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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 1086
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## NI Mfeka Transport (Pty) Limited v DHL International (Pty) Limited t/a DHL Express (A2023/029642)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1086 (23 October 2024)
NI Mfeka Transport (Pty) Limited v DHL International (Pty) Limited t/a DHL Express (A2023/029642)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1086 (23 October 2024)
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sino date 23 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1) REPORTABLE: No
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
Case
No:
A2023-029642
In
the appeal between:
NI
MFEKA TRANSPORT (PTY) LIMITED
Appellant
and
DHL
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LIMITED t/a DHL EXPRESS
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The appellant appeals the magistrate’s upholding of a special
plea staying the appellant’s magistrate’s
court action in
terms of
section 6(1)
of the
Arbitration Act, 1965
pending the
outcome of an arbitration process.
2.
The appellant instituted action in the magistrate’s court
against the respondent for payment of contractual damages
in an
amount of R174 000.00. The appellant in its particulars of claim
pleaded the conclusion of a written agreement between
the parties,
that the respondent repudiated the agreement, that the appellant
elected to cancel the agreement consequent upon the
respondent’s
repudiation and that this resulted in contractual damages by way of
lost profit of R174 000.00.
3.
The respondent raised by way of special plea that the action was to
be stayed pending the resolution of the dispute between
the parties
in terms of the dispute resolution mechanism provided for in the
agreement by way of arbitration.
4.
The appellant did not replicate to the special plea.
5.
Neither was any evidence led for purposes of the special plea.
6.
The parties consequently argued the special plea before the
magistrate based on the pleadings alone, being the particulars
of
claim and special plea.
7.
The magistrate in her reasons of a page for upholding the special
plea found that the parties were bound by the arbitration
clause, and
so upheld the special plea, staying the action pending the outcome of
an arbitration process.
8.
The basis of the appeal is relatively narrow, and that is that the
magistrate erred in the exercise of her discretion.
9.
The appellant does not dispute that the arbitration clause is binding
or otherwise not enforceable. The appellant accepts
that the dispute
falls within the ambit of the arbitration clause. There is no
dispute as to the interpretation of the arbitration
clause.
10.
The appellant asserts that that the magistrate erred in the exercise
of her discretion when granting the stay, either
because she did not
exercise her discretion at all, or if she did, she did so with
reference to the binding effect of the arbitration
clause and to the
exclusion of factors put forward by the appellant during argument
before the magistrate why the stay should not
be granted.
11.
As was emphasised by the appellant’s counsel during argument,
the appellant is particularly aggrieved that the factors
put forward
during its argument before the magistrate as to why the stay should
not be granted do not feature in the magistrate’s
one page of
reasons. This is allegedly indicative that the magistrate did not
exercise her discretion judicially.
12.
As the magistrate allegedly did not exercise her discretion
judicially, the appellant seeks that the appeal court interfere
in
the magistrate’s decision and that the appeal court decide
whether the stay is to be granted.
13.
As stated and as confirmed by Mr Voyi for the appellant, during the
hearing of the appeal, the appellant did not replicate
to the special
plea and did not lead any evidence in opposition to a stay of
proceedings. Rather, such factors relied upon by the
appellant were
raised before the magistrate by way of argument by the appellant’s
attorney, and which are stated in the notice
of appeal. These are
that effectively that:
13.1.
arbitration proceedings would be prohibitively expensive as
contrasted to the instituted magistrate’s court
action;
13.2. the
costs of the arbitration proceedings would exceed the appellant’s
claim of only R174 000.00;
13.3. to
require of the appellant to proceed by way of arbitration would
effectively preclude it from having its claim
determined because it
as a ‘small company struggling financially’ could not
afford arbitration proceedings;
13.4. in the
circumstances a referral to arbitration would implicate its
constitutional right of access to court in
terms of section 34
of the Constitution as it would then not be able to have its claim
determined and that it was not ‘in
the interests of justice’
to refer the dispute to arbitration.
.
14.
The respondent’s counsel, Mr Berlowitz makes the point in his
heads of argument on appeal that no evidence was adduced
by the
appellant before the magistrate in support of what are factual
assertions, such as that arbitration proceedings would be
prohibitively expensive and that the appellant could not afford
arbitration proceedings. The respondent argues that reliance cannot
be placed by the court (whether before the magistrate or on appeal)
on the appellant’s ‘unsubstantiated allegations
from the
side bar’ and ‘the appellant’s
attorney’s
ipse dixit’
.
