Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1046South Africa
Baphalaborwa 72 Construction and Civil Engineering CC v T and L Civil Electrical Contractors CC (2018/45610) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1046 (17 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Baphalaborwa 72 Construction and Civil Engineering CC v T and L Civil Electrical Contractors CC (2018/45610) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1046 (17 October 2024)
Baphalaborwa 72 Construction and Civil Engineering CC v T and L Civil Electrical Contractors CC (2018/45610) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1046 (17 October 2024)
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sino date 17 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2018/45610
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED.
A. FRIEDMAN
17 OCTOBER 2024
In
the matter between:
BAPHALABORWA
72 CONSTRUCTION & CIVIL
ENGINEERING
CC
Applicant
and
T
& L CIVIL ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS CC
Respondent
In
re:
T
& L CIVIL ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS CC
Applicant
and
BAPHALABORWA
72 CONSTRUCTION & CIVIL
ENGINEERING CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT:
LEAVE TO APPEAL
FRIEDMAN
AJ
:
1
In this matter, I handed down my judgment and order on the
merits (“
the merits judgment
”) on 30 June 2023. I
granted the applicant (“
T&L Civil
”) the relief
sought in its notice of motion. The respondent (“
Baphalaborwa
CC
”) appears to have filed an application for leave to
appeal timeously. But, for reasons which remain unclear to me, the
application
for leave to appeal was only set down for argument on 11
October 2024. This would have been regrettable at the best of times.
But
it is especially unfortunate in this case, because there appears
to have been urgent litigation in the intervening period about
the
execution of my order, when perhaps efforts would have been better
spent expediting the hearing of this application. To make
matters
worse, a series of disconcerting further developments led to another
delay in the hearing of the application, with its
postponement to
yesterday – ie 16 October 2024. It is unnecessary to dwell on
those any further.
2
I do not want to delay the finalisation of this application
any longer, so have issued this judgment and order by prioritising
speed over thoroughness (in the old days, this would have been an
ex
tempore
judgment, but with the advent of Microsoft Teams
hearings, I find it more appropriate to issue short reasons in
writing). I accordingly
do not spend any time rehearsing what is
already in the merits judgment and ask than any person with an
interest in this matter
read this judgment together with that one.
The simple issues in this application are whether I was wrong to hold
in the merits
judgment that (a) an Adjudicator’s determination
made under the Master Builders South Africa Domestic Subcontract
Agreement
is binding on the parties, and (b) the appropriate remedy
for a party disputing an Adjudicator’s determination is to
refer
the matter to arbitration, and not to dispute the correctness
of the award in an answering affidavit in the High Court in response
to enforcement proceedings (in what is akin to a collateral attack).
3
Of course, it is human nature to cling to the correctness of
one’s views. But if rational humans could not be persuaded
by
argument, the whole system of litigation would be pointless. It is a
duty of a judge (or acting judge) when deciding whether
to grant
leave to appeal to have the humility to realise when his or her
findings are subject to reasonable disagreement, and to
approach the
matter as objectively as possible. Good judges, in a sensible legal
system, should easily be able to identify which
points are arguable
and which are not. Just as, I dare say, good people, in a sensible
society, should be able to take a position
while recognising the
reasonableness (or unreasonableness) of the differing views of
others.
4
In this case, I took the view that Baphalaborwa CC’s
case (in the merits proceedings) was indisputably lacking in
merit –
ie, it was not even arguable (and which, for present purposes,
carries the implication that the application for leave
to appeal
should be dismissed). Therefore, and in the spirt of what I have said
above, I wanted to use the argument in the application
for leave to
appeal to allow counsel for Baphalaborwa CC to draw to my attention
any aspects of the record, or arguments, which
I may have overlooked,
and which may have been relevant to the correctness of my order. Both
Mr Nkosi
, who appeared for Baphalaborwa CC and
Ms
Rakhadani
, who appeared for T&L Civil, filed written heads of
argument, which I read before the hearing.
