Case Law[2022] ZASCA 144South Africa
Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Capitec Bank Holdings Limited (887/2021) [2022] ZASCA 144; [2023] 1 All SA 1 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – agreement not to sue – pactum de non petendo anticipando – enforcement thereof not against public policy.
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 144
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Capitec Bank Holdings Limited (887/2021) [2022] ZASCA 144; [2023] 1 All SA 1 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Capitec Bank Holdings Limited (887/2021) [2022] ZASCA 144; [2023] 1 All SA 1 (SCA) (24 October 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_144.html
sino date 24 October 2022
FLYNOTES:
Contract – Agreement not to sue – Pactum de non
petendo anticipando – Section 34 of the Constitution
and
access to courts – Enforcement thereof not against public
policy.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 887/2021
In
the matter between:
CORAL
LAGOON INVESTMENTS 194
(PTY)
LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
ASH
BROOK INVESTMENTS 15
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND
APPELLANT
and
CAPITEC
BANK HOLDINGS
LIMITED RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Coral
Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd
and
Another v Capitec Bank Holdings Limited
(Case
no.887/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 144
(24 October 2022)
Coram:
ZONDI, GORVEN and
HUGHES JJA and WINDELL and CHETTY AJJA
Heard
:
5 September 2022
Delivered
:
24 October 2022
Summary:
Contract
–
agreement
not to sue –
pactum
de non petendo anticipando
– enforcement thereof not against public policy.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (Wille J, sitting
as court of first instance).
The
appeal is dismissed with costs on an attorney and client scale,
including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
WINDELL
AJA (
ZONDI,
GORVEN and HUGHES JJA, and CHETTY AJA concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against an order of the Western Cape Division of
the High Court,
Cape Town (the high court). The order directed the
appellants, Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd (Coral) and its
holding company,
Ash Brook Investments 15 (Pty) Ltd (Ash Brook) to
withdraw an action for damages against the respondent, Capitec Bank
Holdings
Limited (Capitec) (the 2020 action). In doing so the high
court, per Wille J, enforced a clause not to sue contained in a
written
‘consent agreement’ concluded between Capitec and
the appellants.
[1]
Such a clause is known as a
pactum
de non petendo
(the
pactum
).
The high court found that the appellants had breached the
pactum
by instituting the 2020 action against Capitec. It further found that
Capitec was entitled to specific performance of the consent
agreement
and that the use of motion proceedings was permissible. It also
dismissed the appellants’ counter application contending
that
the
pactum
is contrary to public policy. The appeal is with leave of the high
court.
[2]
Two main issues arise for determination in this appeal. Firstly, the
interpretation
of the consent agreement and, secondly, whether the
pactum
, which was a permanent one, was contrary to public
policy.
Background
[3]
Coral is wholly owned by Ash Brook, a broad based black economic
empowerment consortium
comprising 13 black shareholders in different
formations.
In
2006 Capitec, Coral, Ash Brook, the shareholders of Ash Brook (all of
which are black persons and black-owned entities) and the
Industrial
Development Corporation (IDC) concluded a linked set of written
agreements. Part of the set of agreements was a subscription
of
shares and shareholders agreement (the subscription agreement),
concluded between Capitec and the appellants on 12 December
2006. The
purpose of the subscription agreement was to facilitate and promote
the achievement of the transformational objectives
set out in the
Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act 53 of 2003 (B-BBEE Act),
the Financial Sector Charter
[2]
(FSC) and the Codes of Good Practice on Black Economic Empowerment
[3]
(the transformation practises). As a result, Capitec allotted and
issued, and Coral subscribed for ten million ordinary shares
in
Capitec at R30 per share for a total subscription price of R300
million (the CPI shares). The CPI shares were equivalent to
a 12,21
per cent stake in Capitec. The black shareholders leveraged finance
of R285 million to fund the acquisition using a third
party, the IDC.
[4]
An important element of the subscription agreement are three sets of
selling restrictions,
aimed at keeping the CPI shares in black
shareholders’ hands. One of these selling restrictions is
clause 8.3 of the subscription
agreement. This clause provides that,
should Coral in any manner endeavour to dispose of any of the CPI
shares to any entity or
person who, in Capitec’s opinion, does
not comply with the B-BBEE Act and transformation practises, Capitec
will determine
the number of CPI shares sold and may require Coral to
acquire an equal number of CPI shares and cause them to be registered
in
Coral’s name.
[5]
It was always Capitec’s and the appellants’ understanding
of clause 8.3
that Capitec’s consent was required for Coral to
trade in the CPI shares. However, in court proceedings instituted by
the
appellants against Capitec in September 2019 (which I deal with
later in the judgment), Capitec stated that it had realized that
clause 8.3 is concerned with the
consequences
for Coral of selling any of its CPI shares to an entity or person
who, in Capitec’s opinion, does not comply with the B-BBEE
Act
and transformation practices. The effect of this concession was that
Coral did not need Capitec’s consent to sell its
CPI shares.
