Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 6South Africa
Instelec Services CC and Another v Ideal Electrical and Mining Supplies (Pty) Ltd and Others (25450/2020;13856/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2024)
Headnotes
the determination of good cause is a discretionary matter to be exercised having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including the degree of non-compliance, the explanation therefor, the prospects of success, the importance of the case, the interests of finality, convenience of the court and the avoidance of unnecessary delays. These factors inter-relate and must be weighed against each other.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Instelec Services CC and Another v Ideal Electrical and Mining Supplies (Pty) Ltd and Others (25450/2020;13856/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2024)
Instelec Services CC and Another v Ideal Electrical and Mining Supplies (Pty) Ltd and Others (25450/2020;13856/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 6 (4 January 2024)
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sino date 4 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 25450/2020
Case
Number: 13856/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
: 4/01/2024
SIGNATURE
In
case number 25450/2020
INSTELEC
SERVICES CC
First
Applicant
MOONSAMY
RAJU NAIDOO
Second
Applicant
and
IDEAL
ELECTRICAL AND MINING SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
THE
ARBITRATOR P BORUCHOWITZ
Second
Respondent
THE
ARBITRATION APPEAL PANELLISTS
Third
Respondent
In
case number:13856/2020
IDEAL
ELECTRICAL AND MINING SUPPLIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
INSTELEC
SERVICES CC
First
Respondent
MOONSAMY
RAJU NAIDOO
Second
Respondent
ORDER
In
case number 25450/2020:
[1]
The application for condonation is dismissed.
[2]
The application is dismissed.
[3]
The applicants are to pay the costs of the applications on the scale
as
between attorney and client such costs to include the costs of
senior counsel where employed and such liability to be joint and
several the one paying the other to be absolved.
In case number
13856/2020:
[1]
The arbitrator’s interim award dated 18 March 2018 handed down
on 19 March 2018 is made an order of court.
[2]
The arbitrator’s final award dated 10 February 2020 handed down
on 10 February 2020 is made an order of court.
[3]
The appeal panel’s award dated 04 June 2020 and handed down on
04 June 2020 is made an order of court.
[4]
The respondents are to pay the costs of the applications on the scale
as between attorney and client such costs to include
the costs of
senior counsel where employed and such liability to be joint and
several the one paying the other to be absolved.
JUDGMENT
FISHER,
J
Introduction
[1]
This judgment is in respect of two related cases which have been
formally
consolidated under their respective case numbers.
[2]
The consolidated hearing involves an application for the review of
the
decision of an arbitrator, retired Judge Philip Boruchowitz (the
arbitrator) in response to an application to have the award made
an
order of court. The review seeks the setting aside of the main
arbitral award in which the claimant in the arbitration, Ideal
Electric and Mining Supplies (Pty) Ltd (Ideal) succeeded against both
defendants in the arbitration, Instelec Services cc (Instelec)
and
Mr Moonsamy Naidoo (Naidoo) in securing a joint and several
order for payment of an amount of R 3.3 million
(rounded) as
damages arising out of theft and fraud and costs.
[3]
The review is based on the central contention that the arbitrator
erred
in failing to allow the introduction into evidence of
approximately 300 pages of documents relating to the disposal of the
stolen
items in issue. The documents were sought to be introduced at
a stage where the claimant had closed its case and Naidoo was under
cross-examination.
[4]
The
defendants argue that the arbitrator’s failure to allow the
introduction of the documents constituted a gross irregularity
as
contemplated by section 33(1)(b) of the Arbitration Act
[1]
(the
Act).
[5]
Initially, the review grounds included allegations relating to bias
and
the lack of integrity of the arbitrator. These allegations are
patently baseless and were wisely not persisted with.
[6]
The review is brought after the expiry of the six-week period
prescribed
in section 33(2) of the Act. Depending on the dates of the
awards and specifically whether the appeal tribunal’s formal
recordal
of the withdrawal of the appeal (4 June 2020) is the date
from which the dies run or whether they run from the date of the
final
award (10 February 2020) the review is either two or five
months late. On any tally the delay is considerable.
[7]
The defendants seek condonation for the late bringing of the review.
The
claimant opposes the application for condonation as well as the
review. The applications for condonation and review are considered
together in that the prospects of success in the review informs the
consideration of whether condonation should be granted.
[8]
I turn to the procedural background.
The procedural
background
[9]
The claim in the arbitration was based on the allegation that Naidoo,
who was a guiding mind behind the business of Instelec, conspired
with an employee of Ideal, Mr Brett Naiker (Naiker) to steal
electronic parts belonging to Ideal. In essence, it was alleged that
Naiker, by abusing his position as employee of the claimant,
secured
the delivery of goods to Instelec and thus Naidoo without recording
the supply of such goods in the records of the claimant
thereby
committing the theft of the goods. Naidoo was alleged to have
facilitated this delivery of goods in the knowledge that
the goods
were stolen.
[10]
The case was initially launched by way of action in June 2016. In
November 2017 the parties
entered into an arbitration agreement in
relation to the hearing of the claim and the arbitrator was
appointed.
[11]
The pleadings closed in December 2017 and the arbitration commenced
on 19 February 2018.
Hearings took place at intervals over the course
of two years, the last hearing date being 10 February 2020.
[12]
As the cross examination of Naidoo was drawing to a close, the
defendants sought leave
to introduce approximately 300 pages of
documents into evidence. The stated intention was to introduce the
evidence in reply.
[13]
The arbitrator heard full argument on the application to adduce
further evidence and ultimately
handed down an order with reasons
refusing the introduction of the further evidence.
[14]
The final award was handed down on 10 February 2020 in favour of the
claimant.
[15]
The defendants filed a notice of intention to appeal three days
later. An appeal panel
was subsequently constituted.
[16]
On 25 May 2020 the defendants withdrew the appeal and the appeal
panel formally recorded
such withdrawal on 04 June 2020.
[17]
The claimant then brought the application under case number
13850/2020 to make the arbitration
award an order of court. The
defendants thereafter brought the application under case number
25450/2020 to set aside the interlocutory
order refusing the
admission of the further evidence and ultimately the final award.
These two applications were consolidated by
order dated 26 January
2023.
[18]
It is sought also by the defendants that the arbitration agreement be
declared to be null
and void. This relief was not proceeded with in
argument. The remedy sought by the defendants in the review is that
the matter
be sent back to the arbitrator for reconsideration of the
awards.
[19]
The inquiry into the application for condonation entails a
determination of whether good
cause exists for such condonation. This
includes a determination of the prospects of success in the
application for review and
whether a proper explanation has been
given for the delay.
[20]
It is convenient to deal first with the application for condonation.
Application for
condonation
[21]
The parties agreed in terms of the arbitration agreement that the
uniform rules of court
would regulate the procedure to be undertaken
in the arbitration. This specifically included interlocutory
applications.
[22]
The legal
prescripts dealing with the consideration of applications for
condonation are well entrenched. In
United
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd
[2]
Holmes JA held that the determination of good cause is a
discretionary matter to be exercised having regard to all the
circumstances
of the case, including the degree of non-compliance,
the explanation therefor, the prospects of success, the importance of
the
case, the interests of finality, convenience of the court and the
avoidance of unnecessary delays. These factors inter-relate and
must
be weighed against each other.
[23]
Naidoo received the award two days after it was handed down. He says
he was not satisfied
with the outcome. He thus instructed his then
attorney Mr Howard Woolf (Woolf) who had represented both defendants
in the arbitration
“to challenge the award in whatever way
legally possible”. An appeal was thus filed two days later by
Woolf. It is
not clear what the appeal grounds were. The appeal
was however ultimately jettisoned. It seems that the defendants
accept
that it had no prospects of success.
