Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 222South Africa
Tornowize (Pty) Limited v Thungela Operations (Pty) Limited (2022/060819) [2025] ZAGPJHC 222 (28 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 February 2025
Headnotes
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.
Judgment
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## Tornowize (Pty) Limited v Thungela Operations (Pty) Limited (2022/060819) [2025] ZAGPJHC 222 (28 February 2025)
Tornowize (Pty) Limited v Thungela Operations (Pty) Limited (2022/060819) [2025] ZAGPJHC 222 (28 February 2025)
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sino date 28 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2022-060819
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
28
February 2025
In
the matter between:
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE, AUCAMP AJ
In
the matter between:
TORNOWIZE
(PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
And
THUNGELA
OPERATIONS (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
JUDGMENT
[1]
The
process of interpretation in resolving a dispute between two parties
is trite:
[1]
“
The
present state of the law can be expressed as follows: Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used
in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument, or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading
the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must be given to
the language used in the light of the ordinary
rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed, and the
material known to those
responsible for its production. Where more than one meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed
in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective, not subjective. A sensible meaning
is to be preferred to one that
leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose of the document. Judges
must be alert to, and
guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible or businesslike for the
words actually used.
To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between interpretation and
legislation; in
a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact made. The 'inevitable
point of departure
is the language of the provision itself' read in
context and having regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to
the preparation and production of the document.”
[2]
The respondent summarises the process of
interpretation, as follows:
2.1.
First,
one must start with the words, affording them their ordinary meaning,
bearing in mind that words must be construed purposively,
and they
must be construed consistently with the other relevant provisions of
the contract. This, according to the respondent,
is the unitary
exercise.
[2]
2.2.
Second,
the context must always be considered. The context includes the
surrounding circumstances attendant upon the documents coming
into
existence, the material known to those responsible for its
production, and the background to the preparation and production
of
the document.
[3]
2.3.
Third,
a court construes the contract as a whole, in a manner that gives
meaning to all of its terms, and avoids an interpretation
that would
render one or more of its terms ineffective.
[4]
2.4.
Fourth,
a sensible interpretation should be preferred to one that is absurd
or leads to an unbusinesslike outcome.
[5]
2.5.
Fifth,
pursuant to and in terms of
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
[6]
contrary
to the submission by the applicant that the process of interpretation
involves an objective approach and not a subjective
approach and that
it does not entail an exercise for a search for the intention of the
parties, Lewis J rejected the said approach.
Instead she found that
the Supreme Court of Appeal has consistently 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.
[3]
This matter concerns the interpretation of
a deed of settlement concluded between the parties which deed was
made an order of court.
The context to this exercise which includes
the surrounding circumstances attendant upon the deed of settlement
coming into existence,
the material known to those responsible for
its production, and the background to the preparation and production
of the deed of
settlement are:
3.1.
The applicant and the respondent on 3 March
2021 concluded a written agreement for the rehabilitation of the
Khwezela Colliery operations
at Kromdraai. The agreement was to
endure from 18 January 2021 to 30 June 2023.
3.2.
On 22 September 2022, the parties concluded
an addendum to the initial agreement extending the contract period to
31 December 2023.
3.3.
On 12 October 2022 the applicant issued the
respondent with a 90 day’s termination notice. In response, the
respondent on
19 October 2022, in writing challenged the purported
termination of the main agreement as well as the addendum thereto.
3.4.
A request made by the respondent for an
undertaking not to invoke the intended termination was not provided
and as a consequence,
the respondent on 20 December 2022 launched an
urgent application which application was set down for hearing on 10
January 2023,
seeking certain interdictory relief.
3.5.
The matter became settled pursuant to and
in terms of a written deed of settlement concluded between the
parties, which deed of
settlement was made an order of court on 10
January 2023.
3.6.
On 13 January 2023, the applicant made
payment to the respondent in the sum of R7 516 434 and on 10 February
2023, R 462 246.43,
R18 144.77 and R1 127 347.10 on 3 March 2023.
3.7.
The parties became embroiled in a dispute
as to whether the applicant, having made the aforesaid payments, had
discharged its obligations
arising from the settlement agreement and
in so doing complied with the said agreement. The issue in dispute
relates to whether
the applicant had paid the preliminary and general
payments (“
P & G
”)
as provided for in the settlement agreement.
3.8.
As a consequence, the applicant approaches
this court for a declaratory order, i.e that the applicant complied
with its obligations
as provided for in the deed of settlement.
