Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 753South Africa
Top Quartile PMSA (Pty) Ltd v Sibanye Gold Limited (2017/43073) [2024] ZAGPJHC 753 (25 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 July 2024
Headnotes
before me on 27 June 2019, the defendant recorded that it was participating under protest, that it had objected to the referral to the Commercial Court and that it would object to any prejudice it suffered as a result of being denied any right under the Uniform Rules of Court.
Judgment
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## Top Quartile PMSA (Pty) Ltd v Sibanye Gold Limited (2017/43073) [2024] ZAGPJHC 753 (25 July 2024)
Top Quartile PMSA (Pty) Ltd v Sibanye Gold Limited (2017/43073) [2024] ZAGPJHC 753 (25 July 2024)
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sino date 25 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2017/43073
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
25/07/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
TOP
QUARTILE PMSA (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
SIBANYE
GOLD LIMITED
Defendant
This
order was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email on 25 July 2024
.
JUDGMENT
INGRID
OPPERMAN, J
Introduction
[1]
This action was initiated in November 2017 under the
Uniform Rules of
Court. After the close of pleadings, the plaintiff applied for the
action to be certified a Commercial Court matter.
At the first case
management meeting held before me on 27 June 2019, the defendant
recorded that it was participating under protest,
that it had
objected to the referral to the Commercial Court and that it would
object to any prejudice it suffered as a result
of being denied any
right under the Uniform Rules of Court.
[2]
The matter proceeded under what I will term a hybrid
set of rules
consisting of both Commercial Court Directives and Uniform Rules of
Court. By agreement between the parties, the procedural
landscape
included amendments to the pleadings under the Uniform Rules of
Court, a reply to the request for particulars and a revised
discovery
affidavit – all procedures not being provided for under the
Commercial Court Directives.
[3]
The parties ultimately agreed to a separation of issues
which was
embodied in an order and endorsed by this Court. It provided:
ORDER: SEPARATION IN
TERMS OF RULE 33(4)
By agreement between the
parties, it is hereby ordered that:-
1. Subject
to what is set out in paragraphs 2 to 4 below, the following issues
arising out of Claim A are to be
determined separately from the
remaining issues in the action:
1.1 Whether
the Professional Services Contract ("
the PSC
")
concluded on or about 1 September 2015 precludes reliance by the
plaintiff on the prior representations or agreements allegedly
made
by the defendant that are the subject of Claims A and E;
1.2. Whether
the Non-Disclosure Agreement ("
the NDA
") concluded
on or about 10 February 2014 precludes reliance by the plaintiff on
the representations or agreements allegedly
made by the defendant
that are the subject of Claims A and E:
- Whether
the defendant's alleged negligent misrepresentations are wrongful
in the circumstances pleaded and for the purpose of
Claim A;
Whether
the defendant's alleged negligent misrepresentations are wrongful
in the circumstances pleaded and for the purpose of
Claim A;
- Whether
the defendant made the representations that are the subject of
Claim A;
Whether
the defendant made the representations that are the subject of
Claim A;
- Whether
the defendant acted negligently in making the representations that
are the subject of Claim A;
Whether
the defendant acted negligently in making the representations that
are the subject of Claim A;
- Whether
the defendant's negligent misrepresentations caused the plaintiff
to terminate the "LMC service agreement"
referred to in
Claim A.
Whether
the defendant's negligent misrepresentations caused the plaintiff
to terminate the "LMC service agreement"
referred to in
Claim A.
- The
merits of Claim B are separated from the remaining issues in the
claim, being paragraph 37 of the particulars of claim read
with
paragraph 25 of the plea and paragraph 23 of the replication.
The
merits of Claim B are separated from the remaining issues in the
claim, being paragraph 37 of the particulars of claim read
with
paragraph 25 of the plea and paragraph 23 of the replication.
- Claim
C is separated from the remaining issues in such claim, being
paragraphs 41 to 51 of the particulars of claim and prayer
6 read
with paragraphs 27 to 33 of the plea; paragraphs 24 —27 of the
replication.
Claim
C is separated from the remaining issues in such claim, being
paragraphs 41 to 51 of the particulars of claim and prayer
6 read
with paragraphs 27 to 33 of the plea; paragraphs 24 —27 of the
replication.
- The
merits of Claim E are separated from the remaining issues in such
claim, being paragraphs 69 and 71 of the particulars of
claim read
with paragraph 37 of the plea and paragraph 29 of the replication.
The
merits of Claim E are separated from the remaining issues in such
claim, being paragraphs 69 and 71 of the particulars of
claim read
with paragraph 37 of the plea and paragraph 29 of the replication.
- The
issues referred to in paragraph 1 — 4 (including
sub-paragraphs) of this court order will be heard at the same
hearing
of the matter.
The
issues referred to in paragraph 1 — 4 (including
sub-paragraphs) of this court order will be heard at the same
hearing
of the matter.
6. If
necessary, the determination of the quantum of Claims A, B and E, and
the merits and quantum
of Claim D stand over for adjudication pending
the final determination of the issues referred to above.
[4]
The matter proceeded to trial on the separated issues.
Mr Kotze
testified on behalf of the plaintiff whereafter the plaintiff closed
its case.
[5]
This then is an application for absolution from the instance
in
respect of four of the five claims (claims A, B, C and E) advanced in
the particulars of claim. Claim A is a claim based on
a negligent
misrepresentation causing pure economic loss; Claim B is an
alternative claim to Claim A based on the unlawful interference
in
the contractual relationship between the plaintiff and an entity
called Long March Capital; Claim E is an alternative to Claims
A and
B based on an oral agreement to pay for expenses incurred by
plaintiff but not recovered; Claim C is one based on rectification
of
an agreement concluded on 1 September 2015 which the parties have
referred to as the Professional Services Agreement.
