Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 27South Africa
Phoenix Salt Industries (Pty)Ltd v Lubavich Foundation of South Africa (2022/1298) [2023] ZAGPJHC 27 (19 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Phoenix Salt Industries (Pty)Ltd v Lubavich Foundation of South Africa (2022/1298) [2023] ZAGPJHC 27 (19 January 2023)
Phoenix Salt Industries (Pty)Ltd v Lubavich Foundation of South Africa (2022/1298) [2023] ZAGPJHC 27 (19 January 2023)
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sino date 19 January 2023
FLYNOTES:
THE SHIFREN STRAITJACKET
CONTRACT –
Non-variation – Shifren rule – Whether pactum de non
petendo struck by the non-variation and
non-waiver clauses in loan
agreement – Variation and waiver discussed – Party
claiming payment having waived
its right to call up the loan.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2022/1298
Date
of hearing: 15 November 2022
Date
delivered: 19 January 2023
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
PHOENIX
SALT INDUSTRIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THE
LUBAVICH FOUNDATION
OF
SOUTHERN
AFRICA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J
:
[1]
Applicant seeks an order for payment by respondent of the sum of R
2 886 005.20,
interest thereon, and costs. The claim arises
from a written loan agreement concluded by the parties on 12 August
1994. A third
party to the agreement was Golden Hands Property
Holdings (Pty) Ltd (“Golden Hands”).
[2]
The respondent is an organization that aims to advance the interests
of the Jewish
community in Johannesburg, and to that end it runs a
school for Jewish scholars on properties in the Orchards area. During
1994
the respondent was indebted to Nedbank Ltd in the sum of some R
5 million, which loan was secured by mortgage bonds over the Orchards
properties, and over properties referred to as the “Klipfontein”
properties.
[3]
Respondent was experiencing difficulties in servicing the loans,
which caused two
of its long-standing benefactors, the brothers
Abraham and Solomon Krok, to come to respondent’s rescue. They
proposed paying
off the Nedbank debt, and taking over the Nedbank
loan through applicant, a shelf company controlled by them. They
proposed that
applicant enter into a loan agreement with respondent
on more favourable terms than the Nedbank loan, with applicant also
taking
cession of the mortgage bonds as security for the loan.
[4]
On 12 August 1994 the parties entered into a written contract which
embodied the above
terms (“the loan agreement”). In the
same agreement Golden Hands bound itself as surety and co-principal
debtor with
respondent for the due and punctual performance of
respondent’s obligations arising from the loan agreement.
[5]
On the same day, respondent entered into a separate written agreement
with Golden
Hands (“the sale agreement”) in terms of
which respondent sold 4 immovable properties to Golden Hands at a
purchase
price of R 5.2 million. The purchase price was, in terms of
the written sale agreement at least, payable on transfer. Golden
Hands
intended to erect a cluster development on the four properties.
In terms of the loan agreement Golden Hands ceded its right to
receive the proceeds from the sale of the cluster houses to
applicant, in order to reduce respondent’s indebtedness. Golden
Hands never paid respondent the purchase price for the properties.
[6]
A material term of the loan agreement reads as follows:
“
9.1
This agreement, together with the annexure thereto, constitutes the
sole record of the agreement between the parties
in regard to the
subject matter thereof.
9.2
Neither party shall be bound by any representation, express or
implied term, warranty, promise or the like
not recorded herein or
reduced to writing and signed by the parties or their
representatives.
9.3
No addition to, variation or agreed cancellation of this agreement or
the annexure thereto shall be of any
force and effect unless in
writing and signed by or on behalf of the parties.
9.4
No indulgence which either party may grant to the other shall
constitute a waiver of any of the rights of
the former.”
[7]
The agreement also provided that the loan would be repayable 24
months after applicant
had demanded repayment of the then outstanding
balance.
[8]
Applicant says that the agreement was a straightforward loan, that it
had demanded
repayment of the balance of the loan on 25 July 2017,
and that the debt had become due and payable on or before 26 July
2019.
