Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 565South Africa
Catalina Invstments (Pty) Ltd v Government Pension Administration Agency (A2024/084497) [2025] ZAGPJHC 565 (11 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Catalina Invstments (Pty) Ltd v Government Pension Administration Agency (A2024/084497) [2025] ZAGPJHC 565 (11 June 2025)
Catalina Invstments (Pty) Ltd v Government Pension Administration Agency (A2024/084497) [2025] ZAGPJHC 565 (11 June 2025)
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sino date 11 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no:
A2024-084497
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 11 June 2025
In the matter between:
CATALINA
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Appellant
and
GOVERNMENT
PENSION ADMINISTRATION AGENCY
Respondent
CORAM: REID J, COWEN J
AND WILSON J
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom REID J and COWEN J agree):
1
The appellant, Catalina, takes issue with an order given by a
single judge of this division. In that order the judge answered two
of six questions posed to her as part of an agreement to separate the
issues raised in a trial action Catalina had instituted.
The
agreements
2
Catalina was appointed to a panel of specialist tracing agents
set up by the respondent, the GPAA. The panel provided the GPAA with
a stable of agents upon which it could call from time-to-time to
trace individuals to whom pension benefits were due, but with
whom
the GPAA had lost contact.
3
The GPAA appointed Catalina to the panel after a competitive
tendering process. The terms of Catalina’s appointment were set
out in two documents: a “master agreement” and a “service
level agreement”. The master agreement set out
the conditions
of Catalina’s membership of the panel, and was terminable on
notice, or by effluxion of time after 36 months.
The service level
agreement dealt with the standards to be adhered to, and the process
to be followed, in carrying out instructions
to trace specific
beneficiaries of government pension funds. The service level
agreement also set out the fee Catalina would be
paid on the
completion of each instruction. The service level agreement was not
terminable on notice. It could only be cancelled
on breach.
The
dispute
4
A dispute arose about the number and frequency of instructions
Catalina could expect to receive as a result of its membership of
the
GPAA’s panel. Although the master agreement made clear that
“[a]ppointment to the Tracing Panel does not guarantee
that the
Service Providers will receive work during their appointment term”,
and that the issuing of instructions to Catalina
would be strictly
“
ad hoc”
(clause 4.2), representatives of the GPAA
apparently created the unfulfilled expectation that Catalina would
receive a minimum
number of instructions – not less than 1000
during every year that Catalina remained a member of the panel.
5
The GPAA ended the dispute by terminating its master agreement
with Catalina on notice, as it was entitled to do. The notice of
termination, signed by the GPAA’s chief executive officer, was
issued on 22 October 2018. It is clear from the notice of termination
that the GPAA took the view that the service level agreement would
also be cancelled, even though the service level agreement itself
could only be cancelled on breach, and it was not suggested that
Catalina had committed any breach of either the service level
agreement or the master agreement.
6
On 13 October 2020, Catalina’s attorneys wrote to the
GPAA’s chief executive officer and claimed that the service
level
agreement was not terminable on notice, but only cancellable on
breach. Since there was no suggestion that Catalina had committed
any
such breach, so Catalina’s attorney contended, the attempt to
invoke the master agreement’s termination clause
to bring an
end to the service level agreement was unlawful, and constituted a
repudiation of the service level agreement. Catalina
accepted that
repudiation, and alleged that, as a result of it, Catalina had
suffered a loss of R5.55 million, being the amount
that Catalina
would have profited had the service level agreement continued for the
remainder of the 36 month period for which
Catalina had been
appointed to the panel under the master agreement. Payment in that
amount plus interest was demanded within ten
days, failing which
action for the recovery of the loss would be instituted.
Proceedings
in the court below
7
The GPAA did not see things Catalina’s way, and in due
course, Catalina issued summons for recovery of R5.55 million plus
interest. Catalina’s claim came before the court below on 31
October 2023. At the outset of the hearing, the court below was
asked
to accept an agreement between the parties to separate six issues
from the remaining questions in the action, and to decide
them first.
8
The court below appears to have accepted that agreement, but
there is nothing on the record to suggest that an order to that
effect
was made. This was irregular. A court asked to separate issues
may not informally adopt the parties’ agreement to do so. It
must evaluate the separated issues carefully, bearing in mind that
questions which appear discrete at the outset of a trial often
become
hopelessly entangled, and that the duty to ensure that “the
issues to be tried are clearly circumscribed” falls
ultimately
upon the court itself (see
Denel (Pty) Ltd v Vorster
2004 (4)
SA 481
(SCA), paragraph 3). That is why rule 33 (4) requires a
separation order. In making such an order, a court must “apply
its
mind to whether it is indeed convenient that [issues] be
separated”. If a separation is appropriate in principle, then
“the
questions to be determined must be expressed . . . with
clarity and precision” (
Absa Bank Ltd v Bernert
2011 (3)
SA 74
(SCA) paragraph 21).
9
The court below did not apply its mind in the manner required,
and did not make the necessary order. As a result, the trial
proceeded
over five days of evidence on six separated questions, many
of which were as entangled with each other as they were with the
issues
from which they were purportedly separated. Much of the
evidence led was also immaterial to the main dispute between the
parties.
10
The court below appears to have appreciated this, since it
eventually resolved the matter by answering only two of the questions
posed to it. However, when the matter came before us, counsel
conceded, in my view correctly, that only one of these issues really
needed to be decided. It is to that issue that I now turn.
The
issue on appeal
11
The trial court ultimately dealt with Catalina’s claim
on the straightforward basis that the effect of terminating the
master
agreement was also to bring an end to the service level
agreement. Although the trial court did not expressly say so in its
judgment,
it appears to have accepted that the service level
agreement could not survive the termination of the master agreement
for very
long. This is because the service level agreement only
applies to instructions sent to entities which are on the panel of
tracers
the GPAA constituted. Since the termination of the master
agreement meant that Catalina was dismissed from the panel, the
service
level agreement could only subsist for so long as Catalina
had not completed the instructions that had been sent to it before
the
master agreement was terminated (see paragraphs 50 and 51 of the
judgment of the court below).
12
Accordingly, the termination of the master agreement did not
constitute a repudiation of the service level agreement, since the
service level agreement applied only to instructions sent to Catalina
by virtue of its membership of the panel. Once Catalina’s
membership of the panel had been ended, the service level agreement
would fall away after any pending instructions sent to Catalina
had
been completed.
13
Before us, Ms. Mpakanyane, who appeared with Mr. Bellin for
Catalina, contended that the court below ought to have found that the
GPAA was precluded from terminating the service level agreement on
notice, because no right to do so was expressly recorded in
the
service level agreement itself. But to accept this argument, we would
have to treat the master agreement and the service level
agreement as
hermetically sealed from each other.
14
Neither Catalina nor the GPAA could seriously have intended
that approach, because neither agreement can function without the
other.
The express terms of the service level agreement make clear
that it is umbilically linked to the master agreement: “[t]his
Agreement together with the Main Agreement and Annexures thereto
constitutes the entire agreement between the parties” (clause
21.1 of the service level agreement). Moreover, the master agreement
defines the services to be performed by a member of panel
by
reference to “Service Levels” which “shall be set
out in” the service level agreement (clause 6.1 of
the master
agreement).
15
There are several other textual indicia of this relationship
in both the service level and master agreements, but I need not deal
with them. There is no conceivable basis on which it could be
contended that the master agreement and the service level agreement
did not in fact form one larger arrangement. In terms of that
arrangement, instructions to trace government pension beneficiaries
would be assigned to Catalina by virtue of its membership of the
panel. Catalina would then carry those instructions out in terms
of
the service level agreement. The termination of Catalina’s
panel membership, which Catalina accepts the GPAA could execute
more
or less at will, meant the end of the whole arrangement, at least
once Catalina had completed any pending instructions assigned
to it
at the time of its dismissal from the panel.
16
It was faintly contended that this way of interpreting the two
agreements together lacked business efficacy, and for that reason
was
not a “sensible or businesslike” construction of the
agreements of the sort required by the decision in
Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at paragraph 18. I can see how reading the two agreements
together in the manner the court below did was not particularly
efficacious for Catalina, but that is not the test. “Businesslike”
interpretation is not merely interpretation that
favours the
commercial interests of the party relying on it. It is interpretation
that gives business efficacy to the agreement
as a whole. I fail to
see how the arrangement between the GPAA and its agents defined in
the service level and master agreements
could function except by
treating each agreement as part of a larger contract incorporating
both of them. The master agreement
provides only for membership of a
panel, but not for the processing of instructions or the payment of
Catalina. Conversely, the
service level agreement provides for the
processing of instructions and the payment of Catalina, but the right
to process the instructions
and to be paid for doing so only accrues
to members of the panel appointed in terms of the master agreement.
Treating the two agreements
as entirely separate is neither sensible
nor businesslike.
17
Finally, it was contended that the relationship between the
master agreement and the service level agreement had to be
ascertained
in light of the maxim “
generalia specialibus non
derogant
”. This Latin maxim, which roughly translates as
“general provisions do not derogate from specific ones”,
is usually
deployed to interpret statutory text. Although I accept,
as Ms. Mpakanyane urged, that there is authority for the proposition
that
the maxim can also play a role in contractual interpretation
(see
Lodhi 2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev Developments (Pty)
Ltd
2007 (6) SA 87
at paragraph 11), the maxim finds no
application in this case.
18
The maxim was relied upon to contend that the “general
provision” authorising the termination of the master agreement
could not be read to qualify or detract from the “special
provision” in the service level agreement which states that
the
service level agreement can only be cancelled on breach. But the
maxim does not work like that. For the maxim to apply, the
provisions
being interpreted would, on the face of it, have to apply to the same
thing. Here the termination clause in the master
agreement and the
cancellation clause in the service level agreement apply to two
different things: membership of the panel on
the one hand, and the
processing of specific instructions on the other. The clause allowing
the GPAA to terminate Catalina’s
panel membership did not
“derogate” from the clause providing for the cancellation
of the service level agreement on
breach.
Order
19
It follows from all of this that the court below was right to
conclude that the termination of the master agreement did not
constitute
the repudiation of the service level agreement. Far from
being repudiated on termination of the master agreement, the service
level
agreement would have to continue until Catalina had completed
any pending instructions.
20
However, in my view, the court below ought to have appreciated
that its conclusion on that issue spelt the end of Catalina’s
case, and to have dismissed the action outright. Counsel before us
were agreed that this is the correct approach. Ms. Mpakanyane
quite
properly conceded that if we agreed with the court below on the
principal issue, then there was nothing left of Catalina’s
case. In exercising our power to “amend” the decision of
the court below and to “render any decision which the
circumstances may require”
(section 19
(d) of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
), we shall substitute paragraph 4 the order of
the court below with an order dismissing Catalina’s action.
21
For all these reasons –
21.1 The appeal is
dismissed with costs. Counsel’s costs may be taxed on scale
“B”.
21.2 Paragraph 4 of
the order of the court below is set aside and is substituted with the
following order –
“
The plaintiff’s
action is dismissed with costs.”
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 June 2025.
HEARD
ON:
7 May 2025
DECIDED
ON:
11 June 2025
For
the Appellant:
M Mpakanyane
P Bellin
Instructed by Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
For
the Respondent:
W Lusenga
Instructed by Ledwaba
Mazwai Attorneys
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