Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 62South Africa
Ocular Technologies (Pty) Limited and Others v AI Vision Consulting (Pty) Limited (43275/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 62 (11 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ocular Technologies (Pty) Limited and Others v AI Vision Consulting (Pty) Limited (43275/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 62 (11 February 2022)
Ocular Technologies (Pty) Limited and Others v AI Vision Consulting (Pty) Limited (43275/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 62 (11 February 2022)
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sino date 11 February 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 43275/2019
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED.
11/2/22
In
the matter between:
OCULAR
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant
####
VELOCITY
IMPORTS (PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant
####
LUTCHMAN,
PREEMESH SHASHIKANT
Third Applicant
and
AI
VISION CONSULTING (PTY)
LIMITED
Respondent
JUDGMENT
K.
MEYER AJ
[1]
This is an application for the rescission of a default judgment
granted by this court
on 24 February 2020 in terms whereof the first,
second and third applicants were ordered to pay to the respondent the
sum of R3 681 822,44
plus interest and costs (the main
application).
[2]
The applicants seek the rescission of the default judgment on the
common law ground
of fraud, in that the respondent is alleged to have
misled the Court in seeking the default judgment.
[3]
The factual background of this matter is largely common cause. The
main application
was brought as a result of the applicants’
failure to comply with the first applicant’s obligations
contained in a
written consultancy agreement between the parties (the
consultancy agreement), the amount claimed being in respect of the
outstanding
last two instalments owed to the respondent in terms
thereof. The applicants were jointly and severally liable, the second
and
third applicants’ liability arising out of suretyships in
respect of the first applicant’s liabilities.
[4]
The applicants did not oppose the main application, despite it having
been personally
served on the third applicant, who is also the sole
shareholder of both the first and second applicants.
[5]
The sole director of the respondent, Ebrahim Dinat (Dinat) and of the
third applicant,
Preemesh Shashikant Lutchman (Lutchman), had been
business partners, and directors and shareholders of the first
applicant. Upon
the souring of their business relationship and their
decision to part ways, it was agreed that Dinat would sell his 43.5
shares
in the first applicant Ocular Technologies (Pty) Limited
(Ocular) to Lutchman for a total amount of R18,8 million. This
included
the share price, certain sale claims and the “separation
costs”, a residual component which included outstanding
salaries,
restraint of trade and subsequent assistance.
[6]
A first step in formalising the agreement between the parties was the
recordal of
heads of agreement drafted by the respondent’s
attorney and signed on 5 July 2018. The R18,8 million to which Dinat
was entitled
would be paid as follows: R7 million upon his
resignation from Ocular (and he would be responsible to manage the
tax implications
of such payment); and R11.8 million over 18 months
in quarterly instalments.
[7]
After further negotiations between the parties’ respective
legal representatives,
Lutchman on 3 August 2018 despatched an email
to all concerned, attaching a suite of agreements. These included the
heads of agreement
signed on 5 July 2018, an employee restraint of
trade agreement, a consultancy agreement, a sale of shares agreement,
a shareholder
restraint of trade agreement and a settlement
agreement.
[8]
The agreements were signed on 31 August 2018 and essentially provided
for the following:
a) In terms of the
employee restraint of trade agreement, Dinat would be paid R1,5
million, the restraint being applicable to a
defined list of
customers attached to the document;
b) the sale of shares
agreement provided for a payment to Dinat of R5 million from the
second applicant, effective 1 July 2018;
c) the shareholder
restraint of trade agreement provided for a payment of R500 000,00
to prohibit and limit Dinat’s activities;
d) the settlement
agreement contained a payment of R500 000,00 in respect of the
salary of Dinat and others, and an
ex gratia
payment of
R1 000,00; and
e)
the consultancy agreement.
[9]
It is the consultancy agreement that is relevant in these
proceedings. It is undisputed
that the parties complied with all
obligations in respect of the suite of agreements, with the exception
of the consultancy agreement.
