Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 603South Africa
Engen Petroleum Limited v Kebrascan (Pty) Ltd t/a Engen Market Gateway and Others (2022/18287) [2023] ZAGPJHC 603 (30 May 2023)
Headnotes
by the [applicant] from or on behalf of the [first respondent]. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, this suretyship shall remain in force, as a continuing security, notwithstanding any intermediate settlement of account, and notwithstanding my death or legal disability, and shall be binding on my estate and my executor and administrator. …”[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Engen Petroleum Limited v Kebrascan (Pty) Ltd t/a Engen Market Gateway and Others (2022/18287) [2023] ZAGPJHC 603 (30 May 2023)
Engen Petroleum Limited v Kebrascan (Pty) Ltd t/a Engen Market Gateway and Others (2022/18287) [2023] ZAGPJHC 603 (30 May 2023)
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#### REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No: 2022/18287
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
30.05.23
In the matter between:
ENGEN
PETROLEUM LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
KEBRASCAN (PTY) LTD
t/a ENGEN MARKET
GATEWAY
FIRST
RESPONDENT
TEBOHO THEOPHYLUS
BEN SEEKO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
CYNTHIA
SEEKO
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation:
Engen Petroleum Limited vs Kebrascan (Pty) Ltd T/A Engen
Market Gateway & 2 Others
(Case No. 2022/18287) [2023]
ZAGPJHC 603 (30 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
BERGER
AJ:
[1]
This
is an application for a money judgment against the three respondents,
jointly and severally.
[2]
The
claim against the first respondent is in respect of goods sold and
delivered during the period 10 January 2022 to 26 April 2022.
The
applicant claims that it sold and delivered automotive fuel and
lubricants to the first respondent, and that these (priced
at
R5 491 161.72) have not been paid for. Other costs, for
turnover rental, rates, refuse, electricity, water, and sewerage,
are
included in the claim. In total, the claim is for an amount of
R5 765 223.96, plus interest and costs.
[3]
The
applicant’s claims against the second and third respondents are
based on deeds of suretyship signed by them to cover the
first
respondent’s indebtedness to the applicant. The applicant seeks
to hold the second and third respondents liable, as
sureties and
co-principal debtors, for the amount owed to it by the first
respondent.
[4]
The
first respondent denies that it is liable to the applicant in the
amount claimed, and states that it has a counterclaim for
damages, in
the amount of R14 800 000, relating to the applicant’s
conduct which, the first respondent claims,
prevented the first
respondent from selling its business.
[5]
The
second and third respondents deny being liable to the applicant and
contend that the deeds of suretyship signed by them do not
extend
beyond 31 December 2013, being the termination of the lease first
covered by the deeds of suretyship. To extend the suretyships
beyond
this date, so the respondents contend, “
would
be contra bonos mores and invalid in law.
”
The
relevant background circumstances
[6] On or about 1
November 2009, the applicant and the first respondent concluded an
agreement of lease and services in terms of
which the first
respondent was appointed as the applicant’s authorised and
nominated dealer in respect of the Engen fuel
service station in City
Deep, Johannesburg (the service station). The agreement provided for
the applicant to let to the first
respondent the premises on which
the service station was housed, and to supply to the first respondent
inter alia
the petrol and diesel required for the operation of
the service station. In terms of the agreement, its expiry date was
set at
31 December 2013.
[7]
On 3
November 2009, the second and third respondents each concluded deeds
of suretyship in favour of the applicant, binding themselves
as
“
surety and
co-principal debtor with [the first respondent] for the due and
punctual payment to [the applicant] of all monies as
are now due
or
may hereafter be owing
by the [first respondent] to the [applicant]
from
any cause howsoever arising
.
”
[1]
[8]
The deeds
of suretyship also provide:
“
This suretyship
shall be a
continuing
and
standing
one, incapable of termination
(even with respect to obligations of the [first respondent] which may
not yet have arisen at any time at which I may desire to
terminate
the same)
without
the prior written consent of the [applicant]
,
and shall be in addition and without prejudice to any other
securities now or hereafter to be held by the [applicant] from or
on
behalf of the [first respondent]. Without limiting the generality of
the foregoing,
this
suretyship shall remain in force, as a continuing security,
notwithstanding any intermediate settlement of account
,
and notwithstanding my death or legal disability, and shall be
binding on my estate and my executor and administrator. …
”
[2]
[9] From 1 January 2014
to 30 March 2015, there was no written agreement of lease and
services between the applicant and the first
respondent. However, the
first respondent continued to trade at the service station during
this period, with the applicant continuing
to supply it with petrol,
diesel and related products.
