Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 367South Africa
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v De Oliveira and Others (19/13509) [2024] ZAGPJHC 367 (9 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 April 2024
Headnotes
and Rhinoline’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v De Oliveira and Others (19/13509) [2024] ZAGPJHC 367 (9 April 2024)
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v De Oliveira and Others (19/13509) [2024] ZAGPJHC 367 (9 April 2024)
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sino date 9 April 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1. Reportable: No
2. Of interest to other judges: No
3. Revised: No
CASE NUMBER: 19/13509
In the matter between:
BP SOUTHERN
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
EDUARDO
JORGE DE OLIVEIRA
First Respondent
RHINOLINE
MANUFACTURERS CC
Second Respondent
FULLIMPUT
1540 (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
In re:
EDUARDO
JORGE DE OLIVEIRA
First Plaintiff
RHINOLINE
MANUFACTURERS CC
Second Plaintiff
and
FULLIMPUT
1540 (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
BP
SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
RANDERA A.J.
1. In this matter the Applicant
(“
BPSA
”) seeks an order requiring the First and
Second Plaintiffs to furnish security for BPSA’s costs of
defending the action
brought by the first and second Plaintiff under
case number 19/13509.
2. The First Respondent claims
in his personal capacity and is the holder of the patent forming the
subject matter of the
claims against the Applicant. The Second
Respondent is a Close Corporation having the First Respondent and his
wife as members.
3. There is a history of
litigation between the Applicant and the Respondents and which
litigation is relevant to this Application.
Given this history the
Applicant, after receiving the summons, filed a notice on 7 June 2019
in terms of Rule 47 (1) requesting
security for costs.
4. The Applicant (BPSA) stopped
purchasing product through the Third Respondent Fullimput 1540 (Pty)
Ltd) (Fullimput). The
Second Respondent (Rhinoline Manufacturers CC)
(Rhinoline), made Application on an urgent basis in the High
Court in KwaZulu
Natal. BPSA drew the attention of Rhinoline to
the fact that it had issued an Application for a patent infringement
in the
wrong Court. Rhinoline thereafter withdrew its Application.
5. On 8 November 2016 Rhinoline
filed a complaint with the Competition Commission alleging that BPSA
had contravened section
8 of the Competition Act of 1988 by
terminating its supply relationship and by failing to agree to pay
higher prices for the product.
The Commission investigated the
matter and decided not to refer the complaint to the Tribunal.
Rhinoline then referred the matter
to the Competition Tribunal in
terms of Section 51 of the Competition Act.
6. BPSA brought an exception to
Rhinoline’s referral on the basis that no cause of action had
been disclosed. Shortly
before the hearing of the exception Rhinoline
consented to the grant of BPSA’s exception with costs. BPSA
taxed a bill of
costs and which taxed bill remains unpaid.
7. Subsequent to the exception
Application Rhinoline filed a supplementary affidavit which did not
cure the deficiencies in
the complaint referral. BPSA then raised a
second exception in response to which Rhinoline filed an answering
affidavit. Shortly
before that matter was to be heard Rhinoline
approached BPSA to settle the Competition Tribunal complaint. The
matter did
not settle. A day prior to the hearing of the matter
Rhinoline advised BPSA through its attorneys that it would not be
attending
the hearing the following day. The matter was heard at the
Competition Tribunal, the exception was upheld, and Rhinoline’s
complaint referral was dismissed with costs.
8. On the same day the
Respondents issued summons out of this Court.
9. On the 3
rd
of May
2019, BPSA obtained a warrant to execute against the movable
property of Rhinoline. The sheriff’s return of
service records
that Rhinoline no was no longer in operation at its previous place of
business and the sheriff was therefore
unable to attach any
assets to satisfy the debt owed to BPSA.
10. The Applicant seeks security
for its costs on the basis that, under the common law, a Defendant is
entitled to seek security
for costs from an
incola
Plaintiff,
whether an individual or a company, where –
10.1 the Plaintiff is insolvent
or unlikely to be able to satisfy any costs order against it; and
10.2 the action is vexatious,
or reckless or amounts to an abuse of the Court process.
11. The Applicant submits that:
having regard to considerations of equity and fairness; the history
of this matter; the lackadaisical
manner in which the Plaintiffs have
conducted this litigation to date; the Plaintiffs’ admission
that they will not be able
to satisfy any adverse costs order against
them; and the fact that, even if the Plaintiffs’ allegations
can be proved, their
claim is without legal basis and obviously
unsustainable and accordingly reckless and/or vexatious.
