Case Law[2022] ZASCA 76South Africa
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v TDS Projects Construction and Newrak Mining JV (Pty) Ltd and Another (169/2021) [2022] ZASCA 76 (27 May 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
27 May 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – interdict to stop payment of demand guarantee – whether requirements for a final interdict satisfied – injury not established – alternative satisfactory remedy available.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 76
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v TDS Projects Construction and Newrak Mining JV (Pty) Ltd and Another (169/2021) [2022] ZASCA 76 (27 May 2022)
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v TDS Projects Construction and Newrak Mining JV (Pty) Ltd and Another (169/2021) [2022] ZASCA 76 (27 May 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_76.html
sino date 27 May 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 169/2021
In
the matter between:
EXXARO
COAL MPUMALANGA (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
TDS
PROJECTS CONSTRUCTION AND
NEWRAK
MINING JV (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v TDS Projects Construction and
Newrak Mining JV (Pty) Ltd and Another
(Case no 169/2021)
[2022]
ZASCA 76
(27 May 2022)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, NICHOLLS, GORVEN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and MEYER
AJA
Heard:
6 May 2022
Delivered:
27 May 2022
Summary:
Civil Procedure – interdict to stop payment of demand
guarantee – whether requirements for a final interdict
satisfied
– injury not established – alternative
satisfactory remedy available.
###
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Lamont J, sitting as a court of first instance):
1
The application for leave to appeal is granted with costs.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following
order:
‘
The application is
dismissed with costs.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana
JA (Schippers, Nicholls and Gorven JJA and Meyer AJA concurring)
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal by
the applicant, Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd (Exxaro) against the
judgment of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the
high court) and, if successful, the determination of the appeal
itself. The
application was referred for oral argument in
terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
.
[2]
The facts of this case are uncomplicated. On 12 July 2018, Exxaro and
the first respondent, TDS Projects Construction and Newrak Mining JV
(Pty) Ltd (TDS), entered into a written agreement for the
construction of the mechanical and electrical plant, civil, building
and engineering works in respect of a project described as
the
‘Tunnel Development (Drill and Blast) and Infrastructure
Development’ concerning Exxaro’s Matla Coal Mine
North
West Access Project (the contract).
[3]
TDS procured a performance guarantee for the due fulfilment of its
obligations
in the amount of R32 082 012.90, as required by
the contract. The guarantee was issued by the second respondent, ABSA
Bank Ltd (ABSA), on 22 August 2018, subject to the following material
terms: (a) the guaranteed amount would be paid to Exxaro
on receipt
by ABSA of a written demand stating that such an amount was due and
payable; (b) written demands would be signed by
a person who
warranted that he/she was duly authorised to do so; (c) the guarantee
would expire on 19 June 2020 (the expiry date)
and any claim and
statement would have to be received by ABSA before the expiry date;
and (d) after the expiry date, the guarantee
would lapse and any
statement received thereafter would be ineffective.
[4]
On 9 June 2020, Exxaro sent a letter to TDS terminating the contract
with
immediate effect on the basis that TDS had committed breaches
which it failed to remedy. TDS denies having committed those
breaches.
The nature of those alleged breaches need not be dealt with
in this judgment. On 10 June 2020, Exxaro sought to invoke its rights
under the guarantee by sending a demand to ABSA claiming that the
guaranteed amount had become payable as a result of TDS’s
failure to perform in terms of the contract (the first demand). In
response, ABSA advised Exxaro that the demand was ‘deemed
unfit
for processing’ by ABSA on various bases, which are also not
necessary to state. This was followed by a letter from
Exxaro
suspending the first demand. On 19 June 2020, Exxaro sent
another letter to ABSA retracting the suspension and claiming
a
lesser amount of R22 165 055.66 (the second demand). Save
for this lesser amount, the second demand was identical to
the first.
[5]
On 25 June 2020, TDS applied to the high court
for
an interim order interdicting Exxaro from demanding, and
ABSA from making payment of any amount under the guarantee to Exxaro,
pending
determination of the relief sought in Part B of the
application. In Part B, TDS sought an order declaring that the
demands made
by Exxaro for payment of the guarantee were invalid, and
a final interdict preventing ABSA from making payment of any amount
under
the guarantee. Exxaro opposed the application and lodged a
counter-application to compel TDS to provide a new or revised
guarantee
on the basis of an alleged agreement TDS had allegedly
reneged on. The high court was only called upon to determine Part B
of the
application. Although ABSA abided the court’s decision,
it filed an affidavit to state its position.