Is
absolution on a separated issue competent in a Commercial Court
matter?
[6]
The first issue which falls for determination is whether
absolution
can be granted on a separated issue in a Commercial Court matter.
This judgment does not seek to answer this question
definitively
because of the manner in which things unfolded
in casu
ie that it was conducted under a ‘hybrid’ set of rules
and directives.
[7]
In her
supplementary heads of argument, the plaintiff’s legal
representative, Ms Marks,
relied
on
Osman
Tyres
[1]
in support of the contention that an order absolving the defendant
from the instance cannot be granted in respect of separated
issues.
Her reliance on
Osman
Tyres
for such proposition, in my view, is misplaced. The trial before the
court
a
quo
in
Osman
Tyres
concerned two claims: a claim by the first plaintiff, Osman Tyres and
Spares CC (the CC) and a claim by the second plaintiff, Mr
Osman. The defendant was ADT Security (Pty) Ltd. The CC's claim was
for contractual damages based on a written agreement concluded
between the CC and ADT for the rendering of security services at the
CC's business premises. Mr Osman's claim, on the other hand,
was a
delictual claim. The parties agreed at a pre-trial conference that
‘
the
merits and quantum should be separated in terms of rule 33(4) and
that the trial would be confined at first to the merits of
the
plaintiffs claims’
.
The trial proceeded on this basis, and ADT applied at the close of
the plaintiffs' cases to be absolved from the instance in respect
of
both claims. The trial court granted the application. It found that
the plaintiffs had failed to make out a
prima
facie
case in respect of each claim. On appeal, the principal issue before
the SCA was whether the trial court had correctly granted
an order
absolving ADT from both claims. In a minority judgment, Koen AJA
found that the trial court correctly absolved ADT from
Mr Osman's
claim but held that the order absolving ADT from the CC's claim was
incorrect. Writing for the majority, Ponnan JA disagreed,
finding
instead that the trial court correctly absolved ADT from both claims.
[8]
Crucially, neither the minority nor the majority expressed
any doubt
that absolution could be granted in respect of separated issues. Koen
AJA inter alia expressed doubt that every element
of the CC's cause
of action (causation specifically) had been separated with sufficient
clarity in terms of the pre-trial minute.
For this and other reasons,
he concluded that the trial court should not have granted absolution
in respect of the CC's claim.
He, however, accepted without
reservation that it was competent for the trial court to grant
absolution (if warranted) in respect
of those issues that had been
separated. The majority, on the other hand, found that while the
separation may not have been formally
ordered, with the individual
elements of the cause of action surgically separated out, the parties
had approached the trial on
the basis that liability and quantum had
been separated, thus, ‘
the CC could not have been under any
illusion as to the elements of the claim that had to be satisfied to
survive absolution’
. For this reason, the majority found
that absolution was justified because Mr Osman had failed to
establish a
prima facie
case in respect of each element of the
CC's cause of action that was required to hold the defendant liable.
[9]
I agree with Mr Seape, representing the defendant, when
he submitted
that it is unsurprising that the SCA was comfortable with the notion
that absolution is competent in respect of separated
issues. An order
separating issues is simply a procedural device that allows parties
to have issues decided separately if it would
be convenient to do so.
In other words, a separation order does no more than direct which
issues must be decided; it does not direct
how they must be decided.
The separation order in this case did not contain a direction
precluding absolution as a means of deciding
the issues.
[10]
The fact that the Commercial Court Directives do not expressly make
provision
for absolution to be sought, in my view, is of no
consequence in this case because the matter proceeded under a
‘hybrid’
but agreed set of rules. The parties expressly
agreed that the separation order is to be granted in terms of rule
33(4) of the
Uniform Rules of Court. This request was made by
agreement and the draft order was amended at the instance of this
court to identify
the issues to be separated clearly and with
precision so as to avoid prejudice. The final order was consented to
and reflects that
it was done by agreement between the parties.
[11]
The
Commercial Court Directives provide expressly that matters heard in
the Commercial Court are to be dealt with in line with broad
principles of fairness, efficiency and cost-effectiveness
[2]
.
In my view, an application for absolution from the instance brought
after the parties agreed to separate issues in terms of rule
33(4) of
the Commercial Court Directives, fits neatly into this description
and constitutes a valuable tool in achieving those
objectives.
[12]
Ms Marks
sought to draw from the principles governing the adjudication of
arbitrations
[3]
and how our
courts have dealt with the competency of absolution applications in
such matters. Those matters are distinguishable
because arbitration
agreements generally provide expressly for a final decision to be
made by the arbitrator. Because absolution
is not a final decision,
it is argued that absolution falls outside the authority of the
arbitrator. The arbitrator is thus, so
the argument continues, under
an obligation to give effect to the arbitration agreement between the
parties and make an award which
is final. Although matters run under
the Commercial Court Directives are conceivably akin to arbitrations,
the defendant in this
case expressly recorded its objection to being
deprived of its procedural rights in terms of the Uniform Rules of
Court at the
very first case management meeting. Crucially, it was
expressly recorded that the separation was requested and ordered in
terms
of rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court which implies that
it is to be applied in accordance with the relevant authorities
including
Osman
Tyres
.
[13]
I thus find that the application for absolution from the instance can
be entertained.
