Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 212South Africa
South African Municipal Workers Union v Imbeu Development and Project Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A2022-061733) [2024] ZAGPJHC 212 (4 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 March 2024
Headnotes
evidence and oral argument were heard before the arbitrator, and, on 21 May 2021, the arbitrator rendered her award. SAMWU was ordered to pay an amount that the arbitrator found to be due to Imbeu. The arbitrator dismissed SAMWU’s counterclaim.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## South African Municipal Workers Union v Imbeu Development and Project Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A2022-061733) [2024] ZAGPJHC 212 (4 March 2024)
South African Municipal Workers Union v Imbeu Development and Project Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A2022-061733) [2024] ZAGPJHC 212 (4 March 2024)
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sino date 4 March 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
A2022-061733
COURT
A QUO
:
30236/2021
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3.
REVISED
04
March 2024
In the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN MUNICIPAL Appellant
WORKERS
UNION (SAMWU)
and
IMBEU DEVELOPMENT
First Respondent
AND PROJECT
MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
ADVOCATE NASREEN
RAJABSecond Respondent
-BUDLENDER SC
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 of the
judgment is deemed to be 04 March 2024.
JUDGMENT
UNTERHALTER
and MALINDI JJ
(Mdalana-Mayisela J
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The Appellant is the South African
Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU). A dispute arose between SAMWU and
the First Respondent, Imbeu
Development and Project Management (Pty)
Ltd (Imbeu), concerning the liability of SAMWU under a service
agreement concluded between
the parties. They agreed to submit their
dispute to arbitration under the AFSA rules. The Second Respondent
(the arbitrator) was
appointed as the arbitrator. Pleadings were
exchanged, a pre-arbitration meeting was held, evidence and oral
argument were heard
before the arbitrator, and, on 21 May 2021, the
arbitrator rendered her award. SAMWU was ordered to pay an
amount that the
arbitrator found to be due to Imbeu. The arbitrator
dismissed SAMWU’s counterclaim.
[2]
SAMWU brought an application to review and
set aside the award in terms of
s33
(1)(a) or (b) of the
Arbitration
Act 42 of 1965
. SAMWU contended that the arbitrator had given the
award on a basis neither pleaded nor agreed upon. The review came
before Todd
AJ. He held that even though the arbitrator had
determined the matter on a basis that was not contended for or dealt
with by the
parties in their pleadings, the review must fail. Todd AJ
found that the arbitrator made an award in respect of each of the
claims
brought by Imbeu, and the counterclaim pleaded by SAMWU that
were referred to her. She did so on the basis of the evidence
introduced
in the course of the arbitration. That SAMWU may consider
the arbitrator’s reasoning to be faulty afforded no basis to
review
the award. SAMWU’s application was accordingly dismissed
with costs.
[3]
SAMWU sought leave to appeal. Leave was
granted, but on a limited basis. Todd AJ’s order reads as
follows
:
“
1.
The Applicant is granted leave to appeal, subject to the condition in
paragraph 2 below;
2. The issues on
appeal are limited to the question whether the arbitrator exceeded
her powers by making a determination on
the issues referred to her on
a basis that was not pleaded by either party.”
[4]
Before
us, SAMWU placed some emphasis upon the finding of the court below
that the arbitrator had ‘determined the matter on
a basis that
was not contended for or dealt with by the parties in their
pleadings’. Once this is so, it was argued, the
holding in
Hos+Med
[1]
governs:
an arbitrator has no jurisdiction to decide a matter not pleaded,
where the parties have expressly submitted to arbitration
only the
matters pleaded.
[5]
SAMWU
contended that we are bound by
Hos+Med.
That
is uncontroversial, at least as that authority has been recently
understood by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Close-Up
Mining
[2]
.
SAMWU
also argued that in terms of
s17(5)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
, the court below limited the issues on appeal, as we have
indicated, and we must determine this appeal on that basis. Given the
finding of the court below (‘the initial finding’) that
the arbitrator ‘determined the matter on a basis that
was not
contended for or dealt with by the parties in their pleadings’,
the question referred to this court permits of only
one answer: the
arbitrator enjoyed no jurisdiction to decide the matters referred to
her on a basis not pleaded.
[6]
The first issue for us to decide is whether
we are bound by the initial finding. SAMWU submitted that we are so
bound. That is not
so. The question before us is whether the
arbitrator determined issues referred to her on a basis not pleaded.
To decide this issue,
we must decide whether the factual premise from
which the court below proceeded, that is the initial finding, is
correct. What
was referred to the arbitrator for determination and
what was pleaded by the parties are facts relevant to answering the
question
raised by this appeal. An appellate court is not bound to
accept the facts found by the court below. If these findings are
plainly
wrong, an appellate court can, and often must, correct them.
[7]
The pleadings before the arbitrator raised
the following issues. Imbeu made two claims. In Claim A, it alleged
that an amount of
R738 840.00 was owing by SAMWU in respect of
work performed, being stage 1 of the project, pursuant to the service
level agreement
concluded between the parties. In Claim B, Imbeu
claimed damages arising from the alleged repudiation of the
agreement. SAMWU
pleaded that the agreement was not authorised
and had been fraudulently concluded. SAMWU brought a counterclaim for
an amount of
R561 570. It alleged that it had paid this amount
to Imbeu, but no services were rendered. The payment was alleged to
constitute
unjust enrichment.