12. The Respondents contend that
the injustice and unfairness of preventing the Plaintiffs from
pursuing their claim by ordering
them to furnish security for cost
will far outweigh any injustice or unfairness to the Defendants, who
may merely be unable to
recover costs, accordingly that the request
to furnish security for cost is unconstitutional.
13. In
Boost Sports Africa
(Pty) Ltd v South Africam Bremsives (Pty) ltd 2015(s) SA38 (SCA)
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal considered whether the legislature’s
omission of a provision similar to that of section 13 of
the 1963
Companies Act within the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
(“
the new
Companies Act
”) signalled an intention to recognise a
litigant’s fundamental right of access to the Courts, as
enshrined in section 34
of the Constitution. In this regard, it was
held that:
“
But
that may be to ignore the fact that a Court was vested with a
discretion in terms s 13 and that in exercising its discretion
a
Court performs a balancing act. On the one hand it must weigh the
injustice to the Plaintiff if prevented from pursuing a proper
claim
by an order for security and against that it must weigh the injustice
to the Defendant if no security is ordered and the
Plaintiff’s
claim fails and the Defendant finds himself unable to recover costs.
Significantly, on that score, the European
Court of Human Rights
appears to have inclined to the view that security for costs pursued
a legitimate aim, namely to protect
a litigant from being faced with
an irrecoverable bill for legal costs and since regard was had to
prospects of success the requirement
could be said to have been
imposed in the interests of the fair administration of justice. It is
also noteworthy that back home,
as long ago as
Lombard
it was stated by Bristowe J that the
power to order security for costs is a most reasonable one. Why the
legislature saw fit to
exclude it (or a provision that mirrors it) is
fortunately a debate that is not necessary for us to enter. Fourth, s
39(2) of the
Constitution makes plain that, when a Court embarks upon
a course of developing the common law, it is obliged to ‘
promote
the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights
.’
This ensures that the common law will evolve, within the framework of
the Constitution, consistently with the basic norms
of the legal
order that it establishes.”
14. The Court therefore
continues to enjoy a discretion on whether to order an
incola
Plaintiff to furnish security for costs. Unlike the position
under section 13 of the old
Companies Act, something
more than the
mere inability of an
incola
company to satisfy a potential
costs order is required to justify an order for security.
15. This Court must now exercise
a discretion with due regard to the nature of the Plaintiff’s
claim; the financial
position of the company at the stage of the
Application for security; and its probable financial position should
it lose the action
.
16. A mere inability to pay is
insufficient to justify the ordering of security for costs. If the
Court is satisfied that
the contemplated main action is vexatious, or
reckless, or amounts to an abuse, then security should be ordered.
17. In their original opposing
affidavit, the Plaintiffs state repeatedly that they do not have
sufficient resources to pay
any adverse costs against them. There is
therefore no dispute that the Plaintiffs will not be able to satisfy
a costs order against
them in these proceedings.
18. It is also important to note
that:
18.1
Rhinoline
has failed, notwithstanding demand, to make payment of the taxed bill
of costs pursuant to the order handed down by the
Competition
Tribunal on 3 August 2017;
18.2
the
Plaintiffs have failed to make payment of the taxed bill of costs
pursuant to the order handed down by the Competition Tribunal
on 11
April 2019; and
18.3 the sheriff has been
unable execute against the moveable property of Rhinoline and, to the
best of BPSA’s knowledge,
Rhinoline does not own any immoveable
property.
19. Rhinoline has significant
liabilities (if only to BPSA) and has, according to the First
Plaintiff (Mr. De Jesus) under
oath in the course of proceedings
before the Competition Tribunal, “
ceas[ed] all business
operations
”. It can therefore reasonably be inferred that
Rhinoline is insolvent.
20. Similarly, the first
Plaintiff has confirmed under oath in the affidavit filed before the
Competition Tribunal in support
of Rhinoline’s complaint
referral that the business’ closure had left him (
inter
alia
) “
without any active source of income
”.
It is therefore clear that Mr.de Oliveira will not be able to satisfy
an adverse costs order against him in his personal
capacity.
