Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 281South Africa
Resichem (Pty) Ltd v Polywhiz Trading (Pty) Ltd (2022/058) [2022] ZAGPJHC 281 (4 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Resichem (Pty) Ltd v Polywhiz Trading (Pty) Ltd (2022/058) [2022] ZAGPJHC 281 (4 May 2022)
Resichem (Pty) Ltd v Polywhiz Trading (Pty) Ltd (2022/058) [2022] ZAGPJHC 281 (4 May 2022)
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sino date 4 May 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
[4 May 2022]
CASE NO: 2022/058
In
the matter between:
RESICHEM
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
POLYWHIZ
TRADING (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
REASONS FOR J U D G M E N T
MUDAU,
J:
1.
This application was
brought on an urgent basis. The applicant, Resichem (Pty) Ltd seeks
an interim interdict to, inter alia, restrain
the respondent,
PolyWhiz Trading (Pty) Ltd from accessing, selling or in any way
using or disposing any of the consignment stock
of chemicals situated
at the respondent's premises, pending proceedings to be instituted
within 30 days of the court order. Central
to the interdictory relief
is the preservation of the stock so that the rightful owner thereof
will not be deprived of the rights
and entitlements consequent upon
ownership. The respondent opposes the relief claimed on a number of
grounds: that the application
is not urgent; alternatively, the
urgency is self- created; and that the applicant has failed to meet
the requirements for an interim
interdict.
2.
The requirements for the
granting of an interim interdict are trite. The test requires an
applicant establishes:
2.1
a
prima
facie
right, even
if it is subject to some doubt;
2.2. a reasonable apprehension of irreparable
and imminent harm to the right if an interdict is not granted;
2.3 the balance of convenience must favour
the granting of the interdict; and
2.4 the
applicant must have no other remedy.
[1]
3.
On 29 April 2022, having
heard counsel and considered the documents filed on record, I ordered
that:
“1. The applicant’s failure to comply with the Uniform Rules of
Court (“URC”) pertaining to forms, time periods and service
is
condoned, and the matter is heard as an urgent application in
accordance with URC 6(12).
2. Pending the finalisation of such legal proceedings as provided for
in paragraph 3 below and subject to paragraph 3 below, the
respondent
is interdicted and restrained from accessing, selling, or in any way
using or disposing of any of the consignment stock
of chemicals which
is situate in the respondent’s warehouse at its premises at Unit 7,
Harbour Park, 1061, Schooner Avenue, Honeydew.
3.
3.1 The interdictory relief set out in paragraph 2 above shall stand
as interim relief pending the finalisation of the legal proceedings
which the applicant intends to bring, and which legal proceedings the
applicant is directed to institute within 30 days of the date
of the
order sought under this application.
3.2 All and any of the interim relief granted under prayer 2 shall
lapse with immediate effect upon the expiration of the period
of 30
days from the date of the order granted under this application in the
event that the applicant fails to institute legal proceedings
for
such further relief as the applicant intends to pursue within 30 days
of the order.
4. Costs in the cause”.
Background
4.
Pursuant to a written
application for credit, on 10 December 2015, the applicant granted
the respondent a 30-day credit facility with
a credit limit of R3
million, subject to the applicant’s standard terms and conditions
regulating all orders and sales of goods
between the parties. Some of
the most salient provisions of the Credit Terms are as follows: in
terms of clause 1.1 “Any quotation,
tender, order, or contract of
sale between the applicant and the respondent in respect of any goods
shall be subject to the credit
terms”. Clause 3.2 provides that
should the respondent fail to pay an invoice within 30 days, it
forfeits its right to credit facilities
and all amounts outstanding
to its account shall become immediately due and payable.
5.
Clause 3.16 of the Credit
Terms provides that “the respondent is not entitled to sell or
dispose of any goods unpaid for without
the prior written consent of
the applicant. The respondent shall not allow the goods to become
encumbered in any manner prior to
the full payment thereof and shall
advise third parties of the applicant’s rights in the goods”. In
terms of clause 7.1 ownership
in the goods shall not pass to the
respondent until they have been paid for in full.
6.
Pursuant to said
agreement, the applicant has since December 2019, delivered
consignment stock comprising raw chemicals utilised in
the industrial
process of producing a two-part polyurethane system to apply LDV
linings used in the automotive market, to the respondent
which took
possession in its warehouse facility situated in its business
premises. The consignment stock has been kept separate from
any of
the other goods of the respondent.
7.
On 2 December 2019 the
parties concluded a Consignment Stock Agreement during the currency
of the relationship and in the pursuit
of what the applicant terms
“finding a pragmatic and efficacious means of overcoming various
logistical impediments” such as
(i) avoiding delays associated with
the procurement of stock; (ii) the cost of warehousing; and (iii) the
incurrence of double transportation
costs to name but a few. On the
applicant’s version, the Consignment Agreement provided numerous
practical advantages to the parties.
It facilitated an ability to
deliver consignment stock into the possession of the respondent
directly such that as and when the respondent
made a purchase or
drawdown, and was invoiced by the applicant, the respondent would
have instant access to stock and would be entitled
to physically take
such stock into its possession.
8.
On the applicant’s
version, since the commencement of the relationship between the
parties in 2015 and its subsequent extension
through the Consignment
Agreement in 2019, all consignment stock was delivered into the
possession and control of the respondent
on the basis that ownership
of that stock remained vested in the applicant until the respondent
made payment in full in respect of
such stock. The applicant asserts
that ownership in the consignment stock it delivered to the
respondent's warehouse as well as stock
drawn and purchased by the
respondent, has throughout the relationship between the parties
remained vested in the applicant until
such stock is paid for by the
respondent. The applicant alleges that despite the 30-day provisions
of the credit facility extended
to the respondent in 2015, the latter
has, at least since November 2021, defaulted in respect of its
payment obligations.
9.
As at 17 March 2022 the
respondent was indebted to the applicant in an amount of R 17 650
257.50, of which an amount of R 8 946 310.00
has been outstanding for
a period in excess of thirty days. Stock to the value of R19 873
800.00 remains in the respondent's
possession, being over and above
the respondent's already outstanding account of R17 650 257.50. The
respondent has contested its
breaches and the applicant's entitlement
to cancel the agreements between the parties. The dispute in this
regard is the subject
of the relief sought in the intended litigation
process.
10.
As to the question of
urgency, according to the applicant, whereas the parties have since
the commencement of their relationship in
2015, and the expansion of
that relationship in 2019, conducted their business on the basis that
ownership in and to all of the consignment
stock in the possession of
the respondent at its warehouse facility remains vested in the
applicant, as does the stock purchased
and drawn down by the
respondent. But the respondent has in its recent communications dated
22 March 2022 (and later on 25 March
2022) contended that it has
become the owner of the consignment stock in its warehouse on the
basis of clause 1.3 of the Consignment
Agreement which according to
the respondent, accords unto it the ownership of all of the
consignment stock and that it can do with
it as it deems appropriate.
This sparked the urgent application. This was after the applicant
indicated its desire to uplift the
stock as the respondent had
alleged that the stock had expired as per the written correspondence
dated 17 March 2022.
11.
Clause 1.3 of the
Consignment Agreement reads as follows:
“
1.3 The (Debtor) shall store
the Goods in a suitable building at its premises, in accordance with
acceptable storage conditions, taking
physical property of the
product types into account and applying the diligence of a prudent
businessman. (Debtor) shall always draw
the Goods stored by the
earliest date (first in first out method). Any Goods not drawn by the
(debtor) within 2(two) months following
the delivery date of the
Goods to the consignment stock area, shall be deemed to be drawn and
purchased by (debtor) at the end of
the 2(two) month period and shall
be invoiced by the Supplier to the (debtor)”.
12.
The question of ownership,
as the applicant stressed, need not be determined at this stage, but
falls for determination in the next
phase of the litigation process.
The applicant contends that its prima facie right is established by
the existence of the Credit
Terms which were at all relevant times
extant and regulated the relationship between the applicant and the
respondent.
13.
In opposing this matter,
the respondent points out that the stock that forms the subject
matter of the application was delivered to
the respondent's premises
during September to December 2021. Discussions regarding payment, use
of the stock and invoicing had been
ongoing since then. The stock is
securely stored at its premises and used in the normal course of the
respondent's business for the
manufacturing of spray-on polyurethane
elastomers used for bakkie linings in the automotive industry. The
stock is comprehensively
insured by the respondent against theft and
damage. The respondent contends that the applicant has an adequate
alternative remedy
and there is no suggestion in the founding papers
that the respondent will not be in a financial position to make
payment for the
stock.
14.
The parties intended to
vary the terms of the Credit Application to suit their needs and
therefore concluded the Consignment Stock
Agreement in 2019 to meet
the respondent's need to have higher volumes of stock available and
on order, on a continuous basis. The
respondent contends that the
Consignment Stock Agreement, on a proper interpretation, superseded
the Credit Application and the terms
thereof and the former agreement
takes precedent.
15.
In terms of the deeming
provisions of the Consignment Stock Agreement, according to the
respondent, ownership of the stock passed
to it no later than 2
months after date of delivery of the stock. Ownership of the stock as
a result vests in it. The respondent
disputes that the terms of the
Credit Application are incorporated in the Consignment Stock
Agreement and contends any assertion
to the contrary is entirely
misplaced and untenable in law.
16.
The respondent contends
further that it tendered to provide the applicant with security for
its claim in relation to the stock purchased.
This tender was
repeated in paragraph 6 of the letter dated the 25 March 2022. The
respondent contends that the applicant has failed
to prima facie
establish that it has a right in relation thereto, not even a prima
facie right open to some doubt. The respondent
contends that the
applicant has an adequate alternative remedy in that the latter has a
contractual remedy to claim payment for the
stock purchased, which is
more than an adequate and effective means to recover any monies that
may be due to the applicant.
17.
In reply, the applicant
points out that the catalyst to the urgent application as pointed
out, is the fact that the respondent with
effect from 22 March 2022
accorded unto itself an entitlement to usurp the ownership and all
attendant rights of the applicant's
stock warehoused at the
respondent's premises and to treat that stock as its own. It is
concerned that once the stock is used by
the respondent or any other
third person or franchisees, its rights of ownership are, through the
industrial processes described
by the respondent's deponent,
destroyed and supplanted by rights of recourse in a debtor and
creditor relationship.
18.
Whereas the respondent
contends that the contractual relationship between the parties is
exclusively regulated by the Consignment
Agreement with no Credit
Terms, in its version, it accepts that it enjoyed credit after the
Consignment Agreement was concluded.
As the applicant pointed out, on
4 and 14 March 2022 respectively, the respondent placed orders with
the applicant for chemicals
from the warehoused stock. In so doing,
the respondent ordered part of that stock and did so contrary to the
position which it expressed
in the communication of 22 March 2022
referred to above.
19.
The existence of a prima
facie right, even if open to some doubt, is established in
casu
.
The Credit Terms provide that the applicant remains the owner of all
stock until paid for in full. It is clear from a reading of
the
Credit Terms and Consignment Agreement, as well as the conduct of the
parties thereafter, that the two agreements, prima facie,
operated in
conjunction with one another and that the Credit Terms continued to
remain applicable and enforceable.
20.
It is common cause that
the respondent's use of the raw chemicals destroys the chemicals in
question and converts them into another
completed product.
Consequently, the use by the respondent of the chemicals in this
fashion holds the result of causing the applicant
irreparable harm.
The substance of the rights to be preserved in this instance, is the
protection of the stock. I am persuaded
that there exists no
substitute remedy for the preservation of the raw chemicals and the
prevention of their destruction through
their conversion into another
end-product if ownership and shelf life span remains in issue.
21.
As for the balance of
convenience, I am also persuaded by the contention that no one is
entitled to do business by using the property,
in this case stock,
which belongs to another and in respect of which the respondent has
not ordered or acquired. At the very least,
ownership remains in
dispute. Given the circumstances, I reached the conclusion that the
balance of convenience in this instance
favours the applicant. These
constitute my reasons for the Court order.
T P MUDAU
[Judge of the
High Court]
Date of Hearing:
12 April 2022
Date of Judgment (Reasons): 4
May 2022
APPEARANCES
For the Applicant:
Adv. N Konstantinides SC
and Adv. F Sangoni
Instructed by:
Marlherbe Riggs and
Ranwell Attorneys
For the Respondent:
Adv. B H
Swart SC and Adv. M T Shepherd
Instructed by:
Bento Incorporated
[1]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221.
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