[9]
Respondent, represented by Rabbi Menachem Lipskar, has a completely
different version
of events. He is, together with Solomon Krok who
deposed to a confirmatory affidavit on behalf of respondent, the only
persons
who have personal knowledge of the events that unfolded in
August 1994. Rabbi Lipskar says that Solomon and Abraham Krok wished
to assist respondent in settling the debt in its entirety. They
therefore devised a scheme whereby they would advance the funds
to
respondent through applicant (of which they were directors together
with Arthur Aaron), so that respondent could settle the
Nedbank debt.
[10]
The scheme, according to Rabbi Lipskar, included a deal whereby
Golden Hands would utilize the
profits from the cluster development
to settle respondent’s debt to applicant. At that stage one
Joseph Rabin was the sole
director and shareholder in Golden Hands.
Golden Hands in fact paid R 2 429 440.00 to applicant in
part-payment of respondent’s
debt. Rabbi Lipskar says that he
was assured by Solomon and Abraham Krok, on numerous occasions, that
applicant would never be
required to settle the debt, as the proceeds
from the cluster development would be used for that purpose. Solomon
Krok confirms
this version in a confirmatory affidavit to the
respondent’s answer.
[11]
Applicant cannot contradict respondent’s version as none of its
witnesses have personal
knowledge regarding the events of August
1994. Applicant says, firstly, that the respondent’s version is
inconsistent with
the objective evidence, and secondly, that it is
legally untenable.
[12]
There is no reason to reject the evidence of Rabbi Lipskar and that
of Solomon Krok. Support
for their version is to be found in the fact
that Golden Hands was party to the loan agreement and that it stood
surety for the
respondent’s debt. This fact, and the
part-payment by Golden Hands to the applicant, supports the version
that it was envisaged
that Golden Hands would repay the loan, and
that respondent would never be required to do so.
[13]
Applicant argues that over many years the applicant has reported the
transaction as a loan in
its financial statements. That fact,
applicant says, is indicative of the fact that it was simply a loan,
and was repayable in
accordance with the terms of the agreement. In
my view, the fact that the transaction was treated as a loan in
applicant’s
financial statements does not mean that the Krok
brothers did not waive repayment. There may well have been a business
reason why
the transaction was so reflected in applicant’s
books.
[14]
On 23 October 1998 the respondent’s accountants made the
following enquiry to Solomon Krok:
“
I
refer to the agreement between the Lubavich Foundation and Phoenix
Salt Industries (Pty) Ltd. Please can you advise on the accounting
treatment adopted by the above company in respect of this transaction
as well as the amount shown as receivable from the foundation
in
respect of the 1995, 1996 and 1997 financial years.”
[15]
This letter, applicant argues, is an acknowledgement that respondent
was indebted to applicant.
In my view, the letter is simply an
enquiry as to how the transaction was treated in applicant’s
books, and how much is reflected
in the books as being owed. It is
not a concession that respondent was liable for payment. On 12
January 1999 applicant’s
auditor sent loan certificates to
respondent reflecting the 1995, 1996, 1997 and 1998 balances.
Respondent did not take issue with
the certificates. Applicant says
that if respondent had believed that it was not liable for payment it
would have disputed the
certificates.
[16]
There is no dispute that during the tenure of Solomon and Abraham
Krok as directors of the applicant,
no attempt was made to enforce
the agreement. They resigned as directors of applicant in November
2003, and were replaced by Martin
and Maxim Krok. Perhaps
coincidentally, or perhaps not, on 19 November 2003 the applicant’s
auditor requested respondent
to acknowledge the outstanding balance
as being R 7.8 million. No response was received from respondent.
[17]
Applicant argues that respondent’s lack of protest that the
loan was not repayable, and
its failure to dispute the certificates,
is indicative of its understanding that the monies remained due to
applicant. It may be
so that one would have expected respondent to
protest on receipt of the certificates, and to say that it did not
owe the monies.
However, can I deduct from the lack of response that
the evidence of Solomon Krok should be rejected? I do not believe so.
Furthermore,
the
Plascon-Evans
test
[1]
requires me to accept
the respondent’s version in motion proceedings where it is in
conflict with that of the applicant,
unless the version is so
far-fetched and untenable that it can be rejected on the papers. I
therefore accept the respondent’s
version of events.
[18]
The further question is whether the defence put up is legally
tenable. Applicant says that the
defence of waiver is ousted by the
non-variation and non-waiver clauses in the loan agreement. In the
absence of an agreement in
writing to vary the terms of the
agreement, applicant says, the alleged oral variation is of no force
and effect.
