Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 655South Africa
Andzanimikula Trading (Pty) Ltd v TCI-TISO RF (Pty) Ltd (2021/17889) [2025] ZAGPJHC 655 (17 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 March 2025
Headnotes
on 12 and 22 February 2025 respectively. They further agreed the contents of the documentary evidence attached to the particulars of claim. At the pretrial conferences, the parties further agreed on certain dates, relevant to the action, which had been incorrectly referred to in both parties’ pleadings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Andzanimikula Trading (Pty) Ltd v TCI-TISO RF (Pty) Ltd (2021/17889) [2025] ZAGPJHC 655 (17 March 2025)
Andzanimikula Trading (Pty) Ltd v TCI-TISO RF (Pty) Ltd (2021/17889) [2025] ZAGPJHC 655 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021 / 17889
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED:
NO
Judge
Dippenaar
In
the matter between:
ANDZANIMIKULA
TRADING (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF
and
TCI-TISO
(RF) (PTY)
LTD
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 17
th
of MARCH
2025.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
This is a trial action in which the
plaintiff sought payment of an amount of R817 500, together with
interest and costs. The
salient facts were common cause and were
agreed to at pre-trial conferences held on 12 and 22 February 2025
respectively. They
further agreed the contents of the documentary
evidence attached to the particulars of claim. At the pretrial
conferences, the
parties further agreed on certain dates, relevant to
the action, which had been incorrectly referred to in both parties’
pleadings.
[2]
That
notwithstanding, the defendant did not agree to the matter being
presented based on the common cause facts. It insisted on
evidence
being presented. The plaintiff accepted the duty to begin and called
Mr Makgatsa as witness. He was the individual who
oversaw the
transaction. The defendant intimated at the commencement of the
hearing that it intended calling a witness. After the
closure of the
plaintiff’s case, it however elected not to call a witness and
closed its case.
[1]
[3]
The genesis of the dispute lies in a
facilitation agreement concluded between the parties on 31 July 2020
in terms whereof the defendant
would facilitate the supply of goods
and/or services by the plaintiff from various suppliers of such
products, for on-sale by the
plaintiff to various off-takers. In
terms of the agreement, a bank account was designated by the
plaintiff which was ceded to the
defendant in terms of a security
cession agreement concluded between the parties. The conclusion of
the agreements and their terms
were common cause.
[4]
The background facts were common cause. The
plaintiff on 23 June 2020 purchased certain goods from a supplier for
R15 million and
on-sold them to the Department of Health, Gauteng for
R18 million. On 30 October 2020, the defendant sent an invoice to the
plaintiff
for R16 350 100 relating to amounts due to it in
terms of the facilitation agreement. The facilitation agreement
provided that the plaintiff was to pay all amounts due to the
defendant by 30 October 2020. It did not. Payment was only made on
18
November 2020. On 18 November 2020, the defendant presented the
plaintiff with a further invoice for R940 125, dated 30
October
2020. That invoice forms the nub of the dispute (‘the penalty
invoice’).
[5]
The penalty invoice provided in relevant
part:
‘
Tax
invoice dated 30 October 2025, Invoice Number – INV-0442,
Reference Penalty, VAT Number (4320289244),
Description
- Penalty fee @ 5% of the total of R16 350 100,
Quantity (1.00) Unit
Price (817 500.00) Vat (15%) Amount ZAR (817 500.00),
Subtotal (817 500.00), Total Standard
Rate Sales (excluding
capital goods) 15% (122 625.00), Invoice Total ZAR (940 125.00),
Total Net Payments ZAR (0.00),
Amount Due ZAR (940 125.00)
Due Date: 31 October
2020.’
[6]
The plaintiff’s pleaded case was that
the defendant without authority transferred amounts of R16 350 100
and R940 125
from the plaintiff’s designated account to
itself. At the hearing, the plaintiff abandoned reliance on the
transfer of the
amount of R16 350 100.
[7]
The plaintiff pleaded:
‘
When
the defendant made the payment of R940 124 from the plaintiff’s
FNB account to the defendant’s designated
account, the
defendant did so without any legal basis to do so, without valid
causa alternatively fraudulently alternatively in
error. The said sum
was neither due nor owing to the defendant’.
[8]
It was undisputed that during November
2020, the defendant repaid an amount of R122 650 to the
plaintiff, resulting in the
dispute between them concerning the
balance of R817 500, reflected on the penalty invoice. The
defendant pleaded that ’
13. The
said amount was a discount of 13% on the penalty fee’.
[9]
The parties agreed that the date of 31 July
2020 was incorrect and should have been 30 October 2020 as being the
date on which payments
by the plaintiff to the defendant should have
occurred. They further agreed that the defendant was only paid on 18
November 2020,
correcting the date pleaded. It was thus common cause
that the plaintiff did not pay the amount due on 30 October 2020, but
only
paid it late and on 18 November 2020.
[10]
The
parties further agreed that the averment in para 5.18
[2]
of the particulars of claim was incorrect wherein it was pleaded hat
the parties agreed the defendant would be payable on the successful
conclusion of the services and payment received from the off-taker.
It was agreed at the last pre-trial conference that the
facilitation
agreement did not contain such a provision. The plaintiff further
abandoned reliance on the notion in the particulars
of claim that the
defendant was required to obtain the plaintiff’s consent prior
to transferring any amounts from its account.
It thus conceded
the defendant’s contention that the invoices were deducted
under clauses 10.1 and 10.3 of the security
cession agreement. By
necessary implication it was undisputed that no consent was sought or
provided for the transfer of the amount
of R940 000.
[11]
The crux of the defendant’s defence
was that it deducted the disputed amount as a penalty in terms of
clause 8.1 of the facilitation
agreement and was entitled to do so.
The penalty invoice stated expressly that the charge was levied as a
penalty. In argument,
the defendant submitted that the entire basis
of the plaintiff’s claim fell away once the late payment was
conceded as the
agreement in its terms does not support an unlawful
payment made outside the terms of the agreement. It further contended
that
no case for fraud was made out and that a new claim for
enrichment was raised in the plaintiff’s heads of argument.
[12]
The plaintiff on the other hand argued that
the common cause facts established that the payment of R817 500
was made to the
defendant without just cause and it was entitled to
judgment. It submitted that the defendant’s interpretation of
clause
8.1 was wrong and that the agreement did not provide for the
imposition of any penalty as set out in the penalty invoice. It
abandoned
any reliance on fraud and limited its case solely on the
contention that the payment was made
sine
causa
.
[13]
In its heads of argument, the defendant
submitted that “
the plaintiff
pivots away from the claim set out in the particulars of argument and
seeks to introduce a claim from interpretation
of contract
’.
It disputed that there was any interpretation issue. That contention
is untenable. The very issue to determine is whether
clause 8.1
permits the defendant to levy a penalty of 5% of the contract price
on the defendant. That requires a proper interpretation
of the
facilitation agreement.
[14]
The defendant’s further submissions
that the ‘new claims’ raised in the heads of argument for
the first time are
‘baseless, procedurally unfair and
impermissible’, are equally untenable. As the defendant itself
relied on a particular
interpretation of clause 8.1, it invoked the
need to consider a proper interpretation of that clause. The
enrichment claim based
on the
condictio
sine causa
, is also not a new claim,
but is set out in the particulars of claim when read in context,
including paragraph 15.
[15]
The issue between the parties in my view
calls into question the proper interpretation of the facilitation
agreement. Clause
8.1 of the facilitation agreement provides:
‘
If
any amount which is due and payable in accordance with the provisions
of this Agreement is not paid in full on its due date,
the
outstanding amount shall bear interest at the prime overdraft rate
plus 5% (five percent), calculated on and with effect from
the due
date for payment thereof up to determining the date of actual payment
thereof.’
[16]
It
is trite that a unitary linguistic, contextual and purposive
interpretation is required.
[3]
From a simple reading of the clause, the word ‘interest’
is expressly used. If clause 8.1 was intended to provide for
a
penalty fee as a percentage on the outstanding amount, the clause
would have expressly stated it. Instead, the clause provides
for the
insertion of a time period, which when considered with the express
use of the words ‘interest’ and ‘prime
overdraft
rate plus 5%’ signifies an intention to calculate interest at a
specific rate over a specific period of time. The
clause nowhere
refers to the full contract price forming a component of the interest
calculation. The levying of interest is an
entirely different matter
to the levying of a penalty. The context and purpose of the clause
affirms this. In terms of clause 8.1
interest is to be levied at a
specific rate over a specific period, because a payment is not made
on due date.
[17]
The agreement in any event in express terms
provides for the levying of a penalty in certain circumstances in a
separate provision.
That makes it clear that a distinction is to be
drawn between interest and a penalty. In terms of clause 13 of the
agreement, a
penalty is levied based on the amount due under the
agreement at a value of 5% of that value in the circumstances set out
in clauses
11 and 12. The levying of a 5 % penalty fee is expressly
referred to in clause 13.2. It is undisputed between the parties that
the provisions of clauses 11, 12 and 13 do not relate to the present
dispute.
[18]
During argument, the defendant submitted
that on a proper interpretation, the word ‘interest’ must
include ‘penalty’.
That submission lacks merit. It is
clear that the agreement expressly draws a distinction between
interest and penalty. In my view,
for the reasons provided, applying
the relevant principles, clause 8.1 of the agreement relates to
interest and not a penalty.
[19]
It is clear that there was a measure of
confusion on the part of the defendant if regard is had to its plea.
The defendant pleaded:
‘
8.2
The amount of R940 125 was a penalty fee which was due and
payable by the plaintiff to the defendant, as the plaintiff
failed to
make full payment to the defendant on or before 31 July 2020.
8.3 While the
defendant was entitled to charge the plaintiff interest at the prime
interest overdraft rate plus 5%, calculated from
the due date for
payment up to and including the date of actual payment, that is, from
31 July 2020 to 30 October 2020, the defendant
elected to charge the
plaintiff only 5% of the total amount due, calculated over only one
calendar month’.
[20]
It thus expressly pinned its colours to the
mast of a penalty fee in paragraph 8.2 of the plea. That accords with
the contents of
the penalty invoice which also expressly refers to a
penalty fee. Whilst paragraph 8.3 of the plea is difficult to
understand,
it is underpinned by the notion that instead of charging
interest under clause 8.1 of the agreement, the defendant elected to
charge
5% of the total amount due, ‘calculated over only one
month.’ That seems to conflate the contractual provisions
pertaining
to interest and those pertaining to a penalty. That is
impermissible and is not in accordance with the relevant contractual
provisions
which regulate the parties’ relationship.
[21]
Factually, as appears from the penalty
invoice, the defendant charged 5% of the total amount due. That is
common cause between the
parties. The penalty fee of 5% of the
contract does not,
ex facie
the
defendant’s invoice, constitute a calculation of the
outstanding interest from 31 October 2020 to 18 November 2020.
Rather,
it is framed as a calculation of 5 % of R16 350 100,
being the whole contract amount, to which VAT of 15% was added.
[22]
The defendant has not in my view
established any contractual entitlement to do so and its reliance on
clause 8.1 does not avail
it. That clause provides a specific basis
on which interest may be charged for the period the plaintiff’s
payment was late.
The penalty invoice was not calculated on that
basis and is in an amount substantially in excess of what clause 8.1
would allow.
[23]
It
is trite that in a contractual claim, once a plaintiff has
established that there is no basis for a payment, a defendant
attracts
a duty of rebuttal. As held in
Skjelbreds
Rederi
A/S
v
Heartless:
[4]
“
The true
position as to the question of onus is that the respondent bears the
overall burden of showing that it is possessed of
rights which
entitled it to claim the attachment order.
The overall
onus remained on it throughout.
However, since it is
armed with a written agreement which appears, on the face of it, to
confer such rights on it, the appellants
bear the burden
“(weerleggingslas”) of rebutting that prima facie case.”
[24]
The defendant did not attempt to present
any evidence to justify the penalty invoice in its terms. It further
did not raise any
counterclaim nor seek set off in its plea. Reliance
was solely placed on the provisions of clause 8.1 of the facilitation
agreement.
The defendant failed to establish that the clause provides
it with a valid defence.
[25]
The plaintiff’s cause of action was
framed on the basis of unjust enrichment. It abandoned reliance on
the alternative causes
of action. I agree with the defendant that
those causes of action were not properly pleaded.
[26]
The
relevant principles pertaining to the
condictio
sine causa
are
set out by the Supreme Court of Appeal thus in
Mhlrari
and
Others v Nedbank Ltd:
[5]
‘
The
requirements for a claim based on unjust enrichment are that the
defendant must be enriched, the plaintiff must be impoverished,
the
enrichment must be at the expense of the plaintiff, and the
enrichment must have been unjustified (sine causa). Although there
is
no unified general enrichment action, these are requisites common to
all enrichment actions
[18] the condictio
sine causa specialis lies where the money is in the hands of the
defendant without cause, whether due to the
plaintiff’s mistake
or not’.
[27]
Considering all the facts, I conclude that
the plaintiff has established that there was no valid basis for the
payment of the penalty
charge levied. The defendant was thus not
entitled to make payment of the amount of R817 500 from the banking
account of the plaintiff.
The payment of such amount was made without
any legal cause. It was not disputed by the defendant that the
plaintiff was impoverished
and the defendant enriched by the payment
of that amount. The common cause facts established this.
[28]
It follows that the requirements of the
plaintiff’s cause of action have been met and it is entitled to
judgment as sought.
Ultimately, the defendant did not establish any
cogent defence to the plaintiff’s claim. The plaintiff sought
interest from
the date on which the payment was made from its banking
account, to wit 18 November 2020. Such date is appropriate and no
argument
was advanced to the contrary.
[29]
There is no reason to deviate from the
principle that costs follow the result. The plaintiff sought punitive
costs on the scale
as between attorney and client based on the
extension of the trial due to the defendant’s insistence that
the plaintiff presents
evidence, notwithstanding the fact that all
the material facts were agreed on between the parties as being common
cause. It further
sought the costs of senior counsel on scale C.
[30]
The defendant in turn argued that no
punitive costs order was warranted and that, even if the plaintiff
was successful, the matter
was not complicated and costs on scale A
should be granted.
[31]
Ultimately, the purpose of the cross
examination by the defendant was unclear and simply resulted in
plaintiff’s counsel successfully
objecting to the line of
questioning pursued by defendant as it sought to undermine the very
common cause facts the parties had
agreed upon on 21 February 2025.
However, the evidence did not substantially extend the duration of
the trial, which was completed
within one day. For that reason,
I am not persuaded that a punitive costs order is warranted.
Considering the intricacies
which arose during the trial I am
persuaded that costs should be awarded as sought by the plaintiff.
[32]
In the result, judgment is granted against
the defendant for:
1.
Payment of the amount of R817 500.00
2.
Interest on the amount in 1 above
a
tempore morae
from 18 November 2020 to
date of payment.
3.
Costs, including the costs of senior
counsel, on scale C.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
HEARING
DATE
OF HEARING
:
24 FEBRUARY 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
17 MARCH 2025
APPEARANCES
PLAINTIFF’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv R.
du Plessis SC
PLAINTIFF’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Geyser van Rooyen Attorneys
DEFENDANT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv N. Nako
DEFENDANT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Strauss Daly Inc.
[1]
Both parties provided written heads of argument at the hearing.
After
the finalisation of oral argument, the defendant’s counsel
sought an opportunity to deliver supplementary heads of
argument. I
acceded to this request and afforded the plaintiff an opportunity to
respond. Both parties delivered supplementary
heads of argument,
which have been taken into consideration.
[2]
The second para 5.18.
[3]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Edumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 596
(SCA) at 603F-604E;
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms)Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
2014 (2) SA 94
(SCA0 para 12;
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Limited and Another
2009
(4) SA 399
(SCA0 at 409F-410A.
[4]
Skjelbreds
Rederi A/S v Heartless
1982 (2) SA 710 (A):
[5]
Mhlari
and Others v Nedbank Ltd
[2024]
ZASCA 39
(4 April 2024) paras 17- 18 and the authorities cited
therein.
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