Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 12South Africa
Imvula Roads and Civils (Pty) Ltd and Others v Holland Insurance Co Ltd and Another (2024/104602) [2025] ZAGPJHC 12 (14 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Imvula Roads and Civils (Pty) Ltd and Others v Holland Insurance Co Ltd and Another (2024/104602) [2025] ZAGPJHC 12 (14 January 2025)
Imvula Roads and Civils (Pty) Ltd and Others v Holland Insurance Co Ltd and Another (2024/104602) [2025] ZAGPJHC 12 (14 January 2025)
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sino date 14 January 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Construction –
Guarantee
–
Fraud
alleged – Termination was preceded by lengthy process aimed
at providing applicant with many opportunities to
comply with its
contractual obligations – Cancellations were valid –
Requirements for an interdict – No
prima facie right –
No prospects of succeeding with claim under Part B – Not
entitled to relief sought under
Part A – Applicants can be
compensated by following dispute resolution process –
Application dismissed.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2024-104602
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE
14/1/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
IMVULA
ROADS & CIVILS (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
IMVULA
EMPOWERMENT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
IMVULA
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
IMVULA
QUALITY PROTECTION (AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
Fourth Applicant
IMVULA
QUALITY PROTECTION AFRICA SA (PTY) LTD
Fifth Applicant
IRC
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Sixth Applicant
LCA
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Seventh Applicant
and
THE
HOLLARD INSURANCE CO.
LTD
First Respondent
WESTERN
CAPE GOVERNMENT
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
DOSIO J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application in terms of the provisions of Uniform
Rule 6(12)(c),
whereby the applicants seek interdictory relief,
restraining the second respondent, who is beneficiary of two
performance guarantees,
from claiming these guarantees from the first
respondent, pending the hearing of part B.
[2]
The second opponent opposes the application.
[3]
The first respondent abides by the Courts decision.
[4]
Having decided it is urgent, I proceeded to consider the matter.
Point in limine
[5]
The second respondent contends, apart from the first applicant, the
other applicants
have no locus standi, as the remaining applicants
are not parties to the contract between the first and second
respondents.
[6]
This Court finds that in addition to the first applicant, the
remaining applicants
are also parties who stand to lose if payment is
made by the first respondent. The remaining applicants naturally have
an interest
and will be affected if payment is made by the first
respondent to the second respondent.
[7]
Accordingly, the point in limine raised by the second respondent is
dismissed.
Background
[8]
The second respondent and the first applicant concluded a written
contract (‘C1105’),
in terms of which the second
respondent appointed the first applicant to provide road
rehabilitation services to it for a stretch
of road in the Du
Toitskloof pass outside Cape Town. The contract price was
R96 200 000-00.
[9]
The second respondent and the first applicant concluded a separate
written contract
(‘C1203’), in terms of which the second
respondent appointed the first applicant to provide road
rehabilitation services
to it for a second stretch of road described
as the Worcester roads, towards Nuy and Villiersdorp, also in the
Western Cape. The
contract price was R183 962 187-00.
[10]
In accordance with the terms of the first and second contract and the
respective tenders
which preceded the awarding of the contracts, the
first applicant was obliged to obtain a performance bond for its
proper performance
in an amount equal to 5% of the value of both
contracts.
[11]
On 17 August 2023 the first respondent issued a performance guarantee
in favour of the
second respondent for the sum of R4 810 000-00.
The first guarantee was renewed on the same terms and conditions and
replaced with EFP/EBGS P/000186144#1.
[12]
On 14 March 2024 the first respondent issued a performance guarantee
in favour of the second
respondent for the sum of R9 198 109-40,
under reference number EFP/EBGSP/000219357.
[13]
The terms of both guarantees are that once the second respondent had
complied with its
relevant terms as set in the guarantee, the first
respondent was contractually obliged to pay under the guarantees.
[14]
For competent demands to be made upon the guarantees, it was required
that (i) the first
applicant was in default of its obligations under
the contracts and (ii) the second respondent validly terminated the
contracts
because of such default.
The applicants’
contentions
[15]
In summary, the applicants contend that the guarantees are
conditional, rather than on-
demand. It was argued that on a proper
construction of the guarantees and the context in which they were
issued, there were underlying
conditions that were to exist prior to
demand thereupon being made.
[16]
The applicants contend these conditions were absent and that the
demands were bad. As a
result, the first respondent did not need to
honour them.
[17]
It was argued that in the event that the guarantees are found to be
on-demand guarantees,
then the demands were fraudulent, as the
contracts were not validly cancelled. It was argued that the second
respondent knew this
and fraudulently, alternatively unconscionably,
presented its claim to the first respondent, misrepresenting to the
first respondent
that the contract had been validly terminated.
[18]
Under part B of the application, the applicants request that the
common law be developed,
to admit their alternative ground for
relief, which is that of unconscionable conduct.
[19]
The first applicant also asserts a contractual right under the
contract that would preclude
the second respondent from making demand
where the first applicant was not in culpable breach of the contract.
The applicants contend
that any demand made in reliance upon clause 5
of the guarantees, is conditional upon the contractor being in breach
of the contract
and the contracts having been validly terminated
pursuant thereto. Absent thereof the conditions are not fulfilled,
rendering the
demands bad.
[20]
The applicants contend the first applicant was not sufficiently in
default to entitle the
second respondent to terminate, as the first
applicant’s failure was not of its making and as a result, the
first applicant
was not culpable. The applicants contend there was an
‘excusable delay’ disentitling the second respondent to
terminate
the contract.
[21]
It was argued that the second respondent has R300 million of
available funds that have
been earmarked for the very projects and
the second respondent will suffer no hardship if the order sought in
part A is granted,
pending the determination of part B. In contrast,
it was argued that the applicants stand to suffer substantial harm
and financial
ruin if payment, pursuant to the demands are made.
[22]
The applicants referred to the case of
Wells
Vs Army and Navy Cooperative Society,
[1]
which states that if a contract provides a time within
which
the
work can be completed, then the first applicant has that time within
which to do the work.
[23]
It was contended the second respondent breached the undertaking and
should be precluded
from conducting itself in this manner.
Du Toitskloof
[24]
The applicants contend that on 15 July 2024, the second applicant’s
agent wrote to
the first applicant expressing certain concerns. The
first applicant addressed the concerns in this regard, on 26 July
2024 and
the second respondent’s agent was satisfied with the
steps to be taken by the first applicant, thereby curing the breach
that existed.
[25]
It was contended that procedurally, the provisions of clause 9.2 of
the contract permit
termination only after giving effect to clause
3.2.2 which require engagement by the second respondent’s agent
with the parties.
[26]
The second respondents’ agent recorded on 2 August 2024 that:
“
Imvula’s
progress during the next month will be closely monitored and a
re-evaluation of the progress will be made by the
end of August 2024
to determine if the EA should issue a ruling that Imvula is in breach
of Clause 9.2.1.3.4 of GCC third edition
(2015).”
This
was confirmed by the second respondent’s agent in a letter
dated 8 August 2024.
[27]
The applicants contend that notwithstanding the letter sent by the
second respondent’s
agent on 8 August 2024, the second
respondent’s agent on 16 August 2024 issued a determination
that the first applicant was
in breach of clauses 9.2.1.3.4 and
9.2.1.3.6.
[28]
On 19 August 2024, the second respondent gave the first applicant
fourteen days to remedy
the alleged breach and on the version of the
second respondent, due to the absence of a response on 4 September
2024, the second
respondent terminated the contract. The applicants
contend they did respond timeously and also addressed the defaults
mentioned
by the second respondent’s agent. As a result, the
second respondent could not have validly terminated the contract and
the
demand in respect of the Du Toitskloof project falls to be
interdicted.
Worcester
[29]
The applicants contend the same applied to the Worcester project, in
that on 15 July 2024,
the second respondent’s agent also wrote
to the first applicant expressing certain concerns. The first
applicant addressed
the concerns on 26 July 2024. On 6 August 2024,
the second respondent’s agent wrote to the first applicant
inviting further
engagement between the parties. Notwithstanding the
engagements, the second respondent’s agent certified the first
applicants
breach on 16 August 2024 and on 19 August 2024 the second
respondent gave the first applicant fourteen days within which to
remedy
the alleged breach. On 21 August 2024 the first applicant
wrote to the second respondent contending it was not in breach.
Notwithstanding
this, on 4 September 2024, the second respondent
terminated the contract on its perception there had been no response,
when it
is alleged by the first applicant it had responded and also
addressed the alleged defaults.
[30]
As a result, the first applicant contends it was not in default and
the termination was
bad, resulting in the application to interdict
the demand in respect of the Worcester project.
[31]
The applicants contend that in respect to the Du Toitskloof and
Worcester projects, the
second respondent falsely misrepresented to
the first respondent, the first applicants’ default and the
validity of the terminations.
[32]
The applicants contend that the circumstances of this matter do not
involve a failure to
enquire on the part of the second respondent,
but rather a clear indication of knowledge of the facts on the part
of the second
respondent, yet a deliberate attempt to ignore them for
the purposes of benefiting from the guarantee. The applicants argue
the
second respondent could not honestly have believed in the
validity of the demands.
[33]
The applicants referred to the case of
Group
Five Construction (Pty) Ltd v MEC for Public Transport, Roads and
Works, Gauteng
[2]
as
support that the absence of good faith, resulting in mala fides on
the part of the second respondent is also a ground for declining
enforcement of a guarantee, especially where an employer like the
second respondent intends to secure an advantage vis-à-vis
a
contractor, like the first applicant, that contractually would
otherwise not be available to the second respondent.
[3]
Therefore, given the absence of culpable breach on the part of the
first applicant it was argued, payment by the first respondent
to the
second respondent should be prevented. As such the applicants contend
they have proven a prima facie right.
Unconscionability
and the development of the Common Law
[34]
As an alternative, the applicants seek to extend the common law to
accommodate an unconscionability
exception. Reference was made to the
case of
Sulzer
Pumps Spain, SA v Hyflux Membrane Manufacturing (S) Pte Ltd
[4]
(‘
Sulzer
Pumps Spain’
).
The exception countenances:-
(a) calls for
excessive sums;
(b) calls based on
contractual breaches that the beneficiary of the call itself is
responsible for;
(c) calls
tainted by unclean hands, e.g., supported by inflated estimates of
damages or mounted on the back of selective
and incomplete
discourses;
(d) calls made for
ulterior motives and;
(e) calls based on
a position which is inconsistent with the stance that the beneficiary
took prior to calling on the performance
bond.
