020. However, for its part the Department contended otherwise.
[4]
On 14 August 2020, Bovicon issued a warrant of execution, against the
Department and,
pursuant thereto, the second respondent (the sheriff)
attached some of the Department’s movable property. On 27
December
2020 the MEC brought an urgent application for an order
setting aside the writ and the subsequent attachment. The basis of
the
application was that Bovicon had not complied with
s 3(1)
of the
State Liability Act 20 of 1957
[3]
and that the judgment debt comprising the capital amount and interest
was, in any event, fully satisfied on 14 July 2020, including
further
interest that had accrued between the date of judgment and the date
of final payment.
[5]
Bovicon resisted the application and also filed a
counter-application. In the counter-application,
Bovicon claimed
post-judgment interest of R220 332.09, calculated at the rate of
15.5% from the date of judgment, ie 5 December
2019 to the date of
payment, namely 14 July 2020. It also claimed interest on the said
post-judgment interest calculated at 15.5%
from 14 July 2020 to date
of payment.
[6]
In the event, the high court set aside the writ and the resultant
attachment as unlawful
and invalid. Bovicon was ordered to pay the
costs of the main application on the scale as between attorney and
client. With respect
to the counter-application, the high court found
in Bovicon’s favour and ordered the MEC to pay Bovicon the
amount of R220 332.09
– representing interest supposedly
accrued on the judgment amount – together with interest on that
amount, calculated
at the rate of 15.5% from 14 July 2020 to the date
of final payment. As in the main application, the high court ordered
the MEC
to pay the costs of the counter-application on the scale as
between attorney and client. The present appeal by the MEC is with
the leave of the high court.
[7]
In pursuit of its appeal, the MEC relied on numerous grounds. These
were, however,
narrowed down to three points during the argument.
First, it was argued that, in effecting the payment of R2 343 549.66
on 14 July 2020, the MEC had fully satisfied the judgment debt.
Secondly, it was contended that even if it were found that the
judgment debt was not settled in full, the rate of interest applied
by Bovicon was in excess of the rate of interest
prescribed in terms of the Prescribed
Rate of Interest Act 55 of 1975 (Prescribed Rate of Interest Act).
Lastly, the MEC contested
the decision of the high court awarding
Bovicon costs on the scale as between attorney and client.
[8]
As regards the first issue, counsel for the MEC argued that once
accrued arrear interest
became equal to the amount owing to a
creditor, in this instance Bovicon, interest stopped running.
Therefore, so the argument
went, as the interest amount became equal
to the initial debt, Bovicon was not entitled to further interest on
the judgment debt
beyond the date on which judgment was granted in
its favour. Counsel's argument is plainly unsustainable.
[9]
In
Paulsen
and Another v Slip
Knot
Investment 777 (Pty Ltd)
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court considered the issue of whether interest
runs anew, after it has ceased running as a result of the
in
duplum
rule, from the date of judgment until the judgment debt has been
settled. Madlanga J, writing the main judgment, had this to say
in
relation to this aspect:
‘
It
is settled law that the
in
duplum
rule permits interest to run anew from the date that the judgment
debt is due and payable. The usual practice for appellate courts,
including this Court, is to retain the date on which the court of
first instance handed down judgment as the date on which judgment
debts are due and payable. In oral argument, counsel for both the
Paulsen’s and Slip Knot accepted that in the order, for
the
purposes of calculating post-judgment interest, the date on which the
High Court entered judgment should be replaced with the
date on which
this court hands down judgment.’
[5]
(Citations omitted.)
[10]
This reasoning was embraced and amplified by the majority as follows:
‘
I
also embrace the manner in which the main judgment resolved the
debate over post-judgment interest. For good reason it concludes
that
the
in
duplum
rule permits post-judgment interest to run afresh at the rate set by
the loan agreement from the date of the judgment to the date
of
payment. I support its order that the Paulsens must pay interest on
the sum of the capital and the capped interest, being R24
million, at
the contract rate from the date of judgment to the date of payment,
limited to R24 million.
[6]
Unsurprisingly,
counsel was constrained to concede that his submission to the effect
that Bovicon was not entitled to interest on
the judgment debt was
devoid of merit.
[11]
Following counsel’s concession, only two issues remain to be
determined, namely the appropriate
prescribed rate of interest and
the scale of costs. As to the applicable rate of interest, Bovicon’s
counsel fairly conceded
that the high court erred in awarding
interest at the rate of 15.5% in respect of the judgment amount.
Relying on
Griffiths
v Janse van Rensburg and Another NNO
,
[7]
counsel accepted that the source for the post-judgment interest is
the judgment itself. Accordingly, the appropriate rate of interest
would be that prevailing at the time when judgment was granted in the
high court.
[12]
Insofar as the punitive costs awarded by the high court are
concerned, the high court did not
provide reasons as to what drove it
to award costs on a punitive scale. This must be deprecated. This
Court has in the past lamented
the failure by judicial officers to
give reasons for their decision when adjudicating cases. As
Flannery
v Helifax Estate Agencies Ltd
[8]
tells us, 'a requirement to give reasons concentrates the mind, [and]
if it is fulfilled, the resulting decision is much more likely
to be
soundly based – than if it is not'. Nevertheless, counsel for
the MEC readily accepted that it is trite that the award
of costs is
at the discretion of the court. And that absent any material
misdirection, an appellate court will not interfere with
the exercise
of such discretion. In this case, counsel could not point to any
misdirection. Thus, subject to the correction of
the order of the
high court as alluded to in paragraph 11 above, the appeal must fail.