5
Unfortunately, the stance taken by
Mr Nkosi
in argument
in the application for leave to appeal displays an unfortunate
feature of this case, present from the outset. Baphalaborwa
CC and/or
its legal representatives have never seemed to grasp the fundamental
basis of T&L Civil’s case – as accepted
by me as
correct in law, in the merits judgment. The single principle which
serves to explain my finding on the merits is this:
if Baphalaborwa
CC disputed the finding of the adjudicator, it had the contractual
right to refer the matter to arbitration. It
failed to assert that
right. Instead, it waited until T&L Civil brought the application
which I granted – ie essentially
to make the adjudication award
an order of court and to compel compliance with it – and then
sought to raise a series of
arguments, almost certainly lacking in
merit, attacking the underlying rationale of the adjudication
determination.
6
This approach was again followed in the application for leave
to appeal, in which
Mr Nkosi
now sought to emphasise my
apparent error in failing to appreciate that the adjudication
determination only related to interim
statements of account. As it
happens,
Mr Nkosi’s
argument appears to be based on an
inexplicable misunderstand of the nature of interim payments in a
building contract. In his
heads of argument,
Mr Nkosi
says
that I failed to understand that the adjudication award was based on
statements which were not final “and subject to
change”.
In making this argument, he referred me to paragraph 46 of the
adjudicator’s determination. But any reasonable
person who
reads paragraphs 46 and 48 of the Adjudicator’s Determination
would appreciate that they are dead against Baphalaborwa
CC. They
confirm the status of interim certificates as giving rise to
enforceable debts. This is not a controversial issue, and
there is a
wide variety of material (judgments, textbooks, LAWSA etc) available
to legal practitioners to enable them to understand
the legal
position easily.
7
But the bigger issue is this. What is the underlying premise
of
Mr Nkosi’s
submissions? He says that there is a
reasonable prospect of an appeal court varying my order. But how? If
one considers both his
heads of argument and his oral address, his
overall contention is that, to “avoid grave injustice”,
an appeal court
would be willing to undertake something which I
declined to do – consider the detailed submissions and evidence
presented
by Baphalaborwa CC in the papers about the various apparent
shortcomings in the Adjudicator’s determination. And,
presumably,
to entertain the ill-conceived argument that the
Adjudicator’s determination was not binding on Baphalaborwa CC
because it
related to interim payments.
8
In fairness to
Mr Nkosi
, there is one development which
only happened after I heard the matter on the merits. If I understand
him correctly, he says that,
in subsequent litigation, T&L Civil
“conceded” in an affidavit that the payments on which the
Adjudicator’s
determination was based were only interim. But,
since this “concession” was only made after my merits
judgment, Mr
Nkosi submitted that I should reopen the case by
granting leave, thus allowing the appeal court to use its wide
discretion to admit
further evidence on these developments.
9
It is self-evident why this is not a sustainable argument. It
suffers the same defect that Baphalaborwa CC’s case
suffered
before me on the merits – it is premised on the same
misunderstanding of the nature of determinations in relation
to
interim payments. Put differently, the argument is once again
premised on the flawed notion that any court (let alone an appeal
court) could now revisit the correctness of the sums claimed by T&L
Civil in the proceedings before the Adjudicator.
10
For these reasons, the application for leave to appeal has to
be dismissed.
11
Ms Rakhadani
filed heads of argument before the hearing
which were clear and of assistance – for which I am grateful.
She argued, along
the lines of what I have already said above, that
Baphalaborwa CC has never grasped the defects in its case. It is, at
she put
it, intent on arguing the merits already subject to the
Adjudicator’s determination, rather than grappling with the
flaws
addressed at length in the merits judgment and more briefly
above. The inference that regrettably must be drawn from the quality
of the application for leave to appeal and argument before me, is
that the application for leave to appeal was a mechanism to achieve
delay. In the circumstances, I agree with
Ms Rakhadani
that a
punitive costs order is justified.
12
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2.
Baphalaborwa
CC (the applicant for leave to appeal) is ordered to pay the
respondent’s costs, on the attorney-client scale.
A.
FRIEDMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter. The
date for hand down is
deemed to be
17 October 2024
.
Heard:
16 October 2024
Judgment:
17 October 2024
Appearances
:
For
Applicant (respondent a quo):
Attorneys for the
Applicant:
J
Nkosi
FC
Nwanezi Agbugba Attorneys Inc
For
Respondent (applicant a quo):
Attorneys for
Respondent:
I
Rakhadani
Myburgh Ralenala
Attorneys
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