Capitec’s understanding of clause 8.3 was recently affirmed by
this Court in
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others.
[4]
[6]
In any event, after holding the shares for 5 years, Coral sold
5 284 735
CPI shares to the Public Investment Corporation
in 2012 in order to repay its debt to the IDC. Coral obtained
Capitec’s consent
prior to the transaction. In addition,
Capitec required as a condition of its consent that the CPI shares be
subject to a further
locked-in period of 10 years. That meant that
the shareholders in Ash Brook would not be entitled to dispose of, or
trade, their
CPI shares in the open market during the locked-in
period. The CPI shares were sold at a 15 per cent discount to the
market.
[7]
From about 2014 there was ongoing dissatisfaction about the selling
restrictions by
Ash Brook and its shareholders. In 2016 the
appellants instituted action against Capitec and its subsidiary,
Capitec Bank Limited,
in which they challenged the validity of
certain provisions of the subscription agreement (the 2016 action).
They specifically
sought an order that they were entitled to dispose
of their shares without the selling restrictions. In 2018, the 2016
action was
removed from the pre-trial roll for purpose of settlement
negotiations. It has not been re-enrolled and is still pending.
[8]
In 2017, Coral sought to sell 3 360 830 of its CPI shares
to a subsidiary
of a 100 per cent black-owned company called
Petratouch (Pty) Ltd (the 2017 Petratouch transaction). It involved
numerous parties
and the transaction was embodied in numerous
agreements. By then, Capitec’s relationship with the appellants
had deteriorated.
At the time the appellants had remained invested in
Capitec for over 10 years and had already fully repaid the funding
for the
CPI shares provided by the IDC. The CPI shares were thus
fully owned by the appellants without any residual financial
obligations
to third parties.
[9]
Consistent with the practice adopted by the parties in the previous
transactions,
Coral sought Capitec’s consent for the 2017
Petratouch Transaction. Capitec agreed, subject to certain
conditions, inter
alia, that Petratouch could only sell the CPI
shares to people who are black persons approved by Capitec in
writing, and further
that the purchaser had to enter into a written
agreement with Capitec on substantially the same terms. Coral
accepted the conditions
and sold the CPI shares to Petratouch. One of
the agreements constituting the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was the
consent agreement
entered into between Capitec and the appellants,
which contains the
pactum
.
[10]
After the 2017 Petratouch Transaction, Coral held 1 354 435
CPI shares. In 2019 Coral
sought to dispose of 810 230 CPI
shares to the Transnet Second Defined Benefit Fund. When Capitec was
called upon to consent
to the sale, it refused. The appellants
launched an urgent application seeking to declare the refusal of
consent to be in breach
of Capitec’s duty of good faith to the
appellants. It is in this application that Capitec, for the first
time, indicated
that clause 8.3 of the subscription agreement did not
require Capitec’s consent to sell the CPI shares and did not
entitle
Capitec to impose further restrictions on a sale of CPI
shares by Coral.
[11]
On 19 June 2020 the appellants instituted the 2020 action against
Capitec. They claimed, in broad
terms, that, but for Capitec’s
conduct, Coral would not have concluded the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction at a discount of 52
per cent to the prevailing 30-day
weighted
average,
amounting to a loss of R 1,225 billion. This led to the application
before the high court that is the subject of this appeal.
Capitec’s
main claim in the high court was that the 2020 action should be
withdrawn because the appellants agreed in clause
7.1.6.2 of the
consent agreement not to institute legal proceedings against Capitec
in which they sought to use or rely upon the
2017 Petratouch
Transaction or any part of it.
[5]
[12]
Before the hearing of the application in the high court, Capitec
filed its plea in the 2020 action.
In the plea Capitec raised special
defences which were similar to the objections in its application. It
also pleaded to the merits
of the 2020 action.
Agreement
not to sue
[13]
Capitec’s consent to the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was
embodied in the written consent
agreement, entered into between
Capitec and the appellants. The purpose of the consent agreement was
for Capitec to waive various
rights in connection with the selling
restrictions imposed in terms of the subscription agreement so that
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction
could proceed. Without these waivers,
which Capitec was not obliged to make, the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction would have breached
the selling restrictions in the
subscription agreement. Because of certain concerns (dealt with
below), Capitec proposed the inclusion
of the
pactum
in the
consent agreement, to which the appellants agreed. It is necessary to
quote the clause containing the
pactum
in extenso:
‘
7.1
Each of Ash Brook and Coral hereby give the following warranties to
Capitec Holdings.
