Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 394South Africa
Smart Civils Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another v Francis Transport and Plant Hire CC (A2023-051064) [2024] ZAGPJHC 394 (19 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Smart Civils Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another v Francis Transport and Plant Hire CC (A2023-051064) [2024] ZAGPJHC 394 (19 April 2024)
Smart Civils Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another v Francis Transport and Plant Hire CC (A2023-051064) [2024] ZAGPJHC 394 (19 April 2024)
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sino date 19 April 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case Number: A2023-051064
Heard on:20/03/2024
Date of Judgment:
19/04/2024
1.
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
2.
OF INTEREST
TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
3
.
R
EVISED.
In the matter between:
SMART CIVILS
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
First Appellant
RADON PROJECTS (PTY)
LTD
Second Appellant
and
FRANCIS TRANSPORT AND
PLANT HIRE CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
UNTERHALTER
J (WINDELL J AND SIWENDU J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The first
appellant, Smart Civils Construction (Pty) Ltd (‘Smart’),
and the second appellant, Radon Projects (Pty) Ltd
(‘Radon’),
in May 2015 entered into a joint venture agreement to tender for the
new Cosmo City Fire Station. They were
successful. The Johannesburg
Development Agency (‘the employer’) awarded the tender to
the joint venture, and concluded
a written agreement for the
construction of the fire station. In December 2015, Radon appointed
the respondent, Francis Transport
and Plant Hire CC (‘Francis
TP’), as a subcontractor to carry out certain works on the fire
station project. Radon
and Francis TP concluded a written contract
for the execution of these works (‘the subcontract’).
[2]
Francis TP
commenced the works under the subcontract on 21 January 2016, and
completed the works on 24 May 2016. Disagreements arose
in
consequence of what Francis TP considered to be the short payment of
its Claim 8. These disagreements were not resolved. Francis
TP
instituted an action to claim payment, initially against Smart, and
then also as against Radon. Francis TP pleaded that it had
duly
executed and completed the subcontracted works and submitted its
final claim, but that Radon and Smart had failed to pay the
final
claim. Radon denied it was liable to Francis TP. Smart pleaded that
it had discharged its liability to Francis TP. And the
matter
proceeded to trial. The trial was heard by Dosio J. Dosio J rendered
a judgment, finding for Francis TP, and ordered that
Radon and Smart
were jointly and severally liable to Francis TP for the payment of R
1 150 500.82, together with interest
and costs. With leave,
Radon and Smart appeal to this court.
[3]
Radon and Smart have confined the
issues for our determination. The issues are these. First, did
Francis TP agree to the cession
and assignment of the subcontract to
Smart? The court below found that Francis TP did not give its
consent. Rather, the court below
favoured the evidence of Mr Gomes,
who testified on behalf of Francis TP. His evidence was that there
was no agreement to cede
the subcontract to Smart. The parties to the
subcontract remained Francis TP and Radon, but Francis TP agreed that
payment may
be made by Smart, and that Radon and Smart would be
jointly and severally liable to Francis TP under the subcontract. If
the court
below was in error, and Francis TP did consent to the
cession and assignment, then Radon would not be liable to Francis TP
in terms
of the subcontract. And Francis TP’s action against
Radon would have to be dismissed. I shall refer to this as the
cession
issue.
[4]
Second,
Radon and Smart confined their appeal to the findings of the court
below on two of Francis TP’s claims. The first
was the claim
for ‘restricted works’, and the second, for
‘preliminaries and generals’ (‘P &
G’s’).
The court below found for Francis TP in respect of both these claims.
The claim for restricted works amounted
to R379 923.63. The
claim for P & G’s totalled R543 267.00. Smart does not
contest, on appeal, that Francis
TP was entitled to the judgment it
procured for the balance, being an amount of R364 109,37.
[5]
I shall
consider first the cession issue, and then proceed to the issues
raised by the claims for restricted works and P & G’s.