[35]
Based on the conduct of the second respondent, the applicants contend
they have made out
a case for the development of the common law. Even
though it was argued this will be determined in part B, at most it
demonstrates
the existence of a prima facie right.
[36]
As regards irreparable harm, the applicants primarily point out that
their immediate liability
and reputational concerns are sufficient as
to threaten the livelihood of their businesses and their employees,
particularly within
the context of the construction industry which is
already constrained.
[37]
As regards a satisfactory alternative remedy, the applicants contend
that it cannot claim
damages from the second respondent as they are
not readily quantifiable.
[38]
As regards the balance of convenience, the applicants contend it
favours them, because
if payment is made by the first respondent to
the second respondent, the applicants stand to suffer immediate harm,
whereas the
second respondent has financial wherewithal to weather
the short delay between the granting of the order sought in part A at
the
determination of part B of the application.
The contentions of
the second respondent
[39]
In essence the grounds of opposition to the application of the
applicants are that:
(a)
the guarantees in question are on-demand guarantees,
(b)
the requirements for payment set by these guarantees have been met,
(c)
the first applicant’s claim that the cancellations of the
underlying construction
contracts
were
invalid are irrelevant to the merits of the claims under the
guarantees,
(d)
the allegations of fraud which the applicants are compelled to make
to
escape the above,
have
no foundations on the facts of this case,
(e)
given the absence of any factual foundation, there is also no
prospect of the applicants
succeeding
with their claim to develop the common law in order to recognise
‘
unconscionable
conduct’ as a ground for a non-party to a guarantee to prevent
payment
under
that guarantee.
(f) If
there is no prima facie right, the remainder of the requirements for
an interim
interdict
are
irrelevant.
[40]
It was argued that it is not for the applicants to raise a defence on
behalf of the first
respondent in circumstances where the first
respondent itself has raised no defence and is willing to comply with
its contractual
obligations vis-à-vis the second respondent.
In addition.
[41]
It was argued that there is no good argument to suggest the second
respondent misrepresented
to the first respondent that the required
terms of the guarantee have been met.
[42]
The second respondent contends that upon receipt of the demands, the
first respondent is
obligated to pay under the guarantees, as the
first respondent undertook in terms of clause 4 and 5, of each
guarantee, to pay
the second respondent.
[43]
The second respondent contends it satisfied the requirements of
clause 5 by submitting
the required documents and the notices of
termination to the first respondent.
[44]
It was argued that the first respondent does not need to be satisfied
of the validity of
the underlying actions which led to the submission
of the documents in question to the first respondent, as that is the
very purpose
and nature of a performance guarantee such as in the
matter in casu.
[45]
The second respondent argued that the reliance by the applicants on
the matter of
Minister
v Zanbuild Construction
[5]
(‘Minister
v Zanbuild’)
is
unfounded, as the Supreme Court of Appeal found that the wording of
that guarantee is akin to a suretyship which is not the same
wording
as in the matter in casu. Accordingly, it was argued that the
guarantees in casu are similar to those in the matter of
Dormell
Properties 282 CC v Renasa Insurance Co Ltd and Others NNO
[6]
(‘
Dormell’
),
as well as the decisions of
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (PTY) Ltd and
Others
[7]
(‘Lombard’)
and
Bombardier
Africa Alliance Consortium v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd and
Another
[8]
(‘
Bombardier
’
).
Legal principles
and evaluation
[46]
In the matter of
Minister
v Zanbuild
,
[9]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
The
essential difference between the two, as appears from these
authorities, is that a claimant under a conditional bond is required
at least to allege and – depending on the terms of the bond –
sometimes also to establish liability on the part of
the contractor
for the same amount. An ‘on demand’ bond … on the
other hand, requires no allegation of liability
on the part of the
contractor under the construction contracts. All that is required for
payment is a demand by the claimant, stated
to be on the basis of the
event specified in the bond
.’
[10]
[47]
In the matter of
Mutual
Federal Insurance Co. Limited & Another v KNS Construction (Pty)
Ltd & Another
[11]
and
Nocartis
SA v Maphil Trading,
[12]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
.
. . the interpretative process is one of ascertaining the intention
of the parties – what they meant to achieve. And in
doing that,
the court must consider all the circumstances surrounding the
contract to determine what their intention was in concluding
it. . .
and the court should always consider the factual matrix in which the
contract is concluded – the text to determine
the parties’
intention
.’
Whether the
guarantee is on-demand or conditional
[48]
The applicants rely on the judgment of
Minister
v Zanbuild
[13]
to argue that the guarantees in casu are conditional guarantees and
not on-demand guarantees. This judgment does not assist them
as it
deals with a bank guarantee which was akin to a suretyship.
[14]
[49]
The wording of the ABSA bank guarantee in the matter of
Minister
of Zanbuild
[15]
is
different to the wording of the guarantee in casu, which is more akin
to the wording in the matters of
Dormell
[16]
and
Lombard.
[17]
[50]
All the second respondent needed to do in terms of clause 5.1 of the
guarantee was to issue
the written demand and state that the contract
was terminated due to the first applicant’s default. There was
no need to
prove the validity of the contract. Clause 8 of the
guarantee also states that ‘payment by the guarantor in terms
of this
clause 5 shall be made within seven calendar days upon
receipt of the first written demand to the guarantor’. Clause 8
does
not mention that the second respondent must first prove a valid
cancelation.
