Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 316South Africa
GMK Civils (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (2024-030334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 316 (27 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## GMK Civils (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (2024-030334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 316 (27 March 2024)
GMK Civils (Pty) Ltd v Bryte Insurance Company Ltd and Another (2024-030334) [2024] ZAGPJHC 316 (27 March 2024)
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sino date 27 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024 - 030334
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
In
the application by
GMK CIVILS (PTY)
LTD Applicant
And
BRYTE INSURANCE
COMPANY LTD First
Respondent
MEC: DEPARTMENT OF
ROADS AND TRANSPORT: Second
Respondent
GAUTENG PROVINCE
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Demand guarantee –
autonomy of – court will not go behind a demand guarantee
except when guarantee is tainted by fraud
- payment must be
made upon presentation of complying documents
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application on the scale
as between attorney and own client.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is a judgement in the urgent court. The applicant seeks an order
that, pending the determination of rights in arbitration
proceedings
instituted by the applicant on 6 February 2024, the first respondent
be restrained from paying the amount of R16,988,439.92
due under a
performance guarantee to the second respondent, and that the second
respondent be restrained from making the demand.
[4]
The first respondent has given an undertaking not to pay the amount
due pending the finalisation of this urgent application.
This was a
sensible and professional attitude to adopt. The first respondent is
however not opposing the relief sought and abides
the decision of the
court.
[5]
PCBS
Construction and Customs Bond Services (Pty) Ltd as underwriting
managers of the first respondent issued the fixed performance
guarantee on 12 July 2022. The guarantee provides that the
guarantor’s performance is restricted to the payment of
money.
[1]
The guarantor
undertook
[2]
to pay to the
employer (the second respondent) the sum certified upon receipt of
specific documents identified in the guarantee.
These documents are -
5.1
a copy of a
first written demand
[3]
issued
by the second respondent to the applicant stating that payment of a
sum certified by the second respondent’s agent
in an interim or
final payment certificate has not been made in terms of the contract
and facility within seven calendar days,
and that the employer
intends to call upon the guarantor to make payment in terms of clause
3.2.2.
5.2 a first
written demand issued by the second respondent to the guarantor at
the guarantor’s physical address with
a copy to the contractor
(the applicant) stating that the period of seven days has elapsed
since the first written demand in terms
of clause 3.2.1 and the sum
certified has still not been paid.
5.3 a copy of the
aforesaid payment certificate which entitled the second respondent to
receive payment of the sum certified.
[6]
The autonomy of demand guarantees is sacrosanct. Like letters of
credit they are autonomous documents independent of the
underlying
agreement between, in this case, the applicant and the second
respondent. The first respondent is obliged to make payment
when
presented with complying documentation. The only question that arises
from the point of view of the guarantor, the first respondent,
is
whether or not it is presented with complying documentation, and if
it is then payment must be made.
[7]
Demand
guarantees
[4]
are in the words
of Lord Denning MR
[5]
“…
virtually
promissory notes payable on demand…. the performance guarantee
stands on a similar footing to a letter of credit.”
[8]
It is no
exaggeration that the autonomy of demand guarantees and documentary
letters of credit is a prerequisite for trade. Donaldson
LJ remarked
in
Intraco
Ltd v Notis Shipping Corporation (The Bhoja Trader)
[6]
that:
“
Irrevocable
letters of credit and bank guarantees given in circumstances such as
that they are the equivalent of an irrevocable
letter of credit have
been said to be the lifeblood of commerce. Thrombosis will occur if,
unless fraud is involved, the Courts
intervene and thereby disturb
the mercantile practice of treating rights thereunder as being the
equivalent of cash in hand.”
[9]
In
Coface
SA Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Own Haven Housing
Association
[7]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal reiterated that a guarantor's obligation to
perform was wholly independent from an underlying
construction
agreement between a contractor and its employer and that disputes in
relation to the underlying construction agreement
were accordingly
irrelevant to the guarantor's obligation to perform in terms of the
guarantee.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in express terms said that the majority
decision in
Dormell
Properties 282 CC v Renasa Insurance Co Ltd and Others NNO
[8]
was wrong to the extent that it created a new exception relating to
the findings in an arbitration.
[10]
The demand guarantee is therefore an autonomous document that creates
an autonomous obligation. A guarantor does not
exercise a discretion
when making payment and the guarantee must be paid according to its
terms. The guarantor evaluates the documents
presented and if the
documents conform, it makes payment. Liability is not affected by the
underlying relationship.
[11]
Fraud uncovers all and payment on a guarantee can be resisted on the
basis of fraud. This constitutes an exception to
the rule that the
demand guarantee, like a letter of credit, is autonomous. A court
will therefore not go behind the demand guarantee
in order to decide
whether payment should be made.
[12]
Disputes arose between the applicant and the second respondent
relating to the fulfilment of obligations in terms of
the underlying
agreement but these disputes do not affect the demand guarantee. The
applicant and the second respondent have embarked
on arbitration
proceedings to resolve these disputes. The first respondent is not a
party to the arbitration agreement or to the
disputes.