The resolution of the cession issue will determine whether Radon or
Smart or both these parties are liable for the claims for restricted
works and P & G’s, should Francis TP sustain these claims
on appeal.
The cession issue
[6]
It is
common ground that the subcontract was concluded between Radon and
Francis TP on 4 December 2015. Mr Klingbiel, who was the
contracts
manager of Radon, working on the fire station project, testified on
behalf of Radon at the trial. Mr Baloyi did so on
behalf of Smart.
Their evidence was clear that under the arrangements concluded
between
[7]
Radon and
Smart, as joint venture partners, each company would be responsible
for certain works, and be liable for its own suppliers
and
subcontractors. The appointment of Francis TP as a subcontractor to
Radon was made in error because these works were the responsibility
of Smart.
[8]
Mr
Klingbiel and Mr Baloyi agreed to cure this error by the transfer of
Radon’s rights and obligations under the subcontract
to Smart.
They arranged to meet with Mr Gomes, who represented Francis TP. A
meeting took place in January of 2016. Mr Klingbiel
and Mr Germani
attended on behalf of Radon and Mr Gomes did so on behalf of Francis
TP. The meeting is not disputed between the
parties. What was agreed
at the meeting was very much placed in issue.
[9]
Mr Gomes
testified that at the meeting he was told that there was a problem
with Radon’s BEE partner, and he was asked whether
Francis TP
would accept payment from a third party. Mr Gomes was willing to
accept payment from Smart (as the third party), but
Radon had to
ensure that payment was on time and in full. According to Mr Gomes,
no mention was made of the cession of the subcontract.
[10]
Mr
Klingbiel’s evidence was this. At the meeting, it was explained
to Mr Gomes that the appointment of Francis TP should have
been made
by Smart, and not Radon. The solution was to transfer Radon’s
rights and obligations to Smart, and that, after
some hesitation, Mr
Gomes agreed.
[11]
What then
occurred was that Mr Baloyi, as the Contract Manager of Smart, wrote
to Mr Gomes on 29 February 2016 as follows: ‘Further
to our
discussion, I hereby confirm that the subcontract order number 12821
issued by Radon Projects has been transferred to Smart
Civils
Construction and the conditions remain unchanged. All your invoices
should be addressed to the following: Smart Civils Constructions
(Pty) Ltd.’ (‘the February letter’). Of the
February letter, Mr Gomes testified that he did not see it when sent,
or at most he saw it but did nothing about it. In making its claims
under the subcontract, and seeking to secure payment, Francis
TP
addressed both Smart and Radon in different permutations.
[12]
After the
dispute arose concerning Francis TP’s claims, Francis TP
appointed attorneys (‘Fasken’) to claim payment
for the
completion of the subcontract works. On 3 November 2017, Fasken
addressed a letter of demand to Radon. This letter simply
references
the subcontract as the basis for the claim. Radon responded on 9
November 2017. Its letter explained that Radon had
in error appointed
Francis TP, but that this appointment was cancelled, and Francis TP
was appointed by Smart. Francis TP had invoiced
Smart and been paid
by Smart. Radon accordingly invited Fasken to redirect their letter.
This they did.
[13]
On 23
November 2017 Fasken addressed a letter of demand to Smart. This
letter refers to the subcontract concluded with Radon. It
goes on to
state: ‘We are instructed that on or about 29 February 2016,
the Subcontract was ceded and assigned to Smart Civils
Construction
(Pty) Ltd. In this regard, a copy of the letter addressed to our
client from Smart Civils is attached hereto marked
B. In accordance
with the cession and assignment of the Subcontract our client issued
its invoices to Smart Civils.’ Demand
was then made for the
payment by Smart of the amount said to be due and payable.
[14]
When this
demand was not met, Francis TP brought an action in May 2018. In its
particulars of claim, Francis TP cited Smart as the
first defendant,
and Radon as the second defendant. Its claim was made against Smart.
Radon was cited thus: ‘No relief is
sought against the second
defendant, and it is joined herein merely insofar as it may have any
interest in the relief sought against
the first defendant’.
