Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 331South Africa
Consortium Comprising: KC Cottrell Co (Pty) Ltd and Another v Santam Limited and Others (Appeal) (2023/009986) [2023] ZAGPJHC 331 (17 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 April 2023
Headnotes
that, to be called up, the guarantee required no more than that Ngodwana informs Santam that KC Cottrell is in breach of the construction contract, and that Ngodwana honestly believes that this is so. The fact that KC Cottrell is in breach of the construction contract was common cause between the parties in the main application. I held that this meant that there could be no lawful restraint imposed upon Ngodwana’s right to make a call on the guarantee.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Consortium Comprising: KC Cottrell Co (Pty) Ltd and Another v Santam Limited and Others (Appeal) (2023/009986) [2023] ZAGPJHC 331 (17 April 2023)
Consortium Comprising: KC Cottrell Co (Pty) Ltd and Another v Santam Limited and Others (Appeal) (2023/009986) [2023] ZAGPJHC 331 (17 April 2023)
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sino date 17 April 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 2023/009986
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
THE
CONSORTIUM COMPRISING:
First
Applicant
KC
COTTRELL CO. LTD
ELB
ENGINEERING SERVICES (PTY) LTD (in liquidation)
ELB
EDUCATIONAL TRUST FOR BLACK SOUTH AFRICANS
KC
COTTRELL CO. LTD
Second
Applicant
and
SANTAM
LIMITED
First
Respondent
NGODWANA
ENERGY RF LTD
Second
Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED C/O NEDBANK INCORPORATED
Third
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
WILSON
J
:
1
The
applicants, to whom I shall refer as KC Cottrell, seek leave to
appeal against my judgment of 7 March 2023. In that judgment,
I
dismissed KC Cottrell’s application for an interim interdict
restraining the second respondent, Ngodwana, from making a
call on a
demand guarantee given in its favour by the first respondent, Santam.
The guarantee is meant to operate as security for
the performance of
KC Cottrell’s obligations in a construction contract it
concluded with Ngodwana.
My judgment
2
In my
judgment, I held that, to be called up, the guarantee required no
more than that Ngodwana informs Santam that KC Cottrell
is in breach
of the construction contract, and that Ngodwana honestly believes
that this is so. The fact that KC Cottrell is in
breach of the
construction contract was common cause between the parties in the
main application. I held that this meant that there
could be no
lawful restraint imposed upon Ngodwana’s right to make a call
on the guarantee.
3
That
conclusion entailed my rejecting KC Cottrell’s argument that
the construction guarantee required more than the mere allegation
and
honest belief that Ngodwana is in breach. Mr. Redman, who appeared
with Mr. Desai for KC Cottrell, argued that the text of
the guarantee
requires that Ngodwana calls up only so much of the guaranteed sum as
it honestly believes it needs to remedy the
breach it alleges.
4
This
was, I found, untenable on the text of the guarantee, read in light
of its purpose as a form of security for KC Cottrell’s
performance under the construction contract.
The case to be argued on appeal
5
In
arguing the application for leave to appeal, Mr. Redman advanced
three arguments against the correctness of my judgment,
6
In the
first place, Mr. Redman renewed his textual submission, and sought to
persuade me that there is a reasonable prospect that
a court of
appeal will differ with the conclusion I drew against it.
7
The
second argument was that the call on the guarantee would be unlawful
because it would rest on the fraudulent assertion that
KC Cottrell is
entitled to reverse the various payment milestones it had previously
certified under the construction contract.
Mr. Redman argued that the
construction contract provides for defects found in the work to be
dealt with by engaging a special
procedure designed for that purpose,
not by decertifying payments that Ngodwana had previously certified.
In choosing to reverse
the payment milestones, rather than to follow
the procedure specifically intended for the rectification of defects,
Ngodwana, it
was argued, perpetrated a fraud that tainted any call on
the guarantee Ngodwana chose to make based on it.
8
The
third argument was a novel one. It was that the law applicable to
construction guarantees should be developed to allow a contractor
to
restrain unconscionable, rather than merely fraudulent, calls on
demand guarantees. I was referred in support of this development
to
decisions of the Singaporean courts, to the position in Australian
law, and to a
dictum
of the Supreme Court of Appeal which was
said to be indicative of an appetite for such a development.
9
It was
contended that, even if Ngodwana’s call on the guarantee might
not have been fraudulent, it would certainly have been
unconscionable. For that reason, if the law is developed in the
manner to be contended for on appeal, then KC Cottrell would be
entitled to its interim interdict.
No prospect of success on appeal
10
In my
view, these arguments stand no prospect of success on appeal.
The text and purpose of the
guarantee
11
There
is no basis on which the text of clause 4 of the guarantee is capable
of meaning anything other than that Ngodwana is entitled
to call up
any amount up to the limit of the guaranteed sum on the honest
allegation of a breach of contract. In clause 4, Santam
undertakes,
on receipt of a “Demand” that states that there is such a
breach, to pay, up to the limit of the guarantee,
such sum as
Ngodwana “may in that Demand require” (less any sums
previously called up). Mr. Redman argued in the main
application, and
again in the application for leave to appeal, that the use of the
word “require” instead of “demand”
means that
Ngodwana may only call up what it needs to remedy the breach it
alleges. But that interpretation is untenable. In the
context of
clause 4 of the guarantee, what is required
is
what is
demanded, not only because the requirement must itself be stated in a
“Demand”, but also because no self-respecting
drafter of
a guarantee of this nature would have used the formulation “in
that Demand demand”.
12
The
guarantee was written so as to provide Ngodwana with security for its
losses in, amongst other eventualities, precisely the
situation that
has now arisen – the construction of a defective power station.
The effect of the guarantee is to allow Ngodwana
to draw down a sum
up to the limit stated in it without having to sue on the contract.
That does not mean, of course, that Ngodwana
gets to keep the
guaranteed sum if it is later established that Ngodwana was not after
all entitled to it. The right to draw on
the guarantee means only
that, by binding itself to Santam for the value of the guarantee, KC
Cottrell must pay out the guaranteed
sum now, and complain about it
later. To read into the guarantee conditions and requirements that
have little or no textual foundation
is to undermine the very purpose
of the instrument, and the arrangements made between the parties.
13
This
approach is entirely consistent with, and in fact required by, the
principles and cases that I cited and glossed in my judgment
on the
main application, all of which are binding on me, and none of which I
can imagine that the Supreme Court of Appeal, or the
Full Bench of
this court, would be inclined to revisit.
The contractual fraud alleged
14
A
further settled principle evident from the cases is that the right to
call up the guarantee, and the obligation to pay out in
response to
such a call, are entirely separate from the rights and obligations
between the parties to the underlying contract.
It follows that,
whatever may be said of the propriety of Ngodwana’s conduct in
reversing the payment milestones it previously
certified, that is a
question arising on the contract, not on the guarantee. The clear
legal separation evident in the cases between
disputes on the
contract and the employer’s right to make a call on the
guarantee is necessary to give guarantees of this
nature their
efficacy. I cannot see any basis on which a court of appeal would be
inclined to interfere with this principle.
The novel argument
15
As I
made clear in my judgment on the main application, it seems to me
that Ngodwana’s decision to reverse the payment milestones
it
had previously certified, rather than to follow the procedure
specifically intended for the rectification of defects, was
oppressive.
Perhaps it was unconscionable. If that had been
demonstrated, and if a
prima facie
basis for developing the
law to restrain unconscionable calls on construction guarantees had
been established, I might well have
issued the interim interdict KC
Cottrell applied for.
16
But
none of this was demonstrated. The proposal is rather that it will be
argued for the first time on appeal, and it is precisely
the novelty
of the argument that dooms it. Ngodwana was brought to court on the
allegation that it had threatened to make a fraudulent
call on the
guarantee. It answered, argued and won
that
case. Had Ngodwana
been told that it faced a different case, that it had threatened to
act unconscionably rather than fraudulently,
its answer on the facts,
and its arguments on the law, would mostly likely have been
different. Ngodwana was entitled to the opportunity
to adduce the
facts necessary to meet such a case. Without knowing what those facts
might have been, and how they would have stacked
up against the
background of the commercial purposes and relationships at stake in
this area of law, I cannot say which way I would
have ruled.
17
Moreover,
as a legal concept, unconscionability has a protean character. I do
not think that there is any prospect that an appeal
court will adopt
a novel development that deploys the concept in a complex social and
commercial field without a case based squarely
on a clear account of
it having been argued at first instance, even if only on a
prima
facie
basis.
No other compelling reason to grant
leave
18
It was
finally contended that my judgment had departed from two previous
decisions of this court. These decisions are
Group Five
Construction (Pty) Limited v Member of the Executive Council for
Public Transport Roads and Works Gauteng
2015 (5) SA 26
(GJ) and
Phenix Construction Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Hollard Insurance
Company
[2017] ZAGPJHC 174. In each of these cases, calls on
demand guarantees were disallowed. It was argued that my decision
cannot be
reconciled with either of them, and that this inconsistency
is a “compelling reason” to grant leave to appeal, within
the meaning given to that phrase in
section 17
(1) (a) (ii) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
19
However, I see no inconsistency.
Group Five
was about a
call made on a guarantee that could only have been activated on the
cancellation of a contract that had not in fact
been cancelled, and
that the MEC in that case could not honestly have believed had been
cancelled.
Phenix
restrained a call on a guarantee for a sum
greater than was secured under guarantee at the time the call was
made. These were both
clearly fraudulent calls on the text of the
applicable guarantees. They are examples of precisely the kind of
fraud that KC Cottrell
has failed to demonstrate on the facts of this
case.
Order
20
There is, accordingly, no basis on which to detain an
appellate court with a reconsideration of my judgment.
21
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was prepared and
authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties or their
legal representatives by email,
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment
to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 17
April 2023.
HEARD ON: 13 April 2023
DECIDED ON: 17 April 2023
For the
Applicant
NP
Redman SC
M
Desai
Instructed by:
LNP
Attorneys, Sandton c/o PPN Attorneys
Parktown
For the Second
Respondent:
PHJ
Van Vuuren SC
DS
Hodge
Instructed by:
Tiefenhalter
Attorneys c/o Dockrat Inc
Dunkeld
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