15.
The respondent argues that in any event these do not constitute
adequate grounds for a stay of the arbitration proceedings
and that
the magistrate did not err in the exercise of her discretion in
granting the stay.
16.
There is no dispute between the parties that a court exercises a
discretion when deciding whether to stay proceedings
pursuant to an
arbitration clause, and that the discretion must be exercised
judicially. It is in the exercise of that discretion,
and on the
basis of the material that the magistrate had before her when
exercising the discretion, that the parties part ways.
17.
Both parties referred to
Parekh v Shah Jehan Cinemas (Pty) Limited
and others
1980 (1) SA 301
(D), where Didcott J said at 305G/H
“
[t]he Court has a discretion whether to call a halt for
arbitration or to tackle the dispute itself
” and at 306A
that the remedy is “
discretionary. Its grant depends on a
variety of circumstances. At the stage of an exception the Court
knows but a few of these.
It is insufficiently equipped to use its
discretion
”.
18.
Didcott J in
Parekh
continued at 306B as follows in
explaining why an exception is not an appropriate manner to seek a
stay:
“
Instead of an
exception in the situation like the present, the party bent on
arbitration must therefore lodge either a substantive
application
under the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
for the requisite stay, or a
plea in the action asking for one. Each side then has the opportunity
to furnish by affidavit or to
plead the material thought to have a
bearing on the exercise of the court’s discretion, together
with information intending
to show, whenever such controversies have
arisen, whether the arbitration agreement in any event fits the case
and may freely be
invoked by the party relying on it.
”
19.
This is
instructive in the present instance as although the stay of the
action was raised by way of a special plea, the parties
did not led
any evidence that may have a bearing on the exercise of the court’s
discretion in relation to the special plea.
This is particularly so
in respect of the appellant who seeks to rely on factually laden
assertions of the kind as set out above,
such as that the costs of an
arbitration would be prohibitively expensive. This is in contrast to
the position of the respondent,
who relies squarely on a valid
arbitration clause in an agreement,
[1]
which is common cause on the pleadings and so in respect of which no
evidence is needed.
20.
It may be that the present appeal can be disposed of and refused on
the narrow basis that as the appellant did not adduce
any evidence in
support of what are effectively factual assertions, the magistrate
cannot be faulted for granting the stay on the
basis of the legally
cognisable material before her, which is the binding effect of valid
arbitration clause and without any countervailing
evidence before
her. Nonetheless I will consider whether the magistrate erred, on an
assumption in favour of the appellant that
some factual credence can
be given to the factors relied upon by the appellant in argument.
21.
As the magistrate’s decision was one of an exercise of
discretion, the scope for an appeal court to interfere in
the
exercise of that discretion depends on the nature of the discretion
that was exercised. Although there is not always uniformity
in the
nomenclature used to label the kinds of discretion at play, the two
kinds of discretion are usefully explained by Brand
JA in
MTN
Service Provider (Pty) Ltd v Afrocall (Pty) Ltd
2007 (6) SA 620
(SCA) at 623C-H:
“
[9]
In accordance with the well-settled principles of our law, courts of
appeal are reluctant to interfere with
the exercise of a discretion
by the court of first instance. For reasons that are equally well
settled, the appellate
Court will not substitute its own discretion
for that of the trial court simply because it would have preferred a
different result.
It will only do so if the court of first instance
had failed, through misdirection or otherwise, to exercise
its discretion
properly (see eg Benson v SA Mutual
Life Assurance Society
1986 (1) SA 776
(A) at 781G - J; S v
Basson
2007 (3) SA 582
(CC) (
2007 (1) SACR 566;
2005 (12) BCLR
1192)
in para [110]).
[10]
But, in Media Workers Association of South Africa and Others v
Press Corporation of South Africa Ltd
('Perskor') 1992 (4) SA791
(A) at 796H - I and 800E - G, E M Grosskopf JA arrived at the
conclusion that, in the present
context, the term 'discretion' has
more than one meaning. On a proper analysis of earlier cases, he
said, the restraint on the
appellate Court's powers of interference
only applies to a discretion in the strict or narrow sense and not to
a 'discretion' in
the broad sense, also described as a
'discretion loosely so called'. A discretion in the strict
sense, Grosskopf JA
explained, involves a choice between different
but equally admissible alternatives, while a 'discretion' in the
broad sense - or
loosely so called - means no more than a mandate to
have regard to a number of disparate and incommensurable
features
in arriving at a conclusion. When used in the broad sense,
Grosskopf JA found, there is no reason why the appellate court should
not exercise its own discretion by deciding the matter according to
its own view of the merits. It is only with regard to discretion
in
the strict sense that the appellate court's powers of interference
are to be circumscribed (see also eg Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others
v Jamieson and Others
1996 (4) SA 358
(A) at 361G -
I; Bezuidenhout v Bezuidenhout
2005 (2) SA 187
(SCA)
[2004] 4 All SA 487) in para [17]).
22.
Where the
discretion is in the strict or narrow sense, the scope of the appeal
court to interfere in the exercise of that discretion
by the lower
court is limited to what has been described as those “
well-known
limited grounds
”,
that is where the court
a quo
has exercised its discretion capriciously or upon a wrong principle
or where it has not brought its unbiased judgment to bear on
the
question or has not acted for substantial reasons.
[2]
23.
The
appellant accepts that the discretion exercised by a court when
deciding whether to stay court proceedings pending resolution
of a
dispute by arbitration is a discretion in the strict or narrow sense,
and so the grounds upon which the appeal court can interfere
are
limited. This is evident from the appellant’s notice of appeal
and heads of argument that the magistrate failed to exercise
her
discretion at all, or, assuming that she had, she failed to take into
account the factors advanced by the appellant why a stay
was to be
refused. The appellant’s grievance that the magistrate appeared
not to have any regard for the appellant’s
reasons advanced
during argument why the stay should be refused and that this, to use
a phase used by the appellant’s attorney
during argument,
affected the ‘due process’ of the proceedings before the
magistrate is also the tenor of that used
to challenge an exercise of
a narrow discretion.
[3]
24.
That the discretion is a narrow one is supported by authority.
25.
In the early decision of
The Rhodesian Railways Limited v
Mackintosh
1932 AD 359
counsel for the respondent argued, with
reference to early English authority, that the decision whether
proceedings should be stayed
is in the discretion of the court of
first instance and that an appeal court should not disturb a decision
arrived at in the exercise
of such discretion. One of those
early English decisions is
Clough v County Live Stock Insurance
Association
[1916] 85 L.J.K.D. 1185 where the appeal court
stated that the court
a quo ‘
must proceed judicially’.
Wessels ACJ speaking for the Appellate Division in
Rhodesian
Railways
at 375 went on to find that “
the court,
therefore, has a discretion, but the discretion must be judicially
exercised and a very strong case for the exercise
must be made
”.
26.
Subsequently, Galgut AJA, writing for the Appellate Division in the
oft-cited
Universiteit van Stellenbosch v JA Louw (Edms) Bpk
1983
(4) SA 321
(A), after referring
inter alia
to
Rhodesian
Railways,
held at 334A that:
“
It is not
possible to define, and certainly it is undesirable for any court to
attempt to define with any degree of precision, what
circumstances
would constitute a ‘very strong case.’
”
27.
Galgut AJA referred with approval at 334A to
Metallurgical and
Commercial Consultants (Pty) Limited v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Limited
1971 (2) SA 388
(W) where Colman J at 391H, after referring to
English authority, said that:
“
There should be
‘compelling reasons’ for refusing to hold a party to his
contract to have a dispute resolved by arbitration.
”
28.
Perhaps the
decision dealing most clearly with the nature of the discretion is
that of Slomowitz AJ in the court
a
quo,
followed by the appeal before the Full Bench in
Polysius
(Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Alloys (Pty) Ltd and another; Transvaal Alloys
(Pty) Ltd v Polysius (Pty) Ltd
1983 (2) 630 (W).
[4]
29.
Slomowitz AJ said at 639H – 640B in relation to the discretion:
“
How
then is this discretion to be exercised? Judicially of course, but,
it seems to me, with the parties' bargain uppermost in one's
mind.
This is as it should be, not least because they have contractually so
bound themselves but also because ‘there are
certain advantages
to arbitration such as finality, privacy, a judex of one's
own choice and avoiding delays through
having to wait one's turn on
the roll of trial cases...’.
Lancaster
v Wallace NO
1975 (1) SA 844
(W) at 847A.
This
approach has prompted various Courts, when speaking of the onus or
case to be made out by the party resisting an
application for a stay,
to say that "such an onus is not easily discharged"
(Metallurgical and Commercial
Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co
(Pty) Ltd
1971 (2) SA 388
(W) at 391E - H) or that a "very
strong case" must be made out (The Rhodesian Railways Ltd v
Mackintosh (supra at
375)), and that there must be "compelling
reasons" for refusing to hold a party to the contract (The Pine
Hill [1958]
2 Lloyd's Rep 146). Some Courts have gone
further. The discretion to refuse a stay is one "which will very
seldom be
exercised": Schietekat v Naumov (1936) 1 PH
A 26 (C). The instances in which the discretion should be exercised
are "few and exceptional": Russel v Russel
[1880]
14 Ch D 411
; see too the Metallurgical and Commercial
Consultants case supra at 391.”
30.
The Full Bench confirmed this approach on appeal, at 655B/C,
and that the discretion is narrow or strict, with limited
grounds for
the appeal court to interfere:
“
[Section 6(2)
of the
Arbitration Act] invests
the Court with a discretion, and this
may be a limiting factor on appeal. Where the exercise by a court of
a discretion in a matter
of this kind, which is essentially
procedural in character, is challenged on appeal, the initial inquiry
must be whether the discretion
has been judicially exercised
by the Judge a quo.
Unless it is shown not to have
been judicially exercised an appellate Court will decline to exercise
its own discretion
.”
31.
The appeal court went on to find at 656D that the court
a quo
had not misdirected itself, and that “
the learned
Judge has in my view properly taken into account all matters which it
was necessary to consider in exercising his discretion
whether to
grant or refuse a stay, and this Court must in consequence
decline to intervene.”
32.
Notably, the appeal court continued at 656D/E that even had the Court
been required to exercise its own discretion afresh,
the same
conclusion would have been reached.
33.
What is evident from the authorities, apart from the nature of the
discretion to be exercised, is that the onus
resisting on a
person who seeks to avoid the contractual bargain struck that
disputes are to be subjected to arbitration is not
an easy onus to
discharge. The appellant does not differ from this settled legal
principle but argues that the onus has been discharged
in the present
instance,
34.
As stated, the magistrate’s reasons are sparse, consisting of
no more than a page. It does not appear from these
reasons whether
the magistrate appreciated that she had a discretion or that she
could go beyond considering only the binding nature
of the
arbitration clause, and consider other factors. And so, the appellant
argues, the magistrate misdirected herself and the
appeal court is
entitled to interfere even in what was the exercise by the magistrate
of a discretion in a narrow sense.
35.
The argument made by the respondent is that the magistrate did
appreciate that various factors were to be taken into account
because
given the submissions that were made on behalf of the parties before
her during argument, it could hardly have escaped
her that she had a
discretion and that various factors came into play. Some
glimmer of this appears in the reasons in that
the magistrate does
refer to the appellant’s right of access to court as well as
the appellant mentioning the lack of funds
with which to proceed with
the arbitration. Rather, the respondent argues, those factors did not
sufficiently weigh on the magistrate
in the exercise of her
discretion to persuade her to refuse the stay, and that in this the
magistrate cannot be faulted.
36.
Even if I were prepared to assume in favour of the appellant,
for purposes of this appeal, that:
36.1. the
magistrate did materially misdirect herself in the manner argued by
the appellant and so open it to this appeal
court to exercise the
discretion afresh;
36.2.
credence is to be given to the factual assertions made by the
appellant during argument although there is no evidence
to support
those factual assertions,
the outcome would
be the same.
37.
Assuming in favour of the appellant that the costs of arbitration
would exceed the quantum of the claim, that the costs
of the
arbitration would be prohibitively expensive and that the appellant
would be unable to afford arbitration, these factors
do not in my
judgment constitute adequate grounds why the arbitration clause
should not be enforced and the stay granted.
38.
As emphasised by the respondent, the appellant voluntarily entered
into the agreement which contains the arbitration clause.
That
it subsequently transpires that the arbitration clause is financially
disadvantageous for the appellant because it results
in a form
of dispute resolution that is too expensive is no different to any
other clause that a party voluntarily agrees to and
then turns out to
be to its financial detriment. The parties voluntarily entered
into the agreement in a commercial context
where the appellant was
engaged as an independent contractor carrying out courier services
for the respondent.
39.