[4]
The deed of settlement agreement provides:
“
WHEREAS
the Applicant has instituted urgent proceedings against the
Respondent to,
inter alia
,
stay the notice given by Respondent to Applicant to cease and vacate
the Khwezela Clliery.
NOW
WHEREAS
the Applicant and the
Respondent have agreed to settle the dispute between them in relation
to the Khwezela Colliery on the terms
and conditions contained in
this Agreement.
1.
SETTLEMENT
1.1
The Respondent acknowledges that it is
indebted to Applicant in the sums of:
1.1.1
R 5 531 193.39, (“
the
settlement amount
”)
representing the amount due, owing and payable to Applicant arising
from the services rendered by Applicant for and on
behalf of
Respondent at Khwezela Colliery, the retention amounts due, the time
related preliminary and general payments due, the
half portion of the
severance packages of the Applicants employees and the
disestablishment of Applicant’s site at Khwezela
Colliery; and
1.1.2
The amounts due to Applicant for work
completed by the Applicant for and on behalf of Respondent, during
the month of December 2022
calculated in accordance with the
agreement attached as annexure FA3 to the Applicant’s founding
affidavit (“
works amount
”).
1.2
The Respondent shall pay the settlement
amount and works amount to Applicant on or before 16 January 2023, in
full, and free of
exchange, set off or other deduction of any nature.
Payment shall be made to the following account and proof of payment
shall be
emailed to … :
…
.
1.3
Payment of the settlement amount and works
amount shall be in full and final settlement of any and all disputes
arising between
the parties.
1.4
The Applicant, subject to the Respondent
effecting payment of the settlement amount and works amount in full
on or before 16 January
2023:
1.4.1
Accept the Respondents’ notice of
termination for convenience issued on 12 October 2022;
1.4.2
Shall complete the disestablishment of its
site at Khwezela Colliery on or before 19 January 2023.
2.
BREACH
2.1
Should Respondent fail to make payment of the settlement amount and
works amount on due date, either
in full or at all, or breach this
Agreement in any manner whatsoever, then in such event, the balance
then outstanding in respect
of the settlement amount shall accrue
interest at the prime rate of interest as quoted by Nedbank Limited,
from time to time, plus
[insert]
calculated from 16 January
2023 to date of final payment both days inclusive and the Respondent
shall be liable to pay the Applicant’s
costs incurred in
connection with these proceedings on the scale as between party and
party.
3.
GENERAL
3.1
No addition to or variation, deletion, or agreed cancellation of all
or any clauses or provisions of
this Agreement will be of any force
or effect unless in writing and signed by the parties hereto.
3.2
No waiver of any of the terms and conditions of this Agreement will
be binding and effectual for any
purposes unless in writing and
signed by the party giving same. Any such waiver will be effective
only in the specific instance
and for the purpose given. Failure or
delay on the part of any party in exercising any right, power or
privilege hereunder will
not constitute or be deemed to be a waiver
thereof, nor will any single or partial exercise of any right, power
or privilege preclude
any another or further exercise thereof or the
exercise of any other right, power or privilege.
3.3
The Parties agree that this Agreement may be made an Order of Court.
4.
SIGNATURE
4.1
This agreement is signed by the parties on the dates and places
indicated below.
4.2
This agreement may be signed and executed in counterparts, each of
which shall be deemed to be an original,
and all of which together
shall constitute one and the same agreement as at date upon which the
counterpart signed by the party
last signing same.
4.3
Where the Agreement is signed by such electronic signature, each
Party agrees that this method of signature
is conclusive of its
intention to be bound by this Agreement as if signed by each Party’s
manuscript signature.”
THE RESPECTIVE
POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES
[5]
The applicant submits that in terms of the
deed of settlement, it was to make payment to the respondent in the
sum of R5 531 193.39,
excluding VAT (clause 1.1.1 thereof,
representing the “
settlement
amount
”), an amount due by
the applicant to the respondent for works completed by the respondent
for and on behalf of the applicant
during the month of December 2022
calculated in accordance with annexure
FA3
(“
works amount
”)
(clause 1.1.2 thereof). The applicant further submits that all
amounts were to be paid on or before 16 January 2023 to
the nominated
bank account of the respondent (clause 1.2) and that all payments
were made in full and final settlement of any and
all disputes
between the parties.
[6]
The applicant furthermore submits that:
6.1.
