Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1462South Africa
Solum Civils (Pty) Ltd v Tiger Business Enterprises CC and Another (55947 /2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1462 (14 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Solum Civils (Pty) Ltd v Tiger Business Enterprises CC and Another (55947 /2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1462 (14 December 2023)
Solum Civils (Pty) Ltd v Tiger Business Enterprises CC and Another (55947 /2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1462 (14 December 2023)
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sino date 14 December 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
LOCAL
SEAT, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 55947 /2022
DATE:
14 December 2023
In
the matter between:
Solum
Civils (Pty) Ltd
Plaintiff
and
Tiger
Business
Enterprises CC:
First
Defendant
Simphiwe
MacGyver Mbetse
Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Johann Gautschi AJ
1.
This is a provisional sentence application
for payment of the amount of R7,702,368.28 (inclusive of VAT).
2.
The provisional sentence summons claims
from first defendant in terms of an acknowledgement of debt (annexure
A to the provisional
sentence summons and hereinafter referred to as
the AOD) in favour of the plaintiff signed on or about 7 November
2022 by the second
defendant on behalf of the first defendant, the
second defendant having been authorised to do so in terms of a
resolution of the
members of the first defendant, annexure B to the
provisional sentence summons. The summons further alleges that:
2.1.
the AOD acknowledges that the first
defendant is truly and lawfully indebted to the plaintiff in the
aforementioned amount of R7,702,368.28
(inclusive of VAT) (the
“capital sum”) “in respect of works executed and
services rendered by the plaintiff and
the two separate written
agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the first defendant;
2.2.
in terms of the AOD the first defendant
undertook to make payment of the capital sum in instalments, but, as
the first defendant
failed to make payment of the first two
instalments, the first defendant immediately became liable in terms
of clause 3 of the
AOD to pay “
the
full balance outstanding of the capital sum plus interest calculated
daily and compounded monthly at the maximum rate permissible
in law
from the date of default until the date of payment, costs on an
attorney and client scale, collection commission tracing
fees
”
and is further entitled “
without
prejudice to any other remedy rights it may have against the first
defendant, to proceed immediately with the recovery of
the
outstanding balance, and may issue provisional sentence summons
therefore without further notice or demand
”;
2.3.
the existence of the first defendant’s
indebtedness to the plaintiff of the aforementioned capital amount is
confirmed by
a certificate of indebtedness, duly signed by director
of the plaintiff as provided by clause 4 of the AOD in terms of which
such
certificate would be prima facie proof for the purpose of
provisional sentence summons of the existence and amount of
indebtedness
of the first defendant to the plaintiff.
3.
As against the second defendant, the
provisional sentence summons claims on the basis of a deed of
suretyship, annexure D to the
provisional sentence summons, alleged
to have been signed by the second defendant on about 20 October 2021
in terms of which the
second defendant is alleged to have bound
himself, jointly and severally, in favour of the plaintiff as surety
and solid and as
joint and several co-principal debtor with the first
defendant for payment of all debts and other monies due of whatsoever
nature
and howsoever arising.
4.
The affidavit opposing provisional sentence
was signed by the second defendant, also acting on behalf of the
first defendant in
his capacity as a member of the first defendant
and authorised to do so by a resolution attached to the opposing
affidavit marked
annexure A. In the opposing affidavit the
second defendant admits the signatures on the AOD, but denies that
“
the document attached as Annexure
“B”, being the deed of surety was properly executed and
signed by me (or by any other
person)”
.
I shall assume that the reference to Annexure B is an obvious
topographical error as the suretyship is annexure D to the
provisional
sentence summons.
5.
The defence raised in respect of the AOD
was formulated as follows in the defendants’ opposing
affidavit:
“
3.2.
Capital must be expressly stipulated that on 7 November 2022 when I
on behalf of the First Defendant signed the acknowledgement
of debt
in favour of the Plaintiff I was under the bona fide, but mistaken
belief and impression, that the amount claimed being
R7,702,368.28
was due, owing payable.
.3.
The aforesaid impression was created as result of incorrect figures
relating to various amounts allegedly
due and payments claimed which
I was able to identify through the necessary cheques
(sic)
and balances with the accounting division of the
First Defendant.
3.4.
Subsequent to the signing of the document I was however advised that
the calculation is not correct at all and
in the circumstances the
claimed amount is disputed.”
6.
The second defendant’s opposing
affidavit alleged that the amount claimed is disputed on the
following grounds and thereafter
provided some amplification:
6.1.
“
No contractual basis for
standing time claim”;
6.2.
