Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 267South Africa
Estate Late Frans Kruger NO v Questek Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/55816) [2023] ZAGPJHC 267 (24 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Estate Late Frans Kruger NO v Questek Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/55816) [2023] ZAGPJHC 267 (24 March 2023)
Estate Late Frans Kruger NO v Questek Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/55816) [2023] ZAGPJHC 267 (24 March 2023)
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sino date 24 March 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER
:
2021/55816
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In the matter between:
ESTATE LATE FRANS
KRUGER NO
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
QUESTEK HOLDINGS
(PTY) LTD
First Defendant/
Excipient
QUESTEK ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LTD
Second
Defendant/Excipient
GEORGE VAN GILS
Third Defendant/
Excipient
DANIEL CHRISTIAAN
PRETORIUS
Fourth defendant/
Excipient
Heard on: 6 March 2023
Delivered on:
24 March 2023
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WESLEY AJ:
[1]
The plaintiff has issued summons against the
defendants for payment of various amounts identified in the
particulars of claim. The
defendants except to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim alleging that they do not disclose a cause of
action. For convenience,
in this judgment I refer to the parties as
in the action.
[2]
The plaintiff has pleaded in the particulars of
claim:
[2.1]
in paragraph 30, that in January 2021 the
plaintiff and the defendants entered into arbitration proceedings;
[2.2]
in paragraph 33, that the contents of the
statement of claim in the arbitration “
mimic
the content of this summons
”
, and
that the claims in the two are identical;
[2.3]
in paragraph 35, that “
the
arbitration proceedings have since been suspended
”
by the arbitrator, as appears from correspondence
attached to the particulars of claim.
[3]
The defendants contend in the exception that these
allegations reflect that “
the
claims pursued by the plaintiff in the arbitration (and in the
particulars of claim) [have] been suspended and are unenforceable
”
.
The heads of argument delivered on behalf of the defendants in this
exception confirm that the defendants’ case is that
“
the
parties
had agreed to suspend the
adjudication of the claims
pursued
by the plaintiff in the particulars of claim
”
(my
underlining).
[4]
The defendants contend that the particulars of
claim therefore disclose a defence to the claims, being an agreement
to suspend the
adjudication of the claims, including by way of this
action.
[5]
The plaintiff denies that this is the proper
interpretation of the agreement pleaded in the particulars of claim.
The plaintiff
asserts that the agreement was limited to the
arbitration proceedings and does not apply to any other proceedings
that might be
launched by the plaintiff, such as this action.
[6]
The plaintiff contends further that the contents
of the agreement in any event could not found an exception to the
particulars of
claim because the defence the defendants claim arises
from that agreement does not relate to any part of the plaintiff’s
cause of action.
## The test on exception
The test on exception
[7]
The test on exception in relation to allegations
of fact is well settled. It has recently been summarised by the
Constitutional
Court in
Pretorius and
Another v Transport Pension Fund and Others
2019
(2) SA 37
(CC) at [15] as follows:
“
In deciding an
exception a court must accept all allegations of fact made in the
particulars of claim as true; may not have regard
to any other
extraneous facts or documents; and may uphold the exception to the
pleading only when the excipient has satisfied
the court that the
cause of action or conclusion of law in the pleading cannot be
supported on every interpretation that can be
put on the facts.”
## The merits of the
exception
The merits of the
exception
[8]
For the purposes of the exception, I must accept
that the allegations in the particulars of claim are true. The
agreement the defendants
rely on is pleaded in paragraph 35 as
follows:
“
35. The
arbitration proceedings have since been suspended by the arbitrator,
being Honourable Judge Bertelsmann, with the correspondence
confirming this suspension attached hereto and marked as ‘POC6’.”
[9]
The plaintiff does not therefore plead that the
agreement was to suspend the claims, only the arbitration
proceedings. This is what
the correspondence attached to the
particulars of claim itself says. That correspondence records that
the agreement is that “
the
arbitration proceedings
”
should
be suspended.
[10]
The defendants contend that I should employ the
ordinary principles of contractual interpretation, including having
regard to the
context in which the agreement was concluded, to
interpret the phrase “
arbitration
proceedings
”
in the
correspondence to mean broadly the adjudication of the claims
referred to arbitration. This is not the Court’s function
at
exception stage. I must, for purposes of the exception, accept the
plaintiff’s pleaded version as to the content of the
agreement.
On that version, the agreement was only to suspend the arbitration
proceedings.
[11]
It may be that the defendants can assert as an
objection to the present summons that the plaintiff is not entitled
to pursue the
claims in court since they are already the subject of
arbitration proceedings. But that is not what the defendants have
raised
in this exception. The defendants contend in this exception
that the actual agreement pleaded by the plaintiff in the particulars
of claim in terms suspends the claims of the plaintiff.
[12]
The defendants’ exception must therefore be
dismissed.
[13]
In the circumstances, it is not necessary for me
to consider the plaintiff’s second contention, that the
contents of the agreement
in any event could not form the basis of an
exception to the particulars of claim because they do not relate to
any part of the
plaintiff’s cause of action.
## Costs
Costs
[14]
The parties were agreed that the unsuccessful
party should be ordered to pay the costs of the application.
[15]
The plaintiff sought an order of costs on the
attorney client scale against the defendants, on the basis that the
exception was
vexatious and an abuse of process. It is well settled
that costs on an attorney and client scale are awarded when a court
wishes
to mark its disapproval of the conduct of a litigant, in
particular fraudulent, dishonest or bad faith conduct, vexatious
conduct
or conduct that amounts to an abuse of the process of court.
[16]
I do not consider that the defendants’
conduct in this matter meets this threshold. Although I have found
that the exception
must be dismissed, there is no reason for me to
doubt the defendants’
bona fides
in objecting to the plaintiff’s referral to
the High Court of claims that were the subject of pending arbitration
proceedings
that the parties had only recently agreed to suspend. Nor
do I consider that the Court should mark special disapproval of the
manner
in which the defendants sought to raise their objection. In
the circumstances, in my view it would not be appropriate to make a
special order of costs.
Order
[17]
I make the following order:
1.
The exception is dismissed;
2.
The
defendants are
ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved
.
MA WESLEY
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, by being uploaded to
Case
Lines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be
24 March 2023
.
Appearances:
Counsel
on behalf of the plaintiff/respondent
A.
Bishop
Instructed
by:
Andre Pienaar &
Associates (APA Africa)
Counsel
on behalf of the defendants/excipients:
N
Horn
Instructed
by:
Smit
Sewgoolam Inc
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