Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 293South Africa
Industrial Corporation of South Africa v Mara Corporation Limited and Others (2022/035089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 293 (19 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 March 2024
Headnotes
an appeal against the decision of the court below upholding an exception that the tacit agreement to terminate the written lease in question offended the provisions of the lease, which provided that there could be no variation or cancellation of the lease without amendment. That decision is relied upon in support of an argument that the defendants’ should be permitted to proceed to trial in order to lead evidence as to the manor and effect of its representations relied upon.
Judgment
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## Industrial Corporation of South Africa v Mara Corporation Limited and Others (2022/035089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 293 (19 March 2024)
Industrial Corporation of South Africa v Mara Corporation Limited and Others (2022/035089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 293 (19 March 2024)
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sino date 19 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022-035089
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED.
In the matter between:
THE
INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION OF SOUTH AFRICA
Plaintiff
And
MARA CORPORATION LIMIT
First Defendant
MARA PHONES LIMITED
Second
Defendant
MARA PS LIMITED
Third
Defendant
ASHISH JAGDISH THAKKAR
Fourth
Defendant
AHUTI CHUG
Fifth
Defendant
JAGDISH CHANDRA
DULLABHJI THAKKAR Sixth
Defendant
SARLA JAGDISH THAKKAR
Seventh
Defendant
# JUDGEMENT
JUDGEMENT
#
# Loxton AJ
Loxton AJ
1.
This matter concerns an exception brought
by the plaintiff against the defendants’ plea on the merits.
The plaintiff alleges
that it lent an amount of R205,973,000 to Mara
Phones South Africa (Proprietary) Limited (“the Borrower”)
in terms
of a written agreement of loan, for the acquisition of
certain plant and equipment for the construction of a smart phone
manufacturing
facility and for working capital (“the Loan
Agreement”). The plaintiff alleges further that it
complied with
its obligations under the loan agreement by
transferring funding to the Borrower in the sum of R129 503 128,60
and a
further payment of R27 799 688,91.
2.
From 22 July 2019 the plaintiff and the
Borrower entered into a written guarantee facility agreement in terms
of which the plaintiff
made available certain guarantee facilities to
assist the Borrower. The terms of the guarantee facility are not
germane to the
issues raised by the exception which is discussed
below. There were further agreements which are not germane to the
issues which
arise in these proceedings.
3.
On 15 January 2019 the plaintiff and the
defendants entered into a guarantee agreement (“the
Guarantee”), the purpose
of which was to guarantee performance
by the Borrower under,
inter alia,
the loan agreement. The Borrower failed to perform its obligations
under the loan agreement and the plaintiff obtained judgment
against
the Borrower for payment of outstanding amounts due under the loan
agreement.
4.
In consequence, the plaintiff called upon
the defendants to make payment under the Guarantee of the amounts
which the Borrower had
failed to pay in terms of the loan agreement.
The defendants failed to honour their obligations under the Guarantee
and,
in consequence, the plaintiff instituted action against the
defendants for payment of amounts due in terms thereof.
5.
The defendants delivered a special plea,
challenging the jurisdiction of the court on the basis that the loan
agreement, guarantee
facility and guarantee are void
ab
initio.
The plea was not the
subject of the plaintiff’s exception and so its merits need not
be interrogated at this stage.
On the face of it however, the special
plea appears to suffer from a fundamental contradiction. The premise
of the special plea
is that because the agreements are void, the
choice of jurisdiction, namely this court, has no legal consequence.
But in order
to reach that conclusion, this court would have to
pronounce the relevant agreements to be invalid. In other words, the
defendants
would have to invoke the jurisdiction of this court, which
would, prima facie, amount to an acquiescence in the court’s
jurisdiction.
6.
In order to understand the point of the
plaintiff’s exception, and the defendants’ attempts to
avoid the consequences
of the exception, it is necessary to explain
the fundamental allegations of fact made by the defendants in their
plea. They are,
in essence, the following:
6.1
Representatives of the Presidency and the
plaintiff represented to the fourth defendant, acting on behalf of
all the defendants,
that the South African government would support a
commercial enterprise to be pursued by the “Mara Group”
(which allegedly
included all the defendants)
and
that “
the defendants would not be
called upon to pay for any losses suffered by the enterprise should
such enterprise fail
”.
6.2
The defendants relied upon both
representations, which induced them to enter into “the
agreements”, which included the
Guarantee.
6.3
In
the event, the first representation was false because the South
African government failed to provide adequate financial support
for
the enterprise of the Mara Group, which was wound up.