[51]
The purpose of a guarantee is to evade all these issues pertaining to
the validity of the
contract itself. There would be no purpose to
have a guarantee if the defaulting party can raise issues like it was
not their fault
due to the weather, etcetera. These are separate
issues that have nothing to do with a performance guarantee. The
contract itself
in any event provides for dispute resolution
mechanisms and arbitration.
[52]
Accordingly, this court finds that the guarantees are on-demand
guarantees and the requirements
set out in the guarantees themselves
have been met by the second respondent.
[53]
An on-demand guarantee, such as in the matter in casu, ensures the
quality of construction
or building projects.
The autonomy
principle
[54]
The fraud exception and the autonomy principle were first recognised
and addressed by the
courts in the matter of
Loomcraft
Fabrics v Nedbank
[18]
(‘
Loomcraft’
).
[55]
The court in
Loomcraft
[19]
upheld
the widely accepted doctrine of autonomy and adopted the strict view
of the fraud exception, emphasising that the guarantor’s
obligation to pay the employer or beneficiary depended, on the strict
compliance of the documents with the requirements. The guarantor
would only avoid payment in rare cases, such as when the employer or
beneficiary committed fraud.
[20]
The court also held that the standard of proof was the usual civil
one, based on the most likely scenario. However, it warned that
fraud
was a serious accusation and would not be assumed easily.
[56]
In light of the decision of
Loomcraft,
[21]
the
fraud exception would only apply when the documents submitted under
the demand guarantee are falsified. The court did not address
if
fraud related only to fraud in the documents or also to fraud in the
underlying contract or relationship.
Loomcraft
[22]
stated
that it would apply the fraud exception and withhold payment in cases
of interdicts if the documents showed clear evidence
of
falsification.
[57]
In the matter of
State
Bank of India and Another v Denel SOC Limited and Others,
[23]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘…
an
interdict restraining a bank from paying in terms of such an
undertaking, will not usually be granted save in the
most
exceptional case.
[24]
[my emphasis]
[58]
In the matter of
Lombard
[25]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘…
[a]
guarantee…is not unlike irrevocable letters of credit issued
by banks and used in international trade, the essential
feature of [a
guarantee] is the establishment of a contractual obligation on the
part of a bank to pay the beneficiary (seller).
This
obligation is wholly independent of the underlying contract
…
Whatever
disputes may subsequently arise between buyer and seller is of no
moment insofar as the bank’s obligation is concerned.
The
bank’s liability to the seller is to honour the credit.
The
bank undertakes to pay provided only that the conditions specified in
the credit are met.
The
only basis upon which the bank can escape liability is proof of fraud
on the part of the beneficiary. This exception falls within
a narrow
compass and applies where the seller, for the purposes of drawing on
the credit fraudulently presents to the bank documents
that to the
sellers knowledge mispresent the material facts’
[26]
[my emphasis]
[59]
In the matter of
Dormell
[27]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
In
principle therefore,
the
guarantee must be honoured as soon as the employer makes a proper
claim against it upon the happening of a specified event
.’
[28]
[my emphasis]
[60]
In the matter of
Compass
Insurance Co Ltd v Hospitality Hotel Developments (Pty) Ltd
,
[29]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
The
very purpose of a performance bond is that
the
guarantor has an independent, autonomous contract with the
beneficiary and that the contractual arrangements with the
beneficiary
and other parties are of no consequence to the
guarantor
.’
[my emphasis]
[61]
The learned Cloete JA, who handed down the dissenting judgment in the
matter of
Dormell,
[30]
repeated
what had been held in the matter of
Lombard
[31]
and
stated that:
‘
The
appellant complied with the provisions of clause 5.
It
was not necessary for the appellant to allege that it had validly
cancelled the building contract due to the second respondent’s
default. Whatever disputes there were or might have been between the
appellant and the second respondent were irrelevant to the
first
respondent’s obligation to perform in terms of the construction
guarantee.’ …
That
is clear… from the following passage in the judgment of Lord
Denning MR in
Edward
Owen v Barclays Bank International
[1
All ER 976
(CA)
(1977) 3 WLR 764
at 983 b-d]
‘
A
bank which gives a performance guarantee must honour that guarantee
according to its terms. It is not concerned in the least with
the
relations between the supplier and the customer; nor with the
question whether the supplier has performed his contracted obligation
or not; nor with the question whether the supplier is in default or
not. The bank must pay according to its guarantee, on demand
if so
stipulated, without proof or conditions. The only exception is when
there is a clear fraud of which the bank has notice.’
[my
emphasis]
[62]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
Coface
South Africa Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Haven
Housing Association
[32]
(‘
Coface
’
)
followed the dissenting judgment in the matter of
Dormell.
[33]
[63]
In the matter of
Guardrisk
Insurance Company Ltd and Others v Kentz (Pty) Ltd
[34]
(‘
Guardrisk’
),
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated that:
‘…
One
of the main reasons why courts are ordinarily reluctant to entertain
the underlying contractual disputes between an employer
and a
contractor when faced with a demand based on a demand or
unconditional performance guarantee, is because of the principle
that
to do so would undermine the efficacy of such guarantees’.
[35]
The
court held further that:
‘
where
its terms have been met, they may, at a later stage and after the
terms of the guarantee have been met, be an ‘accounting’
between the parties to finally determine their rights and
obligations’.