[6]
The grounds for the interdict were as
follows. TDS alleged that ‘the first and second demands were
fraudulently made’
and that it had ‘a clear right to
prevent [Exxaro] from unlawfully benefiting under the guarantee’.
It further alleged
that the demands did not comply with the terms of
the guarantee in that they were not signed by a person warranting
that they had
authority to do so; they failed to state that the
amount claimed was due and payable; and they did not indicate the
respects in
which TDS had breached the contract. As such, ABSA was
not legally obliged to honour the guarantee since its terms governing
the
demand had not been met.
[7]
The harm or injury that TDS allegedly
would suffer if the interdict was not granted, was stated as follows:
‘
[T]he
second respondent [ABSA] will make payment of the full amount under
the guarantee to the first respondent [Exxaro], notwithstanding
the
absence of any entitlement whatsoever on the part of [Exxaro];
the
applicant [TDS], having been subject to a fraudulent call, will
suffer severe financial prejudice in relation to the trigger
of
counter-guarantees and immediate liability under circumstances where
there would otherwise be none (and ought to be none having
regard to
the absence of an entitlement on the part of [Exxaro]);
the
foregoing would trigger events of default in respect of [TDS’s]
various facilities and/or contracts, the dire consequences
of which
would include the cancellation of such contracts and/or immediate
calling up of such facilities when they would not otherwise
have been
an immediate liability…’
This
was all that was said. These assertions were not based on any
evidence as to the consequences, if any, that the honouring of
the
demand by ABSA would have on TDS.
[8]
TDS then alleged that it had no other satisfactory remedy. It claimed
that its damages, which were not confined to the amount paid under
the guarantee, were impossible alternatively extremely difficult,
to
quantify and would in all likelihood be recovered well into the
distant future, whilst its business would be crippled or destroyed
in
the interim.
[9]
The high
court stated that it was unnecessary to deal with the allegations
that the demand for payment of the guarantee was fraudulently
made,
because the non-compliance with the terms of the guarantee was
dispositive of the matter. Relying on
State
Bank of India and Another v Denel SOC Limited and Others (State Bank
of India)
,
[1]
the high court held that TDS was entitled to raise the issue of
non-compliance with the demand, on the basis of a contract of mandate
(the banker-client relationship). Consequently, the high court
granted an order declaring the demands to be invalid and of no force
or effect. It refused Exxaro’s counter-application on the basis
that there were disputes of fact which could not be resolved
on the
papers and further, that there was an arbitration provision in the
contract to deal with the dispute concerning the counter-application.
[10]
It was
common cause between the parties that the performance guarantee
issued by ABSA is a demand guarantee. As was held in
Loomcraft
Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd
and
Another (Loomcraft)
[2]
and numerous cases that followed it, a demand guarantee is akin to an
irrevocable letter of credit, which establishes a contractual
obligation on the part of the bank to pay the beneficiary on the
occurrence of a specified event, and is wholly independent of
the
underlying contract of sale between the buyer and the seller. The
bank will escape liability only upon proof of fraud on the
part of
the beneficiary.
[3]
The
importance of allowing banks to honour their obligations under
irrevocable credits without judicial interference, was stressed
in
Loomcraft,
where it was stated that an interdict by the buyer to restrain a bank
from paying under a letter of credit would not be granted
save in the
most exceptional cases.
[4]
[11]
Counsel for TDS conceded that no case of fraud was made out in the
founding affidavit.
In its supplementary founding affidavit, TDS
alleged that the focal point of the application was ‘whether
there exists a
compliant demand for payment under the guarantee’.
Thus, the case made out by TDS was non-compliance by Exxaro with the
terms
of the guarantee.
[12]
The
question, therefore, is whether TDS was entitled to an interdict on
this basis. The requisites for the grant of a final interdict
are
trite: a clear right; an injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended; and the absence of another adequate remedy.
[5]
[13]
In my view,
TDS failed to establish any injury ie ‘something actually done
which is prejudicial to or interferes with the
applicant’s
right’.
