Case Law[2022] ZASCA 180South Africa
Millenium Aluminium and Glass Services CC and Others v Group Five Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (693/2021) [2022] ZASCA 180 (14 December 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 December 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Construction guarantee – whether the requirements were met - insurer’s obligation to pay – failure by the subcontractor to pay the certified payment advice triggers insurer’s liability to pay – terms of the guarantee met.
Judgment
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## Millenium Aluminium and Glass Services CC and Others v Group Five Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (693/2021) [2022] ZASCA 180 (14 December 2022)
Millenium Aluminium and Glass Services CC and Others v Group Five Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (693/2021) [2022] ZASCA 180 (14 December 2022)
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sino date 14 December 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case
no: 693/2021
In
the matter between:
MILLENIUM
ALUMINIUM AND GLASS SERVICES CC
FIRST APPELLANT
MOHANLALL
BRIDGENUN
SECOND APPELLANT
FAST
TRACK CONTRACTING AFRICA (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
and
GROUP
FIVE CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
CONSTANTIA
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Millenium
Aluminium and Glass Services CC and Others v Group Five Construction
(Pty) Ltd and Another
(693/2021)
[2022]
ZASCA 180
(14 December 2022)
Coram:
ZONDI and MOTHLE JJA and NHLANGULELA, SALIE-HLOPHE
and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
22 November 2022
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 11:00
am on 14 December 2022.
Summary:
Construction guarantee – whether
the requirements were met - insurer’s obligation to pay –
failure by the subcontractor
to pay the certified payment advice
triggers insurer’s liability to pay – terms of the
guarantee met.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Matojane J, sitting as court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Zondi
JA (Mothle JA and Nhlangulela, Salie-Hlophe and Siwendu AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The first respondent, Group Five Construction (Pty) Ltd (Group Five
Construction),
had, in the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg (the high court), claimed payment of an amount of
R1 490 364.09
including interest and costs, from the second
respondent, Constantia Insurance Company Limited (Constantia) and the
first appellant,
Millenium Aluminium and Glass Services CC
(Millenium), in terms of the guarantee.
[2]
Subsequently, Constantia had, by way of a third party notice
procedure,
sought and obtained from the high court an order joining
Millenium, Mr Mohanlall Bridgenun, the second appellant, and Fast
Track
Contracting Africa (Pty) Ltd (Fast Track), the third appellant,
as third parties on the basis of the indemnity and the deed of
suretyship signed by these third parties in favour of Constantia.
[3]
Millenium’s defence was that Group Five Construction did not
comply
with the terms of the guarantee when it demanded payment from
Constantia, because it presented Constantia with a payment advice
which did not, on its face, entitle Group Five Construction to
receive payment in terms of agreement.
[4]
The high
court ordered Constantia to pay Group Five Construction the amount
claimed, together with interest and costs. It also granted
relief in
a dispute between Constantia and Millenium which did not concern
Group Five Construction.
[1]
The
appeal is before this Court with the leave of the high court and is
directed at paragraphs 3-7 of the high court order.
[5]
The relevant parts of the high court order read as follows:
‘
3.
The First Respondent is ordered
to make payment to the Applicant in the amount of R1 419
364.09.
4.
The first respondent is
ordered to pay applicant's costs.
5.
It is declared that the
third parties are obliged, jointly and severally, to indemnify
Constantia Insurance Company Limited (“Constantia”) from
the demand made on Guarantee 117929J by Group Five Construction
Proprietary Limited (in business rescue) (“Group Five”).
6.
The third parties, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved,
are ordered
to pay Constantia the sum of R 1 419 364.09 together with interest at
a rate of 10% per annum from 18 May 2020 to date
of final payment.
7.
The third parties pay all
costs, on an attorney and client scale, incurred by Constantia
in
resisting Group Five's claim against it and pursuing the third party
proceedings against the third parties.’
[6]
The issue therefore is whether Group Five Construction in making a
demand
on the guarantee complied with its requirements. The facts
within which the issue must be determined are the following. During
or about 26 May 2015, Group Five Construction was appointed as a
building contractor to carry out a project in Durban known as Pearls
of Umhlanga – Pearl Sky. Group Five Coastal (Pty) Ltd (Group
Five Coastal), acting as an agent of Group Five Construction,
appointed Millenium as a subcontractor to carry out the design,
supply and installation of the residential windows and shopfronts
at
the sub-contract sum of R20 750 937 excluding VAT. The
sub-contract sum was fixed and not subject to contract price
adjustment for the duration of the contract. In terms of the letter
of appointment, it was agreed that the contractual relationship
between Group Five Construction and Millenium would be governed by
the provisions of the JBCC Series 2000 Nominated/Selected
Sub-contract
Agreement, edition 5.0, 2007.