Francis TP then pleaded the subcontract, and stated further that this
agreement was ceded and assigned
to Smart by agreement between Radon
and Smart. It references the February letter from Mr Baloyi,
described above, and avers that
this letter ‘informed the
plaintiff in writing of the cession and assignment’. Francis TP
later amended its particulars
of claim to reflect the joint and
several liability of Radon and Smart.
[15]
The court
below found Mr Gomes to be a credible witness and was less impressed
with the credibility of Messrs Klingbiel and Baloyi.
And some
deference is due to that assessment. The court below accepted the
evidence of Mr Gomes as to what was agreed at the meeting
in January
2016 between Messrs Gomes, Klingbiel and Germani (‘the critical
meeting’). It found that there was no cession
and assignment of
the subcontract. Rather, Smart was a conduit for the payment of
Francis TP by Radon, and that Radon and Smart
were jointly and
severally liable under the subcontract.
[16]
There are
difficulties in accepting this finding. True enough, Mr Gomes sent
claims to Messrs Klingbiel, Germani and Baloyi. And
Mr Klingbiel
remained involved in the certification process. None of this is
surprising given that Mr Gomes and Mr Klingbiel had
a long-standing
commercial relationship. Invoices were however addressed to Smart,
and Smart issued the payment certificates. But
as to what was agreed
at the critical meeting, the version offered by Mr Gomes faces some
significant hurdles. First, the text
of the February letter from Mr
Baloyi is consistent with a common sense understanding of a cession
and assignment; it is inconsistent
with the version of Mr Gomes. The
letter was written not long after the critical meeting, and Mr
Baloyi, who was not at the meeting,
and was assuming liability on
behalf of Smart, would have little reason to distort what he
understood that liability to be. No
mention whatever is made of joint
and several liability which would have been advantageous to Smart.
[17]
Second, Mr
Gomes does not deny receiving Mr Baloyi’s letter, and allowed
for the possibility that he may have seen it and
done nothing more.
In a matter of such importance, if the letter did not reflect Mr
Gomes’ understanding of what was agreed,
one would expect him
to have set the record straight. That he did not do so is damaging to
his version.
[18]
Third,
Fasken’s first demand was made of Radon. When Radon explained
the demand should be directed to Smart, Fasken’s
instructions
were to do so and to claim from Smart on the basis of the cession and
assignment of the subcontract to Smart. Those
instructions could only
have come from Mr Gomes. In all likelihood, he was reminded of the
letter from Mr Baloyi, and instructed
his attorneys accordingly.
Those instructions are entirely inconsistent with the version offered
by Mr Gomes in his evidence. They
evince no equivocation as the
cession and assignment. And were confirmed by the summons then issued
which claimed against Smart,
and not Radon.
[19]
Taken
together, this evidence casts grave doubt on the version of Mr Gomes.
His version is also contradictory. If Smart is simply
a conduit for
the payment of Radon’s liability, how did Smart somehow also
assume joint and several liability for Roydon’s
obligations?
And how did this come about when clause 1.8 of the JBCC agreement,
which was of application to the subcontract, provides
that a
variation of the agreement shall not be effective, unless reduced to
writing and signed by the parties. The supposed assumption
of joint
and several liability of Smart under the subcontract, without
compliance with clause 1.8 is left unexplained.
[20]
What then
of the evidence of Mr Klingbiel and Mr Baloyi. It too is not without
blemish. But there seems little doubt that they agreed
that the
subcontract should be transferred from Radon to Smart to correct
their initial error. That was the approach made to Mr
Gomes at the
critical meeting. And that is what is reflected in the February
letter.
[21]
What
exactly is the correct legal characterisation of this transfer? The
letter of demand of Fasken references the transfer as a
cession and
assignment. That is the language of clause 13 of the JBCC agreement.
The assumption by Smart of Radon’s duties
under the subcontract
would amount to a delegation. And delegation, being a species of
novation, required the agreement not only
of Radon and Smart, but
also Francis TP as the creditor. In addition, clause 13 of the JBCC
agreement required the written consent
of Francis TP for a party to
‘assign or cede his rights or obligations’.
[22]
The
question then is whether Francis TP agreed to the assignment and gave
its written consent to the cession and assignment, as
required by
clause 13 of the JBCC agreement. There was certainly no written
consent at the time of the critical meeting. At the
critical meeting,
Mr Klingbiel’s testimony was that Mr Gomes agreed to the
cession and assignment. Mr Gomes’ evidence
denied this was so.
What is decisive is the Fasken letter of demand sent to Smart, and
what followed. It was sent on the instructions
of Francis TP, after
Radon had explained why it had no liability under the subcontract.
It is a clear acknowledgement, in
writing, of the cession and
assignment of the rights and obligations under the subcontract from
Radon to Smart. It was the foundation
of Francis TP’s claim
against Smart. Francis TP issued a summons in which it claimed
payment from Smart. Radon was joined
as a party ‘insofar as it
may have any interest in the relief sought against the first
defendant’ (that is Smart).
In the particulars of claim,
Francis TP pleads the cession and assignment of the subcontract, and
its acceptance thereof. This
is clear evidence that Francis TP not
only recognised that Radon and Smart had ceded and assigned the
subcontract, but gave its
consent to this, thereby agreeing to the
delegation. How else could it have claimed performance by way of
payment from Smart. Francis
TP also gave its consent in writing,
given the contents of the Fasken letter of demand, and thereby
satisfied the requirements
of clause 13 of the JBCC agreement.
[23]
The
court below declined to entertain the significance of this conduct on
the part of Francis TP on the basis that the consent of
Francis TP
was given after the agreement of Radon and Smart to the cession and
assignment of the subcontract. This was unwarranted.
While clause 13
of the JBCC agreement could be read to require that written consent
is given prior to the cession and assignment,
that is not an
interpretation of commercial practicality. The general proposition
was stated in
Neugarten
[1]
:
it
is not the rule that in all cases where the consent of some person is
a prerequisite to the validity of a transaction,
it must be by way of
prior consent. The written consent may indeed be constitutive of the
assignment, and hence, it was upon the
consent being given that the
assignment came into being. But I see no reason why clause 13 should
not be read to permit of written
consent after the cession and
assignment was agreed. The point of clause 13 is to ensure that the
parties retain reasonable control
over the transfer of rights and
obligations. That object is satisfied by allowing a party to decide
whether to bless the cession
after it has been concluded. In the case
of the assignment, as indicated, consent by the creditor is
constitutive of the assignment.
That consent is not required to be in
writing. But clause 13 does so require. And hence there is no reason
why the assignment should
not have come into being when written
consent was given by Francis TP.
[24]
Finally,
the court below placed some emphasis upon
Bentel
[2]
and the provisions of clause 1.8 of the JBCC agreement that required
a variation or termination of the agreement to be reduced
to writing
and signed by the parties.
Bentel
is
not of application, given the provisions of the JBCC agreement at
issue in this case. Clause 13 specifically regulates the cession
and
assignment of rights and obligations. It requires the consent in
writing of the other party. And, importantly, it stipulates
that this
consent may not be withheld without good reason. This regime balances
the requirement for written consent against the
dictates of
reasonableness. This differs markedly from clause 1.8 which contains
no standard of reasonableness. Clauses 1.8 and
13 cannot be read
cumulatively. For then the standard of reasonableness in clause 13
would be nullified by the absolute requirements
of clause 1.8. Clause
13 must therefore be interpreted as the specific regime of
application to cession and assignment. The court
below fell into
error in reading the JBCC agreement otherwise.
[25]
It follows
that Radon did establish that there was a valid cession and
assignment of the subcontract in favour of Smart. Radon had
no
liability to make payment to Francis TP for the works undertaken
under the subcontract. Radon’s appeal is thus upheld,
the
judgment and order of the court below against Radon must be set
aside, and Francis TP’s claim against Radon must be dismissed
with costs.