[6]
The alleged
injury was firstly, founded on ‘a fraudulent call’ on the
guarantee, which – it was conceded –
had not been
established. Secondly, the terms of the banker-customer relationship
between TDS and ABSA, the content of the counter-guarantees
that
allegedly would have resulted in ‘immediate liability’ to
TDS, and the ‘default in respect of various facilities’
that would be triggered, were not pleaded. In short, no evidence was
presented as to the existence or nature of the relationship
between
TDS and ABSA, or what obligations would arise if ABSA honoured the
performance guarantee.
[14]
More fundamentally, however, if ABSA were to honour the guarantee
when the demand to do
so did not comply with the terms of the
guarantee, TDS would have a complete defence to a claim by ABSA based
on its having done
so. The only basis on which any liability of TDS
might arise, whether to ABSA or any other party, would be if ABSA was
lawfully
obliged to honour the guarantee. The entire argument before
us was that the demand made of ABSA was not lawful since it did not
comply with the terms of the guarantee. Consequently, non-compliance
with the terms of the guarantee by Exxaro in making its demand
is not
a violation of any right of TDS. Neither will payment of the
guarantee by ABSA result in a violation of a right of TDS.
Indeed,
this was conceded by counsel for TDS. That being the case, TDS could
not show that it would sustain any injury if ABSA
honoured the
guarantee when not obliged to do so.
[15]
What is
more, any contractor that has given a performance guarantee and which
is in the same position as TDS, ‘. . . would
have its ordinary
contractual remedy against [the guarantor]’.
[7]
In this matter, the remedy is a complete defence to any claim founded
on the honouring of the guarantee when ABSA was not obliged
to do so.
This accords with the principle stated in
State
Bank of India
[8]
that ‘South African courts, like their international
counterparts, should jealously guard the international practice that
banks honour the obligations they have assumed in terms of guarantees
issued by them’ save in exceptional cases where fraud
is
involved. Otherwise viewed, it would mean that every contractor in
the position of TDS, could simply seek an interdict in circumstances
where it has a satisfactory remedy available to it. This is a further
reason why the interdict ought not to have been granted.
In this
regard the high court erred.
[16]
By reason of the conclusion to which I have come, it is unnecessary
to consider the counter-application.
There is no reason why costs
should not follow the result.
[17]
For those reasons, the following order is made:
1
The application for leave to appeal is granted with costs.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following
order:
‘
The application is
dismissed with costs.’
N
P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
applicant:
F G Barry SC
Instructed
by:
DLA Piper South Africa
(RF) Inc, Sandton
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
first respondent: A Bester SC (with him
D Hodge)
Instructed
by:
Tiefenthaler Attorneys,
Johannesburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
State
Bank of India and Another v Denel SOC Limited and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 212
;
[2015]
2 All SA 152
(SCA) para 27.
[2]
Loomcraft
Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd
and
Another
[1995] ZASCA 127
;
[1996]
1 All SA 51
(A);
1996 (1) SA 812
(A) at 815G-J;
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2010 (2) SA 86
(SCA) para 20;
Coface
South Africa Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Own Haven
Housing Association
2014 (2) SA 382
(SCA) paras 10-13.
[3]
Loomcraft
fn
2 above.
[4]
Loomcraft
fn 2 above at 816D-H.
[5]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221.
[6]
V
& A Waterfront Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another v Helicopter &
Marine Services (Pty) Ltd and Others
2006
(1) SA 252
(SCA) para 21.
[7]
Loom
craft
f
n
2 above at 823H-823I.
[8]
State
Bank of India
fn 1 above paras 6-7.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
IGS Consulting Engineers & Another v Transnet Soc Limited (198/2020) [2022] ZASCA 63 (29 April 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 63Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Transnet SOC Ltd v Tipp-Con (Pty) Ltd and Others (797/2022) [2024] ZASCA 12 (31 January 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 12Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Mashwayi Projects (Pty) Ltd and Others v Wescoal (Pty) Ltd and Others (1157/2023) [2025] ZASCA 5; [2025] 2 All SA 57 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 441 (SCA) (29 January 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 5Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Samancor Chrome Limited v Bila Civil Contractors (Pty) Ltd (810/21) [2022] ZASCA 163 (28 November 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 163Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Transasia 444 (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others; Transasia Minerals (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (702/2023; 707/2023) [2024] ZASCA 145 (23 October 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 145Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar