Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 591South Africa
Kufuma (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest Facilities Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/25745) [2023] ZAGPJHC 591 (29 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kufuma (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest Facilities Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/25745) [2023] ZAGPJHC 591 (29 May 2023)
Kufuma (Pty) Ltd v Bidvest Facilities Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (2021/25745) [2023] ZAGPJHC 591 (29 May 2023)
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sino date 29 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2021/25745
In
the matter between:
KUFUMA
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
BIDVEST
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
SISHEN
IRON ORE COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
In
re
KUFUMA
(PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
BIDVEST
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Defendant
Neutral
citation
: Kufuma (Pty) Ltd vs Bidvest
Facilities Management (Pty) Ltd and Sishen Iron Ore Company (Pty) Ltd
(Case no: 2021/25745) [2023]
ZAGPJHC 591 (29 MAY 2023)
JUDGMENT
MAHALELO, J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the joinder of the
second respondent in terms of Rule 10(3) of the Uniform Rules of
Court. The joinder
application is accompanied by an application for
condonation in respect of the delivery of the applicant’s
further supplementary
affidavit. The applicant seeks to have the
second respondent joined as the second defendant in the main action
wherein it claims
damages in the action instituted on 20 May 2021
against the first respondent for breach of contract. The applicant,
if granted
joinder of the second respondent seeks to amend its claim
to plead that the first and second respondents are liable to it
jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved. The
second respondent opposes this application to be joined as a party in
the main action. However, does not oppose the filing of the
supplementary affidavit. The second respondent has not delivered any
answering affidavit and has sought to raise a single point of law
against the joinder application.
[2]
The first respondent concluded an oral agreement
with Fresh Camp Management Service (FCMS) for the provision of, inter
alia, catering,
laundry and housekeeping services at the Sishen mine.
The
first respondent was the party liable
to FCMS for payment of the services and allegedly contracted with
FCMS as principal. The applicant
was subsequently incorporated and
was assigned the catering and housekeeping agreement. The catering
and housekeeping agreement
was varied in a number of respects.
[3]
The applicant alleges that it performed properly
in terms of the catering and housekeeping agreement as amended and
that the first
respondent materially breached, alternatively,
repudiated the catering and housekeeping agreement by giving notice
of termination
of the agreement. The applicant alleges that it
suffered contractual damages as a consequence thereof.
[4]
On 20 May 2021, the applicant instituted the main
action against the first respondent. The first respondent defended
and delivered
a notice to remove course of complaint on 1 July 2021.
In response to receiving the notice to remove cause of complaint, the
applicant
delivered a notice of intention to amend its particulars of
claim on 12 August 2021. The proposed amendment was not opposed by
the first respondent and the applicant delivered its amended pages on
31 August 2021. Thereafter, the first respondent delivered
a
substantive plea on 29 September 2021. On 20 October 2021 the
applicant delivered an exception to the first respondent’s
plea.
[5]
Pursuant to the delivery of the exception, the
first respondent delivered a notice of intention to amend its plea.
The applicant
delivered a notice of objection to the proposed amended
plea. The first respondent then delivered a substantive application
for
leave to amend its plea. After considering the contents of the
application for leave to amend and explanation provided, the
applicant
decided that it would not persist with its objection to the
application for leave to amend. Accordingly, it consented to the
proposed
amendment. Thereafter, the first respondent delivered its
amended plea.
[6]
The applicant’s basis for the joinder
application is that the first respondent, in the course of advancing
its various defenses,
admitted and or conceded that it had always
contracted with FCMS and subsequently with the applicant
qua
principal
. The applicant submits that
at no point in its original plea, did the first respondent contend
that it had merely acted as an agent
or in a representative capacity
on behalf of anyone else. However, in the amended plea, the first
respondent’s defense hinges,
inter alia, on the contention that
it never concluded the catering and housekeeping agreement with FCMS
originally or subsequently
with the applicant
qua
principal
. The applicant says that the
first respondent now appears to be saying that it merely managed and
oversaw the conclusion of the
catering and housekeeping agreement as
well as the performance in terms thereof in a representative capacity
on behalf of the second
respondent.
[7]
The applicant contended that the first respondent
now purports for the first time to distance itself from any
contractual liability
in terms of the catering and housekeeping
agreement by contending that it was not the other party contracting
the catering and
housekeeping agreement. In other words, all its
actions, including the original appointment of FCMC as well as
termination of the
catering and housekeeping agreement by notice,
were simply carried out in a representative capacity acting for and
on behalf of
the second respondent. Further, the services originally
provided by FCMC in terms of the catering and housekeeping agreement
provided
to the second respondent were provided to the second
respondent who was the contracting party who paid FCMS and the
applicants
invoices.
[8]
The applicant argued that a necessary implication
of the first respondent’s contentions is that the first
respondent maintains
that the catering and housekeeping agreement was
actually concluded with the second respondent as principal.
Consequently, it has
become necessary for the applicant to join the
second respondent as the second defendant to the main action so that
it may amend its pleadings and plead a contractual
cause of action against the second respondent in the alternative.
[9]
The second respondent contended that the applicant
maintains
that it has a cause of action
against the first respondent as pleaded in
its
amended particulars of claim therefore as a matter of fact and law,
it
always contracted with the first
respondent
qua principal
with
respect
to
the
catering
and
housekeeping
agreement
as
well
as
the
terms
thereof. Further, because the applicant persists
with its case that it contracted
with
the
first
respondent
it
cannot
succeed
in
a
case
against
the
second respondent.
The second respondent argued that the trial court
will
not make a finding that a contract was concluded with the second
respondent
if
the
case
advanced
by
the
applicant
is
that
the
contracting
party
was
the
first
respondent
and
any
joinder
of
the
second
respondent
would
be
at
best
an
academic
exercise
and
or
have no practical effect.
Legal position
[10]
In terms of Uniform Rule 10 (3):
“
Several
defendants may be sued in one action, either jointly, jointly
and
severally,
separately,
or
in
the
alternative,
whenever
the
question
arising between them or any of them, and the plaintiff or any
of the
plaintiffs, depends upon the determination of substantially the
same
question
of
law or
fact, which,
if
such defendants
were
sued
separately,
would arise in each separate. action.”
[11]
The
test in a joinder application is whether or not the party has a
“
direct
and
substantial interest
”
in
the subject matter of the action, i.e. a legal interest
in the
subject matter of litigation, which may be affected prejudicially by
the
judgment
of the court.
[1]
If
such interest is shown this will amount to a joinder
out of
necessity.
Apart
from a joinder out of necessity a court can join a party under the
common law on grounds of convenience, equity, the saving
of costs and
the avoidance of multiplicity of actions.
[12]
Rule 10(3) requires that the question of law and
fact upon which
the
right
to
relief
depends
must
be
substantially
the
same. It means
that
the question of law and fact must in the main or in their principal
essentials be essentially the same.
[13]
Under
the common law the court has the inherent power to order the joinder
of further parties in an action which has already begun
in order to
ensure that that person’s interest in the subject matter of the
dispute and whose rights may be affected by the
judgment are before
court.
[2]
[14]
The
legal
principles
regarding applications for a joinder were confirmed
by
Nkabinde J in a dissenting judgment in
National
Union of Metal Workers of
South
Africa v Intervalve (Pty) Ltd and others
3
as
follows:
“
The
test
at
common law is governed by the following
principles:
(a)
there must be a legal interest in the proceedings
and not
merely
a
financial interest.
(b)
a
party has a
right
to
ask
that
someone be
joined
as a
party ‘if
such a person has a joint propriety interest with one
or
either of the existing parties to the proceedings or has a
direct
and
substantial
interest
in
the
court’s
order’
and
‘
to
avoid a
multiplicity of actions and a waste of costs’.”
# Evaluation
Evaluation
[15]
The original plea delivered by the first
respondent contained a plethora of defenses to the applicant’s
claim. What is relevant
from the original plea is that
the first respondent never once denied
having contracted with either FCMS and or the applicant
qua
principal
. The first respondent
admitted throughout its original plea that it had acted as a
principal with both FCMS and with the applicant.
The defenses
originally pleaded presupposes that it had dealt with and appointed
the applicant as principal. In the amended plea
the first respondent
now contended that it had only acted in a representative capacity for
and on behalf of the second respondent
and had only ever acted on the
second respondent’s instructions.
[16]
As a result of the amended plea and what had been
asserted by the first respondent in its application for leave to
amend it becomes
clear that the applicant would have to join the
second respondent to the main action in order to plead an alternative
contractual
cause of action against it. There is a substantially
similar question of law or fact that exists between the applicant and
the
first and second respondents which would arise if a separate
action was instituted by the applicant against the second respondent
therefore, joinder the of the second respondent as second defendant
in the main action would be convenient and equitable. The joinder
of
the second respondent would prevent a multiplicity of actions and
prevent the inevitable increase in costs that would be attendant
upon
the institution of a separate action against the second respondent.
It would again prevent the applicant’s witnesses
from
testifying twice in two separate trials against two separate juristic
entities and the contractual liability if any of the
respective
parties could be determined and dispositive in a single trial. The
second respondent would not be prejudiced at all
by being joined as a
second defendant to the main action.
[17]
As far as costs are concerned, the applicant
argued that the second respondent should bear the costs of the
joinder application
because it opposed
the joinder application and has not
abandoned its point of law even after being expressly invited to do
so. I find myself in agreement
with the applicant. The second
respondent’s opposition to be joined as the second defendant to
the main action was not necessary.
Order
[18]
In the result I make the following order:
1.
The
second respondent is
hereby
joined
as
the
second
defendant
to
the
main action, under case number
25745/
2021.
2.
All
pleadings
filed
of
record
to
date
in the
main
action
are
to
be
served
on
the
second
respondent within
10(ten) days of the
granting of this order
.
3.
The
second
respondent
to
bear
the
costs
of
the
joinder
application.
MAHALELO J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives and uploading on caselines.
The date for hand down is
deemed to be 29 May 2023.
Appearances.
For
the Applicant:
Adv
E Fraser
For
the Second Respondent:
Adv
M Smit
[1]
Old
Mutual Life Assurance Co SS Ltd v Swemmer
2004
(5) SA 373
(SCA) at 381 C-D.
[2]
Ploughman
NO v Pauw
2006
(SA) 334 (C) at 341 E-F.
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