Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 4South Africa
V and A Placement Agency (Pty) Ltd v Lapan NO and Another (Reasons) (2023/035959) [2025] ZAGPJHC 4 (7 January 2025)
Headnotes
the first to third grounds properly fall within the remit of section 33(1)(b) of the Act. Their merits were considered. They were found to have none. The fourth to tenth grounds were found not to fall within section 33(1)(b)’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## V and A Placement Agency (Pty) Ltd v Lapan NO and Another (Reasons) (2023/035959) [2025] ZAGPJHC 4 (7 January 2025)
V and A Placement Agency (Pty) Ltd v Lapan NO and Another (Reasons) (2023/035959) [2025] ZAGPJHC 4 (7 January 2025)
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sino date 7 January 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: 2023-035959
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
DATE:
15.07.07
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
V
& A PLACEMENT AGENCY (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
ARBITRATOR
ANITIA LAPAN N.O.
First
respondent
ZUID-AFRIKAANS
HOSPITAL
Second
respondent
These
reasons were delivered by uploading it to the court online digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South
Africa,
Johannesburg, and by email to the attorneys of record of the parties
on 7 January 2025.
REASONS FOR DECISION
VAN
DER WALT AJ
Introduction
[1]
On 24
November
2024
I dismissed, with costs
on scale C, an application for leave to appeal in this matter.
The applicant sought reasons for the
dismissal. These are the
reasons.
The
application
a quo
[2]
The initial
application was in terms of section 33(1)(b) of the Arbitration
Act.
[1]
In the main it
sought to set aside an arbitrator’s award (an interim award
dealing only with breach of contract and
negligence). It did so
by asserting ten grounds of review. These ten grounds of review
and the facts alleged in support
of them also formed the basis for
further ancillary relief sought, namely that the
arbitrator
be removed and for the court to substitute its findings for those
made by the arbitrator.
[3]
Briefly,
the first ground of review was that the arbitrator exceeded her
powers by asking counsel for the applicant to reformulate
a
question
and said that the witness
did not understand a question. The second ground alleged bias
on the part of the arbitrator.
The third ground was based on
the arbitrator’s disallowance of evidence that was never put to
the second respondent’s
witnesses. The fourth ground was
based on the submission that the arbitrator “failed to properly
or reasonably assess
the evidence properly before her”.
The fifth ground included the assertions that the arbitrator made a
finding she
could not make, did not “consider evidence that
ought to have been considered” and made a finding that was
“highly
flawed”. The sixth ground asserted that the
arbitrator “incorrectly” stated that certain evidence had
not
been challenged, that she “failed to identify”
inconsistencies in the evidence, that she “got it wrong”
by saying evidence was not challenged or disputed, and that all this
led to a finding that was “highly incorrect”.
The
seventh ground asserted that the arbitrator “incorrectly
assessed the evidence”. What resulted was called
a “false
finding”. The eighth ground asserted that the arbitrator
“got it wrong” where she found
that “the applicant
had led any evidence proving” one of her conclusions on the
facts. The ninth ground took
aim at what the arbitrator
“incorrectly states” in her award. It was said that
“[t]his is incorrect, the
arbitrator has clearly incorrectly
analysed evidence incorrectly by creating testimonies that does not
exist.” The
tenth ground related to findings about the
applicant’s expert’s testimony. It included the
assertion that the
arbitrator “failed to consider” this
evidence and reached a decision a “reasonable decision-maker”
could
not have reached.
The
judgment
[4]
The
judgment held that the first to third grounds properly fall within
the remit of section 33(1)(b) of the Act. Their merits
were
considered. They were found to have none. The fourth to
tenth grounds were found not to fall within section 33(1)(b)’s
remit. The judgment further held that, in addition to there
being no basis in fact for such a step, the court did not have
the
power to substitute its findings for those of the arbitrator.
Lastly, as it had been had held that the large majority
of the case
as made out in the founding affidavit was entirely irrelevant to the
relief sought, looking to make out a case under
section 33(1)(b) as
it did, and that the rest of the applicant’s case had no merit,
no good cause had been shown for the
removal of the arbitrator.
That is, even if one were to overlook the applicant’s failure
to place any reliance on section
13 of the Act.
The
application for leave to appeal
[5]
The
application for leave to appeal addresses only, what the applicant
argues are, errors in the judgment. I will assume in
the
applicant’s favour that this, without more, is sufficient to
satisfy the requirement for leave to appeal in section 17(1)(a)(i)
of
the Superior Courts Act,
[2]
which provides that leave to appeal “may only be given where
the judge or judges concerned are of the opinion that
—
(a)(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success”.
The applicant placed no reliance on section 17(1)(a)(ii),
(b) or
(c). The second respondent did not take issue with the
appealability of the order. Subject to what I find in
respect
of the applicant’s arguments on prospects of success on appeal,
I could not and cannot see how the interests of justice
could ever
assist the applicant. It brought a meritless review; it
reviewed a merely interim arbitral award; the award issued
in an
arbitration it agreed to partake in; and the award was made by an
arbitrator to whose appointment it agreed. The interests
of
justice seem to dictate that the applicant now abides the arbitration
agreement it concluded, to have the disputes between it
and the
second respondent resolved as expeditiously as possible.
The
first ground for leave to appeal
[6]
The first
ground for leave is difficult to understand. It consists of a
number of disjointed phrases and is based on a misreading
of the
judgment. These difficulties were not resolved during
argument. Be that as it may, I will try to do justice
to the
gripe underlying the ground of appeal.
[7]
According
to the applicant, the court erred in analysing the applicant’s
case with reference to arbitrator’s powers
to ask questions
during a hearing and holding that arbitrators have the power to ask
counsel to reformulate a question. In
amplification of this
point, it is said that the court erred in failing to consider the
applicant’s case, which was that
the arbitrator exceeded her
powers. The court, it is said, was mistaken in its
understanding of this review ground.
It was not whether
arbitrators could ask questions of witnesses, it was rather focused
on the arbitrator’s comments on a
question to a witness in
circumstances where the arbitrator “assumed that the witness
was not sure what was being asked”.
The court therefore
erred in holding that an arbitrator would be duty-bound to interject
when she perceived a witness as not able
to understand a question.
The applicant, it is said, had clearly argued that it is not for the
arbitrator to intervene when
she perceived a witness as not
understanding a question, in circumstances where neither the witness
nor counsel for the second
respondent had objected.
[8]
Much could
be said about the faulty premises underlying this ground for leave.
It will suffice to say the following: The arbitrator’s
main mandate included a power to make factual findings. That is
what the hearing of evidence by her was about: to enable
her to make
factual findings. The arbitrator obviously had to understand
the witness’s answers to questions.
She obviously also
had to be sure that the answers witnesses gave, were answers to
questions they understood. That holds
true irrespective of
whether a legal representative raises an objection or whether the
witness herself says she does not understand
a question. The
arbitrator had to write the award. Her observations perceptions
matter. Counsel’s affront
at the arbitrator daring to
make a limited interjection during his cross-examination less so.
[9]
This ground
of appeal has no prospects of success on appeal, even when one reads
it in the most favourable of lights. If anything,
it
underscores the lack of merit in the review ground as it was pleaded.
The
second ground for leave to appeal
[10]
The second
ground for leave to appeal takes issue with the court’s
findings regarding the disallowance of evidence by (or
questions
asked of) one of the applicant’s witnesses. It is said
that the court failed to consider the applicant’s
arguments
about why the disallowance was a gross irregularity (or amounted to
the arbitrator exceeding her powers). The applicant
disagrees
with the arbitrator and the court’s exposition of the law on
parties’ obligations to put their cases to opposing
witnesses.
There was a clear irregularity in the proceedings, says the
applicant, by disallowing the evidence on the basis
that it was not
put to the second respondent’s witnesses, because the second
respondent would have been given an opportunity
to cross-examine the
relevant witness after she had led the evidence that had not been put
to the second respondent’s witnesses.
[11]
This,
however, again, misses the point. The second respondent’s
witnesses, as the version was not put to them during
their
cross-examination, was not given the opportunity to give evidence
about it. This cannot be rectified by a cross-examination
of
the applicant’s witnesses. Therefore, the arbitrator, in
applying trite, elementary and standard rules of procedure,
cannot be
faulted for disallowing the questions counsel for the applicant
sought to ask.
[12]
This ground
of appeal has no prospects of success on appeal.
The
third ground for leave to appeal
[13]
The third
ground for leave to appeal is that the court erred in holding that no
good cause had been shown for the removal of the
arbitrator and
providing no ratio for this decision.
[14]
As it has
been said, the court did provide reasons for its decision. It
found that most of the case as made out in the applicant’s
founding affidavit was entirely irrelevant to the relief sought,
looking to make out a case under section 33(1)(b) as it did, and
that
the rest of the applicant’s case had no merit. It means
that no case was made out for the wrongs the arbitrator
were accused
of, to wit committing gross irregularities in the proceedings or
exceeding her powers. For that reason no good
cause was shown
for the removal of the arbitrator. That is, even if one were to
overlook the applicant’s failure to
place any reliance on
section 13 of the Act.
[15]
This ground
of review has no prospects of success on appeal.
The
fourth ground for leave to appeal
[16]
The
applicant asserts that the court erred in making a punitive costs
order. More specifically, it is said that the court
erred in
awarding punitive costs “only” because the deponent for
the applicant used the words “incorrect”,
“completely
wrong” and “incorrectly decided upon”.
[17]
This ground
for leave is most difficult to understand. It is based, at
best, on a selective reading of the judgment.
The judgment
provides the reasons for the punitive costs order in two paragraphs.
They read as follows:
‘
In
the introductory part of its founding affidavit, V & A promised
that it will ultimately submit that the arbitrator’s
award was
“incorrectly decided upon”. Similarly, in attacking
the arbitrator’s findings of fact, the affidavit
is replete
with words and phrases such as “incorrect”, “highly
incorrect”, “got it wrong” and
“completely
wrong”. This of course ignores the nature of a review in
terms of section 33(1)(b).
V & A’s
deponent also went further. The arbitrator is said to have made
a “false” finding and that she
created “testimonies
that do not exist”. These assertions impugn the
arbitrator’s honesty. I can
see no reason why that was
necessary. In addition, the allegations of bias against the
arbitrator were not only completely
devoid of merit, V & A’s
approach in making them was reprehensible. If this application
is indicative of anyone
who “got it completely wrong” it
seems to me to have been V & A for failing properly to prepare
its own case, causing
it not to be able to put its case to that of
the hospital’s witnesses. Yet it had no difficulty in
accusing the arbitrator
of bias on the most frivolous of grounds,
attacking her award on entirely irrelevant bases and, worst of all,
impugning her integrity.
For these reasons, a punitive costs
order will follow.’
[18]
This ground
of appeal has no prospects of success, not only because it is based
on a misreading of the judgment, but also because
costs is a matter
within the discretion of the judge.
Costs
[19]
The second
respondent again sought a punitive costs order against the
applicant. I do not deem it appropriate to make a further
punitive costs order in dismissing the application for leave to
appeal. The original order was directed mainly at what was
said
by the deponent for the applicant in its founding affidavit.
While the approach taken and assertions made by the applicant
were
defended and reasserted by its counsel during the hearing of the
application for leave, I am reluctant again to penalise the
applicant
for the same conduct. No other grounds disclose conduct
sufficiently serious to justify such an order.
Nico
van der Walt
Acting
Judge, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
Appearances:
For
the applicant
Adv
W.M. Sithole
Instructed
by Rahman & Rahman Inc.
For
the second respondent:
Adv
J. De Beer SC
Instructed
by Kruse Attorneys Inc.
[1]
42
of 1965.
[2]
10
of 2013.
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