21. In Boost Sports the SCA
noted at [17]
”
Absent
section 13
,
there can no longer be any legitimate basis for differentiating
between an
incola
company
and an
incola
natural
person. Our Superior Courts have a residual discretion in a
matter such as this, arising from their inherent
power to regulate
their own proceedings.) It must follow that the former can at
common law be compelled to furnish security
for costs.
Accordingly, even though there may be poor prospects of recovering
costs, a Court, in its discretion should only
order the furnishing of
security for such costs by an
incola
company if it is satisfied that the
contemplated main action (or Application) is vexatious or reckless or
otherwise amounts to an
abuse.”
22. In
African Farms and
Township Ltd v Cape Town Municipality1963 (2) SA 555 (A)
at
565D-E, the Appellate Division (with reference to Western Assurance
Co v Caldwell’s Trustee
1918 AD 262
at 272 recognised the
Court’s inherent power to strike out claims which are
vexatious.
”
An
action is vexatious and an abuse of the process of Court
inter
alia
if it is obviously unsustainable.
This must appear as a certainty, and not merely on a preponderance of
probability.”
23. This principal, insofar as
it applies to an Application for security for costs, was qualified by
the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Boost Sports
at [18] –
[19] as requiring a less stringent test than one for the stay of
vexatious proceedings.
24. This is so, despite the
provisions of
section 34
of our Constitution with regards to the
right to have a matter adjudicated at our Courts. The court
seized with the Application
for security for costs should perform a
balancing act of ensuring that access to justice is not denied purely
on the basis of inability
to provide security for costs.
(
Lappeman Diamond Cutting Works (Pty) Ltd v MIB Group (Pty)
Ltd) (No 1)
1997 (4) SA 908
(W) 919G-H)
.
25. It is for this reason that
the court’s discretion ought not to be fettered by preconceived
points of departure.
Cooper NNO v Mutual and Federal
Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
2002 (2) SA 863
(O) 874B-C.
It is
important in exercising its discretion and balancing the interests of
the parties that the Court shall not deny justice to
any of the
Parties on the basis of security for costs especially where any of
the parties on the basis of security has a good case
in the form of
either claim or defence. The jurisprudence on security for
costs has been developed to root out litigation
in cases which are
vexatious or frivolous.
26. In coming to a decision as
to how it should exercise its discretion to order or refuse security
for costs, the Court may
take into consideration the nature of the
claim and the defence, but the merits of the dispute are almost
invariably irrelevant
in deciding whether a Plaintiff or Applicant
company should be ordered to furnish security for the proceedings.
In addition
to the particular circumstances of the case, the Court
considering whether or not security should be ordered should also
have regard
to considerations of equity and fairness to both
parties. It may, in the exercise of its discretion enquire into
the conduct
of a party which has reduced the other party to penury.
Waste-Tech (Pty) Ltd v Van Zyl and Glanville
2000 (2) SA 400
(SE) at 404C 404G-H
27. In the instant Case, the
Plaintiffs have sought to pursue four separate causes of action
against BPSA on the same set
of “facts”.
27.1 Before the High Court,
Kwa-Zulu Natal Local Division on 14 October 2016, the Plaintiffs
sought urgent interdictory relief
against the Defendants based on an
alleged patent infringement. This Application was withdrawn.
27.2 Before the Competition
Tribunal on 9 March 2017, Rhinoline alleged that BPSA had abused its
position of dominance, in
contravention of section 8 of the
Competition Act, by terminating its supply relationship with
Rhinoline in favour of Fullimput
and by not agreeing to pay higher
prices for the product. This complaint was dismissed on exception.
27.3
Rhinoline
relies on an alleged breach of contract, as set out in its
Particulars of Claim (as amended), the contract being a number
of
oral agreements “
based on the 2007
procurement agreement
”
alternatively tacit variations or ‘relocations of the 2007’
procurement agreement. My attention is drawn to
the fact that this is
the third version Rhinoline has advanced in seeking to identify and
plead the terms of the contract which
it relies upon in support of
its case (previously, before the amendment to the particulars of
claim earlier this year, reliance
was placed on an agreement
concluded in 2000 and the 2007 procurement agreement itself).
27.4
Finally,
Rhinoline and Mr. De Oliveira bring a claim in delict, which appears
to be founded on the assertion that large multinational
companies are
obliged, outside of any competition law obligation or the law of
contract, to continue purchasing goods from a small
business if that
small business is reliant on those purchases for its continued
operation.
