Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 171South Africa
Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd v Faw Vehicle Manufacturing SA (Pty) Ltd (23453-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 171 (22 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 February 2024
Headnotes
even if the defendant knows what case he must meet, this does not disentitle him to except successfully where the plaintiff has failed to convey his case with “reasonable distinctness.” In Boys v Piderit,[2] the court stated that the pleading is also for the benefit of the trial court hearing the matter.” 8. An excipient must show that the pleading is excipiable on every possible interpretation that can be reasonably attached to it.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd v Faw Vehicle Manufacturing SA (Pty) Ltd (23453-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 171 (22 February 2024)
Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd v Faw Vehicle Manufacturing SA (Pty) Ltd (23453-2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 171 (22 February 2024)
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sino date 22 February 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
3.
REVISED
22 February 2024
CASE No. 23453/2022
In
the matter between:
WASTE
PARTNER INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
FAW
VEHICLE MANUFACTURING SA (PTY) LTD
Defendant/ Excipient
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED
AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
The
defendant in the action raised five grounds of exception to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim, dated 29 June 2022.
The
exception is taken on the basis that the particulars of claim lacks
the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action, as
the
agreement the plaintiff relies on does not support its claim for the
transfer and delivery of specific trucks. Counsel
proffered
there was no need to file any notice to cure the cause of complaint.
1.
The plaintiff’s claim is based on a settlement agreement
made in full and final settlement, and which was made
an order of
court, annexed as W1. Mr Mudau appeared for the plaintiff
and submitted that the agreement between the
parties was for the
purchase of specific trucks to service the plaintiff’s waste
disposal business. The plaintiff had
previously used those
trucks, which were leased to one Banakoma, the plaintiff’s
former client, and the plaintiff adapted
the trucks for its waste
disposal business. When Banakoma defaulted on a “master
rental agreement” which it concluded
with the defendant, the
plaintiff negotiated to pay off that debt and “to purchase the
four trucks it had adapted”
, from the defendant. The
agreement between the parties was for the purchase and sale of
specific trucks. Mr Mudau submitted
that the purchase price is paid,
whether by direct payments to the defendant or the amount it realised
in execution. It was
contended that the defendant still retains
an amount it recovered above the actual sale price and to date no
trucks have been delivered.
2.
Mr Mudau proffered that the plaintiff was never a party to the master
rental agreement which is annexed to the pleadings.
The
particulars plead tacit terms and the defendant knows that the
agreement that the plaintiff relies on is for the purchase of
specific trucks and for their delivery and transfer.
Counsel denied any confusion, about the plaintiff’s
claims, the agreement that the plaintiff relies on
arises
from
the “master rental agreement.”
3.
It was contended that the defendant is simply opportunistic, when it
seeks to impute the master rental agreement to the
plaintiff, to
avoid filing a plea after it was placed on bar, this exception was
served on the last day that the plea was due.
4.
Advocate C van der Merwe appeared for the defendant (the excipient)
and submitted that the particulars set out three separate
and
distinct claims based on the rental agreement, as annexed to the
particulars, and that agreement does not provide for “delivery
and transfer of specified vehicles” the agreement refers
only to commercial vehicles. Furthermore, the agreement
does
not refer to delivery and transfer of ownership. It was
contended that ownership will always remain with the defendant.
Counsel submitted that the pleadings do not disclose a cause of
action, the plaintiff will not be able to lead admissible evidence
on
its pleaded case as it relies on a written agreement. No
evidence can be led that supplements the written agreement.
therefore, the exceptions must be upheld.
# The Law
The Law
5.
The fundamental principle in exceptions/pleading is that the averment
made must be concise and clear to enable the opposing
party to
meaningfully respond to the claim or plea, and to avoid prejudice.
6.
An exception implies that the pleading objected to, “taken as
it stands” is unable to fulfil its legal function,
and the
opposing party is unable to respond to it.
7.
In
Cilliers
v van Biljon
[1]
the court held that even if the defendant knows what case he must
meet, this does not disentitle him to except successfully where
the
plaintiff has failed to convey his case with “reasonable
distinctness.” In Boys v Piderit,
[2]
the court stated that the pleading is also for the benefit of the
trial court hearing the matter.”
8.
An excipient must show that the pleading is excipiable on every
possible interpretation that can be reasonably attached
to it.
# Grounds of Exception.
Grounds of Exception.
## Ground 1
Ground 1
9.