The courts
are overburdened. The now accepted approach of courts towards
arbitration, especially over the last two decades, is to
advance
arbitration as an alternate forum for dispute resolution.
[5]
The point well-made by the respondent is that with a responsible
approach within the context of the arbitration clause the parties
should be able to agree to a cost effective arbitration before an
arbitrator who is suitably skilled yet cost effective.
40.
The appellant has had no regard at all for the contractually agreed
mechanism for resolving the dispute, and not only
in respect of
arbitration. The appellant’s summons was not preceded by any
demand, let alone any attempt at
bona fide
discussion and
negotiation as required by clause 20.1 of the agreement.
41.
I am hesitant to find that court proceedings should be pursued rather
than the contractually agreed dispute resolution
mechanisms to which
the parties contractually agreed because of a party’s
subsequently contended for position in relation
to the costs of those
arbitration proceedings. What was argued for the appellant is that an
exceptional circumstance to be taken
into account in the exercise of
the discretion by the court is that the costs of the arbitration
would exceed the extent of the
claim. But this can hardly be
exceptional, or even unusual. Many claims must feature before the
magistrates’ courts on a
daily basis based on agreements that
contain arbitration clauses, and where those claims would be for
amounts falling below the
jurisdictional limit of the magistrates’
courts. Claims will arise based on those agreements and which would
fall within
the jurisdiction of the magistrates’ courts.
Nonetheless the parties agreed to those agreements in which they
chose
a particular dispute resolution process such as by arbitration.
That contractual bargain struck between the parties is to be
respected,
unless a strong case is made out why this should not be so
in that particular instance.
42.
Interestingly,
the appeal court in the early English authority of
Clough
[6]
did not find favour with an argument that an arbitration clause
should not be enforced because it required of the plaintiff to
pay
half the costs of the arbitration whatever the outcome of the
arbitration. The plaintiff sought to argue that this was
unfair
and oppressive and constituted a reason why the action should not be
stayed for purposes of arbitration. The appeal
court held that
as the plaintiff must be taken to have agreed to those terms in the
insurance policy that contained the arbitration
clause, that that was
not a good ground upon which a court could exercise its discretion in
refusing the stay.
43.
To return to the magistrate’s reasons, her reliance on
upholding the parties’ contractually agreed choice
of dispute
resolution is understandable given the primacy of this factor in the
authorities. So much so that a ‘strong case’
needs to be
made out why the arbitration clause should not be enforced.
44.
In the circumstances, even if I exercise the discretion afresh, I
find that the appellant as the plaintiff has not made
out a strong
case as to why its action in the magistrate’s court should not
be stayed pending the outcome of the arbitration.
It follows that the
appeal is to be dismissed.
45.
And when regard is had to the failure of the appellant to adduce
evidence in support of its factual assertions, the factual
veracity
of which is by no means self-evident, more so the magistrate’s
conclusion in the upholding of the special plea cannot
be faulted.
46.
The issue on appeal was narrow and straightforward, and so costs of
counsel could be on scale A for purposes of Uniform
Rule 67A.
47.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed, with the appellant to pay the
respondent’s costs, including the costs of counsel
on Scale A.
Gilbert
AJ
I agree.
Wright J
Date of hearing:
Date
of judgment:
22 October 2024
____
October 2024
Representative for the
appellant:
Instructed
by:
NP Voyi (Attorney)
Ndumiso
Voyi and Associates
Midrand
Counsel for the
respondent:
Instructed
by:
JK Berlowitz
Orelowitz Inc
Johannesburg
[1]
This
is not to say that the court’s jurisdiction is ousted by the
arbitration clause, which is something emphasised by the
appellant’s
attorney during argument. The appellant did not seek to challenge
the validity of the arbitration clause, such
as that the clause, or
its application in the present instance, was
contra
bonos mores
.
[2]
See, for example,
ex
parte Neethling and others
1951
(4) SA 331
(A) at 335E.
[3]
Notably
the appellant has sought to address its grievance of the
magistrates’ court proceedings by way of an appeal, rather
than by way of review proceedings in terms of
section 22(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
.
[4]
The
appeal judgment commences at page 653 of the law report, after the
decision of the court
a
quo
.
[5]
See,
for example,
Zhongji
Development Construction Engineering Co Ltd v Kamato Copper Co Sarl
2015
(1) SA 345
(SCA), at para 38: “
The
process of arbitration must be respected.”
[6]
Above.
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