Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1266South Africa
Swissport South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cemair (Pty) Ltd (2023-067763) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1266 (10 December 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Swissport South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cemair (Pty) Ltd (2023-067763) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1266 (10 December 2024)
Swissport South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cemair (Pty) Ltd (2023-067763) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1266 (10 December 2024)
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sino date 10 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.: 2023-067763
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
10 December 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SWISSPORT
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
CEMAIR
(PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
WINDELL,
J:
Introduction
[1]
In this
matter, Swissport South Africa (Pty) Ltd (the applicant) approached
the opposed motion court for an order against Cemair
(Pty) Ltd (the
respondent) for the return of its equipment.
[2]
The applicant
operates as an aviation services company covering ground and cargo
handling as well as airport lounges. It is common
cause that it is
the owner of the equipment, which consists of airport passenger
buses, baggage wagons, ground power units, air
start units, a narrow
body tug and 3 passenger aid units.
[3]
The respondent
conducts business within the aviation industry as a passenger airline
carrier and also offers aircraft leasing services.
The equipment is
currently in their possession. In essence the respondent’s
defence is that the parties entered into a tacit
lease agreement in
terms of which the applicant leased the equipment to the applicant
pending a sale agreement that may or may
not be entered into at a
later stage. The argument is that it is thus entitled to retain
possession of the equipment.
[4]
The application for vindicatory
relief was launched on 11 July 2023. Khangekile Zamambiwa Khoza (“Ms
Khoza”), a director
and chief executive officer of and in the
employ of the applicant deposed to the applicant’s founding and
replying affidavits.
The respondent delivered their answering
affidavit together with an application to strike out various portions
of the applicant’s
founding affidavit in terms of Rule 30 of
the Uniform Rules of Court on 30 October 2023. It also subsequently
launched a further
application to strike out the applicant’s
replying affidavit
in toto
on
13 February 2024.
Striking out
applications
[5]
The respondent has sought to strike
out certain portions of the applicant's founding affidavit (the first
striking out application)
and the whole of the replying affidavit
(the second striking out application).
[6]
The first striking out application
is brought on the basis that it contains irrelevant material. The
basis of the second striking
out application is that the content of
the replying affidavit is unduly lengthy and an abuse of the process
of court.
[7]
Uniform
Rule 6(15) provides that the Court may, on application, strike out
from any affidavit any matter which is scandalous, vexatious
or
irrelevant, with an appropriate order as to costs. This Rule further
provides that the Court may not grant the application unless
it is
satisfied that the applicant will be prejudiced if the application is
not granted.
[1]
[8]
On the day of the hearing, the
second a striking out application was dismissed with reasons to
follow. Firstly, the paragraphs in
the replying affidavit cannot be
severed. If the replying affidavit is then considered as a whole, the
court was not persuaded
that it was unduly long and an abuse of
process. Secondly, the tacit agreement defence was only disclosed in
the answering affidavit.
The applicant was required to provide a
comprehensive response to these allegations, and the replying
affidavit includes relevant
information to counter the respondent’s
defence. Thirdly, other to claim that it suffered prejudice, the
respondent had not
indicated in what manner prejudice is or was
suffered.
[9]
As
far as the first striking out application is concerned, I am also
unconvinced that portions of the founding affidavit should
be struck
out. The respondent's grievances are predominantly concerning the
background and history of the matter and the relationship
between the
parties. This information is essential because it pertains to the
manner in which the respondent acquired the applicant's
property,
failed to return it, and thus prompted the application. In the
circumstances of this case. those facts are material and
do not in
any way prejudice the respondent.
[2]
[10]
Both striking out applications are
dismissed with costs.
Background facts.
[11]
It is imperative to provide a
comprehensive account of the background facts and the correspondence
between the parties, as the facts
ultimately influenced the decision
that was made in this instance.
[12]
In accordance with numerous
agreements between the parties, the applicant had furnished the
respondent with aviation ground handling-related
apparatus and
services for approximately seven years prior to April 2023. On 28
March 2023, after the previous agreements had come
to an end, the
chief executive officer of the respondent, Mr Miles van der Molen
(“Mr van der Molen”) requested a month-to-month
lease for
the equipment. Consequently, on 31 Marc 2023, the applicant and
respondent executed a written ‘Equipment
Lease Agreement’
(“the ELA”) in terms of which the applicant leased the
equipment to the respondent.
