Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 69South Africa
Business Connexion (Pty) Limited v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (48972/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 69 (31 January 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Business Connexion (Pty) Limited v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (48972/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 69 (31 January 2023)
Business Connexion (Pty) Limited v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (48972/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 69 (31 January 2023)
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sino date 31 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.
: 48972/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
31/1/2023
In
the matter between:
BUSINESS
CONNEXION (PTY) LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Dlamini
J
Date
of hearing:
17
October 2022 - Open Court
Date
of delivery of Judgment: 31
January 2023
This
Judgment is deemed to have been delivered electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
same
shall be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is an
application wherein the applicant seeks a declaration of the contract
between the applicant and the respondent to be
valid and binding and
an order that the respondent must pay the applicant an amount of R
85 479 535,26.
[2]
The applicant
is a private company duly registered and incorporated in accordance
with the company laws of the Republic of South
Africa.
[3]
The
respondent is the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (the CoE), a
municipality and an organ of the state duly established
in terms of
section 12(1) of the Municipal Structures Act.
[1]
[4]
The facts
which form the background to this dispute are broadly common cause.
The applicant testified that on 5 August 2020, the
respondent issued
a Request for Quotations (the RFQ) under bid reference number
C-ICT 04-1 2020 for the acquisition of additional
software licenses,
software maintenance, implementation, and enhancement for the Oracle
software that is in use from the date of
award until 30 June 2023.
The applicant submitted its bid for this project.
[5]
On 10 July
20220, the applicant was selected by the respondent to provide the
services under the abovementioned RFQ.
[6]
On 27 August
2020, the respondent issued an Instruction to Perform Work (the
IPW) to the applicant in terms of which the applicant
was required to
acquire certain specified software licenses on behalf of the
respondent in the sum of R85 479 535.26.
[7]
Pursuant to
the issuing of the IPW, the applicant testified that it procured the
licenses from Episdon Technology Distribution (Pty)
Ltd (Episdon).
That Epsidon is one of Oracle's authorized resellers in South Africa.
The applicant testified that it placed the
order for the license
through Episdon. Episdon in turn secured the licenses directly from
Oracle. After the delivery of the licenses,
the applicant issued an
invoice in the amount of R85 479 535,26 to the
respondent for the licenses as set out in
the IPW.
[8]
The applicant
avers that on 28 August 2020, it delivered to the respondent the keys
to the licenses listed in the IPW. Delivery
was done, insists the
applicant, by delivering to the respondent the keys to the licenses.
Further, says the applicant, Oracle
also delivered the licenses to
the respondent as it appears from Oracle’s letter dated 1
September 2020.
[9]
The applicant
says that it received a letter dated 29 October 2020 titled Request
for Cancellation from the respondent, wherein
the respondent
requested to cancel the order for all but one of the licenses listed
in the IPW.
[10]
The applicant
avers that it does not accept the repudiation of the order, as the
licenses had already been delivered to the respondent.
The applicant
seeks that the respondent abides by its obligation in terms of the
agreement between the parties. Finally, the applicant
insists that
the respondent must make payment for the licenses delivered to it as
per the contract.
[11]
In its
answering affidavit, the respondent testified that it acknowledges
liability for the amount in respect of the Taleo licenses
which the
respondent insists was purely for the renewal of existing licenses
and required that only the invoices be submitted in
respect of this
amount.
[12]
Whilst
admitting that it issued the RFQ and IPW and the applicant was
required to procure the additional licenses from Oracle, however,
the
respondent avers that the applicant was not required to do so
immediately. The respondent says that it was operating on an
outdated, unstable, and unsupported IBM environment. That the
respondent needed to first migrate to a more stable Huawei
environment
before the applicant could procure the additional
licenses.
[13]
Accordingly,
the respondent states that it is not liable to the applicant in the
sum of R85 479 535, 26, but is only liable
to pay the sum
of R6 933 948, 00, and the respondent tenders this amount.
[14]
The respondent
also brought an application in terms of Rule 16A, that the contract
was unlawful, unconstitutional, and
contra
bones mores.
[15]
On the merits.
the question to be answered is whether there are material disputes of
facts present in this matter and further whether
there exist tacit or
express terms in the contract signed by the parties.
[16]
At the hearing
of the matter, the respondent abandoned the Rule 16A application.
PRELIMINARY
OBJECTIONS
[17]
However,
before I deal with the pertinent question on the merits of this
matter, I want to address the preliminary issue that has
been raised
by the respondent. The respondent argues that the deponent of the
applicant's founding affidavit Mr. Benjamin Strydom
has no personal
knowledge of this matter. That Mr. Strydom was never involved in the
matter, had attended no meetings, had neither
sent nor received any
related correspondence, and had not submitted the tender or been
involved in the formation of the agreement.
[18]
The respondent
submit that the confirmatory affidavits attached to Mr. Strydom's
replying affidavit of Ms. Musa Tleane, Mr. Deon
Els, and Mr. Anees
Mayet are vague and meaningless. That more was required of them.
Further, they had to explain in clear and detailed
terms their
respective roles in this matter.
[19]
In
reply, the applicant denies that Mr. Strydom has no personal
knowledge of this matter. The applicant submits that Mr. Strydom’s
replying affidavit fully explains the source of knowledge of the
facts that the deponent has. That the explanation is complete
and
should accordingly be accepted.
[20]
In his
replying affidavit, Mr. Strydom testified that he is the managing
executive of the applicant. He avers that the applicant's
Oracle unit
reports to him and it is part of his responsibility. Mr. Strydom
continues and testify that he was involved with considering
the RFQ
and approving the quotation submitted to the respondent. Further,
Mr.Strydom submits he had sight of the correspondence
exchanges
between the applicant and the respondent which is attached to the
pleadings herein, and that he knows the contents thereof.
[21]
Taking into
account the manner, time, and nature of involvement of Mr. Strydom in
this matter, I am satisfied that he has sufficient,
relevant, and
intricate knowledge of this matter. Mr. Strydom's claim of his
involvement and participation in this matter is corroborated
by Ms.
Tleane, Mr. Els, and Mr. Mayet. Accordingly, the respondent's claim
that the deponent of the applicant's founding affidavit
has no
personal knowledge of this matter is dismissed.
MATERIAL
DISPUTES OF FACTS
[22]
I now turn to
deal with the question of whether there exist material disputes of
facts in the matter.
[23]
In argument,
the applicant submits that there is no merit to this contention. The
applicant insists that the facts of the conclusion
of the contract
are common cause. That the issuing of the IPW, by the respondent, the
acceptance thereof by the applicants, the
acquisition of the licenses
and services to be provided in terms thereof, and the price are clear
on the face of the IPW.
[24]
Further, the
applicant submits that the respondent does not dispute that it
received the letter of Welcome from Oracle which confirms
that the
licenses and services are available for use by the respondent. That
the respondent admits that it received the Taleo license
which was
provided in terms of the same IPW. Accordingly, says the applicant,
there is therefore no real dispute of fact whether
or not the
respondent received the licenses in the IPW and the letter from
Oracle
[25]
The high water
mark of the respondent's claim of the existence of material dispute
of facts is the issue surrounding the fact whether
the applicant
delivered the licenses to the respondent and the applicant's claim
for payment of R85 479 535.26.
[26]
For this
submission, the respondent submits that its Head of Legal Services
wrote to the applicant in which he asserted that the
respondent
denies the applicant delivered all the licenses entitlements and
further that the CoE has had access to and right of
use of all the
licenses.
[27]
The
principles regarding the determination of facts in applications in
our law are well established. The general rule was set out
succinctly
by Corbet JA's judgment in
Plascon-
Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeek Paints (Pty) Ltd
.
