Case Law[2023] ZASCA 161South Africa
Ciba Packaging (Pty) Ltd t/a Cibapac v Timelink Cargo (Pty) Ltd (1156/2022) [2023] ZASCA 161 (28 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – appealability of dismissal of an exception – restatement of principles.
Judgment
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## Ciba Packaging (Pty) Ltd t/a Cibapac v Timelink Cargo (Pty) Ltd (1156/2022) [2023] ZASCA 161 (28 November 2023)
Ciba Packaging (Pty) Ltd t/a Cibapac v Timelink Cargo (Pty) Ltd (1156/2022) [2023] ZASCA 161 (28 November 2023)
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sino date 28 November 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 1156/2022
In the matter between:
CIBA PACKAGING (PTY)
LTD T/A CIBAPAC
APPELLANT
and
TIMELINK CARGO (PTY)
LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ciba Packaging (Pty)
Ltd t/a Cibapac v Timelink Cargo (Pty) Ltd
(1156/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 161
(28 November 2023)
Coram:
MAKGOKA, HUGHES and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
BINNS-WARD and TOKOTA AJJA
Heard:
7 November 2023
Delivered:
28 November 2023
Summary:
Civil procedure – appealability
of dismissal of an exception – restatement of principles.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Matojane J, sitting as court of first
instance):
The appeal is struck from
the roll, with costs.
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana JA
(Makgoka and Hughes JJA and Binns-Ward and Tokota AJJA concurring):
[1]
The appeal concerns the much debated and
recurring question of the appealability of a court order. The Gauteng
Division of the High
Court, Johannesburg (the high court) dismissed
an exception raised by the appellant, Ciba Packaging (Pty) Ltd
t/a Cibapac
(Cibapac), to the particulars of claim of the respondent,
Timelink Cargo (Pty) Ltd (Timelink). The appeal is with the leave of
the high court.
[2]
Timelink instituted an action against
Cibapac, in the high court. It alleged in its particulars of claim
that during December 2011,
it concluded an agreement with Cibapac. In
terms of the agreement, it would supply freight services for Cibapac
within three days
of receipt of written purchase orders from Cibapac.
The services would be rendered at Timelink’s usual rate,
alternatively
at the reasonable rate determined according to the
industry standard. In addition, Cibapac would be liable for all
necessary disbursements
incurred in the rendering of services on its
behalf.
[3]
Timelink further alleged that during
December 2019 to March 2020, it rendered the services in terms of the
agreement, as a result
of which it became entitled to receive payment
in the sum of R1 652 678.80. On 3 April 2020, it sent a
letter of demand
to the Cibapac claiming payment of the alleged debt.
[4]
In addition, it made the following
allegations: (a) on 14 May 2020, Cibapac was placed under business
rescue; (b) Cibapac admitted
its indebtedness to it and recorded it
as a creditor in its business rescue plan; (c) the business rescue
plan was adopted in September
2020; and (d) the business rescue plan
terminated on 18 December 2020 after the business rescue
practitioner filed a notice
of substantial implementation. Timelink
pleaded that it did not participate in the business rescue
proceedings.
[5]
Cibapac filed an exception to Timelink’s
particulars of claim on the grounds that the particulars of claim did
not disclose
a cause of action. This, Cibapac alleged, was because
Timelink’s claim was barred by the provisions of s 154(2) of
the Companies
Act 71 of 2008 (the Act), which reads as follows:
‘
(1)
A business rescue plan may provide that, if
it is implemented in accordance with its terms and conditions,
a
creditor who has acceded to the discharge of the whole or part of a
debt owing to that creditor will lose the right to enforce
the
relevant debt or part of it.
(2)
If a business rescue plan has been approved and implemented in
accordance with this Chapter,
a creditor is not entitled to enforce
any debt owed by the company immediately before the beginning of the
business rescue process,
except to the extent provided for in the
business rescue plan.’