[13]
The respondent was granted
permission by the ELA to lease the equipment at a numerous airports
located throughout South Africa.
The agreement was only valid for one
month, with an expiration date of 30 April 2023, unless it was
extended by mutual consent.
The ELA contained a table that delineated
the equipment and the corresponding amounts payable per item. The
rental fee was required
to be paid in advance.
[14]
On 31 March 2023, the conclusion of
the ELA between the parties was recorded by way of an email addressed
to Mr van der Molen from
Mr Bob Gurr, an erstwhile employee of the
applicant. In the email it was emphasised that the agreement ‘
is
valid for an initial period of one month but may be extended by
mutual consent.’
[15]
Once the ELA came into effect
on 1 April 2023, the respondent was entitled to take possession of
the equipment. The respondent was
also obligated to make payment of
the lease amount in accordance with the ELA. No payment for April
2023 was received from the
respondent, despite an invoice sent to the
respondent on 6 April 2023.
[16]
The respondent collected the
leased equipment from the applicant as provided for in the ELA on 6
April 2023, 14 April 2023 and 17
April 2023. The respondent claims
that they did not collect all of the equipment.
[17]
The ELA was not extended and lapsed
through the effluxion of time. On 30 April 2023, the respondent
failed to return the leased
equipment in their possession to the
applicant.
[18]
On 1 May 2023, the applicant did not
request the equipment's return. Rather, on 15 May 2023, the
respondent, through an email from
Mr. van der Molen to Ms Khoza,
enquired about the potential sale of the equipment by the applicant
to the respondent.
[19]
Ms Khoza responded on the same day.
She advised that a possible sale could be considered subject to the
approval from the Swissport
Group and provided that all monies
outstanding owed to the applicant by the respondent were settled. She
also requested the respondent
to provide a list of equipment that it
was considering purchasing.
[20]
It is common cause that the
reference to settlement of all monies outstanding was from the
previous agreements between the parties
and not to the ELA in this
matter. To date no such list was provided and the dispute about the
outstanding monies between the parties
is ongoing.
[21]
The respondent received
correspondence from the applicant's instructing attorney on 18 May
2023, three days later. The email contained
a portion that seems to
pertain to outstanding invoices from the parties' previous
agreements. It also addressed the ELA in the
following manner:
7.
Lastly, writer has been provided
with an Equipment Lease Agreement (the Agreement) entered into
between Cemair and our client on
31 March 2023.
7.1
The Agreement required an advance payment by Cemair for the
use of the equipment and an invoice was duly issued by our client on
1 April 2023.
7.2
Notwithstanding a request for payment, an amount of
R569 010.19
remains outstanding and
payable.
7.3
We have instruction to demand, as we hereby do, that payment
of the amount of mentioned in 7.2 above, together with interest at
prime plus 2% is payable by no later than
16h30 Tuesday 23
May
2023
, into our client’s
account, the details of which you are in possession of.
8.
Our client’s rights remain reserved’
.
[22]
On 19 May 2023, the respondent was
permitted to collect further equipment from the applicant’s
premises. The applicant
clarified that it was a mistake and
that it happened because the instruction to prohibit any further
collection of equipment by
the respondent had not yet reached the
applicant’s delivery department and personnel. On 22 May 2023,
when the respondent
again attempted to collect further equipment, it
was barred from doing so by the applicant. The respondent was not
permitted to
collect any further equipment after that date.
[23]
The respondent replied to the
applicant’s correspondence on 31 May 2023 by way of an email.
It was marked “without prejudice”
and contained
settlement proposals and other discussions that relate to a separate
matter. The relevant letter was not attached
as an annexure to the
founding affidavit. A portion of the letter relating to the ELA,
however, was disclosed in the founding affidavit.
In this letter the
respondent expressed dissatisfaction with the applicant's request for
payment in terms of the ELA, as not all
of the equipment had been
delivered to the respondent. Additionally, they complained that some
of the equipment was outdated and
required repairs. The respondent
also argued that the applicant had not provided the correct details
of the equipment and had misrepresented
its condition and
functionality to them. It subsequently stated:
‘
We
had no alternative but to proceed and contract with another ground
handling company to assist where we are unable to operate
due to the
state of your client’s equipment.