Test
in an application for absolution from the instance
[14]
In
Gordon
Lloyd
[4]
the
locus
classicus
test as formulated in
Claude
Neon Lights
[5]
was further refined as follows:
‘……
a plaintiff has to make
out a prima facie case - in the sense that there is evidence relating
to all the elements of the claim -
to survive absolution because
without such evidence no court could find for the plaintiff (
Marine
& Trade Insurance Co Ltd v Van der Schyff
1972
(1) SA 26
(A)
37G-38A; Schmidt
Bewysreg
4
th
ed
91-92). As far as inferences from the evidence are concerned, the
inference relied upon by the plaintiff must be a reasonable
one, not
the only reasonable one (Schmidt 93). The test has from time to time
been formulated in different terms, especially it
has been said that
the court must consider whether there is “evidence upon which a
reasonable man might find for the plaintiff”
(
Gascoyne
loc
cit) - a test which had its origin in jury trials when the
“reasonable man” was a reasonable member of the
jury
(
Ruto
Flour Mills
).
Such a formulation tends to cloud the issue. The court ought not to
be concerned with what someone else might think; it should
rather be
concerned with its own judgment and not that of another “reasonable”
person or court. Having said this, absolution
at the end of a
plaintiff's case, in the ordinary course of events, will nevertheless
be granted sparingly but when the occasion
arises a court should
order it in the interests of justice.’
A
bird’s eye view of the case
[15]
The main protaganists in this case are the plaintiff, Long March
Capital and
the defendant. Mr Kotze explained in much detail how the
relationships developed over the years of their involvement. Most
factual
propositions were backed up with a contemporaneous note, a
subsequent e-mail or a memorandum. As is so often the case, it’s
the inferences to be drawn from such facts, the role-player’s’
interpretation of such facts and their understanding,
which is less
clear.
[16]
In short then, the plaintiff, almost exclusively represented in the
negotiations
and conclusion of agreements by Mr Kotze, was introduced
to Long March Capital to investigate the feasibility of developing a
solar
project for the defendant. Long March Capital in turn
introduced the plaintiff to the defendant. What started as a
tripartite relationship
evolved into potentially two separate
relationships with the defendant. It’s the severance of the
relationship between the
plaintiff and Long March Capital and the
failure to formalise, alternatively inadequate formalisation of, the
relationship between
the plaintiff and the defendant which lies at
the heart of this litigation.
Claim
A
[17]
Claim A is a claim in delict. It is a claim for pure economic loss.
The plaintiff
contends that it suffered loss because of a negligent
misrepresentation made by the defendant’s representative. The
claim
is based on the following allegations:
‘
19.
During
or about 15 May 2015 the plaintiff, represented by Kotze advised the
defendant, represented by Richard Stewart, that the
plaintiff would
continue with the work on the feasibility and development phases and
allow the defendant full use of the plaintiff’s
project,
engineering, permitting and business track artifacts and the works as
developed by the plaintiff, subject to the following
conditions ('the
representation conditions'):
19.1
the
mandate between the defendant and the plaintiff would be
formalised shortly on a basis similar to the LMC service agreement as
amended and as reflected in the Joint Mandate Letter, including that
the defendant would make payment to the plaintiff of the risk
or
development fee;
19.2
the
defendant would make payment to the plaintiff in full in terms of
all effort and expenses incurred by the plaintiff to date as well
as
all future effort and expenses until such time that the mandate
between the defendant and the plaintiff was formalised.
20.
The defendant negligently represented to the plaintiff that the
representation
conditions would be complied with ("the project
misrepresentation") and was aware that the plaintiff would rely
thereon
in terminating the LMC service agreement.
- The
defendant had used the project misrepresentation to induce the
plaintiff to terminate the LMC service agreement.
The
defendant had used the project misrepresentation to induce the
plaintiff to terminate the LMC service agreement.
22.
As a result of the project misrepresentation made by the defendant
the plaintiff
agreed to the termination of the LMC service agreement.
The plaintiff terminated the LMC service agreement orally or through
conduct
by advising LMC that it would enter into a separate mandate
agreement with the defendant on 17 June 2015. LMC accepted this by
implication.
23.
If the LMC service agreement was not terminated the plaintiff would
have been
paid by LMC under such agreement. The plaintiff would have
further continued with the project under the LMC service agreement
and
the development of the works under the LMC service agreement.
…
33.
The project misrepresentation of the defendant was made unlawfully
and negligently
and a reasonable person would have realised that such
misrepresentation would lead to damages to the plaintiff. The project
misrepresentation
was made negligently in that a reasonable man would
have verified the correctness thereof and not made such project
misrepresentation
without ensuring that it was correct.’
[18]
The parties concluded two written agreements while working together.
Early
in their relationship on 10 February 2014, the parties
concluded a Non-Disclosure Agreement and later, on 1 September 2015,
they
concluded what they referred to as the Professional Services
Agreement.
[19]
In response to claim A, the defendant contended that the parties
agreed first,
in terms of the Non-Disclosure Agreement (concluded on
10 February 2014), that representations made during the existence of
the
Non-Disclosure Agreement would not be actionable and thereafter,
in terms of the Professional Services Agreement (concluded on 1
September 2015), that representations made prior to the conclusion of
the Professional Services Agreement would similarly not be
actionable. Accordingly, the defendant contended that the plaintiff
is precluded by the terms of the Non-Disclosure Agreement and
the
Professional Services Agreement from pursuing Claims A and E.
[20]
Mr Seape argued that the issues separated out in determining Claim A
are legal
issues that raise questions of contractual interpretation.