…………
7.1.6
it shall not and shall procure that its related and inter-related
persons (as defined in the Companies Act) do not:
7.1.6.1
directly or indirectly use or rely on the Transaction (or any part
thereof) or any of the Transaction Agreements in the
Legal
Proceedings or any other legal proceedings related thereto or flowing
therefrom: and/or
7.1.6.2
directly or indirectly institute any legal proceedings against
Capitec Holdings and/or any of its subsidiaries (as defined
in the
Companies Act), whether as plaintiff, applicant, defendant,
respondent or otherwise, wherein it seeks to use or rely upon
the
Transaction (or any part thereof).
(Transaction
warranties)’.
It
is common cause that the word ‘Transaction’ in the
clauses above refers to the 2017 Petratouch Transaction and that
‘Legal Proceedings’ refers to the 2016 action.
The
interpretation of clauses 7.1.6.1 and 7.1.6.2
[14]
The appellants contend that clauses 7.1.6.1 and 7.1.6.2 are
warranties that do not give rise
to the rights and obligations that
Capitec contends for. It is submitted that the only basis for the
inclusion of the clauses was
to protect Capitec in the 2016 action.
[15]
It is trite that interpretation is, generally speaking, an objective
process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, read
in the context of the document as a whole and having regard to the
apparent purpose of the words.
[6]
It is a unitary exercise which must be approached holistically:
simultaneously
considering the text, context and purpose.
[7]
In
addition, extrinsic evidence may be admitted as relevant to context
and purpose
.
[8]
[16]
The point of departure in interpreting the subject clauses is the
text. The introductory words in Clause 7.1.6, read with 7.1.6.1
and
7.1.6.2, make clear that the institution of legal proceedings by
Coral and Ash Brook and its related entities against Capitec
are not
permitted under two distinct circumstances. Clause 7.1.6.1 is
specifically directed to the 2016 action. It stipulates that
the
appellants (and its related and inter-related persons) shall not use
or rely on the 2017 Petratouch Transaction in the 2016
action or any
other legal proceedings related to the 2016 action. Clause 7.1.6.2 is
framed in wider terms. It applies not only
to the 2016 action but to
any
legal proceedings
against Capitec where the appellants seek to use or rely upon the
2017 Petratouch Transaction. The singular purpose of the words
used
in clause 7.1.6.2 is clearly to prevent the appellants from
instituting any future legal proceedings against Capitec in which
it
seeks to use or rely upon the 2017 Petratouch Transaction.
[17]
The context in which the parties agreed to the
pactum
is similarly clear. In the introduction to the consent agreement, it
is recorded that the appellants and other parties had proposed
the
2017 Petratouch Transaction to Capitec (clause 1.2). Various steps in
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction required the consent
or approval of
Capitec in terms of the subscription agreement (clause 1.3). The
parties requested Capitec to consent to those steps
(clause 1.3).
Capitec was willing to provide that consent on the terms and subject
to the conditions in the consent agreement (clause
1.4). Clause 7.1.6
then addressed Capitec’s two main concerns: Clause 7.1.6.1
prevents the appellants from using or relying
upon the 2017
Petratouch Transaction in the 2016 action; and clause 7.1.6.2
prevents the appellants from instituting any other
legal proceedings
in which it will use or rely upon the 2017 Petratouch Transaction.
Clause 7.1.6.2 clearly does not refer to the
2016 action.
[18]
The appellants contend that on the assumption that clause 7.1.6.2
only applies to new litigation
in which it seeks to escape ‘from
the selling restrictions’, it is not triggered by the 2020
action as the 2020 action
does not relate to the ‘selling
restrictions’. In support of this contention the appellants
refer to Capitec’s
founding affidavit in which it stated that
at the time the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was concluded, it was
‘concerned that
[the appellants] intended to use the 2017
Petratouch Transaction to either support that litigation, or to
institute new litigation
in which it sought to escape from the
Selling Restrictions’.
[19]
The passage in the founding affidavit referred to above is not the
only
instance
in
the founding affidavit where Capitec explained the reason for the
inclusion of the
pactum
.
Capitec also averred that it gave its consent for the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction only because it knew that the appellants could
not
subsequently hold the 2017 Petratouch Transaction against it in
litigation. Clause 7.1.6. catered for both the 2016 action
(which
attacks the selling restrictions directly) and any legal proceedings
other than, and in addition to, the 2016 action.
[20]
The context established that Capitec agreed to give its consent to
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction
only if the appellants agreed not to
use or rely on the 2017 Petratouch Transaction or any part thereof
against Capitec in the
2016 action or any other legal proceedings
which they might institute against Capitec.
Is
clause 7.1.6.2 a warranty?
[21]
Clause 7, in which the
pactum
is located, is headed
‘Warranties, representations and undertakings by Ash Brook and
Coral’. In Clause 7.1 it is recorded
that ‘Ash Brook and
Coral hereby give the following “warranties” to Capitec
Holdings’. Clause 7.1.1 to
7.1.6 are also referred to in the
agreement as ‘Transaction Warranties’. Clause 7.3 further
states that the ‘transaction
warranties are a material
representation inducing Capitec Holdings to enter into this
Agreement’.