[36]
[64]
As a result, a call on an on-demand guarantee can only be interdicted
where the contractor
is able to clearly show fraud. Any contractual
disputes under a construction contract or agreement, are irrelevant
to a guarantor
in deciding whether or not to make payment. This is
similar in interdict proceedings. Therefore, an on-demand guarantee
must be
honoured in accordance with its terms, without reference to
the underlying contract.
[65]
The Constitutional Court in the matter of
National
Gambling Board v Premier, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others,
[37]
stated
that the purpose of an interim interdict is to maintain the status
quo pending the determination of rights or the dispute
between the
parties, however, the court cannot interfere with the contractual
obligations of the parties.
[66]
From the cases of
Lombard,
[38]
the
dissenting judgment of
Dormell,
[39]
the
judgment of
Coface
[40]
and
Guardrisk,
[41]
whatever
disputes may subsequently arise between buyer and seller is of no
moment insofar as the bank’s obligation is concerned.
This
applies equally to disputes between an employer and employee. The
bank’s liability is to honour the credit when the
demand is
made.
[67]
With reference to the matter of
Dormell,
[42]
the specified event which the applicants allege happened in the
matter in casu, is that the first applicant may have delayed in
completing the works, which entitled the employer, as per the terms
of the contract to then cancel the contract and demand payment.
There
is no clear proof of fraud or that this demand was not correctly made
in terms of clause 4 and 5. As stated in the matter
of
Lombard
[43]
and
Dormell
,
[44]
the fact that the second respondent may have called up the guarantee
relying on a patently unlawful cancellation does not assist
the first
applicant. The demand has nothing to do with the underlying contract.
[68]
There is no fraud proven by the applicants. The second respondent
cancelled the contract
and demanded performance from the first
respondent. If there had been no cancellation and no letter of
cancelation in support of
this and the second respondent claimed from
the first respondent, then in that event, there would have been room
for arguing the
fraud exception. However, that is not the case in the
matter in casu.
[69]
The applicants referred to the matters of
Presidency
Property Investments (Pty) Ltd V Patel
[45]
at 28 and
Niggli
[46]
1981 2 SA 684
(A). The Supreme Court of Appeal and the Appellate
Division (as it then was), respectfully held that an opinion that
contains express
or tacit statements of this nature which are
incorrect, are actionable like any other wrongful representation of
fact.
[70]
The applicants contend that an assessment of the reasonableness of an
opinion requires
an investigation into the existence, or otherwise,
of facts that provide a reasonable basis for the opinion. The absence
thereof
leads to the inescapable inference that the second respondent
acted fraudulently in proffering the opinion. Reference was made to
the matter of
R
v Meyers
[47]
where the Appellate Division, as it then was, held that:
‘…
the
absence of reasonable grounds for belief in the truth of the matter
stated does not amount to or necessarily prove malice, but
it
provides cogent evidence that there was in fact no such belief,
which, in turn, will generally lead to the inference of malice…’
[71]
Fraud is not likely presumed, fraud needs to be proven and there
needs to be clear facts
of fraud. There needs to be relevant fraud
and there needs to be dishonesty which is mala fides with the
intention to defraud.
[72]
The applicants cannot identify the party who is supposed to have
committed the alleged
fraud in casu. Was it the second respondent’s
agent who followed the process which culminated in the termination of
the Du
Toitskloof pass contract, or was it the second respondent
itself, represented by Mr Mostert? Or was it Ms Buys who submitted
the
claim for payment under the first guarantee? Or was it all three
sets of people, acting in cahoots with each other? The applicants
do
not say. Given the seriousness of the claim and the strict
requirements for the charge to be established, it does not assist
the
applicants to simply say it was all of the above acting in unison.
The onus is on the applicants to prove that which they are
alleging,
and such conduct is not lightly inferred.
[73]
The second respondent contends that the first applicant admitted in
‘IM5’ to
the founding papers that it had failed to
proceed with due diligence on contract C1105 as at 26 July 2024. The
second respondent’s
agent responded by way of ‘IM6’
on 2 August 2024, stating it would closely monitor progress during
the month in order
to determine whether it would issue a ruling that
the first applicant was in breach of clause 9.2.1.3.4. and that if
the
norm of slow progress was maintained, it would have no option but
to report a breach at the end of August. On 16 August 2024 by
way of
‘IM8’ the second respondent’s agent noted inter
alia that on 14 August 2024 no traffic accommodation of
any form was
taking place on site, the sub-contractor had withdrawn from the site
for the second time owing to non-payment, the
site had been left in
an unsafe condition and there was no evidence of any substantial
effort to remedy the defaults which had
been previously pointed out.
The second respondent’s agent certified that the first
applicant had failed to proceed with
the works in accordance with the
approved programme and was not carrying out the works in accordance
with the contract. The second
respondent issued a notice to remedy
the default, by way of ‘IM9’ on 19 August 2024. On 26
August
the first
applicant
replied to the second respondent’s agent’s letter
of 16 August 2024 by way of ‘IM10’, addressed to the
second
respondent’s agent. On 30 August the second respondent’s
agent responded to an earlier submission of a revised contract
programme stating that it was not approved and providing advice as to
what was required, but in the same process identified all
the
shortcomings in performance under the contract, by way of ‘IM11’.