Your client is thus in
breach of the equipment lease agreement for its failure to deliver
all the equipment in the condition and
operating manner in which it
was represented to us. We have incurred costs to repair two busses in
the meantime as nothing was
operable. The agreement period was for 30
days due to the consideration of entering into a sale agreement.
Despite the aforesaid,
your client insists on the full lease amount
despite failure to properly to deliver. Our rights to proceed with a
claim of damages
for the immense prejudice suffered daily due to your
client’s breach remain reserved”.
[24]
A written demand for the return of
the equipment on or before 9 June 2023 was sent to the respondent on
6 June 2023. In this letter,
the applicant reminded the respondent
that the agreement was only for one month, which expired on 30 April
2023 and that failure
to return the equipment will result in legal
action. The respondent failed to adhere to the demand to return the
equipment and
no reply was received in respect of this letter.
[25]
The increasingly fraught
situation between the parties was sketched out in a letter from the
applicant’s attorney to the respondent,
including the
respondent’s legal advisor, dated 11 June 2023. It had come to
the knowledge of the applicant that some of
the equipment had been
removed from OR Tambo International Airport (ORT) without their
permission. The respondent was again afforded
the opportunity to
return the equipment to the applicant on or before 12 June 2023,
failing which they would approach the High
Court for urgent relief.
[26]
The letter of 11 June 2023 was
followed up by an email addressed to four employees of the respondent
including Mr van der Molen
and Ms Botha by the applicant’s
legal representative, Mr Jacobs, on 12 June 2023. The email stated
that the respondent had
not received a response to the applicant’s
request regarding the equipment that had been taken from ORT. Mr
Jacobs also expressed
his dismay that he had not been provided with a
list of equipment that had been removed from ORT and that the
respondent had still
not returned any equipment to the applicant.
[27]
In this letter Mr Jacobs expressly
stated that the respondent had until 16h30 on 12 June 2024 to comply
with the applicant’s
requests. Mr Jacobs provided the mobile
number of Mr Ali Mafela and Mr Rudi Buitenbos to the respondent in
the email and confirmed
that both officials were available to assist
the respondent with any access or logistical issues that they might
have. The equipment
that was not on the premises of ORT had to be
delivered to Swissport Cargo SCS6 Warehouse by no later than 16h30 on
Tuesday 13
June 2023.
[28]
Ms. Botha, the respondent’s
in-house legal advisor, responded on behalf of the respondent in
writing to the applicant's correspondence
dated 6 June 2023, 11 June
2023, and 12 June 2023 on 12 June 2023. The respondent denied that
they were in breach of the ELA and
once more contended that the
applicant had misrepresented the actual functioning condition of the
equipment, resulting in ongoing
prejudice and that they were
currently in the process of calculating the contractual damages and
the cost of the repairs incurred.They
asserted that their “
right
to retain certain equipment until the aforesaid amount has been
settled in full remain reserved
”
and that it was common cause that the applicant was “
no
longer operation and all its equipment will be put into storage, it
is not as if your client can lease the equipment as it has
been
rejected by ACSA for e.g. its age and condition…….”
Additionally, they suggested that the applicant could make an
arrangement with Mr van der Molen for the collection of specific
equipment at their own expense.
[29]
Thus, it was revealed that the
reason for retaining possession of the applicant’s equipment
was that the respondent had a
lien or right to retain the equipment
in their possession in lieu of the recovery of unspecified
contractual damages and unconfirmed
repairs to the equipment.
[30]
The applicant responded to this
letter on 22 June 2023. It attached three invoices to be paid to the
applicant. It was specifically
stated that:
“
The
presentation of these invoices to you is simply an effort to recoup
the enormous amount of money owed to our client by Cemair
and should
in no way be deemed as a waiver of any of our client's rights
contained in the Equipment Lease Agreement and in law
and our
client's rights to pursue any and all amounts still outstanding
remains reserved”.