6.4
As
a result of that misrepresentation, there was no consensus between
the parties due to a fundamental mistake as to the terms of
“the
agreements”, which were accordingly void
ab
initio
.
7.
When pleading the representations upon
which the defendants rely, the defendants do not distinguish between
the Loan Agreement,
the Letter of Amendment (which amended the Loan
Agreement), the Guarantee Facility Letter or the Guarantee. All these
agreements
are lumped together and simply called “the
agreements”. It is accordingly not possible to establish from
the defendants’
plea how the alleged representation that the
South African government would support the enterprise of the Mara
Group induced the
defendants to conclude the particular agreements
referred to above. This failure becomes particularly important when
considering
the terms of the Guarantee.
8.
The plaintiff excepts to the defendants’
plea to the extent that it raises the defence described above, on the
basis that
clause 14 of the Guarantee records that:
“
No
representations, promises or warranties have been made or given to
the Guarantor by IDC or any other person in connection with
this
Agreement.”
9.
In addition, the plaintiff relies on clause
22.2 of the Guarantee, which provides that:
“
No
Party shall be bound by any express or implied term, representation,
warranty, promise or the like not recorded herein.”
10.
Accordingly, so the plaintiff contends, the
representations and promises relied upon by the defendants are to no
avail and the plea
accordingly discloses no defence to the
plaintiff’s claim.
11.
As I understand the argument advanced for
by counsel for the defendants, it is this:
11.1
The plaintiff’s exception concerns a
matter of evidence which will be tested at trial. Facts may
emerge at trial which
will explain why the representation relied upon
by the defendants was not included in the guarantee;
11.2
That evidence is foreshadowed in the
defendants’ plea being one of misrepresentation and the parties
lacking consensus as
to the terms of the agreements;
11.3
t is accordingly not appropriate to decide
the issue on exception;
11.4
In
Ocean
Ecko Properties 327CC and another v Old Mutal Life Assurance Company
(South Africa) Ltd
[1]
the Supreme Court of Appeal upheld an appeal against the decision of
the court below upholding an exception that the tacit agreement
to
terminate the written lease in question offended the provisions of
the lease, which provided that there could be no variation
or
cancellation of the lease without amendment. That decision is relied
upon in support of an argument that the defendants’
should be
permitted to proceed to trial in order to lead evidence as to the
manor and effect of its representations relied upon.
11.5
The decision is also relied upon for the
argument that the “
no
representations”
clause will not
prevent the defendants from leading evidence at the trial to show
that, as a result of the misrepresentations made
by the plaintiff,
the defendants’ reasonably laboured under a material mistake in
regard to the terms of the agreement and
as a result there was no
consensus.
12.
The
next decision relied upon by counsel for the defendants – and
which indeed formed the main plank of his argument –
is
Spenmac
(Pty) Ltd v Tatrim CC
[2]
.
13.
As I understand the argument, it was that
the Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Spenmac
that whenever a misrepresentation leads to a lack of consensus
between the contracting parties, the party seeking to enforce the
agreement in question cannot rely on any term of that agreement, and
more particularly a clause which excludes reliance upon
misrepresentations.
It is accordingly necessary to examine the
decisions in
Ocean Echo
and
Spenmac
in order to establish whether or not they apply to the facts of the
present case.
14.
The facts of
Ocean
Echo
were the following:
14.1
Ocean Echo and Old Mutual had entered into
an agreement of lease.
14.2
The second appellant, one Giannaros, had
executed a deed of suretyship in terms of which he bound himself as
surety and co-principal
debtor to Old Mutual for the due and proper
fulfilment of all of the obligations of Ocean Echo under the lease
agreement.
14.3
The defendants admitted that the first
defendant had entered into the lease, but pleaded that the lease was
tacitly terminated when
the first defendant vacated the premises, at
which time it was not in arrears in respect of rent, rates or any
other charges.
14.4
Old Mutual in its turn was aware that the
first defendant had vacated the premises, found a new tenant and
began receiving payments
from the new tenant in respect of rental,
rates and other expenses. Furthermore, the plaintiff no longer
sent rental statements
to the second defendant and instead sent such
statements to the new tenant.
14.5
In those circumstances, so the defendants
argued, Old Mutual had acknowledged that there was a tacit lease
between itself and the
new tenant, and accordingly the lease between
the Old Mutual and the defendants had come to an end.
15.