It was contended by the second respondent that
it issued its notice
of termination, stating inter alia that the first applicant had not
responded to its letter of 19 August,
namely ‘IM9’, which
detailed the various breaches of contract which had not been
remedied. This was dated 4 September,
15 days after ‘IM9’
had been sent, to which there had been no response. The applicants
allege a response was sent together
with a revised program. Whether
or not this was indeed sent, is an issue pertaining to the underlying
contract and does not amount
to fraud.
[74]
Courts must distinguish between fraud, on the one hand, and innocent
breach of contract,
on the other. A mere breach of the underlying
contract by the beneficiary of a demand guarantee will not
necessarily entitle the
applicant to block payment by acquiring an
interdict against the bank to prevent payment.
[75]
The dispute is irrelevant to the claim under the guarantees, unless
the first applicant
can prove that the second respondent did not
cancel the contracts and untruthfully claimed that it had. This is
not the applicants’
case. Whether the second respondent knew
that it was not entitled to cancel and intentionally misrepresented
not only the fact
of cancellation but the validity of the
cancellation, knowing it to have been invalid, to the first
respondent with the intention
to defraud the insurer and get it to
make a payment to it which it knew was not due to it, cannot be shown
on the facts of this
matter.
[76]
The applicants argued that the second employer was mistaken in
cancelling the contract
on the ground that there had not been a
formal response, within 14 days, to the letter of demand sent by the
agent of the second
respondent. The fact that the second respondent’s
agent did not accept the revised contracts should not have allowed
the
second respondent to cancel. If this argument raised by the
applicants is valid, it is a mistake or an error and definitely not
fraud. An error, misunderstanding or oversight on the part of the
people mentioned in paragraph [72] supra or a contracting party,
however unreasonable, is not a ground for raising the fraud exception
in a claim under a performance guarantee.
[48]
[77]
Even if the representatives of the second respondent were incorrect
in their actions and
understanding of the legal effect of that which
they did, this still does not constitute knowledge on their part that
they had
no right whatsoever to cancel the contracts.
[78]
It appears that there were in fact many other letters and
communications which preceded
those referred to above, which show
that the termination was preceded by a lengthy process aimed at
providing the first applicant
with many opportunities to comply with
its contractual obligations. If the revised program was not accepted
by the second respondent
or its agent, this is a matter which relates
to the contract itself and not the guarantee. The applicants can seek
recourse via
arbitration and a claim for damages.
[79]
It is important to remember that the primary contract is between the
first and second respondent.
These are the only two parties as
concerns the guarantee and the performance guarantee stands on its
own. The contract between
the second respondent and the first
applicant is a separate contract between these two parties and has
its own implications.
[80]
The applicants contend that there is misrepresentation in that the
second respondent knew
that the contract was not validly cancelled
and that they dishonestly and mala fides misrepresented to the first
respondent that
the contract had been validly cancelled. Should the
applicants have proof that this is the case, then that is an issue
which will
be dealt via arbitration.
[81]
This court has considered whether the facts of the matter in casu
raise a constitutional
issue, notwithstanding the decisions of
Lombard,
[49]
Dormell,
[50]
Coface
[51]
or
Guardrisk
[52]
which
may amount to a prima facie right to grant the interdict.
[82]
In the matter of
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregan Trust
and Others
[53]
(‘
Beadica
’
),
the Constitutional Court held that:
‘…
A
careful balancing exercise is required to determine
whether
a contractual term, or its enforcement, would be contrary to public
policy
…’
[54]
[my emphasis]
and
further
‘…
The
common law must be developed so as to promote the spirit, purport and
objects of the Bill of Rights. Constitutional values an
essential
role to play in the development of constitutionally infused
common-law doctrines’
[55]
and
further
‘
The
first is the principle that ‘(p)ublic policy demands that
contracts freely and consciously entered into must be honoured’
.
This court has emphasised that the principle of pacta sunt servanda
gives effect to the ‘central constitutional values of
freedom
and dignity’.
It
has further recognised that in general public policy requires that
contracting parties honour obligations that have been freely
and
voluntarily undertaken.
Pacta
sunt servanda is thus not a relic of our pre-constitutional common
law. It continues to play a crucial role in the judicial
control of
contracts through the instrument of public policy, as it gives
expression to central constitutional values’
.
[56]
[my emphasis]
and
further
‘
The
second principle requiring elucidation is that of ‘perceptive
restraint’, which has been repeatedly espoused by
the Supreme
Court of Appeal
.
According
to this principle a court must exercise ‘perceptive restraint’
when approaching the task of invalidating,
or refusing to enforce,
contractual terms
.
It is encapsulated in the phrase that
a
‘court will use the power to invalidate a contract or not to
enforce it, sparingly and only in the clearest of cases’
.
[57]
[my emphasis]
and
further
‘
This
principle follows from the notion that contracts, freely and
voluntarily entered into, should be honoured
.
This court has recognised as sound the approach adopted by the
Supreme Court of Appeal that the power to invalidate, or refuse
to
enforce, contractual terms should only be exercised in worthy cases.
[90] However, courts should not rely upon this principle
of restraint
to shrink from their constitutional duty to infuse public policy with
constitutional values. Nor may it be used to
shear public policy of
the complexity of the value system created by the Constitution.
