Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 339South Africa
Drive Control Corporation (Pty) Ltd v National Health Laboratory Service (A2023/049792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 339 (10 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Drive Control Corporation (Pty) Ltd v National Health Laboratory Service (A2023/049792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 339 (10 April 2024)
Drive Control Corporation (Pty) Ltd v National Health Laboratory Service (A2023/049792) [2024] ZAGPJHC 339 (10 April 2024)
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sino date 10 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Cession –
Prohibition
–
Cession
of right to receive payment from NHLS under contract –
Contractual prohibition on party ceding its rights without
prior
consent – Employee of NHLS acknowledged cession and
undertook that it would pay – This not superseding
original
agreement and had no effect independently of it –
Prohibition on cession was fused into right to payment the
contract itself created – NHLS’ prior consent was
condition for its very creation and the prior consent was never
given – Cession relied on was never cession at all.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED
10
April 2024
#### Case
No.A2023-049792
Case
No.
A2023-049792
In the matter between:
DRIVE
CONTROL CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
Appellant
and
NATIONAL
HEALTH LABORATORY SERVICE
Respondent
CORAM: ADAMS J, WILSON J
AND WANLESS J
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom ADAMS J and WANLESS J agree)
:
1
The appellant,
Drive Control, took cession of a right to receive payment under a
contract between the respondent, the NHLS, and
a company known as
Blue Future Internet and Surveillance CC (“Blue Future”).
Blue Future won a tender to supply computers
and information
technology services to the NHLS. Finding itself unable to purchase
the inventory necessary to perform its obligations
under its contract
with the NHLS, Blue Future ceded to Drive Control its right to be
paid for the goods and services it was bound
to supply under the
contract. The cession was to operate as security for the supply of
the inventory Blue Future needed to perform
on its obligations to the
NHLS.
2
Despite securing a written undertaking to honour that cession
from one of the NHLS’ employees, a Mr. Motsepe, Drive Control
was never paid. Instead, the NHLS continued to pay Blue Future.
Aggrieved, Drive Control sued the NHLS in the court below for the
payments it says were due under the cession. Those payments amounted
to just over R33.75 million.
3
The court below absolved the NHLS from the instance at the end
of Drive Control’s case. The court concluded that Drive Control
had failed to lead evidence upon which a reasonable court could give
judgment for it. There was accordingly no need to put the
NHLS on its
defence. The primary bases on which the court below reached that
conclusion were that the contract entered into between
Blue Future
and the NHLS stipulated that Blue Future would not cede any of its
rights under the contract without the NHLS’
prior written
consent, and that the NHLS’ prior written consent to the
cession was never secured.
4
It was common cause before the court below that Blue Future
ceded its rights to Drive Control on 22 August 2016. It did so
without
having first obtained the NHLS’ consent – whether
in writing or at all. It was not until 24 August 2016 that Mr.
Motsepe,
the NHLS’ Head of Supply Chain Management, signed a
document that purported to acknowledge the cession on the NHLS’
behalf, and that contained an undertaking that the NHLS would pay
Drive Control pursuant to it.
5
The gist of the decision of the court below was that Drive
Control could only succeed in the face of Blue Future’s failure
to secure the NHLS’ prior written consent to the cession of its
right to payment if it could be shown that the NHLS had waived
the
prohibition on cessions without its prior consent, or if the contract
had been varied to delete that prohibition. The court
below found
that the only person authorised to vary the contract or to waive the
NHLS’ rights was the NHLS’ Chief Executive,
Ms. Mogale,
who had signed the contract on NHLS’ behalf, and who had been
authorised by the NHLS’ board to implement
the board’s
resolution to award the contract to Blue Future. Since no evidence
had been led that Ms. Mogale had agreed to
vary the contract, or had
waived the prohibition on the cession of Blue Future’s rights
without the NHLS’ consent,
absolution had to be granted.
6
The court below also dealt with Drive Control’s argument
that the NHLS was estopped from denying Mr. Motsepe’s authority
to consent to be bound by the cession on the NHLS’ behalf. The
court below found that Drive Control had not led evidence
upon which
it could conclude that Drive Control’s reliance on Mr.
Motsepe’s authority was reasonable. Drive Control’s
own
evidence was that it had done nothing to acquaint itself with the
terms of the contract out of which Blue Future’s rights
were
being ceded, and had made no more than the most cursory inquiries
about whether Mr. Motsepe was employed at the NHLS, and
what his
position was. In these circumstances, Drive Control could not
reasonably rely on Mr. Motsepe’s ostensible authority.
7
The court below refused Drive Control’s application for
leave to appeal, but the appeal is now before us with the Supreme
Court of Appeal’s leave.
8
On appeal, Drive Control renewed its contentions that Mr.
Motsepe had actual or ostensible authority to acknowledge the cession
on the NHLS’ behalf, and to bind the NHLS to it. Mr. Sawma, who
appeared together with Mr.
Roeloffze
for
Drive Control before us, also advanced the argument that the written
acknowledgement of the cession Mr. Motsepe signed created
a basis
upon which NHLS is indebted to Drive Control that is
separate
and independent from the underlying contract out of which Blue Future
ceded its rights
.
9
The argument, as I understood it, was that the contractual
prohibition on Blue Future ceding its rights without the NHLS’
prior consent was only operative between Blue Future and the NHLS.
Assuming he had the authority to do so (whether actual or
ostensible),
Mr. Motsepe’s acknowledgement of the cession and
his agreement on the NHLS’ behalf to make payment under it was
enough,
in itself, to ground Drive Control’s claim. It is, in
other words, not necessary to consider whether the cession was
consistent
with the prohibition on cessions without the NHLS’
prior written agreement in the underlying contract, because that
prohibition
is not binding on Drive Control. It accordingly mattered
not whether Mr. Motsepe’s conduct amounted to a waiver of the
NHLS’
rights under contract. All that mattered was whether Mr.
Motsepe had actual authority to acknowledge the cession or whether,
if
he did not, the NHLS was estopped from denying his authority.
10
In
my view, the court below reached the correct conclusion. I also find
it difficult to fault much of the reasoning the court adopted.
That
said, the approach I prefer to take to this matter is slightly
different.
11
Mr.
Berger, who appeared together with Mr. Manchu for the NHLS, argued
that Blue Future’s cession of its right to payment
was void
from the outset. It follows, Mr. Berger submitted, that Mr. Motsepe’s
acknowledgement of the cession and his agreement
to be bound by its
terms was likewise void, because there was in truth no cession to
acknowledge. It therefore makes no difference
what Mr. Motsepe’s
true authority was, or whether he waived any of the NHLS’
rights under the contract, or whether
the acknowledgement of the
cession could have amounted to a variation of the contract’s
terms. The mere fact that the cession
was invalid from the outset
means that the rights of which Drive Control says it took cession
never actually passed to it.
12
It
seems to me that Mr. Berger’s argument must be correct. Its
correctness follows, I think, from the decision of the Supreme
Court
of Appeal in
Born Free Investments 364
(Pty) Ltd v FirstRand Bank Limited
[2013]
ZASCA 166
(27 November 2013) (“
Born
Free
”
). There, the unanimous
court drew a distinction between two types of prohibition on cession.
The first type is an agreement not
to cede a pre-existing right –
viz. a right that came into being separately and independently from
the prohibition on cession
itself. For example, if A loans B a sum of
money to be repaid over 20 years, and A agrees in year 10 of the term
of the loan not
to cede his right to repayment, the prohibition on
cession is separate and distinct from the underlying right to
repayment.
13
The
second type of prohibition is one created at the same time and in the
same agreement as the underlying right. Such a prohibition
exists,
for example, if A buys goods and services from B and stipulates in
the contract of sale that none of B’s rights under
the contract
may be ceded to anyone else. In that event, the prohibition against
cession is fused into the rights and obligations
between the parties
at their inception. The prohibition against cession is part of the
character of the rights themselves.
14
In
Born Free
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the second type of prohibition
applies not just between the parties to the contract, but
against
third parties too. The theory animating the court’s approach
was that where a right is created as non-transferable
– in
other words, where it is designed to adhere to one of the parties to
a contract and to no-one else – a cedent
who attempts to cede
such a right tries to pass to the cessionary more rights than the
cedent really has (see
Born Free
,
paragraph 14). That, of course, cannot be done.
15
In
my view, the prohibition on cession contained in the contract between
Blue Future and the NHLS was of this, second, type. The
prohibition
on cession was fused into the right to payment the contract itself
created. In other words, the payments due under
the contract were not
objects of commerce in themselves. They were merely undertakings to
pay Blue Future on the terms set out
in the contract.
16
It
follows from all of this that the cession upon which Drive Control
relies was never a cession at all, because the right to treat
the
payments due under the contract as objects of commerce capable of
transfer to third parties was not a right that Blue Future
really
had. Blue Future did not have that right because the NHLS’
prior consent was a condition for its very creation, and
the NHLS’
prior consent was never given. There was, therefore, nothing for Mr.
Motsepe to acknowledge when he signed the
document Drive Control
forwarded to him on 24 August 2016, and no cession to which Mr.
Motsepe could have bound the NHLS.
17
It
is accordingly impossible to accept Mr. Sawma’s argument that
the acknowledgement of cession Mr. Motsepe signed created
a separate
and free-standing basis on which Drive Control’s claim against
the NHLS can be pressed. Besides the fact that
a cession generally
has no life of its own, as it is always accessory to the rights
ceded, the cession in this case was invalid
because it purported to
pass on a right that did not really exist.
18
Mr.
Sawma’s argument derived much of its force from the judgment of
this court in
Hilsage Investments v
National Exposition
1974 (3) SA 346
(W)
(“
Hilsage
”
)
and the Appellate Division’s decision on appeal in that matter:
Hillock v Hilsage Investments
1975
(1) SA 508
(A) (“
Hillock
”
).
In that case, both this court (see
Hilsage
at pages 354F to 355C) and the Appellate Division
(see
Hillock
at
page 515A-C) appear to express themselves against the proposition
that a prohibition on assignment in a contract of lease could
apply
to third parties. The facts of the matter were that one company,
Hilsage, had let premises to another company, Hirba. Hirba
later
assigned its rights and obligations as lessee to a third company,
National Exposition. Hilsage then sued National Exposition
for rent.
National Exposition denied liability, partly because the lease
between Hilsage and Hirba contained a prohibition on assignment.
19
Both
this court and the Appellate Division nonetheless held National
Exposition liable for the rent. But neither court actually
concluded
that the prohibition on assignment in the lease between Hilsage and
Hirba could not have rendered the assignment invalid.
Both courts
instead concluded that, whatever the effect of the prohibition on
assignment, National Exposition had in any event
later concluded a
new contract, directly with Hilsage, in terms of which National
Exposition assumed all of Hirba’s rights
and obligations under
Hirba’s lease with Hilsage. That superseding contract was the
basis on which both courts held National
Exposition liable (see
Hilsage
,
at page 355H and
Hillock
,
at page 516A-D).
20
This
case is different, for two reasons. The first reason is that we are
bound by the decision in
Born Free
,
which makes clear that a prohibition on cession of the type agreed to
between Blue Future and the NHLS does in fact void any cession
purportedly executed in breach of its terms. The second reason is
that Mr. Motsepe’s apparent acknowledgement of the cession
executed between Blue Future and Drive control did not supersede the
original agreement between Blue Future and the NHLS. It pre-supposed
the validity of the cession and had no effect independently of it.
21
During
argument, Mr. Sawma also adverted to the injustice of a third party
being bound by a prohibition on cession in a contract
“of which
he knows nothing”. But the answer to this is simple. The third
party is only bound where the prohibition
on cession is created at
the same time as, and is fused into, the rights purportedly ceded. A
cessionary wishing to protect itself
against a prohibition on cession
need do no more than examine the contract under which the cedent’s
rights were created.
If that contract creates a prohibition on
cession, then the cessionary is bound by it. If it does not, the
cessionary is not bound
by it. If the court below was correct when it
found that Drive Control did nothing to acquaint itself with Blue
Future’s
contract with the NHLS, then Drive Control has only
itself to blame.
22
In
sum, then, at the close of Drive Control’s case there was no
evidence on which a reasonable court could give judgment for
Drive
Control. The cession on which Drive Control relied was void from the
outset. Mr. Motsepe’s acknowledgement of the cession
–
even if it was made with NHLS’ actual or ostensible authority,
and whatever the legal consequences that may otherwise
have attached
to it – could have done nothing to change that.
23
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 10
April 2024.
HEARD
ON:
28 February 2024
DECIDED
ON: 10 April 2024
For
the Appellant:
A Sawma SC
AL Roeloffze
Instructed by Hooker
Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
D Berger SC
T Manchu
Instructed
by Lawtons Inc
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