He argued that the plaintiff failed to present any evidence that
would
sustain cognizable defences to the defendant's reliance on the
terms of each agreement. He argued that the defendant is accordingly
entitled to be absolved from the instance.
The
context in which the Non-Disclosure Agreement was concluded
[21]
The parties concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement under the
following circumstances:
In late 2013, inconsistent and unreliable
electricity supply from Eskom was compromising the defendant's
operations. Mr Kotze testified
that, at the time, he understood that
the defendant's CEO, Mr Froneman, had a working relationship
with Mr Kwong of Long
March Capital. Mr Kwong, a managing partner at
Long March Capital, was a business facilitator who essentially
created mutually
beneficial commercial opportunities for Chinese
business in South Africa and elsewhere. Mr
Kotze testified that he was introduced to Mr Kwong by Mr Man, a
friend he knew from their time studying together at Stellenbosch.
Mr
Kotze testified that when he met Mr Kwong, Mr Man was employed by FMO
(the Dutch Development Bank) as a senior investment officer
responsible for transacting with Chinese Investors.
[22]
Mr Kotze testified that late in 2013, Mr Kwong began investigating
whether
it would be technically and economically viable to develop
solar plants at certain sites owned by the defendant. Mr Kwong
approached
the defendant with the possibility of installing solar
power at its operations with a view to reducing its reliance on Eskom
and
the national supply of electricity to its operations. Mr Kotze
testified that when Mr
Kwong informed Mr Man of his intention to put up solar projects in
Southern Africa, Mr Man strongly recommended that Mr Kwong contact
and use the plaintiff to facilitate and project manage the proposed
projects.
[23]
Mr Kotze testified that he met Mr Kwong and Mr Man on 17 October 2013
to discuss
the possibility of the plaintiff participating in the
proposed solar project. Mr
Kotze testified that he was invited to pursue the project in
partnership with Long March Capital and that he was presented with
the proposed terms of the contemplated partnership. He testified that
he considered the proposal and ultimately accepted it over
the
weekend of 23 November 2013.
[24]
Mr Kotze testified that Mr Kwong introduced the proposal on the
contemplated
solar project in broad outline to the defendant for its
consideration. He testified further that Mr Kwong conveyed to the
defendant
that Mr Kwong had identified the plaintiff as the lead
project management company that would gather information and perform
the
work necessary to establish whether the project was feasible. It
is perhaps important to record at this juncture that there was
no
agreement about the admissibility of hearsay evidence. Mr Kwong did
not testify.
[25]
Mr Kotze testified that during December 2013 he met with the
defendant's representative,
Mr Ashworth, Mr Kwong and others. At this
stage, the project was in its infancy. Mr Ashworth was the
defendant’s representative
assigned to liaise with Mr
Kotze and provide him with the information required to start the
pre-feasibility investigations.
[26]
Mr Kotze explained that the plaintiff required sensitive information
from the
defendant to start conducting the investigations. This
information concerned, amongst other things, the positions, locations
and
capacities of the defendant's substations. Mr
Kotze testified that, because the prefeasibility
work required the
parties to share sensitive information, the defendant suggested that
the parties conclude a Non-Disclosure Agreement.
Mr Kotze testified
that he was willing to conclude such an agreement because it would
also protect the plaintiff's interests as
the plaintiff was
conducting the work at risk in terms of its agreement with Long March
Capital and it had to protect its intellectual
property ie work
artefacts that were to be generated by the plaintiff and made
available to the defendant during the course of
conducting the
pre-feasibility study.
[27]
Mr Kotze
testified that in January 2014, the parties sourced and engaged the
relevant personnel required to conduct the pre-feasibility
work. He
testified that on 23
January 2014, Mr Ashworth sent him a draft Non-Disclosure
Agreement
in anticipation of the kick-off meeting scheduled for 27 January
2014. He testified that he made a few minor changes
to the draft,
like to the duration of the agreement, and then signed it on 30
January 2014. He confirmed that the defendant signed
on 10 February
2014. The Non-Disclosure Agreement was to endure for a period of 2
(two) years from 10 February 2014 thus until
9 February 2016.
[6]
[28]
In summary, the parties concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement at the
beginning
of their relationship when nothing was certain; when,
according to Mr Kotze, ‘
the total amount of work, as a
percentage of volume of the overall work, was 1%, maximum 2 %, at
that point in time’
; and when the plaintiff's participation
in the project, on Mr Kotze's version, was nothing more than a
possibility because the
parties did not know whether the project was
feasible.
[29]
They concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement to create the environment
required
to advance the project, an environment in which they could
act and speak freely without attracting any obligations or
liabilities
to one another outside the Non-Disclosure
Agreement, a fact Mr
Kotze accepted under cross-examination.
The
terms of the Non-Disclosure Agreement
[30]
Claim A is based on negligent misrepresentations allegedly made by
the defendant's
representative, Mr Stewart, at a meeting at the
defendant's offices on 15
May 2015. The representations were made while the Non-Disclosure
Agreement was still in force. On the assumption that Mr Stewart
made
the representations as alleged, the question is whether the defendant
can be held liable in view of the provisions of the
Non-Disclosure
Agreement.
[31]
The Non-Disclosure Agreement defines
Possible Transaction
to
mean ‘…
.the possible transaction involving [the
plaintiff] and the [defendant]’
, and
Permitted Purpose
to mean ‘…
the consideration, evaluation and
negotiation of the
Possible Transaction’.
[32]
Clause 3, the ‘INTRODUCTION’, provides that the plaintiff
and the
defendant ‘….
have an interest in exchanging
Confidential Information for the purpose of considering and
evaluating the Possible Transaction’.
[33]
Clause 10, headed ‘NO OBLIGATION IN RESPECT OF THE POSSIBLE
TRANSACTION’,
provided that:
‘
10.1
The parties acknowledge and agree that –
10.1.1
until such time as definitive agreements
regarding the
Possible Transaction
have been executed by the
Parties
,
neither
Party
…
shall
be under any legal obligation or have any liability of any nature
whatsoever with respect to the
Possible
Transaction
by virtue of this
Agreement or otherwise
; and
10.1.2
[the plaintiff] and [the defendant] shall each
have the right to
terminate discussion with each other at any time without having to
indemnify or compensate the other
Party
with respect to such termination (save
as otherwise agreed in writing between the
Parties
).
10.2
Except for the obligations specifically set out in this Agreement,
no
other obligation of any kind is assumed or implied against any
Party
by virtue of such
Party's
involvement in the discussions
in respect of the
Possible
Transaction
.
Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, each
Party
also acknowledge that this
Agreement
and
any meetings,
discussions or communications between the parties relating to the
Possible Transaction
shall not constitute an offer, request, commitment, agreement or
contract with the other
Party
’
.
(emphasis provided)
[34]
By
concluding the Non-Disclosure Agreement, the parties sought to
protect themselves from liability for non-fraudulent
representations
[7]
made while
the Non-Disclosure Agreement was still in force. The ‘
Possible
Transaction’
referred
to in the Non-Disclosure Agreement was the solar project, the
feasibility of which they planned to investigate further.
In terms of
clause 10.1 read with 10.2 the parties agreed that they would not
attract obligations (except as set out in the Non-Disclosure
Agreement) ‘
of
any nature whatsoever
’
for statements made and for negotiations or discussions conducted
pursuant to the solar project.
[35]
This is the plain unambiguous meaning of such terms read in context.
In other
words, when they concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement, the
parties agreed, for instance, not to assume a duty not to negligently
misrepresent facts while engaging in relation to the ‘
Possible
Transaction’
.
[36]
It is necessary to deal with the plaintiff's replication to the
defendant's
reliance on the Non-Disclosure Agreement. The plaintiff
pleaded in its replication that the ‘
Possible Transaction’
referred to in the Non-Disclosure Agreement means the LMC service
agreement (ie the agreement which it had concluded with Long March
Capital). Later in the replication, the plaintiff contended that
clauses 10.1.1 and 10.2 of the Non-Disclosure Agreement referred
specifically to the LMC service agreement and that the subject matter
of the Non-Disclosure Agreement is the LMC service agreement.
[37]
The LMC Agreement is pleaded as follows in the particulars of claim:
3. During or about 17
October 2013 Long March Capital, represented by Kwong and the
plaintiff, represented by Zachary Bernard Kotze
("Kotze")
and at Rosebank entered into an oral agreement ("the LMC service
agreement"). The material express,
alternatively implied,
further alternatively tacit terms of the LMC service agreement were:
3.1 The plaintiff would
develop, manage and assess the feasibility of two 10 MW Photovoltaic
("PV") solar plants. One
plant was to be constructed for
the defendant ("the solar project"). The second plant was
to be developed for Gold One
("the Gold One Project" );
3.2 LMC would make
payment for the plaintiffs disbursements incurred on the
pre-feasibility study work on the solar project and
the Gold One
Project;
3.3 The plaintiff would
pay the costs incurred on the pre-feasibility study work excluding
disbursement costs until the pre-feasibility
report showed the
project to be feasible;
3.4 If the
pre-feasibility work showed that the solar project or Gold One
Project was not feasible, the plaintiff would not receive
compensation for the work performed and LMC would only make payment
to the plaintiff for the disbursements;
3.5 Once the
pre-feasibility report showed that the solar project or Gold One
Project was feasible:
3.5.1 the plaintiff would
be eligible for a project development incentive, also referred to as
a project development fee of 1.5
percent of the project capital
expenditure which would be paid at predetermined project milestones,
the first milestone being the
completion of the feasibility phase and
the last milestone being commissioning, provided that the LMC service
agreement was still
in force;
3.5.2 the plaintiff would
be paid for all the work performed in the pre- feasibility phase
which had not been reimbursed;
3.5.3 funding for the
further development of the project would be made available.
3.6 At least one of the
two projects would proceed;
3.7 LMC planned to
structure a number of solar plants with the defendant and other
mining entities across Southern Africa, based
on the works so
developed by the plaintiff (without the inclusion of the criteria
specific to the defendant's needs and criteria)
and using the works
as a base model or template for the roll out of utility scale PV
solar plants to other mining houses across
Southern Africa, with the
plaintiff fulfilling the same role on these projects as for the solar
project.
[38]
This argument that
the Possible Transaction
could be a
reference to the LMC agreement is flawed. The ‘
Possible
Transaction’
is defined in the Non-Disclosure Agreement as
the possible transaction involving the plaintiff and the
Interested
Party
(i.e., the defendant). The LMC service agreement was an
oral agreement concluded between the plaintiff and Long March Capital
on
17 October 2013. It had already been concluded by the time the
plaintiff and the defendant concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement.
It was in effect at the time of the conclusion of the Non-Disclosure
Agreement. It was no longer ‘
a possible transaction’
.
It was, according to Mr Kotze, a concluded transaction,
which for purposes of this absolution application, I must
accept. It
could thus not possibly have been the
Possible Transaction
referred to in the Non-Disclosure Agreement.
[39]
In addition, the plaintiff's version as pleaded is unsupported by the
facts.
Mr Kotze did not testify that he disclosed the terms of the
LMC service agreement to the defendant before the parties concluded
the Non-Disclosure Agreement. He also accepted in cross-examination
that both Mr Ashworth and Mr Froneman did not attend the meeting
in
October 2013 when Mr Kwong proposed the terms of the LMC service
agreement. So, on the plaintiff's version, there is no evidence
that
the defendant knew about or had in mind the LMC service agreement
when it concluded the Non-Disclosure Agreement.
[40]
The interpretation advanced by the plaintiff gives rise to an
unbusinesslike
construction. One asks, why would the terms of the
Non-Disclosure Agreement have application if the parties to the solar
project
are the plaintiff, the defendant and Long March Capital but
not if the parties are only the plaintiff and the defendant? If one
of the objectives sought to have been achieved by the conclusion of
the Non-Disclosure Agreement was to protect the use of such
confidential information by the recipient thereof, why on earth
should that protection fall away when Long March Capital falls
out of
the picture? That is particularly so as Long March Capital was not
even a party to the Non-Disclosure Agreement. The Non-Disclosure
Agreement was concluded between the plaintiff and the defendant. The
‘Possible Transaction’ was defined to ‘involve’
the plaintiff and the defendant.
[41]
In the circumstances, this court finds that the Non-Disclosure
Agreement precludes
the plaintiff from relying on the representations
that are the subject of Claim A. It follows that the defendant is
entitled to
absolution from the instance in respect of Claim A on
this basis alone.
Claim
E
[42]
Claim E is a contractual claim which has been pleaded as an
alternative to
Claim A. Plaintiff relies on an oral agreement
concluded between it and the defendant on or about 15 May 2015 ie at
a time when
the Non-Disclosure Agreement governed their relationship.
Clause 10 of the Non-Disclosure Agreement precludes not only
delictual
liability as formulated in Claim A but also contractual
liability where reliance is placed on an oral agreement not reduced
to
writing.
[43]
Furthermore, in terms of clause 25.1.1 of the Non-Disclosure
Agreement, the
parties agreed that ‘
no undertaking,
representation, term or condition relating to the subject matter of
the [NDA] not incorporated in the [NDA] shall
be binding on either of
the Parties’
[44]
It follows that the defendant is entitled to absolution in terms of
Claim E.
Claim
B
–
Contractual Interference
[45]
Claim B concerns a delict. The plaintiff pursues Claim B in the
alternative
to Claim A. The plaintiff pleaded that the defendant:
‘
37.1
…….used its influence under the First Sibanye-LMC
Contract to expedite the solar project’, which led to
the
plaintiff ‘expending substantial time and effort on the solar
project’.
‘
37.2
……did not provide the project finance for the solar
project as required by the First Sibanye-LMC Contract
as orally
conveyed to the plaintiff’ which placed LMC ‘in the
position of being unable to make payment to the plaintiff
in terms of
the LMC service agreement’;
‘
37.3
…..used the provision of the project finance as an inducement
to persuade LMC and the plaintiff to agree to the defendant's
request
during or about May 2015 to conclude a new agreement with LMC and a
direct agreement with the plaintiff for the technical
delivery and
management of the project.’;
’
37.4……thus
requested the termination of the LMC service agreement’;
’
37.5……unlawfully
interfered in the contractual relationship between the plaintiff and
LMC which led to its termination’,
which led to the plaintiff
terminating the LMC service agreement ‘by advising LMC orally
or through conduct that it would
enter into separate mandate
agreement with the defendant on 17 June 2015’;
’
37.6……was
aware that the plaintiff would suffer damages if the LMC service
agreement was terminated through the interference
of the defendant in
the contractual relationship between the plaintiff and LMC…’
and ‘The defendant reconciled
itself hereto which is dolus
eventualis.’
[46]
Based on these allegations, the plaintiff contends that it would have
been
paid under the LMC service agreement had it not terminated the
LMC service agreement. Accordingly, the plaintiff claims the same
damages it claims in terms of Claim A, Claim B being an alternative
claim to Claim A.
[47]
The evidence does not establish intentional wrongful
interference by the defendant.
[48]
The plaintiff contends that it was deprived
by
the defendant, a stranger to the LMC services agreement, of the
benefits it would otherwise have obtained from performance under
the
LMC service agreement. It contends that the defendant’s
decision not to conclude the joint mandate that LMC proposed
on 30
March 2015 constituted unlawful interference
[49]
In
Country Cloud (CC),
Khampepe J held that:
‘
The cases where
conduct may arguably be
prima
facie
wrongful, are limited. They involve a situation where a third party,
A, the defendant, intentionally induces a contracting party,
B, to
breach his contract with the claimant, C, without lawful
justification for doing so."
[8]
[50]
In
light of these requirements, the question is whether the plaintiff
led sufficient evidence to establish intentional interference
in the
sense contemplated by the authorities.
Mr
Kotze
conceded under cross examination that he did not disclose the terms
of the LMC service agreement to any of the defendant's
representatives before the alleged interference occurred.
[9]
[51]
Knowledge
of contractual terms must be proved for a court to regard
interference as actionable. Without knowledge of the terms of
the LMC
service agreement, it would not have been possible for the defendant
to foresee the possibility that its decision not to
conclude the
joint mandate would likely cause the plaintiff loss, and it would not
have been possible for the defendant to reconcile
itself with the
fact. This proposition explains why successful contractual
interference claims involve proof that the defendant
was aware of the
contractual relationship between the plaintiff and the third
party.