“
No contractual basis for
retention claims”;
6.3.
“
Various bulk services payments
made on behalf the Plaintiff by the First Defendant which must be
credited
”
;
6.4.
“
Exceptio errore calculi”
.
7.
For reasons explained more fully below, the
opposing affidavit does not, in my view, disclose a valid defence in
law.
8.
In the Plaintiff’s heads of argument
reliance was placed,
inter alia
,
on the applicable legal principles conveniently set out in the
following passages from
George v
Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
1958 (2) SA 465
(A):
“–
–
when
the document was put in evidence and the appellant's signature to it
was admitted, the onus resting on the respondent was discharged
unless the evidence also disclosed some fact which in law entitled
the appellant to repudiate the document. If the action had been
brought in the Supreme Court, where the Rules would have required the
filing of a replication, an admission of the signing of the
document
in the replication would have necessitated the pleading of some
further fact by reason of which the appellant was not
bound by it,
and the onus of proving that further fact would clearly have rested
on the appellant.
In Burger v Central South
African Railways,
1903 T.S. 571
, INNES, C.J., said at p. 578:
'It
is a sound principle of law that a man, when he signs a contract, is
taken to be bound by the ordinary meaning and effect of
the words
which appear over his signature. There are, of course, grounds upon
which he may repudiate a document to which he had
put his hand. But
no such grounds have been shown to exist in the present case.
Consider the circumstances under which this note
was signed. Neither
fraud nor misrepresentation has been alleged; nothing was said by any
railway official which misled the signatory;
the language of the
document was one which the consignor understood; no pressure of any
kind was exercised. All that can be said
is that the consignor did
not choose to read what he was signing, and after he had signed did
not know the particulars of the regulations
by which he had agreed to
abide. For the Court to hold upon these facts that the appellant is
legally justified in repudiating
his signature would be a decision
involving far-reaching consequences, and it would be a principle
unsupported by any principle
of our law. The mistake or error of the
signatory in the present case was not such justus error as would
entitle him to claim a
restitution in integrum, or as could be
successfully pleaded as a defence to an action founded upon the
written contract, and therefore
it cannot be used for the purpose of
attacking that contract when the railway seeks to rely upon it.'
[1]
–
– –
“
When
can an error be said to be justus for the purpose of entitling a man
to repudiate his apparent assent to a contractual term?
As I read the
decisions, our Courts, in applying the test, have taken into account
the fact that there is another party involved
and have considered his
position. They have, in effect, said: Has the first party - the one
who is trying to resile - been to blame
in the sense that by his
conduct he has led the other party, as a reasonable man, to believe
that he was binding himself? (vide
Logan v Beit,
7 S.C. 197
; I.
Pieters & Company v Salomon,
1911 AD 121
esp. at pp. 130, 137;
van Ryn Wine and Spirit Company v Chandos Bar.
1928 T.P.D. 417
, esp.
at pp. 422, 423, 424; Hodgson Bros v South African Railways,
1928 CPD
257
at p. 261). If his mistake is due to a misrepresentation, whether
innocent or fraudulent, by the other party, then, of course, it
is
the second party who is to blame and the first party is not bound.
[2]
–
– –
“”
When
a man is asked to put his signature to a document he cannot fail to
realise that he is called upon to signify, by doing so,
his assent to
whatever words appear above his signature. In cases of the type of
which the three I have mentioned are examples,
the party who seeks
relief must convince the Court that he was misled as to the purport
of the words to which he was thus signifying
his assent. That must,
in each case, be a question of fact, to be decided on all the
evidence led in that particular case.”
[3]
9.
In the present case the second defendant,
having admitted the signature on the AOD, failed to set out any facts
which would amount
to
justus error
as required by the authorities as conveniently set out in the
above-mentioned passages from
George v
Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
(supra). He
merely relies upon his own alleged mistaken belief.
10.
Besides and in any event, even the
underlying contractual basis relied upon as providing the basis for
the second defendant’s
alleged erroneous calculation is without
substance:
10.1.
firstly, with regard to standing time, he
states that no basis exists in any of the underlying service level
agreements entitling
the plaintiff to claim standing time and that
“
clause 5.2 expressly indemnify
(sic)
parties to claims of this nature”
.
But that is not correct. Clause 2.5 does not deal with
standing time at all. It reads: “
Unless
otherwise provided in any further written Agreement, neither Party
shall be liable to the other for any indirect, consequential,
special, incidental or punitive damages, including without
limitation, loss of use or loss of business, revenue, profits,
anticipated
savings, reputation and goodwill arising connection with
the Scope of Works or Services.