[31]
On 30 June 2023, the respondent made
the first payment in respect of the equipment to the applicant. On 11
July 2023 this application
was launched. A further payment was made
on 1 September 2023 and was followed by a further payment comprising
of a part-sum payment
after the notice of motion in this matter had
been issued. The applicant received a further part-payment from the
respondent on
31 October 2023.
[32]
On 30 October 2023, the respondent’s
answering affidavit was delivered. In their answering affidavit it
raised, for the first
time, that there was a tacit lase agreement
entered into between the parties which entitled them to retain the
applicant’s
equipment.
Evaluation
[33]
There are three requirements
necessary for success in a vindicatory action. One, the applicant's
ownership or co-ownership of the
thing; Two, the thing must still be
in existence and be clearly identifiable; and three, the respondent
has possession or detention
of the thing at the moment the action is
instituted. All the requirements have been met.
[34]
In
Chetty
v Naidoo
[3]
Jansen JA articulated the position as follows:
“
It
is inherent in the nature of ownership that possession of the res
should normally be with the owner, and it followed that no
other
person may withhold it from the owner unless he is vested with some
right enforceable against the owner (e.g. a right of
retention or a
contractual right). The owner, in instituting a rei vindicatio, need
therefore do no more than allege and prove
that he is the owner and
that the defendant is holding the res — the onus being on the
defendant to allege and establish
any right to continue to hold
against the owner."
[35]
In the answering affidavit the
respondent stated that it has the right to retain the equipment
because the parties entered into
a tacit lease agreement during May
or June 2023. During argument the respondent submitted that the tacit
lease agreement was entered
into as early as 1 May 2023, as the ELA
came to an end through the effluxion of time on 30 April 2023. It was
argued that the ELA
was therefore irrelevant as a new lease agreement
was entered into. The respondent, however, continued to
reference the ELA
in the email dated 12 June 2023. In this
email, the respondent expressed their dissatisfaction with the
applicant's misrepresentation
of the condition of the equipment
delivered in accordance with the ELA and asserted that they were not
in breach of the ELA. No
mention was made of a tacit lease agreement.
[36]
It
is well-established that a party wishing to rely on a tacit agreement
must plead and prove the facts from which a court can infer
that a
genuine and actual consensus occurred. An implied and a tacit
agreement only differs from an express agreement in the manner
in
which the offer or acceptance is made. It is not expressed in words,
gesture or writing, but is implied from all the circumstances
and
actions of the parties.
[4]
Wessels, The Law of Contract, analyses the legal position
relative to tacit contracts and state that the following requisites
must be present: (i) the person whom it is proposed to fix with the
tacit contract must be fully aware of all the circumstances
connected
with the transaction; (ii) the act must not be equivocal; and (iii)
the tacit contract must not extend to more than the
parties
contemplate. He further remarks that a tacit agreement must be
restrictively interpreted in favour of the person whom it
is sought
to lay an obligation.
[5]
In Maasdorp the learned author remarks that ‘
in
order to constitute a valid tacit contract, the conduct of the
parties must not only be consistent with consent, but such as
will
allow of no other interpretation’
.
[6]
[37]
It is unclear from the answering
affidavit and the circumstances of the matter as to which conduct of
the applicant the respondent
relied upon to infer that a tacit
agreement was reached. In fact, the circumstances of this case do not
provide any evidence that
a tacit agreement was entered into. For
instance, the respondent was denied permission to collect equipment
on 22 May 2023 or any
subsequent date, despite the respondent's
efforts to do so. This contradicts the terms of the alleged tacit
agreement. The
applicant had been requesting the return of all
equipment in the respondent's custody since 6 June 2023. The
respondent's failure
to do so was a unilateral action and does not
represent a consensus between the parties or an unequivocal act on
the part of the
applicant that could potentially give rise to a tacit
agreement.
[38]
According to the respondent, the tacit agreement
commenced upon the termination of the ELA on 30 April 2023.
The
respondent, however, had never settled a full invoice issued
by the applicant in respect of the leased equipment pursuant to their
claimed tacit agreement
and most payments were
only paid after the application was launched.
In
response,
the respondent argued that the purported
tacit agreement had no payment terms: The respondent pays according
to their preferences
at their discretion. Such an agreement
leaves the applicant entirely at the respondent’s mercy and
makes no commercial
sense. There is no conduct alleged on the part of
the applicant that shows that the applicant would have consented to
such a term.
