Case Law[2022] ZASCA 94South Africa
Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Limited v Johannes Frederick Klopper NO & Others (277/2021) [2022] ZASCA 94 (17 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
17 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Contract Law – whether obligations created under a joint venture contract survived termination of the contract – principles governing interpretation of legal documents reaffirmed – reconstruction of the terms of the contract by the court on termination impermissible – all obligations ceased on termination of the contract.
Judgment
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## Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Limited v Johannes Frederick Klopper NO & Others (277/2021) [2022] ZASCA 94 (17 June 2022)
Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Limited v Johannes Frederick Klopper NO & Others (277/2021) [2022] ZASCA 94 (17 June 2022)
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sino date 17 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 277/2021
In
the matter between:
NAKA
DIAMOND MINING (PTY) LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
JOHANNES
FREDERICK KLOPPER N O
FIRST RESPONDENT
RYNETTE
PIETERS N O
SECOND RESPONDENT
SOUTHERNERA
DIAMONDS (PTY)
LIMITED
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Naka
Diamond Mining (Pty) Limited v Johannes Frederick Klopper NO &
Others
(case no 277/2021)
[2022] ZASCA
94
(17 June 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, GORVEN, MOTHLE and
MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA, and SAVAGE AJA
Heard:
13 May 2022
Delivered:
17 June 2022
Summary:
Contract
Law – whether obligations created under a joint
venture contract survived termination of the contract –
principles
governing interpretation of legal documents reaffirmed –
reconstruction of the terms of the contract by the court on
termination
impermissible – all obligations ceased on
termination of the contract.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Spilg J sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs of two
counsel, where so employed.
2
The cross appeal is upheld with costs of
two counsel, where so employed.
3
The order of the high court is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
‘
1
It is declared that any and all obligations of SouthernEra Diamonds
(Pty) Ltd (in business rescue) owed by it in respect
of the
Klipspringer Joint Venture Agreement (being the agreement concluded
on 31 July 2001 between SouthernEra Diamonds (Pty) Ltd,
formerly
SouthernEra Resources Ltd, Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Ltd, formerly
Steppon Investments (Pty) Ltd and De Beers Consolidated
Mines Ltd),
as amended on 6 October 2004, terminated, at the latest, on 24 May
2020.
2 Naka
Diamond Mining (Pty) Ltd is liable for the costs of the application,
including the costs of two counsel where
so employed.’
JUDGMENT
Dambuza
JA (Gorven, Mothle and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Savage AJA
concurring)
[1]
The issue in this appeal is whether certain obligations which the
third respondent,
SouthernEra (Pty) Ltd (in business rescue)
(SouthernEra), had under a joint venture agreement survived the
termination of that
agreement. The Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Johannesburg (Spilg J) (high court), before which the matter
served, did not
make any order in this regard. It merely granted a
declarator that the joint venture agreement was terminated prior to
the commencement
of SouthernEra’s business rescue, an order
which displeased both parties. The appeal by the appellant, Naka
Diamond Mining
(Pty) Ltd (Naka), and the cross-appeal by the first
and second respondents, Mr Johannes Klopper and Mr Rynette Pieters,
SouthernEra’s
business rescue practitioners (the
practitioners), are with the leave of the high court.
[2]
In 2001 SouthernEra, which was then known as SouthernEra Resources
Limited, concluded
a joint venture agreement with Naka, then known as
Steppon Investments (Pty) Ltd, and De Beers Consolidated Mines
Limited (De Beers).
The object of the agreement, termed the
Klipspringer Joint Venture Agreement (JV agreement), was to prospect
for, mine and sell
diamonds.
[3]
Each party was to make a contribution to the joint venture (JV). Naka
had to contribute
development costs of up to R49,6 million which was
to be used to boost the underground mining activities.
[1]
SouthernEra had to contribute its ‘old order mining rights’
in respect of Farm Rusland 93 KS, on which the Klipspringer
fissure
diamond mine was located (Klipspringer right), together with the use
of its mining plant and infrastructure.
[2]
De Beers had to contribute its mining rights in respect of Farm
Marsfontein 91 KS, together with the rights to mine in respect
of the
De Beers Rights and De Beers Exploration Properties.
[3]
Naka and SouthernEra also contributed the mining rights jointly held
by them in respect of the Farm Doornrivier 86 KS (the Doornrivier
old
order rights).
[4]
In addition,
each party had to make available to the JV all technical data
relating to the respective JV mining rights.
[5]
In return, a ‘participation interest’ would be allocated
to each party, being their share (expressed as a percentage)
of the
net revenue earned by the JV.
[4]
The JV was to continue for an indefinite period; for as long as
diamonds were produced
on the relevant properties.
[6]
However, in terms of Clause 14 of the JV agreement the parties could
terminate the agreement by mutual agreement at any time, or
if a land
claim or expropriation impacted negatively on the feasibility
thereof
[7]
, or if the precious
stones to which the JV mining rights related were exhausted.
[8]
[5]
It was the responsibility of each of the parties to the JV to
maintain the validity
of, and enforceability of the mining rights
contributed by it to the JV.
[9]
However, the royalties payable in respect of the State rights, the
costs of purchasing additional mineral rights, and royalties
payable
in respect of the Klipspringer rights and SouthernEra Exploration
Properties would be borne by the JV.
[6]
In October 2004 the parties concluded an addendum to the JV agreement
which, amongst
other things, regulated De Beers’ exit from the
JV and for its participation interest to be transferred to Naka. The
De Beers’
rights, as transferred to Naka, and Naka’s
share of the Doornrivier rights lapsed and returned to the State in
May 2009.
Thereafter Naka made no further contribution to the JV.
[7]
During 2010 operations on Farm Rusland ceased as a result of
underground flooding.
Furthermore, no Management Committee meetings
had taken place since 2008. SouthernEra maintained that the JV had
terminated by
operation of law following Naka’s inability to
contribute De Beers’ and the Doornrivier rights and costs of
care and
maintenance of the mining operations. On 22 February 2013
the Klipspringer old order right was converted into a new order
mining
right as a result of a conversion application that had been
lodged by SouthernEra in 2009. By March 2015 the mining operations at
Rusland had been conducted at a loss of R563 990 176.
Thereafter, the JV suffered further losses.
[8]
In an email to Naka’s attorneys dated 7 August 2018,
SouthernEra, through its
attorneys, advised that it was cancelling
the JV agreement because of Naka’s failure to transfer the De
Beers rights to the
JV and to maintain them. SouthernEra asserted
that Naka’s failure constituted an irremediable breach of the
JV agreement
as the rights in question had since been allocated to
the local community. There does not seem to have been any response
from Naka
in this regard. However, judging from its conduct
subsequent to the cancellation, it did not accept same.
[9]
During February 2020 SouthernEra sold some of its mining equipment
located at Farm
Rusland. Naka attempted but failed to stop the sale.
Naka’s attorneys then sent a written warning to SouthernEra’s
attorneys advising that the disposal of the equipment was in breach
of the JV agreement and threatening that action would be taken
by
Naka if the equipment was not returned to the JV. The sale of
equipment proceeded. All that Naka managed to secure on 24 February
2020 was an interim interdict in terms of which SouthernEra was
restrained from continuing with mining activities on Farm Rusland
and
from disposing of its business interests in the Farm Rusland mining
operations, pending an action or mediation that was to
be instituted
by it (Naka) by 1 June 2020 for resolution of the dispute as to
whether the JV agreement remained extant. The interim
interdict was
granted on the basis that throughout the years 2009 to 2017
SouthernEra had acknowledged the existence of the JV
in its business
activities, notwithstanding Naka’s failure to contribute the De
Beers mining rights. The court held that
it was not open to
SouthernEra to raise as its defence to Naka’s application for
an interdict, Naka’s failure to contribute
the rights.
[10]
On 23 March 2020 SouthernEra went into voluntary business rescue and
the practitioners were appointed.
The following day Naka’s
attorneys wrote to SouthernEra’s attorneys advising that Naka
was cancelling the JV agreement
as a result of a SouthernEra’s
irremediable breach thereof. In this regard, it too, invoked clause
26.2 of the JV agreement.
This was in reference to the sale of
equipment by SouthernEra. In the written cancellation Naka’s
attorneys advised that
the breach by SouthernEra constituted a
withdrawal from the agreement and relinquishment of SouthernEra’s
entire participation
interest as provided in Clause 8.7 of the JV
agreement. Naka insisted that SouthernEra remained bound to perform
its obligations
under the agreement as provided in Clause 8.7 after
the cancellation of the JV agreement.
[11]
On 24 June 2020 the practitioners launched an application in the high
court on an urgent basis,
seeking a declarator that all of
SouthernEra’s obligations under the JV agreement had
terminated, alternatively, that such
obligations as might have
survived the termination of the agreement be cancelled as provided in
s 136(2)
(b)
of
the Companies Act 71 of 2008 (Companies Act).
Initially,
in prayer 2 of the Notice of Motion, the practitioners had sought a
declaratory order that the Joint Venture Agreement
had terminated.
The Notice of Motion was later amended by adding prayer 2A in which a
declaratory order was sought that any and
all obligations of
SouthernEra under the JV had been terminated, at the latest on 24
March 2020.
[12]
In the application the practitioners contended that the JV had been
an ‘abject failure’
because of various factors, including
Naka’s failure to comply with its obligations under JV
agreement. In addition to what
SouthernEra had raised in its letter
of cancellation it was asserted that Naka had failed to maintain the
black ownership level
necessary to enable the JV to comply with the
Black Economic Empowerment requirements of the Department of Mineral
Resources. The
R600 million financial losses during the years 2014
and 2015 borne by SouthernEra alone were another source of complaint.
There
was, however, no intention of laying a claim against Naka for
its share of the losses, as it had no realisable assets from which
it
could satisfy such a claim. SouthernEra had discontinued all mining
and business operations during 2019.
[13]
With regard to the alternative prayer, brought under
s 136(2)
(b)
of the
Companies Act, the
practitioners contended that the declarator
sought was necessary to provide certainty regarding the termination
of the JV and any
obligations that SouthernEra had thereunder, so
that a rational Business Rescue Plan could be prepared and presented
to the creditors.
[14]
In opposing the application, Naka highlighted that in the interdict
judgment the high court had
found in its favour, that the JV remained
extant and had not been an ‘abject failure’ as had been
contended by SouthernEra.
It repeated its contention that SouthernEra
had withdrawn from the JV agreement and that it remained bound to
continue its contributions
to the JV.
[15]
Regarding the alternative prayer, Naka contended that there were no
reasonable prospects that
SouthernEra could be rescued. It further
contended that the practitioners could only seek cancellation of
residual obligation once
they had prepared a business rescue plan.
[16]
The high court’s declarator that the JV agreement had been
cancelled left both parties
in limbo because the dispute regarding
the consequences of the termination remained unresolved. In its
submissions in this Court
Naka contended, somewhat curiously
considering its letter of cancellation, that the issue whether the
agreement had been terminated
was pending in the action it had
instituted as per the interdict. However, at the hearing of the
appeal its counsel clarified that
Naka had accepted that the
agreement was terminated but insisted that such termination was
consequent to SouthernEra’s breach.
In the cross-appeal the
practitioners maintained that all obligations on SouthernEra under
the JV agreement terminated on cancellation
of the JV agreement.
[17]
Naka’s main contention on appeal was that, following the
irremediable breach by SouthernEra
in selling its mining equipment,
it cancelled the JV agreement as provided in Clause 26.2 of the JV
agreement (the breach clause)
and that Clause 26.3 which became
operative on termination of the agreement for breach, prescribed that
the provisions of Clause
8.7 came into effect. Consequently, Naka
sought a declarator that, as provided under Clause 8.7, SouthernEra
was bound to continue
with its contributions to the JV as specified
under Clause 7.8 of the JV agreement. Clause 7.8 provided that:
‘
7.8
Each of Steppon [Naka], De Beers and SouthernEra shall at its own
cost do all things necessary to maintain the validity and
enforceability of the portion of the KJV Rights contributed by each
of them respectively (except as determined by the Management
Committee) for the duration of the Joint Venture except that:
7.8.1
royalties payable in respect of the State Rights;
7.8.2
the costs of purchasing any additional mineral rights within the
Exploration Properties; and
7.8.3
royalty obligations payable to MSA in respect of the Klipspringer
Rights and the SouthernEra Exploration Properties, as set
out in
clause 3.4 shall be expenses of the Joint Venture.’
[18]
It should be noted that there remains a dispute in the pending action
as to which party terminated
the agreement. It is common cause that
the agreement was terminated, by SouthernEra or Naka, and that it was
terminated under Clause 26.2.
The dispute as to which party
terminated is not relevant to the appeal and is the subject of the
unfinished litigation. If it terminated
at the instance of
SouthernEra on 8 August 2018 on the basis that Naka had committed an
irremediable breach of the agreement, it
is common cause that no
residual obligations rested on SouthernEra thereafter. If, on the
other hand, it terminated at the instance
of Naka on 24 March 2020
due to an irremediable breach by SouthernEra, the question arises
whether any residual obligations rested
on SouthernEra thereafter.
The appeal was argued before us on the basis that this question alone
should be decided and not the
prior question of whether SouthernEra
or Naka terminated the JV agreement. This addresses prayer 2A of the
amended notice of motion
referred to above. I agree that this is an
appropriate way to deal with the matter. The parties want clarity on
that point and
it is not possible to resolve who terminated the JV
agreement in these proceedings.
[19]
The breach clause provided:
’
26.
BREACH
26.1
The remedies of the Parties under 26.2 shall not be exhaustive and
shall be in addition and without prejudice to any other
remedies in
law which they might have, whether under this Agreement or at common
law.
26.2
A party shall be entitled to cancel this Agreement by written notice
to the others upon the occurrence of any one or more of
the following
events:
26.2.1
if the other Party commits a material breach of this Agreement which
is incapable of being remedied;
26.2.2
if the other Party commits any other material breach of this
Agreement and fails to remedy the breach within a reasonable
time
(which shall not be less than 30 days) after receiving written notice
to do so;
26.2.3
if the other Party commits a breach of the Principal Agreement or
this Agreement, which breach is either incapable of remedy
or, if
capable of remedy, is not remedied within the period allowed for
remedy in terms of such agreement;
26.2.4
if any provisional or final order is made or an effective resolution
passed for the winding up of the other Party otherwise
than for the
purposes of its reconstruction or an amalgamation with another
company;
26.2.5
if any provisional or final order is made for the judicial management
of the other Party;
26.2.6
if any event analogous to any of the events set out in 26.2.4 and
26.2.5 should occur with respect to a Party in any other
jurisdiction.
26.3
On termination of this Agreement in terms of 26.2, the provisions of
8.7 shall apply mutatis mutandis.’ (My emphasis.)
[20]
On Naka’s argument, on its cancellation of the agreement under
Clause 26.2.1, Clause 26.3
became operative and in terms thereof
Clause 8.7 regulated the consequences of the termination. Clause
8.7 provided:
‘
If
either Steppon [Naka] or SouthernEra’s Participation Interest
is diluted to 5% or less, such party shall be deemed to have
withdrawn forthwith from this Agreement and shall relinquish its
entire Participation Interest free of any consideration; provided
that such withdrawing party shall nevertheless be obliged to maintain
in place and continue its contribution to the Joint Venture
as set
out in clause 7 (but excluding funding of capex in 7.2.1) and shall
remain bound by the Principal Agreement (if it is party
thereto)
and
shall be liable for its obligations under this Agreement until
termination of this Agreement
, save
that it shall have no further funding obligations in terms of this
clause 8. Such relinquished Participation Interest shall
be deemed to
have accrued automatically to the other party free of any
consideration.’ (My emphasis.)
[21]
Counsel for Naka conceded that the basis for the deeming portion in
Clause 8.7 has not been established.
He submitted, however, that Naka
was entitled to invoke Clause 8.7 because the parties to the
agreement intended that in the event
of breach the ‘guilty
party’ would be divested of its right to participate in the JV.
He submitted that the words
mutatis mutandis
in Clause 26.3
empowered Naka, as the innocent party, to make the necessary
alterations to Clause 8.7 in order to divest the ‘guilty
party’
of its participation interest. In terms of Clause 8.7, on termination
of the agreement, SouthernEra was to be deemed
to have withdrawn from
the agreement because its interest in the JV had been diluted to 5%
or less, and it would then remain liable
for its obligations under
the agreement until the termination thereof.
[22]
This contention then led to a distinction being drawn between the JV
agreement and the JV; the
argument being that the JV survived the
cancellation of the agreement, such that SouthernEra’s
contributions would still
be used in advancing the business of the
surviving JV until the termination thereof.
[23]
This submission is untenable. Generally, cancellation of a contract
results in termination of
the obligations created thereby. ‘If
a contractual obligation has not yet been fulfilled, cancellation has
the result that
obligations from the contract are extinguished and
can therefore no longer be enforced’.
[10]
The continuing contributions provided for under Clause 7.8 fall under
this category (as opposed to accrued rights) and therefore
became
extinguished on termination of the JV agreement. Furthermore, the JV
being a form of a legal relationship that was created
by the JV
agreement, with the rights and obligations thereunder regulated
thereby, could not survive on termination of the agreement.
[24]
Clause 8.7 must be interpreted and applied sensibly, within the
context of Clause 8 in which
it is located and the entire JV
Agreement, in line with the established approach to interpretation of
legal documents.
[11]
Clause
8 regulated the funding requirements of the JV, over and above the
R49,6 million that would have been provided by
Naka. In terms thereof
the parties would provide a determined proportionate share of funding
to the JV.
[12]
In the event of
failure by a party to provide its proportionate share of the funding,
the other party could provide the defaulting
party’s share,
together with its own.
[13]
The
result would be that the defaulting party’s participation
interest would then be diluted to the extent determined by
a
specified formula.
[14]
If the
defaulting party’s participation interest became diluted to 5%
or less, that party would be deemed to have ‘withdrawn’
from the agreement, but would remain obliged to continue with the
contributions prescribed in Clause 7 until termination of the
JV
agreement.
[15]
[25]
Notably, the trigger for the provisions of Clause 8.7 would be the
occurrence of a specified
event – the dilution of a party’s
participation interest to 5% or less. On the other hand the
termination of the agreement
under the breach clause resulted from
the exercise of an election by a party to cancel the agreement upon
breach by the other party
as specified in the breach clause.
[26]
Significantly, the trigger event under Clause 8.7 resulted in a
‘withdrawal’ from
the agreement compared with the
‘termination’ of the agreement under Clauses 14 and 26.
The use of the two different
words suggests that the parties
envisaged different processes and consequences in the relevant
clauses. On the deemed withdrawal
of a party the agreement and the JV
would remain valid until terminated. On termination, under the breach
clause, the agreement
and the JV would come to an end. The provisions
of the termination clause have already been discussed in paragraph 4
above.
[27]
The interpretation contended for by Naka was effectively an
impermissible reconstruction of Clause
8.7 of the agreement. The
entire portion in that clause which specified the basis for its
application would have to be deleted
and a new basis be substituted.
The words ‘until termination of the Agreement’ would be
rendered superfluous or meaningless.
It was submitted that those
words should be altered to read ‘until termination of the Joint
Venture’, which would be
absurd given that the JV was
terminated under Clause 26.2.
[28]
Consequently, the premise on which Naka sought to invoke the
provisions of Clause 8.7 was unsustainable.
Once the JV Agreement was
terminated under the breach clause, the provisions of Clause 8.7
could not apply
mutatis mutandis
. The substance regulated in
the breach clause and Clause 8.7 differ substantially. On termination
of the agreement, the JV terminated
and all the parties’
obligations thereunder ended. The practitioners were accordingly
entitled to the declaratory order sought
in the amended prayer 2A of
the Notice of Motion.
[29]
It is not necessary to deal with the alternative relief brought under
s 136(2)
(b)
of the
Companies Act. The
following order shall
therefore issue:
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs,
including cost of two counsel, where so employed.
2
The cross appeal is upheld with costs,
including costs of two counsel, where so employed;
3
The order of the high court is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
‘
1
It is declared that all obligations of SouthernEra Diamonds (Pty) Ltd
(in business rescue)
owed by it in respect of the Klipspringer Joint
Venture Agreement (being the agreement concluded on 31 July 2001
between SouthernEra
Diamonds (Pty) Ltd, formerly SouthernEra
Resources Ltd, Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Ltd, formerly Steppon
Investments (Pty) Ltd and
De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd), as
amended on 6 October 2004, terminated at the latest on 24 May 2020.
2
Naka Diamond Mining (Pty) Ltd is liable for the costs of the
application, including
the costs of two counsel, where so employed.’
N
DAMBUZA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
BM Gilbert
Instructed
by:
David Levithan Attorneys, Sandton
Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein
For
respondents: A Gautshi SC with J
Smit
Instructed
by:
Van Wyk Van Heerden Inc, Paarl
Symington & De Kock,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Clause
7.5 of the JV agreement.
[2]
Clause
7.1 and 7.2.
[3]
Clause
7.5 and 7.6.
[4]
Clause
7.3.
[5]
Clause
7.4.
[6]
Clause
5.3.
[7]
Clause
12.
[8]
Clause
14.2.
[9]
Clause
7.8 of the JV agreement p70.
[10]
Van
Huyssteen et al
Contract-
General Principles
6 ed (2020) at 455.
[11]
In
KPMG Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another
(644/07)
[2009] ZASCA 7
;
2009 (4) SA 399
(SCA);
[2009] 2 All SA 523
(SCA);
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
ZASCA
13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA).
[12]
Clauses
8.1 to 8.3.
[13]
Clause
8.4
[14]
Clause
8.4.2
[15]
Clause
8.7
sino noindex
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