[6]
The thrust of Cibapac’s exception was
therefore this. Timelink was seeking to enforce a debt allegedly owed
by Cibapac immediately
before the beginning of the business rescue
process. Since Timelink did not plead that the business rescue plan
allowed for the
enforcement of its alleged debt, its particulars of
claim did not disclose a cause of action.
[7]
The
high court dismissed the exception with costs. Relying on this
Court’s interpretation of s 154(2) in
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
,
[1]
it reasoned as follows:
‘
.
. .
the approval and implementation of the
business rescue plan do not necessarily discharge the debt. It cannot
be said that the pleadings
are excipiable on every interpretation
that can reasonably be attached to it.
On a reading of the
particulars of claim, the claim in respect of the breach of oral
contract has been set out to enable the excipient
to respond to it. I
find that the plaintiff’s cause of action is not dependent on
the allegations relating to business rescue
proceedings pleaded in
paragraph 10 of the particulars of claim. I, therefore, find that the
excipient can respond to the claim
for breach of the oral agreement,
and it follows that the exception must fail.’
[8]
The issue in the appeal is whether the high
court’s order dismissing the exception is appealable; and, if
so, whether Timelink’s
particulars of claim are excipiable on
the basis that they do not disclose a cause of action.
[9]
The
general principle is that the dismissal of an exception is not
appealable, save where the exception challenges the jurisdiction
of
the court.
[2]
This Court, in
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
,
recently confirmed this.
[3]
One
of the exceptions raised in
TWK
was that the plaintiff had no cause of action to secure an appraisal
remedy in terms of s 164 read with s 37(8) of the Act, unless
the
company had more than one class of shares. That was an alleged
statutory prerequisite, which was, at best for the defendant,
found
to be no more than a question of law.
[10]
Cibapac
accepted the position as set out in
TWK
.
It sought to distinguish its case on the basis that its exception
went to the competence or the jurisdiction of the high court
to
determine the matter before it, and as such is appealable because it
fell within the exception to the rule in respect of the
non-appealability of orders dismissing exceptions recognised in
TWK
.
[4]
Counsel for Cibapac argued that it is not competent for the court to
entertain a claim, such as the one advanced by Timelink in
its
summons, because, so he submitted, the claim is expressly prohibited
by s 154(2) of the Act.
[11]
As to the exception itself, counsel
submitted that the cause of action as pleaded by Timelink could not
be divorced from the allegations
relating to the placing of Cibapac
in business rescue and the existence and termination of the business
rescue plan. Because of
these allegations, so it was contended,
Timelink had the onus to plead why the prohibition in s 154(2) of the
Act was not applicable.
[12]
The
submission in relation to the appealability issue is unsustainable
for reasons explained in
TWK
as
follows:
[5]
‘
Maize
Board
does recognise a carve-out to the
rule that the dismissal of an exception is not appealable. An order
dismissing an exception will
be appealable where the exception
challenges the jurisdiction of the court.
That
is so for reasons that were explained in Moch
.
Where the challenge concerns the jurisdiction of a court, and hence
the competence of a judge to hear the matter, the decision
of the
court is considered definitive, and appealable. This is consistent
with the principles enunciated in
Zweni
because the decision as to jurisdiction is considered final.
This
position is entirely justified because an error as to jurisdiction,
if not subject to appellate correction, would permit the
court below
to proceed with a matter when it had no competence to do so,
rendering what it did a nullity. That is plainly an undesirable
outcome. Furthermore, a challenge to jurisdiction is taken at the
commencement of proceedings. Until this challenge is finally
resolved, a court should not exercise coercive powers that compel
compliance.
’ (My emphasis.)
[13]
Counsel
for Cibapac submitted that Cibapac’s exception is similar to
the situation in
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
,
[6]
which had to do with the appealability of an order dismissing an
application for recusal. This is not so. In
Moch
,
the Court underscored that:
‘
A
decision dismissing an application for recusal relates, as we have
seen, to the competence of the presiding judge; it goes to
the core
of the proceedings and, if incorrectly made,
vitiates
them entirely
.
. . That a decision dismissing an application for recusal has such a
bearing stands to reason because it reflects on the competence
of the
presiding judge to define the parties’ rights and
to
grant or refuse the relief claimed
.
For this very reason it is
comparable
with a decision on a plea to a court’s jurisdiction
.
. .’
[7]
(My emphasis.)
[14]
The objective of limiting the appeal of a
dismissal of an exception to challenges of jurisdiction, is evident
from these cases.
Proceeding with a matter in circumstances where a
judicial officer is not competent to grant or refuse the relief
sought, goes
to the heart of the proceedings. An order issued by a
court that lacks jurisdiction will vitiate the entire proceedings and
it
is final. An error committed in those circumstances cannot be
corrected or revisited by that court at a later stage.
[15]
That
is, however, not what we are dealing with in the present matter.
Here, the high court has jurisdiction to determine the action
brought
by Timelink. It may grant or refuse the claim. It may base its
refusal of the claim on the legal challenge posed by s 154(2)
of the
Act or on other bases. Thus, any view taken by the high court when
dismissing the exception is capable of being altered
by the court
deciding the matter on trial. That order will be competent. In
Blaauwbosch
Diamonds Ltd v Union Government (Minister of Finance)
,
[8]
this Court had this to say:
‘
.
. . one would say that an order dismissing an exception is not the
final word in the suit on that point that it may always be
repaired
at the final stage. All the Court does is to refuse to set aside the
declaration; the case proceeds; there is nothing
to prevent the same
law points being re-argued at the trial; and though the Court is
hardly likely to change its mind there is
no legal obstacle to its
doing so upon a consideration of fresh argument and further
authority.’
[16]
Counsel
further placed reliance on the minority judgment of the
Constitutional Court in
Baliso
v Firstrand Bank Limited t/a Wesbank
,
[9]
which he contended characterised non-compliance with a provision of a
statute as a matter going to the competence of the court
and hence
its jurisdiction. This, he submitted, the majority judgment did not
disagree with.
[17]
The exception in
Baliso
concerned non-compliance with the notice required under s 127(2) of
the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (the NCA). Section 130(3)
(a)
of the NCA permits a court to determine a matter in respect of a
credit agreement, only after procedures required by ss 127, 129
or
131 have been complied with, where those sections apply.
[18]
The
majority judgment observed that regardless of the outcome of the
exception, the applicant was in a position to provide evidence
at the
trial that he was not given proper notice in terms of s 127(2) of the
NCA. ‘After hearing evidence from both parties,
the presiding
judicial officer would then have to assess this evidence in order to
decide whether proper notice was given’.
[10]
It further found that the dismissal of the exception was not final in
its effect, neither was it definitive of the rights of the
parties,
nor dispositive of any substantial portion of the relief sought in
the main proceedings, as required in
Zweni
.
[11]
The appealability test was, therefore, not met.
[12]
[19]
The minority, however, adopted a different
view. It held that the decision sought to be appealed against related
to the jurisdiction
or competence of the high court to determine the
matter before it did, and, as such, the decision (of the high court)
was appealable.
It further held that s 130(3) of the NCA introduced a
precondition that must exist before the court may have the competence
or
jurisdiction to determine the matter.
[20]
One of the relevant passages referred to in
Baliso
reads as follows:
‘
This
Court made it clear that section 191(5) concerns jurisdiction. Given
the use of “if” and “may”
in section 191(5),
and “may” and “only if” in section 130(3) of
the Act, it seems to me that section 130(3)
relates to the competence
or jurisdiction of the court. Its effect is that, the court will
have no jurisdiction in respect
of a matter where the procedures
prescribed by section 127(2) have not been complied with.
Therefore,
compliance with the procedure in section 127(2) goes to the
competence or jurisdiction of the court. A decision
that there
has been compliance with section 127(2) is a decision on the
competence or jurisdiction of the court. Once a court
of first
instance has made a decision on jurisdiction, it cannot alter that
decision later.
’
[13]
(My emphasis.)
[21]
The
majority had recognised that compliance with the relevant sections of
the NCA is a prerequisite for determining the matter.
Nevertheless,
it concluded that the question of whether proper notice was given
would be assessed when evidence was presented in
the trial.
[14]
[22]
Even
if the approach adopted by the minority were to be accepted, it is
not supportive of Cibapac’s contention. There is no
precondition required to be fulfilled in the current matter before
the high court could determine the matter. It has jurisdiction.
Baliso
dealt
with a completely different set of circumstances and is clearly
distinguishable from the present case. The minority, in any
event,
characterised the court’s decision on the dismissal of the
exception as one that could not be altered later.
[15]
[23]
As
in
TWK
,
the dismissal of the exception in this case has nothing to do with
jurisdiction. At best, it turns on the question of law ‘that
[has] nothing to do with the competence of the trial court to try the
action. Rather, the trial court can consider again whether
the
dismissal of the exception was correct’.
[16]
[24]
Evidence may be required in relation to
what is provided for in the business rescue plan in relation to
Timelink’s claim,
taking into account the provisions of
s 154(2) of the Act. Facts surrounding its alleged
non-participation in the business
rescue proceedings may, among other
issues, also be relevant. All these matters should be decided with
finality at the trial. Given
the findings on appealability, it is not
necessary to decide whether the exception is good in law or not.
[25]
In the end, counsel for Cibapac submitted
that Cibapac is not seeking the dismissal of the action, but for
Timelink to be afforded
an opportunity to amend its particulars of
claim. This is a further indication that the dismissal of the
exception did not finally
dispose of the issue between the parties
and confirms the fact that the high court has jurisdiction over the
matter.
[26]
In light of the order of the high court not
meeting the requirements of appealability, the appeal must be struck
from the roll,
with costs following the result.
[27]
The following order is made:
The appeal is struck from
the roll, with costs.
______________
____________
N P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellant:
L E Combrink SC with W J
Pietersen
Instructed
by:
Venns Attorneys, Pietermaritzburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the respondent: K
Gounden
Instructed
by: Larson
Falconer Hassan Parsee
Inc, Durban
Hendre
Conradie Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Van
Zyl v Auto Commodities (Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZASCA 67; 2021 (5) SA 171 (SCA); [2021] 3 All SA 395 (SCA).
[2]
Maize
Board v Tiger Oats Limited and Others
[2002] 3 All SA 593
(A);
2002 (5) SA 365
(SCA) para 14.
[3]
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 63
;
2023 (5) SA 163
(SCA) paras 9 and 43.
[4]
TWK
paras 10 and 43.
[5]
TWK
para
43, referring to
Maize
Board v Tiger Oats Limited and Others
[2002]
3 All SA 593
(A);
2002 (5) SA 365
(SCA);
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
1996 (3) SA 1
(A) and
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[1993]
1 All SA 365 (A); 1993 (1) SA 523 (A).
[6]
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
1996 (3) SA 1 (A).
[7]
Moch
at
10D-G.
[8]
Blaauwbosch
Diamonds Ltd v Union Government (Minister of Finance)
1915
AD 599
at 601.
[9]
Baliso
v
Firstrand
Bank Limited t/a Wesbank
[2016]
ZACC 23; 2016 (10) BCLR 1253 (CC); 2017 (1) SA 292 (CC).
[10]
Baliso
para 19.
[11]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[1993] 1 All SA 365 (A); 1993 (1) SA 523 (A).
[12]
Baliso
para 20.
[13]
Baliso
para
68.
[14]
Baliso
para
19.
[15]
Baliso
para
68.
[16]
TWK
para
44.
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