Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 903South Africa
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Evaton Fuels CC (21/36781) [2023] ZAGPJHC 903 (15 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Evaton Fuels CC (21/36781) [2023] ZAGPJHC 903 (15 August 2023)
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Evaton Fuels CC (21/36781) [2023] ZAGPJHC 903 (15 August 2023)
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sino date 15 August 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 21/36781
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
15.08.23
In the matter between:
BP
SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Excipient
and
EVATON
FUELS CC
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The excipient, BP, is being sued by the respondent, Evaton
Fuels, for breach of contract. In the alternative, Evaton Fuels
advances
a delictual claim of wrongful misrepresentation. BP has
excepted to Evaton Fuels’ particulars of claim as disclosing no
cause
of action, or as being vague and embarrassing.
The claim
2
The dispute between the parties in the main suit is simple. BP
rented Evaton Fuels a petrol station through which Evaton Fuels sold
BP-branded petrol and diesel. BP was paid a cut from Evaton Fuels’
turnover. The petrol station was branded as a BP petrol
station. It
had amenities that motorists tend to use, such as a café, a
grocery store and a cash machine. The lease lasted
for an initial
period of five years. Evaton Fuels claims that the lease was then
extended, month-to-month, on the same terms and
conditions.
3
During the fourth year of the initial five-year period, BP set
up another petrol station with a third party three kilometres away
from the petrol station it rented to Evaton Fuels. Evaton Fuels says
that the other petrol station has syphoned-off some of its
customers,
and reduced its profit. Evaton Fuels says that, in facilitating the
operation of the other petrol station, BP breached
three tacit terms
of its contract with Evaton Fuels, the thrust of which are that BP
would not open a BP-branded petrol station
in the same “locality”
as Evaton Fuels’ BP-branded station.
4
If it turns out that there were no such tacit terms in the
agreement, Evaton Fuels says that it was wrongfully induced into
contracting
without those terms, that it would never have entered
into its lease with BP if it had thought that BP would open up the
competing
petrol station, and that BP either fraudulently
misrepresented that the competing station would not be opened in the
currency of
Evaton Fuels’ lease, or that BP wrongfully and
negligently failed to disclose that it intended to permit the
competing station
to be opened.
5
In damages on the contractual claim, Evaton Fuels claims the
difference between the fuel it would have sold without the competing
petrol station having opened, and the fuel it actually sold during
the relevant period. On the delictual claim, Evaton Fuels calculates
its damages on the basis either that it would not have entered into
an agreement with BP at all or that it would have entered into
an
agreement with BP on less onerous terms.
The exception
6
BP excepts to Evaton Fuels’ particulars of claim on nine
separate grounds. Some of these grounds are expressed rather
cryptically.
For example, BP’s first ground – that “it
was neither a term of the lease agreement . . . nor the extended
lease
agreement” that BP would not act in the manner forbidden
by the tacit terms pleaded – turned out to be just another
way
of saying that the tacit terms had been vaguely pleaded. That boiled
down to the proposition that the tacit terms pleaded in
the
particulars ought to be have been accompanied by an account of the
surrounding circumstances from which the tacit terms could
be
inferred. That also seems to have been the thrust of BP’s
fourth ground of exception: viz. that Evaton Fuels’ allegation
that BP breached the tacit terms fails to disclose a cause of action,
and that Evaton Fuels’ case that the tacit terms were
breached
lacks a “a clear and concise statement of the material facts”
upon which Evaton Fuels relies.
7
The second and third grounds of exception are, respectively,
that Evaton Fuels had failed to allege that the month-to-month
extension
of its lease was duly authorised in the manner required by
the written agreement, and that Evaton Fuels has failed to
particularise
its damages in a manner to which BP can reasonably
plead.