The restricted works
[26]
The court
below found in favour of Francis TP and awarded an amount of R
468 301,00 excluding VAT, to Francis TP in respect
of a claim
for restricted works. These works were claimed on the basis that it
was necessary to extend the terrace to instal pipes.
The court below
based its award on the quantification of the expert called by Francis
TP at the trial, Mr Andrin. It held that
there was no reason to think
that Mr Gomes or Mr Andrin would lie about the necessity of this
work.
[27]
It is not
disputed that neither the subcontract, nor the bill of quantities
provided for a claim for restricted works. Mr Gomes
admitted that the
final claim, submitted on 18 July 2016, made no reference to
restricted works. The claim was made in the letter
of demand sent in
November 2017.
[28]
The
question that arises is this. What agreement was struck between Smart
and Francis TP in respect of restricted works? Francis
TP contend
that, in an e mail dated 21 August 2017, Mr Klingbiel requested Mr
Gomes to provide a quantity and rate build-up for
the restricted
work. Mr Gomes sent (indeed resent) the build -up to Messrs Klingbiel
and Baloyi. Mr Baloyi sent a revised claim
build-up. Francis TP rely
upon a passage in the cross-examination of Mr Baloyi in which the
following was put to Mr Baloyi: ‘Your
e mail accepts Mr Gomes’s
proposal. What do you say to that?’; and Mr Baloyi replied, ‘I
agree M ’Lord’.
[29]
The
proposal however formed part of a larger engagement between the
parties. Mr Gomes accepted that the final claim, submitted on
18 July
2016, made no reference to restricted works. How then did the claim
for restricted works come to be made. Mr Gomes explained
that the
restricted claim came about because Smart and Radon had wanted to
claim from Francis TP an amount of R178 000 for
an excavation to
extend the platform. Responsively, it appears, the quotation for
restricted works was made on the basis that it
would be submitted to
the employer for payment. Mr Baloyi expressed doubts that the
employer would pay the claim, and it did not.
Mr Andrin, the expert
who testified for Francis TP, confirmed that the quotation was used
for submission to the employer.
[30]
On this
evidence, there is little to show that the scope of Mr Baloyi’s
acceptance of the claim for restricted works went
beyond agreement to
submit the claim to the employer to see if it would pay the claim.
The evidence does not establish that Mr
Baloyi’s acceptance
went any further than this. And if it did not, then there is no basis
for Francis TP to claim for restricted
works from Smart.
[31]
Francis TP
submitted that the ‘pay-when-paid’ provision of the
subcontract applies only to progress payments, and hence
is not of
application to the claim for restricted works. This submission fails
to engage an insuperable hurdle. Francis TP did
not contend that the
agreement to pay for restricted works constituted a variation to the
subcontract that complied with clause
1.8 of the JBCC agreement.
Absent such compliance, the agreement contended for by Francis TP,
resting upon Mr Baloyi’s acceptance
of the claim, is, in terms
of clause 1.8, of no effect. But, even if the agreement could have
effect outside of the subcontract
(a conclusion that is difficult to
sustain) Francis TP cannot invoke the provisions of the subcontract
to regulate the separate
agreement upon which it seeks to rely.
[32]
For these
reasons, the appeal in respect of the restricted works must be
upheld.
Additional P & G’s
[33]
The court
below awarded an amount of R476 550.00 for additional P&G’s,
being a claim for additional costs. The court
below appeared to
recognise the application of clause 29 to a claim of this kind, but
did not decide upon whether Francis TP’s
claim was barred by a
failure to comply with it. Before us, the parties were at odds as to
whether clauses 29.2.10 read with 29.4
and 29.5 of the JBCC agreement
govern claims for additional payment.
[34]
It is not
necessary to resolve this disagreement. It is common ground that Mr
Baloyi accepted in his testimony that Francis TP should
be paid for
additional P&G costs. Francis TP’s reading of his evidence
is that there was no agreement as to a final amount.
