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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 212
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## Mampuru and Others v Bowman and Another (2024/008706)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 212 (5 March 2025)
Mampuru and Others v Bowman and Another (2024/008706)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 212 (5 March 2025)
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sino date 5 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2024-008706
Date
of hearing: 24 February 2025
Date
delivered: 5 March 2025
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
5/3/25
SIGNATURE:
In
the application of:
MAMPURU,
MOSES SIPHO
First
Applicant
NOKO
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
MAMPURU
WASTE MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Third
Applicant
NOKO
PACKAGING (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Applicant
and
BOWMAN,
CRAIG ANDREW
First
Respondent
ADV.
SCHALK AUCAMP N.O.
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
This is a review of an
arbitration award that was handed down by the second respondent
on 18
December 2023. The applicants seek the setting aside of the award,
and an order that the matter be referred for adjudication
before a
different arbitrator.
[2]
The cause of action in the matter is not important to this judgment.
It is sufficient
to say that the arbitration arose from an agreement
between the first applicant and the first respondent in terms of
which the
first applicant purchased the first applicant’s
members’ interest in two close corporations and the shares in
two companies
at a purchase price of R 7 350 000. Having
concluded the agreement, the first applicant allegedly breached its
terms by failing
to pay the purchase price. The second to fourth
applicants are party to the matter by virtue of having guaranteed the
first applicant’s
performance under the agreement.
[3]
After a brief sojourn in the courts, the first respondent referred
the matter to the
Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa (“AFSA”)
for the appointment of an arbitrator.
[4]
The second respondent was appointed as arbitrator, and after
adjudicating an in limine
issue against the first applicant, a
pre-arbitration meeting was held on 9 August 2023, with the view to
preparing for arbitration
on the merits. The first applicant had
instructed his attorneys not to be present at the meeting. At the
said meeting the parties
attempted a settlement, which they could not
achieve, and a further pre-arbitration meeting was arranged for 16
August 2023. The
first applicant was warned explicitly that the first
respondent would not countenance any delay in the matter. He
undertook to
ensure his attorney’s presence at the next
meeting.
[5]
The first applicant’s attorneys were again not present at the
meeting on 16
August 2023. He explained that he had appointed new
attorneys, and that he would be delivering the case files to them the
following
day. The pre-arbitration meeting then proceeded, and the
following was agreed:
[5.1]
The parties would deliver discovery affidavits by 31 October 2023;
[5.2]
The first respondent would deliver a bundle of documents by 6
November 2023;
[5.3]
Expert notices, if any, would be delivered by the first respondent in
terms of Uniform Rule 36 by
17 November 2023, and by the first
applicant by 24 November 2023.
[5.4]
The arbitration would commence on 6 December 2023;
[5.5]
The parties would settle the arbitration costs in equal shares before
6 December 2023, and if any
party failed to do so, the other party
was entitled to pay the fees on its behalf.
[6]
It was recorded that the first applicant’s new attorneys could
contact the first
respondent’s attorneys should they require
clarity on any part of the procedure.
[7]
The first respondent discovered by 31 October 2023. On the same day
the first applicant
sent an email that read:
“
Please find the
list of my discovered documents. I am busy finalizing an agreement
with my attorney of record.”
[8]
The first respondent’s attorneys acknowledge receipt of the
list, and requested
the first applicant to deliver his discovery
affidavit and his bundle of documents. On 1 November 2023 the first
respondent’s
attorneys again reminded the first applicant that
he had not complied with his obligation to discover.
[9]
On 20 November 2023, three weeks later, the first applicant wrote to
the first respondent’s
attorney saying:
“
I am still waiting
for the documents I requested from you as per the attachment on the
31
st
October 2023. Please advise when I must expect the
documents.”
[10]
I find it inexplicable that the first applicant could somehow
interpret his email of 31 October
to constitute a request for
documents. Nonetheless, the first respondent’s attorneys
advised him that the documents requested
were personal to the first
respondent, were irrelevant, and would not be provided.
[11]
The first applicant then did nothing until 6 December 2023 when he
appeared, unrepresented, at
the arbitration. The first applicant
sought a postponement of the proceedings on two grounds: Firstly,
that he was unrepresented
and had not been able to obtain the
services of an attorney, and, secondly, that he had not been provided
with the documents that
he says he requested on 31 October 2023.
[12]
The arbitrator made the off-the cuff remark that possibly the first
applicant could not represent
the second to fourth respondents, but
he made no finding on the issue.
[13]
The first applicant provided no reason why he had not secured the
services of an attorney. As
far as the requested documents are
concerned, the first applicant was asked what their relevance might
be. The first applicant
only said that they might become relevant
when their contents were scrutinized, and that an attorney might be
able to answer the
question better. In short, the first applicant
could not justify his request for the documents.
[14]
The second respondent considered the request, and then refused a
postponement. He enquired from
the first applicant how he intended to
proceed. The first applicant chose to leave the arbitration
proceedings, effectively
allowing the arbitration to continue by
default. Having heard evidence, the arbitrator then adjourned the
case and reserved judgment.
He handed down judgment on 18 December
2023.
[15]
The grounds for review are the following:
[15.1] That there
had been no agreement on the rules under which the arbitration would
be conducted (the Commercial or Expedited
rules of AFSA), and that
the second respondent applied different rules to the conduct of the
matter;
[15.2] That the
arbitrator had erred in finding that the first applicant could not
represent the second to fourth applicants;
[15.3] That the
arbitrator refused a postponement in circumstances where the rules of
discovery had not been agreed upon,
the first applicant had only
become aware shortly before the arbitration that the first respondent
did not have the documents that
he sought, and that he was unaware of
the remedies available to him to obtain the documents;
[15.4] That the
award had been amended improperly subsequent to its publication in
order to correct an incorrect date.
[16]
Before I deal with the merits of the application, I point out that
the applicants also sought
condonation for the late filing of the
application, which was not opposed. I shall thus condone the late
filing of the application.
[17]
The
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
provides in
section 33
(1) for the
circumstances under which an award may be set aside. It reads as
follows:
“
(1)
Where-
(a)
any member of an arbitration tribunal has misconducted himself in
relation to his duties
as arbitrator or umpire; or
(b)
an arbitration tribunal has committed any gross irregularity in the
conduct of the arbitration
proceedings or has exceeded its powers; or
(c)
an award has been improperly obtained,
the court may, on the
application of any party to the reference after due notice to the
other party or parties, make an order setting
the award aside.”
[18]
The above provisions are exhaustive of the grounds upon which a
private arbitration may be reviewed
and set aside. The first
applicant relies particularly on
section 33
(1) (b), that the second
respondent committed a gross irregularity in the proceedings. He
argued that although the grounds for
review individually may not
justify a review, the cumulative effect was that the applicants had
not received a fair hearing.
[19]
When parties agree to private arbitration, they agree to the
expeditious determination of the
dispute by way of an agreed and
truncated process. In
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[1]
the
court said
[2]
:
“
[50]
By agreeing to arbitration parties to a dispute necessarily agree
that the fairness of the hearing will be
determined by the provisions
of the Act and nothing else. Typically they agree to waive the right
of appeal. Which in context means
that they waive the right to have
the merits of their dispute re-litigated or reconsidered. They may,
obviously, agree otherwise
by appointing an arbitral appeal panel,
something that did not happen in this case.
[51]
Last, by agreeing to arbitration the parties limit interference by
courts to the grounds of procedural
irregularities set out in
s 33
(1) of the Act. By necessary implication they waive the right to rely
on any further ground of review, ‘common law’
or
otherwise.”
[20]
The first applicant relies entirely on
section 33
(1) (b), that the
second respondent allegedly committed a gross irregularity in the
matter. In
Bester
v Easigas (Pty) Ltd and Another
[3]
the Court defined said that a gross irregularity relates to the
conduct of the proceedings, and not to the outcome thereof. The
conduct must have been of such a serious nature so as to result in
the aggrieved party not having his case fully and fairly determined.
This approach was approved in
Mia
v DJL Properties (Waltloo) (Pty) Ltd and Another
[4]
[21]
The question is therefore not whether the arbitrator was right or
wrong, the question is whether
the arbitrator allowed a process by
which the aggrieved party was prevented from presenting his case
fairly. As it was put in
Rabinowitz
v Levy and Others
[5]
:
“
The ‘gross
irregularity’ required by
s 33
(1) (b) must relate to the
conduct of the proceedings, and not the result or outcome of the
proceedings. Thus, if an arbitrator
is guilty of conducting an
arbitration in some form of high-handed or arbitrary manner, or
dishonestly, he or she would be guilty
of a gross irregularity. But a
bona fide mistake in the merits, no matter how gross, will not
suffice. It is furthermore not every
irregularity in the conduct of
the proceedings that will afford grounds for review; the irregularity
must have been of such a serious
nature that it resulted in the
aggrieved party not having his case fully and fairly determined.”
[22]
It was put eloquently in
Telcordia
, that an arbitrator “
has
the right to be wrong on the merits
”. The arbitrator is
granted the right to apply the law as he believes to be correct, and
an error in such application does
not constitute a gross
irregularity.
[23]
The applicants, firstly, allege that the arbitrator applied the
incorrect rules, by applying
the AFSA expedited rules, and that it
had not been agreed that those rules applied to the arbitration. The
first respondent has
stated in the answering affidavit that,
notwithstanding that the pre-arbitration minutes do not say so, it
had been agreed that
the expedited rules would apply. On the
Plascon-Evans rule
[6]
I must
accept the first respondent’s version unless it is clearly
untenable. The facts support the first respondent’s
version.
[24]
In any event, what, if any, effect did the application of the rules
have on the manner in which
the proceedings were conducted? In my
view, none. The first applicant knew exactly what was expected of him
as far as discovery
was concerned. He failed to comply with the
arbitrator’s directive that he should discover by 31 October
2023. He then sent
an email that cannot under any circumstances be
interpreted as a request for documents, and he sat back and did
nothing to engage
with the arbitrator regarding better discovery
until he appeared at the arbitration. The first applicant neglected
to have his
attorneys present at the arbitration. Neither the nature
of the rules applied, nor the manner of their application caused the
first
applicant any prejudice.
[25]
The arbitrator has the right to adopt whatever procedure he believes
to be appropriate for the
resolution of the dispute, unless the
arbitral agreement precludes such procedure.
[7]
In this case the arbitrator decided to adopt the procedures in
rule
35
, which the first applicant was welcome to follow if he wished to
do so. The first ground of review has no merit.
[26]
The first applicant also alleged that the second respondent ruled
that he could not represent
the second to fourth applicants. That is
not correct. The second respondent specifically did not make a ruling
on this issue. On
the contrary, having refused a postponement, he
invited the first applicant to continue with the proceedings, at
which point the
first applicant left the proceedings of his own
volition. He is, in my view, the author of his own misfortune.
[27]
The first applicant also contends that the second respondent
committed a gross irregularity by
refusing a postponement. If regard
is had to the above discussion on ‘gross irregularities’,
it is immediately clear
that refusing a postponement is not a gross
irregularity. The arbitrator exercised a discretion, and even if he
did so erroneously,
which I do not believe is the case, then he had
the right to be wrong. This is not a ground for review.
[28]
The final aspect was the allegation that the award was subsequently
corrected in an irregular
manner. Counsel for the applicants did not
pursue this submission, wisely so, and the less said on this topic
the better.
[29]
Counsel for the applicants argued that individually the grounds for
review might not justify
the setting aside of the award, but that
they collectively led to the applicants not receiving a fair hearing.
I disagree. The
first applicant brought the result upon himself by
his dilatory conduct, and by his decision to leave the arbitration.
In the circumstances
he received a fair hearing.
[30]
The agreement for the sale of provides for the granting of
attorney/client costs, and I shall
make such an order.
[31]
It follows, therefore that the application must fail, and I make the
following order:
[31.1] The late
filing of the application is condoned.
[31.2] The
application is dismissed.
[31.3] The
respondents shall pay the costs on the attorney/client scale, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Counsel
for the applicants:
Adv P Kok
Instructed
by:
Langham-Love Galbraith-Van Reenen Inc
Counsel
for the first respondent:
Adv B van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Malherbe Rigg and Ranwell Inc
Date
heard:
24 February 2025
Date
handed down:
5 March 2025
[1]
Telcordia Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 112
;
2007 (3) SA 266
(SCA);
[2007] 2 ALL SA 243
(SCA)
[2]
At paras [50] to [51]
[3]
Bester v Easigas (Pty) Ltd and Another
1993 (1) SA 30
(C) at 42 G to
43 D
[4]
Mia v DJL Properties (Waltloo) (Pty) Ltd and Another
2000 (4) SA 220
(T)
[5]
Rabinowitz v Levy and Others 2024 JDR 0220 (SCA);
[2024] ZASCA 8
(26
January 2024), at para [15]
[6]
Plascon Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA
620 (A)
[7]
Dexgroup (Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty) Ltd
2013 (6)
SA 520
(SCA) at paras 19 to 20
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