The subsequent payment(s) were accompanied
by correspondence dated 13 January 2023 wherein the respondent, was
informed that the
payment of R7 516 434.59, exclusive of Vat was in
respect: (a) R5 531 193.39 excluding Vat as per clause 1.1.1 of the
settlement
agreement and (b0 R1 985 241.20 excluding Vat as per
clause 1.1.2 settlement agreement. Reference to clause 1.1.1 of the
settlement
agreement is relevant as it relates to the (i) retention
amounts due; (ii) the time related preliminary and general payments
due
(“
P&G’s
”);
(iii) 50% of the severance package in respect of the respondent’s
employees and the disestablishment of the site,
(iv) R1 985 241.20 in
respect of work completed during the month of December 2022.
6.2.
As a consequence, on 10 January 2023, the
December P & G’s were included in clause 1.1 of the
settlement agreement.
6.3.
Prior to the conclusion of the settlement
agreement and as set out in clause 2.2 of the then counter proposal
of the respondent,
R1 646 000.00 was quantified. Furthermore, in the
said letter, an invoice reflecting the settlement amount and works
amount was
so requested, as the applicant undertook to make payment
of the Vat amount upon a correct Vat invoice. In the very same
letter,
the respondent was made aware that the Vat payment will be
made once a Vat invoice in compliance with section 20(1) of the Vat
Act, 89 of 1991 was so provided.
6.4.
The applicant labels the settlement
agreement as a compromise agreement which had the result of the
parties having reached a compromise,
in full and final settlement,
including the P & G’s for December 2022. The settlement
agreement made provision for what
was so payable, the settlement
amount was so calculated in terms of clause 1.1.1 of the settlement
agreement and the works amount
as set out in clause 1.1.2.
6.5.
The respondent’s contention that the
P & G’s were not included in the settlement agreement loses
sight of the fact
that all amounts due for December 2022 were
included in clause 1.1.2 in that it made specific provision for all
works so contemplated
during the month of December 2022 and that it
is dated 10 January 2023.
[7]
The respondent submits that the dispute
between the parties is whether the amount of R823 000.00 being an
amount the applicant invoiced
as being for the preliminary and
general payments (P & G’s) for the month of December 2022 –
as contemplated in
clause 1.1.2 of the settlement agreement, falls to
be paid by the respondent. The contention of the respondent is that
it need
not pay the applicant this invoiced amount because it made
payments for the P & G’s pursuant to clause 1.1.1 of the
settlement
agreement is opportunistic, inconsistent with the terms of
the settlement agreement and lacks commercial logic.
[8]
The structure of the relevant clauses in
the settlement agreement are such that they are divided into two
parts. The first part
(clause 1.1.1) and the second part (clause
1.1.2). The distinction is important as it shows that the two
provisions cater for two
situations. The first part relates to
payments that were known and quantified. The second deals with
payments which are not quantified
and relate to one specific month
(December). It was intended to deal with work done – and
payments that would be due –
for the month of December 2022.
[9]
The applicant’s assertion that the P
& G’s for December 2022 were included in the settlement
agreement amount and
are therefore not payable is incorrect in that
the settlement amount did not and could not include the December 2022
P & G’s
as well as the volumes moved after 22 December 2022
because those amounts were not yet “
due
”.
No invoice had been issued in respect of the said amounts.
[10]
The main agreement provides that an amount
becomes due and payable 30 days after the presentation of a tax
invoice. As at the time
of the conclusion of the settlement agreement
the P & G’s were not due and therefore could not be
included in the settlement
amount recorded in the settlement
agreement. They naturally had to be included (as contemplated) in the
amounts due per clause
1.1.2 of the settlement agreement.
[11]
As such it follows that the P & G
general work completed by the respondent for the month of December
2022, calculated in accordance
with the main agreement were to be
paid separately from the amounts set out in the settlement amount;
such payments had to be made
pursuant to clause 1.1.2 of the
settlement agreement.
[12]
The settlement amount recorded the
settlement then due prior and excluding the December 2022 amounts as
they related to the P &
G’s dues. P & G dues for
December 2022 only became due and payable on presentation of the
invoice for the entire month
of December 2022, which was only
presented on 12 January 2023 post the settlement agreement’s
conclusion. Therefore, the
settlement agreement cannot be interpreted
to include P & G dues for December 2022. To do so would be
contrary to logic, the
provisions of the main contract, the terms of
the settlement agreement itself and more importantly commercial
sensibility.
[13]
The applicant’s interpretation also
ignores the meaning of the word “due” in clause 1.1 of
the settlement agreement.
The clause repeatedly refers to the word.