[22]
The appellants contend that clause 7.1.6.2, properly interpreted, is
a warranty that ‘reflected
a position at the time the consent
agreement was concluded’. The appellants submit the purpose of
the clause was limited
and does not give rise to legally enforceable
rights and obligations beyond those specified in clause 7.4 which
provides:
‘
If
Ash Brook or Coral breach any of the Transaction Warranties, then
Capitec Holdings shall be entitled to immediately without having
to
give notice as envisaged in clause 11, upon written notice to the
other Parties and without prejudice to any other remedies
Capitec
Holdings may be entitled in law, forthwith revoke all or any of the
consents, approvals, undertakings and confirmations
envisaged in
clause 6
ab
initio
,
and/or exercise its rights pursuant to the Mandatory Acquisition
Option and/or the Repurchase option as the case may be.’
At
most, so it is argued, a breach of a warranty would give rise to a
damages action, and not the ‘drastic remedy’ granted
by
the high court. In support of their argument the appellants rely,
inter alia, on
Absa
Bank v Swanepoel
.
[9]
In that matter Cameron JA emphasised that not all terms in a contract
create enforceable rights and obligations. He remarked that
to
establish whether a clause has an operational effect ‘depends
on what it says within its context in the contract, against
the
background in which the parties concluded it’.
[23]
Although clause 7.1.6.2 is referred to as a ‘warranty’ in
the consent agreement,
there is no magic in the contractual
terminology. As remarked by Hoexter JA in
Resisto
Dairy v Auto Protection Insurance Co
:
[10]
‘
The
terms of the contract cannot be changed into suspensive conditions
merely by calling them conditions precedent. A term of the
contract
may be so material that a breach of it will entitle the other party
to repudiate the contract, and in the present case
the parties have
used the words “conditions precedent to any liability” to
indicate that the so-called conditions are
material terms of the
contract.’
[11]
[24]
In
Parsons
Transport (Pty) Ltd v Global Insurance Ltd
[12]
this
Court had to interpret certain clauses in an insurance contract. In
dealing with the ‘warranties’, Mpati DP applied
the
approach adopted in
Resisto
Dairy,
and
held that they were material terms of the contract and did not
‘become warranties merely because they are referred to
as
warranties in the schedule’.
[13]
In
Protea
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Boundary Financing Ltd (formerly known
as International Bank of Southern Africa Ltd) and Others,
[14]
Griesel J
said:
'In
the final analysis, there is no unanimity among the authorities as to
what the expression "warranty" connotes, save
that it is a
contractual term. It accordingly becomes necessary, as pointed out by
Farlam JA in
Masterspice
(Pty) Ltd v Broszeit
Investments
CC,
"in
every case where the expression is used, to exam
ine
the terms of the contract in question closely in order to endeavour
to ascertain in what sense the parties have used it".
(Footnotes
omitted)
[25]
Warranties, in the narrow sense, can give rise to contractual
remedies if they were intended
to do so. But, depending on the
context, they can also be used in a wider sense to mean
contractual
undertakings.
[15]
I have already dealt with the context in which the
pactum
was included in the consent agreement. Clause 7.1.6.2 was clearly
intended to create obligations and afford rights and remedies.
This
is made clear by clause 7.4. Clause 7.1.6.2 is not a warranty in the
true sense of the word, ie a representation about a past
or present
state of affairs.
[16]
It is about how the appellants warrant or undertake that they shall
not conduct themselves in future.
It
is a contractual undertaking. This interpretation is fortified by the
use in the heading to clause 7 of the word ‘undertakings’.
Breach of the
consent agreement
[26]
The claim against Capitec in the 2020 action is based on four causes
of action, which are all
framed in the alternative. Capitec’s
synopsis of the four claims can be summarized as follows:
1.
Claim
A: This is a contractual claim for damages based on a breach of duty
of reasonableness and good faith allegedly owed in terms
of the
subscription agreement, alternatively the common law duty of good
faith, and what the appellants described as the duty to
achieve BEE.
It is alleged that Capitec breached these duties by imposing a
condition that its consent be obtained for the 2017
Petratouch
Transaction, which caused Coral to sell its CPI shares at a discount.
2.
Claim
B: This is a delictual claim for damages based on an alleged grossly
negligent and/or fraudulent material misrepresentation
by Capitec
that the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was conditional upon Capitec’s
consent.
3.
Claim
C: This is a delictual claim for damages based on pure economic loss
allegedly suffered by Coral as a result of Capitec’s
breach of
duty to ‘not engage in conduct that diminished or reduced the
value of [Coral’s and Ash Brook’s] proprietary
interest
in the [Capitec] shares’. Capitec allegedly breached this duty
by facilitating the 2017 Petratouch Transaction.
4.