Courts
should not be so recalcitrant in their application of public policy
considerations that they fail to give proper weight to
the
overarching mandate of the Constitution
…’
[58]
[my emphasis]
Unconscionability
[83]
The applicants argued that in the absence of fraud, the common law
should be developed
to accommodate an unconscionability exception.
Reliance was placed on the decision of
Sulzer
Pumps Spain.
[59]
[84]
In the matter of
Sulzer
Pumps Spain
[60]
the
Court held that it is not only fraud that may prohibit the calling up
of a construction guarantee, ‘but also unconscionable
conduct
and also when a contract to the contrary has been entered into
between the relevant parties (in this instance including
the
bank)’
[61]
[85]
Unconscionability has been described as follows in a comprehensive
paper entitled
Calling
on a Performance Security: As Good as Cash
?,
[62]
namely:
‘
b)
unconscionability – generally involves ‘taking advantage
of a special disadvantage of another’ or ‘unconscientious
reliance on strict legal rights’ or ‘action showing no
regard for conscience, or that are irreconcilable with what
is right
or reasonable. In
Olex
Focas Pty Ltd v Skodaexport Co Ltd and ACCC v Samton Holdings Pty Lts
(2002)
117 FCR 301
, unconscionability was held to include:-
(i)exploitation
of vulnerability or weakness;
(ii)abuse
of a position of trust or confidence;
(iii)insistence
upon rights in circumstances which make that harsh or oppressive; and
(iv)inequitable
denial of legal obligations.
c) breach of a negative
stipulation in the underlying contract -where calling on the security
would be a breach of an express or
implied negative stipulation in
the underlying contract, the courts may restrain a beneficiary from
involving the financier’s
autonomous obligation.’
[86]
The argument raised by the applicants that the common law should be
developed to include
unconscionable conduct is unnecessary in that
the Constitutional Court in the matter of
Beadica
[63]
has already stated that any contract that is contrary to the public
interest will not be enforced. Therefore, the common law does
not
need to be developed.
[87]
In addition, the issues the applicants seek to raise for purposes of
developing the common
Law under Part B could only notionally arise if
the guarantees are not on–demand guarantees and if the validity
of the cancellation
of the underlying construction contracts was
relevant, which would then make the second respondent’s conduct
in respect thereof
an issue. This Court has found the guarantees are
on-demand guarantees.
[88]
As a result, whether the second respondent mistakenly thought they
were valid or not, and
whether they were negligent or reckless in
their thinking, and whether or not this was unconscionable, is all
equally irrelevant.
[89]
In any event, a mistake in thinking that the contract could be
cancelled when in fact the
second respondent was not entitled to, is
not unconscionable conduct. It is simply an error and everyone makes
errors. Even if
there was an error, the fact remains that the first
respondent merely requires a receipt of a written demand to cancel
from the
second respondent.
[90]
The fraud exception, recognised under the common law, presents the
necessary safeguards
already and strikes the right balance. The
lesser test advocated by the applicants has also not been met.
The requirements
for an interdict
Prima facie right
[91]
The purpose of an interdict is to maintain the status quo pending the
determination of
the rights or the dispute between the parties.
[64]
[92]
In order to succeed in obtaining an interim order restraining the
first respondent from
paying the second respondent in terms of the
guarantee, the applicants need to first establish a prima facie right
to have the
demand for payment in terms of the guarantees set aside
on the grounds that the demand did not comply with the terms of the
guarantee
and that the fraud rule or exception finds application on
the facts or that they have prospects of succeeding with their claim
for a development of the common law, once again on the facts of the
matter.
[93]
This Court has serious doubt as regards the fraud exception or the
unconscionability exception
and if this Court has serious doubt with
the applicants’ prima facie right, then all the other
requirements become irrelevant.
[94]
Given that the applicants are seeking an interim interdict pending
the determination of
certain issues under part B, when it is clear
that they have no prospects of succeeding with their claim under Part
B, then logically,
they are not entitled to the relief sought under
Part A.
[95]
In the matter of
SA
National Roads Agency SOC Limited v Fountain Civil Engineering (Pty)
Ltd and Another
[65]
(‘
SANRAL
’
),
the SCA dealt with the issue whether an interdict against payment
under a construction guarantee should have been granted pending
the
hearing of a dispute in respect of the merits of the cancellation of
the construction contract.
[96]
In the matter of
SANRAL
[66]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
As
stated above,
the
guarantee is an unconditional one
.
Its wording is instructive: Lombard (the insurer) was obliged
to pay ‘on receipt of a written demand’ from SANRAL,
which could be made if, in SANRAL’s ‘opinion and …
sole discretion’, the Joint Venture had failed and/or
neglected
to commence the work as prescribed, or if it had failed and/or
neglected to proceed therewith, ‘or if, for any
reason, [it]
fails and/or neglects to complete the services in accordance with the
conditions of the contract’. The catch-all
provision, viz. ‘any
reason’, is important.
The
Joint Venture’s failure to complete the project, be it due to
force majeure or otherwise, falls into this category. In
other words,
the reason for such failure is irrelevant.
’
[67]
[97]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
SANRAL
[68]
held on appeal that no interdict against payment under the guarantee
should or could have been granted. The same applies in the
matter in
casu.
Balance of
convenience
[98]
Even if this court is wrong and the cancelations were invalid, then
the applicants can
be compensated for their loss in due course by
following the dispute resolution process provided by the construction
contracts.
