Case Law[2022] ZASCA 98South Africa
Engen Petroleum Ltd v Flotank Transport (Pty) Ltd (876/2020) [2022] ZASCA 98 (21 June 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Interpretation of cession – whether a pledge or out-and-out cession incorporating a pactum fiduciae – effect of out-and-out cession on ceded debts upon liquidation of cedent – appeal upheld with costs.
Judgment
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## Engen Petroleum Ltd v Flotank Transport (Pty) Ltd (876/2020) [2022] ZASCA 98 (21 June 2022)
Engen Petroleum Ltd v Flotank Transport (Pty) Ltd (876/2020) [2022] ZASCA 98 (21 June 2022)
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sino date 21 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 876/2020
In
the matter between:
ENGEN
PETROLEUM
LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
FLOTANK
TRANSPORT (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Engen
Petroleum Ltd v Flotank Transport (Pty) Ltd
(876/20)
[2022] ZASCA
98
(21 June 2022)
Coram:
MAYA P, ZONDI,
MAKGOKA JJA, MEYER AND SAVAGE AJJA
Heard
:
23 May 2022
Delivered
:
21 June 2022
Summary:
Interpretation of cession –
whether a pledge or out-and-out cession incorporating a
pactum
fiduciae
– effect of
out-and-out cession on ceded debts upon liquidation of cedent –
appeal upheld with costs.
ORDER
Application
for leave to appeal from:
Northern
Cape Division of the High Court, Kimberley (Makoti AJ sitting as
court of first instance):
1
Leave to appeal is granted.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside
and replaced as follows:
‘
1.
The respondent is to pay to the applicant the following amounts:
1.1
R342 389.38 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 12 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.2
R344 239.14 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 19 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.3
R152 817.80 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 22 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.4
R313 137.14 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 24 December 2014 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.5
R339 052.39 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 2 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.6
R198 613.68 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 9 January 2015 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.7
R230 571.36 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 16 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.8
R276 046.04 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 23 January 2015 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.9
R34 794.85 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 30 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive.
2.
The respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Savage
AJA (Maya P, Zondi, Makgoka JJA and Meyer AJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The
applicant,
Engen Petroleum
Limited (Engen), seeks leave to
appeal
to this Court against the judgment and order of the Northern Cape
Division of the High Court, Kimberley (the high court),
dated 29
March 2020. This was after the high court dismissed with costs
Engen’s application
to enforce against the respondent, Flotank Transport (Pty) Ltd
(Flotank), the terms of a cession agreement
concluded between Engen
and Windsharp Trading (Pty) Limited (Windsharp). Engen applied for
leave to appeal. This was refused.
[2]
Following the refusal by the high court
of Engen’s application for leave to appeal, Engen petitioned
this Court for leave
to appeal. The application was referred for oral
argument in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The parties were advised to be
prepared, if called upon to do so, to address this Court on the
merits. Having regard to the prospects
of success, apparent from the
reasons which follow, leave to appeal to this Court is granted.
Relevant
factual background
[3]
In January 2009 Engen and
Windsharp entered into an Engen Diesel Club (EDC) agreement. Under
the terms of the EDC agreement, Windsharp
became indebted to Engen in
an amount which, by June 2014, exceeded R5.5 million. As security for
the debt, Engen and Windsharp
concluded two deeds of cession, in
April 2012 and June 2014. Clause 1 of the first cession, entered into
on 3 April 2012 (the 2012
cession), recorded that:
‘
1.
CESSION AND PLEDGE
The
Cedent hereby cedes, transfers and makes over to the Cessionary all
the Cedent’s right, title and interest in and to the
Debts (as
defined in clause 2) as a continuing general covering security for
the due performance and discharge of every obligation
and
indebtedness from whatsoever cause and howsoever arising which the
Cedent may now or at any time hereafter have toward the
Cessionary;
and without limiting the generality of the foregoing, whether such
indebtedness be a direct, indirect or contingent
liability; whether
it be matured or not; whether it may be or may have been incurred by
the Cedent individually or jointly with
others or by any firm in
which the Cedent has or holds or may hereafter have or hold any
interest; and whether it arises through
any acts of suretyship,
guarantee, warranty, indemnity or other undertaking signed by the
Cedent solely or jointly with others
or otherwise.’
[4]
Clause 1 of the second cession
entered into on 30 June 2014 (the 2014 cession), which replaced the
first cession, was similar to
clause 1 of the first cession, but with
the insertion in italics at the end of that clause of the following:
‘…
The Cession hereby
granted by the Cedent to the Cessionary includes any and all
reversionary rights the Cedent might otherwise have
had in and to the
claim hereby ceded
.’
[5]
Clause 14.2 of
the 2014 cession provided that:
‘
14.2
Execution of this memorandum has discharged –
(a)
every prior agreement between the parties to the extent within the
scope of the subject
matter of this agreement, whether or not
inconsistent with the provisions of this memorandum; . . .’
[6]
On 5 November 2014, at Engen’s
instance, a provisional order of liquidation was obtained against
Windsharp. That order was
made final in January 2015. On 9 December
2014, Engen notified Flotank in writing of the existence of the June
2014 cession and
of Engen’s intention to claim the debt ceded
to it by Windsharp. Engen called upon Flotank, pursuant to the terms
of the
2014 cession, to make payments directly to it. Flotank was
cautioned that should it fail to do so it would not be absolved of
liability
towards Engen for any amounts paid to Windsharp.
[7]
In response to
Engen’s notice, on 12 December 2014 Flotank sought that, by
13h00 the same day, Engen provide it with a copy
of the relevant
cession.
Engen
failed to do so. Thereafter, Flotank, in disregard of Engen’s
notice, made nine payments to Windsharp, from 12 December
2014 to 30
January 2015, in respect of debts due by it to Windsharp. In May
2017, on the basis that Windsharp had ‘ceded
its book debts in
securitatem debiti
’
to it, Engen applied to the high court for an order that Flotank pay
Engen the nine amounts it had paid to Windsharp.
[8]
Flotank opposed the application
inter alia on the basis that, on liquidation, Windsharp’s ceded
book debts resorted with its
liquidators, with Engen becoming a
secured creditor of Windsharp from the date of liquidation; and that
Engen held a claim against
Windsharp’s liquidators. In
addition, Flotank contended that since Engen had failed to provide it
with the cession relied
upon, no proper perfection of the cession had
occurred.
[9]
The high court found that the
concursus creditorum
was created by operation of law on 5 November 2014 when Windsharp was
placed into provisional liquidation. The court rejected Flotank’s
contention that Engen had failed to ‘perfect’ the cession
by not having provided a copy of the cession to Flotank and
that
notice to Flotank by Engen of the cession had been sufficient. The
court found, however, that it was Windsharp’s liquidators
and
not Engen that were entitled to claim that which had been ceded
in
securitatem debiti
to Engen. This,
reasoned the court, was so in that the cession entered into had
amounted to a pledge, which was the basis on which
the case had been
conducted before the court.
[10]
For the first
time in its application for leave to appeal to this Court, Engen
argued that, properly construed and as a matter of
law, the 2014
cession was not a pledge and that the high court had erred in
treating it as such. Since the reversionary rights
of the cedent were
vested in Engen as the cessionary, it was contended that an
out-and-out cession to Engen existed and that it
was entitled to the
relief sought against Flotank.
[11]
The matter was
opposed by Flotank on the basis that the cession relied upon by Engen
was not an outright cession and should be construed
as a pledge.
This, it was submitted, was so even where there is a clear expression
of the intention of the parties otherwise.
Discussion
[12]
The
issue turns on the interpretation of the terms of the second cession
agreement. The true
character
of a cession
in
securitatem debiti
depends
on the intention of the parties,
[1]
with the wording of the cession being the appropriate point of
departure to determine such intention.
[2]
In
Grobler
v Oosthuizen
(
Grobler
)
[3]
this Court, recognised the existence of opposing theories in our law
regarding cessions
in
securitatem debiti
,
namely the ‘pledge theory’ and the ‘outright
cession theory’. However, it found it unnecessary to resolve
the debate between these theories one way or another.
[4]
[13]
On
‘the pledge theory’ the principal debt is ‘pledged’
to the cessionary on the basis that the cedent retains
‘bare
dominium’ or a ‘reversionary interest’ in the claim
against the principal debtor.
[5]
On such construction, only the right to enforce the right upon
non-payment is ceded.
[6]
Since a
cession ordinarily entails a transfer of a right, it is the retention
by the cedent of the very substance of the right
around which the
doctrinal debate regarding the pledge theory has centred. This Court,
in
Grobler
,
recognised however that such debate had been resolved, primarily for
pragmatic reasons, with the pledge theory accepted as the
default
position.
[7]
On this basis a
cession
in
securitatem debiti
is now taken to resemble a pledge, unless the intention of the
parties is different.
[8]
[14]
On the alternative theory –
‘
.
. . a cession
in
securitatem debiti
is
in effect an outright or out-and-out cession on which an undertaking
or
pactum
fiduciae
is
superimposed that the cessionary will re-cede the principal debt to
the cedent on satisfaction of the secured debt. In consequence,
the
ceded right in all its aspects is vested in the cessionary. After the
cession
in
securitatem debiti
the
cedent has no direct interest in the principal debt and is left only
with a personal right against the cessionary, by virtue
of the
pactum
fiduciae,
to
claim re-cession after the secured debt has been discharged.’
[9]
[15]
Although
the pledge construction has been recognised as the default form of
security cession, there is no support for a conclusion
that it has
subsumed the field of security cessions.
[10]
This is so since our law favours a recognition of both constructions
of security cession.
[11]
It
therefore remains open to the parties to structure a cession either
as a pledge or as an out-and-out cession, upon which a
pactum
fiduciae
is superimposed. This is to be determined by reference to the clear
intention of the parties.
[12]
[16]
The
2014 cession expressly ceded to Engen the debt as defined, with any
reversionary rights Windsharp may have to the debt ceded.
From the
wording used, it is clear that the parties’ express intent was
to achieve an out-and-out cession on which the
pactum
fiduciae
could, as a matter of law, be superimposed. Although Engen, as
indicated earlier, did not assert an out-and-out cession with a
pactum
fiduciae
in
the high court, it is open for it to do so for the first time on
appeal, since the correct interpretation of a cession is a question
of law.
[13]
[17]
The
result is that given that the 2014 cession was an out-and-out
cession, the debt ceded by Windsharp was an asset in the estate
of
Engen.
[14]
Windsharp held no
right to receive payment from Flotank of the principal debt ceded to
Engen but retained a claim by virtue of
the
pactum
fiduciae
to re-cede once that debt was discharged. It follows that Flotank was
obliged, on receipt of notice of the cession, to make payments
to
Engen and not to Windsharp. In finding differently the high court
erred.
[18]
It follows for these reasons that the
appeal must succeed with costs.
Order
[19]
The following order is made:
1
Leave to appeal is granted.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside
and replaced as follows:
‘
1.
The respondent is to pay to the applicant the following amounts:
1.1
R342 389.38 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 12 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.2
R344 239.14 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 19 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.3
R152 817.80 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 22 December 2014 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.4
R313 137.14 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 24 December 2014 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.5
R339 052.39 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 2 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.6
R198 613.68 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 9 January 2015 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.7
R230 571.36 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 16 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive;
1.8
R276 046.04 with interest thereon
at the legal rate from 23 January 2015 to date of payment, both days
inclusive;
1.9
R34 794.85 with interest
thereon at the legal rate from 30 January 2015 to date of payment,
both days inclusive.
2.
The respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs.’
K
M SAVAGE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
applicant:
M Tsele
Instructed
by: MCH
Attorneys Inc., La Lucia Ridge
Webbers,
Bloemfontein
For
respondent: P Zietsman SC
Instructed
by:
Van der Wall Inc., Kimberley
EG
Cooper Majiedt Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Grobler
v Oosthuizen
[2009]
ZASCA 51
;
2009 (5) SA 500
(SCA) (
Grobler
)
para 11;
Thorogood
v Hoare
1930 EDL 354
;
Fisher
v Schlemmer
1962 4 SA 651
(T);
Nahrungsmittel
GmbH v Otto
[1992] ZASCA 228
;
1993 1 SA 639
(A);
African
Consolidated Agencies (Pty) Ltd v Siemens Nixdorf Information
Systems (Pty) Ltd
1992 (2) SA 739
(C) at 744.
[2]
Grobler
p
ara
11.
[3]
Grobler
paras
11-15.
[4]
Grobler
para
15.
National
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Cohen’s Trustee
1911 AD 235.
[5]
Grobler
para 15 with reference to
Picardi
Hotels Ltd v Thekweni Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 128
;
2009 (1) SA 493
(SCA) para 3 and other
authorities.
[6]
Ibid
para 16 with reference to
Land-
en Landboubank van Suid-Afrika v Die Meester
1991
(2) SA 761
(A) 771C-G;
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg
2002
(5) SA 425
(SCA) para 50.
[7]
Grobler
para 17 with reference to
Leyds
N O v Noord-Westelike Koöperatiewe Landboumaatskappy Bpk
1985 (2) SA 769
(A) at 780E-G;
Bank
of Lisbon and South Africa Ltd v The Master
and
Others
1987 (1) SA 276
(A) at 291H-294H;
Incledon
(Welkom) (Pty) Ltd v Qwa Qwa Development Corporation Ltd
[1990] ZASCA 85
;
1990 (4) SA 798
(A) at 804F-J;
Millman
N O v Twiggs
[1995] ZASCA 62
;
1995 (3) SA 674
(A) at 676H;
Development
Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg
fn
6 para 50.
[8]
Grobler
para 17.
[9]
Grobler
para
17.
[10]
3
Lawsa
3 ed para 180.
[11]
2
Lawsa
2
ed para 53; Van der Merwe
Kontraktereg
4
th
ed (2012) at 427.
[12]
Grobler
paras
11-14;
Worman
v Hughes and Others
1948 (3) SA 495
(A) at 505;
Byron
v Duke Inc
[2002]
ZASCA 58
;
2002 (5) SA 483
(SCA).
This was also applied by this Court in
Freddy
Hirsch Group (Pty) Ltd v Chickenland (Pty) Ltd
[2011] ZASCA 22
;
2011 (4) SA 276
(SCA) para 15.
[13]
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Von Abo
[2011]
ZASCA 65
;
2011 (5) SA 262
(SCA) paras 18-19;
CUSA
v Tao Ying Industries
[2008] ZACC 15
;
2009 (2) SA 204
(CC) at para 68.
[14]
Van
der Merwe, fn 12, at 429;
MT
Argun: Master & Crew of the MT Argun v MT Argun
2003 (3) SA 149
(C) at 158.
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