In fact, the applicant's actions suggest the opposite.
[39]
Moreover, the
respondent contends that the applicant was to lease the respondent
any equipment that it may require from time to
time. One consequence
of this is that the applicant would be required to reserve equipment
for the respondent "in case"
they desired to lease it. This
argument ignores the fact that the respondent was explicitly informed
that they were not entitled
to lease or acquire additional equipment
from at least 22 May 2023. Finally, the respondent asserts that it
was a condition of
the tacit agreement that it would be responsible
for any equipment repairs. Nevertheless, the letter dated 12 June
2023, stated
that
the applicant
was responsible for the repairs and that they were in the process of
determining their damages.
[40]
There is no indication that the
parties engaged in any conduct that would suggest an offer and
acceptance or a meeting of the minds
on the terms of the purported
tacit agreement. The applicant's comprehensive response to the
respondent's claims and the commercially
prejudicial terms of the
tacit agreement with respect to the applicant demonstrate that the
parties were consistently at odds and
that no agreement was reached.
The respondent’s reliance on the email dated 23 June 2023, in
which the applicant attached
three invoices for payment, is in my
view not sufficient to prove the existence of a tacit agreement.
The
applicant confirmed that it was merely attempting to recover at least
part of the substantial monies owed by the respondent
to the
applicant and is by no means an indication of the existence of a
tacit agreement,
[41]
There is no basis to believe that
there was any tacit agreement, pending a sale agreement that reached
no further than an enquiry
stage. The alleged potential sale
agreement claimed by the respondent clearly reached no further than
the enquiry and or discussion.
There was no certainty or undertaking
that such a sale agreement would ever come to fruition or would even
be possible
[42]
The respondent's defence, which it
disclosed on 31 May 2023 in a letter authored by the respondent’s
in-house legal advisor,
was founded on a lien in lieu of contractual
damages claim, as evidenced by the extensive correspondence between
the parties. No
reference was made to the existence of a tacit
agreement between the parties that would allow the respondent to
retain possession
of the applicant's equipment. The respondent did
not allege the existence of a tacit lease agreement until the
answering affidavit
was submitted on 30 October 2023.
[43]
The purported tacit agreement is
clearly an afterthought in an attempt to escape liability. The
respondent’s defence of a
tacit agreement is untenable and
farfetched and can be rejected outright. I am satisfied that the
respondent has no legal right
to retain possession of the equipment
and was unable to show cause why the equipment should not be returned
to the applicant.
[44]
In the result, the following order
is made:
1.
The Respondent is ordered to return all the
Applicant's equipment as reflected in Annexure "SP17"
attached to the Applicant's
Founding Affidavit herein, within 5
(five) days of the granting of this Order.
2.
For those pieces of equipment that
are located at the OR International Airport at date of this Order the
equipment must be returned
to the Applicant's premises located at the
Swissport GSE area at the OR International Airport.
3.
For those pieces of equipment that are no
longer located at the OR International Airport at date of this Order,
the equipment must
be returned to the Swissport Cargo SCS6 Warehouse.
4.
If the Respondent fails to return the
Applicant's equipment described at point 1, 2 and 4 above within the
stipulated time, the
Sheriff of this Court is then and, in that
event, authorised to attach and remove the equipment and to deliver
such to the Applicant's
aforementioned premises at the Respondent's
cost.
5.
Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of
the application on Scale B.
L. WINDELL
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected 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 on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 10 December 2024.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Ms A.
De La Porte
Instructed
by:
Thyne
Jacobs Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondent:
Advocate
C.E. Thompson
Instructed
by:
Hennie
Bezuidenhout Inc Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
19
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
10
December 2024
[1]
See
Helen
Suzman Foundation v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
2015 (2 SA 1
(CC) at paras 27 and 28 for a discussion on striking
out applications.
[2]
See
Beinash
v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA) at 733.
[3]
1974
(3) SA 285 (A)
[4]
Frame
v Palmer 1950 (3) SA 341 (C)
[5]
Vol 1 Second Edition at para 266.
[6]
Vol
3, 4
th
Edition Ed. At page 64
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