Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 303South Africa
Manganese Minerals (Pty) Ltd v Enabliq Mining Plant (Pty) Ltd (14724/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 303 (26 March 2024)
Headnotes
the parol evidence rule remains part of our law, and is one of the caveats to the principle that extrinsic contextual maybe admitted . The essence of the rule was most aptly captured in the case of Vianini Ferro- Concrete Pipes, where it was stated: “Now this Court has accepted the rule that when a contract has been reduced to 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 of its contents, nor may the contents of such document be contradicted, altered, added, or varied by parol evidence."
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Manganese Minerals (Pty) Ltd v Enabliq Mining Plant (Pty) Ltd (14724/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 303 (26 March 2024)
Manganese Minerals (Pty) Ltd v Enabliq Mining Plant (Pty) Ltd (14724/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 303 (26 March 2024)
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sino date 26 March 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
3.REVISED:
26
March 2024
CASE
NO
:
14724\2022
In the matter between:
MANGANESE
MINERALS (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
ENABLIQ
MINING PLANT (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Dlamini J
Heard
:
22 January 2024 (Courtroom 9B)
Delivered:
26 March 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email, uploaded to
CaseLines
, and released to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 26 March 2024
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
In this application, the applicant seeks a
declaratory order that a written agreement to mine minerals is void
ab initio
due to the non-fulfillment of its suspensive conditions.
[2]
The application
concerns two companies, the applicant (Manganese Minerals ) and the
respondent (Enabliq Minerals) that are
involved in the mining
industry, specifically the mining and selling of manganese, (“the
Parties”).
[3]
The applicant is a
holder of a mining right that was granted to it and executed by the
Department of Mineral Resources under reference
number
NW30/5/2/476MR.
[4]
The respondent was
appointed as the contractor to mine for minerals, described in the
agreement as the Sevices.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[5]
The facts underlying this dispute are
largely common cause.
[6]
On or about 9 January 2021, the applicant
and the respondent entered into an agreement. The purpose of the
agreement was the regulation
of the respective parties' rights and
obligations therein. The material terms of the agreement were the
following; -
6.1.
The respondent will source funding for the resumption of mining
manganese at the applicant mine.
6.2.
The applicant appointed the respondent as a sole and exclusive
contractor to conduct the mining activities, including adding
additional minerals in terms of a Section 102 application if required
on the property in the name of the applicant under the mining
right.
[7]
The agreement would
commence on the Effective Date and would continue until the
respondent gave written notification to the applicant
of no less than
30 days of cancellation of the agreement.
[8]
On 2 March 2021, the
parties entered into a written addendum, novating the provisions of
clause 10,4 of the agreement.
[9]
The applicant
testified that the respondent was supposed to in terms of clause
21.2, obtain finance for the payments as specified
in clause 10 of
the agreement within 120 days from the date of signature that is by 9
January 2021. The applicant avers that even
on a benevolent
interpretation that the date of signature could be extended to March
2021, when the addendum had been signed, would
in any event result in
the relevant suspensive conditions having to be fulfilled by 2 July
2022, which did not occur.
[10]
Therefore the case
made by the applicant is that to date the respondent has not obtained
finance for such payments, accordingly,
the applicant contends that
the agreement is void
ab
initio.
[11]
The respondent denies that the agreement is
void
ab initio
on
various grounds and opposes this applicant.
ISSUES
FOR DETERMINATION
[12]
The question that
falls to be determined is whether the respondent has complied with
the suspensive condition and in answering the
question this court is
called upon to decide whether it should take into account the
pre-agreement and post-agreements of the parties.
Further, whether
the non-variation and whole agreement clauses are applicable in this
case.
[13]
The applicant submits
that the respondent has failed to fulfill the suspensive condition of
the contract timeously or at all. Manganese
Minerals denies that it
had purposely made it impossible for the respondent to comply and
fully execute the agreement. The applicant
insists that there exists
no material dispute of facts in this matter. In sum, the applicant is
adamant that the respondent's non-fulfillment
of the relevant
suspensive condition renders the agreement in law void
ab
initio
.
[14]
The high water mark
of the respondent’s submission is that in interpreting the
agreement, Enabliq urges that this court
must take into account
the so-called factual matrix of the agreement, which consists of the
pre-contractual conduct as well
as the post-conduct of the
parties.
[15]
Enabliq submits that
the following definitions in particular provide context to the
interpretation of the agreement. For instance,
the court should note
that the definition of Services encompasses a wide range of
activities, those activities include any mining
activity or any
conduct incidental thereto. The respondent argues therefore that the
parties agreed that the Services to be rendered
by the respondent are
not only confined to the physical mining of manganese but in any
conduct in furtherance thereto.
[16]
The reason for the
above submissions, insists the respondent is that when Enabliq was
appointed as the contractor it says it inherited
a derelict
non-functioning mine that had to be kickstarted in a period that was
undeterminable at the stage when the agreement
was concluded. This
therefore means the parties were also unable to determine the finance
needed to kickstart the operations.
[17]
The respondent
submitted that the applicant is unsure when the date for performance
is, whether it is 120 days from the signature
date or 120 days from
the date of the addendum, which would be 2 July 2022. Nor does the
applicant indicate what the amount of
financing should have been.
[18]
A further contention
by the respondent is that it has already secured a credit line
facility of R30 million and that due regard
must be taken into
account in the fact that the mine was operational.
[19]
The case made by the
respondent is that it had procured its own finance and was able to
upstart the mine, whereafter the applicant's
repeated contractual
breaches made it impossible for the respondent to mine further.
[20]
The defences raised
by the respondents in this regard in essence amount to a variation,
alteration, amendment, or suspension of
the agreement.
[21]
In
resolving this dispute, this court is required to interpret the
written agreement in accordance with the general principles relating
to the interpretation of contracts as laid down in
Endumeni
.
(
Natal
Joint Municipal pension Fund v Endumeni Municipalit
y
[1]
.
[22]
The
Constitutional Court clarified
Endumeni
with regard to the application of the parol evidence rule while
considering contextual evidence in interpreting documents in
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park
Theological
Seminary and Another
[2]
as
follows at [88]; -
“
In
KPMG and Swanepoel, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the parol
evidence rule remains part of our law, and is one of the
caveats to
the principle that extrinsic contextual maybe admitted . The essence
of the rule was most aptly captured in the case
of Vianini Ferro-
Concrete Pipes, where it was stated:
“
Now
this Court has accepted the rule that when a contract has been
reduced to 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
of its contents, nor may the contents of such document be
contradicted, altered, added, or varied by parol evidence."
[23]
Flowing
from this Constitutional ruling, it follows therefore that the parole
evidence rule remains entrenched in our law, which
provides that
extrinsic evidence cannot be used to vary the terms of a written
agreement unless the parties comply with the requirements
of the
“Shifren Clause" of the agreement. This standard
non-variation clause was recognised decades ago by the SCA in
SA
~Sentrale Ko-op
Graanmaatskappy
Bpk v Shifren and Others
.
[3]
This
entrenchment clause binds parties to the provision that a written
contract may only be amended if certain formalities are complied
with. Generally. In practice, amendments are permitted and allowed if
effected in writing and signed by all the parties to the
contract.
[24]
It is useful to restate the provisions of
the contract in particular clause 21.2 threreof. Relevant to us are
the following: -
“
The
Mining Activities are subject to: -
21.2
the Contractor obtaining finance for
payments as specified in clause 10 above within 120 days from Date of
Signature.”
[25]
The costs set out in
clause 10 relevant hereto are those set out in clauses 10.1 to
10.3 which read as follows; -
10.1
The contractor shall bear all the material equipment, labour, and
other costs associated in any way with the carrying out of
any
provisions of the Services.
10.2
All costs incurred in setting up the necessary plant and equipment to
enable the Contractor to perform the Services in terms
of this
Agreement, as well as the costs incurred in removing or disassembly
or contracting such plant and equipment at the termination
of this
agreement, for whatever reason, shall be at the cost and expense of
the Contractor
10.3
The parties agree that the Contractor will pay the Right Holder an
amount of R5 million (Five million rand only) after
the
effective date or at a date as agreed between the parties from time
to time. The Parties agree that the amount can be paid
in
installments as agreed from time to time and as practically possible
and afforded by the forward mineral sales agreement or
by third-party
investors supporting the Contractor
[26]
The
principle of interpretation of contracts in our law is well
established and has been pronounced upon in a number of our court's
decisions. In
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v
KJ
Foods
,
[4]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that in interpreting terms of contract
or legislation as the case may be; the principles enunciated
in
Natal
Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[5]
and
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
[6]
find
application. Furthermore, as was said in Endumeni,
a
sensible meaning is to be preferred to that that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results.
”
[27]
In general, contracting parties possess
enough freedom in choosing how they structure their agreements, and
it is not the function
of the court to protect consenting parties
from bad bargains. The established principle of our law of contract
is that legal certainty
and the notion of
pacta
sunt servanda
must always be honored
and enforced by our courts.
[28]
It is appropriate to revisit the
non-variation clause of the loan agreement, as it is relevant in
deciding this issue before this
Court, Clause 29 provides as
follows:-
“
No
addition to or variation, consensual cancellation or novation of this
agreement and no waiver of any rights arising from this
Agreement or
its breach or termination shall be of any force or effect unless
reduced to writing and signed by all the parties.”
[29]
In my view, a
businesslike and sensible interpretation of clause 21 is that the
respondent was required to secure the funding by
12 March 2021 or at
the very least by 21 July 2022 which is the date of amendment. Then
in the event of failure by the respondent
to secure such finds, the
applicant is entitled in terms of clause 21,2 of the contract to
cancel the contract as they have done.
This therefore means that the
respondent's submission of the existence of prior and post-contract
agreements is thus defeated.
Also, the contention by Enabliq that it
had secured funding by way of a credit line of R30 million from its
own third party KD
Minerals is unhelpful and does not support the
respondent case.
This
is because this contention does not amount to fulfillment of the
suspensive condition. Further, Enabliq's contention is of
no moment,
the respondent has not attached any documentation for instance a
resolution and accompanying statements from the third
party showing
the liability on the third party’s books of this amount.
[30]
The respondent's submission that it had
secured its own funding and that it has failed to secure funding
because of the repeated
breaches of the contract by the applicant is
meritless. First, this is not a valid defence to the applicant’s
claim. Second,
if there existed any breach of the contract on the
part of the applicant, the respondent was and is still entitled to
seek its
remedies in terms of the contract. Significantly, Enabliq
has not filed any action against the applicant nor filed any
counterclaim
in this application. In any event, the agreement places
no obligation and does not require any steps to be taken by the
applicant
to ensure that the suspensive conditions are fulfilled by
the respondent.
[31]
This therefore means that if a suspensive
condition is not fulfillied timeously the contract lapses, unless
there is provision for
it not do so. Once the contract has lapsed it
can only be revived and be put to force and effect by the conclusion
of a new contract,
the operative effect of which is to reinstatethe
the lapsed contract. This happens when the parties agree in a
contractually binding
manner that they will pursue a contract
on the terms of the former contract.
[32]
The test of whether the suspensive
condition has been complied with is an objective one. Absent payment
by the respondent, in that
event the respondent has not complied with
the suspensive conditions
.
[33]
It should follow therefore that there are
no material disputes of fact in this case. The signing of the
contract and its amendments
are all common and are not in dispute. On
the facts and evidence before this court, it's apparent that the
respondent has not complied
with the relevant suspension conditions
of the contract. The respondent's contention that it had complied
with the suspensive condition
is bald and unsubstantiated. These
allegations were simply raised by the respondent to avoid its
non-compliance with the suspensive
condition and they are thus
dismissed. This in my view, must be the end of this matter.
[34]
In all the circumstances, I am satisfied
that the applicant has discharged the onus that rested on its
shoulders and is entitled
to the orders that the applicant seeks.
There is no reason why the costs should not follow the result.
The
following order is made.
ORDER
1.
The agreement to mine for minerals, annexed
to the founding affidavit as “FA1” is declared void
ab
initio
.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of this application.
DLAMINI J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
Adv
H P van Nieuwenhuizen
EMAIL:
hvn@joburgbar.co.za
INTRUCTED
BY:
KEVIN HYDE ATTORNEYS
EMAIL:
kevin@kha.co.za
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
Adv
Jaco Matthee
EMAIL:
jaco@jdmlaw.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY
LAUFS ATTORNEYS C/O SCHEEPERS
PRETORIUS
ATTORNEYS
EMAIL:
litigation@laufsprok.co.za
admin@sandpattorneys.co.za
[1]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18]
[2]
2021
(6) SA 1 (CC)
[3]
1964
(4) SA 760
[4]
(734/2015)
[2015] ZASCA 50( 26 April 2017)
[5]
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13(15 March 2012)
[6]
(20229/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 111(3 September 20150)
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