Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 396South Africa
Agile Capital Holdings (Pty) Ltd v 68 Melville Road Properties (Pty) Ltd (A5048/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 396 (23 April 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Agile Capital Holdings (Pty) Ltd v 68 Melville Road Properties (Pty) Ltd (A5048/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 396 (23 April 2024)
Agile Capital Holdings (Pty) Ltd v 68 Melville Road Properties (Pty) Ltd (A5048/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 396 (23 April 2024)
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sino date 23 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appeal
Case No: A5048/2022
Court
a quo Case No: 27208/2020
Reportable:
No
Interest
to other Judges: No
23
April 2024
In
the matter between:
Agile
Capital Holdings (Pty) Ltd
Appellant
(Respondent in Court a
quo)
And
68
Melville Road Properties (Pty) L
Respondent
(Applicant in Court a
quo)
JUDGMENT
Vally,
J
Introduction
[1]
The respondent in this appeal instituted ten separate claims, all
sounding in money against ten different respondents
in the court
a
quo
. The appellant was one of the respondents in those cases, and
it was agreed that the case against it would be used as a proxy for
the other cases as the issues were identical in all of the cases. The
court
a quo
(Adams J) decided the matter in favour of the
respondent. This is an appeal against that order. Leave to appeal was
granted by
the court
a quo
.
[2]
The respondent is a property developer. It procured certain land for
purposes of developing it as a mixed use commercial
structure. It
attended to all the necessities required to commence with the
development. It chose to adopt a co-development business
model to
complete the development. The model involved concluding contracts
with parties who purchased one or more of the developed
units. The
appellant was one such party. Together with the other parties it
would acquire sectional title ownership of the property
it purchased.
The provisions of the
Sectional Titles Act, 95 of 1986
applied to the
entire development. The purchasers were investors in the development
as well as owners of the property they purchased.
Each of them became
a shareholder –
pro rata
to the value of their
respective investment - in a development company. To this end the
parties concluded two agreements: a sale
agreement and a
shareholders’ agreement.
[3]
The respondent’s case hinged entirely on the sale agreement.
The sale agreement was very different from one that
is normally
concluded between purchasers and sellers of immovable property. As
the purchasers were also investors in the development,
they assumed
some of the risk associated with the construction of the development.
The parties agreed that the purchase price specified
at the time of
contracting would not be the final one. It would only be determined
once the construction of the development was
finalised. They agreed
on a formula to be applied to each purchase. By application of the
formula the purchase price would be adjusted
either upwards or
downwards. The interpretation and application of the clause in the
sale agreement dealing with the adjustment
of the purchase price
(clause 4) became the central focus of the litigation. Clause 4
reads:
“
4
Adjustment to the Purchase Price
4.1
It is recorded that the purchase price of the property shall,
after registration of transfer, be adjusted to the amount
equal to
the final participation quota allocated to the section (as recorded
on the sectional title plan of the Scheme once approved
of by the
Surveyor General) multiplied by the Total Base Development Cost after
it has been finalised in terms of paragraph 4.3
hereof.
4.2
The amount referred to in the paragraph 1.5 of the Contract of
Sale is therefore the actual purchase price of the property,
which
has been calculated by multiplying the anticipated Total Base
Development Cost (as referred to in Annexure “E”
hereto)
by the anticipated participation quota if the Section (as referred to
in Annexure “PQ” hereto).
4.3
Once registration of transfer has occurred and once the Total
Base Development Cost has been finalised by the Quantity
Surveyor
(which shall occur as soon as possible after the Scheme is complete)
the purchase price shall be adjusted to the amount
as finally
calculated in accordance with the aforesaid formula and where the
purchase price of the Property is less than the amount
reflected in
Clause 1.5, the balance owing to the Purchaser shall be
refunded through the Purchaser’s shareholding
in the Seller’s
entity.
4.4
If there is any dispute as to what the Total Base Development
Cost of the property is, the decision of the Quantity Surveyor
(acting in his capacity as an expert and not an arbiter) shall be
final and binding on the parties.”
[4]
A quantity surveyor, DHP Quantity Surveyors (DHP), determined the
Total Base Development Cost on 14 September 2020, which
is presented
in a single page document, annexed to the founding affidavit as
Annexure ‘FA6’ (FA6). The amount
determined was
higher than the actual price referred to in sub-clause 4.2. In
consequence, the appellant became liable for the
difference between
the actual price and the Total Base Development Cost. The respondent
sought payment from the appellant for the
difference. The appellant
refused to pay causing the respondent to approach the court
a quo
for relief. The matter was called in the court
a quo
on 24
November 2021. The appellant raised a number of defences, some of a
more technical nature and others on the merits of the
claim. The
court
a quo
found that all of its defences were without merit
and ordered it to pay the respondent the amount sought.
[5]
In this appeal the appellant restricts its case to two issues: (i)
the admissibility of FA6; and (ii) the lack of jurisdiction
of the
court to deal with the issue.
The
admissibility of FA6
[6]
FA6 is typed on a letterhead of DHP. It is made up of four columns –
a description of the cost item, the fixed base
costs of the item, the
final base costs of the item and a comments column. These are
appropriately filled and the fixed base costs
and final base costs
are eventually summed-up. Thereafter a basic arithmetical calculation
is undertaken to establish the fixed
base development costs and final
base development costs per square metre. The final calculated amount,
Total Base Development Cost,
is used to adjust the purchase price.
[7]
There is no indication on the document as to who the author of the
document is. Nor is there a confirmatory affidavit
from anyone from
DHP confirming the authenticity of the document or the veracity of
its contents. The failure to file a confirmatory
affidavit from the
author of the FA6 was raised in the answering affidavit. In reply,
the respondent said that it was not necessary
for it to file a
confirmatory affidavit, as the ‘determination speaks for
itself, and its contents do not need to be confirmed.
[The
appellant’s] allegations in this regard are tenuous, at best.’
[8]
The lack of a confirmatory affidavit, according to the appellant, is
fatal to the case of the respondent.
[9]
The court
a
quo
found that the appellant challenged only the admissibility of FA6.
The court
a
quo
understood this to mean that the veracity of the contents was not in
dispute. The court
a
quo
agreed with the submission that the document ‘speaks for
itself.’ It accordingly found no merit to the appellant’s
claim that the document was inadmissible. This, the appellant
says, constitutes a misdirection. It is so because a challenge
to the
admissibility of a document is ‘by necessary implication’
a challenge to the veracity of its contents. In my
view, both the
court
a
quo
and
the appellant are wrong. The fact that the appellant did not
challenge the veracity of the contents does not automatically
result
in the document being admitted as evidence, as the court
a
quo
found. At the same time, the fact that its admissibility is
challenged does not automatically mean that the veracity of its
contents
is also challenged. The latter challenge must be raised
upfront, and the basis of the challenge must be carefully and
comprehensively
set out so that the respondent can (i) know what case
it has to make or meet and (ii) make or meet the case, albeit in
reply
[1]
, as required. As the
veracity was not challenged, the only controversy the court need
concern itself with is its admissibility.
[10]
FA6 is hearsay evidence: its value in proving the calculation of the
Total Base Development Costs (probative value) depends
on the author
of FA6 and not on the deponent to the founding affidavit. In terms of
s 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45
of 1988 (Act) it can
only be admitted into evidence if it falls within one or more of the
recognised grounds of admissibility.
The provisions of the section
read:
“
3.
Hearsay evidence
(1) Subject to
the provisions of any other law, hearsay evidence shall not be
admitted as evidence at criminal or civil proceedings,
unless—
(a)
each party against whom the evidence
is to be adduced agrees to the admission thereof as evidence at such
proceedings;
(b)
the person upon whose credibility
the probative value of such evidence depends, himself testifies at
such proceedings; or
(c)
the court, having regard to—
(i)
the nature of the proceedings;
(ii)
the nature of the evidence;
(iii)
the purpose for which the evidence
is tendered;
(iv)
the probative value of the evidence;
(v)
the reason why the evidence is not
given by the person upon whose credibility the probative value of
such evidence depends;
(vi)
any prejudice to a party which the
admission of such evidence might entail; and
(vii)
any other factor which should in the
opinion of the court be taken into account, is of the opinion that
such evidence should be
admitted in the interests of justice.
(2) The
provisions of subsection (1) shall not render admissible any evidence
which is inadmissible on any ground other than
that such evidence is
hearsay evidence.”
[11]
In its oral submissions, the respondent claimed that as the reason
for including FA6 was simply to demonstrate that the
determination of
the Total Base Development Costs was undertaken as per the sale
agreement (the appellant challenged the determination
on the ground
that it was not undertaken by the Quantity Surveyor identified in the
sale agreement, but abandoned that challenge),
there is no need for a
confirmatory affidavit. Again, this is wrong. Firstly, for the
reason already mentioned, the author
of FA6 needs to confirm that the
determination was undertaken and, secondly, it was not introduced
merely to show that the determination
was undertaken, but to prove
that the Total Base Development Cost was higher than the actual
purchase price, thus justifying its
monetary claim.
[12]
However, it is within the power of the court in terms of subsection
3(1)(c) to admit the evidence in the interests of
justice. The
factors referred to in subsections (3)(1)(i),(ii),(iii) and (iv) of
the Act which require a court’s attention
are straightforward
in this case. These were motion proceedings dealing with the
implementation of clause 4 of the sale agreement,
which
implementation really involved no more than an arithmetical
calculation of the costs of items and services incurred in the
course
of construction of the development. The appellant accepted the
validity of the clause. By not challenging the veracity of
the
contents it accepted that the costs were incurred (this was
challenged in the founding affidavit, but abandoned later), the
amounts thereof and the consequent arithmetical calculation. And, by
not challenging the veracity of the contents, the appellant
cannot
claim to be prejudiced by its admission, thus the requirement set out
in subsection 3(1)(c)(vi) is also unproblematic. The
reason as to why
the evidence is not given by the person upon whose credibility the
probative value depends - the requirement set
out in subsection
3(1)(c)(v) – is not provided. The court is kept completely in
the dark about this. While this should, in
my view, tilt the scale in
favour of refusing admission, it does not do so in this case, because
the probative value of FA6 is
not an issue. Accordingly, it would be
in the interest of justice to admit it into evidence.