[13]
For these reasons the application must fail.
Urgency
[14]
The second
respondent gave notice of termination of the underlying agreement on
8 September 2023 in a letter entitled “
Notification
in terms of clause 9.2 – termination by employer”
.
The letter contained the required 14 days notification to rectify the
faults in accordance with clause 9.2.1 of the contract.
[9]
The 14 day notice period commenced on 12 September 2023 and expired
on 26 September 2023. One special non-working day had
to be
added to the notification timeframe and this meant that the second
respondent was entitled to terminate the project on 27
September
2023.
[15]
On 30 November 2023 in a letter that was received 6 December 2023 the
second respondent gave notice of termination of
the contract and
stated that it would “
submit a ‘First written demand’
to claim the full guaranteed sum from the guarantor.”
[16]
The applicant knew of the threatened demand already on 6 December
2023 and did not seek an order until March 2024. The
notice of motion
and founding affidavit were both signed on 19 March 2024.
[17]
An urgent
application must be brought as soon as possible and an applicant is
expected to provide cogent reasons for any delay.
This the applicant
failed to do. The applicant is the author of the urgency.
[10]
[18]
The applicant is therefore not entitled to invoke rule 6 (12).
Costs
[19]
The
applicant launched this application in the urgent court under
circumstances where it knew that it was seeking to go behind an
autonomous demand guarantee and with knowledge of the long line of
decisions in this regard and in particular the clear and unequivocal
statements by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Coface
in 2014.
[11]
The
second respondent sought a punitive cost order against the applicant
on the basis that the applicant waited from December 2023
until March
2024 to bring the application at short notice.
I
am of the view that a punitive cost order is justified.
Conclusion
[20]
in summary,
20.1 the
application is not urgent;
20.2 the demand
guarantee is an autonomous document and a court will not go behind
the guarantee to evaluate the underlying
agreement and disputes
between the applicant and the second respondent;
20.3 an attorney
and own client cost order is justified.
[21] For the
reasons as set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
MOORCROFT
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting 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
27 March 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT: MC
MALATJI
INSTRUCTED
BY: R
BALOYI INC
COUNSEL FOR THE SECOND
RESPONDENT: MH MHAMBI
DATE OF
ARGUMENT: 26
MARCH 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT: 27
MARCH 2024
[1]
Clause 3.1.2.
[2]
Clause 3.2.
[3]
Clause 3.2.1.
[4]
Also
known as
performance
bonds, performance guarantees, demand guarantees, advance demand
guarantees, or construction guarantees. A better
description might
be ‘documentary guarantees’ as performance depends on
the presentation of the required documents
as is the case with a
‘documentary [letter of] credit.’
[5]
Edward
Owen Engineering Ltd v Barclays Bank International Ltd
[1978]
1 All ER 976 (CA) (1977) 3 WLR 764.
[6]
Intraco
Ltd v Notis Shipping Corporation (The Bhoja Trader)
[1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep 256 (CA) 257
.
See also
Power
Curber International Ltd v National Bank of Kuwait SAK
[1981]
3 All ER 607
(CA) 613b
,
Loomcraft Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another
[1995] ZASCA 127
;
1996
(1) SA 812
(A) 816G-817A;
[1996] 1 All SA 51
(A)
,
Lombard Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2010
(2) SA 86
(SCA) para 20,
Bombardier
Africa Alliance Consortium v
Lombard
Insurance
Company
Limited and another
[2020] JOL 48680
(GP),
Compass
Insurance Company Ltd v
Hospitality
Hotel Developments (Pty) Ltd
[2011] JOL 27976
(SCA),
Nedbank
Limited and another v
Procprops
60 (Pty) Limited
[2015]
JOL 33537
(SCA)
.
[7]
Coface
SA Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Own Haven Housing
Association
2014
(2) SA 382
(SCA);
[2014]
1 All SA 536
(SCA). The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the
majority decision in
D
ormell
Properties
282 CC
v
Renasa
Insurance
Co
Ltd
and
others
2011 (1) SA 70
(SCA);
[2011] 1 All SA 557
(SCA) that created an
exception to the principle enunciated above, was wrong. The minority
judgment by Cloete JA (Mpati P concurring)
in
Dormell
was endorsed by the later judgement.
[8]
Dormell
Properties 282 CC v Renasa Insurance Co Ltd and Others NNO
2011 (1) SA 70 (SCA), [2011] 1 All SA 557 (SCA).
[9]
The General Conditions of Contract for Construction Works (2015)
3
rd
edition published by the South African institution of Civil
Engineering was applicable.
[10]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE) 94C–D
; Stock
v Minister of Housing
2007
(2) SA 9
(C) 12I–13A
;
Kumah v Minister of Home Affairs
2018
(2) SA 510
(GJ) 511D–E.
[11]
Coface
SA Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Own Haven Housing
Association
2014
(2) SA 382
(SCA);
[2014]
1 All SA 536
(SCA).
sino noindex
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