Alleged
Breach of Contract
28. It is the Plaintiffs’
position that subsequent to the expiry of the 2007 procurement
agreement, (attached
to the Plaintiffs’ particulars of claim),
Rhinoline and BPSA concluded a new agreement (alternatively, a series
of
annual agreements) “
based on the 2007 procurement
agreement,
” alternatively tacit variations or
relocations of the 2007 procurement agreement (“the
oral/tacit agreement”).
BPSA denies these allegations.
29. Given the agreement and the
flow of procurement, any tacit agreement would have to be concluded
between Rhinoline and
Fullimput, as the company that purchased and
paid for the product from the Plaintiffs.
30. Accordingly, the claim
against BPSA, as pleaded in its Particulars of Claim is unsustainable
31. Rhinoline claims in this
regard that BPSA breached the agreement between the parties in that
it failed to:
31.1 continue to purchase
cartridges from Rhinoline;
31.2 afford Rhinoline an
opportunity to meet or beat the price charged by Fullimput for the
supply of comparable rock drill
grease cartridges (and thereby
compete with Fullimput for this supply);
31.3 pay for the cartridges
within an agreed period;
31.4 review the purchase price
payable for the cartridges, and
31.5 conduct itself in good
faith.
I deal with each of these below:
32. In paragraph 14(a) of the
amended particulars of claim it is alleged that BPSA breached the
oral/tacit agreement by ceasing
to purchase the cartridges from
Rhinoline. Similarly, in paragraph 14(c), it is alleged that BPSA
failed to issue Purchase Orders
for supply and delivery as and when
it required the cartridges.
33. However, in terms of the
procurement agreement, BPSA is entitled to issue Purchase Orders “
in
its sole discretion”
and is under no obligation to commit
itself to any number of Purchase Orders.
BPSA’s failure to afford
Rhinoline an opportunity to meet or beat Fullimput’s price
34. In terms of Clause 5.1 of
the 2007 procurement agreement, which expressly states that the
relationship is to be non-exclusive,
the question as to whether or
not BPSA afforded Rhinoline an opportunity to meet or beat the prices
charged by Fullimput for the
supply of comparable cartridges is not
required by the agreement.
35. BPSA states that its reason
for seeking an alternative source of supply was because Rhinoline was
unable to supply the
cartridges, either timeously or at all and
therefore had nothing to do with price. This allegation BPSA
points out, has not
been disputed by the Plaintiffs.
BPSA’s alleged failure to pay
Rhinoline within a set time period is unsubstantiated
36. The Plaintiffs have failed
to plead any facts in support of their contention that BPSA failed to
pay Rhinoline for the
supply of the cartridges within 7(seven) days
of the date of invoice, alternatively, within 30 (thirty) days of
receipt of invoice
as allegedly required in terms of clause 7.3 of
the 2007 procurement agreement.
37. BPSA’s founding and
supplementary founding affidavits draw attention to the fact that
prior to the termination of
the supply arrangement, Rhinoline had
started to request payment for the supply of the cartridges in
advance. In compliance
with this request, and in an effort to
secure the necessary supply of the product required by its mining
customers, BPSA paid Rhinoline
an amount of R667 913, 68 for
cartridges that were to be supplied in the future.
38. Notwithstanding this
payment and numerous demands, Rhinoline failed to supply the
cartridges ordered and paid for by
BPSA (through Blendcor), with the
result that Rhinoline is significantly indebted to BPSA.
BPSA’s alleged failure to
review the price payable for the cartridges
39. Clause 7.1 of the 2007
procurement agreement provides for the regular review of the prices
charged by Rhinoline.
However, the clause further provides that
in the event that the parties are unable to agree then either Party
may terminate the
agreement, and pending the termination the existing
prices will apply.
40. In other words, if BPSA was
unwilling to pay a higher purchase price for the cartridges, either
party was entitled to
terminate the supply arrangement, BPSA was not
obliged to purchase the cartridges at a price higher than it was
willing to pay.
BPSA’s
alleged failure to conduct itself in good faith without merit
41. Finally, the Plaintiffs
allege that, through its failure to afford Rhinoline an opportunity
to meet and beat the prices
charged by Fullimput for the supply of
comparable cartridges, BPSA failed to conduct itself in good faith.
42. In terms of clause 7.4 of
the 2007 procurement agreement, BPSA is at liberty to purchase
product from third parties where
the reasons for the purchase do not
relate to price. The right to deal with others is not
restricted.