[13]
For the first time, in this court, the appellant, by its
supplementary heads of argument, raised the issue of FA6 constituting
opinion evidence which fails to comply with the requirements for the
admission of expert evidence, such as identifying who the
expert is
and what the expert’s qualifications are. FA6 was compiled by a
person or persons from DHP. DHP is a firm of quantity
surveyors. It
is assumed that it is compiled by some person(s) who is/are qualified
quantity surveyors(s). A scrutiny of FA6 does
not allow for any
conclusion as to whether the expertise of a quantity surveyor(s) was
essential to, and utilised in, the compilation
of it. It is simply a
listing of items and the amounts expended for those items during the
construction process. Hence, it would
be incorrect for any court to
draw a conclusion that FA6 constitutes expert evidence. Thus, the
challenge that it constitutes inadmissible
expert evidence cannot
hold.
[14]
In any event, as this issue was not raised in the court
a quo
,
it would be inappropriate for this court to entertain it on appeal.
It is not simply a ‘law point’ which requires
no factual
evidence. Had it been raised properly in the answering affidavit it
could have been dealt with by the respondent. The
appellant cannot
now be allowed, at this very late stage, to ambush the respondent. In
any event, if the appellant had no problem
with the veracity of the
contents, it matters not as to whether the evidence is that of an
expert or not.
[15]
On this holding, it is necessary to consider the second challenge of
the appellant, the lack of jurisdiction.
The
lack of jurisdiction
[16]
This issue is raised as ‘the expert determination point.’
The appellant contends that clause 4.4 provides
that the quantity
surveyor will make a determination on a dispute once it has arisen.
Clause 4.4 is binding on the parties and
should be implemented. This
dispute should be referred to the quantity surveyor and not be
adjudicated by the court.
[17]
That sub-clause 4.4 is binding and operative is not denied by the
respondent. The pertinent question is whether it is
applicable in
this case. The appellant refers to the role of the quantity surveyor
in making a determination on a dispute, but
that is not what the
sub-clause says. It does not refer to, nor is it applicable to, any
dispute, but rather to a specific dispute.
It has to be a dispute as
to ‘what the Total Base Development Cost of the property is’.
A dispute to that effect clearly
falls within the domain of the
quantity surveyor. However, the dispute between the parties is not
about what that particular cost
is. The appellant raised numerous
defences all of which it abandoned save for the admissibility of FA6
and the jurisdiction of
the court. What it did not raise is a dispute
about ‘what the Total Base Development Cost is’. That, as
mentioned above,
involved no more than an arithmetical calculation,
which is presented in the form of FA6. As the correctness thereof was
not an
issue, there can be no dispute that falls within the exclusive
domain of the quantity surveyor. In addition, the appellant raised
many defences in its answering affidavit. The Total Base Development
Cost of the project is not one of them. These defences can
only be
determined by the High Court. But, even if the appellant had raised
it as one of the issues to be determined by the court,
the
jurisdiction of the court would not have been ousted. In that case,
as it was only one of the issues, it would be correct for
the court
to determine all the issues, including the one about what the Total
Base Development Cost is, once and for all. It would
not make sense
to allow the court to determine all the other issues, such as, for
example, the admissibility of FA6, and leave
the issue of what the
Total Base Development Cost is for the quantity surveyor. A splitting
of the jurisdictions would not be prudent.
The court which always
retains jurisdiction in contractual disputes would be the correct
forum to determine all of the disputes
and bring finality to the
matter.
Costs
[18]
Both parties agree costs should follow the result. The parties had
contractually agreed that costs should be on an attorney
and client
scale.
Order
[19]
The following order is made:
(1) The
appeal is dismissed.
(2)
The appellant is to pay the costs of the appeal, including the costs
of two counsel where two counsel were employed and
which costs are to
be taxed on an attorney and client scale.
B. VALLY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
I agree,
R. STRYDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
I agree,
B. FORD
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
13 March 2024
Delivered
on:
23 April 2024
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
L. Morrison SC
with T. Njokwana
(Initial Heads of
Argument were compiled by A. J. Troskie
SC and supplementary
Heads of Argument were compiled
by L. Morrison SC and T.
Njokwana)
Instructed
by:
Claassen Incorporated
For
the Respondent: D. Mahon
with J. Brewer
Instructed
by:
Boshoff Incorporated
[
1]
The principle against making out a case in reply would not
necessarily apply if the respondent, once informed of the exact
challenge to the veracity of its contents, can show that it was
entitled to reasonably assume that the veracity would not be
challenged. There are many possible reasons as to why this
assumption may be reasonable. They are, of course, not relevant for
our present purposes.
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