Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1144South Africa
South African Airways SOC LTD v KCT Logistics CC (2022/5838) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1144 (11 October 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## South African Airways SOC LTD v KCT Logistics CC (2022/5838) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1144 (11 October 2023)
South African Airways SOC LTD v KCT Logistics CC (2022/5838) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1144 (11 October 2023)
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sino date 11 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
2022/5838
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN AIRWAYS SOC LTD
Excipient
And
KCT
LOGISTICS CC
Respondent
In
re:
SEAWORLD
MANAGEMENT SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
KCT
LOGISTICS CC
Defendant
SOUTH
AFRICAN AIRWAYS SOC LTD
Third
Party
JUDGMENT
HA
VAN DER MERWE, AJ:
[1]
This is an exception against a third party
notice, on the basis that in the annexure to the notice, no case
sustainable in law is
pleaded against the third party. South African
Airways SOC Ltd is the excipient and the third party. The respondent
in the exception
is KCT Logistics CC. The respondent is also the
defendant. The plaintiff is Seaworld Management Services (Pty) Ltd.
The plaintiff
did not participate in the hearing of the exception.
[2]
The plaintiff’s claim against the
respondent is for payment of unpaid rent due in terms of a written
sub-lease agreement.
The plaintiff pleads in the particulars of claim
that it is a sub-lessee in terms of a sub-lease agreement concluded
between the
plaintiff and a company called Seaworld Aviation Services
(Pty) Ltd, with the latter having concluded a “head”
lease
agreement with Transnet SOC Ltd. The respondent is thus a
sub-sub-lessee. The respondent does not deny these allegations in its
plea. The lease and sub-lease agreements were concluded in respect of
the same premises.
[3]
The substance of the defence pleaded in the
respondent’s plea, so far as it is relevant to the exception,
is that the plaintiff
was not entitled to conclude the sub-lease
agreement on which it relies, with the respondent. The case pleaded
by the respondent
in the annexure to the third party notice is
conditional on it being found in favour of the plaintiff that the
sub-lease agreement
was validly concluded, in other words,
conditionally on its defence against plaintiff’s claim not
being upheld.
[4]
In the annexure to the third party notice,
the respondent pleads that subsequent to it having concluded the
sub-lease agreement
with the plaintiff, the excipient misrepresented
to it that the plaintiff was not entitled to conclude that agreement
with the
respondent. Instead, so the respondent pleads, the excipient
suggested to it that the respondent should conclude a lease agreement
with it in respect of the same premises. The respondent accepted the
excipient’s representations and concluded a lease agreement
with it, as the excipient suggested. Once the lease agreement was
concluded with the excipient, the respondent paid rent to it
and not
to the plaintiff. The respondent thus finds itself in the position of
having concluded two agreements in which it leased
(or sub-leased)
the same premises but with two different lessors over the same period
of time.
[5]
As the respondent did not pay rent to the
plaintiff, it now faces the plaintiff’s claim for unpaid rent.
[6]
Whether
the defence pleaded by the respondent to the plaintiff’s claim
is sustainable, is open to serious doubt,
[1]
but that it is not a matter that calls for my attention.
[7]
In argument Mr Tisani who appeared for the
excipient placed the fate of the exception on the following
submission: The misrepresentations
on which the respondent relies do
not go the
facta probanda
of the respondent’s claim against the excipient, in that it is
not alleged that the excipient misrepresented any aspect of
the lease
agreement concluded with the excipient. The respondent does not, for
instance, plead that the excipient misrepresented
the extent of the
leased premises or any of its other attributes. The
misrepresentations are concerned with the respondent’s
motive
in concluding the lease agreement with the excipient. Generally, an
error in motive is not a ground on which a contract
may be avoided.
[8]
Mr
Tisani is correct that an error in motive does not afford the party
in error with a ground to avoid a contract when it does not
vitiate
the mutual assent achieved between the parties. As was found by
Miller J in
Diedericks
v Minister of Lands
[2]
:
“
It
is clear, however, that in our law, as in the law of England, a
mistake which is merely incidental to the contract in the sense
that
it relates only to the reasoning or motivation of the party seeking
to escape the consequences of the terms on which he agreed,
does not
vitiate or preclude mutual assent. (Cf. de Wet
Dwaling
en Bedrog by die Kontraksluiting
at
pp. 5 - 6;
Hahlo
and Ellison Kahn ibid
.
at pp. 455 - 6; and see
Banks
v Cluver
,
1946 T.P.D. 451
at pp. 458 - 9). The words of Lord ATKIN, which I
have quoted above, seem to me to epitomise the complaint of the
defendant in
this case; as a result of his own error, the defendant
concluded a bad bargain instead of the good one he could have
concluded
had he not made that error. His position, in principle, is
no different from that of a party who agrees to certain terms of
a contract because he miscalculated his potential profit or forgot to
take into account a factor which he should have included
in his
reckoning. The error which the defendant made did not relate to the
identity or nature, or even to the quality of the subject-matter
of
the contract, for on that score the parties were
ad idem
,
each receiving and giving exactly what he bargained for. What
motivated him in making the offer to plaintiff was his conclusion
that, in order to obtain the release of the required land from the
terms of the 1953 agreement, it was necessary or advisable to
offer a
certain sum of money to plaintiff. This conclusion was wrong because
he overlooked the resumption clause; this is
what caused him to
make a wrong appraisal of the situation. Such an error, as I have
said, does not negative or exclude mutual
assent.”
[3]
[9]
However, the crucial question is whether an
error in motive can be relied on if it is induced by a fraudulent
misrepresentation.
The respondent also relies on a negligent
misrepresentation in the alternative, but for the reasons that
follow, I need not decide
whether a proper case on a negligent
misrepresentation has been pleaded.
[10]
Mr Aldworth who appeared for the respondent
submitted that a misrepresentation can be relied on so long as it is
material. A misrepresentation
will be material if it would have
induced a reasonable person in the respondent’s position to
conclude the lease agreement.
As the respondent pleads that the
misrepresentations on which it relies were material, a proper case is
pleaded by the respondent.
[11]
Mr
Aldworth is correct that if a misrepresentation would have convinced
a reasonable person to conclude a contract, then the requirement
of
materiality is met.
[4]
If that
is the case, then it does not seem to me to matter that the
misrepresentation created an error in the respondent’s
motive
for concluding the lease agreement with the excipient. After all,
fraud unravels all between the immediate parties to the
fraud.
[5]
[12]
As stated above, all of the grounds of
exception relied on by the excipient circle back to the same
essential submission made by
Mr Tisani on the misrepresentation
inducing an error in the respondent’s motive in entering into
the lease agreement. As
it is my view that an error in motive is
actionable if it was induced by a fraudulent misrepresentation, it is
the final word on
all the grounds of exception on which the excipient
relies, as Mr Tisani fairly conceded.
[13]
It remains for me to deal with one other
matter. The respondent’s claim is in the first instance for
restitution, so Mr Aldworth
argued, although the word “restitution”
does not appear in the annexure to the third party notice. The
respondent pleads
in the annexure to the third party notice that the
lease agreement concluded with the excipient was tainted by the
excipient’s
fraudulent misrepresentation. It also claims
repayment of the amounts it paid to the excipient.
[14]
The
respondent does not tender to restore what it received pursuant to
the lease agreement concluded with the excipient. The general
rule is
that a party claiming restitution is required to tender restoration
of what it received pursuant to the contract, but the
general rule
may be departed from in an appropriate case. Trollip JA found as
follows in
Feinstein
v Niggli
[6]
:
“
The
object of the rule is that the parties ought to be restored to
the respective positions they were in at the time they
contracted. It is founded on equitable considerations. Hence,
generally a court will not set aside a contract and grant
consequential
relief for fraudulent misrepresentation unless the
representee is able and willing to restore completely everything that
he has
received under the contract. The reason is that
otherwise, although the representor has been fraudulent, the
representee would
nevertheless be unjustly enriched by recovering
what he had parted with and keeping or not restoring what
he had in turn
received, and the representor would correspondingly be
unjustly impoverished to the latter extent (see
Actionable
Misrepresentation
(supra at
para 294 and note 5 thereto);
Marks
Ltd v Laughton
1920
AD 12
at
21;
Harper
v Webster
1956
(2) SA 495 (FC)
at
502B - D;
Van
Heerden en Andere v Sentrale Kunsmis Korporasie (Edms) Bpk
1973
(1) SA 17
(A)
at
31G - 32A). But since the rule is founded on equity it has been
departed from in a number of varying circumstances where
considerations
of equity and justice have necessitated such departure
(see
Harper's
case
where the cases are collected and especially at 500B, 502E).
”
[15]
The
absence of a tender of restoration is not among the grounds of
exception, so the point is not available to the excipient.
[7]
It is also hard to see how the respondent could restore the
occupation of the leased premises it enjoyed, so the respondent may
in due course come home under an exception to the general rule.
[16]
In
the result, the essential factual allegations to make a case for
restitution are apparent from the annexure to the third party
notice,
even though it is not pleaded as a claim for restitution in terms.
[8]
[17]
I
have reservations about the respondent’s claim based on the
condictio
indebiti
.
For one, the respondent does not plead that it made payment to the
excipient under an excusable error. The respondent relies on
the
judgment in
Municipal
Employees Pension Fund v Mongwaketse
[9]
for the submission that it need only plead that the excipient was
enriched, that the enrichment was at the expense of the respondent,
that the respondent was impoverished and that the enrichment was
sine
causa
.
However, there Wallis JA was dealing with the general requirements
for the c
ondictio
indebiti
.
It does not seem to me that that judgment should be read to mean that
an excusable error is not a requirement for the
condictio
indebiti
,
[10]
inasmuch as that requirement is not a general one. However, I need
not decide this point either, because upholding the exception
on the
unjustified enrichment part of the respondent’s claim would
leave the claim for restitution intact.
[11]
For the same reason I need not pronounce on the respondent’s
reliance on a negligent misrepresentation. As I found that a
proper
case for restitution on a fraudulent misrepresentation is apparent
from the annexure to the third party notice, the reliance
on a
negligent misrepresentation is, for purposes of the exception,
surplusage.
[18]
In the result, the exception should be
dismissed. There is no reason why costs should not follow the result.
I make the following
order:
a.
The exception is dismissed;
b.
The excipient is liable for the
respondent’s costs of the exception.
H
A VAN DER MERWE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard
on: 2 October 2023
Delivered
on: 11 October 2023
For
the excipient:
Adv
S Tisani instructed by Lawtons Inc.
For
the respondent:
Adv
D Aldworth instructed by Hiralall Attorn
[1]
See
Mighty
Solutions t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd
2016 (1) SA 621
(CC) at 23 –33.
[2]
1964
(1) SA 49
(N) at 56C-G.
[3]
See
Slip
Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Ltd v Du Toit
2011 (4) SA 72 (SCA).
[4]
Novick
and Another v Comair Holdings and Others
1979 (2) SA 116
(W);
Rabinowitz
v Ned-Equity Insurance Co Ltd and Another
1980 (1) SA 403 (W)
at 408.
[5]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Moore
2017
(1) SA 255
(CC) at 39.
[6]
1981
(2) SA 684
(A) 700G – 701A.
[7]
Feldman
NO v EMI Music SA (Pty) Ltd; Feldman NO v EMI Music Publishing SA
(Pty) Ltd
2010
(1) SA 1 (SCA)
at
5A.
[8]
Lillicrap,
Wassenaar and Partners v Pilkington Brothers (SA) (Pty) Ltd
1985 (1) SA 475
(A) at 496G.
[9]
2020
JDR 2838 (SCA) at
50.
[10]
DP
Visser “Enrichment” in
LAWSA
3
rd
ed. (2018) Vol 17 at 214.
[11]
Santos
and Others v Standard General Insurance Co, Ltd and Another
1971 (3) SA 434
(O) 437B-E.
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