[10] On 12 March 2015,
the applicant and the first respondent concluded a second agreement
of lease and services (the second lease
agreement) in respect of the
premises housing the service station and the supply of products to
the service station. The second
lease agreement contained many of the
clauses that appear in the original agreement, and others that do
not. The second lease agreement
was to run for a period of five
years, commencing on 1 April 2015 and terminating on 31 March 2020.
[11]
In order
for the applicant to prove the indebtedness of the first respondent
at any time, the agreement provided that a
“
certificate on
the stationery of the Company signed by any director, the secretary,
any legal advisor or any senior manager of the
Company and stating
the amount due and payable by the [first respondent] to the
[applicant], shall be proof of the existence of
such debt and of the
amount of the [first respondent’s] indebtedness to the
[applicant] at that time unless the [first respondent]
proves the
contrary.
”
[3]
[12] The second lease
agreement contained a clause (44.2) providing for the situation where
the applicant intended or elected not
to offer the first respondent a
further lease agreement after 31 March 2020. The clause provided for
a twelve month notice period
which could result in the second lease
agreement being continued, on the same terms, until the completion of
the notice period.
The clause further provided that:
“
Should the
[applicant] advise [the first respondent] that it does not intend
renewing the lease between the parties, [the first
respondent] shall
be entitled to attempt to sell the Business during the remaining
period of the lease, and the [applicant] shall
not unreasonably
withhold its consent to such sale. ...
”
[13] During 2019, and
while the second lease agreement was still operative, a dispute arose
between the applicant and the first
respondent concerning the
proposed sale of the first respondent’s business.
[14] On 30 October 2019,
the Controller of Petroleum Products, in terms of
section 12B
of the
Petroleum Products Act 120 of 1977
, granted the request of the first
respondent (a licensed retailer) to refer the dispute to arbitration.
Section 12B(5)
of the Act provides that any award made by the
arbitrator, in such an arbitration, shall be final and binding upon
the parties
concerned.
[15] On 4 March 2020, by
order of the Western Cape High Court (
per
Gamble J), it was
recorded that the applicant and the first respondent had agreed to
appoint retired Judge Bertelsmann to act as
arbitrator in the
arbitration. It was
inter alia
ordered that, pending the
finalisation and/or final determination of the arbitration, the first
respondent’s operations,
tenure and entitlement to conduct its
business at the service station would continue and/or remain extant.
[16] It was further
ordered by Gamble J that the terms of the second lease agreement
would “
continue to operate as provided for and contemplated
in clause 44.2 of the operating lease
”, pending the final
determination of the arbitration.
[17] On 22 March 2021,
shortly before the arbitration was to commence, the applicant and the
first respondent concluded a settlement
agreement, which was made an
arbitration award by Judge Bertelsmann. In terms of the settlement
agreement, the parties agreed on
a procedure by which the first
respondent could dispose of its interest in the service station by 30
September 2021, as long as
the applicant identified and advised the
first respondent of an approved purchaser by no later than 30 August
2021. The sale was
subject to the approved purchaser obtaining a
retail license as contemplated in the
Petroleum Products Act.
[18
] It was also recorded
in the settlement agreement that “
the entrenched value of
the business as contemplated by “A” [the second lease
agreement], has been determined to be
R10 000 000 (ten
million rand), ex VAT. Subject to paragraph (8) below, the
sale/disposal shall be concluded at this
price, ex VAT.
”
[19] Paragraph (8) of the
settlement agreement recorded that the “
entrenched value
”
excluded the first respondent’s stock-in-trade, and fixed and
movable assets. It was further provided that the first
respondent was
free to negotiate the terms of the acquisition of any stock and/or
equipment, owned by it on the premises, with
the approved purchaser,
and/or to remove any such stock or equipment owned by it.
[20] Paragraph (12) of
the settlement agreement provided: “
Subject to paragraph
(13) below, [the first respondent] together with all those claiming a
right or title to occupy the premises
by or through it will vacate
the premises by no later than 30 September 2021.
” Paragraph
(13) provided for the first respondent to remain in occupation of the
premises beyond 30 September 2021, if the
first respondent had by
then concluded an agreement of sale with the approved purchaser, and
the approved purchaser had by then
lodged an application for a retail
license. In that event, the first respondent could remain in
occupation until 14 days after
the date on which the Controller of
Petroleum Products announced its decision on the purchaser’s
application for a retail
license.
[21] If the first
respondent remained in occupation of the premises beyond the period
allowed in terms of paragraph (13), the settlement
agreement provided
that the first respondent would have to pay the applicant a holding
over penalty in the amount of R250 000
per month, payable on the
first day of each month that the first respondent remained in
occupation.
[22] The arbitrator’s
award, including the settlement agreement, was made an order of this
Court on 11 August 2021.
[23] On 24 August 2021,
the applicant advised the first respondent of its approved purchaser
(the approved purchaser). The applicant
reminded the first respondent
that it had until 30 September 2021 to dispose of its interest in the
service station.
[24] Nine days before the
deadline, on 21 September 2021, the first respondent and the approved
purchaser concluded a sale of business
agreement in terms of which
the first respondent sold its business at the service station to the
approved purchaser. On the following
day, 22 September 2021, the
approved purchaser made application for a retail license.
[25] The first respondent
continued to remain in occupation of the premises, as it was entitled
to do. About four months later,
on 11 January 2022, the Controller of
Petroleum Products announced that the approved purchaser’s
application “
for a Retail New (Change-of-Hands) License
”
had been approved.
[26] In terms of the
settlement agreement, the first respondent had until 25 January 2022,
to vacate the premises. On 7 February
2022, the applicant demanded
that the first respondent pay to it an amount of R3 045 861.09,
which the applicant said
was outstanding in respect of fuel and
lubricants sold and delivered. On 9 February 2022, the first
respondent vacated the premises.
[27] On 14 February 2022,
the applicant terminated the second lease agreement with the first
respondent. The applicant recorded
its reason for termination as
follows:
“
In breach of
your obligations under the operational lease agreement, … you
have inter alia, without the knowledge of [the
applicant], ceased
trading from the site and abandoned the premises.
”
[28] The first respondent
states that it vacated the premises “
in order to avoid
paying the holding-over penalty of R250 000.00 to the
applicant.
”
The
claim against the first respondent
[29] The applicant
alleges that during the period 10 January 2022 to 9 February 2022
(although the applicant also alleges the period
to have lasted until
26 April 2022), the first respondent placed orders for fuel and
lubricants “
in accordance with the terms of the operating
lease with Engen.
” The orders were accepted, and the
applicant sold and delivered the fuel and lubricants to the first
respondent.
[30] In addition, the
applicant alleges that it levied charges for rates, refuse,
electricity, water and sewerage consumed by the
first respondent at
the premises during the period. The applicant also levied turnover
related rental charges against the first
respondent which it alleges
the first respondent was obliged to pay “
in terms of the
operating lease
”.
[31] The “
certificate
of balance
” relied on by the applicant, dated 10 May 2022
and signed by the applicant’s credit risk manager, records that
the
first respondent is indebted to the applicant in the capital
amount of R5 765 223.96.
[32] The first respondent
denies “
that it is indebted to the applicant in the sum of
R5 765 223.96 and accordingly the applicant is put to the
hereof
”. Similarly, the first respondent denies its
liability to the applicant in respect of the charges for “
rental,
rates, refuse, electricity, water and sewerage as this is set-off by
the first respondent’s counter-claim
”. The basis of
the first respondent’s denial that it is liable for the cost of
the automotive fuel and lubricants,
delivered over the period 10
January 2022 to 26 April 2022, is that no order would have been
released by the applicant without
payment by the first respondent of
the previous delivery.
[33] However, the first
respondent does not state positively that it has paid any of the
amounts claimed by the applicant.
[34] It is clear that the
applicant could not have been delivering its product to the first
respondent after 9 February 2022, and
certainly not until 26 April
2022. The first respondent had vacated the premises on 9 February
2022, and the applicant had terminated
the second lease agreement on
14 February 2022. There would have been no reason for the applicant
to have delivered product after
it had cancelled its agreement with
the first respondent.
[35] As at 7 February
2022, the applicant claimed that the amount outstanding from the
first respondent in respect of fuel and lubricants
sold and delivered
to it was the sum of R3 045 861.09.
[36] In its replying
affidavit to the first respondent’s answering affidavit, the
applicant sought to rebut the first respondent’s
denial that
“…
the
applicant could have sold and delivered goods to the first respondent
in the amount of R5 491 161.72 for four (4)
months without
payment
” by annexing “…
copies of the
delivery notes confirming delivery of the product sold and delivered
to the first respondent.
”
[37] The delivery notes
annexed to the replying affidavit reflect deliveries of petrol and
diesel by the applicant to the first
respondent. Some of the delivery
notes have delivery dates before 10 January 2022; others have been
duplicated. Excluding duplications,
and delivery notes outside the
relevant period, the total amount sold and delivered during the
period 10 January 2022 to 9 February
2022 is reflected as
R3 884 008.86.
[38] The first respondent
does not dispute the applicant’s charges for turnover rental,
rates, refuse, electricity, water, and sewerage,
totaling R274 062,24. Instead, the first respondent claims that
these charges
be “…
set-off
by the first respondent’s counter claim
”.
For the reasons set out below, set off cannot be done.
[39]
In
my view, the applicant has proved that the first respondent is
indebted to it in the amount of R4 158 071.10, being
the
sum of the relevant delivery notes and the other undisputed charges.
The certificate of balance states that the amount owing
to the
applicant is R5 765 223.96, but this is only
prima
facie
proof of the extent of the
indebtedness, and must give way to the evidence submitted by the
applicant in response to the first
respondent’s denial of
liability.
[40]
I
therefore find that the first respondent is liable to make payment to
the applicant in the sum of
R4 158 071.10
,
together with interest and costs as claimed by the applicant. As far
as interest is concerned, the second lease agreement set
the rate at
4% above Standard Bank’s Prime Bank Overdraft Rate, as
published.
The claim against
the second and third respondents
[41] The applicant’s
claim against the second and third respondents is based on the deeds
of suretyship concluded by them
on 3 November 2009. In this regard,
the applicant relies primarily on the provision in the deeds that:
“
This suretyship shall be a
continuing and
standing one, incapable of termination
(even with respect
to obligations of the [first respondent] which may not yet have
arisen at any time at which I may desire to
terminate the same)
without the prior written consent of the [applicant]
…
”
[42] There are other
provisions in the deeds (as quoted above) that repeat the point that
the deeds are intended to be continuous.
It is clear that, when the
second and third respondents signed the deeds of suretyship, they
agreed that the deeds would remain
in force “
as a continuing
security
” until the applicant consented in writing to
terminate them.
[43]
It
is common cause that the applicant has not consented to the
termination of the deeds of suretyship, in writing or otherwise.
There is therefore no basis for the contention that the deeds of
suretyship terminated on 31 December 2013 when the first lease
agreement came to an end.
[44] The fact that the
second lease agreement contained terms of insurance not found in the
original lease agreement matters not.
The deeds of suretyship
constitute independent undertakings by the second and third
respondents in favour of the applicant. They
do not depend on one or
both of the lease agreements, either for their validity or for their
continued existence.
[45]
The
second and third respondents further contend that it “
would
be contra bonos mores and invalid in law
”
for the deeds of suretyship to extend beyond the life of the first
lease agreement. No authority was cited for this proposition,
and I
am not aware of any. Since the deeds of suretyship are independent
undertakings, not linked to either or both of the lease
agreements,
they cannot be rendered
contra bonos
mores
, or invalid in law, by virtue of
the fact that they continue to exist beyond the life of the first
lease agreement.
[46]
I
am therefore of the view that the second and third respondents are
liable, jointly and severally with the first respondent, to
make
payment to the applicant in the sum of
R4 158 071.10
,
together with interest and costs as claimed.
