Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1247South Africa
Municipal Employees Pension Fund v Adamax Property Projects Menlyn (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/098721) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1247 (31 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Municipal Employees Pension Fund v Adamax Property Projects Menlyn (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/098721) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1247 (31 October 2023)
Municipal Employees Pension Fund v Adamax Property Projects Menlyn (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/098721) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1247 (31 October 2023)
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sino date 31 October 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2023 –
098721
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In the application by
MUNICIPAL
EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
Applicant
And
ADAMAX
PROPERTY PROJECTS MENLYN (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
GERALD
FARBER
N O
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Arbitration –
stay of proceedings – section 3 of
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
– not in the interests of justice to order a stay
Urgency – self
created – case made out on the merits not such that urgent
relief is justified even though applicant
failed to act timeously
Order
[1] In this matter
I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of
the application.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
The
applicant (“MEPF”) seeks an order in the urgent court
staying arbitration proceedings scheduled to proceed on 22
November
2023 before the second respondent (“the arbitrator”)
pending the latter of
3.1
MEPF’s
application under
section 3
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
that
an arbitration agreement shall cease to have any effect with
reference to the disputes between the parties, and
3.2
the
final determination of MEPF’s envisaged application for a
review of the arbitration award of the arbitrator made on 18
September 2023.
[4]
In
the alternative MEPF seeks an order staying the arbitration pending
the
section 3
application only.
[5]
The
application is opposed by the party that initiated the arbitration,
the first respondent (“Adamax”). The arbitrator
abides
the decision of the court.
[6]
An
application for a stay of proceedings must be evaluated on the basis
of the interests of justice.
[1]
This
must be viewed from the perspective of all parties.
The
Arbitration Act
[7
]
Section
3
of the
Arbitration Act gives
effect to the principles of party
autonomy
[2]
and
pacta
sunt servanda
,
and reads as follows:
3 Binding
effect of arbitration agreement and power of court in
relation thereto
(1) Unless the
agreement otherwise provides, an arbitration agreement
shall not be capable of being terminated except
by consent of all the
parties thereto.
(2) The court may at
any time on the application of any party to an arbitration agreement,
on good cause shown-
(a)set aside
the arbitration agreement; or
(b)order that any
particular dispute referred to in the arbitration agreement
shall not be referred to arbitration;
or
(c)order that
the arbitration agreement shall cease to have effect with
reference to any dispute referred.
[8]
The
parties have waived compliance with
section 23
of the
Arbitration
Act.
Background
:
The co-ownership
agreement
[9]
The
parties entered into a co-ownership agreement on 9 November 2011. The
two co-owners were MEPF and Adamax.
[3]
Adamax
was described as ‘Propco,’ the holding company of three
fully owned subsidiaries.
[4]
These
three subsidiaries were not parties to the co-ownership agreement but
they held
[5]
a
share in the letting enterprise
[6]
comprising
the Property,
[7]
in
turn comprising various properties
[8]
listed
in Schedule 2.
[10]
The
co-ownership was constituted by an agreement to carry on the letting
enterprise
[9]
comprising
[10]
the
Property listed in Schedule 2 together with rights flowing from
leases and revenue relating to the Property.
[11]
It
was expressly agreed between the contracting parties that the
agreement did not constitute a joint venture or partnership.
[11]
[12]
The
arbitration agreement between MEDF and Adamax is to be found in
clause 20 of the co-ownership agreement. In terms of the agreement
the arbitrator has the power to fix all procedural rules and to
decide on the admissibility of evidence.
[12]
Unless
the arbitrator directs otherwise the Uniform Rules of Court as
applied in what is now the Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
shall be
applicable to the arbitration.
The property
management agreement and the second addendum
[13]
On
the same day, 9 November 2011, MEPF, Adamax, and three other
entities
[13]
entered
into a property management agreement in respect of the Property
described in the co-ownership agreement. Akani RFA was appointed
as
the Manager, subject to a cession of its rights and a delegation of
its obligations to CRE and M&M.
[14]
Unlike
the co-ownership agreement the property management agreement does not
contain an arbitration clause. MEFP and Adamax pertinently
agreed to
arbitration in the co-ownership agreement but the parties to the
property management agreement did not.
The arbitration
[15]
In
the arbitration that was initiated in February 2023 Adamax seeks an
order -
15.1
declaring
that MEPF was in breach of the co-ownership agreement and that it was
terminated on 18 October 2022 (“the breach
relief”), and
15.2
directing
that the co-ownership be dissolved (“the dissolution
relief”).
