Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 540South Africa
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v ABSA Bank Ltd and Another (2023/028000) [2024] ZAGPJHC 540 (6 June 2024)
Headnotes
in Loomcraft Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another (Loomcraft) [3] and numerous cases that followed it, a demand guarantee is akin to an irrevocable letter of credit, which establishes a contractual
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v ABSA Bank Ltd and Another (2023/028000) [2024] ZAGPJHC 540 (6 June 2024)
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v ABSA Bank Ltd and Another (2023/028000) [2024] ZAGPJHC 540 (6 June 2024)
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sino date 6 June 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023/028000
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
6
June 2024
In
the matter between:
EXXARO
COAL MPUMALANGA (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ABSA
BANK
LTD
Respondent
TDS
PROJECTS CONSTRUCTION AND
Intervening party
NEWRAK
MINING JV (PTY) LTD
JUDGMENT
FISHER J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by
TDS Projects
and Newrak Mining JV (Pty) Ltd (TDS) to join in the main application
in terms of rule 12.
[2]
The main application involves a claim by
Exxaro Coal Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd (Exxaro) against the respondent,
ABSA Bank Ltd (ABSA)
in terms of an on- demand guarantee issued by
ABSA
on the instruction of and behalf of TDS as security
in terms of a building contract and underwritten by Hollard Insurance
Company Ltd (Hollard)
[3]
The issues in the main application are relatively straightforward as
far as the well-entrenched legal principles pertaining
to on-demand
guarantees are concerned.
[4]
This intervention application represents an attempt to create a case
which allows for a departure from these principles.
These principles
are famously impervious to such a departure other than in the case of
fraud.
Test to be met for
intervention
[5]
The test is
whether a party has a legal interest in the subject-matter which may
be affected prejudicially by the judgment of the
court in the
proceedings concerned.
[1]
[6]
It is not
every interest in a dispute which will entitle a party to join or be
joined in legal proceedings. It is not enough if
a person simply has
an interest in a finding or in certain reasons for an order. The
interest must be a legal interest: that is
an interest in the order
or the outcome of the litigation.
[2]
Facts
[7]
On 12 July 2018, Exxaro and TDS
concluded a written agreement for the construction of the mechanical
and electrical plant, civil,
building and engineering works on a
project involving Exxaro's Matla Coal Mine (the construction
contract).
[8]
TDS procured the performance guarantee
in issue as security for thefulfilment of its obligations in the
amount of R32 082 012.90,
as required by the construction contract.
The guarantee was issued by ABSA subject to the following material
terms:
a.
the guaranteed amount would be paid to
Exxaro on receipt by ABSA of a written demand stating that such an
amount was due and payable;
b.
written demands would be signed by a
person who warranted that he/she was duly authorised to do so;
c.
the guarantee would expire on 19 June
2020 (the expiry date) and any claim and statement would have to be
received by ABSA before
the expiry date; and
d.
after the expiry date, the guarantee
would lapse and any statement received thereafter would be
ineffective.
[9]
On 9 June 2020 Exxaro sent a letter to
TDS terminating the construction contract with immediate effect on
the basis that TDS had
committed breaches thereof which it had failed
to remedy. TDS denies having committed those breaches. Facts relating
to these alleged
breaches are not relevant to this intervention
application or the main application.
[10]
On 10 June 2020 Exxaro sought to invoke
its rights under the guarantee by sending a demand to ABSA claiming
that the guaranteed
amount had become payable as a result of TDS's
failure to perform in terms of the construction contract (the first
demand).
[11]
ABSA responded with the advice to Exxaro
that the demand was 'deemed unfit for processing' by ABSA on various
bases which I need
not go into. This advice was followed by a letter
from Exxaro suspending the first demand.
[12]
On 19 June 2020 Exxaro sent another
letter to ABSA retracting the suspension and claiming a lesser amount
of R22 165 055.66 (the
second demand). Save for this lesser amount
the second demand was the same as the first.
[13]
On 25 June 2020 TDS applied to this
court for an interim order interdicting Exxaro from demanding, and
ABSA from making, payment
of any amount under the guarantee pending
determination of relief sought in Part B of that interdictory
application.
[14]
In Part B, TDS sought an order declaring
that the demands made by Exxaro for payment of the guarantee were
invalid and a final interdict
preventing ABSA from making payment of
any amount under the guarantee.
[15]
Exxaro opposed the application and
lodged a counter- application to compel TDS to provide a new or
revised guarantee on the basis
of an alleged agreement TDS had
allegedly reneged on.
