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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 381
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## Ram Transport (South Africa) Proprietary Limited t/a Ram Hand-to-Hand Couriers v DHL Supply Chain (South Africa) Proprietary Limited (20232/2020)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 381 (17 April 2024)
Ram Transport (South Africa) Proprietary Limited t/a Ram Hand-to-Hand Couriers v DHL Supply Chain (South Africa) Proprietary Limited (20232/2020)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 381 (17 April 2024)
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sino date 17 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
20232/2020
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: YES
17 April 2024
In the matter between:
RAM TRANSPORT (SOUTH
AFRICA) PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
t/a RAM HAND-TO-HAND
COURIERS
Applicant
and
DHL SUPPLY CHAIN
(SOUTH AFRICA)
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
Respondent
LEAVE
TO APPEAL - JUDGMENT
MANOIM J:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal. The applicant is the
plaintiff in this matter. It seeks leave to appeal my
decision to
dismiss its matter. The matter concerns a breach of contract and a
claim for damages consequent on the alleged breach.
[2]
I had separated the issue of damages from the merits. The appeal
concerns my finding on the merits. There is no
dispute that
some form of contract existed between the plaintiff and the defendant
(“the respondent in the application for
leave to appeal”).
To succeed with a claim for damages the plaintiff had to prove that
the terms of the contract it contended
for, contained the following
three terms:
a.
The contract’s duration was for a minimum of two years (“the
contract period”);
b.
The contract was exclusive; and
c.
That the contract was only terminable for cause during the contract
period.
[3]
The plaintiff alleged that the contract was to endure for a minimum
period of two years. It is common cause that the parties
had
implemented some form of contract for a period of six months, before
the defendant terminated it on one month’s notice.
As a finding
of fact, I did not find that it was terminated for cause.
[4]
The defendant denies that the contract had a two-year duration but
was an
ad hoc
contract which could be cancelled in the manner
that it did without cause. (An alternative plea that it had been
terminated for
cause was not persisted with.)
[5]
The basis for the plaintiff’s claim of a two-year contract was
a letter of intent (“LOI”) that the defendant
wrote to it
on 30 November 2017. In that letter the defendant stated its
intention to enter into a contract with the plaintiff.
It mentions
that this would be for an “…
initial period of 24
months...”.
This sentence is what the plaintiff relies on
to prove the alleged duration. (The two other provisions, exclusivity
and cancellation
for cause are pleaded as tacit terms.)
[6]
But the LOI also stated in a concluding sentence that:
“
The
final award will be subject to the successful conclusion of the
contract accordingly.”
[7]
The case largely turns on what that sentence meant. It is common
cause that no further contract was entered into. That
might suggest
that this was a condition that had to be fulfilled prior to the
contract being entered into. But the parties, notwithstanding
this,
proceeded to take a number of steps which the plaintiff alleges meant
that the contract had been entered into.
Inter alia
, the
plaintiff relied on the fact that the defendant had taken steps to
terminate its existing service provider, verified that
the plaintiff
was compliant with its service standards, and advised its clients
(amongst whom was major hospital group) that the
plaintiff was now
its service provider.
[8]
It is also common cause that the plaintiff commenced providing the
services contemplated in the contract on an exclusive
basis from 26
March 2018 to 30 September 2018. The duration of the service
provision was six months.
[9]
What then does the plaintiff make of the condition? The plaintiff
suggests various possibilities. The first was that the
condition
contemplated no more than a nuts-and-bolts agreement that detailed
the minutiae but had no effect on the major terms
including price and
duration which the LOI had regulated. In the alternative this
condition was waived or by virtue of quasi mutual
assent the clause
was no longer operative.
[10]
The plaintiff, I found, had difficulties getting around the plain
language of the agreement. But the plaintiff sought
to rely on
context to establish its primary argument that the condition was of
the nuts-and-bolts variety .What the plaintiff was
seeking to rely on
as a matter of law was a decision by Corbett JA in
Alsthom
[1]
where he held that the
existence of outstanding matters may not deprive an agreement of
contractual force. The matter concerned
like this one with an
acceptance of a contract, but which was subject to further
negotiations which were never completed.
[11]
Corbett JA held that the parties might well have agreed expressly or
by implication, to have left the outstanding matters
to later
negotiation. Where these outstanding matters do not get resolved then
the original contract might nevertheless still stand.
When might this
apply? Corbett JA held that this would depend
on
“…their conduct, the terms of the agreement, and the
surrounding circumstances.”
[2]
On the facts of the case Corbett JA held that there had been a
binding contract.
[12]
But at the other end of the spectrum was the case also from the SCA
which the defendant relied on,
Command
Protection Services
.
[3]
That case like this one dealt with a tender that had been awarded
subject to a condition. In that case as well the contract had
been
implemented before the defendant had terminated it.
Command
Protection Services
was
decided after
Alsthom
and the court refers to
it. Brand JA explains that disputes of this kind are not novel. He
goes on to say that the case law recognises
two possibilities. The
first is that the parties lacked
animus
contrahendi
because
there was no consensus on the outstanding issue. In that case there
is no contract to be recognised. The second is that
of the
Alsthom
situation. Even if they
fail to agree on the outstanding issues the original contact
prevails.
[4]
[13]
Both parties regard these two cases as authoritative. The issue was
whether on the spectrum of possibilities between
them, the case more
closely resembled the one, not the other. The plaintiff in its leave
to appeal has devoted an entire table
to setting out the differences
in fact between the facts in the present case and that in
Command
Services
. I make no comment on whether all the differences are as
significant as the plaintiff suggests.
[14]
The problem faced both parties, in a case where the conduct of the
parties was a central issue, was the number of
dramatis personae
who had been players in the dispute. Each placed more reliance on the
testimony or absence thereof of the other side’s witnesses.
[15]
The plaintiff seeks to rely on the fact that the defendant had failed
to call two available witnesses. One was Margareutte
Van Der Merwe,
who at the relevant time was the general manager of DHL Supply Chain
in South Africa. She was the author of the
LOI and the person who had
authorised the termination of the other service provider and gave an
instruction that the change in
service provider be communicated to
the hospital group client. A lesser player who was also not called
although available was Lindi
Smith. She was the client liaison person
who had authored the email to the hospital group on the instruction
of Van der Merwe.
[16]
The plaintiff urged me to draw an adverse inference from the failure
to call these witnesses when they were known to
be available to
testify. Although I did so in my decision, it would appear that the
plaintiff considers that this inference should
have gone further. In
the view of plaintiff’s counsel during argument “
had
they been called they would have sunk the defendant’s case”.
[17]
I noted in my decision that up until this point in the narration the
context favoured the plaintiff’s version.
What changed was when
during the implementation stage, the plaintiff’s in-house legal
counsel, Alan Da Costa, who was also
one of its directors, sought to
taken up the pen and draft a contract between the parties. He is the
plaintiff’s witness
whose conduct the defendant seeks to rely
on to make its case.
[18]
Da Costa’s attempt to conclude a contract went through several
iterations but ultimately was never finalised. During
the drafting
process Da Costa had not confined himself to ‘nuts and bolts’
but had dealt with the three key issues
the plaintiff now seeks to
rely on: duration, exclusivity, and termination for cause. What was
perplexing was that in various drafts
he never sought to rely on the
LOI, but even proposed terms at variance with it. Also, during this
period, a collateral dispute
over insurance of goods in transit had
led the plaintiff’s managing director to assert that until this
was resolved the plaintiff
would operate in terms of is standard
terms and conditions. This did not include any of the terms that the
plaintiff now relies
on.
[19]
It was based on Da Costa’s conduct that I considered that the
context had changed and that it now favoured the
version of the
defendant. While I agreed at least with the plaintiff, that the
defendant had not succeeded in proving its version
of an alternative
contract, I nevertheless agreed with defendant’s counsel’s
proposition, that it was not for the defendant
to prove its candidate
for the contract. It only had to establish that the plaintiff had not
established its candidate.
[20]
What the plaintiff seeks to argue in the leave to appeal turns on two
aspects that another court might consider differently.
First, is the
adverse inference to be drawn from the failure to testify being more
consequential than I had regarded it. The second
is that the evidence
of Da Costa should have not been considered in the treatment of
subsequent context. The argument here was
that he was not involved in
the initial contract negotiations leading to the LOI and had arrived
late when the contract implementation
had already taken place. The
plaintiff argues that his views of the contract were subjective not
objective, and I erred in having
regard to them. Whilst I do not
agree with this view, I accept that these two issues are of
sufficient probative value, that another
court might consider the
issues differently. Thus, if another court made more of the adverse
inference in respect of the defendant’s
witnesses who did not
testify, and made nothing of the conduct of Da Costa, because it
would be considered no more than manifestations
of his subjective
intent, the outcome of the case would have been different, and the
plaintiff would have prevailed.
[21]
I therefore consider the plaintiff should be given leave to appeal. I
do not consider the case should be appealed to
the Supreme Court of
Appeal as the plaintiff sought in its notice of appeal. There is, as
I earlier noted, no legal dispute on
the principles to be applied.
Rather what the case turns on is their application. For this reason,
an appeal to a full bench of
this division would suffice.
[22]
The plaintiff sought to rely on several other issues for the appeal.
I did not, it argued, consider its alternatives,
namely waiver and
quasi mutual assent. It is correct that I did not. But as the factual
underpinning for these cases is the same
as the plaintiff’s
principal argument based on
Alsthom,
I did not consider they
took the case any further. I do not consider they had any merit
and I have therefore not needed to
consider them given my conclusion
on the two main issues.
ORDER:-
[23] In the result
the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal to a full bench of this division is granted.
2.
Costs to be costs in the appeal.
N.MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
08 March 2024
Date of
Judgment:
17 April
2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant: Adv MM Antonie SC
Adv AB
Berkowitz
Instructed
by.
Werksman Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent: Adv JPV Mc Nally SC
Adv JM
Heher
Instructed
by:
Eversheds Sutherland
[1]
Cgee
Alsthom Equipments et Enterprises Electriques, South African
Division v GKN Sankey (Pty) Ltd
1987
(1) SA 81 (A).
[2]
Supra, 92 E-F.
[3]
Command
Services (Gauteng) v SA Post Office Ltd
2013(2)
SA 133.
[4]
Supra, at paragraph 12.
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