[13]
There is one final issue that calls for adverse comment. It is this:
the high court, sitting
as a court of first instance, granted leave
to appeal to this Court. Section 17(6) explicitly provides that if
leave is granted
under subsection 2
(a)
or
(b)
[9]
to appeal against a decision of a Division as a court of first
instance consisting of a single judge, the judge granting leave
must
direct that the appeal be heard by a full court of that Division.
This is the default position. It therefore goes without
saying that
leave to appeal to this Court against a decision of a Division
sitting as a court of first instance consisting of a
single judge may
be granted to this Court only where: (a) the decision to be appealed
involves a question of law of importance
or in respect of which a
decision of this Court is required to resolve differences of opinion;
or (b) the administration of justice,
either generally or in a
particular case, requires consideration by this Court.
[14]
In the light of the aforegoing, it is difficult to discern why in
this instance it was thought
that this case deserves the attention of
this Court. This Court has in the past sounded a word of caution to
Judges in the courts
of first instance, emphasising that it is the
duty of the Judge in the court of first instance to consider what
court is the more
appropriate in the circumstance of each case. Where
the issue is one of fact or raises no complex legal principle, leave
should,
as a general rule, be granted to the Full Court. Indeed this
is what the Superior Courts Act contemplates.
[10]
Only in circumstances where the issue raised deserves the attention
of this Court because, for example, of complexity, a general
question
of law of importance, discordant judgments or novelty should leave be
granted to this Court.
[15]
In short, this means that a single Judge who would have had intimate
knowledge of the issues
involved in a particular case before whom
those issues were debated would therefore be able to screen the case,
so that matters
of pure fact or fact and law – where the law is
not controversial – would be referred to the Full Court. This
would
in turn mean that the valuable time of this Court would be
profitably devoted to complex issues of law.
[16]
This Court has, in the past, consistently deprecated the
inappropriate granting of leave to appeal
to it. This is because
doing so needlessly increases the costs of litigation and,
importantly, results in cases involving greater
difficulty and truly
deserving of its attention having to compete for a place on this
Court's roll with cases which are not.
[11]
[17]
As a general rule, appellate courts are extremely loathe to criticise
Judges in the courts of
first instance in the interests of judicial
comity. However, given that many admonitions in the past have gone
unheeded, a time
will soon come when this Court might well consider
adopting a robust stance and invoke the powers accorded to it by
S17(6)
(b)
[12]
of the Superior Courts Act.
[18]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
Paragraph 5 of the high court’s order is set aside and
substituted
with the following:
‘
5. The applicant
is ordered to pay interest on the amount of R2 343 549.66,
calculated at the prescribed interest rate prevailing
on 6 December
2019 from that date until the date of final payment, less the amount
ordered in paragraph 4 above.’
2
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
X
M PETSE
ACTING
PRESIDENT
SUPREME
COURT OF APPEAL
M
B S MASIPA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
C
Georgiades SC
Instructed
by:
Lebea
& Associates, Johannesburg
Lovius
Block Inc, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
S
Grobler SC
Instructed
by:
Schoeman
Law Inc, Cape Town
Peyper
Lessing, Bloemfontein
[1]
Linton
v Corser
1952 (3) SA 685 (A).
[2]
At 695G.
[3]
Section 3(1)
of the
State Liability Act reads
:
'Subject
to subsections (4) to (8), no execution, attachment or like process
for the satisfaction of a final court order sounding
in money may be
issued against the defendant or respondent in any action or legal
proceedings against the State or against any
property of the State,
but the amount, if any, which may be required to satisfy any final
court order given or made against the
nominal defendant or
respondent in any such action or proceedings must be paid as
contemplated in this section.'
[4]
Paulsen
and Another v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Limited
[2015] ZACC 5; 2015 (3) SA 479 (CC); 2015 (5) BCLR 509 (CC).
[5]
Ibid
para 96.
[6]
Ibid
para 106.
[7]
Griffiths
v Janse van Rensburg NO
[2015] ZASCA 158
;
[2016] 1 All SA 643
;
2016 (3) SA 389
(SCA) paras
35 and 37.
[8]
Flannery
v Helifax Estate Agencies Ltd
[1999] EWCA Civ 811
;
[2000]
1 WLR 377
at 381H. See also:
Botes
and Another v Nedbank Ltd
1983 (3) SA 27
(A) at 27H-28A;
Mphahlele
v First National Bank of SA Ltd
[1999] ZACC 1
;
1999 (2) SA 667
(CC) para 12.
[9]
Section 17(2)
(a)
and
(b)
reads:
'
(a)
Leave to appeal may be granted by the judge or judges against whose
decision an appeal is to be made or, if not readily available,
by
any other judge or judges of the same court or Division.
(b)
If leave to appeal in terms of paragraph
(a)
is refused, it
may be granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on application filed
with the registrar of that court within one
month after such
refusal, or such longer period as may on good cause be allowed, and
the Supreme Court of Appeal may vary any
order as to costs made by
the judge or judges concerned in refusing leave.
[10]
See
s 17(6)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[11]
See, for example,
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Bumpers Schwarmas CC and Others
2003 (5) SA 354
(SCA) para 6 of the concurring judgment of Marais
JA;
Exdev
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Pekudei Investments (Pty) Ltd
2011 (2) SA 282
(SCA) para 28; S v
Monyane
and Others
2008 (1) SACR 543
(SCA) para 28;
S
v Myaka
1993 (2) SACR 660
(A) at 661i-662b.
[12]
Section 17(6)
(b)
provides:
'Any
direction by the court of a Division in terms of paragraph
(a)
,
may be set aside by the Supreme Court of Appeal of its own
accord,...,and may be replaced by another direction in terms of
paragraph
(a)
.'
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