[19]
Respondent argues that Solomon and Abraham Krok, acting on behalf of
applicant, had concluded
a pactum de non petendo
,
which was
not struck by the non-variation and non-waiver clauses in the
agreement.
[20]
There was, until the issue was settled in
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy BPK v Shifren
[2]
,
some debate as to whether a non-variation clause was valid.
[21]
Shifren
(
supra
)
put the debate to rest. Steyn CJ wrote:
[3]
“
Waar
partye so ‘n bepaling in hul kontrak ingelyf het, d.w.s. ‘n
bepaling wat nie slegs ander bedinge nie, maar ook
himself teen
mondelinge wysiging heet te beveilig, kan ek geen rede vind waarom
die een party nie die ander daaraan gebonde kan
hou nie.
[22]
Although the debate regarding the validity of non-variation clauses
was put to rest, and the
principle has been reaffirmed
subsequently,
[4]
it has been
recognized that a rigid application of the Shifren principle may, in
certain circumstances, result in injustice. For
instance, if parties
to a contract were to orally agree to a changed contractual regime,
and conduct themselves in accordance with
their mutual understanding
without recording the variation in writing, if one party were later
to enforce the strict terms of the
agreement on the basis that the
agreement was only variable in writing, the other party, who has
abided by the oral agreement,
may suffer serious prejudice.
[23]
Hutchinson has referred to this difficulty as “the Shifren
straitjacket” in a useful
article
[5]
in which he analyzed the various ways in which courts have attempted
to soften the impact of the Shifren rule, in order to prevent
inequitable outcomes. Although the Shifren-rule has been consistently
applied, non-variation clauses have been restrictively interpreted,
thus ameliorating the effect of the Shifren-rule.
[6]
In
Hillsage
Investments (Pty) Ltd v National Exposition (Pty) Ltd
[7]
the court dealt with the waiver of a right by a party to whose sole
benefit the right accrued. The court held that “…
a
stipulation that which is clearly inserted for the benefit of one of
the parties, can, if he so wishes, be waived by him.”
[24]
In
Impala
Distributors v Taunus Chemical Manufacturing
[8]
the court said:
“
Maar
afstandoening, en ook mondelinge afstanddoening, speel beslis ‘n
rol in die samehang van hierdie regsfiguur. Dit kan
egter alleen
betrekking hê op ‘n bepaling wat uitsluitend tot voordeel
van een party is. ‘n Bepaling, bv. dat
huurgeld betaal moet
word, is uitsluitend tot voordeel van die verhuurder en hy kan
vanselfsprekend eensydig afstand doen van sy
reg om dit in te vorder.
Hy kan dit mondeling doen en selfs stilswyend. Dit is geen wysiging
van die kontrak nie. Dit is ‘n
pactum de non petendo wat naas
die kontrak kan bestaan.
[25]
In
Minnit
v Stewart Wrightson (Pty) Ltd
[9]
,
following the lead in
Impala
(
supra
)
the court recognized the principle that a stipulation for the benefit
of one party may fall outside of the ambit of a non-variation
clause,
and may then be waived unilaterally.
[26]
In
Miller
N.O. and Another v Danneker
[10]
a
franchisor agreed not to institute action for payment of franchise
fees a period, in order to give the franchisee time to dispose
of his
interest in a guest house. Nevertheless, action was instituted
against the franchisee. In denying summary judgment Ntsebeza
AJ
said
[11]
:
“
The
defence of pactum de non petendo is still part of our law. In Impala
Distributors v Taunus Chemical Manufacturing…. Hiemstra
J held
that when a contract provides that dissolution thereof can only take
place in writing, such a restriction can be revoked
by oral
agreement….
The
pactum, the judge held, merely suspends the capacity or right of a
creditor to sue for a specified period or until the occurrence
of
some contingency.”
[27]
In this case applicant argued that a pactum de non petendo is always
limited to a specific period,
or is only operative until the
occurrence of a specific event. It thus entails a temporary
suspension of an obligation, and is
not, as in this case, of
permanent effect. That contention seems to me to be correct. Van der
Merwe, Contract General Principles
[12]
,
says that a pactum de non petendo “suspends the capacity to
enforce [a contract],
usually
for a specified period or until the occurrence of some contingency”
(emphasis added). For that reason respondent’s
reliance on a
pactum de non petendo must be incorrect.
[28]
It seems to me, however, that a pactum de non petendo must be
distinguished from other forms
of waiver. The former suspends a
contracting party’s right to enforce a contractual right for a
period, whereas a waiver
may be:
“…
.the
renunciation of a right. When the intention to renounce is expressly
communicated to the person affected he is entitled to
act upon
it.”
[13]
The
term has been used loosely in various judgments (as Hutchinson
(
supra
) points out) in the context of the release of a debtor
from an obligation to perform, an agreement not to sue or to enforce
a right,
and an election by a creditor between alternative remedies.
[29]
Christie
[14]
is of the view
that a waiver “invariably results in the variation of that
contract…..”. I do not agree. One
should distinguish
between a variation, which amends the terms of the agreement, and a
waiver, where the terms of the agreement
remain the same, but one
party’s entitlement to enforce a right arising from the
agreement is extinguished. It is one thing
to say “I agree that
the monthly rental will be reduced by 50%”, as opposed to
saying “I undertake not to sue
you for the arrear rental”.
The former amends the agreement, the latter is the abandonment of a
contractual right. In
Van
As v Du Preez
[15]
the court said:
“
It
is unnecessary to canvass what the juristic nature of a waiver is and
more particularly whether it is contractual in form or
merely a
unilateral act. Suffice it to say that, however brought about, it is
the abandonment or surrender (with the necessary
knowledge) of a
right ….. It does not per se result in the contract being
altered. Herein lies the difference between it
and a variation. This
is the distinction drawn by HIEMSTRA J in the Impala Distributors
case. The English approach, as Tager (at
435) points out, is similar,
namely a waiver is a ‘mere forbearance afforded by one party or
the other for the latter’s
convenience and at his request’
whereas a variation involves ‘a definite alteration, as a
matter of contract, of contractual
obligations by the mutual
agreement of both parties’”.
[30]
In my view the applicant clearly waived its right to call up the loan
and to enforce the strict
terms of the agreement. The only remaining
question is whether the waiver is ousted by the terms of clause 9.4
of the agreement
which provides that the granting of an indulgence
shall not be regarded as a waiver of applicant’s rights. An
indulgence
is simply that, a temporary freeing of a party to an
agreement from strict compliance with the terms thereof. That is not
the position
in this case. In this matter the Krok brothers
permanently abandoned applicant’s right to call up the loan,
and to enforce
payment in terms of the agreement.
[31]
As I have said above, terms which restrict a party’s freedom to
contract must be restrictively
interpreted. Clause 9.4 relates only
to the granting of indulgences, and does not restrict applicant from
permanently abandoning
its rights. The application must therefore
fail.
[32]
I make the following order:
[32.1]
The application is dismissed with costs.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
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 19 January 2023.
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT: Adv.
R Pierce SC
Adv.
N Badat
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT: CLIFF
DEKKER HOFMEYR INC
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT: Adv.
J Kaplan
ATTORNEYS
FOR RESPONDENT: Ian Levitt
Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
15 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 19
January 2023
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(AD) at 634 (H)
[2]
1964
(4) SA 760 (A)
[3]
At
766
[4]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA)
[5]
Hutchinson
D, 2001 SALJ 720
[6]
Randcoal
Services Ltd and Others v Randgold and Exploration Co Ltd 1998 (4)
SA 825 (SCA)
[7]
1974
(3) SA 346
(W) at 354
[8]
1975
(3) SA 273 (T)
[9]
1979
(4) SA 151 (C)
[10]
[1999]
JOL 4956 (C)
[11]
At
para 10
[12]
2
nd
Ed at 373 – 374
[13]
Mutual
Life Insurance Co of New York v Ingle
1910 TPD 540
at 550, affirmed
in Botha (now Griessel) and another v Finanscredit (Pty) Ltd
1989
(3) SA 773
(A)
[14]
Christies
Law of Contract in South Africa, 6
th
Ed, page 453
[15]
1981
(3) SA 760
(T) at 764 F - H; See also Sunset Village SPV (Pty) Ltd v
Smith Tabatha Buchanan Boyes Inc and others
[2010] JOL 24786
(WCC)
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