Claim
D: This is a statutory claim for damages based on an allegation that
Capitec engaged in a fronting practice in contravention
of the B-BBEE
Act, which amounted to conduct or the conducting of Capitec’s
business in a manner that is oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to,
or that unfairly disregards the interests of Coral in terms of
s
163(1)(a)
and (b) of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
or which amounted
to unfair discrimination on the basis of race as contemplated in
s 7
of the Promotion of Equality and the Prevention of Unfair
Discrimination Act 4 of 2000. Capitec allegedly engaged in a fronting
practice by requiring the appellants to sell their sale shares at a
discount.
[27]
It is clear from the above that the appellants ‘use or rely on’
the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction in support of their claims. But, if
there was any doubt, the following paragraphs in the particulars of
claim, describing
the conduct causing loss, make it plain:
‘
96.
At the time of the 2017 Petratouch Transaction, Capitec maintained
that Coral was prohibited from disposing of its CPI shares
without
Capitec’s consent.
97.
As a condition for granting its consent, Capitec required that Coral
could only sell its CPI shares subject to the requirement
of
Capitec’s consent as to the identity of the purchaser and the
terms on which the sale takes place, including subjecting
the Sale
Shares to further restrictive conditions as a condition of its
consent as reflected in the Framework Agreement, the Capitec
Consent
Agreement and the Relationship Agreement to persuade BidCo to
conclude the transaction.
[17]
98.
At the time of imposing this condition, Capitec knew or would have
known with the exercise of reasonable care, that imposing
this
condition would have the effect of the Black shareholders having to
sell the Sale Shares at a significant discount of 52%
of their market
value, given the highly restrictive nature of the restrictive
conditions.
104.
But for Capitec’s conduct in breach of one or more of the legal
duties pleaded below, Coral would not have concluded
the 2017
Petratouch Transaction and would have been able to sell its CPI
shares to any Black purchaser at a discount of at most
5% of the
value of the Sale Shares.’
[28]
To finally test if the claims in the 2020 action contravene clause
7.1.6.2, is to ask whether
they can be sustained without using or
relying upon the 2017 Petratouch Transaction. The answer is no. The
institution of the 2020
action clearly breached the undertaking not
to sue.
Remedy
The
nature of a pactum de non petendo in anticipando
[29]
A
pactum
de non petendo in anticipando
forms part of our law.
[18]
It is a contractual undertaking not to institute an action. The
appellants contend that our courts have recognised such a
pactum
only (a) as a defence and (b) to grant a temporary stay of
proceedings to afford a debtor an opportunity to repay, alternatively
(c) as part of settling (compromising an already existing dispute).
[30]
A
pactum
is
an agreement like any other. It is a contract that gives rise to
rights and correlative duties. The nature of the right in question
varies from case to case and is dependent on the text and the facts.
Although the court in
Miller
v Dannecker
[19]
held that the
pactum
merely suspends the enforcement of a contract, usually for a specific
period or until the occurrence of some contingency, the court
in that
matter was dealing with a
pactum
that was temporary. In the present matter the limitation of the right
not to be sued is not linked to time. The
pactum
in the present matter is one operating in perpetuity.
[20]
Van
Zyl
makes it clear that there is no bar in our law to such a
pactum
.
[21]
Formulations emphasising time limitation or contingency aspects
cannot therefore be said to mean that such features are requirements
for a
pactum
to be valid.
Specific
performance
[31]
The law on specific performance is well established. Injured parties
have the right of election
whether to hold the parties in breach to
their contract and claim performance by them for precisely what they
had bound themselves
to do, or to claim damages for the breach.
[22]
It is in the court’s discretion to award specific performance.
The discretion must be exercised judicially upon a consideration
of
all relevant facts.
[23]
The ultimate principle is that the order which the court makes should
not produce an unjust result such as in a situation where
it is
impossible for the appellants to comply with the order or if the
order would operate unduly harshly on the appellants.
[24]
[32]
The appellants contend that Capitec was not entitled to specific
performance. It was submitted that in the event of breach
of the
consent agreement Capitec could rescind the consent agreement or seek
damages. They rely on clause 7.4 of the consent agreement
(referred
to earlier), which they argue caters for the only remedies a party
can claim in the event of a breach.
[33]
Firstly, clause 7.4 expands, rather than
restricts, Capitec’s remedies. It specifically provides that
the remedies in 7.4 are ‘without prejudice to any other
remedies to which Capitec Holdings may be entitled in law’.
Secondly, it is not clear what damages Capitec would be able to claim
in these circumstances. The appellants were unable to identify
any.
Thirdly, specific performance in the present matter is possible and
is not unprecedented. In
Rayden
v Hurwitz
[25]
the court granted an order that an action be withdrawn on the basis
of a similar provision in an agreement.