”
10.2.
secondly, with regard to retention, he
states: “
The claim amount was
calculated to include retention payments, which basis can only be
found in the GCC (Clause 6.10.5). When considering
these provisions,
it is clear that these retention amounts only becomes
(sic)
due when a Final Approval Certificate is
issued in terms of Clause 6.10.5.3. This Final Approval Certificate
has not been issued
in the circumstances claims for these retention
amounts are premature and not yet due owing and payable
.”
But this is also not correct. The second defendant’s version is
contradicted by retention certificate 15 attached
as annexure
RA
4
to the plaintiff’s replying
affidavit, which contains the second defendant’s signature
acknowledging that the retention
invoice is correct and payable and
on which the amounts and due dates were inserted in manuscript by
second defendant;
10.3.
thirdly, with regard to bulk services he
states that “
The claim amount
calculated fails to take into account bulk services that was paid for
by the First Defendant on the Plaintiff’s
behalf which in the
circumstances ought to be deducted from the calculation
”.
This explanation is contradicted by contents of the second
defendant’s own calculation included in its replying affidavit
which reflects two instances in which credit was given for bulk
services;
10.4.
fourthly and finally, the defence of
exceptio errore calculi
is misplaced. The second defendant does not contend for a calculation
error, but instead alleges that the account should be revised
in
various respects. But, as I have already found above, each of
those is incorrect.
11.
In the result, the second defendant has, in
my view, not shown that the first defendant has a
bona
fide
defence to the plaintiff’s
claim.
12.
It follows that the claim for provisional
sentence against the first defendant must succeed in the amount of
R7,702,368.28 (including
VAT) claimed together with interest on the
aforementioned amount
a tempore morae
at the rate of 9% per annum (there having been no dispute as to the
applicable rate of interest).
13.
I turn now to the claim for provisional
sentence against the second defendant based on the deed of
suretyship.
14.
Both parties addressed argument on the
defence raised in the opposing affidavit, namely, whether there was
compliance with the formalities
for contracts of suretyship as
required by section 6 of Act 50 of 1956 by reason of the absence of
the second defendant’s
signature on the last page of the
document. After the hearing and pursuant to my request, counsel
for both parties filed
supplementary heads of argument thereon.
15.
However, when in the course of preparing
this judgment I checked legal requirements for provisional sentence,
I realised that following
the Full Bench judgment in
Harrowsmith
v Ceres Flats (Pty) Ltd
1979 (2) SA 722
(T) and further endorsed by the Appellant Division in
Wollach
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1983 (2) SA 543
(A), a deed of
suretyship is not a liquid document in respect of which provisional
sentence can be granted. This is because,
as in the present
case, it does not unequivocally acknowledge any indebtedness for a
certain and determinate sum. Instead,
the deed of suretyship,
which was signed about a year prior to the AOD, merely acknowledges
an indebtedness for an unspecified
sum, namely, such sum or sums of
money as might at any time in the future become owing or claimable
from the debtor to the creditor.
In such circumstances extrinsic
evidence would be necessary to show the amount owing and the
subsequent provision of a certificate
of indebtedness (as provided
for in clause 7 of the deed of suretyship) cannot serve to make the
deed of suretyship a liquid document.
16.
In the result provisional sentence cannot
be granted against the second defendant.
17.
Given that neither party drew my attention
to this line of authorities, I am of the view that I should in such
circumstances make
no order as to costs with regard to the
plaintiff’s claim against the second defendant.
18.
Accordingly, I make the following order
ORDER:
1.
Provisional sentence is granted against the
first defendant in the amount of R7,702,368.28 (inclusive of VAT) and
interest on the
aforementioned amount
a
tempore morae
at the rate of 9% per
annum.
2.
The first defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff’s costs of provisional sentence application but only
insofar as it relates
to the claim for provisional sentence against
the first defendant.
3.
The claim for provisional sentence against
the second defendant is dismissed.
4.
No order for costs is made with regard to
the claim for provisional sentence against the second defendant.
___________________
Johann Gautschi AJ
14 December 2023
Date of judgment: 14
December 2023
Date of hearing: 26
October 2023
Counsel for Plaintiff:
Adv M Jacobs
Attorneys for
Plaintiff: MDA Attorneys
Counsel for
Respondents: Adv J van den Bergh
Attorneys for
Respondents: Neethling and Vosloo Inc
[1]
At
p 470
[2]
At
p 471 C-D
[3]
At
p 472 A-B
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