Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1015South Africa
PCM Mining Supply (Pty) Ltd and Another v Manuli Fluiconnecto (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-018601) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1015 (12 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 September 2023
Headnotes
out to Amplats that PCM was its joint venture party for the tender. In addition, when Manuli was faced with an aggressive approach from a third party, which sought to be its joint venture party for the tender, Manuli rebuffed this party by asserting that its chosen party was PCM.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## PCM Mining Supply (Pty) Ltd and Another v Manuli Fluiconnecto (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-018601) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1015 (12 September 2023)
PCM Mining Supply (Pty) Ltd and Another v Manuli Fluiconnecto (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023-018601) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1015 (12 September 2023)
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sino date 12 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2023-018601
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
12.09.23
In
the matter between:
PCM
MINING SUPPLY (PTY) LTD
FIRST
APPLICANT
PETROS
MAFAKALADA TONGA
SECOND
APPLICANT
And
MANULI
FLUICONNECTO(PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
ANGLO
AMERICAN PLATINUM LTD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Manoim J
[1] On 30 January
2023, the first respondent, Manuli Fluiconnecto (Pty) Ltd (“Manuli”)
published an advertisement
calling for expressions of interest from
community-based organisations to partner it for the supply of
hydraulic hose assemblies
at “…
one of the mining
operations in the Greater Tubatse Region.
” The client
for whom these services is to be provided is not named in the advert.
It simply described as “…
an active mining operation
in the Greater Tubatse region.”
Despite this anonymity this
alarmed the first applicant, PCM Mining Supply Ltd (“PCM”).
The reason was that it
considered that the partnership advertised was
going to be for the supply of hydraulic hoses to the second
respondent, Anglo American
Platinum Pty Ltd (“Amplats”)
and that it (“PCM”) already believed it had a contract
with Manuli to be its
joint venture partner. I will refer to this as
the Amplats project.
[2] PCM rushed to
court on 22 February 2023 with an urgent application for an interim
interdict to prevent PCM from proceeding
with the Amplats project
with any other joint venture partner. The contractual basis on which
PCM alleged its claim was based was
not clear from the founding
affidavit, and Wilson J who heard it, allowed PCM to file a
supplementary affidavit, which it duly
did, as well as a second one,
to attempt to remedy this deficiency. Manuli, in response filed a
supplementary answering affidavit.
On 14 March 2023, the parties were
again in urgent court and Randera AJ gave an interim order,
interdicting Manuli from appointing
any company as its joint venture
or community development partner for the Amplats project pending the
finalisation of the matter
in the ordinary course.
[1]
[3] This explains
how this matter is before me now on the ordinary opposed motion roll.
The applicant now seeks a final interdict
on these terms:
a. That Manuli be
interdicted from appointing any company as its joint venture partner
pursuant to the advert;
b. That Manuli be
interdicted from issuing a further such advert in the future;
c. That if Manuli
has appointed another company pursuant to the advert that such
appointment be voided;
d. That the Court
declare that there is an existing joint venture between PCM and
Manuli as its partner for the Amplats Matotolo
contract.
[4] The
requirements for a final interdict are well-known. They are a clear
right on the part of the applicant; an injury
actually committed or
reasonably apprehended; the absence of any other satisfactory remedy
available to the applicant.
[2]
All of these requirements must be present.
[3]
Clear right
[5] This case turns
on PCM’s allegation that in March 2021, it entered into an oral
agreement in terms of which PCM
would become Manuli’s sole
local development partner for the Greater Tubatse region. The
agreement was reached between the
second applicant, Petros Tonga, the
applicant’s owner and sole director, and Johan Weigand, a
manager of Manuli. Tonga alleges
that the agreement was express or
alternatively tacit. At the time it was anticipated that Amplats was
going to put out a tender
for hydraulic hose management known as the
Matotolo tender.
[6] It was agreed
as well that each party would tender separately for the contract but
whoever won it would retain the other
as a joint venture partner on
an exclusive basis. The tenders themselves are not in the record. But
there is no dispute between
the parties that this was the arrangement
at the time. During the course of 2021 various documents show that
Manuli held out to
Amplats that PCM was its joint venture party for
the tender. In addition, when Manuli was faced with an aggressive
approach from
a third party, which sought to be its joint venture
party for the tender, Manuli rebuffed this party by asserting that
its chosen
party was PCM.
[7] That is how
matters stood, or so PCM believed, until the applicants participated
in a video call set up by Amplats in
February 2023, along with other
companies. In that call Amplats announced that Manuli had won the
tender and it would now be seeking
a community partner. This came as
a shock to PCM who had up until then understood that it had an
agreement with Manuli that it
was the joint venture partner. This
video call is not common cause. Manuli claims to have no knowledge of
it. Admittedly PCM is
not in a position to say it did not take place
so I must accept this was the case. Although Amplats has been cited
as a respondent
in these proceedings it has not filed any papers, so
I do not have its version.
[8] What happened
next and it seems close in time to the call is that Manuli put out an
advert calling for community based
organisations to partner it in a
partnership to supply hydraulic hose assemblies at “…
one of the mining operations in the Greater Tubatse Region
.”
This is the advert that is the subject of the interdict. Admittedly
this advert does not contain an express reference to
the Amplats
tender. But PCM avers that the description so closely resembles the
nature of the Amplats tender that it must be understood
to refer to
that. Manuli gives no satisfactory account as to which client the
advert is referring to, so I accept PCMs’ version
on this point
that it must be Amplats.
[9] Thus, the case
for PCM is that it had agreed with Manuli to be joint venture
partners for the tender and whilst each would
tender separately the
winner would include the other. Manuli won the tender, but it is
apparent from the advert that it is no longer
prepared to honour the
agreement. Thus, PCM alleges, it has thus established a clear right
to the relief it seeks.
[10] Manuli denies
that PCM has a clear right. It takes the history of the case
back earlier to 2020. In that year Manuli
put out an invitation to
community organizations in the area (the area where PCM conducts
business) to enter into partnerships
with it. The goal of the project
was to develop small firms or SMME’s in the area with skills
and opportunities, until they
became self-sufficient. What was
envisaged is that the community organisations would partner with it
on a project and go through
various phases of growth to develop their
capacity. This aspect of the project is not in dispute. But,
according to Manuli, there
was a crucial proviso to the project;
organisations selected would participate for one project only. The
terms of the project are
set out in a document whose contents are
common cause. After outlining the six phases a development partner
will go through it
states: “
This initiative will be limited
to one opportunity per SMME”.
I will refer to this as
the one project only principle.
[11] In 2021 both
PCM and Manuli made bids for a tender from another mining company,
Glencore. Again, each bid separately.
Manuli says the arrangement was
on the same terms as the Anglo bid. Whoever won would include the
other. PCM contends that it bid
on its own although it would have
included Manuli as its supplier. Again, this tender is not in
the record. However, it is
common cause that Glencore has awarded the
tender to PCM. Although the award was made in 2021, the contract, was
only signed in
February 2022. There is no dispute about this - the
signing page of the contract is in the record.
[12] Here the
chronology of events is crucial. It is Manuli’s case that the
Glencore tender was part of the project
arrangements between it and
PCM. This meant that the one project only principle applied. Once it
learnt that the Glencore tender
had been awarded to PCM, it
considered that in terms of the one project only principle, PCM was
no longer eligible to be the joint
venture partner for the Amplats
tender which at that stage had not yet been awarded.
[13] Manuli then
had to explain why it had held out both to Anglo and the third party,
that PCM was its joint venture partner.
Manuli explained that this
correspondence all took place in 2021, at a time when although the
Glencore contract had been announced,
it had not yet been signed.
Hence at that stage the one project only principle still applied and
since the Glencore contract was
not yet finalised it still considered
PCM as its partner for Amplats. That changed in February 2002 when
the Glencore contract
was signed, and thereafter there was no
correspondence with any party suggesting that it was still in the
joint venture with PCM
for Amplats.
[14] The difficulty
for PCM is that it seeks to rely on enforcing an oral agreement by
motion proceedings. The oral agreement
is alleged to be express
alternatively tacit. It is as vague as that. Given that the existence
of this agreement whose key premise
is that PCM was not a once off
partner but Manuli’s sole joint venture development partner for
the area, this once-off conversation
for which there is no subsequent
proof in the documentation, has made PCM’s case difficult to
establish in motion proceedings.
PCM knew from correspondence it
received from Manuli's attorney, prior to commencing this litigation
that the latter would rely
on the one project only principle. It thus
should have proceeded by way of action given the existence of the
anticipated dispute
of fact about the alleged oral agreement.
[15] On the other
hand, Manuli’s version about the one off only principle is
supported by the documentation. Its apparent
inconsistency in respect
of the Amplats contract during 2021 has been satisfactorily
explained. There are no documents in the record
after PCM signed the
Glencore agreement in 2022 that suggest Manuli still regarded PCM as
its joint venture partner for Amplats
and hence its decision to
advertise for community partners in 2023 was not a breach of
contract. Manuli contends that PCM has sought
to elide its status as
one of its development partners to a status as its sole joint venture
partner, something it said was never
contemplated.
[16] The applicant
fails on these papers to make out the existence of the oral agreement
they contend for and hence they are
unable to establish a clear right
entitling them to an interdict. The application therefore fails and
costs must follow cause.
ORDER: -
[17] In the result
the following order is made:
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. The interim
order dated 14 March 2023 is discharged.
3. The applicants,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, are
liable for the costs of the first respondent
on a party and party
scale.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 07
August 2023
Date of judgment: 12
September 2023
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicants:
Adv VJ Chabane
Instructed by.
Montjane Freedom
Attorneys
Counsel for First
Respondent:
Adv. A Granova (Heads
prepared by Adv W.P. Venter)
Instructed by:
HJV Attorneys
[1]
See
CaseLines 013-1.
[2]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
[3]
Erasmus,
Superior Court practice, volume 2, paragraph 7, D6-12 service 8
2019.
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