It was contended that the plaintiff failed to disclose a cause of
action, it claims delivery and transfer of specific vehicles,
however
the settlement agreement does not refer to “specified
vehicles,” but to “commercial vehicles.”
Mr van der Merwe contended there may have been oral terms which
may have been part of negotiations but that cannot assist
the
plaintiff in its legal basis for its claim. Counsel submitted
that if the plaintiff cannot lead admissible evidence at
trial in
support of its version, there is no cause of action, and the
exception must succeed. The court must consider the
pleading as
it stands, the agreement relied on does not provide for a delivery
and transfer of specified vehicles. The agreement
provides for
commercial vehicles upon fulfilment of payment as per the master
rental agreement which the plaintiff relies on.
## Ground 2
Ground 2
10.
The plaintiff claims for delivery and transfer of ownership of the
vehicles, the settlement agreement does not provide
for transfer of
ownership of vehicles, in terms of the master rental agreement.
Clause 2.5.1 of the agreement provides
that the defendant would
always be the owner, accordingly the plaintiff failed to disclose a
cause of action on this claim.
Counsel contended that the
agreement relied on was a lease, not a purchase and sale agreement.
## Ground 3
Ground 3
11.
The plaintiff claims the defendant was unduly enriched in the amount
of R1 696 769.44, when it executed
and recovered
monies above the sale price. However, it is argued that the
plaintiff failed to plead the elements of enrichment
and therefor
failed to plead the necessary facts to sustain a claim. The
plaintiff failed to plead that the defendant
was enriched, that
the plaintiff was impoverished, and that the defendant’s
enrichment was at the plaintiff's expense, which
was without cause,
and therefor unjustified.
## Ground 4
Ground 4
12.
The plaintiff claims for damages in the alternative to
enrichment, for payment of the sum of R6 017 484.21
with
interest and costs. The plaintiff contends that it paid the
amount and no vehicles have been delivered. It was argued
that if the
plaintiff failed in ground 2 on delivery and transfer, it cannot
succeed in any claim for damages.
## Ground 5
Ground 5
13.
The plaintiff’s claim for damages due to the defendant’s
breach, is not supported by material facts for either
general or
special damages, if fails to plead that the damages flow naturally
from the alleged breach and failed to plead a case
for special
damages. This claim for damages is not pleaded in the
alternative.
14.
Mr van der Merwe submitted that all grounds of exception be upheld
and that the particulars of claim be set aside, the
claim be
dismissed with costs, which order is to be suspended, for 10 days
pending the plaintiff’s filing a notice to amend
its
particulars of claim.
15.
Mr Mudau argued that the defendant could have requested for
particulars regarding the vehicles but instead raised exceptions
to
delay the finalisation of the matter. It was contended that
there is no confusion as to the vehicles the plaintiff requires
to be
delivered, the defendant knows of the specifics of the vehicles.
# The Particulars of Claim
The Particulars of Claim
16.
Paragraph 8 of the particulars of claim provides,
“
the plaintiff entered
into the settlement agreement for those specific commercial vehicles
as opposed to buying new ones.”
17.
Clause 2.1 of the settlement agreement, provides:
“
Upon
payment of the full R4 320 614.77. the applicant (the
defendant in casu)agrees to deliver 4 commercial vehicles to
the
respondents which will be the fulfilment execution of the master
rental agreement and the return of 4 commercial vehicles.”
[3]
No specific details are included in the agreement.
18.
It is noteworthy that the particulars of claim refers to a “
master rental agreement,” but the plaintiff claims
“delivery
and transfer of the vehicles.”
19.
At
paragraph 5 of the letter of demand dated 7 February 2022, which is
an annexure to the pleadings, the specifics of the vehicles
are set
out. This letter refers to a “master agreement with
Banakoma.”
[4]
20.
Mr Mudau contended that the plaintiff concluded this agreement with
the defendant, to “purchase specific trucks,”
the parties
have never concluded a master rental agreement, which permits the
defendant to retain ownership.
21.
The plaintiff was never a party to any master rental agreement, it
pleaded in the alternative, for return of the purchase
price, given
that the trucks have not been delivered.
22.
Furthermore, it was contended, that the plaintiff had to continue to
operate its business and was forced to hire vehicles,
as it awaits
the delivery and transfer of the trucks from the defendant. The
costs of hire are the basis for the damages
claim.
23.
Mr Mudau proffered that the elements of enrichment can be found
within the particulars and the fact that they do not appear
in the
conventional format, it cannot be fatal to the plaintiff’s
lawful claim. Mr Mudau contended that the defendant
could
have requested further particulars to seek clarification of the
claim, the exception is an abuse of process, and the
exceptions must
be dismissed with costs. Counsel proffered that it is telling
that the defendant was in no hurry through
the litigation, the
plaintiff had to place it on bar for its plea, and the plaintiff had
to set down this exception, to move the
matter along.
24.
In reply Mr
van der Merwe, argued that the court must consider the pleading as it
appears, the plaintiff relies on a written agreement,
which does not
support its version. No tacit or implied terms can apply, the
plaintiff cannot lead evidence that is contrary
to the terms of
agreement it relied on, as established in Johnston v Leal
[5]
.
Counsel contended that the plaintiff has not laid a basis for
delivery and transfer of ownership, it is not in the agreement
they
rely on. It was submitted that the exceptions are good in law
and must be upheld with costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
25.
The plaintiff is bound to the provisions of the written agreement it
relies on. I agree with Mr van der Merwe, that
the claims for
“specified vehicles and for delivery and transfer” are
not apparent from the agreement, accordingly
the particulars do not
disclose a cause of action. The main point being that the
plaintiff cannot provide admissible
evidence to prove its claims for
delivery and transfer of specified vehicles, at trial and therefore
its particulars of claim do
not disclose a cause of action.
26.
Having heard Mr Mudau’s submissions, it is apparent that the
plaintiff’s claim is founded in a partly oral
and partly
written agreement annexed as W1. In Union Government v Vianini
Ferro-Concrete Pipes (Pty) Ltd, Watermeyer JA,
stated:
“
This
court has accepted the rule that when a contract has been reduced to
writing, the writing is, in general, regarded as the exclusive
memorial of the transaction and in a suit between the parties no
evidence to prove its terms may be given save the document or
secondary evidence to its contents, nor may the contents of such
document be contradicted, altered, added to or varied, by parol
evidence.”
See
also
AFFIRMATIVE
PORTFOLIOS CC v TRANSNET LTD t/a METRORAIL
[6]
,
where
the
court reaffirmed that
“the execution of a document deprives all previous statements
of their legal effect.”
27.
The pleadings are for both the defendant and the court to understand
the claim.
“
A court is to look
at the pleadings as it stands and no facts outside those stated in
the pleading can be brought into issue, except
where there is an
inconsistency, and no reference may be made to any other
document.”
[7]
28.
The writer
Erasmus states that the excipient must demonstrate to the court that
upon every interpretation of the pleading,
particularly
the document on which it based can
bear
,
no cause of action is disclosed.
[8]
29.
The agreement relied upon makes no reference to a transfer and
delivery. The plaintiff cannot lead evidence
on tacit and
oral terms, to supplement the agreement they rely on.
30.
The object of an exception is to dispose of a matter expeditiously on
a point. I am of the view the two main exceptions
must succeed.
31.
Grounds 3 to 5 of the complaint are related to the first and second
grounds, and accordingly are upheld.
32.
I noted
that in its letter of demand, as annexed to the particulars of claim,
the plaintiff does set out the specifics of the vehicles,
albeit that
the letter of demand is not specifically incorporated into the
particulars. The plaintiff’s difficulty,
lies in that no
oral evidence can be led on the terms of the agreement at trial.
[9]
33.
The plaintiff’s claim must be reformulated, with greater
precision.
Accordingly,
I make the following order.
1.
The plaintiff’s particulars of claim is set aside.
2.
The action is dismissed with costs, the order is suspended, pending
the plaintiff’s service of a notice of intention
to amend its
particulars of claim, within 10 days of this order.
3.
The plaintiff is to pay the costs of the exception.
MAHOMED
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or 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 22 February 2024.
Date
of Hearing: 3
November 2023
Date
of Judgment: 22 February 2024
Appearances
For
Excipient: Adv C van
der Merwe
Email:
dominus.cvdm@gmail.com
Instructed
by: Minnie & Du Preez
Inc
Email:
marius@minnieattorneys.co.za
For
Respondent Adv Mudau
Instructed
by: Makuta Attorneys
Inc
Email:
thuto@makutaattorneys.co.za
[2]
1925 EDL 23
at 25
[3]
001-20
[4]
001-37
[5]
1980 3 SA 927
A at 947 H
[6]
[2008] ZASCA 127
;
2009 (1) SA 196
SCA
[7]
Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, 2
nd
ed D1-293.
[8]
Erasmus, op sit, D1-294
[9]
Leal v Johnson 1980 I3) SA 927 A,
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