8
The fifth to ninth grounds of exception concern the delictual
claim. It is said that Evaton Fuels did not allege that BP had a
legal
duty to disclose that a competing petrol station may be set up,
and that BP wrongfully failed to do so (the fifth ground). Nor did
Evaton Fuels allege that BP was aware of this possibility at the time
the contract was concluded (the sixth ground). BP says that
Evaton
Fuels also failed to allege the facts giving rise to an inference of
negligent misrepresentation (the seventh ground). BP
also complains
that the damages Evaton Fuels claims are not sufficiently
particularised (the eighth ground), and that those damages
constitute
a form of “positive
interesse”
which is not
claimable as a matter of law (the ninth ground).
The tacit terms
pleaded
9
During argument, Mr. Ncgongo, who appeared for BP, submitted
that the first and fourth grounds of exception really boiled down to
the proposition that Evaton Fuels had to plead the circumstances
surrounding the conclusion of the contract from which the tacit
terms
alleged could be inferred. This has not been done, rendering Evaton
Fuels’ particulars excipiable.
10
The weight of authority on this point is that a pleader need
do no more than set out the tacit terms that are sought to be
imported
into an express agreement. The formulation of those terms
need not be accompanied by a list of surrounding circumstances from
which
the existence of the terms can be inferred. There are
exceptions to the rule where the whole agreement is alleged to have
been
concluded by conduct, or where the tacit terms alleged appear to
conflict with the plain facial meaning of the express parts of
the
contract (see, by analogy, the approach to the admission of evidence
of surrounding circumstances in
Société Commerciale
de Moteurs v Ackermann
1981 (3) SA 422
(A), especially at
430E–H). However, where the express agreement does not, on its
face, conflict with the tacit terms alleged,
a pleader need do no
more than formulate the tacit terms relied upon. The question of
whether those terms really were part of the
agreement is a matter of
evidence.
11
In this case, it is not suggested that the tacit terms Evaton
Fuels alleges conflict with the express terms of the written
agreement.
In fact, Mr. Strobl, who appeared for Evaton Fuels, argued
persuasively that the underlying structure of the contract rendered
Evaton Fuels a captive retailer of BP’s products, such that the
parties may well have tacitly accepted that BP was under a
duty not
to interfere with Evaton Fuels’ customer base by setting up
another BP retailer in close proximity to its petrol
station.
12
It seems to me, therefore, that there is no merit in the first
and fourth grounds of exception. All BP reasonably needs in order
to
answer the claim is the written agreement and the textual ambit of
the tacit terms Evaton Fuels seeks to import. Either BP agrees
that
there were such terms, or it does not. The rest is a matter of
evidence.
The authority point
13
Evaton Fuels identifies the individuals who it says extended
its contract. In these circumstances, it is not for Evaton Fuels to
state that the extension it alleges was authorised. It is for BP to
plead that it was not (see
Tuckers Land and Development
Corporation v Perpellief
1978 (2) SA 10
(T) at 16F-H). The second
ground of exception is accordingly without merit.
The contractual
damages claim
14
Under Rule 18 (10), a defendant is entitled to information
that will enable it to understand how the plaintiff has calculated
their
loss. The defendant is not entitled to a line-item account of
the plaintiff’s losses. Nor is it entitled to material that
would enable it to check the correctness of the plaintiff’s
calculations (
Thonar v Union and South West Africa Insurance Co
Ltd
1981 (3) SA 545
(W) at 551C). I have already set out how
Evaton Fuels has calculated its damages. Either it is entitled to
those damages or it
is not, but there can be no serious suggestion
that BP does not know what Evaton Fuels thinks its damages are. The
third ground
of exception must also fail.
Misrepresentation
15
Insofar as Evaton Fuels alleges fraud, it need not also allege
that the fraudulent misrepresentation was wrongful. It is always
prima facie
wrongful to lie. Insofar as Evaton Fuels alleges a
negligent misrepresentation, it need not explicitly allege that the
negligence
was also wrongful. It need only allege the facts necessary
to allow a court to decide whether or not BP’s negligence, if
it is established, breached a legal duty BP owed to Evaton Fuels (see
Trope v South African Reserve Bank
1993 (2) SA 208
(T) at
214C-E). Here the facts on which Evaton Fuels relies are clear: the
nature of the relationship between the parties (Evaton
Fuels being a
captive retailer of BP) was such that, if it were reasonably
foreseeable that BP might open up a competing petrol
station, BP was
under a duty to say so. Evaton Fuels’ particulars go as far as
they have to in drawing BP’s attention
to the legal duty it
intends to prove.
