Case Law[2023] ZASCA 115South Africa
Dis-Chem Pharmacies Limited v Dainfern Square (Pty) Ltd and Others (648/2022) [2023] ZASCA 115; 2024 (4) SA 489 (SCA) (27 July 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
27 July 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Alternative Dispute Resolution – jurisdiction of arbitrator – unjustified enrichment – whether an arbitrator has jurisdiction over the appellant’s unjustified enrichment claim – whether the application for an order declaring that the arbitrator did not have jurisdiction to determine a claim of unjustified enrichment was premature – whether the arbitrator erred in dismissing a special defence of jurisdiction as raised by the first respondent.
Judgment
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## Dis-Chem Pharmacies Limited v Dainfern Square (Pty) Ltd and Others (648/2022) [2023] ZASCA 115; 2024 (4) SA 489 (SCA) (27 July 2023)
Dis-Chem Pharmacies Limited v Dainfern Square (Pty) Ltd and Others (648/2022) [2023] ZASCA 115; 2024 (4) SA 489 (SCA) (27 July 2023)
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sino date 27 July 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 648/2022
In the matter between:
DIS-CHEM PHARMACIES
LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
DAINFERN SQUARE (PTY)
LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
MPILO WINSTON DLAMINI
N O SECOND
RESPONDENT
NOBLE SPECTATUS FUNDS
(PTY) LTD THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Dis-Chem
Pharmacies Limited v Dainfern Square (Pty) Ltd & Others
(648/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 115
(27 July 2023)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MOTHLE and MOLEFE JJA and
KATHREE-SETILOANE and MALI AJJA
Heard:
15 May 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives via e-mail publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down are
deemed to be 27 July 2023 at 11h00.
Summary:
Alternative Dispute Resolution –
jurisdiction of arbitrator
–
unjustified
enrichment – whether an arbitrator has jurisdiction over the
appellant’s unjustified enrichment claim –
whether the
application for an order declaring that the arbitrator did not have
jurisdiction to determine a claim of unjustified
enrichment was
premature – whether the arbitrator erred in dismissing a
special defence of jurisdiction as raised by the
first respondent.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J sitting as court of
first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including costs of two counsel where
so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and is substituted by:
‘
1 The application
is dismissed with costs; and
2 It is declared that the
arbitrator has jurisdiction over the respondent’s claim.’
JUDGMENT
Mothle
JA (Nicholls and Molefe JJA and Kathree-Setiloane and Mali AJJA
concurring)
[1]
This appeal concerns a dispute between a tenant and a landlord over
the interpretation of
an arbitration clause in a written lease
agreement. The crisp issue is whether, on a correct interpretation of
the arbitration
clause, the second respondent the arbitrator –
Mr Mpilo Winston Dlamini SC – had the requisite jurisdiction to
adjudicate
an enrichment claim, essentially for a refund of excess
payment of turnover rental, lodged by the appellant, Dis-Chem
Pharmacies
Limited (Dis-Chem) as the tenant, against the first
respondent, Dainfern Square (Pty) Ltd (Dainfern), its erstwhile
landlord.
[2]
The background facts which are largely common cause are that during
October 2016 and
at Johannesburg, Dis-Chem entered into a
written lease agreement with Dainfern, the owner of Dainfern Square
Shopping Centre. In
terms of the lease agreement, Dis-Chem took
occupation of shop 27 in the business premises and was liable for
payment of monthly
rental and turnover rental to Dainfern. A formula
for calculation of Dis-Chem’s financial year-end turnover
rental was expressed
in annexure ‘F’ to the lease
agreement.
[3]
The full text of annexure ‘F’ to
the written lease agreement is attached to Dis-Chem’s claim.
Since the merits
of the claim are yet to be considered and decided
on, it is unnecessary at this stage to refer to the full text of
annexure ‘F’.
In this judgment, reference is made
only to the material terms of the annexure as pleaded in the claim.
These are:
‘
In terms of the
agreement of lease [Dis-Chem] would let from [Dainfern] shop no 27 in
the Dainfern Square shopping centre.
. . .
The
agreement of lease had the following express
alternatively
implied further
alternatively
tacit terms (and the agreement
of lease, properly construed, provided
inter alia
as follows):
…
The agreement of lease
would commence on 1 June 2015 and [Dis-Chem’s] rental
obligations, from 23 July 2015;
Basic rental would be
R115 p/m
2
(subject to escalation at a rate of 7%, on 1 May
of every succeeding year);
In addition to basic
rental [Dis-Chem] would be liable for payment of turnover rental
calculated in accordance with annexure “F”
to the
agreement of lease;
Turnover rental (with
annexure “F” to the agreement of lease properly
construed);
would be payable within
two months from the end of each turnover period;
would be payable in
addition to the basic rental; and
would be calculated as
the amount equal to the difference between the basic rental (referred
to as “Gross Rental” in
annexure “F”) and
1.75% of nett turnover (if any) and accordingly, would be payable if
and to the extent that 1.75%
of nett turnover exceeds the basic
rental;
. . .
A “turnover period”
would be the period that commenced at the date of commencement of the
agreement of lease and ended
at [Dis-Chem’s] financial year-end
(and thereafter, on every anniversary of [Dis-Chem’s] financial
year-end).’
[4]
In May 2020, Dis-Chem lodged a claim with the arbitrator in which it
alleged that on 20
May 2016, 19 May 2017 and 22 May 2018, Dainfern
claimed payment of turnover rental by issuing invoices in the amounts
of R646 258.26,
R1 543 300.34 and R2 010 065.97 on those
dates. Dis-Chem further alleged in the claim that it paid those
amounts as they were
requested on 1 June of three consecutive years -
2016, 2017 and 2018 respectively. The payments made:
‘
13.1 [W]ere made
in the
bona fide
and mistaken belief that the amounts invoiced
were due and payable when, in truth, they were not, in that turnover
rental:
13.1.1 Ought to have been
calculated as the difference (if any) between basic rental and 1.75%
of [Dis-Chem’s] nett turnover;
and
13.1.2 Ought to have been
payable only in the event and to the extent by which 1.75% of
Dis-Chem’s nett turnover, over a turnover
period, exceeded the
basic rental for the same period’.
[5]
Dis-Chem alleged that when it paid the invoices, it made a
bona
fide
(but reasonable and mistaken) acceptance of the correctness
of Dainfern’s invoices. No turnover rental was payable in
circumstances
where 1.75% of Dis-Chem’s turnover in any one of
the relevant periods did not exceed the basic rental. Consequently,
the
total amount invoiced in the three years, being R4 199 624.57
was an overpayment. Therefore, Dainfern has been enriched
and
Dis-Chem impoverished to the extent of the total amount, and despite
demand, Dainfern has refused to repay the excess amount.
Dis-Chem
specifically made an allegation in its claim that Dainfern was
unjustifiably enriched.
[6]
It is apposite to mention that at the time Dis-Chem lodged the claim,
Dainfern had sold
the property to the third respondent, Noble
Spectatus Funds (Pty) Ltd (Noble Spectatus Fund). Dis-Chem included
an alternative
claim against Noble Spectatus Fund as successors in
title.
Consequently,
Noble Spectatus Fund, as well as the arbitrator, cited as the third
and the second respondents respectively, did not
participate in this
appeal. The dispute in this appeal is thus primarily between Dis-Chem
and Dainfern.
[7]
Dainfern entered two special pleas to the claim: one on jurisdiction
and the other on prescription.
It, however, did not plead over. In
relation to the special plea of jurisdiction, Dainfern contended that
since Dis-Chem had sought
an award for payment on the basis of a
condictio
: (a) the claim is one in unjustified enrichment, and
not grounded in contract; and (b) the dispute does not pertain to the
interpretation
of any provision of the agreement of lease or the
implementation thereof. Dainfern accordingly pleaded that the dispute
fell beyond
the ambit of the parties’ terms of the arbitration
agreement and consequently the arbitrator had no requisite
jurisdiction
to determine the dispute in relation to the plea of
prescription.
[8]
Dainfern pleaded in the alternative (and only in the event that the
first special plea is
not upheld), that in paragraph 12.1 of the
statement of claim, Dis-Chem claimed that on or about 1 June 2016, it
paid to Dainfern
an amount of R646 258.26 from the invoice received
in May 2016. Dainfern also pleaded that Dis-Chem ‘had knowledge
of the
identity of the debtor, [Dainfern], and the facts from which
the debt in the amount of R646 258.26 allegedly arose, [which] is
more than three years prior to the referral of the dispute to
arbitration,
alternatively
Dis-Chem could have acquired such
knowledge by exercising reasonable care. Dis-Chem’s claim has
accordingly prescribed to
the extent of R646 258.26’.
Significantly, Dainfern did not plead-over in respect of the
allegation that it applied an incorrect
interpretation in generating
the invoices in the course of implementing the formula in annexure
‘F’, for collection
of turnover rental.
[9]
Dis-Chem submitted the matter to the arbitrator who ruled that the
central dispute was one
of interpretation of annexure ‘F’
to the lease agreement and consequently he had jurisdiction to
determine the claim.
The arbitrator dismissed Dainfern’s
special plea. Dainfern applied to the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria
(the high court), which declared (per
Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J) that the dispute did not fall within the
provisions of clause
33.1 of the lease agreement and was accordingly
incorrectly referred to arbitration by Dis-Chem. Dis-Chem sought and
successfully
obtained leave to appeal the judgment and order of the
high court, to this Court.
[10]
Central to
the crisp issue of the arbitrator’s jurisdiction, is the
interpretation of the arbitration clause 33.1 of the lease
agreement,
which provides:
‘
In
the event of any dispute or difference or doubt or question arising
between the parties as to the interpretation of any provision
of this
Agreement of Lease or the implementation thereof, and the parties
being unable to resolve the issue, then in the discretion
of either
party, the issue shall be submitted to arbitration in accordance with
the provisions of this clause and the decision
of the arbitrator/s or
the umpire as the case may be, shall be final and binding upon the
parties.’
[11]
In addition,
and read with
the arbitration
clause, is clause 24 of the lease agreement, which deals with the
issue of jurisdiction and costs. It provides thus:
‘
Should
there be a breach of this agreement by the defaulting party then the
aggrieved party shall choose whether the dispute is
to be brought in
the Magistrate’s Court or by way of arbitration as set out in
clause 33 below.’
[12]
In making his ruling, the arbitrator
concluded that:
‘
Dis-Chem’s
claim for the turnover rental allegedly paid over to Dainfern,
although not specifically envisaged in the arbitration
clause since
the clause is silent about overpayment or enrichment, it is in actual
fact a claim relating to the lease agreement
because it involves the
interpretation of annexure “F”.’ and …
therefore [it is] referable to arbitration.’
[13]
The
high court in accepting Dainfern’s argument, similarly confined
its remarks and findings to the question of interpretation
of clause
33.1. The learned Judge at the outset, correctly held, with reference
to the matter of
Hos
+ Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe Ya Bophelo Healthcare Marketing &
Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Others
[1]
that
the source of the arbitrator’s power is the agreement between
the parties. She, however, summarily concluded that since
the
arbitration clause
‘
does
not make provision for a claim based on unjustified enrichment [it]
does not find application.’
[14]
On a proper
construction of the text of the arbitration clause 33.1 of the lease
agreement, ‘any disputes or differences,
doubts or question
arising between the parties’, may be categorised as either an
interpretation
of
any provision of the agreement of lease; or
the
implementation
of the lease agreement. The phrase may also be construed as including
both interpretation and implementation as referenced above.
[15]
The high
court adopted Dainfern’s approach, which essentially implies
that the claim by Dis-Chem should be viewed as consisting
of two
parts. The one component is where Dainfern’s application of the
formula to calculate turnover rental and issuing the
inflated
invoices, is raised. Dainfern concedes that this part of the claim
relates to the interpretation of annexure ‘F’.
It falls
within the arbitrator’s jurisdiction. There is thus no dispute
in this regard.
[16]
The disputed
part of the claim relates to the relief sought by Dis-Chem, should it
succeed, on its interpretation, to prove that
the invoices were
incorrect. Dainfern contends that the relief or award sought by
Dis-Chem is in the form of unjustified enrichment;
which is a
separate course of action that may raise ‘other requirements’.
It is this part of the claim, so continues
Dainfern’s argument,
which falls outside of the agreement and beyond the terms of the
arbitration clause 33.1 of the lease
agreement. The contention is
that the arbitrator has no jurisdiction to make an award based on
unjustified enrichment. This is
the nub of the objection to
jurisdiction, on which the high court also based its conclusion.
[17]
The high court held that since the claim
was one of enrichment, it contemplated ‘other requirements’
of enrichment,
beyond the interpretation which would have to be
considered. It held that:
“
These
other requirements are not expressly mentioned in clause 33.1. This
would entail that the arbitrator may only adjudicate on
the
interpretation of annexure “F” to the agreement and the
remainder of the issues in dispute will need to be determined
by
another forum. This an arbitrator may not do. In the words of Ponnan
JA: “[t]he award or determination may therefore not
reserve a
decision on an issue before the arbitrator or expert for another to
resolve.”’
The
quoted text attributed to Ponnan JA was extrapolated from
Termico
(Pty) Ltd v SPX Technologies (Pty) Ltd & Others (Termico)
[2]
.
I will return to this aspect later in the judgment.
[18]
In the present case, by concluding as it
did, the high court erred in overlooking the nature of the dispute.
Central to Dis-Chem’s
claim, as described by the arbitrator in
his award, is the determination of the dispute as to the correct
interpretation in the
course of the implementation of annexure ‘F’
of the lease agreement, relating to turnover rental. Until that
determination
is made, the issue as to whether any party was
unjustifiably enriched or impoverished, does not arise. Less so
‘other requirements’
that would go with enrichment which,
as it turns out, do not appear anywhere in the pleadings. Dainfern,
in its response to Dis-Chem’s
claim, had not pleaded any ‘other
requirements’ of unjustified enrichment and how ‘the
other requirements’
find application to exclude the
jurisdiction of the arbitrator. Equally so, the high court has not
attempted to identify or define
the ‘other requirements’
alluded to.
[19]
The conclusion of the high court based on
these unnamed ‘other requirements’ amounts to speculation
as to what may or
may not arise in the course of the arbitration of
the dispute. Therefore,
the
high court’s reasoning is grounded on conjecture. Over the
years, the courts in South Africa, including this Court, relying
on
cases decided in England, have developed the approach and principles
applicable to the determination of the scope of jurisdiction
of an
arbitrator. The following are some of the authorities relevant to the
issue in this appeal.
[20]
In
North
East Finance v Standard Bank (North East Finance),
[3]
this Court held:
‘
In addition, a
contract must be interpreted so as to give it a commercially sensible
meaning:
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Germiston Municipal Retirement Fund
.
[4]
This is the approach taken to considering the ambit of an arbitration
clause adopted in
Fiona
Trust
.
We must thus examine what the parties intended by having regard to
the purpose of their contract.’
In
adopting the approach of the courts in England, the court in
North
East Finance
referred to an address by Lord Hoffman
in
Fiona Trust
,
and held:
[5]
‘
It
was necessary, therefore, Lord Hoffman said, to have regard to the
purpose of the agreement as a whole and of the arbitration
clause in
particular. In doing so, the court would assume that generally
parties intended to have all their disputes under an agreement
determined by the same tribunal – not some disputes by an
arbitrator and others by a court. If the parties intended otherwise,
it was easy enough for them to say so.’
[21]
In
Fili
Shipping Co Ltd v Premium Nafta Products and Others,
[6]
Lord Hoffmann, delivering the speech with which all their lordships
concurred, said:
‘
In my opinion the
construction of an arbitration clause should start from the
assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen,
are inclined to
have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which
they have entered or purported to enter to
be decided by the same
tribunal. The clause should be construed in accordance with this
presumption unless the language makes it
clear that certain questions
were intended to be excluded from the arbitrator’s
jurisdiction.’
[22]
The essence
of Dis-Chem’s objection is that when Dainfern generated the
invoices it interpreted the calculation clauses incorrectly.
There is
no doubt that even on a narrow construction, the objection to the
invoices arises first, during the course of the implementation
of the
calculation clause in annexure ‘F’ of the lease
agreement; and second, Dainfern applied a wrong interpretation
of the
calculations in annexure ‘F’ to the lease agreement.
Therefore, the objection falls squarely within the ambit
of clause
33.1 and it is within the arbitrator’s jurisdiction.
[23]
Dis-Chem submits, and correctly so, that the arbitration clause does
not refer to any course
of action or any claim. It refers to ‘any
dispute or difference or doubt or question’. The entitlement it
may have
to recover from Dainfern depends entirely on the
determination of a dispute as to the correct interpretation and the
implementation
of certain provisions of the lease agreement, in this
case annexure ‘F’.
[24]
In
Zhongji Development Construction Engineering Company Limited v Kamoto
Copper Company Sarl (Zhongji),
[7]
this Court, with reference to the seminal case in England, stated as
follows:
‘
In
Fiona Trust
(which the House of Lords upheld in
Fili Shipping
), decided in
the English Court of Appeal, Longmore LJ, delivering the court’s
unanimous judgment, said:
“
As it seems to us
any jurisdiction or arbitration clause in an international commercial
contract should be liberally construed.
The words ‘arising out
of’ should cover ‘every dispute except a dispute as to
whether there was ever a contract
at all’.”
And
“
One of the reasons
given in the cases for a liberal construction of an arbitration
clause is the presumption in favour of one-stop
arbitration. It is
not to be expected that any commercial man would knowingly create a
system which required that the court should
first decide whether the
contract should be rectified or avoided or rescinded (as the case
might be) and then, if the contract
is held to be valid, required the
arbitrator to resolve the issues that have arisen.”
[25]
Also in
Termico,
this
Court determined two principles relevant and applicable to the
present appeal
.
There, this Court dealt with an arbitration award that did not
include relief in the form of money. The arbitrators had refrained
from including a monetary value in the award, for the reason that it
was not part of the claim. In acquiring the shares, the claimant
had
received a loan from the respondent, whose value, at the time of the
arbitration, was not as yet determined. The high court
concluded that
by failing to make an award for the value of the shares, the
arbitrators committed an irregularity. On appeal, this
Court first
held that the decision of the arbitrators did not constitute any
irregularity, as that case was not one where an ‘
arbitrator
neglected to determine all the disputes that had been referred to
arbitration, he/she in doing so,
[would]
commit a
reviewable irregularity’.
Here Dainfern went to court to seek a review and declaratory relief
in circumstances where there was no misconduct or gross irregularity.
In
Termico
,
the second principle was that, a party can only apply to review an
arbitration award if all the disputes submitted to the arbitrator
have been disposed of in a manner that achieves finality and
certainty.
[8]
[26]
Therefore
Dis-Chem submits, correctly so, that Dainfern prematurely approached
the high court to seek a review against what it perceived
to be a
‘wrong’ decision of the arbitrator. It couched the review
in the form of declaratory relief, despite being
aware that the
arbitration had not reached finality and certainty on the merits of
the claim.
In
Zhongji,
[9]
this Court stated as follows:
‘
Zhongji
Construction’s application to the high court was accordingly
premature and perhaps unnecessary. In
Geldenhuys
and Neethling v Beuthin
, Innes CJ said:
“
Courts
of Law exist for the settlement of concrete controversies and actual
infringements of rights, not to pronounce upon abstract
questions, or
to advise upon differing contentions, however important. And I think
we shall do well to adhere to the principle
laid down by a long line
of South African decisions, namely that a declaratory order cannot be
claimed merely because the rights
of the claimant have been disputed,
but that such a claim must be founded upon an actual infringement.”’
Thus,
the reliance on the decision in
Tzaneng
Treated
Timbers (Pty) Ltd v Komatiland Forest SOC Limited and another
[10]
that
it was permissible for a court to grant declaratory relief against a
ruling of an arbitrator, before the arbitration had reached
finality
and certainty on the merits, was clearly misplaced. The high court
therefore, erred in granting a declaratory order in
circumstances
where the merits of the claim had not reached finality and certainty.
The high court’s order must thus be set aside and the appeal in
this Court must succeed. I see no reason why the costs should
not
follow the result.
[27]
In the
result, the following order is made
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including those of two counsel where
so
employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and is substituted
by:
‘
1 The application
is dismissed with costs; and
2 It
is declared that the arbitrator has jurisdiction over the
respondent’s claim.’
____________________
SP
MOTHLE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellant: A
J Daniels SC
Instructed
by: Saltzman
Attorneys, Johannesburg.
EG
Cooper Madjiedt Inc, Bloemfontein.
For first respondent: E
Fagan SC and S Mathiba
Instructed
by: GVS
Law, Durbanville.
Symington
& De Kok, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Hos+Med
Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe ya Bophelo Healthcare Marketing &
Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2007]
ZASCA 163
;
2008
(2) SA 608
SCA; [2008] 2 All SA 132 (SCA).
[2]
Termico
(Pty) Ltd v SPX Technologies (Pty) Ltd
and Others;
SPX
Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Termico (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZASCA 109; 2020 (2) SA 295 (SCA).
[3]
North
East Finance (Pty) Ltd v Standard Bank
of
South Africa Ltd
[2013] ZASCA 76
;
2013 (5) SA 1
(SCA);
[2013] 3 All
SA 291
(SCA) para 25.
[4]
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Germiston Municipal Retirement Fund
[2009]
ZASCA 154
;
2010 (2) SA 498
(SCA);
[2010] 2 All SA 195
(SCA) para 13.
See also
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA);
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA)
para 18.
[5]
Fn
5 above para 21.
[6]
Fili
Shipping Co Ltd v Premium Nafta Products and Others
[2007] UKHL 40; [2007] Bus LR.
[7]
Zhongji
Development Construction Engineering Company Limited v Kamoto Cooper
Company
Sarl
[2014]
ZASCA 160
;
2015 (1) SA 345
(SCA);
[2014] 4 All SA 617
(SCA) para 32.
[8]
Fn
2 above para
13.
[9]
Zhongji
fn
9 above para 38.
[10]
Tzaneng
Treated Timbers (Pty) Ltd v Komatiland Forest Limited and Another
(A3966/2020) [2021] ZAGPPHCSOC 376 (22 June 2021).
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