Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 575South Africa
Egoli Sport (Pty) Ltd and Others v Global Sports Betting (Pty) Ltd (2024/065348) [2025] ZAGPJHC 575 (10 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Egoli Sport (Pty) Ltd and Others v Global Sports Betting (Pty) Ltd (2024/065348) [2025] ZAGPJHC 575 (10 June 2025)
Egoli Sport (Pty) Ltd and Others v Global Sports Betting (Pty) Ltd (2024/065348) [2025] ZAGPJHC 575 (10 June 2025)
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sino date 10 June 2025
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2024-065348
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
In the matter between:
EGOLI
SPORTS (PTY) LTD
First Excipient
COLDSTREAM
MANAGEMENT COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Second Excipient
KIMESH
CHETTY
Third Excipient
and
GLOBAL
SPORTS BETTING (PTY) LTD
Respondent
In re:
Case Number: 2024-065348
In the matter between:
GLOBAL
SPORTS BETTING (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
EGOLI
SPORTS (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
COLDSTREAM
MANAGEMENT COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
KIMESH
CHETTY
Third Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties' legal representatives
by email and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on
10 June 2025.
Flynote:
Civil Procedure — Pleadings —
Exception — No cause of action disclosed — Contractual
and delictual claims
indistinctly pleaded — Lack of contractual
nexus and legal duty — Exception upheld.
JUDGMENT
PG LOUW, AJ
Introduction
[1]
The
first to third defendants delivered an exception to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim on the basis that it fails to
disclose a cause
of action.
Particulars of claim
[2]
The plaintiff relies on a written service
level agreement (“the service level agreement”)
concluded in October
2018 between the plaintiff and the first and
second defendants, represented by the third defendant. In terms of
the service level
agreement, the first and second defendants
undertook to provide management services to the plaintiff, namely
facilitating
the operation and management of bookmaker licences.
[3]
The plaintiff pleads that the “defendants
committed various unlawful alternatively negligent actions which
caused substantial
damages to the plaintiff.” According to the
plaintiff, “the defendants intentionally alternatively,
unlawfully failed
to make” certain payments to the South
African Revenue Service, the City of Johannesburg and other
third parties.
[4]
The plaintiff further pleads that in “an
attempt to hide the non-payment of the above amounts, the defendant
devised a fraudulent
scheme in which it would account for these
payments to the plaintiff, by utilizing fraudulent invoices and or
fraudulent proof
of payments.” The plaintiff refers to “the
defendant” (singular) and “the defendants”
(plural)
throughout the particulars of claim without specifying which
of the defendants is actually referred to.
[5]
The plaintiff further pleads that the third
defendant, while employed by the first and second defendants,
perpetrated acts of theft.
[6]
According to the plaintiff, it suffered
damages in the amount of R10 689 904.45 as the result of
the “above contractual
and fiduciary malpractice.”
[7]
The plaintiff further pleads that during or
about February 2024, the plaintiff concluded an oral agreement with
the first and second
defendants, represented by the third defendant
(“the oral agreement”), in terms of which the first and
second defendants
undertook to sell various licences to the plaintiff
in lieu
of
payment of the alleged damages.
[8]
The plaintiff pleads that, in terms of the
oral agreement, the defendants (without specifying which of them)
accepted liability
for the damages incurred by the plaintiff.
However, despite the oral agreement, during March and/or April 2024
the defendants “approached
the Gauteng Gambling Board and
started the regularity process of advertising and transferring the
above licences to unknown Third
Parties”. The particulars of
claim concludes as follows:
“
38.
As a result, the 1
st
and 2
nd
defendants are continuing to cause the plaintiff damages.
39. The plaintiff has
ascertained that the 1
st
and 2
nd
defendants
have no tangible assets to attach in order to settle the damages
caused by the malfeasance of the defendants.
40. As a result, the
plaintiff specially pleads that the licences are the only assets
owned by the 1
st
and 2
nd
defendants which are
capable of settling, in part, the damages suffered by the plaintiff.”
[9]
The plaintiff claims judgment against the
first, second and third defendants, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to
absolved for:
(a)
Specific performance in terms of the oral
agreement;
(b)
Alternatively, payment of the amount of
R10 689 904.45;
(c)
Interest at the prescribed rate;
(d)
Costs on the scale as between attorney and
client; and
(e)
Further and/or alternative relief.
Exception
[10]
The defendants rely on four grounds of
exception.
[11]
The upshot of the first ground of exception
is that, in relying on contractual “malpractice”, there
is no contractual
nexus, in terms of the service level agreement,
between the plaintiff and the second and/or third defendant.
[12]
The second ground of exception is that,
insofar as the plaintiff’s pleaded “fiduciary
malpractice” and related
unlawful actions are construed as a
delictual claim, no legal duty is alleged to have been owed by any of
the defendants to the
plaintiff, and thus no conduct is rendered
unlawful.
[13]
The third ground of exception also pertains
to a possible delictual claim. The defendants contend that the
conduct relied upon by
the plaintiff does not constitute omissions in
respect of which Aquilian liability lies.
[14]
The fourth ground of exception is that,
insofar as the
facta probanda
(of
the defendants’ conduct) relate to the failure to pay amounts
owing by the plaintiff to third parties, such failure cannot
constitute actionable damages in law. In their heads of argument, the
defendants explain that a failure to pay third parties has
no effect
on the plaintiff’s patrimony; if the funds were not withdrawn
from the plaintiff’s account to discharge the
debt, there is no
change in patrimony.
General principles
applicable to exceptions
[15]
An
exception should be dealt with sensibly and not in an over-technical
manner.
[1]
As such, the court
looks benevolently instead of over-critically at a pleading.
[2]
[16]
In
order to succeed with an exception on the basis that no cause of
action is disclosed, a defendant must persuade the court that,
upon
every interpretation which the particulars of claim and the document
on which it is based can reasonably bear, no cause of
action is
disclosed; failing which the exception ought not to be upheld.
[3]
It is “only if the court can conclude that it is impossible to
recognise the claim, irrespective of the facts as they might
emerge
at the trial, that the exception can and should be upheld”.
[4]
[17]
The
main purpose of an exception on the basis that no cause of action is
disclosed in the particulars of claim is to avoid leading
unnecessary
evidence at trial.
[5]
Exceptions
provide a useful mechanism “to weed out cases without legal
merit”.
[6]
Evaluation of the
exception
[18]
As I understand the particulars of claim,
the plaintiff’s first cause of action is based on the service
level agreement, and
the second cause of action on the
oral agreement. Both agreements were concluded between the
plaintiff and the first and
second defendants. The third
defendant is not a party to either agreement relied upon by the
plaintiff.
[19]
The plaintiff seeks relief against the
third defendant on the basis that he, as one of the “defendants”,
breached the
service level agreement and acted unlawfully in certain
respects. However, the third defendant was not a party to the service
level
agreement and therefore owed no obligations thereunder.
[20]
Insofar as the cause of action based on the
oral agreement is concerned, the plaintiff pleads that the
“[d]efendants admitted
civil liability for the damages incurred
by the Plaintiff”. However, the third defendant was not a party
to the oral agreement.
The plaintiff further pleads that it is the
first and second defendants who are continuing to cause the plaintiff
damages. Nothing
is alleged in this regard against the
third defendant.
[21]
In the circumstances, the first ground of
exception should be upheld, at least to the extent that no cause of
action is made out
against the third defendant. For the reasons
already stated, I am of the view that no cause of action is disclosed
in respect of
the third defendant.
[22]
During argument, counsel for the defendants
correctly conceded that the particulars of claim need to be amended
to include the third
defendant as a party to the service level
agreement and the oral agreement, respectively.
[23]
The second and third grounds of appeal
proceed on the premise that the plaintiff’s claim sounds in
delict. The defendants
are correct that no legal duty is alleged to
have rested upon any of the defendants
vis-à-vis
the plaintiff that would render their
conduct unlawful. The plaintiff does not allege a breach of a
statutory duty or a common-law
right.
[24]
In
my view, if the plaintiff’s claim is delictual in nature —
more specifically, one under the
Lex
Aquili
a
— it must be pleaded that the defendants owed a legal duty of
care to the plaintiff, or that the facts exist from which
such a duty
can be inferred, and that the defendants breached that duty.
[7]
The plaintiff has failed to do so.
[25]
In the circumstances the second and third
grounds of exception should also succeed.
[26]
The fourth ground of exception is directed
at the defendants’ alleged failure to make certain payments to
third parties on
behalf of the plaintiff. It is not clear from the
particulars of claim on what basis such failure resulted in the
damages allegedly
suffered by the plaintiff. I agree with the
defendants that this failure, on its own, has no effect on the
plaintiff’s patrimony.
No basis for the alleged damages is
pleaded. In the circumstances, the fourth ground of exception should
also succeed.
[27]
In the event that the exception is upheld,
the defendants seek an order that the action be dismissed
ipso
facto
if the plaintiff fails to amend
the particulars of claim within 20 days of the date of the order. I
am not inclined to grant such
an order. Should the plaintiff fail to
amend the particulars of claim, the defendants have recourse to the
machinery provided for
in the Uniform Rules of Court.
Costs
[28]
Insofar as the issue of costs is concerned,
there is no reason why costs should not follow the result in the
exception.
[29]
The defendants insist on costs on scale C,
while the plaintiff contends that costs should be awarded on scale B.
[30]
Although the issues for determination in
the exception are not complex, the quantum involved in the matter is
substantial. There
is no reason why the defendants should be out of
pocket. In my view, the appropriate scale of costs is scale C.
Order
[31]
In the premises the following order is
granted:
1.
The defendants’ exception dated 7
August 2024 is upheld, with costs on scale C.
2.
The plaintiff is afforded an opportunity to
amend its particulars of claim within 20 days from date of this
order.
PG LOUW
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
11 March 2025
Date of
judgment:
10 June 2025
Appearances
Counsel for
plaintiff: Adv J C
Carstens
Instructed
by:
Shaban Clark Coetzee Attorneys
Counsel for defendants:
Adv H P van Nieuwenhuizen
Instructed
by:
M Soni Inc.
[1]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
(“
Telematrix
”)
[2005] ZASCA 73
;
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at para 3.
[2]
Merb
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Matthews and Others
[2021] ZAGPJHC 693 at para 9;
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
(“
Perry
”)
[2001] ZASCA 37
;
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA) at 972I.
[3]
Theunissen
en Andere v Transvaalse Lewendehawe Koöp Bpk
1988
(2) SA 493
(A) at 500E-F;
Perry
n 2 above at para 6. See also
Van
Loggerenberg
at D1 Rule 23-25.
[4]
Tembani
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another
[2022] ZASCA 70
;
2023 (1) SA 432
(SCA) at para 16;
Shopfitters
Studio (Pty) Ltd v Dynamic Design Upholstery (Pty) Ltd
[2022] ZAGPPHC 926 at para 10.
[5]
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v Thompson
1989 (1) SA 547
(A) at 553H.
[6]
See
Telematrix
above
n 1 at para 3. See also
H
v Fetal Assessment Centre
[2014] ZACC 34
;
2015 (2) SA 193
(CC);
2015 (2) BCLR 127
(CC) at para
10.
[7]
Coronation
Brick (Pty) Ltd v Strachan Construction Co (Pty) Ltd
1982
(4) SA 371
(D) at 378C-H.
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