[10]
[52]
Without
any evidence that the defendant knew the terms of the LMC service
agreement, this court cannot conclude that the defendant
acted
intentionally. In any event, before this court can find that the
defendant acted wrongfully, the plaintiff would have to
establish
something more than the defendant's mere knowledge of the terms of
the LMC service agreement.
[11]
It has not done so. Thus, the plaintiff’s cause of action is
incomplete, which means the claim must fail on this ground alone.
[53]
To overcome
the problem of knowledge of the contractual terms, Mr Kotze testified
that Mr Stewart would have been aware of the terms
of the LMC service
agreement from the proposed terms of the joint mandate. The cogency
of this version collapsed under cross-examination.
Mr Kotze first
testified that Mr Stewart would have been aware of the terms of the
LMC service agreement because "90 percent
of those terms are in
the joint mandate letter".
[12]
He later revised this assessment down to "60 percent"
[13]
after it was put to him that, on a plain reading of the joint
mandate, the first two terms of the LMC service agreement (as set
out
in paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 of the Particulars of Claim) were not
reflected in or conveyed by the joint mandate.
[14]
Faced with the problem that the joint mandate did not convey the
terms of the LMC service agreement because that was not its
purpose,
[15]
Mr Kotze asserted
that Mr Stewart would have acquired knowledge of the terms of the LMC
service agreement from reading the joint
mandate in light of certain
other "data points" of which he was aware. The logic of
this version is unsustainable as
the LMC service agreement was oral.
Mr Kotze conceded that he did not advise the defendant
representatives of the terms of the
LMC service agreement. It would
not have been possible for Mr Stewart to infer the precise terms of
an oral agreement the existence
of which was never communicated to
him. To compound matters, some terms were tacit.
[54]
In
addition, no persuasion was established. Mr Kotze testified that the
defendant's desire not to conclude the joint mandate was
first
conveyed to him at the meeting of 15 May 2015. Mr Kotze testified
that at the meeting, Mr Stewart conveyed that the defendant
was
considering splitting the mandates, a revelation that came as a
surprise. He testified further that Mr Stewart requested him
to work
with Mr Ashworth to compile draft terms for the defendant's
consideration. The meeting concluded on this basis.
[16]
[55]
Mr Kotze gave no evidence that the defendant had engaged, at any
point, in
an act of persuasion directed at either of the contracting
parties with the intent that it dishonour its agreement with the
other
party. The evidence was that the defendant did no more than
exercise its right to arrange its affairs in accordance with its
interests.
This is the import of Mr Kotze's evidence. Mr Kotze
himself understood that the defendant had taken an independent
decision because,
as he put it, he had to ‘break the news’
to Mr Kwong that the defendant was proposing separate mandates.
[56]
In sum, the plaintiff failed to lead any evidence upon which this
court might
conclude that the defendant attempted to persuade any of
the parties to the LMC service agreement to dishonour its
obligations.
The defendant simply exercised a choice; it elected not
to conclude the proposed joint mandate. Because the decision did not
involve
an act of persuasion intended to induce another to breach
their contract, it follows that the decision did not constitute
interference
in the relevant sense. The implication is that
the plaintiff seeks extension of liability in a truly novel case.
[57]
The plaintiff invites this court to extend delictual liability even
further,
in respect of an even narrower range of conduct, to cases
where there is no interference at all. The plaintiff has failed to
lay
any factual basis for the implied assertion that delictual
liability should be extended in this case.
[58]
In sum, it is evident that the plaintiff has failed to lead
evidence that might establish intent or interference on the part of
the defendant.
[59]
The defendant will accordingly be absolved from this claim.
Claim
C – Rectification of the Professional Services Agreement
[60]
The plaintiff seeks rectification of the Professional Services
Agreement by
the deletion of the last sentence of clause 15.3. Clause
15.3 of the Professional Services Agreement provides:
‘
The Deliverables,
including but not limited to
all technical
information, reports, all drawings and other documents, will become
the property of the Company on handover. Insofar
as it may be
necessary, the Contractor cedes and assigns to the company all
intellectual property rights in any work created or
executed by it in
the course and scope of the contract. The Contractor undertakes not
to exercise any residuary write and undertakes
to procure that the
affected parties shall not exercise any residuary rights in respect
of any work created or executed by it or
them in the course and scope
of this Contract.
All work created or
executed by the Contractor will be deemed to have been created or
executed by it in the course and scope of
the contract
.
’
(emphasis provided)
[61]
Mr Kotze testified that on 2 November
2015 the plaintiff submitted its comments on the proposed
Professional Services Agreement.
Mr Kotze testified that there were
three very pertinent comments from the plaintiff on the proposed
Professional Services Agreement
that have relevance. Clause 1.1.4:
'Contract' means collectively the contract document
for
the contract period under consideration
together with its Annexures or schedules listed and attached hereto
from time to time, including, Particular Conditions, constituting
one
indivisible Contract; Clause 22.1: This Contract embodies the entire
agreement between the Parties
for the
period under consideration;
Clause
19.1: In acceptance of the Contract
the
Company
and Contractor undertake
s
to act only on the basis of utmost
good faith and trust in the execution thereof. The emboldened text is
that which Mr Kotze had
added and on which he placed much
significance.
[62]
Mr Kotze testified that the Professional
Services Agreement does not reflect the common intention of the
parties to the extent that
it does not reflect that it would only
govern the scope of work to be developed by the plaintiff during the
course and scope of
it. Mr Kotze testified that had it indeed been
the common intention of the parties that:
'All
work created or executed by the Contractor will be deemed to have
been created or executed by it in the course and scope of
the
Contract.',
as reflected in the last
sentence of Clause 15.3, then the defendant would not have requested
the plaintiff for an invoice for
direct man-hours for the work
conducted prior to the commencement of the Professional Services
Agreement to the value of R 1 553
577.50 and even less so, under a
different contract number; the defendant would not have effected
payment under such other contract
number, for work deemed to have
been created or executed by the plaintiff in the course and scope of
the Professional Services
Agreement; the defendant would not have
acknowledged to the plaintiff, orally and in writing, that an amount
was outstanding to
the plaintiff for work performed by the plaintiff
prior to the commencement of the Professional Services Agreement and
would not
have engaged with the plaintiff over a period of 21 months
(August 2015 to May 2017).
[63]
The inference the plaintiff draws from
these facts is that it was not the common intention of the parties to
include the final sentence
in paragraph 15.3. I am unable to conclude
at this stage of the proceedings that it is an unreasonable inference
– it is
not the only reasonable one but it need not be, to
overcome absolution. As has been stated repeatedly, absolution at the
end of
the plaintiff’s case, in the ordinary course of events,
should be granted sparingly. In my view it will not serve the
interests
of justice to grant absolution in respect of Claim C.
Conclusion
[64]
The defendant is entitled to an order of
absolution in respect of:
64.1
Claim A as this court has found the
issue formulated in paragraph 1.2. of the separation order in favour
of the defendant.
64.2
Claim B, as this court has found the
issue formulated in paragraph 2 of the separation order in favour of
the defendant.
64.3
Claim E, as this court has found the
issue formulated in paragraph 1.2. of the separation order in favour
of the defendant.
[65]
The defendant is not entitled to an
order for absolution in respect of Claim C.
Order
[66]
I accordingly grant the following order:
66.1
In respect of Claims A, B and E –
absolution from the instance is granted with the plaintiff to pay the
costs of the action
in respect of such claims.
66.2
In respect of Claim C – absolution
from the instance is refused with costs.
I
Opperman
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Appearances
For the Plaintiff:
J Marks
For the Defendant:
M
Seape instructed by Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyer Inc
Date
of final argument:
18
October 2024
Date
of supplementary heads:
16
November 2024
[1]
Osman
Tyres and Spares CC and Another v ADT Security (Pty) Ltd
,
[2020] 3 ALL SA 73
(SCA) (3
April 2020)
[2]
Paragraph
1 of Chapter 4 of the Commercial Court Practice Directive
[3]
Van
Biljon v Coleman
[2021]
NAHCMD 365 (11 August 2021)
[4]
Gordon
Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera and Another
,
2001 (1) SA 88
(SCA) at para 2
[5]
Claude
Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel
,
1976 (4) SA 403
(A) at 409G-H
[6]
Clause
4 read with the definition of ‘Signature Date’
[7]
Wells
v South African Alumenite Company
1927 AD 69
at 72 and 73
[8]
Country
Cloud Trading CC v MEC, Department of Infrastructure Development
2015 (1) SA 1
(CC) at para [30]
[9]
Transcript:
XIC, 017-688 to 690
"
MR
SEAPE
: No no,
perhaps
my question was not clear. You never disclosed or discussed the
terms of the agreement that you had with LMC, you never discussed
that with Mr Stewart?
MR
KOTZER
:
Not in person
.
…
MR
SEAPE:
Please
do not speculate. You – my question to you was that you never
told prior to the 15th of May meeting, you never told
Mr Stewart
about the terms, the specific terms of your agreement with LMC.
MR
KOTZER
:
I
did not tell him that terms
,
although all those terms are or 90 percent of those terms are in the
joint mandate letter."
(Emphasis
added)
[10]
Atlas
Organic
Fertilizers
(Pty)
Ltd v Pikkewyn Ghwano (Pty) Ltd and Others
1981
(2) SA 173 (T)
[11]
Country
Cloud (CC) supra
where
Khampepe J expressed her belief that "a certain level of intent
greater than subjective foresight that breach would
result…would
be necessary to place it in this category [i.e., the category of
interference that is prima facie wrongful]".
[12]
Transcript:
XIC, 017-689
[13]
Transcript:
XIC, 017-702
[14]
Transcript:
XIC, 017-703
[15]
Transcript: XIC,
017-729:
"
MR
SEAPE
: Thank you, M’Lady. All
right. I want to try and just try and cut through this. The mandate
agreement, the joint mandate,
excuse me, the joint mandate, its
principal purpose was to outline what the nature of the defendants’
relationship would
be with you and LMC, if the defendant accepted
the mandate?
MR
KOTZER
: That is correct.
MR
SEAPE
: So it was forward-looking?
MR
KOTZER
: It was forward ...
"
[16]
Transcript:
XIC, 017- 757 to 761: Specifically, at 760:
"
MR
SEAPE
: Well, you accepted…
You may not have been satisfied and you are right, maybe I used the
wrong word, but you accepted
it, because we then see as you go
forward you try to put together a package of terms that would be
acceptable to the defendant.
MR
KOTZER
: Yes.
MR
SEAPE
: So you proceeded on that
basis.
MR
KOTZER
: I proceeded. That was the
instruction from the defendant. Yes.
MR
SEAPE
: Yes. So from the… At
the close of that meeting you understood. Joint mandate is out of
the way. What we need to do is
conceive of terms that will possibly
be acceptable to the defendant.
MR
KOTZER
: Yes. Yes. And… Yes."
sino noindex
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