[7]
As part of
Millenium’s contractual obligations, it was required to provide
and maintain performance guarantees in favour of
Group Five
Construction. Millenium obtained and provided a guarantee
[2]
from Constantia. The relevant terms of the guarantee are as follows:
‘
N/S CONSTRUCTION
GUARANTEE NO. 117929J
for use with the
JBCC Nominated/Selected
Sub-Contract Agreement
JBCC SERIES 2000
GUARANTOR
DETAILS AND DEFINITIONS
Guarantor
means
:
CONSTANTIA INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
(Reg. No. 1952/001514/06)
.
. .
Contractor
means
:
GROUP
FIVE COASTAL (PTY) LTD ACTING AS AGENTS
FOR GROUP FIVE
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
(Reg. No. 1974/003166/07)
Subcontractor
mean :
MILLENIUM ALUMINIUM
& GLASS SERVICES CC
(Reg. No. 2006/140485/23)
.
. .
Works
means
:
PEARL
SKY – SUPPLY AND INSTALLATION OF
RESIDENTIAL WINDOWS &
SHOPFRONTS
.
. .
Agreement
means the JBCC Series 2000 Nominated/Selected Subcontract Agreement
.
. .
3.1
Any reference in this Guarantee to the Agreement is made for the
purpose of convenience
and shall not be construed as any intention
whatsoever to create an accessory obligation or any intention
whatsoever to create
a suretyship.’
Clause
3.1 of the guarantee makes it clear that the reference in the
guarantee to the agreement should not be construed as an intention
to
create ‘an accessory obligation’ or ‘to create a
suretyship’.
[8]
Clause 4 regulates the circumstances under which Constantia would
become
obliged to honour the guarantee. It provides as follows:
‘
4.
Subject to the Guarantor’s maximum liability referred to in
clause 1. above,
the Guarantor hereby undertakes to pay the
Contractor the sum certified upon receipt of the documents identified
in clauses 4.1
to 4.3 below.
4.1
A copy of a first written demand issued by the Contractor to the
Subcontractor stating that
payment of a sum certified by the
Contractor in a payment advice has not been made in terms of the
Agreement and failing such payment
within seven (7) calendar days,
the Contractor intends to call upon the Guarantor to make payment in
terms of clause 4.2.
4.2
A first written demand issued by the Contractor to the Guarantor at
the Guarantor’s
domicilium citandi et executandi
with a
copy to the Subcontractor stating that a period of seven (7) calendar
days has elapsed since the first written demand in
terms of clause
4.1 and the sum certified has still not been paid; therefore the
Contractor calls up this N/S Construction Guarantee
and demands
payment of the sum certified from the Guarantor.
4.3
A copy of the said payment advice which entitles the Contractor to
receive payment in terms
of the Agreement of the sum certified in
clause 4.’
Further,
clause 12 provides as follows:
‘
12.
This N/S Construction Guarantee, with the required demand notices in
terms of clauses 4. or 5.,
shall be regarded as a liquid document for
the purpose of obtaining a court order.’
[9]
On 25 April 2018, Group Five Coastal issued a payment certificate to
Millenium
confirming that it was indebted to it in the sum of
R12 239 967.24 and called upon it to pay the certified sum
within
twenty-one days. Millenium failed to pay. Pursuant to the
terms of clause 4.1 of the guarantee, on 18 May 2018, Group Five
Coastal
sent a written demand to Millenium calling on it to make
payment within seven days. The email sent to Millenium on 25 April
2018
was attached to this written demand. The payment certificate and
reconciliation statement which accompanied the demand was issued
by
Group Five Coastal under its new trading name, Group Five KZN (Pty)
Ltd (Group Five KZN).
[10]
When payment was not forthcoming pursuant to the written demand,
Group Five Coastal on
behalf of Group Five Construction on 28 May
2018, and in terms of clause 4.2 made a demand on Constantia.
Constantia refused to
pay and in consequence, on 22 October 2018,
Group Five Construction approached the high court seeking payment in
terms of the guarantee.
Constantia did not oppose the application. It
is not opposing this appeal and has filed a notice to abide.
[11]
Millenium opposed the application on two grounds. It contended that
no proper demand was
made by Group Five Construction on Constantia in
terms of the Construction Guarantee with the result that Millenium’s
obligation
to pay in terms of the indemnity in favour of Constantia
was not triggered. Millenium alleged that the payment certificate was
issued by Group Five KZN, an entity that was not a party to the
construction contract or the guarantee. It contended that the payment
advice was thus not a contractual document upon which Constantia
could rely. It argued that absent a payment advice entitling Group
Five Construction to receive payment, it was not entitled to call up
the guarantee, as the guarantee’s jurisdictional requirements
were not met.
[12]
The high court rejected Millenium’s argument. It held, among
other things, that Group
Five KZN is the same company as Group Five
Coastal, which it found was supported by the registration number
2002/011542/07 and
that it changed its name on 19 July 2010. It
reasoned that Group Five Coastal, acting as agents for Group Five
Construction, is
listed as a contractor in the guarantee and ‘any
instruction payment [advice] or other document issued by Group Five
Coastal
was done in its capacity as agents for Group Five
Construction (Pty) Ltd’. The high court accordingly concluded
that Group
Five Construction had presented the demand to Constantia
properly and had met all the jurisdictional requirements set out in
clause
4 of the guarantee.
[13]
Millennium
attacked the findings of the high court. Relying on
OK
Bazaars (1929) Ltd v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[3]
and
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
,
[4]
Millenium submitted that the high court erred in finding that the
call on the guarantee was lawful and valid in the circumstances
where
the payment advice and guarantee make no reference to Group Five KZN
or its registration number. It argued that those judgments
require
strict compliance with demand guarantees. Millenium submitted that
the absence of a payment certificate and reconciliation
statement in
the name of the contractor identified in the guarantee ought to have
been sufficient for the high court to find that
the requirements of
the guarantee were not met.
[14]
This
Court, in
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Brera Investments CC
,
[5]
had this to say regarding a guarantee:
‘
The
guarantee is thus of the same nature as a performance guarantee,
performance bond or letter of credit and consists of an undertaking
to make payment of an amount of money on the happening of a specified
event (see Cloete JA in
Dormell
Properties 282 CC v Renasa Insurance Co Ltd & others
[2011]
1 All SA 557
(SCA),
2011 (1) SA 70
para 61). A
guarantee of this nature must be paid according to its terms and
liability under it is not affected by the relationship
between other
parties to the transactions that gave rise to its issue, particularly
not with the question whether the sub-contractor
performed in terms
of his contract with the contractor (see
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd & others
2010
(2) SA 86
(SCA) paras 19 and 20;
Loomcraft
Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd
2010 (2)
SA 86
(SCA) para 38 and
Minister
of Transport and Public Works, Western Cape & another v Zanbuild
Construction (Pty) Ltd & another
2011
(5) SA 528
(SCA) paras 11-15). The words of the guarantee
under consideration make it clear that it is not a suretyship but an
independent,
and not accessory, agreement that must be performed
according to its terms (see also
Compass
Insurance Co Ltd v Hospitality Hotel Developments (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 537
(SCA) para 15).’
[15]
In
Schoeman
and Others v Lombard Insurance Co Ltd
,
[6]
a defence similar to the one raised by Millenium was raised. In
rejecting it, this Court held:
‘
The
argument proceeded from the basis that a demand guarantee was, like a
letter of credit, subject to strict and precise compliance
in all
respects. I am in agreement with Maier-Frawley AJ in the court below
that there is “little to gain from attempts to
divine the
essential distinction between letters of credit, on the one hand, and
demand guarantees, on the other”: the real
issue, which
involves an interpretation of this particular demand guarantee, is
“simply whether there was compliance with
the terms of the
guarantee under circumstances where the beneficiary’s demands
for payment were made to the guarantor at
its address, rather than at
the address of the beneficiary”.’
[16]
Accordingly, Millenium’s defence
should fail. As I see it, the issue is about the interpretation of
the demand guarantee and
the question is whether there was compliance
with the terms of the guarantee in circumstances where an entity
which made a demand
on guarantee is not the same as an entity that
issued a payment certificate and the reconciliation statement. Clause
4 of the guarantee
stipulates the requirements that should be met
first in order to establish the liability of guarantor under the
guarantee. Clause
4.1 states that there must be a first written
demand issued by the Contractor to the Subcontractor stating that the
payment of
a sum certified by the Contractor in a payment advice was
not made. The payment advice was issued by Group Five KZN (Group Five
Coastal), which was in terms of the guarantee the appointed Group
Five Construction’s agents. As required by clauses 4.2
and 4.3,
the payment advice which entitled Group Five Construction to receive
payment accompanied a demand on guarantee that was
made on Constantia
by Group Five Coastal.
[17]
Constantia was in no doubt about the
identity of the Contractor, because that was easily ascertainable
from the guarantee itself
which it had issued. The demands for
payment were made to Millenium and to Constantia on the basis of the
payment advice which
identified the contract in respect of which it
related, namely Pearls of Umhlanga – Pearls Sky. Millenium is
identified as
a subcontractor in the payment advice. The purpose of
the guarantee was to enable Group Five Construction to obtain payment
from
Constantia in the event of default by Millenium.
[18]
During argument, Millenium contended for
the first time that the high court erred in granting Group Five
Construction relief on
a copy of the guarantee which did not meet the
requirements of clause 12 of the Construction Guarantee. Clause 12 on
which Millenium
relies provides that the ‘N/S Construction
Guarantee, with the required demand notices in terms of clause 4 or
5, shall be
regarded as a liquid document for the purpose of
obtaining a court order’.
[19]
Millenium’s contention has no merit.
In the first instance this contention does not form part of its
grounds of appeal. It
is raised for the first time on appeal. When
this difficulty was pointed out to him, counsel conceded that this
was indeed the
case, but he argued that it was a legal point and that
the court was not precluded from considering it.
[20]
I will assume in favour of Millenium that
the point it raises is a legal one and that the court is not
precluded from considering
it. Millenium is however opportunistic to
argue that the high court should not have granted relief to Group
Five Construction because
the guarantee on which it made a demand was
a copy and not the original. Millenium was aware of the reason why
Group Five Construction
did not submit the original guarantee to
Constantia. The original guarantee that was reissued after the expiry
of the initial one
was returned by Mr Rakesh Chunilall, Millenium’s
director and the deponent to Millenium’s answering affidavit,
to Constantia
for cancellation, purportedly on the basis that the
project was practically complete. Thus, Group Five Construction never
had in
its possession the reissued original guarantee and could not
be blamed for having submitted a copy of the guarantee to Constantia.
[21]
The high court was therefore correct to
find that Group Five Construction had properly presented the demand
to Constantia and that
it had met all the jurisdictional requirements
set out in clause 4 of the guarantee. The demand triggered Millenium
obligations
to Constantia to indemnify it against Group Five
Construction’s demand and to pay to Constantia an amount equal
to Group
Five Construction’s demand.
[22]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with
costs.
D
H ZONDI
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the appellants:
A Collingwood
Instructed
by:
V Chetty Incorporated, Durban
Lovius Block Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent:
A V Voormolen SC
Instructed
by:
Cox Yeats Attorneys, Durban
McIntyre Van der Post,
Bloemfontein
For
the second respondent: Abides the
decision of this Court
Instructed
by:
Ryan D Lewis Attorneys, Sandton
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
high court granted an order which included prayers 1 and 2 of the
notice of motion. The order that was sought in prayer 1
was ‘The
First Respondent’s purported cacellation of guarantee 117929J
is revoked and set aside’ and in prayer
2 was ‘The
Applicant’s call on guarantee 117929J is declared valid and
enforceable’. Group Five abandoned those
prayers in the high
court. Therefore, to the extent that the high court order included
prayers 1 and 2, it was made in error.
[2]
Guarantee 117929J.
[3]
OK
Bazaars (1929) Ltd v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2002
(3) SA 688 (SCA).
[4]
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2009]
ZASCA 71; [2009] 4 All SA 322 (SCA); 2010 (2) SA 86 (SCA).
[5]
First
Rand Bank Ltd v Brera Investments CC
[2013] ZASCA 25
;
2013 (5) SA 556
(SCA) para 2.
[6]
Schoeman
and Others v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd
[2019] ZASCA 66
;
2019 (5) SA 557
(SCA) para 22.
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