[14]
[16]
Adamax
alleges that MEPF had committed material breaches of the agreement by
impermissibly interfering in the conduct of the property
management
agreement which deprived Adamax of income it was entitled to, thus
constituting a breach in terms of clauses 6.1(1)
and 12.1 of the
co-ownership agreement. The allegation before the arbitrator is that
MEPF impermissibly instructed the party responsible
for the
management of the letting enterprise described below not to pay over
an amount of R6,609,145.40 that Adamax was entitled
to.
[17]
MEPF
contends that:
17.1
An
arbitral tribunal cannot grant a dissolution of co-ownership.
17.2
The
dissolution of co-ownership falls outside the scope of the
arbitration agreement embodied in the co-ownership agreement.
17.3
MEPF
prayed that the dismissal relief be dismissed.
17.4
The
jurisdiction of the arbitrator was placed in dispute in the
arbitration proceedings.
17.5
The
disputes referred to arbitration ignore MEPFs claims in pending legal
proceedings instituted in the 2016 in the High Court in
Pretoria
[15]
where
MEPF as plaintiff together with two other companies
[16]
seeks
a number of orders against six defendants. arising out of a number of
agreements including the co-ownership agreement and
the addendum to
the property management agreement. Adamax is the sixth defendant in
the action in Pretoria.
[17]
17.6
In
the Pretoria High Court action the MEPF and the other plaintiffs
inter alia
claim
that Adamax failed to make contributions to the co-ownership expenses
that it was obliged to make. In May 2023 the matter
was allocated as
a Commercial Court matter.
17.7
Adamax
did not invoke
section 6
of the
Arbitration Act in
the litigation in
the Pretoria High Court.
17.8
The
disputes raised by Adamax in the arbitration proceedings are linked
to and dependent upon the outcome of the litigation in the
High Court
in Pretoria, and the claims in the arbitration are
lis
pendens
.
17.9
MEPF’s
claims in the High Court action far exceed Adamax’s claim in
the arbitration and would totally extinguish it.
17.10
The
basis for the breach of the agreement relied on by Adamax in the
arbitration arises from MEPF’s alleged failure to pay
over
R6,609,145.40 in net income to Adamax and the question of breach is
linked to the question whether the amount was in fact
due. In the
High Court action MEPF alleges that Adamax had failed to contribute
its share of expenses of the co-ownership and these
expenses
constitute a deduction from any net income that might become payable.
17.11
MEPF
therefore prayed that the breach relief be dismissed, or
alternatively stayed pending the final determination of the action
in
the Pretoria High Court.
[18]
Urgency
[18] The
section 3
application was launched on 5 September 2023, seven months after the
appointment of the arbitrator and delivery of the statement
of claim
in February 2023. The founding affidavit in the application for a
stay was signed on 29 September 2023.
[19] The facts
relied upon by MEPF in the
section 3
application were known to MEPF
at all times and the application could have been brought at any time
since delivery of the statement
of claim or even before. MEPF was
entitled to invoke
section 3
when it became apparent that Adamax was
not willing to abandon arbitration in response to MEPF’s letter
of 24 November 2022.
By 5 April 2023 the dates of the arbitration
were fixed provisionally at 20 to 30 November 2023. The statement of
defence was signed
on 22 May 2023.
[20] Had MEPF
timeously applied for a court order in terms of
section 3
, it might
not have been necessary to apply to the arbitrator for a postponement
and any such application would have been decided
on different facts.
MEPF can therefore not rely on the award in the postponement
application as a ground of urgency.
[21]
MEPF
now also seeks a stay on the ground that it will seek to review the
award in the postponement application on the basis that
the
arbitrator committed a gross irregularity by deciding the issue of
lis pendens
when
he was not called upon to do so. MEPF argues that the award now
precludes MEPF from relying on its
lis
pendens
defence even though
lis
pendens
was not the question to be
decided in the application.
I deal with the award below.
[22] The
urgency
[19]
is self-created.
The question of urgency can however not be divorced from the merits
and I therefore find it necessary to evaluate
the merits of the
application.
The postponement
application before the arbitrator
.
[23] MEPF applied
for a postponement before the arbitrator.
The
arbitrator delivered his award on 18 September 2023. He postponed the
arbitration proceedings in respect of the dissolution
relief but
ordered that the arbitration proceed on the questions of jurisdiction
and the breach relief.
[24]
The
arbitrator found that:
24.1
The
dissolution relief in prayer 3 of the statement of claim is not a
matter which should now be dealt with in the arbitration.
MEPF has a
reasonable prospect of persuading the Court in the
section 3
application that the dissolution relief ought to be dealt with in the
High Court.
24.2
The
question of jurisdiction should nevertheless be dealt with in the
hearing scheduled to commence on 22 November 2023 because
the Court
may in the exercise of its discretion in terms of
section 3
of the
Arbitration Act refuse
the relief sought by MEPF.
24.3
The
claims brought by MEPF in the High Court are not open to easy and
speedy proof and set-off cannot be relied upon to extinguish
the debt
allegedly owed to Adamax.
24.4
The
hearing will commence on 22 November 2023 on the special plea of
jurisdiction, and prayers 1 and 2 of the statement of claim
i.e. the
breach relief.
[25] In this matter
the existence of the arbitration agreement is not in dispute. What is
in dispute is whether the claim
now before the arbitrator falls
within the four corners of the arbitration clause. The question of
jurisdiction is therefore a
question that may and should be dealt
with by the arbitrator subject to the ultimate control of the
Court.
[20]
[26]
The
arbitrator also found that the claims in the High Court action do not
impact on the breach relief claimed by Adamax in the arbitration,
and
that the dispute relating to the termination of the co-ownership
agreement and the termination of co-ownership ought to be
resolved as
a priority.
[27]
MEPF’s
postponement application before the arbitrator was based
inter
alia
on its jurisdiction and
lis
pendens
arguments in the special pleas.
The arbitrator proceeded to deal with both as he had to. He made no
order on jurisdiction and held
that this would have to be dealt with
at the arbitration in November 2023. In respect of the
lis
pendens
argument he did not make a
final finding on the special plea, but dismissed the postponement
application on the basis of his finding
that set off did not apply
[28]
He
said:
[21]
“
If
set-off might notionally operate, then there would obviously be much
force in the MEPF's argument that the matter ought to be
determined
by the High Court and that the pleadings before it are to be enlarged
to include prayers 1 and 2 of Adamax's Statement
of Claim. However,
in the event of the claims before the High Court being in character
such that the operation of a potential set-off
is not capable of
attainment, then it seems to me that subject to additional
considerations, (which I will presently address),
there is no sound
reason for me not to deal with the prayers in 1 and 2.”
[29] MEPF intends
to approach the Court for an order setting aside the award on the
basis that the arbitrator committed a
gross irregularity.
Section 33
of the
Arbitration Act contains
statutory review provisions. MEPF
relies on
section 33(1)(b):
1cm; line-height: 150%">
33
Setting aside of award
(1) Where-
…
(b)an arbitration tribunal
has committed any gross irregularity in the conduct of
the arbitration proceedings
or has exceeded its powers; or
…
the court may, on the
application of any party to the reference after due notice to the
other party or parties, make an order setting
the award aside.
[30] The grounds of
review in
section 33
are closely linked to the rules of natural
justice.
[22]
Dishonesty or
moral turpitude is not
[23]
a
requirement for a finding that an arbitrator committed a gross
irregularity - a gross irregularity may be committed with the
best of
intentions. An error of law
[24]
can constitute a gross irregularity and it seems to me that the true
question is not whether the arbitrator made an error of law,
but
whether the dissatisfied party was prevented from presenting its
case.
[31] The Courts
should not be over-keen to intervene in arbitration awards.
[25]
The parties chose to arbitrate and the principles of party autonomy
dictate that the powers of review should be used sparingly.
[26]
For an award to be set aside on the ground of a gross irregularity,
the arbitrator must have committed an irregularity of a nature
so
serious that the applicant was precluded from having its case fully
and fairly determined.
[27]
The
enquiry is focused on the conduct of the proceedings (i.e. the
process) rather than the result (i.e. the outcome.) In
Bester
v Easigas (Pty) Ltd and Another:
[28]
Brand AJ (as he was then) said that:
“…
. the
ground of review envisaged by the use of this phrase relates to
the conduct of the proceedings and not the result thereof.
This appears clearly from the following dictum of Mason J
in Ellis v Morgan; Ellis v Dessai
1909 TS 576
at 581:
‘
But an
irregularity in proceedings does not mean an incorrect judgment; it
refers not to the result but to the method of a trial,
such as, for
example, some high-handed or mistaken action which has prevented the
aggrieved party from having his case fully and
fairly determined.'
(See
also, for example, R v Zackey
1945
AD 505
at
509.)