[16]
The parties ultimately agreed on
interim relief and this court was called upon to determine Part
B of the application.
Although ABSA abided the court's decision, it
filed an affidavit to state its position.
[17]
The grounds for the interdict were as
follows. TDS alleged that the first and second demands were
fraudulently made and that it
had a clear right to prevent Exxaro
from unlawfully benefiting under the guarantee. It further alleged
that the demands did not
comply with the terms of the guarantee in
that they were not signed by a person warranting that they had
authority to do so; they
failed to state that the amount claimed was
due and payable; and they did not indicate the respects in which TDS
had breached the
contract. As such TDS argued that ABSA was not
legally obliged to honour the guarantee.
Issues
[18]
TDS claims that it has the type of interest necessary to allow
joinder in the main application on the following two grounds:
a. First, that
there is a concrete financial interest which exists in a deed of
indemnity and consequent deposit provided
by TDS directly to Hollard;
b. Second, that it
wishes to join in order to raise fraud or at least unconscionable
conduct on the part of Exxaro.
[19]
I will deal successively with these grounds.
The
financial interest
[20]
As a condition precedent for the issuance of the Hollard
Guarantee and to secure the Absa guarantee TDS deposited the sum of
R4,812,301.94
against which Hollard would be entitled realize the
entire amount or such portion thereof as may be necessary to
discharge TDS's
liability to Hollard at any time. Hollard will not
release the deposit to TDS until Absa releases Hollard from its
obligations
to ABSA.
[21]
The high watermark of TDS’s application is that it has
substantial rights under the deed of deposit and the deed of
indemnity which may be affected by the main application and that it
seeks to protect such rights by a presence in the intervention
application.
[22]
TDS’s position vis-à-vis Hollard does not accord
to TDS the necessary interest. In the main application Exxaro seeks
to enforce the terms of the guarantee against ABSA. Such an order
would only be enforceable against ABSA. By virtue of the autonomous
nature of the guarantee TDS has no legal interest in the outcome of
the main application.
[23]
The interest that TDS contends for clearly lies in the other
commercial arrangements that TDS, Hollard and ABSA have voluntarily
put in place. Arising out of these arrangements TDS retains
its
ordinary contractual remedy against ABSA should it pay under the
guarantee when it is not legally entitled to do so. This remedy
is a
complete defence to any claim by ABSA founded on the guarantee.
[24]
There is no basis for an intervention for these reasons.
[25]
I did not understand Mr van Tonder SC to press this ground with any
vigour, but it was not specifically abandoned so
I have dealt with
it.
The
fraud/unconscionable behaviour
[26]
This was the main basis raised for the joinder.
[27]
The
performance guarantee issued by ABSA is a demand guarantee. As was
held in
Loomcraft
Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another (Loomcraft)
[3]
and numerous cases that followed it, a demand guarantee is akin to an
irrevocable letter of credit, which establishes a contractual
obligation on the part of the bank to pay the beneficiary on the
occurrence of a specified event, and is wholly independent of
the
underlying contract. In construction agreements such guarantees are
habitually required by employers before they will enter
into an
agreement with a contractor. It is not disputed that this security
was a sine qua non of the contractual relationship
between
Exxaro and TDS.
[28]
The
importance of allowing financial institutions to honour their
obligations under irrevocable credits without judicial interference,
was stressed in
Loomcraft
,
where it was stated that an interdict to restrain a bank from paying
under a letter of credit would not be granted save in the
most
exceptional cases.
[4]
[29]
The device of the guarantee is neat: provided the demand is made on
the terms provided in the guarantee instrument, the
bank that has
issued the instrument must pay in accordance with its tenor. There is
no resort had by the bank to any dispute under
the contract it
secures. Indeed, the very purpose of the guarantee is to avoid
embroilment in these contractual disputes which
have the potential
leave an employer under a construction contract with no redress.
[30]
The
contractor in the position of TDS has its
ordinary contractual remedy against the bank should it fail to honour
the guarantee in
accordance with its terms.
If ABSA were
to honour the guarantee when the demand to do so did not comply with
the terms of the guarantee (as is squarely raised
by ABSA in the main
application) TDS would have a complete defence to a claim by ABSA
based on its having done so.
[31]
The only basis on which any liability of TDS might arise, whether to
ABSA or any other party, would be if ABSA were lawfully
obliged to
honour the guarantee. Thus, non-compliance with the terms of the
guarantee by Exxaro in making its demand does not affect
the rights
of TDS. Neither will payment of the guarantee by ABSA result in a
violation of a right of TDS.
[32]
It is conceded by Mr van Tonder SC on behalf of TDS that the only way
that his client can be let in to the main action
is if there is clear
evidence of fraud.
[33]
The fraud contended for in the founding affidavit in this application
is that Exxaro’s claim in the first demand
was for an amount
which was in excess of the amount which it was entitled to claim
under the guarantee. This inflated claim allegedly
came about in the
following circumstances. The terms of the guarantee provided
that payment thereunder was subject to a maximum
of 10% of the
contract price. The contract price was initially R320,820,128.54 but
it was subsequently reduced to R220,270,897.63.
Hence any amount due
in terms of the guarantee could not exceed the sum of R22,165,055.66.
The first demand was based on the pre-amended
contract price. This
failure to adjust for the amended price allegedly constituted a
deliberate demand by Exxaro for payment of
an amount which was
self-evidently not due. This was later corrected in the second demand
and the fact of such correction is indicative
of fraud in the first
demand. Thus, it is argued that TDS is entitled to join for the
purposes of raising this fraud.
[34]
To my mind, these allegations do not meet the threshold of
establishing even prima facie the clear case of fraud such
as would
be necessary to give TDS any basis to raise the fraud exception to
the autonomy of the guarantee.
[35]
The allegations of dishonesty are dealt with adequately in the main
application by Exxarro’s Ms Corina Koorsen
who made the demands
in the context of the negotiations and discussions leading up to the
making of the second demand on the guarantee’s
expiry date.
[36]
The heads of argument filed by TDS seem to accept, at least in the
alternative, that these allegations fall short of
a case for fraud.
The heads make the suggestion that it would be enough if only
unconscionable behaviour were shown. Mr van
Tonder wisely did
not press this more expansive approach in oral argument.
Costs
[37]
Exxaro seeks costs on a punitive scale. The argument is that these
proceedings are abusive. A main contention is that
the question of
fraud was raised and decided against TDS in the SCA.
[38]
Further heads were filed in this regard – Exxaro arguing that
the existence of fraud had been decided and TDS arguing
that the
fraud aspect was not actually dealt with by the SCA as the case was
decided on a lack of proof of the interdictory elements
and not an
absence of fraud.
[39]
In light of the conclusion to which I have come - i.e. that the right
to be joined to raise the fraud exception is not,
in any event, made
out in the founding affidavit it is not necessary for me to resolve
this res judicata/estoppel argument.
[40]
The real question to be asked is whether it was, given the strict
legal parameters operative in relation to on-demand
guarantees, ever
viable to raise so flimsy an attempt at garnering a basis for
intervention into a straightforward dispute on the
guarantee.
[41]
I agree with Mr Bothma SC that the application to join is frivolous.
TDS, having been involved in similar questions which
have taken the
matter all the way to the SCA should, in my view, have been more
circumspect.
Conclusion
[42]
An interest which rests on the ability and entitlement to make out
the fraud exception is not established and neither
is any other
direct and substantial interest established.
[43]
Order
The application to
intervene is dismissed with costs such costs to include the costs of
two counsel where employed and such costs
to be on the scale as
between attorney and client.
FISHER
J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This Judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 06 June 2024.
Heard:
29 April 2024
Delivered:
06 June
2024
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. H.C. Bothma SC.
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
DLA PIPER SOUTH AFRICA (RF) INC
Respondent's
Counsel:
Adv. G.W. Amm SC
Adv.
L. Peter
Respondent
Attorneys:
LOWNDES DLAMINI ATTORNEYS
[1]
Gordon
v Department of Health, Kwazulu-
Natal
(2009 (6) SA 522
(SCA), at para 9.
[2]
Lebea
v Menye and Another
[2022] ZACC 40
, at para 30.
[3]
Loomcraft
Fabrics CC v Nedbank Ltd and Another
[1995] ZASCA 127
;
[1996]
1 All SA 51
(A);
1996 (1) SA 812
(A) at 815G- J;
Lombard
Insurance Co Ltd v Landmark Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2010
(2) SA 86
(SCA) para 20;
Coface
South Africa Insurance Co Ltd v East London Own Haven t/a Own Haven
Housing Association
2014
(2) SA 382
(SCA) paras 10-13.
[4]
Loomcraft
fn
2 above at 816D-H.
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