It refers to “
retention amount
due
” and the “
time
related preliminary and general payments due
”.
Clause 1.1.1 is very specific in relation that which is due, it
itemises them, and states a fixed amount.
[14]
The meaning of the word “
due
”
in the settlement agreement must be understood within the factual and
historical context, which includes, the nature of
the dispute which
precipitated and formed the settlement agreement, and in turn
encompasses the state of affairs at the time of
conclusion of the
settlement agreement.
[15]
The word “
due
”
must be interpreted with regard to the provisions of the main
agreement, for it is that agreement which tells us, when and
how the
payments became “
due
”
in the context of the relationship between the parties. The main
agreement provides that amount for any and all work done,
became
“
due
”.
Clause 16 of the contract data deals with the “
Time
for Payment
”. It provides that
payment would be due, “
30 (thirty)
days from the last day of the month in which the Company receives the
relevant tax invoice
.”
[16]
Also relevant is clause 12.2.8, which
provides that: “[t]he Contractor’s payment application
shall include the following
information (as applicable) (a) details
of the amounts to which the Contractor considers itself to be
entitled … The structure
of the settlement agreement itself is
consistent with the way in which the parties understood the meaning
of the words “
due
”
in the context of payments that were liable to be made. Clause 1.1
specifies a quantified amount of R5 531 193.39 –
and also sets
out the items falling within the said amount. This could only have
been because those items and amounts were considered
“
due
”
after the respondent had rendered an invoice for the November 2022
period. The parties neither discussed nor agreed upon
the December
2022 P & G’s prior to the conclusion of the settlement
agreement, precisely because they did not know what
they entailed.
What was fixed and “
due
”
in consequence of the invoices provided to the respondent (prior to
the conclusion of the settlement agreement) were the
P & G’s
for November 2022. These were “
due
”
within the meaning of the word as contemplated by the contractual
matrix in this case.
[17]
It follows that the assertion that the
December 2022 P & G’s were included in paragraph 1.1.1 of
the settlement agreement
is incorrect. It would mean that both the
applicant and the respondent agreed to the unknown. It makes no
commercial sense whatsoever
to agree to something which has not been
quantified – or the quantification of which has not occurred,
It must be re-iterated
that, at the time of the conclusion of the
settlement agreement, that which had been quantified and thus known
(as regards the
nature of the work done and the expenses incurred)
consisted of costs relating to November 2022 (and before) in other
words, work,
which had been duly invoiced.
[18]
On the requirement that that a contract
must be interpreted purposively. It is clear that clause 1.1.2
contemplates
future
payments
which not yet been computed. This is why it contemplates that such
payments would be computed in accordance with the provisions
of the
main agreement. That is its purpose.
[19]
The “
work
completed
” for the month of
December 2022 – and for which payment would be “due”
upon presentation of an invoice
– obviously includes the P&Gs
for that specific month. A contrary interpretation would render the
clause meaningless,
if not superfluous. But as stated, it is a
fundamental principle of interpretation that no word or provision
should be rendered
meaningless orsuperfluous.19 It follows that
Tornowize’s interpretation is consistent with the purpose of
the clause –
and indeed with the two-part structure of clause
1.1.
THE EVALUATION
[20]
First and foremost, it has to be remembered
that the parties, subsequent to a contractual arrangement extending
over a period of
time, became embroiled in a dispute, more
specifically in relation to the premature termination thereof. This
dispute was ultimately
resolved by agreement between the parties in
the conclusion of the deed of settlement.
[21]
In
Eke
v Parsons
[7]
the
Constitutional Court held that for an order to be competent and
proper, it must, in the first place, relate directly or indirectly
to
an issue or lis between the parties. Secondly, the agreement being
made an order of court, should not be objectionable and thirdly
the
agreement must hold some practical and legitimate advantage. The
Constitutional Court continued to hold that once the settlement
agreement is made an order of court, it is an order like any other.
It will be interpreted like all orders:
“
The
starting point is to determine the manifest purpose of the order. In
interpreting a judgement or order, the court’s intention
is to
be ascertained primarily from the language of the judgement or order
in accordance with the usual well-known rules relating
to the
interpretation of documents. As in the case of a document, the
judgement or order and the court’s reasons for giving
it must
be read as a whole in order to ascertain its intention.”
[22]
The
respondent concedes that the settlement agreement, had the effect of
bringing the relationship between the parties to an end.
This is in
line with the ratio expressed in Eke
supra
:
[8]
“
The
effect of a settlement order is to change the status of the rights
and obligations between the parties. Save for litigation
that may be
consequent upon the nature of the particular order, the order brings
finality to the lis between the parties; the lis
becomes res judicata
(literally, ‘a matter judged’). It changes the terms of a
settlement agreement to an enforceable
court order. The type of
enforcement may be execution or contempt proceedings. Or it may take
any form permitted by the nature
of the order. That form may possibly
be some litigation the nature of which will be one step removed from
seeking committal for
contempt; and example being a mandamus.”
[23]
Secondly, the deed of settlement expressly
provides that: “
Payment of the
settlement amount and works amount shall be in full and final
settlement of any and all disputes arising between
the parties.
”
The phrase “
full
and final settlement of any and all disputes arising between the
parties
” suggests that, once the
payments are made, the parties waive any further claims against each
other regarding the subject
matter of the settlement.
[24]
In
Breitenbach
v Breitenbach
[9]
a
settlement agreement that was made an order of court was treated as a
final disposition of the dispute between the parties and
could not be
reopened unless there were exceptional circumstances such as fraud,
misrepresentation, or a material mistake. In
Gollach
& Gomperts (1967) (Pty) Ltd v Universal Mills & Produce Co
(Pty)
Ltd
[10]
it
was held that
–
a compromise (transaction) is binding and excludes parties from
litigating further on matters already settled.
[25]
By
agreeing to a “
full
and final settlement
,”
the parties waived their right to bring any further claims related to
the dispute. A valid compromise creates new rights
and obligations
and replaces the original cause of action.
[11]
[26]
Thirdly, the respondent’s contention that the structure
of the deed of settlement, i.e the two parts referred to and the fact
that the P & G’s in respect of December 2022, as at the
date of the conclusion of the settlement agreement (10 January
2023)
were not as yet due for payment and that no invoice in respects of
such amounts had been issued by the respondent is without
merit. I
say this because it ignores the fact that the conclusion of the
settlement agreement and the subsequent making thereof
an order of
court, had the
ex lege
consequence of destroying the
underlying agreement(s) and replacing same with the deed of
settlement. The reliance on the fact
that the P & G’s for
December 2022 was not as yet due and payable is with reference to the
underlying agreement and not
the deed of settlement. The only aspect
that remained alive from the underlying agreement was the computation
of the amounts due
to the respondent for work completed by the
respondent for and on behalf of the applicant during the month of
December 2022. The
computation of the said amount was to be
determined with reference to the relevant provisions of the
underlying agreement. The
payment, more specifically the payment
date(s) of the settlement amounts, and work amounts had to be made
pursuant to and in terms
of the deed of settlement and not in terms
of the underlying agreement.
[27]
I find that the case presented by respondent, is not supported
by the ordinary meaning of the words used in the deed of settlement,
is not in accordance with the whole of the deed of settlement,
especially clause 1.3 thereof and accepting the approach adopted
by
the respondent would render clause 1.3 ineffective. I finally hold
that the interpretation of the respondent does not constitute
a
sensible interpretation and will result in an absurd or leads to an
unbusinesslike result. The intention of the parties was to
bring
their contractual arrangement to an end and to part ways on a clean
slate once the deed of settlement was duly executed.
RELIEF
[28]
In the result I make the following order:
28.1.
It is declared that the applicant complied
with its obligations as provided for in a deed of settlement so
concluded between the
applicant and the respondent dated 10 January
2023, which was made an order of court on 10 January 2023.
28.2.
The respondent is to pay the applicant’s
party and party costs of this application, such costs to be taxed in
accordance with
scale C.
S AUCAMP
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e mail and publication
on CaseLines.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10h00
on
-28 February 2025
Heard
on: 29 January 2025
Date
of Judgement: 28 February 2025
For
the Applicants:
Adv J.W Kloek
Instructed by: Hogan
Lovells, Johannesburg
For
the Respondents:
Adv M. Tsele
Instructed by: KWA
Attorneys
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
[2]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA)
[3]
Endumeni
supra
[4]
African
Products (Pty) Ltd v AIG South Africa
2009 (3) SA 473
(SCA)
[5]
Endumeni
supra
[6]
2016
(10 SA 518 (SCA)
[7]
2016
(3) SA 37
(CC) at Para [25]
[8]
At
Para [31]
[9]
1971
(2) SA 81 (T)
[10]
1978
(1) SA 914 (A)
[11]
Schierhout
v Minister of Justice
1926 AD 99
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 399High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 961High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 971High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 1319High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar