Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 314South Africa
South African Forestry Company SOC Limited v Boruchowitz N.O and Another (033595/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 314 (24 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 March 2025
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 314
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## South African Forestry Company SOC Limited v Boruchowitz N.O and Another (033595/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 314 (24 March 2025)
South African Forestry Company SOC Limited v Boruchowitz N.O and Another (033595/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 314 (24 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_314.html
sino date 24 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 033595/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In
the application to intervene of –
HAKHENSA
CONSULTING CC
Applicant
In
re:
the matter between –
SOUTH
AFRICAN FORESTRY COMPANY SOC LIMITED
Applicant
and
PHILLIP
BORUCHOWITZ N.O.
First Respondent
BASADI
BA ITSOSA CONSULTANTS & PROJECTS CC
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
JM BERGER AJ:
[1]
This is an application for leave to
intervene as a co-respondent in the main application, in which the
South African Forestry Company
SOC Limited (“SAFCOL”)
seeks to review and set aside an arbitration award granted in favour
of Basadi Ba Itsosa Consultants
& Projects CC. At the time the
arbitration proceedings ran, Basadi and Hakhensa Consulting CC, the
applicant in this intervention
application, were comrades in arms.
But that is no longer the case. More about this later.
[2]
In
order to be granted leave to intervene, Hakhensa “
must
show that it has a right adversely
affected
or likely to be affected by the order sought”
in
the main application. As the Constitutional Court explained in
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others
:
[1]
“
[9]
It is now settled that an applicant for intervention must meet the
direct and substantial interest test in order to succeed.
What
constitutes a direct and substantial interest is the legal interest
in the subject-matter of the case which could be prejudicially
affected by the order of the court. This means that the applicant
must show that it has a right adversely
affected
or likely to be affected by the order sought. But the applicant does
not have to satisfy the court at the stage of intervention
that it
will succeed. It is sufficient for such applicant to make allegations
which, if proved, would entitle it to relief.
[10] If the applicant
shows that it has some right which is affected by the order issued,
permission to intervene must be granted.
For it is a basic principle
of our law that no order should be granted against a party without
affording such party a predecision
hearing. This is so fundamental
that an order is generally taken to be binding only on parties to the
litigation.
[11] Once the
applicant for intervention shows a direct and substantial interest in
the subject-matter of the case, the court ought
to grant leave to
intervene.”
[3]
Two
rights are potentially at play here: Hakhensa’s right as a
cessionary, in terms of a “Deed of Cession and Direct
Payment
Agreement” entered into with Basadi on 3 May 2021; and its
right in terms of an addendum to a memorandum of understanding
(“MoU”),
[2]
which
was entered into with Basadi on 4 August 2021. In terms of that
addendum, Hakhensa has a contractual right to a substantial
portion
of the arbitration award, which currently stands at over R23.8
million.
[4]
Before
I consider whether either of these rights provides Hakhensa with a
direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter
of the main
application, thereby justifying it being granted leave to intervene
in the main application, it is important to consider
the factual
background to this application. That began in September 2019, when
SAFCOL and Basadi entered into an agreement for
the provision of
certain silviculture services,
[3]
for a three-year period, backdated with effect from 1 July 2019.
[5]
By the end of April 2021, Basadi was
struggling to pay the wages of its workers, who were providing the
contracted services to SAFCOL.
It was at that point that Hakhensa
entered the picture, making a R1.6 million contribution to Basadi so
that the wages could be
paid. In order to secure repayment, Hakhensa
entered into the deed of cession with Basadi, in terms of which the
latter, as cedent,
agreed to cede to the former, as cessionary, “
its
right, title and interest in and to any amounts due and owing by
SAFCOL in terms of the [services] contract”
.
[6]
The deed of cession also records the
following:
“
6.
It is recorded that the terms of this agreement will be binding on
SAFCOL from the date the representative of SAFCOL signs
this
agreement.
7. It is
recorded that SAFCOL’s responsibility in terms of this
agreement is limited to transferring the amounts
payable by the
Cedent.
8. This
cession shall remain in force for as long as the Cedent is indebted
to the Cessionary and will expire on the
date when the debt payable
to the Cessionary has been extinguished.
9. It is
recorded that this cession constitutes security for payment of the
amounts payable by the Cedent to the Cessionary
and shall in no way
be regarded as extinguishing the liability of the Cedent towards the
Cessionary.
11.