The counter claim
[47] The first respondent
bases its counter claim on the allegation that the applicant breached
the settlement agreement concluded
between the parties on 22 March
2021, and subsequently made an order of court. The first respondent
claims that “
the applicant’s failure to comply with
the order has caused the first respondent to suffer damages in the
sum of R14 800 000.00
(R14.8 million)
”, made up
as follows: R10 million “
for the sale of the business
”,
R3 million “
for stock
”, and R1.8 million “
for
the assets
”.
[48] In its answering
affidavit in the main application, the first respondent sets out the
basis of its counter claim. At its core,
the claim is that the first
respondent was made aware on 9 December 2021 that the Controller of
Petroleum Products had declined
the approved purchaser’s
application for a retail licence “
because, inter alia, it
failed to provide proof of availability of funds.
” That,
according to the first respondent, meant that the applicant had
“
failed to provide a financially suitable candidate as per
the settlement agreement
” and that, as a result, the
agreement of sale between the first respondent and the approved
purchaser “
fell through, resulting in the first respondent
suffering damages.
”
[49] There are further
allegations in the answering affidavit concerning a prospective
purchaser who allegedly did not secure the
applicant’s
approval. That gave rise to the arbitration that was ultimately
settled. Since the counter claim is based on
an alleged breach of the
settlement agreement, there is no basis for relying on facts that
preceded the settlement.
[50] In its answer, the
applicant points out that the Controller of Petroleum Products
granted the approved purchaser’s application
for a retail
license on 11 January 2022. This in light of the sale of business
agreement concluded on 21 September 2021 between
the first respondent
and the approved purchaser. The applicant notes that it was not a
party to the sale of business agreement.
Furthermore, the applicant
contends that the first respondent breached the settlement agreement
by deliberately frustrating and
hindering the sale of the business.
[51] The first
respondent, in its replying affidavit, appears to accept that the
approved purchaser was granted a retail license
on 11 January 2022.
However, it persists in the allegation that the applicant breached
the settlement agreement by failing to identify
and approve a
purchaser who was ready, willing and able to purchase the first
respondent’s business. The basis for this allegation
is a
telephone call in which the approved purchaser informed the first
respondent that it was unable to pay the purchase price
to it in
terms of the agreement of sale. No further evidence has been adduced
to establish the financial position of the approved
purchaser and the
true reason for the failure (or breach) of the agreement of sale.
[52] A further difficulty
with the counter claim is that it is a claim for damages, at least
part of which is unliquidated.
[53] It nevertheless
appears that there may yet be a basis for the counter claim, if it is
brought by way of action. Further evidence
may be adduced to make out
a proper case for the damages claimed by the first respondent, both
in regard to the merits of the claim
and in regard to the extent of
damages.
[54] In my view, it would
not be just for me to dismiss the counter claim outright. It is
appropriate, in the circumstances, that
I grant the first respondent
absolution from the instance in relation to the counter claim
(counter application, properly called),
and make no order as to
costs.
Orders
[55] In the result, I
make the following order in relation to the main application:
55.1. The first, second
and third respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying, the
other to be absolved, are directed to
make payment to the applicant
of:
55.1.1. the sum of
R4 158 071.10;
55.1.2.
interest
on the sum of R4 158 071.10 at the rate of 4% above the
ruling Prime Bank Overdraft Rate of the Standard Bank
of South
Africa, calculated from date of service of summons (23 May 2022) to
date of payment; and
55.1.3. costs of suit.
[56] In relation to the
counter application, I make the following order:
56.1. Absolution from the
instance is granted; and
56.2. There shall be no
order as to costs.
D I Berger
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment 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
30 May
2023.
Heard
on: 19 April 2023
Delivered:
30 May 2023
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Mr
S Aucamp
For
the Respondents:
Mr
M Mavodze
[1]
My
underlining.
[2]
My
underlining.
[3]
Clause 12 of Schedule 2 to the second lease agreement. The first
agreement (concluded in 2009) contained a similar clause
.
In terms of that clause, the certificate would serve as
prima
facie
proof of the first respondent’s indebtedness to the applicant.
In my view, there is no material difference between the
two versions
of the clause.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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