[10]
In terms of the consultancy agreement, the respondent would be paid
the sum of R12 727 886,40
in four instalments, the first
being R3 830 199,76 on 31 October 2018, the second
instalment of R3 384 642,47
on 31 March 2019, the third
instalment of R3 146 683,30 on 31 July 2019 and the fourth
instalment of R2 364 360,97
on 31 December 2019. The
respondent was to render consultancy services in terms of the
agreement “
as and when required by the Company
”
and “
as requested by the Company
” (Ocular). The
period during which such consultancy services could be called upon
was between 1 August 2018 and 31 December
2019. The agreement also
confirms the restrictions imposed on Dinat in terms of the employee
restraint of trade agreement and the
shareholder restraint of trade
agreement. Further, the parties agreed that the respondent “
shall
be responsible for accounting to the appropriate authorities for
income tax or any other monies required to be paid in terms
of
legislation or any other law. The consultant
[respondent]
hereby
indemnifies the Company
[Ocular]
against all losses, claims,
liabilities, damage or expense which the Company may suffer as a
result of, or which may be attributable
to any liability of the
Company for taxation in respect of payment made in terms of this
agreement.
”
[11]
With the exception of the third and fourth instalments payable in
terms of the consultancy agreement,
all amounts due in terms thereof
and in terms of the other agreements were duly paid. It is the sum of
the third and fourth instalments
in respect of which the default
judgment was sought and granted.
[12]
It is trite that the applicant in a rescission application must set
out a reasonable explanation
for its default. ‘
Where
a defendant allows a case to go by default he always needs to provide
a satisfactory explanation as to why he did not raise
his defence
timeously. That is so even if the defence is one of fraud”:
Basson
and Others NNO v Orcrest Properties (Pty) Limited
[2016] 4 All SA 368
(WCC) paragraph [47].
The
applicant
cannot succeed if its
default was wilful or due to gross negligence. The application itself
must be
bona fide
and not made with the intention of delaying the claim of the party
who obtained default judgment. In addition, the applicant must
demonstrate that it has a
prima facie
bona fide
defence to the claim.
[13]
The default judgment was granted on 24 February 2020 and the
rescission application served on
28 May 2020. The applicant contends
that the rescission application was brought within a reasonable time,
being just over three
months after the default judgment was granted.
The respondent contends however that the following ought to be
considered:
a) No explanation is
proffered for the default in opposing the main application, in spite
of the fact that there had been personal
service of the main
application on Lutchman on 4 February 2020, and that his conduct is
readily conciliable with a party who believes
that the debt claimed
is in fact due and payable. The respondent further contends that this
conclusion is supported by the fact
that the applicants elected not
to join issue with the respondent’s allegations that extensive
settlement negotiations had
taken place in 2019 between the
applicants’ erstwhile attorney and the respondent’s
attorney, following on the default
of the third and fourth instalment
payments in terms of the consultancy agreement.
b) A further contention
is that it appears that the decision of the applicants not to oppose
the main application was a deliberate
and informed one and that the
default in opposing the main application was in fact wilful. It is
not until the applicants consulted
new attorneys that the defence
raised in the rescission application emerged for the first time. This
is recorded in a letter despatched
on the applicants’ behalf on
19 March 2020 by their new attorneys, Vally Chagan & Associates.
[14]
In my view these contentions have merit. There is a further delay
between the letter dated 19
March 2020 and the launching of the
rescission application on 28 May 2020, for which no explanation is
given, save that mention
is made of the Level 5 National Lockdown
which applied from 26 March 2020 onwards. As correctly pointed out by
the respondent’s
counsel, the Lockdown applied only after the
applicants were appraised and aware of their possible defence that
the consultancy
agreement is a “fiction”. It is difficult
to accept, in the absence of particular or special facts and
circumstances,
that there was any obstacle to the applicants and
their legal representatives in launching this rescission application
with the
appropriate haste, considering that even prior to the
national lockdown, matters in this division of the high court had for
some
time been dealt with electronically. In any event, practitioners
and litigants communicate and engage by electronic means with each
other and with the court. Accordingly, it is my view that the
applicants have failed to provide the court with a reasonable
explanation
sufficient to satisfy one of the requirements to
establish good cause for the granting of a rescission of the
judgment.
[15]
In order to succeed in obtaining the rescission of the default
judgment in this matter, the applicants
bear the onus of
demonstrating that they have a
prima facie bona fide
defence
to the respondent’s claim in the main application. The defence
proffered by the applicants is that of fraud allegedly
committed by
the respondent in obtaining default judgment. It is further contended
on their behalf that the court would not have
granted the default
judgment, but for such fraud.