All payments made by SAFCOL shall pro tanto reduce the Cedent’s
liability to the Cessionary.”
[7]
The agreement was not signed by any SAFCOL
representative. The reason for that is neither clear nor relevant.
What matters for purposes
of this application is whether SAFCOL’s
apparent failure to consent to the cession has any implications for
its validity.
On this issue the parties are sharply divided, with
Basadi – which was quick to accept Hakhensa’s offer of a
lifeline
and then sign the deed of cession – now making common
cause with SAFCOL.
[8]
Importantly, no-one makes the submission
that SAFCOL’s failure to sign the deed of cession, without
anything more, affects
its validity and/or enforceability. Rather,
the argument raised by both SAFCOL and Basadi is that the deed of
cession is rendered
invalid by clause 18.2 of the services agreement,
which provides:
“
The
Service Provider shall not be entitled to cede or assign this
Agreement without the written consent of the Client, which consent
shall not unreasonably be withheld.”
[9]
Clause 18.2 is to be read together with
clause 18.1, which provides:
“
The
Client shall be entitled to cede or assign this Agreement without the
written consent of the Service Provider, provided that
the Client
shall be obliged to inform the Service Provider of such cession or
assignment.”
[10]
Both clauses rely on the definition of
Agreement in clause 2.13, which reads: “
this
Service Level Agreement together with all the annexures attached
hereto”
.
[11]
The preamble to the deed of cession, which
does not seek to create any enforceable rights or binding
obligations, notes that Basadi
wanted Hakhensa to take over its role
as service provider to SAFCOL. Everyone agrees that, in terms of
clause 18.2 of the services
agreement, that could not happen without
SAFCOL’s consent.
[12]
Seemingly in anticipation of consent being
provided, Basadi and Hakhensa entered into their MoU on 7 May 2021.
Not only was consent
not forthcoming, but just a few days later –
on 13 May 2021 – SAFCOL terminated the services agreement. It
was that
decision that Basadi sought to have declared unlawful and
set aside in the arbitration proceedings.
[13]
On 4 August 2021, Basadi and Hakhensa
entered into their addendum to the MoU, in which they recorded their
agreement “
to commence with
litigation against [SAFCOL].”
Should the contemplated legal proceedings be successful, as indeed
they were, the parties agreed to allocate “
any
monetary settlement which may be received”
in the following way:
a.
The legal costs associated with such
proceedings would be paid first.
b.
Thereafter, whatever was still due to
Hakhensa, as at the date of the award, would be paid to them.
c.
Finally, the balance would be split equally
between the two parties.
[14]
As a party to the cancelled services
agreement, Basadi initiated the arbitration proceedings against
SAFCOL. Its legal costs were
covered by Hakhensa, with Mr Lucas Nkuna
– Hakhensa’s managing member – playing a central
role in the proceedings.
This is not surprising, given the broad
scope of the general power of attorney in terms of which he was
appointed as Basadi’s
“
true
and lawful agent for managing and transacting all or any business
affairs and transactions”
. Like
the addendum to the MoU, that document is also dated 4 August 2021.
[15]
The arbitration ran for five days in late
January 2022, with oral argument being heard in early April 2022. The
arbitration award
was published on 1 September 2022. On 10 October
2022, just a little over five weeks later, Basadi –
a.
purported to revoke the general power of
attorney with immediate effect;
b.
advised its then attorneys that Mr Nkuna no
longer had any authority to act in the name of Basadi; and
c.
advised the attorneys of the details of a
new bank account into which the damages awarded in terms of the
arbitration award were
to be paid.
[16]
Just three days later, SAFCOL initiated the
review application.
[17]
Despite the events of 10 October 2022, Mr
Nkuna took part in a decision taken a month later to appoint Basadi’s
new instructing
attorneys, who were granted a “
special
power of attorney for the review application”
.
But on 26 December 2022, just over a month after SAFCOL’s
replying affidavit had already been delivered, Basadi’s
CEO
decided to terminate their mandate. Its new attorneys filed a notice
of appointment as Basadi’s attorneys of record dated
11 January
2023, and a notice of substitution dated 12 January 2023. Since then,
both sets of attorneys have claimed to represent
Basadi.
[18]
Now back to this interlocutory application.
[19]
In addition to the order granting leave to
intervene in the main application as a co-respondent, Hakhensa’s
notice of motion
seeks declaratory relief in respect of the following
three decisions taken by Basadi:
a.
First, to revoke Mr Nkuna’s general
power of attorney;
b.
Second, to revoke Basadi’s erstwhile
attorneys’ mandate; and
c.
Third, to appoint Basadi’s new
attorneys.
[20]
Given the nature of the primary relief
sought in this intervention application, it would make little sense
to grant this declaratory
relief. For if it were to be granted, it
would effectively put Mr Nkuna back in control of Basadi’s
defence of the arbitration
award, dispensing with any need for
Hakhensa to intervene as a co-respondent. In any event, I am not
convinced that on the evidence
put up in this application, Hakhensa
has established that any of the three decisions was taken unlawfully.
[21]
That leaves the primary relief sought in
prayer 1, and the issue of costs.
[22]
SA
Riding for the Disabled
tells
us that if Hakhensa “
shows
that it has some right which is affected by the order issued,
permission to intervene must be granted.”
[4]
In its notice of motion in the main application, SAFCOL seeks an
order – in prayer 1 – that Basadi’s claim in
the
arbitration be dismissed. In addition, in prayer 2, it seeks to make
Basadi responsible for the costs of the arbitrator, the
costs and
fees of the Arbitration Foundation of South Africa, and the costs of
recording and transcription, and to recover its
own legal costs, to
be taxed on a punitive scale.
[23]
If SAFCOL were to obtain the relief it
seeks in the review, Hakhensa would be directly affected. While the
various costs orders
would be for Basadi to pay, that would most
likely leave Hakhensa without an enforceable legal remedy against
Basadi in respect
of the various payments made on Basadi’s
behalf, including the R 1.6 million paid in or around April 2021, as
well as legal
fees paid in respect of the arbitration proceedings.
More importantly, it would leave Hakhensa without its agreed-upon
share of
the damages award of over R 23 million. If this were to
happen, would it affect any of Hakhensa’s rights, or would it
simply
affect its financial interests?
[24]
The parties that appeared in this
interlocutory application are all of the view that if the deed of
cession is valid, Hakhensa has
a direct and substantial interest in
the outcome of the review, and accordingly, ought to be granted leave
to intervene. I agree.
If Hakhensa, as cessionary, had a right to be
paid what was due to Basadi in terms of the services agreement, then
it must follow
that it has a right – at the very least –
to a portion of any damages award granted in Basadi’s favour in
respect
of an unlawful termination of the agreement in question.
[25]
As I have already noted, both SAFCOL and
Basadi submit that the deed of cession is rendered invalid by clause
18.2 of the services
agreement. When read together with clause 18.1,
as well as the definition of Agreement in clause 2.13, it appears to
me that what
clause 18.1 sought to prevent was Basadi ceding all of
its rights and obligations under the services agreement without
SAFCOL’s
consent. This makes sense: SAFCOL’s consent
would be required should Basadi seek to get someone else to do that
which it
had been contracted to do.
[26]
What clause 18.2 does not appear to do is
to require consent for the type of cession at issue in this matter,
where all that was
ceded was the right to receive payment from
SAFCOL, and no more. Mr Thompson, who appeared for SAFCOL, accepted
that his client
could not have objected had Basadi simply arranged
for whatever payments were due to it to be paid into a bank account
of its choice,
even if that was Hakhensa’s account. But, he
added, this could not be achieved by way of a cession of the right to
receive
payment.
[27]
In
dealing with the validity of an agreement that prohibits cession,
[5]
Professor Susan Scott delivers the following note of caution:
[6]
“
Because
of the far-reaching consequences of such an agreement, the intention
to prohibit or limit transferability should be clear
from the
agreement between the parties.”
There is no such clarity in clause 18.2. It is not, for example, the
type of clause at issue in
Born
Free Investments 364 (Pty) Limited v Firstrand Bank Limited
,
which Ponnan JA described as follows:
[7]
“
Clause
15.1 of each agreement, which contains the pactum de non
cedendo, is couched in fairly wide terms. The language could
not have
been clearer – it proclaims in emphatic terms: ‘You shall
neither cede any of your rights nor assign any of
your obligations
under this agreement without our prior written consent.’ The
prohibition is thus directed in each instance
at the other party to
the contract, being Summer Season and Central Lake. It stipulates
that neither of them shall cede nor assign
any of their obligations
under their respective agreements with FRB without the prior written
consent of the latter.”
[28]
But
even if I am wrong on the applicability of clause 18.2, I am of the
view that it would have been unreasonable for SAFCOL to
withhold
consent in the particular circumstances of the matter, including –
in particular – the common cause fact that
but for the R1.6
million payment made by Hakhensa, Basadi would not have been able to
pay their workers’ wages. As we learn
from
Locke
v Centracom Property Investments (Pty) Ltd
,
[8]
a cedent may simply disregard an unreasonable refusal of consent and
proceed with the contemplated cession.
[9]
[29]
Mr
Thompson sought to make much of the fact that Hakhensa only dealt
with clause 18.2 in reply, after it had been raised and relied
upon
by SAFCOL in answer. According to him, it was not open to Hakhensa to
make its case in reply; it ought to stand or fall on
the basis of the
case made out in its founding papers. But as I have already held,
clause 18.2 is simply of no application. And
even if it is, once
SAFCOL relied on it in attempting to invalidate the deed of cession,
it was open to Hakhensa to make submissions
on the enforceability of
the
pactum
de non cedendo.
[10]
[30]
In addition to its right as cessionary,
Hakhensa also has a contractual right to a substantial portion of the
damages award granted
in Basadi’s favour, should that be upheld
– even in part – in the review. The fact that this right
pertains to
an amount of money does not change its nature: it does
not become a mere financial interest in the outcome of the
litigation. Rather,
it remains a right to benefit directly from the
arbitration award, should it be upheld in any manner or form. That
right would
most certainly be affected adversely
should
the order sought by SAFCOL in the review be granted.
[31]
That then leaves the issue of costs. I see
no reason why costs should not follow the result, with both SAFCOL
and Basadi being ordered
to pay Hakhensa’s costs, including the
costs of counsel, on the ordinary scale. In so far as the first
respondent is concerned,
there is no order as to costs, as he did not
oppose the relief sought.
ORDER
[32]
In the result, I make the following order:
a.
Hakhensa Consulting CC (“Hakhensa”)
is granted leave to intervene as a co-respondent in the review
application instituted
in this Court by the South African Forestry
Company SOC Limited (“SAFCOL”) under case number
2022-033595.
b.
SAFCOL and Basadi Ba Itsosa Consultants &
Projects CC are directed to pay Hakhensa’s costs in this
interlocutory application,
including the costs of counsel, on scale
A.
JM BERGER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Dates:
Hearing:
3 March 2025
Judgment:
24 March 2025
Appearances:
For
the applicant in the intervention application:
MD
Mohlamonyane SC, instructed by Malele Inc. Attorneys
For
the applicant in the main application:
CE
Thompson, instructed by Richen Attorneys Inc.
For
the second respondent in the main application:
BM
Khumalo, instructed by Marule Attorneys (with heads of argument
having been prepared by GK Shai)
[1]
2017
(5) SA 1
(CC) at paras 9 – 11 (footnotes omitted)
[2]
The
MoU was entered into on 7 May 2021.
[3]
“
[S]
ilviculture
refers to the cultivation of trees mainly for commercial purposes
and encompasses the treatment and management of
trees from being
planted until they are harvested.”
See
Lakes
Forestry & Development CC v Cognad Properties CC
[2024] ZAWCHC 45
;
[2024] 2 All SA 83
(WCC) at para 63
[4]
At
para 10
[5]
Such
an agreement is known as a
pactum
de non cedendo
.
[6]
Susan
Scott,
Scott
on Cession: A Treatise on the Law in South Africa
(Juta:
Cape Town, 2018) at p 193 (footnote omitted)
[7]
[2013]
ZASCA 166
at para 14
[8]
1985
(2) SA 116
(N) at 118E-F
[9]
See
also, Scott at p 197
[10]
See
MEC
for Health, Gauteng v 3P Consulting (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 542
(SCA) at para 28
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African Securitisation Programme (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Hakem Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/009594) [2025] ZAGPJHC 230 (6 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 230High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Reserve Bank v YWBN Mutual Bank (2025/059995) [2025] ZAGPJHC 518 (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 518High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Board of Sheriffs v Cibe (000219/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 583 (21 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 583High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Council for Architectural Profession v O'Reilly and Another (28641/2019) [2025] ZAGPJHC 559 (2 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 559High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Securitisation Program (RF) Ltd v Complete Avionic Systems (Pty) Limited and Another (2022/045085) [2024] ZAGPJHC 522 (28 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 522High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar