Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 622South Africa
Juvansu Trading CC v Puma Energy Procurement South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/003038) [2024] ZAGPJHC 622 (9 July 2024)
Headnotes
on 12 September 2019 were to be separated and heard first. [13] In order to understand the separation, it is necessary to consider the pleadings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Juvansu Trading CC v Puma Energy Procurement South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/003038) [2024] ZAGPJHC 622 (9 July 2024)
Juvansu Trading CC v Puma Energy Procurement South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/003038) [2024] ZAGPJHC 622 (9 July 2024)
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sino date 9 July 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-003038
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES
In
the matter between:
JUVANSU
TRADING CC
Plaintiff
/ Applicant / Appellant
and
PUMA
ENERGY PROCUREMENT
First Defendant / Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
PUMA
ENERGY
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY)
Second Defendant / Respondent
LTD
HENDRIK
LOUW N.O
Third Defendant / Respondent
Heard:
17 April 2024
Delivered:
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and
by uploading to
Caselines. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 10:00 am
on 9 July 2024.
JUDGMENT
GREEN,
AJ
[1]
The Applicant applies to review and set
aside an award made by the Third Respondent who sat as an arbitrator
in a dispute between
the Applicant and the First and Second
Respondents.
[2]
The dispute between the parties has its
origin in a Dealer and Supply Agreement (“the Agreement”).
That Agreement is
concluded between the Second Respondent, to whom I
will refer to as “Procurement”, and the Applicant, to
whom I will
refer to as “Juvansu”.
[3]
The Juvansu and the Respondents are engaged
in the fuel supply industry, with Juvansu operating a filling station
and the Respondents
being involved in the supply of fuel to filling
stations.
[4]
On 20 July 2015 the representative of
Juvansu signed the Agreement and it was despatched. When the dispute
between Juvansu and the
Respondents arose, and the Respondents sought
to rely on the arbitration provision contained in the Agreement.
Juvansu took the
view that the Agreement was not valid and operative.
[5]
Juvansu’s contention that the
Agreement was not valid, and operative is based on two grounds.
[5.1]
Firstly, Juvansu says that prior to the arbitration being
commenced it had never seen a copy of the Agreement that had been
signed
by Procurement and on that basis challenged whether the
Agreement had in fact been signed by Procurement and whether the
signatory
was authorised to do so. In this context it bears mention
that the version of the Agreement that was available during the
arbitration
proceedings is signed by a person who is described as
“
C Fourie
” on 28 July 2015.
[5.2] The second
ground on which Juvansu challenged the validity of the Agreement was
that the conditions in clause 2 of the
Agreement had not been
fulfilled. This is relevant because clause 2.2 of the Agreement
provides that the whole of the Agreement
is subject to the suspensive
condition “
that the Sale of the Shares and Claims Agreement
is signed and entered into by the parties to it and that it takes
effect and becomes
unconditional according to its terms.”.
[6]
The
arbitration clause in the Agreement is contained in clause 31.1 and
provides:
## “In the event of
any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or the
breach, termination or invalidity thereof, then
any Party may give
written notice to the other Party to initiate the procedure set out
below (the Dispute Notice).”
“
In the event of
any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or the
breach, termination or invalidity thereof, then
any Party may give
written notice to the other Party to initiate the procedure set out
below (the Dispute Notice).”
##
[7]
Clause 31.3 provides that the parties must
agree the arbitration procedure and failing agreement the UNCITRAL
arbitration rules
will apply.
[8]
The Agreement also provides for the
Association of Arbitrators (Southern Africa) to appoint the
arbitrator. That Association appointed
the Third Respondent as the
arbitrator.
[9]
The parties exchanged pleadings setting out their
respective positions and the arbitration was set down for hearing in
December
2019. At the beginning of the arbitration proceedings the
parties asked the Arbitrator to allow the matter to stand down
whilst they engaged in discussions. Following on those discussions
the Arbitrator was requested to postpone the hearing
sine die
,
and he did so.
[10]
After the postponement of the hearing the
First and Second Respondents, as claimants in the arbitration, gave
notice to amend their
statement of claim. The amendment, shorn of
unnecessary detail, sought to name the existing claim that had been
advanced as Claim
A, and to introduce an alternative Claim B. Claim B
was to the effect that the dispute between Juvansu and Procurement
had been
settled when the matter was stood down during December 2019.
The amendment was objected to by Juvansu, and the Arbitrator was
requested
to rule on the amendment. The point of Juvansu’s
objection was that the Arbitrator lacked jurisdiction to hear Claim
B. The
Arbitrator ruled that the amendment should be allowed.
[11]
On 17 June 2021 the parties agreed to
separate out, for prior determination, certain issues. Given the
relevance of that which was
separated, I deal with it in detail.
[12]
The Separation Agreement provides that
paragraphs 4, 5, 17, 29 – 31 and 44 of the Statement of Claim,
read together with paragraphs
4.2, 18, 19 and 24 of the Statement of
Defence, and paragraphs 2.1.1 and 2.1.2 of the minutes of the second
pre-arbitration meeting
held on 12 September 2019 were to be
separated and heard first.
[13]
In order to understand
the separation, it
is necessary to consider the pleadings.
[13.1] Paragraph 4
of the Statement of Claim alleges the conclusion of the Agreement,
and paragraph 5 of the Statement of
Claim attaches a copy of the
Agreement.
[13.2] Paragraph
4.2 of the Statement of Defence is responsive to paragraphs 4 and 5
of the Statement of Claim. In paragraph
4.2 Juvansu pleaded:
## “The Defendant –
“
The Defendant –
## 4.2.1 has no
knowledge regarding the identity or authority of the signatory who
purported to sign the Agreement on the
First Claimant’s behalf,
the identity, signature and authority of such signatory accordingly
being specifically denied;
4.2.1 has no
knowledge regarding the identity or authority of the signatory who
purported to sign the Agreement on the
First Claimant’s behalf,
the identity, signature and authority of such signatory accordingly
being specifically denied;
## 4.2.2 denies
that all suspensive conditions were fulfilled and/or waived whether
timeously or at all;
4.2.2 denies
that all suspensive conditions were fulfilled and/or waived whether
timeously or at all;
## 4.2.3 in the
premises denies that the Agreement is of any force or effect and puts
the Claimant to the proof thereof.”
4.2.3 in the
premises denies that the Agreement is of any force or effect and puts
the Claimant to the proof thereof.”
##
[13.3] Paragraph 17
of the Statement of Claim alleges that all of the suspensive
conditions in the Agreement were either fulfilled
or waived, and that
the Agreement is extant.
[13.4] Paragraphs
29 to 31 of the Statement of Claim provides that Claim B is pleaded
in the alternative to Claim A, allege
the conclusion of an agreement
in terms of which “
the dispute(s) that formed the subject of
the pleadings in this arbitration as they stood on 2 December 2020,
were fully and finally
settled as between the Claimants and the
Defendant (
“
the Settlement Agreement
”)”,
and paragraph 31 pleads the terms of the Settlement Agreement.
[13.5] Paragraphs
18 and 19 of the amended Statement of Defence are responsive to the
paragraphs 29 to 31 of the Statement
of Claim. Paragraph 29 of the
Statement of Claim is denied the following is pleaded in paragraph 19
of the statement of defence:
“
19.1.
To the extent that an oral agreement (hereinafter referred to as "the
Settlement Agreement") was concluded, whether
in the terms
alleged or at all (all of which are denied) the defendant pleads as
follows:
19.1.1.
The defendant
repeats its plea above in respect of Claim A as if incorporated
herein, and specifically its denial that the Agreement pertaining to
Claim A ("the Agreement") is of any force and effect
19.1.2
to the extent that the Agreement is of no force and effect.
Claim B is not subject to arbitration and the Arbitrator
has no
jurisdiction to determine Claim B
19.1.3.
To the extent that the Agreement is of any force and effect, the
Settlement Agreement amounts to a novation of the Agreement,
with the
result that -
19.1.3.1
Claim B is not subject to arbitration;
19.1.3.2
the Arbitrator has no jurisdiction to determine Claim B.
19.1.4.
Moreover, and to the extent that the Agreement is of any force and
effect, clause 33.2 thereof provides that no variation,
amendment or
consensual cancellation thereof or any provision or term thereof will
be binding or have any force and effect unless
reduced to writing and
signed by or on behalf of the parties.
19.1.5.
If the Settlement Agreement was concluded, whether in the terms
alleged or at all, it constitutes an oral variation, amendment
or
consensual cancellation of the Agreement and of its provisions and
terms, and the Settlement Agreement is accordingly not binding
or of
any force and effect.”
[13.6] Paragraph 24
of the Statement of Defence is responsive to paragraph 44 of the
Statement of Claim and provides:
“
24.1.
The defendant pleads that the allegation to the effect that Claim B
is also a dispute arising out of or relating to
the Agreement, and is
accordingly a dispute subject to arbitration, is not sustainable, as
a matter of law.”
[13.7] In the
pre-arbitration minute of September 2019, the parties agreed that the
arbitrator had to decide:
## “2.1.1
The Defendant denies that all suspensive conditions were fulfilled
and/or waived, having implications on the validity
of the agreement
and the arbitration agreement.”
“
2.1.1
The Defendant denies that all suspensive conditions were fulfilled
and/or waived, having implications on the validity
of the agreement
and the arbitration agreement.”
## 2.1.2
At the hearing of the matter the Arbitrator will be required to make
a finding thereon and the validity of the
agreement, effectively on
his jurisdiction.”
2.1.2
At the hearing of the matter the Arbitrator will be required to make
a finding thereon and the validity of the
agreement, effectively on
his jurisdiction.”
##
[14]
In his Award on the separated issues the
Arbitrator held that the suspensive conditions had been fulfilled and
that the Settlement
Agreement had been concluded, and what the terms
of the Settlement Agreement were.
[15]
The applicant’s review raises the
question of whether the arbitrator had jurisdiction. That issue, as I
understand the applicant’s
pleaded case involved two questions.
[15.1] The first
question is whether the Agreement had been signed by an authorised
representative of Procurement and linked
to that is whether the
suspensive conditions had been fulfilled (“
the Suspensive
Condition Issue
”).
[15.2] The second
question is whether the arbitrator had jurisdiction to determine
issues relating to the Settlement Agreement.
(“
the
Settlement Agreement issue
”).
[16]
I will deal with the two issues in turn.
# The
Suspensive Condition Issue
The
Suspensive Condition Issue
##
[17]
The starting point in unravelling this
issue is the arbitration clause in the Agreement. The interpretation
of the arbitration clause
must be undertaken in the now
well-established manner that considers text, context and purpose, as
a unitary exercise, with the
gravitational pull being towards the
words that were used.
[18]
The arbitration clause allows the
Arbitrator to adjudicate the “
termination”
and “
invalidity”
of the agreement. The adjudication of the termination and invalidity
of the agreement must include the adjudication of the continued
existence of the Agreement and the validity of the Agreement. This in
turn necessarily requires the suspensive condition issue
to be
determined by the Arbitrator.
[19]
My view on the interpretation of the
arbitration clause is consistent with the parties’ subsequent
conduct in agreeing at
the September 2019 pre-arbitration meeting
that the Arbitrator would determine the suspensive condition issue.
[20]
There
is nothing anomalous in the parties agreeing that an arbitrator will
determine the validity of the very agreement that is
the source of
the arbitrator’s jurisdiction. It is simply a question of
giving effect to what the parties agreed. This was
recognised in
North
West
[1]
:
“
It
is in principle possible for the parties to agree that the question
of the validity of their agreement may be determined by arbitration
even though the reference to arbitration is part of the agreement
being questioned. That is suggested in Heyman. Lord Porter said:
'I
think it essential to remember that the question whether a given
dispute comes within the provisions of an arbitration clause
or not
primarily depends upon the terms of the clause itself. If two parties
purport to enter into a contract and a dispute arises
as to whether
they have done so or not, or as to whether the alleged contract is
binding upon them, I see no reason why they should
not submit that
dispute to arbitration. Equally, I see no reason why, if at the time
when they purport to make the contract, they
foresee the possibility
of such a dispute arising, they should not provide in the contract
itself for the submission to arbitration
of a dispute as to whether
the contract ever bound them or continues to do so. They might, for
instance, stipulate that, if a dispute
should arise as to whether
there had been such a fraud, misrepresentation or concealment in the
negotiations between them as to
make a purported contract voidable,
that dispute should be submitted to arbitration. It may require very
clear language to effect
this result, and it may be true to say that
such a contract is really collateral to the agreement supposed to
have been made, but
I do not see why it should not be done.'
”
[2]
[21]
I find that the Arbitrator had the power to
determine whether the suspensive conditions had been fulfilled, and
that there is no
basis to set aside the Award on the basis that the
Arbitrator exceeded his jurisdiction in deciding this issue.
[22]
In addition, Juvansu has argued that the
arbitrator erred in finding that the Agreement was valid. This
criticism is, on my reading,
founded on Juvansu’s view that the
Arbitrator erred in his assessment of the evidence that was presented
to prove the fulfilment,
or waiver, of the suspensive conditions. An
error of the type suggested by Juvansu does not found a ground to
review the Award.
[23]
It follows that the Award declaring that
the Agreement was valid and binding following the fulfilment of the
suspensive conditions
is an issue that fell within the Arbitrator’s
jurisdiction and there is no basis to interfere with that finding.
Accordingly,
the Suspensive condition issue must be decided against
the Applicant.
The Settlement Agreement
Issue
[24]
Claim B alleges that Claim A was
compromised by the Settlement Agreement. Juvansu denies that Claim A
was compromised by the Settlement
Agreement.
[25]
To decide this issue, it is necessary to
locate where the Settlement Agreement fits into the scheme of the
dispute.
[26]
Claim
B is an oral agreement that does not have an arbitration clause. It
follows that the Arbitrator could not issue an award to
enforce the
Settlement Agreement. The Respondent’s accepted this in their
heads of argument and said that it would be enforced
in court
proceedings.
[3]
[27]
The Settlement Agreement does not stand
alone but stands as a compromise of Claim A. It follows that in order
to decide if Claim
A has been compromised a decision on the existence
of the Settlement Agreement has to be made. That is a decision for
the purpose
of dealing with Claim A and not a decision for the
purpose of enforcing the Settlement Agreement. Once this distinction
is recognised
the Arbitrator’s findings in respect of the
Settlement Agreement are put into their correct context, and it is
clear he did
not deal with the Settlement Agreement for the purpose
of enforcing the Settlement Agreement.
[28]
The
need to deal with something that is related to an arbitral dispute in
order to decide the dispute being arbitrated is not novel.
In
Aveng
[4]
Wallis J (as he was) in a slightly different context said:
“
I
can discern no sound commercial reason why Aveng and Midros should
have agreed to submit disagreements concerning the quality
of Aveng’s
work and its entitlement to be paid to arbitration, where those
disagreements arose on completion of the contract
works, but would
exclude an arbitrator from considering the self-same issues when they
arose from discussions between the parties
in a bid to resolve the
initial disagreements between them. The source of the disagreements
is the rights and obligations of the
parties under the agreement, and
the differences between them are disagreements arising out of the
agreement. All of them accordingly
are disagreements falling within
the terms of the arbitration clause.”
[5]
[29]
I agree with what was said in
Aveng
.
In this matter it would lead to an absurd result if the Arbitrator
were prohibited from considering the Settlement Agreement where
that
is the agreement that is alleged to have compromised the dispute that
is the subject of the Arbitration, but only for the
purpose of
determining that which is subject to the arbitration.
[30]
In
its heads of argument Juvansu articulated five complaints against the
Award in respect of the Settlement Agreement Issue.
[6]
The complaints are:
[30.1]
The
arbitrator did not find that he had no jurisdiction to determine
Claim B.
This begs the question whether the arbitrator found that
he had jurisdiction to determine Claim B. On my reading of the Award
the
Arbitrator made no such finding, and to the extent that he dealt
with Claim B he did so in the context of deciding whether the
Settlement Agreement had been concluded for the purpose of issuing an
award on Claim A
[30.2]
The
Arbitrator failed to make any determination on the issue whether he
had jurisdiction to determine Claim B, with reference to
the
allegations in paragraph 19.1.3 of Juvansu’s statement of
defence – these allegations were to the effect that the
settlement agreement, if concluded, would amount to a novation of the
Juvansu Agreement, resulting in the Arbitrator not having
jurisdiction to determine Claim B.
It is correct that the
Settlement Agreement is a compromise of the Agreement, but what
Juvansu misses in raising this complaint
is that it denied the
conclusion of the Settlement Agreement. There was therefore a dispute
arising from the Agreement, and that
dispute was whether the
Agreement dispute had been compromised by the Settlement Agreement.
The Agreement dispute was something
for the Arbitrator to determine.
Juvansu cannot at the same time deny the existence of the Settlement
Agreement and thus contend
the Agreement dispute remains
un-compromised, and at the same time contend that the Agreement has
been novated by compromise so
that the Arbitrator has no
jurisdiction.
[30.3]
The
Arbitrator erred by failing to make any determination of the issue
whether Claim B is a dispute arising out of or relating to
the
Juvansu Agreement, and is accordingly subject to arbitration, with
reference to the respondents’ case pleaded in paragraph
44 of
the statement of claim, read with paragraph 24 of Juvansu’s
statement of defence.
This formulation of the complaint sets up a
strawman argument. The Arbitrator did not have to decide if the
Settlement Agreement
arose out of the Agreement. What the Arbitrator
had to decide was the dispute relating to the Agreement, and that
dispute was whether
Claim A based on the Agreement had been
compromised by the Settlement Agreement.
[30.4]
The
Arbitrator erred by declaring that the disputes between Juvansu and
the respondents, as they existed in the arbitration proceedings
as at
December 2019, were fully and finally settled by way of an oral
settlement agreement, entered into between Juvansu and Puma
Energy on
2 December 2019.
It is not clear why this is suggested to be an
error. The Arbitrator was required to make a finding on the Agreement
and whether
it had been compromised. He did that and cannot be
faulted for doing so.
[30.5]
Finally,
the Arbitrator erred by determining the terms of the alleged
settlement agreement.
To decide whether a Settlement Agreement
had been concluded the Arbitrator was of necessity required to
consider the terms of the
Settlement Agreement to decide whether
those terms had been agreed to for the purpose of compromising the
dispute arising from
the Agreement. I cannot see how the Arbitrator
could have decided whether the Settlement Agreement had been
concluded, and whether
it compromised the dispute arising out of the
Agreement without deciding what the terms of the Settlement Agreement
were. This
is something quite different to the Arbitrator deciding
the terms of the Settlement Agreement for the purpose of enforcing
the
Settlement Agreement.
[31]
The arbitrator was, on my reading of his
Award, mindful of the distinction between determining the terms of
the Settlement Agreement
for the purpose of deciding the dispute
arising from the Agreement and determining the terms of the
Settlement Agreement for the
purpose of enforcing those terms. It is
for this reason that the Arbitrator made no decision on substantive
relief flowing from
the Settlement Agreement.
[32]
It follows that the Settlement Agreement
issue must be decided against Juvansu.
[33]
There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result. The First and Second Respondents employed two
counsel and were in my
view justified in doing so. The issues in the
matter are of the type and complexity to justify that Counsel’s
costs should
be awarded on scale C.
[34]
For the reasons set out above I make the
following order:
“
The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel to be taxed on scale C.”
I
GREEN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Appearances
For
the Applicant: H M Viljoen instructed by Hay &
Scott Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondent: AJ Daniels SC and
CT Vetter instructed Webber Wentzel
Date
of hearing: 17 April 2024
Date
of judgment: 9 July 2024
[1]
North
East Finance (Pty) Ltd v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd 2013 (5)
SA 1 (SCA)
[2]
At
para 16.
[3]
At
para 47.
[4]
Aveng
(Africa) Ltd (formerly known as Grinaker LTA) t/a Grinaker-LTA
Building East v Midros Investments (Pty) Ltd 2011 (3) SA
631 (KZD)
[5]
At para 15.
[6]
Heads
of Argument para 76.
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