Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1365South Africa
Bennetto v Dreyer and Nieuwoudt (A3101/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1365 (24 November 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bennetto v Dreyer and Nieuwoudt (A3101/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1365 (24 November 2023)
Bennetto v Dreyer and Nieuwoudt (A3101/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1365 (24 November 2023)
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sino date 24 November 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: A3101/2022
In the matter between:
GRAHAM
PHILIP BENNETTO
Appellant
And
DREYER
& NIEUWOUDT
Respondent
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM, J (Adams J
concurring):
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is a Full Bench appeal against the
decision of the Regional Magistrate, Randburg, dated 4 July 2022 in
an action brought by
the firm of attorneys, Dreyer & Nieuwoudt
(respondent) against its former client Mr Bennetto (appellant). The
Learned Magistrate
granted judgment in favour of the respondent
together with costs on an attorney and client scale.
[2]
Various ancillary issues were raised
pertaining to a special plea, condonation, rule 31 applications and a
rule 60A application.
By agreement between the parties, the court on
appeal was informed that the court need not make any findings on
these issues but
deal with the appeal itself.
# Grounds of appeal
Grounds of appeal
[3]
In the appellant’s notice of appeal
dated 14 March 2023, the following grounds were relied upon:
3.1
The respondent did not properly account to
him, as provided in the Mandate and Fee Agreement (“the Mandate
Agreement”)
as required in terms of the law.
3.2
The magistrate erred in finding that the
appellant was an unreliable witness.
3.3
The respondent’s alleged failure to
account properly to the appellant was in contravention of s 48(1)
read with s 48(2)(c),
s 41(1)(a), s 50(2)(b)(i) and
(ii), and s 51(1)(a) of the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008
(“the CPA”)
and that the Mandate Agreement was
misleading.
3.4
The Appellant had proven his defence of
estoppel.
3.5
The Appellant’s special plea to stay
the action should have been upheld. (This ground of appeal was not
persisted with).
3.6
The costs on an attorney and client scale
should not have been awarded to the respondent.
# The Mandate Agreement
The Mandate Agreement
[4]
The Appellant provided the respondent with
a mandate to render professional legal services to him in connection
with the action
instituted against him by Hyprop Investment Ltd in
the Gauteng Division of the High Court under Case No. 400044/2015.
[5]
It should be noted that it is not disputed
that the parties entered into this agreement which was signed by the
parties. It is further
not disputed that the professional services
were rendered to the appellant. What is in dispute is whether the
respondent properly
accounted to the appellant in a manner which it
was required to be done in terms of the Mandate Agreement. For this
reason, the
court will have to refer to the terms of the Mandate
Agreement and then consider whether the respondent complied with
these terms.
[6]
The following was confirmed in the Mandate
Agreement:
“
1.1
The attorneys are entitled to charge fees on the attorney and own
client scale for services rendered in terms hereof and
that I
undertake to pay the attorneys fees as set out in this agreement;
1.2 The fees on an
attorney and own client scale will be calculated on the basis that
the attorneys will render me an account based
on the High Court
tariff plus 50% thereof;”
[7]
It was further confirmed that:
“
2.1
Disbursement will reasonably have to be incurred, and I accept
responsibility to pay such disbursement to the attorneys
on demand;
2.2 I shall personally be
responsible to pay in full all disbursements incurred by the
attorneys in respect of the fees of service
providers such as
advocates, experts, arbitrators and assessors who the attorney will
be entitled to appoint in their sole discretion
when they deem it
necessary, as principal vis-à-vis such service providers;
2.3 Disbursements in
respect of travel costs by motor vehicle will be recovered at the
appropriate AA tariff applicable from time
to time;
2.4 The costs of making
photocopies will be recovered at the rate provided for in the High
Court tariff, plus 50%;
2.5 All other
disbursements shall be recovered on the basis of the actual amount
thereof;
2.6 If requested to do so
the attorneys will provide me with a copy of the High Court tariff
referred to.”
[8]
In paragraph 3 of the Mandate Agreement the
appellant acknowledged that the attorney’s fees for services
rendered and disbursements
incurred shall be as provided for in
paragraphs 1 and 2 above and the appellant was made aware that he was
entitled to engage the
service of another attorney who may levy fees
on a lower scale or tariff but that he elected not to do so.
[9]
Important for a decision in this matter is
clause 4 of the Mandate Agreement which reads as follows:
“
I
understand that:
4.1 The attorneys are
entitled to render me interim accounts in respect of fees and
disbursements and that, at the conclusion of
the matter they will
render me a final account;
4.2 All disbursements
reflected in the account will, insofar as possible, be accompanied by
supporting documentation, and that in
respect of fees, the attorney
will set out a short cryptic description of the work done by them
together with the time spent in
execution thereof;
4.3 Should I require the
attorneys to furnish me with a detailed specified account in respect
of services rendered by them, and
in the event of the total of such
detailed specified account being higher than the total of the account
as set out in paragraph
4.2 above, I accept responsibility to:
4.3.1 pay such higher
amount, and,
4.3.2 pay the costs
incurred in the preparation and drafting of such specified detailed
account, which may include the cost of a
cost consultant;
4.4 If I do not object in
writing to the account, or request a specified detailed account,
within 30 (thirty) days of receipt of
the account from the attorneys,
I will be deemed to have waived any right which I may have in respect
thereof and that I will also
then be deemed to have accepted the
attorneys’ account as fair and reasonable.”
[10]
In clause 6 of the Mandate Agreement, the
appellant reserved himself the right to withdraw from this
undertaking and to terminate
the mandate given in terms hereof by
giving the respondent written notice of such withdrawal and
termination within seven days
from the date of signature thereof.
[11]
At the heart of the dispute between the
parties lies the interpretation of clause 4 as quoted above.
[12]
On behalf of the appellant, it was argued
that the interim accounts in respect of disbursements referred to in
clause 4.1 had to
be accompanied by supporting documentation and that
in respect of fees the respondent had to set out in the interim
account a short
cryptic description of work done by the respondent
together with the time spent in execution thereof. The Appellant
further argued
that he never asked the respondent to furnish him with
a detailed specific account as contemplated in clause 4.3.
[13]
On behalf of the respondent, it was argued
that the Mandate Agreement as far as the interim accounts are
concerned, was not obligated
to set out in these accounts a short
cryptic description of the work done together with the time spent in
execution thereof. It
was submitted that this detailed information
would only be contained in a final account referred to in clause 4.1.
It was further
argued that the appellant in fact asked for a detailed
specific account and that such account was drafted which constituted
a final
account.
[14]
Further aspects that remained contentious
between the parties was if the account stipulated that all fees
charged by the respondent
had to be on a time-spent basis. In this
regard, the appellant averred that clause 4.2 is clear that fees
could only be charged
on a time spent basis while it was argued on
behalf of the respondent that the overriding clause pertaining to the
fees of the
respondent is clause 1.2 which stipulated that the fees
will be charged on an attorney and own client scale and will be
calculated
on the basis that the respondent will render accounts to
the appellant based on the High Court tariff plus 50% thereof.
Concerning
what this entails, evidence was led that not all fees will
be charged on a time spent basis but on the basis of what is provided
for in the High Court tariff.
[15]
The court has been referred to various
authorities pertaining to how the interpretation of a written
agreement be approached. For
purposes of this judgment, the court
will accept that a written agreement between parties must be read as
a whole to determine
the true intention of the parties thereto and if
unambiguous, no extrinsic facts or evidence are permissible to
contradict, amend
or qualify the terms thereof.
[16]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
it
was found as follows:
“
Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration must be given to the
language used in the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax,
the
context in which the provision appears, the apparent purpose to which
it is directed and the material known to those responsible
for its
production. Where more than one meaning is possible each possibility
must be weighed in the light of these factors. The
process is
objective, not subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to
one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results
or undermines
the apparent purpose of the document.”
[17]
In
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2]
it
was found as follows:
“
Whilst
the starting point remains the words of the document, which are the
only relevant medium through which the parties have expressed
their
contractual intentions, the process of interpretation does not stop
at a perceived literal meaning of those words, but considers
them in
light of all relevant and admissible context, including the
circumstances in which the document came into being.”
[18]
In
short, the approach of the court would be that the words of the
section provide the starting point and are considered in the
light of
their context, the apparent purpose of the provision and any relevant
background material.
[3]
[19]
The words used in the Mandate Agreement is
unambiguous and clear but must still be considered in their context.
[20]
Clause 2.1 provides that the attorney’s
fees will be calculated on the basis that the attorney will render
the appellant an
account based on the High Court tariff plus 50%
thereof. The reference to
an account
would mean one account. The overriding principle
for charging fees would be the High Court tariff. The High Court
tariff was tendered
to appellant in terms of clause 2.6. Clause 3.1
also made it clear that the High Court tariff would prevail.
[21]
Clause 2.1 makes it clear that
disbursements became payable on demand and clause 2.5 provides that
disbursements shall be recovered
on the basis of the actual amount
thereof.
[22]
Clause 4.1 provides the respondent with an
entitlement
to
render
interim accounts
in
respect of fees and disbursements, and at the conclusion of the
matter respondent had to render a
final
account.
From this it can be gathered
that more than one
interim account
could be rendered for disbursements and fees but
more importantly, before a decision in this matter, the fees would
only be charged
on an interim and not on a final basis.
[23]
Clause 4.2 then refers to “
the
account”
in which all
disbursements reflected must, as far as possible, be accompanied by
supporting documentation and in respect of fees
the respondent had to
set out a short cryptic description of the work done together with
the time spent in execution thereof. The
question for
interpretation, within the context of the entire Mandate Agreement is
whether the reference to
“
the
account”
is a reference to
interim account
or
the
final account.
[24]
In my view, the reference is to the
final
account.
If it was a reference to the
interim accounts
it
would have referred to “
the
accounts”
in the plural.
Moreover, the last reference in clause 4.1 is to
final
account.
Thereafter, in clause 4.2
reference is made to “
the
account”.
One would have expected
that a final account would have contained more detail whilst the
interim accounts
would
contained less details. The evidence has shown that as far as the
interim fees were concerned references were made to
deposits.
[25]
The
detailed
specified account
in respect of
services rendered would only have been provided if a request was made
by the appellant for this account.
[26]
From this analysis it is shown that the
Mandate Agreement referred to three types of accounts. First
,
interim accounts,
second
,
final account
and third,
a
detailed specified account.
[27]
The evidence in this matter has shown that
only 2 kinds of accounts were rendered. The
interim
accounts
and
a
detailed specified account.
The
evidence of the appellant as to which of the
interim
accounts
he has received is, as was
pointed out by the Regional Magistrate in her judgment, contradictory
but the accepted version was that
appellant received at least some of
these
interim accounts.
That
is why he asked for more detail to be provided. Respondent informed
the appellant that detail would be provided when a
final
account
is rendered.
[28]
In my view, the appellant’s argument
that the
interim accounts
should have provided a short cryptic description
of the work done is not sustainable. This information was to be
provided when a
final account
was rendered.
[29]
As far as it was argued that all fees
should have been charged on a time spent basis this negates the very
specific terms of clause
1.2 which provides that the respondent had
to render an account based on the High Court tariff. This would mean
that if the High
Court tariff refers to fees to be charged on the
basis of time spent then it should be charged as such.
[30]
The respondent rendered
interim
accounts
but never a
final
account.
This step was skipped.
According to the respondent the reasons for that was because the
respondent asked for a more detailed account.
The court,
a
quo,
found on the evidence with
reference to correspondence that there was such a request. The
request led to the drafting of a bill
of costs. There is no reason
why this court should not accept the trial court’s finding on
this issue. In the appellant’s
letter dated 24 April 2018 he
requested the respondent to provide him with a more detailed account.
Again, this request was made
on 11 May 2018. The respondent was even
aware that the file was required “
in
order to tax your account.”.
The
appellant was informed on 14 December 2018 that the “accounting
aspect” was still outstanding. In my view, the respondent
was
entitled to have a bill of cost drafted to provide the appellant with
a
detailed specified account,
but in my view nothing much turns on the skipping
of the step to deliver a
final account.
The reason being that the Mandate Agreement did
not require that the
interim account
contained a short cryptic description of the
work done. This information should have been included in the
final
account
as well as the
detailed
specified account.
Consequently, the
same information needed to be included in both these accounts. The
only difference is that the
detailed
specified account
came with an extra
cost of the cost consultant.
[31]
It should be noted that the true complaint
of the appellant throughout this matter was that the
interim
accounts
should have obtained more
information how fees were charged, calculated and arrived at. The
interim accounts
were
paid by the appellant as he laboured under the impression that when
the mandate was fulfilled, he was in credit. This view
was formed
despite the specific statement that the account must still be
finalised. When the appellant then 8 months later received
the bill
of cost in the form of
a detailed
specified account
it left him
dissatisfied. It is unfortunate that it took so long to provide the
detailed specified account,
but the time period does render the account not
payable.
[32]
The entire dispute about the accounting was
underpinned by the appellant’s wrong interpretation of what
information should
have been inserted in an
interim
account.
Further, because appellant was
of the view that the
interim account
should have obtained a short cryptic
description of the work done by respondent together with the time
spent in execution thereof.
If the appellant was dissatisfied with
the terms of the Mandate Agreement or how it was implemented, he
always had the option to
terminate the mandate. He never elected to
do this even after the respondent informed him that at the conclusion
of the matter
a final account would be rendered.
[33]
The appellant’s attack in this matter
was not aimed at the contents of the
detailed
specified account.
In fact, at some
stage, he queried some entries and adjustments were made. As pointed
out hereinbefore his qualm was that the
interim
accounts
left him under the impression
that he was in credit to the extent of approximately R16 000. In
my view, all of this was occasioned
by the appellant’s wrong
interpretation of the Mandate Agreement.
[34]
When the
detailed
specified account
is considered, some
fees were charged according to time spent. The expert witness, Mr
Friedlander, testified that the bill was drafted
according to the
High Court tariff, plus 50% as stipulated in the Mandate Agreement.
He testified that the amounts charged were
fair and reasonable. His
evidence was not contested, except on the aspect of the fees which
allegedly should have been time based.
In my view, subject to a
finding on the other grounds of appeal raised by appellant, as was
found by the magistrate, has
proven that fees were charged according
to the Mandate Agreement.
[35]
The defence raised by the appellant that
the respondent failed to perform his reciprocal obligations in terms
of the Mandate Agreement
is to be rejected on the strength of this
court’s finding that respondent rendered the
interim
accounts
and the
detailed
specified account
in line with the
Mandate Agreement. There is no basis for an argument that the
respondent failed to fully perform its obligations.
[36]
The same apply to the estoppel defence
raised by the appellant. This defence was based on the allegation
that “
[a]t all material times, the
plaintiff held out to the defendant that he was up to date with his
payments in respect of fees and
that he was in fact in credit in
respect of fees owing to the plaintiff;”
[37]
In my view, as was found by the magistrate,
the appellant failed to discharge the
onus
which was on him to prove that a
representation was made which deceived the appellant. It is to be
noted, that at some stage it
was his version that he never received
any of these
interim accounts,
but on the assumption that he did receive some of
them, as was shown in evidence, then these
interim
accounts,
rendered in terms of the
Mandate Agreement could never have deceived the appellant. In
addition, no detriment, loss or prejudice
was shown. An interim
account is exactly what it is called and is not final. The view which
appellant formed was based on his own
misunderstanding of what the
Mandate Agreement determined. It was not based on a misrepresentation
made by respondent. I am in
agreement with the finding of the learned
magistrate that the appellant has not established the defence of
estoppel on a balance
of probabilities.
[38]
As far as the magistrate’s finding
that the appellant was an unreliable witness is concerned there is no
reason for this court
to come to a different decision. The magistrate
meticulously considered the evidence and formed her views without any
misdirection.
Having said this, I agree with the contention on behalf
of the respondent that for purposes of interpretation of the Mandate
Agreement
the credibility finding is immaterial.
[39]
What remains is the defences raised under
the CPA. During argument before this court it was stated that this
defence is not abandoned
but it certainly was not strenuously argued.
As found by this court, the Mandate Agreement was not misleading. The
Mandate Agreement
was signed by the parties after an open and
transparent process. The appellant was at some stage advised by his
ex-wife who is
an attorney.
[40]
In my view, the magistrate’s
evaluation of the evidence, in relation to the alleged breaches of
the provisions of the CPA,
is correct. These defences cannot be
sustained. The respondent has shown that the
detailed
specified account
was fair and
reasonable, albeit, that it was delivered after a delay. The
appellant should have agreed to have the draft bill taxed.
This would
have been done in accordance with the High Court tariff and the
Mandate Agreement. Certainly, it would have curtailed
proceedings and
costs.
[41]
The magistrate in, the exercise of her
discretion, and after a full motivation, ordered cost on an attorney
and client scale. It
cannot be found that the magistrate misdirected
herself in the exercise of her discretion. Consequently, the cost
order should
stand.
[42]
The following order is made:
42.1
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
R. STRYDOM, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
L. ADAMS, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
I agree,
For
the Appellant: Adv. C. Bothma SC
Instructed by: DHD
Attorneys
For the Respondent:
Adv. N.M. Davis SC
Instructed by: Dreyer &
Niewoudt
Date of Hearing: 17
August 2023
Date
of Judgment: 24 November 2023
[1]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at 604.
[2]
2014
(2) SA 494
(SCA) at para 12.
[3]
See
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Bosh & Another
2015
(2) SA 174
(SCA) at para 9.
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