16
It is Evaton Fuels’ case that BP promised that it would
take steps to prevent the establishment of a competing petrol station
at the time the contract was concluded. The question of whether or
not BP was aware of the possibility that, in breach of that
promise,
it might set up a petrol station in competition with Evaton Fuels at
the time the agreement was concluded goes to whether
the
representation that it would not was foreseeably false (as opposed to
an outright lie). That is a matter of evidence. It need
not be
pleaded.
17
For these reasons, there is no merit in the fifth and sixth
grounds of exception.
The facts giving rise
to an inference of negligence
18
The seventh ground of exception is likewise plainly without
merit. As Mr. Strobl points out in his written submissions, Evaton
Fuels’
case is obvious on the face of its particulars. At the
time the agreement was concluded, the parties were co-operating to
prevent
a competing petrol station being set up. They both foresaw
that this would harm Evaton Fuels’ business. It is plain from
paragraph 11.6 of Evaton Fuels’ particulars that its case is
that (1) BP represented that it would continue to oppose the
establishment of the competing station and that (2) in any event,
even if BP was unsuccessful, no such site could practically be
established during the agreement’s initial period. Plainly, the
fact that BP allegedly ended up setting up the competing
petrol
station is itself is a strong indication that it ought to have known
that its representations were false at the time it
made them, even if
it did not tell an outright lie. That is Evaton’s case.
Damages
19
The eighth ground of exception fails for the same reasons as
the third. There is sufficient particularity in Evaton Fuels’
calculations to allow BP to plead to its case.
“
Positive
interesse
”
20
If it is successful in its delictual claim, Evaton Fuels is
entitled to be compensated for what it has lost as a result of acting
on BP’s false representations. It is not entitled to be put in
the position it would have been in had the false representation
been
true (see
Voges v Wilkins NO
1992 (4) SA 764
(T) 772G-H).
21
BP says that Evaton Fuels has in fact claimed the right to be
put into the position it would have been in had the false
representation
been true. BP calls this an impermissible claim for
“positive
interesse
”. I am not sure that term is
apposite in this context, but that is beside the point. Whatever
label one applies, it seems
clear to me that Evaton Fuels in fact
claims the difference between the rent and other costs it agreed to
pay (believing BP’s
false representation to be true) and the
financial outlay it would have made if had it known that the
representation was false
(see paragraphs 17 and 18 of the particulars
of claim).
None of this presupposes that Evaton
Fuels wishes to be put in the position it would have been in had BP’s
representations
been true.
22
For these reasons, the ninth ground of
exception must also fail.
Order
23
It has been said that exceptions must be approached “sensibly”
rather than hyper-technically (see
Telematrix v Advertising
Standards Authority
2006 (1) 461 (SCA), paragraph 3). The
question in every case goes little further than whether a pleading
sets out a cause of action
or defence recognised in law in a manner
that enables the reader to understand what the pleader’s case
is, and to respond
to it. In this case, as should be clear from the
opening paragraphs of my decision, I am in no doubt about what Evaton
Fuels’
case is. What BP has done, for the most part, is hint at
or preview what its answers to that case will be. It has not
established
that the two claims pursued are impermissibly vague, or
that they are bad in law.
24
The exception is dismissed with costs.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was
prepared 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 15
August 2023.
HEARD ON: 7 August
2023
DECIDED ON: 15 August
2023
For the Excipient:
P Ngcongo
Instructed by
Norton Rose Fulbright Inc
For the Respondent:
W Strobl
Instructed by
Metcalfe Attorneys
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