[34]
Capitec has the right to not be sued by the appellants where they use
or rely upon the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction. The appellants breached
the
pactum
by instituting the 2020 action. Under the
circumstances there is no reason why Capitec cannot enforce the
pactum
by instituting application proceedings aimed at
compelling the appellants to comply and withdraw the 2020 action. The
only issue
is whether the ordering of specific performance in the
circumstances of this case would result in an injustice. To answer
this
question, it is necessary to deal with the appellants’
claim that the high court should not have enforced clause 7.1.6.2
because it would be contrary to public policy.
The
enforceability of the
pactum
[35]
The appellants made two main submissions: first,
that a constitutional right cannot be waived, and second,
that the
pactum
is against public policy.
Waiver
[36]
Section 34 of the Constitution provides that everyone has the right
to have any dispute that
can be resolved by the application of law
decided in a fair public hearing before a court or, where
appropriate, another independent
and impartial tribunal or forum. The
issue whether this right can be waived was addressed in
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates Pty Ltd v Andrews
(
Lufuno
).
[26]
That matter concerned whether parties to arbitration agreements could
waive their right to a fair hearing. The majority held that
where
parties agree to arbitrate, they arguably do not so much as waive
their s 34 rights as simply agree not to exercise them.
O’Regan
ADCJ, speaking for the majority said:
‘
If
we understand section 34 not to be directly applicable to private
arbitration, the effect of a person choosing private arbitration
for
the resolution of a dispute is not that they have waived their
rights under section 34. They have instead chosen not to
exercise
their right under section 34. I do not think, therefore, that the
language of waiver used by both the European Court of
Human Rights
in
Suovaniemi
and
by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Telcordia
is
apt. Indeed, it may not be apt in relation to constitutional rights
at all, but that is a topic for another day.’
[27]
[37]
The high court applied
Lufuno
and found that the concept of waiver did not arise. It held that the
appellants were fully informed of their rights and elected
voluntarily to consent to the terms of the subject clause. It then
proceeded with an enquiry to establish whether clause 7.1.6.2
was
inconsistent with public policy. The high court cannot be faulted in
its approach. The proper inquiry in the present matter
is to
determine whether the subject clause or its enforcement is consistent
with public policy.
[28]
Public
policy
[38]
In
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others,
[29]
the
Constitutional Court held that public policy is the basis on which
courts may decline to enforce contractual terms where the
term itself
or its enforcement would be contrary to public policy.
[30]
Public policy requires in general that parties should comply with
contractual obligations that have been freely and voluntarily
undertaken. This is neither the only nor the most important
principle, but is a factor that gives effect to the central
constitutional
values of freedom and dignity and is essential to the
achievement of the constitutional vision of our society.
[31]
In determining what public policy requires, courts must conduct a
careful balancing exercise in which it has to ‘employ [the
Constitutional] values to achieve a balance that strikes down the
unacceptable excesses of “freedom of contract”, while
seeking to permit individuals the dignity and autonomy of regulating
their own lives’.
[32]
This includes a consideration of various factors, including, but not
limited to, whether the parties negotiated with equal bargaining
power and whether they understood what they were agreeing to. This
much is accepted by the appellants.
[39]
Courts should use the power to invalidate a
contract or not to enforce it sparingly and only in the clearest
of
cases.
[33]
This principle of perceptive restraint has been endorsed by the
Constitutional Court subject to the caveat that the degree of
restraint to be exercised must be balanced against the backdrop of
our constitutional rights and values.
[34]
The principle of perceptive restraint flows from the underlying
principle that contracts that are freely and voluntarily entered
into
should be honoured.
[35]
Is
Clause 7.1.6.2 consistent with public policy?
[40]
The appellants submit that clause 7.1.6.2 ousts their right to access
to court. In general, with
reference to, amongst others,
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[36]
and
Schierhout
v Minister of Justice,
[37]
they
contend that a litigant will always be entitled, even at common law,
to an adequate and fair opportunity to seek judicial redress
and that
it would be contrary to public policy to enforce a clause that does
not afford such an opportunity.
[41]
The appellants bear the burden of showing that
clause 7.1.6.2 or its enforcement would be contrary to public
policy.
[38]
The appellants allege that it would be unfair to enforce the clause
because Capitec was a central participant in the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction and its enforcement will have the effect that the
appellants will not be able to exercise their s 34 rights of access
to courts. They further contend that their status as BEE shareholders
is relevant; that Capitec owed them a duty to protect the
value of
their shares; and they had no commercial power to prevent Capitec’s
alleged abuse of clause 8.3 of the subscription
agreement.
[42]
The following factors are instructive. Firstly, in clause 9 of the
consent agreement it was agreed
that the parties were ‘free to
secure independent legal and other professional advice (including
financial and taxation advice)
as to the nature and effect of all the
provisions of the consent agreement and the other Transaction
Agreements’. The appellants
did just that. They were legally
represented at the time of the negotiation and conclusion of the 2017
Petratouch Transaction.
In fact, they obtained substantial
independent professional and legal advice spending over R16 million.
[43]
Secondly, the parties to the consent agreement were all experienced
business people who engaged
in detailed and complex negotiations over
a period of time. They themselves shared Capitec’s belief that
its consent for
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was legally required.
They specifically agreed in clause 9.3.1 and 9.3.2 that: (a) They had
not
placed any reliance upon any view expressed by any other party,
except those express representations, warranties, covenants,
undertakings
and agreements set forth in the consent agreement and
the other Transaction Agreements to which it is or will become a
party; (b)
The terms and conditions of the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction were fair and reasonable in all the circumstances and
were in accordance
with the parties’ commercial intentions; and
(c) They had the necessary sophistication, knowledge and experience
in financial
and business matters and were capable of evaluating the
merits, risk and suitability of entering into the consent agreement.
There
is no indication on the facts that the parties did not have
equal bargaining power.
[44]
Thirdly, there are no special rules that apply to contracts designed
to promote black economic
empowerment. In
Beadica
the
contract under scrutiny was part of an empowerment scheme and
enforcing it would lead to the failure of a publicly funded BEE
initiative. The Constitutional Court held that carving out special
rules for BEE contracts would:
‘
.
. . increase
the
risk of contracting with historically disadvantaged persons who
benefit from the Fund. If the applicants were to succeed,
it would
establish the legal principle that enforcement of a contractual term
would be inimical to the constitutional value of
equality, and
therefore contrary to public policy, where enforcement would result
in the failure of a black economic empowerment
initiative. This
could, in turn, deter other parties from electing to contract with
beneficiaries of the Fund, or force beneficiaries
to offset the
increased risk by making concessions on other contractual aspects
during contract negotiations. These outcomes would,
in effect,
undermine the very objects that the Fund and section 9(2) seek to
achieve’.
[39]
[45]
The fact that the appellants are BEE shareholders of Capitec is
therefore irrelevant. They were
fully advised, fully informed,
believed the terms were reasonable and freely relinquished the right
not to institute legal proceedings
in which they use or rely on the
2017 Petratouch Transaction, in return for Capitec’s consent to
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction.
[46]
Fourthly, the
pactum
was concluded in a particular context for
a specific legitimate reason. Coral required the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction to settle
a substantial tax liability to SARS and to
enable 71,3 per cent of Ash Brook’s shareholders to exit the
consortium. Coral
chose to sell to Petratouch at the sale price with
the result that R975 287 684 was paid out to the existing
shareholders.
At all material times, Mr Tshepo Mahloele was a
director of both Coral
and
Petratouch. At the time of the 2017
Petratouch Transaction the appellants had already instituted the 2016
action in which they
had sued Capitec over the legality of the
selling restrictions in the subscription agreement. Capitec was
concerned that the appellants
intended to use the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction to either support that litigation or to institute new
litigation in which it sought
to escape from the selling
restrictions. But it did not want to stand in the way of a deal
between the appellants and Petratouch.
It therefore proposed the
inclusion of the
pactum
in the consent agreement, to protect
its interests, which the appellants agreed to. The appellants
determined that the benefit that
they would obtain from concluding
the 2017 Petratouch Transaction was worth the cost of agreeing not to
sue Capitec. Capitec was
not a party to the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction, it did not initiate the transaction nor did it directly
benefit from it. As for
the alleged duty owed to the appellants, no
basis for such a duty was established by the appellants.
[47]
Lastly, the clause does not prevent the appellants from suing Capitec
for breach of the consent
agreement, or for matters unrelated to the
2017 Petratouch Transaction. This is expressly set out in clause 7.2:
‘
For
the avoidance of doubt, it is recorded that the provisions of clause
7.1.6 do not apply to a cause of action or claim resulting
or arising
from a breach by Capitec Holdings of any of the provisions of this
Agreement, and shall not preclude another Party from
instituting
legal proceedings against Capitec Holdings in order for that Party to
enforce compliance by Capitec Holdings with any
of the provisions of
this Agreement.’
What
they agreed not to do was ‘use or rely upon the 2017 Petratouch
Transaction’ to sue Capitec outside such a breach.
The
pactum
went no further than was necessary to prevent very specific
litigation. As such it is a limited and reasonable restriction on the
appellants’ ability to litigate.
[48]
Agreements not to litigate are not necessarily unreasonable.
Most
agreements of compromise,
in which one party settles a claim against the other, as a matter of
course entails an agreement by one party not to institute
or persist
with the same proceedings against the other party in the future. Each
case must be assessed on its own terms undertaking
the enquiry set
out in
Barkhuizen.
On
the facts in the present matter the
pactum
is consistent with public policy. In the premises, the appellants’
counter application was correctly dismissed.
[49]
The subscription agreement and the consent agreement provide that
costs will be recoverable on an attorney and own client scale.
There
is no reason why such costs,
including
the costs of two counsel, should not follow the result.
[50]
In the result the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs on an attorney and client scale,
including the costs of two counsel.
L
WINDELL
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellants:
I V Maleka SC with T Scott
Instructed
by:
Mkhabela Huntley Attorneys Incorporated,
Johannesburg
McIntyre van der Post, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: A M
Breitenbach SC with M Bishop and P Wainwright
Instructed
by:
Van der Spuy, Cape Town
Hill McHardy & Herbst Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
There were also
other parties to the consent agreement namely K2017134938 (South
Africa) (Pty) Ltd (Bidco) and CB Employee Holdings
(Pty) Ltd.
[2]
The
South
African
Financial Sector Charter is a
transformation
charter
in
terms of the
Broad-Based
Black Economic Empowerment
(B-BBEE) Act 53 of 2003. The
Charter came into effect in January 2004.
[3]
Codes of Good
Practice on Black Economic Empowerment published in General Notice
112 in
Government
Gazette
29617
of 9 February 2007, as amended from time to time.
[4]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA).
[5]
Capitec
also sought alternative relief, directing the appellants to refer
their claims for arbitration.
[6]
Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para [18].
[7]
University of
Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021]
ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) para [65].
[8]
Footnote
1 para 47. Unterhalter AJA remarked, that ‘reasonable
disagreements as to the relevance of such evidence should
favour
admitting the evidence and the weight of the evidence may then be
considered. It is this enquiry into relevance that will
determine
the admissibility of the evidence’.
[9]
ABSA Bank Ltd v
Swanepoel
[2004] ZASCA 60
;
2004 (6) SA 178
(SCA) paras 6-8.
[10]
Resisto
Dairy v Auto Protection Insurance Co
1963 (1) SA 632 (A).
[11]
Ibid
at 644F-G.
[12]
[2005] ZASCA 95.
[13]
Ibid para [7].
[14]
Protea Property
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Boundary Financing Ltd (formerly known as
International Bank of Southern Africa Ltd) &
Others
[2007] ZAWCHC 39;
2008
(3) SA 33 (C)
para 39.
[15]
See Wessels:
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
2
ed Vol 2 paras 3044 and 3049.
[16]
Lewis Ltd v
Norwich Union Fire Insurance Co
1916
AD 509
.
[17]
The
particulars of claim define “Sale Shares” as meaning the
shares sold by Coral in the 2017 Petratouch Transaction.
[18]
Miller v
Dannecker
2001 (1) SA 928
(C);
Tuning
Fork (Pty) Ltd t/a Balanced Audio v Greeff and Another
[2014] ZAWCHC 78
;
2014 (4) SA 521
(WCC) para 43 (iv).
[19]
Ibid at 937A-B.
[20]
Van Zyl v Auto
Commodities (Pty) Ltd
[2021]
ZASCA 67
;
2021 (5) SA 171
SCA.
[21]
Ibid para 32.
[22]
Benson v SA
Mutual Life Assurance Society
[1985] ZASCA 114; 1986 (1) SA 776 (A).
[23]
Ibid at 783C.
[24]
Ibid at 783 E-G.
[25]
Rayden v
Hurwitz
1932 CPD 336.
[26]
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
[2009]
ZACC 6; 2009 (4) SA 529 (CC).
[27]
Ibid
para 216. See also
Schoombee
and Another v S
[2016]
ZACC 50
;
2017 (2) SACR 1
(CC);
2017 (5) BCLR 572
(CC)
para
25.
[28]
See
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
CC.
[29]
Beadica 231 CC
and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust and
Others
[2020]
ZACC 13
(
Beadica
);
2020 (5) SA 247
CC.
[30]
Beadica
para 80.
[31]
Ibid paras 57 and
87.
[32]
Ibid para 71.
[33]
AB v Pridwin
Preparatory School
[2018] ZASCA 150
;
2019 (1) SA 327
(SCA) para 27.
[34]
Footnote 28 paras
88-90.
[35]
Ibid
para 89.
[36]
Barkhuizen v
Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
CC (
Barkhuizen
).
[37]
Schierhout v
Minister of Justice
1926 AD 99.
[38]
Barkhuizen
para 58 and
Pridwin
para 27 (iv).
[39]
Beadica
para 101.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Islandsite Investments (Pty) Ltd v The National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (894/2022) [2023] ZASCA 166; 2024 (5) SA 20 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 166Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Msimbithi Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v African Legend Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (628/2023) [2025] ZASCA 61; [2025] 3 All SA 613 (SCA) (14 May 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 61Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 48Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Tsogo Sun Caledon (Pty) Ltd and Others v Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board and Another (89/2021) [2022] ZASCA 102; 2023 (2) SA 305 (SCA) (24 June 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 102Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Strategic Partners Group (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Liquidators of Ilima Group (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) and Others (1291/2021) [2023] ZASCA 27; [2023] 2 All SA 658 (SCA) (24 March 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 27Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar