Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 280South Africa
Vaal University of Technology v Peach (25805/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 280 (14 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 March 2025
Headnotes
“In ordinary language, one can undoubtedly say that an order enforcing a specific obligation due to be performed in terms of a contract,
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Vaal University of Technology v Peach (25805/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 280 (14 March 2025)
Vaal University of Technology v Peach (25805/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 280 (14 March 2025)
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sino date 14 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
CASE
NO: 25805/2021
In
the matter between:
THE
VAAL UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
Excipient /
Defendant
And
DR
VUYO PEACH
Respondent /
Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
DREYER
AJ
:
[1]
On or about 27 May
2021 the Respondent / Plaintiff instituted action against the
Excipient / Defendant. For ease of reference the
parties will be
referred to as Respondent and Excipient respectively.
[2]
On 19 September 2023
the Excipient served a Notice of Exception on the attorneys of record
of the Respondent on the ground that
the Particulars of Claim lack
the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action.
[3]
The Excipient sets
out in the Notice of Exception that the Respondent’s claim is
for specific performance in terms of the
agreement pleaded by the
Respondent in the Particulars of Claim (‘the pleaded
agreement”).
[4]
The crux of the
exception raised by the Excipient is that whilst the Respondent seeks
specific performance in terms of the pleaded
agreement, the
Respondent:
4.1
has failed to allege that he has complied with his obligations
pleaded in paragraphs 6.2 and 6.3 of
the pleaded agreement and
therefore failed to allege that he complied with his full obligations
as pleaded;
4.2
does not allege that the obligations pleaded in paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3
of the pleaded agreement are divisible
and that the obligation
pleaded in paragraph 6.1 is separate from the obligations pleaded in
paragraphs 6.2 and 6.3.
[5]
In the circumstances
the Excipient set out the Particulars of Claim lack averments
necessary to sustain a cause of action based
on a claim for specific
performance.
[6]
It appears from the
Particulars of Claim that the Respondent is seeking payment from the
Excipient of his invoices rendered to the
Excipient in respect of
legal services rendered as an independent consultant to the Excipient
totalling the sum of R4 976 518.14.
[7]
The relevant
portions of the Particulars of Claim are the following:
“
4.
The Plaintiff acting personally, was duly and properly instructed in
his capacity as an independent
consultant in terms of the terms of
reference set out in Annexure “1” attached hereto and
dated 14
th
of October 2019, which terms where approved on the 22
nd
of October 2019 at Vanderbijlpark, by the Defendant being duly
represented by authorised representative, acting Deputy
Vice-Chancellor
Teaching, Learning and student Support, Prof CM van
Der Bank in her capacity as the acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor
Teaching, Learning.
5.
…
6.
The Defendant set out the terms of reference as set out more fully in
Annexure “
VP1”
. In terms thereof, Defendant
indicated the terms of reference as follows: “This
investigation is to clarify the negligence
from the side of the
university, and the consequences thereof. This investigation needs to
clarify who is responsible for not meeting
the said conditions”.
The scope of work would include, amongst others the following:
6.1
To conduct investigation on the alleged misconducts.
6.2
To determine whether or not those allegations are substantiated or
not.
6.3
Make recommendations on appropriate steps to be followed in order to
address those allegations that
you shall have found substantiated.
7.
…
8.
…
9.
In addition to the material terms as set out in the scope of work,
and in order to facilitate
the investigation, parts of the agreement
were partially written, partially verbal and/or tacit: it was further
agreed that:
9.1
The Plaintiff would charge for his time spent at a rate of R3000/h
(prior to 11 November 2020) and R4000/h
(after 11 November 2020) and
R8/km for travelling.
9.2
The Defendant will pay the Plaintiff’s invoices for reasonable
fees for legal representation and
legal services on rendering of the
account, alternatively within a reasonable time but no later 30 days
after rendering of the
account.
9.3
The Plaintiff will charge incidental interest at a rate of 7% for
late payment on invoices rendered.
10.
…
11.
…
12.
…
13.
The Plaintiff, duly, properly and in accordance with the aforesaid
agreed, carried out his instructions
received from the Defendant and
rendered the representation and investigated as required.
14.
The balance on the account of the Plaintiff’s reasonable fees
for legal representation and legal
services as aforesaid, including
incidental interest at a rate of 7%/annum, due and owing by the
Defendant to the Plaintiff, pursuant
to the aforesaid agreement
amount to R4 976 518.14 as at 15 May 2021, are computed as
follows:
14.1
Invoice No 03/2020: R225 154.26, attached hereto and marked as
Annexure “
VP3”
. This invoice is made up of the
total amount of R211 200 without interest and the additional
amount of R13 954.26, which
includes interest of 7% on the
original amount.
14.2
Invoice No 11/2020: R4 751 363.88, attached hereto and
marked as Annexure “
VP4”
. This invoice is made up
of the total amount of R4 509 040.00 without interest and
the additional amount of R242 323.88,
which includes interest of
7% on the original amount.
15.
…
16.
…
17.
…
18.
Plaintiff rendered his account to Defendant on the following
dates:
18.1
Invoice No 3 of 2020: On 6 March 2020.
18.2
Invoice No 11 of 2020: On 12 May 2020.
These
invoices were sent to Defendant via email and the receipt thereof was
formally acknowledged by Defendant through its finance
departments on
the dates set out hereinabove.
19.
Defendant has failed and or has neglected or refuses to make payment
of the outstanding amount and to
this end a letter of demand was
issued via Plaintiff’s attorneys of record for settlement
thereof.
20.
…
21.
…
22.
Notwithstanding the above and notwithstanding demand for payment, the
Defendant has failed or refused
or neglected to pay any portions of
the outstanding amount to Plaintiff, despite demand.
”
[8]
A distinction has to
be drawn between orders
ad
pecuniam solvendam
,
which relates to the payment of money and orders
ad
factum praestandum
,
which calls upon a person to perform a certain act or refrain from
specific action.
[9]
In
Ethekwini
Municipality v Cooperativa Muratori & Cementisti – CM Di
Ravenna Societa Cooperative
2023 JDR 2053 (SCA) at paragraph 25 it was held that “
In
ordinary language, one can undoubtedly say that an order enforcing a
specific obligation due to be performed in terms of a contract,
including one for payment of money, is an order for specific
performance. However, that is not the sense in which the term has
been used in our law consistently, judging from reported judgments,
since the nineteenth century in the context of the discretion
to
grant or refuse an order for specific performance. In this sense the
term is used to denote an order for the performance of
a contractual
obligation to do something; that is an order of ‘specific
performance ad faciendum’, or more frequently,
an order ad
factum praestandum.
”
[10]
It is clear from the
Particulars of Claim that the Respondent’s cause of action is
contractual and that he is seeking an order
enforcing a contractual
obligation
ad
pecuniam solvendam
,
i.e. an order for specific performance of a money claim.
[11]
In
McKensie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at page 23 the Appellate Division defined ‘cause of
action’ to be “
every
fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right to judgment of the
Court. It
does not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove
each fact, but every fact which is necessary to
be proved.
”
[12]
In
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty Ltd
2001
(3) SA 986
(SCA) at paragraph 7 it was held that “
It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it can be shown that
ex
facie the allegations made by a plaintiff and any document upon which
his or her cause of action may be based, the claim is
(not may) bad
in law.
”
[13]
In
Living
Hands (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ditz and Others
2013 (2) SA 368
(GSJ) at paragraph 15 the applicable principles when
considering exceptions were set out as follows:
13.1
In considering an exception that a pleading does not sustain a cause
of action, the court will accept, as
true, the allegations pleaded by
plaintiff to assess whether they disclose a cause of action.
13.2
The object of an exception is not to embarrass one’s opponent
or to take advantage of a technical flaw,
but to dispose of the case
or a portion of thereof in an expeditious manner, or to protect
oneself against embarrassment which
is so serious as to merit the
costs even of an exception.
13.3
The purpose an exception is to raise a substantive question of law
which may have the effect of settling
the dispute between the
parties. If the exception is not taken for that purpose, an excipient
should make out a very clear case
before it would be allowed to
succeed.
13.4
An excipient who alleges that a summons does not disclose a cause of
action must establish that, upon any
construction of the particulars
of claim, no cause of action is disclose.
13.5
An over-technical
approach should be avoided because it destroys the usefulness of the
exception procedure, which is to weed out
cases without legal merit.
13.6
Pleadings must be
read as a whole and an exception cannot be taken to a paragraph or a
part of a pleading that is not self-contained.
13.7
Minor blemishes and
unradical embarrassments caused by a pleading can and should be cured
by further particulars.
[14]
Having regard to the
allegations pleaded by the Respondent in the Particulars of Claim as
a whole, although not eloquently pleaded,
it cannot be said the
Respondent’s claim is bad in law.
[15]
In essence the
parties entered into a contract in terms of which the Respondent were
to conduct an investigation. This is evident
from the terms of
reference set out in Annexure “VP1” attached to the
Particulars of Claim. This is pleaded by the
Respondent in paragraphs
4 and 6 of the Particulars of Claim. On a reading of Annexure “VP1”
it is evident that the
scope of work referred to therein and pleaded
in paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3 of the Particulars of Claim merely outlined
the boundaries
and expectations of the investigation to be conducted,
and is not the contract per se as the Excipient seems to make out in
the
exception.
[16]
As set out above the
Respondent’s cause of action is contractual and he is seeking
an order for specific performance of a
money claim. In this regard
the Respondent pleaded the terms of the contract (paragraphs 4, 6 9,
11 and 12 of the Particulars of
Claim) that he complied with his
obligation (paragraph 13 of the Particulars of Claim) and
non-performance by the Excipient (paragraphs
19 and 22 of the
Particulars of Claim). In my view the exception that a cause of
action is not disclosed cannot succeed.
[17]
I therefore make the
following order:
1.
The exception is
dismissed.
2.
The Excipient is to
pay the costs of the application on scale B.
E
DREYER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date for hand down is deemed to be 14 March 2025.
Appearances:
Appearance
for Excipient / Defendant:
Adv. A Laher
Instructed
by:
Nadeem Mahomed Attorneys
Appearance
for Respondent / Plaintiff:
Adv.
FJ
Nalane SC
Adv. T
Moneri
Rerani
Mdludla Inc.
Date
of hearing:
5 March 2025
Date
of Judgment:
14 March 2025
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