Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 587South Africa
Coyle and Another v Classic Comfort Construction and Others (Pty) Ltd (2022/029290) [2025] ZAGPJHC 587 (11 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Coyle and Another v Classic Comfort Construction and Others (Pty) Ltd (2022/029290) [2025] ZAGPJHC 587 (11 June 2025)
Coyle and Another v Classic Comfort Construction and Others (Pty) Ltd (2022/029290) [2025] ZAGPJHC 587 (11 June 2025)
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sino date 11 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2022-029290
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
.
In
the matter between:
MICHAEL
EDWARD COYLE
First Applicant
MARIE
ANN COYLE
Second
Applicant
and
CLASSIC
COMFORT CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
PETER
JOHN TROSKIE
Second Respondent
GAVIN
BYRNE
Third Respondent
UMHLABATHI
ENGINEERING CC
Fourth Respondent
BYRNE
HOPE JONES PROPERTIES CC
Fifth Respondent
GARETH
AHIER
Sixth Respondent
In
re:
MICHAEL
EDWARD COYLE
First Plaintiff
MARIE
ANN COYLE
Second Plaintiff
and
CLASSIC
COMFORT CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
PETER
JOHN TROSKIE
Second Defendant
GAVIN
BYRNE
Third Defendant
UMHLABATHI
ENGINEERING CC
Fourth Defendant
BYRNE
HOPE JONES PROPERTIES CC
Fifth Defendant
Heard:
23 January 2025
Delivered:
11 June 2025
JUDGMENT
YACOOB,
J:
[1]
The
applicants, Mr and Ms Coyle,
[1]
to whom I shall refer collectively as “the Coyles” seek
an order that arbitration proceedings between themselves and
the
first respondent (“Classic Comfort”), before the sixth
respondent (“the arbitrator”), are stayed pending
the
determination of action proceedings that they have instituted against
the first to fifth respondents. Only the first and second
respondents
have opposed the application. Where I refer to “the
respondents” collectively this means only the first
and second
respondents.
[2]
The basis on which the Coyles seek a stay
is that they claim they have a counterclaim which is now the subject
of the action proceedings,
and that the counterclaim will set off the
claim in the arbitration, but cannot be determined in the
arbitration.
[3]
On 28 June 2018 the Coyles signed an offer
to purchase from the fifth respondent, represented by the third
respondent (“Byrne”)
and an estate agent, Denise Eysell,
who is not a defendant, a property which was part of a development
called “Eco-on Dean”.
The property was still to be
developed, and construction of the Coyles’ home, in which they
now live, was to begin within
two months of transfer.
[4]
On the same day, and in accordance with the
contract of sale, the Coyles entered into a building contract with
Classic Comfort for
construction of a dwelling house on the property.
Classic Comfort was represented by the second respondent
(“Troskie”)
in this transaction. In July 2018, the Coyles
paid an amount of R3 650 000 into a trust account, portions
of which were
to be drawn down by Classic Comfort on certain
milestones in the building process. According to the respondents’
affidavit,
all of this was apparently drawn down by December 2019,
leaving an amount of R148 889.20 outstanding from the building
price.
It is common cause that the R148 889 is approximately 5%
of the total price.
[5]
On 10 November 2020 Byrne signed the
certificate of completion in his capacity as the member of the fourth
respondent. A certificate
of occupation was issued by the local
authority on 15 December 2020 (although the Coyles dispute the
validity of the certificate
of occupation) and the property was
handed over to the Coyles on 14 January 2021, and they apparently
took occupation shortly thereafter.
[6]
In February 2021 the Coyles obtained a
report from an entity known as Gauteng Property Inspections detailing
a “snag list”
for the property. They requested that
Classic Comfort deal with these issues. Classic Comfort, on the other
hand, contended that
the Coyles owed it the outstanding R148 889.
This remaining unpaid, Classic Comfort instituted arbitration
proceedings in
accordance with the building contract for the payment
of this final amount in February 2021. The Coyles cancelled the
building
agreement in August 2021 because the “snag list”
had not been dealt with.
[7]
The Coyle’s response was to claim
that they have a substantial counterclaim which will set-off the
claim, and then raised
a number of defences to the claim, including
defects in the construction and “snags”. They also claim
that parts of
the contract are against public policy. In the
affidavits it is clear that the counterclaim was initially brought
before the arbitrator,
but that has not been placed before this
court. Only the amended statement of defence which refers to the
counterclaim being pursued
in action proceedings is annexed to the
papers. This seeks the stay of the arbitration proceedings pending
the action.
[8]
On 29 April 2022 the arbitrator issued a
ruling, based on Classic Comfort raising a point in limine that the
counterclaim fell outside
the arbitrator’s jurisdiction, on the
basis that the Coyles had not followed the process set out in the
building contract
to deal with defects, and had not properly declared
a dispute regarding the defects, so that there was no proper dispute
before
the arbitrator. It was further contended that the counterclaim
was a claim for damages arising from cancellation and that this all
arose after Classic Comfort’s claim was referred to
arbitration, so that it could not be part of the dispute before him.
[9]
The arbitrator found that because the
cancellation happened after he was appointed and the damages claim
was linked to the cancellation,
he (personally in those particular
arbitration proceedings) did not have jurisdiction to determine it.
[10]
It must be noted that there is no evidence
before me that any of the second to fifth respondents were implicated
in the counterclaim,
since that counterclaim is not before me. It
must also be noted that arbitrator did not determine that the
counterclaim could not
be determined in arbitration, but simply that
it could not form part of what was before him because the cause of
action was the
cancellation, which occurred after the arbitration was
referred to him.
[11]
So, there is no merit in the contention
that the counterclaim cannot be determined in arbitration. It is so
that there are additional
parties in the action proceedings, but it
is not clear to me that that should affect the arbitration
proceedings. It is not that
each of the defendants has a different
claim against them. It is contended in the particulars of claim that
all of them are liable
for the amount claimed jointly and severally,
but the core complaint is that the home built by Classic Comfort is
not what the
Coyles expected. The claim in the action proceedings is
for damages apparently suffered in bringing the home up to the
necessary
standard.
[12]
The Coyles contend that it will be
convenient for them to have the arbitration proceedings stayed.
However, the issues in the arbitration
and the action are not
identical. The Coyles will have far less to prove in the arbitration
than they do in the action.
[13]
The second reason relied upon by the Coyles
for the stay is that Classic Comfort is a “man of straw”
and has had to
furnish security in the arbitration proceedings. It is
not clear how this supports the argument that the arbitration
proceedings
should be stayed. The fact that Classic Comfort had to
furnish security for arbitration proceedings of R250 000 does
not support
a claim to stay those proceedings so that a claim of over
R3 million can first be proceeded with. If Classic Comfort is of so
little
substance, it is unlikely that the Coyles will recover the
full amount of their damages from Classic Comfort anyway and would
recover
it, if proved, from the remaining defendants. It then does
not become a true set off.
[14]
In addition, it seems to me that where the
amount outstanding is so small and the issues, although related, are
not identical, it
does not serve anyone to stay an arbitration
pending a trial date some six years in the future. The whole point of
arbitration
proceedings is so that a dispute is determined quickly
and relatively inexpensively and in those circumstances, there should
be
a weighty reason for staying them.
[15]
I am not satisfied that any such reason has
been provided. A court has a discretion to stay arbitration
proceedings, and I am not
satisfied that my discretion should be so
exercised.
[16]
In the result, I order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 11 June 2025.
APPEARANCES
For
the applicants:
SJ Martin
Instructed
by:
Anthony Berlowitz Attorneys
For
the respondent:
MJ Cooke
Instructed
by:
Tiefenthaler Attorneys Inc
[1]
It
is not clear from the papers whether they are married to each other
or merely live together and have the same last name. The
annexures
to the agreement state that each is married in community of property
but do not state to whom. On the assumption that
a spouse married in
community of property would have signed the offer to purchase
immoveable property, it may be inferred that
they are married to
each other, but this is not pleaded.
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