Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1081South Africa
TSI Communications CC v Omega M Projects (2022/13169) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1081 (27 September 2023)
Headnotes
at (201-211) that an exception to a pleading of it being vague and embarrassing involves two primary considerations namely;
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## TSI Communications CC v Omega M Projects (2022/13169) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1081 (27 September 2023)
TSI Communications CC v Omega M Projects (2022/13169) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1081 (27 September 2023)
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sino date 27 September 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.
:
2022/13169
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED
DATE:
27/09/2023
In
the matter between:
TSI
COMMUNICATIONS C.C
PLAINTIFF
And
OMEGA
M PROJECTS
DEFENDANT
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of hearing:
30 August 2022
Date
of delivery of judgment: 27 September 2023
The
Judgment is deemed to have been delivered electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
the
same shall be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is an application for exception
brought by the defendant against the plaintiff’s Particulars of
Claim.
[2]
The matter concerns a partnership between
the plaintiff and the defendant. The plaintiff claims a sum of R
48 773.52 as part
of profit sharing and R 35 305.47 being
half of the tools and equipment that the defendant allegedly
retained. The claim is
being opposed by the defendant.
TEST
FOR EXCEPTION
[3]
In dealing with the exception it is trite
that the pleadings must be looked at as a whole. An excipient must
show that the pleading
is excipiable on every possible interpretation
that can reasonably be attached to it.
[4]
The test on exception is whether on all
reasonable readings of the facts pleaded, no cause of action may be
made out.
[5]
The well-established principle of our law
is that the
onus
rests upon the excipient who alleges that a summons discloses no
cause of action or is vague and embarrassing. The duty rests upon
the
excipient to persuade the court that the pleading is excipiable on
every interpretation that can reasonably be attached to
it.
[6]
In
H
v Fetal Assessment Center,
[1]
the court said
"The
test on an exception is whether, on all possible readings of the
facts, no cause of action may be made out. It is for
the excipient to
satisfy the court that the conclusion of law from which the plaintiff
contends cannot be supported on every interpretation
that can be put
upon the facts.”
[7]
The trite principle of our law is that an
excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to the stated grounds
of his exception,
[8]
in
Luke
M Tembani and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Another
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal set out the general principle relating to
and the approach to be adopted regarding the adjudication
of
exceptions as follows; “
Whilst
exceptions provide a useful mechanism to weed out cases without legal
merit, it is nonetheless necessary that they be dealt
with sensibly
(
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority
SA [
2005] ZASCA 73
;
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) para 3). It is where
pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to determine the nature
of the claim, or where pleadings
are bad in law that their contents
do not support a discernible and legally recognised cause of action,
that exception is competent
(
Cilliers
et al Hebstein and Van Winsen the Practice of the High Courts of
South Africa
5ed
Vol 1 at 631
;
Jowel v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 386
(W) at 899E-F). the burden rests on an excipient, who must
establish that on every interpretation that can reasonably be
attached
to it, the pleading is excipiable
(Ocean
Echo Properties 327 CC and Another v Old Mutual Life Insurance
Company (South Africa) Ltd
[2018]
ZASCA 9
;
2018 (3) SA 405
(SCA) para 9). The test is whether on all
possible readings of the fact no cause of action may be made out; it
being for the excipient
to satisfy the court that the conclusion of
law for which the plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every
interpretation that
can be put upon the facts
(Trustees
for the Time Being of the Children’s Resources Centre Trust and
Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012]
ZASCA 182
;
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA);
2013 (3) BCLR 279
(SCA);
[2013] 1
All SA 648
(SCA) para 36 (
Children’s
Resource Centre Trust).”
[9]
The
tests applicable in deciding exceptions based on vagueness and
embarrassment are now well established and have been consistently
applied by our Courts. In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank,
[3]
it was held at (201-211) that an exception to a pleading of it being
vague and embarrassing involves two primary considerations
namely;
9.1 whether
it is vague, and;
9.2 whether
it causes embarrassment of such a nature that the excipient is
prejudiced
[10]
The
Trope
decision was approved in
Jowell
v Bramwell –Jones,
[4]
at 899-903. In the Jowell – judgment it was also held that it
was incumbent upon a plaintiff to plead a complete cause of
action
that identifies the issues upon which it seeks to rely and on which
evidence will be led in an intelligible, lucid form
that allows the
defendant to plead to it.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[11]
The facts underlying this dispute are
largely common cause.
[12]
The plaintiff (TSI Communication) is a
company that provides telecommunication services for the mining
industry. TSI in May 2020,
entered into a partly verbal and a partly
written joint venture agreement (‘the agreement”)with the
defendant, Omega
M Projects (Omega M) a company that is involved in
the commissioning and installation of fibre networks.
[13]
In terms of the agreement, TSI was expected
to provide capital to finance the projects, including all expenses in
relation to each
individual project. The defendant was required to
conduct the physical installations of the fibre networks. The parties
further
agreed that they shall be entitled to share in the profit of
the individual projects and shall bear the losses on the individual
projects.
[14]
Subsequent, to the signing of the agreement
the parties acquired two contracts. One is titled the Newcastle
Project, which is Claim
1 wherein the plaintiff pleads that it is
entitled to its share of profit, thus being a claim for profit
sharing.
[15]
Claim 2, relates to the Danville
Project, wherein the parties were awarded the project, however during
the course of the project,
the main contractor which appointed the
parties as sub-subcontractors was liquidated. On this claim, the
plaintiff insists that
it incurred expenses and as such a loss, and
therefore the defendant is liable to reimburse the plaintiff in equal
terms to such
loss.
[16]
After entering an appearance to defend, the
defendant raised certain objections against the plaintiff's
particulars of claim. The
plaintiff amended its particulars of claim
and its amendment was effected. Not satisfied with this amendment,
the defendant delivered
a notice in terms of Uniform Rule 23 (1) to
the plaintiff's particulars of claim, on the basis that the
particulars of claim do
not disclose a cause of action and or are
vague and embarrassing.
DEFENDANT
EXCEPTION
[17]
The issue to be decided is whether as the
plaintiff has pleaded the existence of a partnership agreement and in
terms of
actio pro socio
a claim for accounting, debatement, and reimbursement in a
partnership is only available upon the dissolution of the
partnership.
[18]
In so far as Claim 1 is concerned the
defendant submits that all profit made by the partners together with
all loans to the partnership,
whether by the parties themselves or
from outsiders, also form part of the partnership assets. Therefore,
insists the defendant
that a partner cannot lay claim to partnership
assets, absent dissolution of same as the partner's share is an
undivided half share,
which becomes divisible only upon dissolution.
[19]
Same as in Claim 1, the defendant insists
that just like the claim for payment, the accounting obligation comes
to the fore only
upon payment by a third party and there was no
payment, therefore accounting becomes enforceable,
ex
lege
upon
dissolution of the partnership.
[20]
In sum, Omega M’s submission is that
the
actio pro socio
can only be instituted, upon the dissolution of the partnership. That
absent the claim for dissolution as the plaintiff has failed
to claim
dissolution, there is no cause of action. Therefore, the plaintiff
has no claim against the excipient for the amounts
allegedly owed to
it in relation to the partnership affairs until the accounts are
settled and there remains a credit balance due
to him from the
excipient.
[21]
TSI
submits that it is not claiming for a division of partnership assets
upon dissolution. That both its claims fall within the
ambit of the
actio
pro socio
and it is not necessary to dissolve the partnership for its claim to
succeed. For this proposition, the plaintiff seeks reliance
in
Municipal
Employees
Pension Fund and Others v Chrisal Investment (PTY) Ltd
and Others.
[5]
See also
Morar
NO v Akoo and Another
[6]
where the Court succinctly set out a detailed exposition of the
general principles of the
actio
pro socio
and
its requirements the court said at [11] “Two points are
noteworthy about this exposition of the general principles of
the
action pro socio. The first is that according to the authorities, the
action is one that lies at the instance of one of the
partners for
relief against another, either during the subsistence of the
partnership or after its dissolution. A detailed discussion
is to be
found in Voet 17.2.9 and 17.2.10 5 where it is said that the claim is
one in terms of which one partner may claim against
the other;
(a) an account and a
debatement thereof, either during the subsistence of the partnership
or after it has been terminated;
(b) delivery of a
partnership assets to the partnership,
(c) the appointment of a
liquidator to the partnership.
[22]
Taking into account all the circumstances
of this case I agree with the exposition of the
actio
pro socio
as laid down in
Morar
NO
above and this Court is in any event
bound by the SCA decision. It must follow therefore that the
defendant’s exception has
no merit and stands to be dismissed.
This is so because the trite principle of our law is that the
actio
pro socio
is available during the
existence of a partnership or during the dissolution.
[23]
As a result, my view is that the
plaintiff's particulars of claim are valid and contain the averments
that are necessary to sustain
a cause of action for the relief the
plaintiff claim against the defendant.
[24]
I make the following order.
ORDER
1.
The defendant’s exception is
dismissed with costs
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
30
August 2023
Delivered:
27
September 2023
For
the Plaintiff
Adv.
Christo van der Merwe
Dominus.cvdm@gmail.com
Instructed
by:
Annie
van de Merwe Inc.
For
the Defendant
:
Adv.
Eugene Janse van Ransburg
eugene@law.co.za
Instructed
by:
baartman
Du Plessis Attorneys
bean@bdpattorneys.co.za
[1]
[2014] ZACC 34
2015
(2) SA 193 (CC)
[2]
[2022] ZASCA 70
(20 May 2022)
[3]
1992
(3) SA 208 (T)
[4]
1988
(1) SA 836
(W)
[5]
2022
(1) SA 137 (SCA)
[6]
2011
(6) SA 311
(SCA)
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