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 621
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Labat Africa Ltd and Others v Ngubane Zeelie Inc (A2024/065297)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 621 (23 June 2025)
Labat Africa Ltd and Others v Ngubane Zeelie Inc (A2024/065297)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 621 (23 June 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_621.html
sino date 23 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no:
A2024-065297
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 23 June 2025
In the matter between:
LABAT
AFRICA LTD
First Appellant
SOUTH
AFRICAN MICROELECTRONIC
SYSTEMS
(PTY) LTD
Second Appellant
SAMES
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Third Appellant
BRIAN
VAN ROOYEN
Fourth Appellant
and
NGUBANE
ZEELIE INC
Respondent
CORAM: REID J, COWEN J
AND WILSON J
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom REID J and COWEN J agree):
1
The respondent, Zeelie Inc, is a firm of auditors retained by
the first to third appellants, to whom I shall refer collectively as
Labat. The fourth appellant, Mr. van Rooyen, engaged Zeelie Inc on
Labat’s behalf. The terms of the engagement were recorded
in a
written agreement. Each of the first to third appellants bound
themselves as co-principal debtors for any amount due to Zeelie
Inc
under that agreement. Mr. van Rooyen bound himself as surety and
co-principal debtor for those amounts.
2
Zeelie Inc carried out its obligations under the agreement and
billed Labat from time-to-time. It is clear from the record that Mr.
van Rooyen regarded Zeelie Inc’s auditors’ fees as
excessive, and in due course a dispute arose about the extent of
Labat’s liability for them. Zeelie Inc sued in the court below
for just over R890 000 it said was due to it under the
agreement, but which it alleged Labat had not paid.
3
Much of the evidence in the court below revolved around the
reasonableness of Zeelie Inc’s fees, and whether Labat had
become
liable for them merely because it had failed to challenge them
within the period the agreement specified. A secondary issue was
whether Mr. van Rooyen had acknowledged Labat’s liability for
the sum claimed in correspondence exchanged between the parties.
4
The court below rejected the contention that the fees were due
because Labat had failed to dispute them. The respondent only faintly
challenged that conclusion on appeal, and I have no doubt that the
conclusion was correct for the reasons the court below gave.
5
However, the court below also found that Mr. van Rooyen had
acknowledged Labat’s indebtedness to Zeelie Inc, and that Labat
was liable for R577 000 on that basis. That figure appears to
have been reached by subtracting payments Labat made under the
agreement from the total amount Zeelie Inc claimed.
6
Dissatisfied with that outcome, Labat and Mr. van Rooyen
sought leave to appeal against the whole of the judgment of the court
below.
By the time the application for leave to appeal was heard in
the court below, it was virtually common cause that the court had
miscalculated the amount for which it gave judgment. The parties
disagreed, however, about the extent of the miscalculation, and
the
court below was bound in those circumstances to grant leave to appeal
on that point. The court nonetheless refused leave to
appeal on
Labat’s other grounds. Labat then approached the Supreme Court
of Appeal, which granted Labat leave to appeal to
us against the
whole judgment.
7
There is really only one issue on appeal. That is whether Mr.
van Rooyen’s correspondence with Zeelie Inc constituted an
acknowledgement
of Labat’s indebtedness to Zeelie Inc in a
definite or ascertainable amount. The court below held that it did,
but it is
hard to pin the judgment down to a specific amount or to a
specific acknowledgement. The court contented itself with the
observation
that the correspondence which had passed between Mr. van
Rooyen and Zeelie Inc revealed “the golden threa[d] of the
defendants’
unqualified intention to pay the account of the
plaintiff”. The court below concluded that certain portions of
that correspondence
evinced an intention to pay Labat’s whole
account, rather than “specific invoices or amounts” (see
the judgment
of the court below at paragraph 36).
8
I am unable to agree with this gloss on the correspondence.
The record shows that, in an email dated 21 September 2011, Mr. van
Rooyen acknowledged Labat’s liability for Zeelie Inc’s
outstanding fees at that point in the sum of R784 979.18
(see
annexure C4 of Zeelie Inc’s particulars of claim). It is common
cause before us that this amount was eventually paid.
9
That however, was not all that Zeelie Inc ultimately claimed
it was owed. Zeelie Inc continued to pursue Labat for further amounts
it said were due under the agreement. The court below did not
identify any acknowledgement of those additional amounts. Nor did
it
make any findings about what those amounts were.
10
Before us, counsel referred to a table placed before the court
below in paragraph 14 of Zeelie Inc’s heads of argument in the
application for leave to appeal. We were told that the parties agree
that the contents of this table are correct. The table reveals
audit
fees and interest which fell due well after Mr. van Rooyen made his
acknowledgement of 21 September 2011, and which could
not have been
in Mr. van Rooyen’s contemplation when he made that
acknowledgment. If those amounts were due under an acknowledgement
of
debt, the acknowledgment could not have been made in the 21 September
2011 letter, and it was incumbent upon the court below
to say where
and how the acknowledgement was made.
11
This the court below could not do, since there is nothing on
the record that discloses such an acknowledgement. Much of the
argument
before us revolved around a further letter Mr. van Rooyen
addressed to Zeelie Inc on 13 January 2012. The letter appears on the
record as annexure C7 to Zeelie Inc’s particulars of claim. In
that letter Mr. van Rooyen complained about “the quantum
of
fees being charged” by Zeelie Inc. He raised concerns about
cost overruns, which he said had been sanctioned and billed
for
without prior approval from Labat or Mr. van Rooyen. The letter
stated that Mr. van Rooyen’s business “cannot support
this level of fees”.
12
Mr. van Rooyen then went on to refer to “payment of the
account”. It is not clear on the face of the letter which
account
Mr. van Rooyen is referring to, but given that Labat had not
at that stage discharged the amount acknowledged in the 21 September
2011 letter, it is a fair inference that this was what Mr. van Rooyen
meant. Even if it was not, there is nothing on the record
that would
allow us to conclude which other account or what amount Mr. van
Rooyen was talking about. Whatever it was, Mr. van Rooyen
set out the
various steps being taken to pay it. He then proposed a meeting to
discuss “outstanding matters”.
13
The court below appeared to conclude that the 13 January 2012
letter was part of the “golden thread” of correspondence
in which Labat effectively acknowledged liability for whatever Zeelie
Inc’s account turned out to be. But an acknowledgement
of that
nature is unenforceable. An acknowledgement of debt is a clear and
unambiguous admission of liability to pay a fixed or
objectively
ascertainable amount of money (see, for example,
Adams v SA Motor
Industry Employers Association
1981 (3) SA 1189
(A) at 1196G-H
and 1198B-H and
Twee Jonge Gezellen v Land and Agricultural
Development Bank of South Africa
2011 (3) SA 1
(CC) at paragraph
15). An acknowledgement of liability to pay whatever someone else
chooses to charge is not an acknowledgement
of a fixed or objectively
ascertainable sum.
14
In his written submissions, counsel for Zeelie Inc referred to
a number of authorities which he claimed support the proposition that
Labat may be bound to honour an “implicit acknowledgement”
to pay Zeelie Inc’s audit fees “even if the
exact amount
is disputed” (see the respondent’s heads of argument,
paragraphs 32 to 34). None of the authorities cited
provides any
support for the propositions counsel advanced. Few if any of them
touch on the nature of acknowledgements of debt,
and I struggle to
imagine why they were relied upon at all. I cannot in any event
support the notion that an acknowledgment of
debt can bind a debtor
who disputes the amount of their indebtedness, save insofar as the
dispute entails the acceptance of a lower
but objectively
ascertainable amount that the debtor intends to pay. It is not
suggested that anything Labat or Mr. van Rooyen
said in this case
entailed such an acceptance.
15
The court below failed to appreciate that the “golden
thread” it identified in the correspondence had been severed in
the letter of 21 September 2011, which tied Labat’s
acknowledgement of indebtedness to specific amounts. It is impossible
to reconcile the 21 September 2011 letter with either an
acknowledgement of further indebtedness that might have arisen after
it was sent, or with an intent to pay whatever was demanded in terms
of the agreement. Moreover, the 13 January 2012 letter cannot
fairly
be read as consistent with such an intent. Its gist was precisely the
opposite: Mr. van Rooyen plainly wanted to limit his
liability, and
was irritated by what he saw as Zeelie Inc’s trigger-happy
approach to billing.
16
Mr. van Rooyen’s 13 January 2012 letter was plainly not
a clear and unambiguous admission of liability to pay a definite or
objectively ascertainable sum of money. Nor can it be read together
with any other document to amount to that. The latest communication
on the record that meets these requirements was Mr. van Rooyen’s
letter of 21 September 2011, which acknowledged a debt that
everyone
accepts was paid.
17
For all these reasons –
17.1 The appeal
succeeds, with costs. Counsel’s costs may be taxed on the “B”
scale.
17.2 The order of
the court below is set aside, and is substituted with the following
order –
“
The plaintiff’s
claim 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 23 June 2025.
HEARD
ON:
7 May 2025
DECIDED
ON:
23 June 2025
For
the Appellants:
HB Marais SC
Instructed by Douglas
Bennett Inc
For
the Respondent:
AR van der Merwe
Instructed by Wynand du
Plessis Attorneys
sino noindex
make_database footer start