[8]
The pleaded issues before the arbitrator
were thus the following: was the service level agreement binding; if
it was, was Imbeu
entitled to an award in the amounts it claimed in
Claims A and B; and, was SAMWU entitled to an award in its favour for
the amount
it claimed as unjust enrichment? The arbitrator identified
these pleaded issues in paragraph 9 of her award.
[9]
The arbitrator considered the evidence
before her and concluded that the agreement was validly concluded.
The arbitrator referred
to the evidence that SAMWU had agreed to pay
the outstanding sum claimed by Imbeu, in respect of stage 1 of the
project, even after
it became aware that certain office bearers had
concluded irregular contracts. This agreement (‘the subsequent
agreement’)
was reflected in minutes of meetings held between
the parties and subsequent e mails. The minutes were not disputed in
evidence.
Based upon this evidence, the arbitrator found for Imbeu in
respect of Claim A to the extent of the subsequent agreement. The
arbitrator
dismissed Claim B as having no basis. The arbitrator
dismissed SAMWU’s counterclaim in that, since SAMWU had
accepted the
obligation to pay for the work done by Imbeu in respect
of stage 1 of the project, SAMWU could not claim that it had paid for
services
it had not received.
[10]
Ms
Kekana gave evidence in the arbitration proceedings. Ms. Kekana’s
evidence was to this effect. In May 2019 she, with others,
were
tasked with negotiating with debtors because the appellant was
experiencing financial difficulties. During this process, it
was
discovered that Imbeu’s attorneys had written a letter of
demand to SAMWU for outstanding monies. She was present at
meetings
held on 18 and 19 July 2021 with Mr. Mahlangu, Imbeu’s Sole
Director and Project Manager, and his legal representatives.
A
payment plan was negotiated and agreed to pay these outstanding
amounts.
[3]
It
was recorded that:
“
The
agreement is that there is a need to sort out the account and
acknowledge the current debt.”
[4]
In
addition to the payment plan agreed and acted upon in July 2019,
SAMWU acknowledged on 6 December 2019 that it owes Imbeu R431 000.00
and it undertook to pay it over 7 months.
[5]
[11]
SAMWU submits that the arbitrator, relying
upon this evidence to uphold portion of Claim A and dismiss the
counterclaim, strayed
beyond the pleadings, and thus rendered an
award outside her jurisdiction. In particular, SAMWU complains that
Imbeu’s pleadings
did not rely upon the subsequent agreement,
nor plead an acknowledgement of indebtedness.
[12]
This submission fails to distinguish the
issues referred to the arbitrator arising from the pleadings and the
evidence the arbitrator
was at liberty to consider in deciding these
issues. Imbeu’s Claim A did not require it to plead the
subsequent agreement
or the acknowledgement of indebtedness by SAMWU.
Claim A is a claim to be paid for services rendered. The evidence
that the services
were rendered is that SAMWU was willing to pay for
them, and hence it admitted they
were
rendered, after the issue of the
malfeasance of its office bearers was raised. It was evidence that
amounted to an admission to
which the arbitrator was entitled to have
regard. That there was other evidence that the arbitrator may have
considered founds
no basis for review. Once there was evidence
that the services were rendered by Imbeu in respect of stage 1 of the
project,
there was plainly no basis to find that Imbeu was unjustly
enriched. SAMWU had paid for services rendered.
[13]
It follows that the court below was
incorrect in its finding that the arbitrator determined matters not
pleaded. The arbitrator
identified the issues referred to her for
determination that arose from the pleadings, and then rendered an
award to decide those
issues. That she did so on the basis of the
uncontested evidence before her is a commonplace exercise of arbitral
competence.
[14]
The appeal must therefore fail.
[15]
We make the following order: the appeal is
dismissed with costs.
UNTERHALTER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I agree:
MDALANA-MAYISELA J
(Ms)
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I agree:
MALINDI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
Mr. P. Ndou
INSTRUCTED BY:
Ndou Attorneys Incorporated
COUNSEL FOR THE 1
ST
RESPONDENT: D.J. Sibuyi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
DMS Attorneys
DATE OF
HEARING:
14 February 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
04 March 2024
[1]
Hos+Med
Medical Scheme v Thebe ya Pelo Healthcare
2008
(2) SA 608 (SCA)
[2]
Close-Up
Mining (Pty) Ltd and Others v The Arbitrator, Judge Phillip
Boruchowitz and Another
2023
(4) SA 38 (SCA)
[3]
Award
as at CaseLines
section 03
-
46
, paragraphs 26.3-28; Minutes of
Meetings of July 2019 as at CaseLines
section 03
-
1372
.
[4]
Minutes
of Meeting at paragraph 2.
[5]
Award
as at CaseLines
section 03
-
469
, paragraph 30.
sino noindex
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