Smart submits
that Mr Baloyi’s evidence was that an amount of R120 000
was agreed. In the relevant passage of Mr Baloyi’s
evidence, Mr
Baloyi states that ‘the R120 000 was agreed separately out
of this meeting’.
[35]
Counsel
for Francis TP asks us to discount this evidence because it began
with a leading question. It is fair to say that this was
so, but thus
prompted, this was Mr Baloyi’s recollection. Mr Gomes’
evidence made no mention of such an agreement.
But that does not
suffice to rebut what Mr Baloyi recalled, not least because Mr Baloyi
was, by so doing, making a concession to
the case that Francis TP
advanced. The court below simply states that the parties did not
agree the final amount. Why that was
so required some treatment of
the evidence as to why Mr Baloyi should be disbelieved. There is
insufficient reason to do so. On
the contrary, Mr Gomes, under cross
examination, accepted the agreement. Accordingly, I find that Smart
is liable to make payment
to Francis TP in the amount of R120 000
in respect of the claim for additional P & G’s. The appeal
is sustained
to the extent that the P&G claim is limited to
R120 000.
Conclusion
[36]
The appeal
of Radon is upheld. The order of the court below against Radon must
be set aside and replaced with an order dismissing
Francis TP’s
claim against Radon. The appeal of Smart must also be upheld. The
order of the court below which included the
claims made by Francis TP
in respect of the restricted works and the additional P & G’s,
as determined by the quantity
surveyor, Mr Andrin, called as an
expert by Francis TP, must be set aside. I have found that Francis TP
did not prove its claim
for restricted work, and succeeds only in
part in respect of its claim for additional P&G’s. As Smart
limited its appeal
to these two claims, the balance of the sum found
by the court below to be owing by Smart to Francis TP stands. These
amounts attract
interest as stipulated in clause 1 of the JBCC
agreement from the date of the letter of demand. Radon has been
successful in its
appeal, and Smart substantially so. They are
entitled to their costs on appeal. However, Smart has submitted a
draft order in which
it recognises that the order to be made against
it, in substitution of the order of the court below, is one in which
Smart pays
Francis TP’s costs of suit, including the qualifying
fees and expenses of Mr Andrin. That appears a fair attribution,
since
Francis TP was required to bring an action against Smart to
claim the amount to which it is entitled. Francis TP was justified in
doing so in the High Court.
[37]
In the
result, the following order is made:
(i)
The appeal of the second appellant is
upheld, with costs.
(ii)
The order of the court below is set aside
and replaced with the following order: ‘the plaintiff’s
claim against the
second defendant is dismissed with costs.’
(iii)
The appeal of the first appellant is
upheld, with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
(iv)
The order of the court below is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
(a) The first defendant
shall pay to the plaintiff an amount of R364 109,37, together
with interest at the rate stipulated
in clause 1 under the definition
of interest of the JBCC 2000 Principal Building Agreement (edition
July 2007) from 23 November
2017 to the date of payment.
(b) The first defendant
shall pay the plaintiff’s costs of suit, including the
qualifying fees and expenses of the quantity
surveyor, Mr Andrin.
DN UNTERHALTER
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division:
Johannesburg
L. WINDELL
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division:
Johannesburg
T SIWENDU
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division:
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL FOR 1
ST
APPELLANT: ADVOCATE C J
HARTZENBERG SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VAN DER MEER AND PARTNERS INC
COUNSEL FOR 2
ND
APPELLANT: ADVOCATE DON MAHON SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TERRY MAHON ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL FOR
RESPONDENT:
ADVOCATES G J NEL SC & C T PICAS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
FASKEN ATTORNEYS
[1]
Neugarten
& others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
1989
(1) SA 797
(A) at 802 F
[2]
Bentel
Associates International (Pty) Ltd & another v Bradford Corner
(Pty) Ltd & another
[2013]
JOL 30165
(GSJ)
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