Secondly it appears
from these authorities that every irregularity in the proceedings
will not constitute a ground for review on
the basis under
consideration. In order to justify a review on this basis, the
irregularity must have been of such a serious nature
that it resulted
in the aggrieved party not having his case fully and fairly
determined. (See, for example, Ellis v Morgan
(supra); Coetser
v Henning and Ente NO
1926 TPD 401
at 404; Goldfields
Investment Ltd and Another v City Council
of
Johannesburg and Another
1938 TPD 551
; and cf also S v
Moodie
1961
(4) SA 752 (A)
.)”
[32] The
arbitrator’s award on the postponement application is not
subject to appeal on the basis that his decision
was wrong. The
review application on the ground of an alleged gross irregularity has
not yet been launched but for the purposes
of this urgent application
I am not persuaded that a
prima facie
case is made out for a
review on any ground, and that the matter is urgent, and that it
would be in the interest of justice to grant
the application for a
stay.
[33]
For
the reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of the judgment
is deemed to be
31 OCTOBER 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
A
E FRANKLIN SC
J
P V McNALLY SC
B
L MANENTSA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
WEBBER
WENTZEL
COUNSEL
FOR THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
D
R VAN ZYL
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MALATJI
& CO ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
18
OCTOBER 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
31
OCTOBER 2023
[1]
Mokone
v Tassos Properties CC and Another
2017 (5) SA 456 (CC) para 67.
[2]
See also Butler and Finsen
Arbitration
in South Africa - Law and Practice
(1993) 63 to 67.
[3]
Clause 1.1(4).
[4]
Clause 1.1(24).
[5]
Clause 1.1(25).
[6]
Clause 1.1(12).
[7]
Clause 1.1(20).
[8]
See also the agreement for the sale of land between MEPF as
purchaser and the three subsidiaries as the sellers entered into
on
9 November 2011.
[9]
Clause 4.
[10]
Clause 1.1(12).
[11]
Clause 7.
[12]
Clause 20.8.
[13]
Akani Retirement Fund Administrators (Pty) Ltd (“Akani
RFA”), Christodoulou Real Estate CC (“CRE”),
and
Mervin & Malan Accounting and Secretarial Services (Pty) Ltd
(“M&M”).
[14]
Statement of case, prayers 1 to 3.
[15]
Gauteng Division Pretoria, case number 2016-98063. The
co-ownership agreement is set out in paras 32 to 38A of the amended
particulars of claim.
[16]
Akani RFA and Akani Properties (Pty) Ltd.
[17]
The
action was instituted in 2016 and in the original particulars of
claim relief was sought as against Adamax on the basis of
an
addendum to the property management agreement but the particulars
were amended to also orders against Adamax in respect of
other
claims.
[18]
Statement of defence, special prayer (a).
[19]
See
Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
RS 20, 2022, D1-84A and particularly authorities in footnote 16.
[20]
Canton
Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Cube Architects v Hattingh NO
2022 (4) SA 420 (SCA) paras 30 to 36.
[21]
Award para 14.
[22]
Nemo
iudex in sua causa, audi alteram partem
,
and the rule that justice must be seen to be done. See Butler and
Finsen
Arbitration
in South Africa – Law and Practice
(1993) 265.
[23]
Section 33(1)(a)
of the Act provides for the setting aside of
an award on the basis of misconduct. Dishonesty and moral turpitude
are relevant
considerations. See
Bester
v Easigas (Pty) Ltd and Another
1993 (1) SA 30 (C).
[24]
Goldfields
Investments Ltd v City Council of Johannesburg and Another
1938 TPD. 551
at 560, referring to
Ellis
v Morgan; Ellis v Dessai
1909 TS 576
at 581. See also
Telcordia
Technologies Inc v Telkom SA Ltd
2007 (3) SA 266 (SCA).
[25]
See
Zermalt
Holdings SA v Nu-Life Upholstery Repairs Ltd
[1985]
2 EGLR 14
(QBD), quoted in
SA Breweries
Ltd v Shoprite Holdings Ltd
2008 (1) SA 203 (SCA)
para 22.
[26]
See
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews and Another
2009 (4) SA 529
(CC) para 236. See also
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport & Construction (Pty) Ltd
2018 (5) SA 462
(SCA) para 8 and
Umgeni
Water v Hollis NO and Another
2012 (3) SA 475 (KZD) para 42.
[27]
Butler and Finsen
Arbitration
in South Africa - Law and Practice
(1993) 294.
[28]
Bester
v Easigas (Pty) Ltd and Another
1993 (1) SA 30 (C) 42E to 43. See also Brand
Judicial
Review of Arbitration Awards
Stell
LR 2014 2 p 247 and
Anshell
v Horwitz and Another
1916 WLD 65
at 67.
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