[24]
The documents which were sought to be introduced at the arbitration
were invoices sent
by a business set up clandestinely by Naiker, BDR
to two businesses Boz Auto and African Olive reflecting the sale of
the stolen
goods.
[25]
It was the version of the defendants that they had no part in the
theft of the goods. They
alleged that the goods were stolen by Naiker
without their knowledge and cooperation and that they were sold by
Naiker through
BDR to various purchasers at a significantly reduced
price. Two main purchasers of these stolen goods by Naiker were
alleged to
be Boz Auto and African Olive, the former being an
automobile concern and the latter a supplier of goods to the mining
industry,
including a substantial amount of copper tape. Copper tape
was one of the items stolen from Ideal.
[26]
That money changed hands between Naidoo and Naiker was not in dispute
on the evidence of
Naidoo. These transactions were said by Naidoo to
be loans which would be repaid when the goods in issue were sold.
There were,
on Naidoo’s evidence, also times when adjustments
were done in relation to amounts owed between Instelec and BDR and
amounts
were set off between the two entities in relation to goods
supplied by Instelec to BDR. No VAT was paid on any transactions
between
Naiker and Naidoo. It was not disputed that there was a very
tight relationship between the two men and the entities they
controlled.
[27]
This defence of no knowledge and innocent participation was raised on
behalf of the defendants
from the beginning of the arbitration.
[28]
The existence and whereabouts of the invoices by BDR to African
Olive and Boz Auto
were known to Naidoo and his legal representatives
as early as March 2018.
[29]
To my mind, the existence of proof that stolen items were sold by
Naiker to these two businesses
has limited probative value and
relevance to the pivotal factual issue in the case, being whether
Naiker and Naidoo were “in
cahoots” in relation to the
theft of the items from the warehouse of the claimant. That the goods
were stolen by Naiker is
not in dispute and neither is it disputed
that goods were delivered to Instelec.
[30]
Whether Naidoo provided a fraudulent mechanism for the goods being
ordered and delivered
is the central question. This was answered by
the arbitrator in the affirmative on the probabilities as examined by
him in detail.
There can be no question, in review, proceedings of
the arbitrator being wrong in this determination.
[31]
It emerges from the arbitrator’s careful analysis of all the
evidence that reference
to the invoices of BDS in terms of which it
sold the stolen goods would add little or no value to the discussion.
The evidence
shows that invoices were manufactured and delivery notes
destroyed in accordance with the central fraudulent scheme and on the
basis that this served the purposes of both Naiker and Naidoo.
[32]
Documents brought into existence by fraudsters often suffer
from a lack of probative
value or relevance in that they are
contrived for the purposes of obfuscation. That is the case here. It
seems to me that this
was the real reason why there was no effort
made by Naidoo’s legal team to obtain these documents in the
first place.
[33]
The whereabouts of the documents throughout the arbitration is
important. They were, to
the knowledge of Naidoo and his legal
representatives, seized from the home of Naiker by the SAPS and were
in the possession of
the claimant’s attorneys by at least March
2018.
[34]
A pivotal aspect raised by the arbitrator in considering whether to
admit the documents
was the reason why the documents were not sourced
earlier using the rules of court which expressly applied to the
arbitration proceedings.
The defendants produced no feasible
explanation for this failure at the arbitration and now latterly seek
to attempt to blame the
failure to source the documents on the
incompetence of their attorney and counsel. I might mention that both
are experienced senior
practitioners.
[35]
Furthermore, the explanations for the delay in bringing the review
application also bear
little scrutiny. Naidoo, in support of the
application for condonation, states that he could not get hold of his
attorney, Woolf
as Woolf was allegedly ill. There are no emails or
other proof of these alleged attempts at making contact. Furthermore,
no detail
is provided as to when the defendants ultimately instructed
their new attorney.
[36]
The explanation for the delay is vague, lacking in important detail
and is, in its essential
parts, unimpressive.
[37]
The conduct of Naidoo in the aftermath of the final award is telling.
There was no apparent
basis for an appeal. Naidoo’s instruction
to Woolf was that he cast about to find any conceivable basis for
appeal. That
the appeal was subsequently jettisoned suggests that it
was instituted vexatiously.
[38]
The manner in which the review application was ultimately
framed is also an indication
of a vexatious approach. The fact that
all of the grounds for the review, save the attack on the refusal to
admit the documents
were ultimately abandoned is, again, indicative
of a lack of a substantive basis for the review.
[39]
To my mind, the defendants have made out no case for condonation and
the application for
condonation falls to be dismissed.
[40]
I am, in any event, of the view that the review must fail on
its merits. I move to
consider the review.
The review
[41]
The arbitration agreement provided for the rules of court to apply.
The parties thus clothed
the arbitrator with the discretion to decide
interlocutory matters.
[42]
The review is brought in terms of section 33(1)(b) of the Act. The
defendants must show
that the refusal to allow the documents to be
admitted constituted a gross irregularity.
[43]
It was not disputed that the defendants and their legal
representatives had the knowledge
of the existence and whereabouts of
the documents approximately two years before the application to admit
the documents was made.
[44]
The arbitrator was troubled by the fact that no attempt was made to
use the formal mechanisms
available under the applicable rules of
court to obtain their discovery. He was doubly troubled by the fact
that there was no feasible
explanation given for this failure to
obtain the documents before the hearing.
[45]
As I have set out above, the relevance and probative force of
the documents is questionable.
Notwithstanding that the defendants
were represented by experienced senior counsel; these documents did
not form the focal point
of the case. To my mind, they were
brought up in reply as an afterthought.
[46]
The refusal to admit of the documents does not emerge as having been
regarded by the defendants
as a calamity at first. It was only
hit upon by the defendant’s new attorney as a possible ground
of appeal together
with a compendium of other misguided grounds.
[47]
In my view the arbitrator exercised his discretion properly.
[48]
In the circumstances, even if I had granted the condonation, I would
have dismissed the
review application and the other relief claimed by
the defendants under case number 25450/2020.
[49]
In case number 13856/2020 the applicant has made out a case for the
relief sought.
Costs
[50]
The approach taken by the defendants since the final award was handed
down has been characterised
by a vexation. They have cast about for
any reason to avoid liability under the award. None of the bases
conjured up by them have
had any cogency.
[51]
In the circumstances this is a proper matter for punitive costs to be
paid by the defendants.
I might add that this is not the first time
that costs on a punitive scale have been awarded against the
defendants in light of
their conduct of the case.
[52]
The claimants have made out a case for the relief sought by them.
Order
[53]
In the circumstances I make the following order:
In case number
25450/2020:
[1] The application
for condonation is dismissed.
[2] The application
is dismissed.
[3] The applicants
are to pay the costs of the applications on the scale as between
attorney and client such costs to include
the costs of senior counsel
where employed and such liability to be joint and several the one
paying the other to be absolved.
In case number
13856/2020:
[1] The
arbitrator’s interim award dated 18 March 2018 handed down on
19 March 2018 is made an order of court.
[2] The
arbitrator’s final award dated 10 February 2020 handed down on
10 February 2020 is made an order of court.
[3] The appeal
panel’s award dated 04 June 2020 and handed down on 04 June
2020 is made an order of court.
[4] The respondents
are to pay the costs of the applications on the scale as between
attorney and client such costs to include
the costs of senior counsel
where employed and such liability to be joint and several the one
paying the other to be absolved.
D FISHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by
uploading to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
04 January 2024.
Heard:
19 October 2023
Delivered:
04 January 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
S.S.Cohen
Instructed by:
Thomson Wilks
Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
J.M.
Heher
Instructed
by:
Fluxmans
Inc.
[1]
Act
42 of 1965
[2]
United
Plant Hire (Pty) LTD v Hills
1976 (1) SA 717
(A) at
720E-G
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