The court of first instance upheld an
exception to the defendants’ plea on the basis that it was bad
in law because the tacit
cancellation of the lease was contrary to
the terms of the written lease agreement, which contained a
non-variation clause. An
appeal against that decision was dismissed
by the full court. An appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
succeeded, however.
16.
It
is important to follow the reasoning adopted by Ponan JA in
Ocean
Echo
.
The starting point is the observation by Botha JA in
Ferreira
& Another v SAPDC (Trading) Ltd
[3]
:
“
From
Neethling’s case I venture to abstract this principle: while an
oral agreement varying (at least materially) the terms
of a contract
of the kind in question is not permissible, there is no objection to
allowing proof of an oral agreement relating
to the cancellation of
the contract by which its terms as such are not placed in issue.”
17.
It
is important to observe that in
Neethling’s
case
[4]
the court was not concerned with a non-variation or “no
representations” clause. It was instead concerned with
whether the termination of a contract which was required to be in
writing by section 1(1) of the Transfer Duty Proclamation 1902
(T)
could be cancelled by way of an oral agreement. Since the
cancellation of the agreement did not call into question the terms
of
the contract, and therefore did not undermine the objects of the
Transfer Duty Proclamation, an oral cancellation was permissible.
18.
Botha
JA, on the basis of
Neethling’s
case, abstracted the principle that while an oral agreement varying
(at least materially) the terms of a contract in question (namely
a
suretyship which was required to be in writing) was not permissible,
there was no objection to relying on proof of an oral agreement
relating to the cancellation of the contract, by which its terms are
not placed in issue.
[5]
19.
Returning
to
Oceal
Echo
,
it is for present purposes important to observe that there the court
was not dealing with the variation of the terms of an agreement,
or a
misrepresentation upon the basis of which the defendants sought to
escape the terms of a written agreement despite the existence
of a
“
no
representations”
clause. Ponan JA concluded
[6]
that the effect of the tacit agreement pleaded by the appellant was
to terminate the operation of the contract of lease
in
futurum
,
so as to preclude the coming into being of any further obligations,
while leaving intact obligations that arose from the past
operation
of the contract, with all its terms.
20.
It will immediately be appreciated that
Ocean Echo
is
for that reason distinguishable from the facts of the present case.
In this case the defendants have not sought to cancel any
of the
relevant agreements, more particularly the Guarantee. Nor have they
sought to escape future obligations, as opposed to past
obligations.
In consequence I am of the view that the defendants’ reliance
upon
Ocean Echo
is misplaced.
21.
I turn now to consider the decision in
Spenmac
,
upon which counsel for the defendants placed great reliance. The
facts in
Spenmac
are correctly summarised in the headnote. Spenmac, the owner of
a unit in a sectional title scheme, innocently represented
to Tatrim
CC that the unit was one of only two units in the scheme, and that
the owner of the unit had a right to veto any subdivision
of the
other unit. That representation induced Tatrim to enter into an
agreement to buy the unit.
22.
One of the provisions of the contract was
an acknowledgement by Tatrim that it had not been induced by any
representation to enter
into the agreement; and that it waived any
rights that it might have acquired as a result of such
representation.
23.
When the true position came to light,
Tatrim applied successfully to the High Court for a declaration that
the agreement was void.
An appeal by Spenmac to the Supreme Court of
Appeal was unsuccessful. That court held that the agreement had been
void from the
outset because Spenmac’s misrepresentation had
induced Tatrim to make a material mistake about the nature of the
unit, and
consequently there had never been consensus as to the
subject matter of the sale. Tatrim’s mistake was also
reasonable. Since
the agreement was void
ab
initio
, Spenmac could not rely on the
“
no representations”
clause.
24.
It
will immediately be seen from a recitation of the facts with which
the court in
Spenmac
was confronted that that case is distinguishable from the present
case. In that case, there was an error as to the subject-matter
of
the sale, which was induced by an innocent misrepresentation by the
seller. For that reason and because the seller had been
unaware of
the true position, there was no consensus as to what the seller
thought it was selling and the purchaser thought it
was purchasing.
As Mthiyane DP points out,
[7]
the correct enquiry is firstly whether the error precluded the
parties from reaching consensus and secondly whether it is
reasonable for the resiling party to labour under such a
misapprehension.
25.
Importantly
for present purposes, both
Spenmac
and
Allen
v Sixteen Sterling Investments (Pty) Ltd
[8]
- which was approved in
Brink
v Humphries & Jewell (Pty) Limited
,
[9]
concerned an error regarding the subject matter of a sale.
26.
In
Brink
v Humphries
[10]
the error concerned the existence of a personal suretyship obligation
in a credit application form. The appellant maintained that
when he
signed the credit application form on behalf of the debtor, he had
not known that it embodied a personal suretyship obligation,
and it
was common cause that no one had informed the appellant that such an
obligation was embodied in the form. Cloete JA, who
spoke for the
majority of the court, held that the credit application form was a
trap for the unwary and that the appellant was
justifiably misled by
it.
[11]
The learned judge of appeal held that it was unreasonable for a party
who had induced the justifiable mistake in the signatory
as to the
contents of a document to assert that the signatory would not have
been misled had he read the document carefully and
that such party
could accordingly not rely on the doctrine of
quasi-mutual
assent.
27.
In the present case there is no allegation
that the defendants were misled as to the terms of the Loan Agreement
or the Guarantee,
or that they could not reasonably have expected,
when signing those agreements, that they contained the obligations
which they
did. The allegation by the defendants that the
representations identified by them in paragraphs 30.4-30.7 of the
plea do
not justify a conclusion – even on the most benevolent
interpretation of the plea - that they induced a
justus
error on the part of the defendants as
to the contents of the Guarantee. The furthest that the
defendant go is that the representations
in question induced them to
conclude “
the agreements”
.
But that is insufficient to bring the defendants within the scope of
Spenmac
,
or the other authorities relied upon by counsel for the defendants.
28.
The allegation in paragraph 31 of the plea
that as a result of the representation, there was no consensus
between the parties “
in concluding
the agreements and that there was a fundamental mistake as to the
binding nature of the agreements and their terms”
suffers from two defects.
28.1
Firstly, paragraph 31 appears to be an
inference which the defendants have drawn from the facts pleaded in
the previous paragraphs
and not an allegation of fact.
28.2
Secondly, paragraph 31 does not contain an
allegation as to what the defendants believed that the terms of the
Guarantee were, or
even that they believed that the Guarantee did not
impose obligations upon them.
29.
In the absence of any allegation on the
part of the defendants that they had been led to believe by the
plaintiff the Guarantee
did not impose obligations upon the
defendants to make payment to the plaintiff in the event of the
breach of the Loan Agreement,
or that its terms were other than what
appeared in the Guarantee, is in my view fatal to the defendants’
attempt to escape
the “
no
representation”
clause in the
Guarantee. On the face of it, the Guarantee quite obviously
imposes obligations of the financial nature upon
the defendants.
In addition, it is clear that the obligations imposed by the
Guarantee are wholly independent of the success
or failure of their
venture.
30.
In short, the defendants have pleaded that
there was a mistake which led to a lack of consensus without ever
pleading what, in relation
to the Guarantee, the mistake was.
31.
Finally, although it is correct that an
excipient must take the pleadings as he finds them, there are limits
to that principle.
Where, as here, the allegations are so improbable
that they border on the ridiculous, a court may reasonably conclude
that the
pleadings have been framed with the object of escaping the
contract upon which the plaintiff’s claim is based, instead of
setting out a genuine defence. Fortunately, it is not necessary in
this matter to reach a conclusion on that question.
32.
In the circumstances I find that the
plaintiff’s exception was well taken. Accordingly, I grant the
following order:
32.1
The exception is upheld and the defendant’s
plea on the merits is dismissed.
32.2
The defendants are given leave to amend
their plea, if so desired, within a period of 30 days from the date
of this order.
32.3
The defendants are to pay the costs of the
exception, such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
C.D.A. LOXTON SC
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
14 March 2024
Date of judgment:
19 March 2024
Appearances
For the
plaintiff:
Adv Pillay SC
Adv
Broster
Adv
Mchunu
Instructed
by:
Pather
& Pather Inc
For the first
defendant: Adv Patrick
Instructed
by:
De Klerk
& Ven Gend Inc
[1]
2018
(3) SA 405
SCA @ paras (10-16)
[2]
2015
(3) SA 46 (SCA)
[3]
1983
(1) SA 235
(A) at 247
[4]
Neethling
v Klopper en Andere
1967 (4) SA 459 (A)
[5]
It’s
important to bear in mind that the decision of Botha JA forms part
of a minority judgment. The majority held that the
oral agreement
constituted a variation of the terms of the contract of suretyship
and was therefore not permissible.
[6]
At
para. 15
[7]
At
para 27
[8]
1974
(4) SA 164
(D), and (CLD)
[9]
2005
(2) SA 419 (SCA)
[10]
Supra
[11]
At
para 11
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