[2]
He defined the rule for the resolution of disputes of fact as
follows:-
"It
is correct that, where in proceedings on notice of motion disputes of
fact have arisen on the affidavits, a final order,
whether it be an
interdict or some other form of relief, may be granted if those facts
averred in the applicant's affidavit which
have been admitted by the
respondent together with the facts alleged by the respondent, justify
such order".
[28]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma2
,
[3]
Harms DP said applications are designed to deal with legal issues on
common cause facts. Unfortunately, few applications meet this
idealized standard, with the result that rules have been developed to
determine how disputes of fact should be dealt with in application
proceedings.
[29]
Heher
JA in Wightman
t/a
JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another,
[4]
restated that “
an
applicant who seeks final relief on motion must, in the event of
conflict, accept the version set up by his opponent unless the
latter’s allegations are, in the opinion of the court, not such
as to raise a real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact
or are so
far- fetched or clearly untenable that the court is justified in
rejecting them merely on the papers".
[30]
I consider the
respondent's allegations that the applicant did not deliver the
licenses to have no legal basis and fall to be dismissed.
This is
because the facts before me indicate that the keys to licenses were
delivered by the applicant to the respondent on 28
August 2020 by
making the keys to their utilization available to the respondent.
This fact is supported first, by the evidence
of Mr. Els an employee
of the applicant, and confirmed in full by the evidence of Mr. Mayet
an employee of Oracle, who testified
that indeed the keys to the
licenses were delivered to the respondent by letter on the 28 August
2020 and confirmed by letter from
Oracle dated 1 September 2020.
[31]
Significantly,
the respondent does not deny that it received the Taleo licenses and
has offered to settle the amount that relates
to the Taleo licenses.
However, the respondent does not deny the applicant's submission that
the Taleo licenses were delivered
simultaneously by Oracle and the
applicant by the 28 August 2020 letter. This simply means that, when
the respondent admits delivery
of the Taleo licenses, the respondent
must simultaneously admit the delivery of the rest of the licenses as
per IPW as all the
keys to the licenses were delivered to the
respondent by the applicant all at once.
[32]
Critically,
the Request for Cancellation by the respondent to the applicant
is silent on the issue of none delivery of the
licenses by the
applicant to the respondent. Also, nowhere is it disputed by the
respondent that it awarded the IPW to the applicant
and that the
applicant purchased and delivered the licenses to the respondent. The
respondent submission in this regard is an after-thought
as it was
raised for the first by the respondent in the answering affidavit,
the same falls to be dismissed.
[33]
Considering
all of the above, it is my considered view that there are no material
disputes of facts in this matter.
TACIT
TERMS
[34]
I now turn to
deal with the question of whether expressly, by implication, or
tacitly on the evidence before this Court the parties
agreed that the
provisions of licenses in terms of the IPW would be deferred
until the respondent would be able to use them
after it had migrated
from the existing IBM environment to new Huawei infrastructure.
[35]
Before this
Court,
Adv
Baloyi SC
for the applicant submitted that evidence before this court does not
support an agreement to defer compliance with the IPW. The
applicant
contends that there is no express or unequivocal evidence of conduct
or circumstances from which it appears, on a balance
of
probabilities, that the parties agreed to defer provisions of the
licenses as alleged by the respondent. Further, that the respondent's
contentions are not supported by the RFQ on which the respondent
relies.
[36]
Finally, the
applicant contends the IPW stipulates that no other terms outside of
the IPW apply to the procurement of licenses and
services listed
therein. The applicants insist that this is a sensible meaning that
must be preferred. That, the terms sought to
be imported by the
respondent “ leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results”
in that it contemplates that notwithstanding
the duration of 12
(twelve months) and the purchase price agreed on the IPW, the parties
contracted for an undetermined and uncertain
period in the future
when the respondent would be ready to utilise the licenses as alleged
by the respondent. I agree.
[37]
On behalf of
the respondent
,
Adv Hulley SC
submitted that the Municipality wished first to migrate to the Huawei
environment and that the additional software licenses were
only
required to operate in the new environment. The respondent argues
that no purpose would have been served in acquiring the
additional
licenses until the migration had already taken place. Further, that
the applicant was aware that the Municipality could
not use the
licenses in its current environment but needed to migrate first to
Huawei.
[38]
The respondent
further submits that having regard to the background and surrounding
circumstances, the Municipality contends that
the express,
alternatively tacit terms of the agreement between the parties are in
sum, that applicant was not required to procure
the licenses
immediately in terms of the IPW but that the applicant should have
supplied these licenses in the future.
[39]
The principle
of interpretation of statute in our law is now well established. In
Firstrand
Bank LTD v KJ Foods
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that in interpreting terms of
contract or legislation as the case may be; "the principles
enunciated in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality and Novartis SA
(PTY) Ltd v Maphil Trading (PTY) Ltd
find application. These cases and other earlier ones provide support
for the trite proposition that the interpretive process involves
considering the words used in the Act in the light of all
relevant and admissible context, including the circumstances in
which
the legislation came into being. Furthermore, as was said in
Endumeni
, “a sensible meaning is to be preferred to the one that leads
to insensible or unbusinesslike results “Thus …
the
court must consider whether there is a sensible interpretation that
can be given to the relevant provisions that will avoid
anomalies.
Accordingly, in this instance, the approach in the interpretation of
the provisions is one that is in sync with the
objects of the Act,
which includes’[enabling] the efficient rescue and recovery of
financially distressed companies, in a
manner that balances the
rights and interest of all relevant stakeholders.
[40]
The ICT
Instructions to Perform Work signed by the parties on 27 August
2020 contains the following Clause “
No
additional clauses are applicable
to
this scope
”,
my emphasis. On a clear reading and interpretation of this clause, it
is abundantly clear that the contract constituted
the entire
agreement between the parties. That no additional clauses except
those that are specifically included in the contract
are binding to
the parties. Therefore, the respondent's submission of the existence
of express alternatively tacit terms in this
contract is baseless and
stands to be dismissed. Had the respondent considered these
alternative terms to be so crucial, the respondent
could have simply
included the terms in the ICT contract. Nothing prevented the
respondent from including these alternative terms
in the contract as
this contract was prepared and drawn up by the respondent itself.
[41]
Significantly,
the Request For Cancellation by the respondent is silent on this
critical issue. The reasons cited by the respondent
for the
cancellation of the contract is that CeE had difficulties brought as
a result of the Covid -19 pandemic, there is no mention
that the
applicant was not required no procure the licenses as per the IPW.
[42]
Taking all the
above into consideration, it is my view that the applicant has made
it out its case and the application must succeed
ORDER
1.
The contract
between the Applicant and Respondent is valid and binding.
2.
The Respondent
is indebted to the Applicant in the amount of R85 479 535.26
plus interest.
3.
The Respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of the Applicant, including the costs of
two Counsels.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 17
October
2022
Delivered:
31
January 2023
For
the Applicant: Adv
S. Baloyi SC
sesibaloyi@law.co.za
Adv
M. Phukubje
mphukubje@thulamelachambers.co.za
instructed
by: Motsoeneng
Bill Attorneys
michael@mbaincorporated.co.za
Ms.
Y. Diko
yonela@mbaincorporated.co.za
For
the Respondents
: Adv
G.I. Hulley SC
gihulley@law.co.za
Adv
N. Strathern
nicky@strathern.co.za
Instructed
by: Chiba
Attorneys
Mrs.
N. C. Chiba
natasha.chiba@gmail.com
[1]
Act
117 of 1998
[2]
(53/84)
[1984] ZASCA 51
(21 May 1984)
[3]
(573/08)
[2009] ZASCA 1
(12 Jan 2009)
[4]
(66/2007)
[2008] ZASCA 6
(10 March 2008)
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