The
applicants must establish the existence of the various requirements
of fraud as succinctly set out in
Fraai Uitzicht 1798 Farm (Pty)
Limited v McCulloch and Others
(118/2019) ZASCA 60 (5 June 2020)
at paragraph 16:
‘
In
spite of being a 1924 decision,
Childerley
remains good authority regarding the circumstances under which a
court can grant
restitutio
in integrum
against a judgment. Following
Childerley
our courts have repeatedly stated that a judgment induced by fraud to
which one of the parties was privy, cannot stand.
[1]
It was held that in order to succeed on this ground there are three
requirements that a plaintiff must prove: (1) the defendant
gave
incorrect evidence at the initial trial; (2) that the defendant did
so fraudulently with the intention to mislead the court;
and (3) that
such false evidence diverged from the true facts to such an extent
that the court, had it been aware thereof, would
have given a
different judgment.’
[2]
[16]
The applicants contend that the respondent has perpetrated a fraud in
that the consultancy agreement
constituted an unlawful evasion of tax
obligations through a misrepresentation of the true nature of the
agreement as a consultancy
agreement when, so they allege, it
actually constituted a sale of shares agreement designed to evade tax
implications attendant
thereon. In particular, the applicants contend
that the real price of the shares, being subject to capital gains
tax, is reduced
and the fiscus is short changed, when in truth the
sale of shares is concealed in an agreement named “consultancy
agreement”.
The applicants have failed to demonstrate factually
that this contention is valid. They present no evidence or
calculation demonstrating
how and to what extent the alleged tax
evasion would have operated to the respondent’s benefit, if at
all. This is all the
more the case having regard to the fact that the
whole suite of agreements provided for a structured transaction of
many parts.
Moreover, the applicants had devised and authored the
whole suite. All parties were at all relevant times legally
represented,
and confirmation of their consensus on the terms of the
agreement was conveyed at the time. In Lutchman’s email dated 3
August
2018 he refers to ”
the structure that we have put
together”
and states that the suite of agreements was
“
drafted, discussed and verified by Dheven, Len and Ocular
..”
, the firstmentioned being a director of Ocular and Len
being the respondent’s auditor. Accordingly, all parties
concerned
may be accepted as having entered into the suite of
agreements freely and voluntarily, and fully apprised of the rights
and obligations
contained therein, and the consequences thereof. I
have regard also to the fact that the consultancy agreement
specifically provides
that the respondent will be liable and
responsible to account to SARS. The respondent confirmed that the
first and second instalments
paid to the respondent in terms of the
consultancy agreement had already been declared to SARS and the VAT
paid.
[17]
The question arises whether the successful litigant, the respondent,
was a party to a fraud.
The founding affidavit in the main
application reveals that the respondent relied on an agreement for
the rendering of services
(the consultancy agreement); that the
respondent had duly performed all its obligations in terms of the
consultancy agreement;
and that the respondent had rendered an
invoice which the applicants had failed and/or refused to pay.
[18]
It is contended on behalf of the applicants that the respondent
through the affidavit of Dinat
misrepresented that the respondent
“
had rendered services in terms of the consultancy
agreement
”. I disagree. The deponent stated that reliance
was placed on the consultancy agreement, that a part payment had
occurred
and that the respondent had
duly performed its
obligations
in terms thereof and that there was an outstanding
balance which it then claimed. In my view, the contractual
obligations of the
respondent in terms of the consultancy agreement
was that it would be available for a fixed period of time to provide
such services
if and when called upon to do so. By being available
for that period of time to provide such services, the obligation had
been
discharged. As the respondent’s counsel correctly points
out, in the circumstances it is not for the consultant to do anything
more than be available and be paid for such availability, whether or
not it is called upon to actually provide such services to
the other
party contractually entitled to such services.
[19]
The further question to be decided is whether a fraud was in fact
committed and if so, upon whom.
I disagree with the contention that
SARS has been defrauded in any way by the signing of the agreement or
by Dinat stating that
the respondent had “
duly performed all
its obligations in terms of the consultancy agreement
”.
[20]
The irony of the applicants’ contention in this regard is that
they too signed the consultancy
agreement, they performed in
accordance with the entire suite of agreements including the
consultancy agreement, then did an about-turn
after the second of
four instalments in terms of the consultancy agreement had been paid,
then negotiated with the respondent as
a result of their non-payment
of the last two instalments, and only some time later began to allege
that the consultancy agreement
was a fiction.
[21]
The onus is throughout on the party who seeks to set aside or amend a
judgment affected by fraud
(
Hotz v Hotz
2002 (1) SA 333
(W) at
336-337) para 9.
[22]
For the reasons set out herein, I cannot find that the respondent
deliberately and fraudulently
and with intent to mislead the court
gave the evidence it did in the founding affidavit of the main
application. In coming to this
conclusion I am guided by the
principles of our law that fraud is not easily inferred (
Gilbey
Distillers & Vintners (Pty) Ltd v Morris NO
1990 (2) SA 217
(SE)), and that fraud must not only be pleaded but also proved
clearly and distinctly (
Courtney-Clarke v Bassingswaighte
[1991] 3 All SA 625
(Nm), 1991 (1) 684 (Nm)p. 689).
[23]
The applicants further bear the onus of proving that the court would
have given a judgment other
than that which it was allegedly induced
to give by the respondent’s evidence, if the true facts had
been placed before it.
In the absence of any allegation that an
agreement is void or voidable upon proper grounds, the court will
give effect to the terms
of an agreement. The rights and obligations
provided for in the consultancy agreement
per se,
and viewed
in the context of the entire suite of agreements, are in my view on
the facts presented in this application valid and
enforceable in
every respect. The applicants have failed to demonstrate convincingly
in which way and to what extent, if any, the
terms of the consultancy
agreement are a fiction designed to evade tax liability.
[24]
Accordingly, I cannot agree with the applicants’ contention
that there is”
no doubt that had the court been aware of the
truth and been apprised of all the facts it would not have granted
default judgment
in favour of the respondent
”. Less still
am I persuaded that the court would “
certainly”
have enquired into the true nature of the agreement and given effect
to that. On the contrary, the respondent approached the court
on the
basis that the last two instalments in terms of the consultancy
agreement had not been paid by the applicants. There is
in my view no
apparent reason why the respondent could not have approached the
court on that basis and made the allegations it
made in order to
obtain judgment for the balance outstanding in terms of the
agreement. It was not for the respondent to “
come clean
”
about anything untoward as is suggested by the applicants, and if the
applicants had been uncomfortable at any stage, believing
that the
agreement was a fiction, they have had several years to raise this
concern and rectify the matter. They failed to do so
and in fact
complied with most of their obligations in terms thereof. The
consultancy agreement formed part of a carefully considered
and
executed suite of agreements documenting the parties’ true
intent. With the exception of the third and fourth instalments
due in
terms of the consultancy agreement, the parties’ true intent
was manifested in that all other payments were made in
terms of the
entire suite of agreements.
[25]
This then is not a case where ‘strong merits of success may
excuse an inadequate explanation
for the delay (to a point)’:
Valor IT v Premier, North West Province and Others
2021(1) SA
42 (SCA) para 38.
[26]
The applicants have failed to show good cause for the rescission of
the default judgment granted
by this court on 4 February 2020 in
that, firstly, they have failed to provide a reasonable explanation
for their failure to defend
the main application and the subsequent
delays in bringing this rescission application, and secondly, they
have failed to discharge
the onus of satisfying the requirements for
the granting of a rescission at common law based on fraud, and that
the court, but
for the alleged fraud, would not have granted the
default judgment.
[27]
In the result, the following order is made:
The
rescission application is dismissed with costs.
____________________________
K
MEYER
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Electronically
delivered: This judgment was prepared and ordered 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 to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines. The
date of the judgment is 11 February 2022.
Judgment
: 11 February 2022
Heard:
27 October 2021
Applicants’
counsel: Adv Y Alli
Instructed
by: Vally Chagan &Associates, Johannesburg
Respondent’s
counsel: Adv C Acker
Instructed
by: Jordaan & Wolberg Attorneys, Johannesburg
[1]
[
Schierhout
v Union Government
1927 AD 94
at 98.
Rowe
v Rowe
[1997] ZASCA 54
;
1997 (4) SA 160
(SCA);
[1997]
3 All SA 503
(A) at 504
.
Makings
v Makings
1958 (1) SA 338
;
[1958]
1 All SA 510
(A)
at 342H-345A.]
[2]
[
Childerley
at 169.]
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