43. For all the reasons set out
above, Rhinoline’s claim based on an alleged breach of
contract, is without merit, and
is in the circumstances vexatious.
The delictual claim
44. the Plaintiffs’
delictual claim is said to be based on the following facts:
44.1 BPSA is part of a large
multinational group with access to extensive resources;
44.2 Fullimput was able to
produce and sell a comparable cartridge with the support of BPSA;
44.3 The only commercial
resource available to Rhinoline was the production and sale of the
cartridges to BPSA;
44.4 It would be very costly
for Mr de Olivera to institute proceedings for the enforcement of
this patent; and
44.5 the alleged breach of the
contract.
45. Furthermore, within the
supplementary answering affidavit deposed to by Ms De Oliveira it is
stated that BPSA:
“
Must
have realised the impact this would have had on Rhinoline’s
liquidity and ability to trade, and of the knock-on
affect on the
first Plaintiff’s ability to defend or protect the patent”
46. It is trite that a Plaintiff
cannot advance both a contractual
and
delictual cause of
action based on the same set of facts unless the causes of action are
pleaded in the alternative.
47. It would thus appear to be
the Plaintiffs’ case, that BPSA was under a legal duty to
continue to remain bound to
the oral/tacit agreement, notwithstanding
Rhinoline’s inability to supply the cartridges and the
substantial debt owed by
Rhinoline to BPSA as a result of Rhinoline
being a small family business financially dependent on BPSA’s
custom and Mr
de Oliveira cannot afford to defend his patent.
48. The Plaintiffs’
delictual claim is, in sum, manifestly ill-conceived and baseless.
Furthermore, there is nothing
to support the claim brought by Mr de
Oliveira in his personal capacity.
49. For the reasons set out
above, neither of the two causes of action relied upon by the
Plaintiffs in the proceedings before
this Court are sustainable and
the action is vexatious.
The claim for damages
50. The Plaintiffs state at
paragraph 21 of the amended Particulars of Claim that:
“
the
damages suffered by the Plaintiff are the reasonable and foreseeable
consequence of the breach of the
procurement
agreement
, alternatively the wrongful
and unlawful conduct of the Defendants.
51. It is pointed out that,
having accepted that the 2007 procurement agreement was never signed
and, at best, expired no
later than 31 August 2007 (which is disputed
by BPSA), the Plaintiffs have sought to rely on a series of oral
agreements, described
as the “oral/tacit agreement”).
However, for the purposes of pursuing damages against BPSA, the
Plaintiffs appear
to have reverted to the original written agreement,
an agreement which both sides appear to agree was never concluded.
52. It is unclear whether the
Plaintiffs’ claim is based on damages arising from the alleged
breach of contract, or
the alleged patent infringement and, in either
event, on what basis damages for “
the lifetime of the
patent”:
are claimed. The Plaintiffs have also failed
to plead the basis upon which they claim damages for a period of 9
(nine) years
(for an agreement that was renewed annually), and how
the start and end of that period has been determined.
53. In any event, if one
considered that this action was launched on 11 April 2019, a material
portion of the Plaintiffs’
claim has already prescribed.
54. In light of the above, the
claim for damages (whether in contract or delict) is obviously
unsustainable.
Having regard to the principles set
out above and the facts of this case, I am persuaded that the
Defendants have discharged the
onus to prove that they are entitled
to Security for Costs.
55. As a result, the following
Order is made:
55.1 the Plaintiffs are ordered
to furnish security for the First and Second Respondents legal costs
in the action.
55.2 the form, amount and
manner of security to be provided by the Plaintiffs shall be
determined by the Registrar on Application
made by the Second
Defendant to that office within 10 (ten) days of this order, failing
which Application for this order shall
lapse.
55.3 in the event that the
Plaintiffs fails to provide security as determined by the Registrar
within 10 (ten) days of the
Registrar’s order or determination,
the action shall be stayed.
55.4 the Respondents are
ordered to pay the costs of this Application.
MOHAMED RANDERA AJ
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e mail and publication
on CaseLines.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 09 April 2024
.
Date of Hearing:
27 February
2024
Date of Judgment:
09 April 2024
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the applicant:
GD Marriott
marriott@counsel.co.za
AL Ashworth
ashworth@law.co.za
Counsel for the respondents:
G Goddard SC
glenglen@law.co.za
S Mahabeer SC
mahabeers@law.co.za
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