There is no serious suggestion that the second respondent
is unable to pay any damages which may ultimately be proven by the
applicants.
[99]
This Court has empathy for the position the applicants find
themselves in, however, so
too has this Court to consider what
disruption it may cause the second respondent should the interdict be
granted.
Costs
[100]
The second respondent seeks costs on a punitive scale in that it
alleges that the allegations of the
first applicant were made out of
desperation and that there are allegations made that some officials
have been implicated in fraud
which is not the case.
[101]
Costs are within the discretion of the Court and this Court does not
find that this matter is an instance
where punitive costs are
warranted.
Order
[102]
The application is dismissed. Costs to follow the result.
D DOSIO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down is deemed to be
10h00 on 14 January 2025
APPEARANCES
ON BEHALF OF THE
APPLICANTS:
Adv. D.S Hodge
Instructed by MDA
Attorneys
ON
BEHALF OF THE SECOND RESPONDENT:
Adv. R Stelzner SC
Instructed by The
State Attorney
[1]
Wells
Vs Army and Navy Cooperative Society
(1902)
86 LT 764
[2]
Group
Five Construction (Pty) Ltd v MEC for Public Transport, Roads and
Works, Gauteng
2015
(5) SA 26 (GSJ)
[3]
Ibid para 50
[4]
Sulzer
Pumps Spain, SA v Hyflux Membrane Manufacturing (S) Pte Ltd
[2020]
SGHC 122
and CEX v CEY & Another [2020] SGHC 100 (CEY)
[5]
Minister
v Zanbuild Construction
2011
(5) SA 528
[6]
Dormell
Properties 282 CC v Renasa Insurance Co Ltd and Others
NNO
2011 (1) SA 70
(SCA) ([2011] 1 All SA 557, [2010] ZASCA 137)
[7]
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (PTY) Ltd and Others
2010
(2) SA 86
[8]
Bombardier
Africa Alliance Consortium v Lombard Insurance Company Ltd and
Another
2021
(1) SA 397 (GP)
[9]
Minister
v Zanbuild
(note
5 above)
[10]
Ibid para 13
[11]
Mutual
Federal Insurance Co. Limited & Another v KNS Construction (Pty)
Ltd & Another
[2016]
ZASCA 87
at paras 8 and 9
[12]
Nocartis
SA v Maphil Trading
2016
(1) SA 518
(SCA) at para 27
[13]
Minister v Zanbuild
(note 5 above)
[14]
Ibid para 19
[15]
Ibid
[16]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[17]
Lombard
(note 7 above)
[18]
Loomcraft
Fabrics v Nedbank
[1995] ZASCA 127
;
1996
(1) SA 812
(A) at 815-816
[19]
Ibid
[20]
Ibid at 815F-J
[21]
Ibid
[22]
Ibid
[23]
State
Bank of India and Another v Denel SOC Limited and Others
(947/13)
[2014] SCA 212
[2015] 2 All SA 152
(SCA) (3 December 2014)
[24]
Ibid para 7
[25]
Lombard
(note 7 above)
[26]
Ibid para 20
[27]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[28]
Ibid para 39
[29]
Compass
Insurance Co Ltd v Hospitality Hotel Developments (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) (SCA)
[30]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[31]
Lombard
(note 7 above)
[32]
Coface
South Africa Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Haven
Housing Association
2014
(2) SA 382 (SCA)
[33]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[34]
Guardrisk
Insurance Company Ltd and Others v Kentz (Pty) Ltd
(94/2013)
[2013] ZASCA 182
;
[2014] 1 All SA 307
SCA
[35]
Ibid para 28
[36]
Ibid para 27
[37]
National
Gambling Board v Premier, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others
[2001] ZACC 8
;
2002
(2) SA 715
CC
[38]
Lombard
(note 7 above)
[39]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[40]
Coface
(note 32 above)
[41]
Guardrisk
(note 34 above)
[42]
Dormell
(note
6 above)
[43]
Lombard
(note 7 above)
[44]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[45]
Presidency
Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Patel
2011
5 SA 432 (SCA)
[46]
Niggli
1981
2 SA 684
(A) at page 695C
[47]
R
v Meyers
1946
AD 83
[48]
Bombardier
(note
8 above) para 22
[49]
Lombard
(note
7 above)
[50]
Dormell
(note 6 above)
[51]
Coface
(note 32 above)
[52]
Guardrisk
(note 34 above)
[53]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregan Trust
and Others
2020
(5) SA 247 (CC)
[54]
Ibid para 71
[55]
Ibid para 77
[56]
Ibid para 83
[57]
Ibid para 88
[58]
Ibid para 89
[59]
Sulzer
Pumps Spain
(note
4 above)
[60]
Ibid
[61]
Ibid para 115
[62]
Calling
on a Performance Security: As Good as Cash
?
(presented by Michael Whitten (18 June 2012) to the Commercial Bar
Association Construction Law Section (The Victorian
Bar)
[63]
Beadica
(note 53 above)
[64]
National
Gambling Board v premier Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others
[2001] ZACC 8
;
2002
(2) SA 715
CC at para 49
[65]
SA
National Roads Agency SOC Limited v Fountain Civil Engineering (Pty)
Ltd and Another
(395/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 118
(20 September 2021)
[66]
Ibid
[67]
Ibid para 28
[68]
Ibid
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