Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 531South Africa
Sanlam Life Insurance Limited v Future Energy Electrical (PTY) Limited and Another (2019/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 531 (30 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sanlam Life Insurance Limited v Future Energy Electrical (PTY) Limited and Another (2019/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 531 (30 June 2022)
Sanlam Life Insurance Limited v Future Energy Electrical (PTY) Limited and Another (2019/8534) [2022] ZAGPJHC 531 (30 June 2022)
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sino date 30 June 2022
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case number: 2019/8534
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
30 JUNE 2022
In the matter between:
SANLAM
LIFE INSURANCE LIMITED
Applicant
and
FUTURE
ENERGY ELECTRICAL (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
(Registration number:
2014/076964/07)
MANESHREE
PILLAY
Second Respondent
(Identity number: [....])
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an opposed application in which the
Applicant (“Sanlam”) seeks an order that a settlement
agreement (“the
agreement”) be made an order of court.
The agreement was signed after Sanlam had instituted an action (“the
action”)
under the above case number against the Respondents.
In the action, Sanlam’s case against the First Respondent
(“Future
Energy”) was based on the latter’s alleged
breach of a written commercial lease it had concluded with Sanlam. As
against
the Second Respondent (“Ms Pillay”), Sanlam’s
case in the action was that she had allegedly bound herself as surety
and co-principal debtor with Future Energy in favour of Sanlam for
Future Energy’s obligations under the said written commercial
lease.
[2]
The agreement was signed on Sanlam’s
behalf by a duly authorised representative. Ms Pillay is the sole
member of Future Energy.
She signed the agreement in her personal
capacity and on behalf of Future Energy. The agreement provides as
follows in relevant
part:
“
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 8534/2019
In the matter between:
SANLAM LIFE INSURANCE
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
FUTURE ENERGY ELECTRICAL
(PTY) LIMITED First Defendant
(REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2014/076964/07)
MANESHREE PILLAY
Second Defendant
(IDENTITY NUMBER: [....])
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
WHEREAS the Plaintiff has
instituted action against the First and Second Defendants, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved for recovery
of arrear rental, charges, ejectment and legal costs in respect of
the commercial leased premises described
as Unit 26, Randburg
Graphite Park, Strijdompark, Randburg.
AND WHEREAS the Plaintiff
and First and Second Defendants (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
parties’), are desirous of
concluding settlement of their
respective rights and obligations in relation to the action and the
underlying tenancy, on the terms
and conditions herein contained:
NOW THEREFORE the parties
record and agree as follows:
1.
The First and Second Defendants acknowledge
themselves to be truly and lawfully indebted and firmly bound,
jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, to
the Plaintiff in the amount of:
1.1.
R68 022.47 …, being the total arrears in respect of rentals
and other
charges including, interest and legal fees incidental to
the Plaintiff’s claim, up until and including April 2019;
1.2
Three months’ rental in the amount of R34 303.23 (including
VAT),
as an agreed early termination penalty;
1.3
Utility and ancillary charges up to and including April 2019
(provided
that the First Defendant vacate the commercial leased
premises on or before 30 April 2019, as agreed to herein below);
1.4
Reinstatement costs incurred by the Plaintiff who shall attend to
such
reinstatement of the commercial leased premises on the First
Defendant’s behalf and the costs of which will be the liability
of the First and Second Defendants. In this regard, the Plaintiff
will furnish the First and Second Defendants with invoices pertaining
to the costs of the reinstatement upon completion thereof; and
1.5
All legal costs incurred by the Plaintiff on the attorney and own
client
scale.
(herein after referred to
as ‘the settlement indebtedness’).
2.
The First and Second Defendants will pay the settlement indebtedness
to the Plaintiff,
without deduction or set off, and free of
commissions and bank costs as follows:
2.1
By way of monthly installments in the amount of R10 000.00 …
commencing
on
1 April 2019
and thereafter on or before the
first day of each month until the settlement indebtedness is paid in
full;
…
8.
This agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties
and here
(sic)
are no other understandings or agreements,
written or oral, among them on the subject.
9.
The parties specifically record that the parties are desirous that
this agreement
be made an order of the above Court, subject to the
approval of the Court.”
[3]
Although the Respondents raised a number of
grounds of opposition to the relief sought in the answering affidavit
deposed to by
Ms Pillay, they persisted with only one ground in their
heads of argument and at the hearing of this application. They
contend
as follows at paragraph 6.1 of their heads of argument:
“
[T]he
respondents were unaware of certain material terms contained in the
settlement agreement. The conclusion of the settlement
agreement on
these terms was done in error as a result of the applicant’s
mala fide
conduct
and misrepresentation. This is centred on the defence of
iustus
error
”.
[4]
The Respondents contend at paragraph 32 of
their heads of argument that they –
“
cannot
be bound to the re-instatement charges and legal costs clauses on the
basis of
iustus error
.”
[5]
The liability of the Respondents for
reinstatement costs is provided for at clause 1.4 of the agreement,
while their liability for
Sanlam’s legal costs is provided for
at clauses 1.1 and 1.5. In support of their contention that they
cannot be bound by
the provisions of clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5, the
Respondents make the following submissions in their heads of
argument:
“
10.
The issue of legal costs (especially on an attorney and own client
scale) was never negotiated with the respondents.
The only reference
made to any legal costs by the applicant were those referred to in an
email dated 11 March 2019. Paragraph 5
of that email reads:
‘
5.
You will continue making payment of R10 000.00 per month until the
full amount owed
by you as at 30 April 2019, plus the 3 (three) month
early termination penalty,
interest
and legal costs
are settled in
full and final settlement of this matter.’
11. The
above was then catered for in the settlement agreement:
‘
1.1
R68 022.47 …, being the total arrears in respect of rentals
and other charges including,
interest
and legal fees incidental to the Plaintiff’s claim
,
up until and including April 2019.’
12. In
any event, it is clear from the papers that on 11 March 2019 the
applicant proposed terms of settlement
to the respondents, after
which the first respondent countered with terms of its own (i.e. the
removal of the re-instatement costs).
This evinces that the
respondents did not accept all the terms proposed by the applicant.
…
15. In
the email under cover of which the settlement agreement was sent to
the respondents, the applicant’s
attorney states that the
settlement agreement is ‘
as discussed last month’
.
16. The
respondents were entitled to assume that the settlement agreement
contained those terms as counter-proposed
to the applicant and
nothing more.
17. The
respondents certainly did not expect the settlement agreement to
contain terms which were not discussed
or agreed upon, especially
those terms which had been rejected or disputed outright by the
respondents, such as the re-instatement
costs.
18. The
respondents signed the settlement agreement on the assumption that it
did not contain clauses which were
rejected or not discussed. The
respondents could not reasonably have expected the settlement
agreement to contain these clauses.
19. By
signing the settlement agreement, the respondents committed a
justifiable error as a result of the applicant
not bringing these
clauses to the respondent’s attention.
…
21. Had
the applicant intended to bind the respondents to the clause relating
to the re-instatement charges and
legal costs, it should have
specifically drawn the respondents’ attention to these clauses
in the settlement agreement as
it was imposing an unusual obligation
on the respondents. Only the applicant can be at fault for failing to
alert the respondents
accordingly.”
[6]
The submissions at paragraph 12 of the
Respondents’ heads of argument are not borne out by the facts.
Future Energy did not
make a counterproposal on 11 March 2019. Ms
Pillay conveyed at paragraph 4 of her email at 17:41 on 11 March 2019
that there would
be no reinstatement costs because the premises was
in the same condition as when Future Energy took occupation. She
accepted that
there was a liability in respect of reinstatement
costs, but made the point that it would not be necessary to incur any
such costs.
In any event, Ms Pillay does not state in the answering
affidavit that she and/or Future Energy made the counterproposal
contended
for in their heads of argument.
[7]
As to the submissions contained at
paragraph 16 of the Respondents’ heads of argument, Ms Pillay
does not state in the answering
affidavit that she assumed that the
agreement contained the terms of a so-called “counter-proposal”
and nothing more.
There is no mention of a counterproposal in the
answering affidavit.
[8]
The main thrust of Ms Pillay’s
evidence as to how the error contended for by the Respondents came
about, is found in these
two paragraphs of the answering affidavit:
“
6.16
At the time of signing the Settlement Agreement I did not appreciate
and understand all the clauses contained therein, save
for the clause
that stated that the arrear rental was R68 923.68 … and that
the Respondents would be paying monthly instalments
in the amount of
R10 000, commencing on 01 April 2019;
…
13.1 … I
re-iterate that I printed and signed the settlement agreement as I
implicitly relied on the representations
of the Applicant, via Liad
Hadar, in that all the settlement agreement encompassed was that the
respondents were going to pay the
applicant R62 923.68, in monthly
instalments of R10 000.00.”
[9]
The Respondents contend that they agreed to
the provisions of clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of the agreement in error
as a result of
Sanlam’s
mala fide
conduct and misrepresentation.
According to the Respondents, Sanlam made itself guilty of
misrepresentation by omission when it
failed to bring clauses 1.1,
1.4 and 1.5 of the agreement to their attention. The Respondents
further contend that they cannot
be bound by the provisions of
clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of the agreement on the basis of
iustus
error
. This is similar to what was
contended for by Compusource in the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Constantia Insurance Co Ltd v
Compusource (Pty) Ltd
2005 (4) SA 345
(SCA)
:
“
[15]
… Compusource’s answer to Constantia’s claim was …
that it was not bound by the provisions
of clause 3.5. As the basis
for this answer, it relied upon the contention that [Compusource’s
representative] was unaware
of the clause when he entered into the
agreement and that [Constantia’s representatives] had failed in
their duty, imposed
upon them by law, to alert [Compusource’s
representative] to its existence.
[16]
Compusource’s approach to the case was that its defence was one
of misrepresentation by the representatives
of Constantia in the form
of an omission: the non-disclosure of clause 3.5.”
[10]
In dealing with this contention, the
Supreme Court of Appeal held at paragraph [16] of
Constantia
:
“…
The
true issue in this case is not one of misrepresentation by omission.
It is one of
dissensus
.
Constantia’s representatives thought that [Compusource’s
representative] had agreed to clause 3.5 read with clause
3.3.2
whereas in fact he had not. The reason for the misapprehension on the
part of the former was that [Compusource’s representative]
created the impression that he did agree to clause 3.5 by accepting
the quotations that were made subject to the provisions of
a standard
policy, including that clause. Under these circumstances our law is
that [Compusource’s representative’s]
principal would,
despite this lack of actual consensus, be bound to the provisions of
the clause if Constantia’s representatives
were reasonable in
their reliance on the impression created by [Compusource’s
representative]. If a reasonable person in
their position would have
realised that [Compusource’s representative], despite his
apparent expression of agreement, did
not actually consent to be
bound by the clause, this clause could not be said to be part of
their agreement.”
[11]
Having regard to this authority from
Constantia
,
it seems to me that this case is also not one of misrepresentation by
omission, but rather one of
dissensus
.
I am fortified in my view by the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
reference in
Constantia
to
the principles laid down by the Appellate Division in
SONAP
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd (formerly known as SONAREP (SA) (Pty) Ltd) v
Pappadogianis
[1992] ZASCA 56
;
1992 (3) SA 234
(AD) and
the Supreme Court of Appeal’s application of those principles
in deciding
Constantia
.
The Appellate Division held in
SONAP
at 238G–240B:
“
The
mistake relied upon by the appellant was one committed during the
expression of its intention (‘erklärungsirrtum’
in
German: Fevrier-Breedt
A Critical
Analysis of Mistake in SA Law of Contract
,
LLD dissertation, UP (1991) at 142): it mistakenly believed that its
declared intention conformed to its actual intention. The
respondent’s declared intention, on the other hand, did not
differ from his actual intention. The
dissensus
is, therefore, in a sense the result of
the appellant’s so-called unilateral mistake. Compare
Asser
Verbinternissenrecht
part II (1985) at 144–5. I
use the term ‘mistake’ and not ‘error’
because, although they may be used
interchangeably, ‘mistake’
rather ‘implies misunderstanding, misinterpretation, and
resultant poor judgment,
and is usually weaker than
error
in imputing blame or censure’.
(
American Heritage Dictionary sv
‘error’.)
The
law, as a general rule, concerns itself with the external
manifestations, and not the workings, of the minds of parties to a
contract.
South
African Railways & Harbours v National Bank of South Africa
Ltd
1924
AD 704
at 715–6. However, in the case of an
alleged
dissensus
the law does have regard to other considerations: it is said that, in
order to determine whether a contract has come into being,
resort
must be had to the reliance theory. Compare
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging v Friedman
1979
(3) SA 978
(A) at 995–6 and
Reinecke
and Van der Merwe
1984
TSAR 290.
This Court has, in two judgments delivered on the
same day by differently constituted Benches, dealt authoritatively
with
the question of
iustus
error
in
the context of a so-called unilateral mistake. The first is
Georqe
v Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
1958
(2) SA 465
(A) at 471B–D where Fagan CJ said the
following:
‘
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? … 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.’
The
second is Schreiner JA’s statement in
National
and Overseas Distributors Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato Board
1958
(2) SA 473
(A) at 479G–H:
‘
Our
law allows a party to set up his own mistake in certain circumstances
in order to escape liability under a contract into which
he has
entered. But where the other party has not made any misrepresentation
and has not appreciated at the time of acceptance
that his offer was
being accepted under a misapprehension, the scope for a defence of
unilateral mistake is very narrow, if it
exists at all. At least the
mistake (
error
)
would have to be reasonable (
justus
)
and it would have to be pleaded.’
These
dicta
gave respondent’s counsel the cue to argue that, in the absence
of a misrepresentation by the respondent, the appellant could
not
succeed in its alternative claim. That is in my view an
over-simplification. If regard is had to the authorities referred to
by the learned Judges (see
Logan
v Beit
7
SC 197
at 251;
I
Pieters and Company v Salomon
1911
AD 121
at 137;
Hodgson
Bros v South African Railways
1928
CPD 257
at 261;
Van
Ryn Wine and Spirit Co v Chandos Bar
1928
TPD 417
at 422–4;
Irvin
& Johnston (SA) Ltd v Kaplan
1940
CPD 647
and, one could add,
Collen
v Rietfontein Enqineerinq Works
1948
(1) SA 413
(A) at 430–1), I venture to suggest that what
they did was to adapt, for the purposes of the facts in their
respective cases,
the well-known
dictum
of
Blackburn J in
Smith
v Huqhes
(1871)
LR 6 QB 597
at 607, namely:
‘
If,
whatever a man’s real intention may be, he so conducts himself
that a reasonable man would believe that he was assenting
to the
terms proposed by the other party, and that other party upon that
belief enters into the contract with him, the man thus
conducting
himself would be equally bound as if he had intended to agree to the
other party’s terms.’
In
my view, therefore, the decisive question in a case like the present
is this: did the party whose actual intention did not conform
to the
common intention expressed, lead the other party, as a reasonable
man, to believe that his declared intention represented
his actual
intention? Compare Corbin on
Contracts
(one volume edition) (1952) at 157. To answer this question, a
three-fold enquiry is usually necessary, namely, first, was there
a
misrepresentation as to one party’s intention; secondly, who
made that representation; and thirdly, was the other party
misled
thereby? See also
Du
Toit v Atkinson's Motors Bpk
1985
(2) SA 893
(A) at 906C–G;
Spindrifter
(Pty) Ltd v Lester Donovan (Pty) Ltd
1986
(1) SA 303
(A) at 316I–317B. The last question
postulates two possibilities: Was he actually misled and would a
reasonable man
have been misled?
Spes
Bona Bank Ltd v Portals Water Treatment South Africa (Pty) Ltd
1983
(1) SA 978
(A) at 984D–H, 985G–H.”
[12]
The approach set out in
SONAP
was also referred to and applied by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Pillay and
Another v Shaik and Others
2009 (4) SA
74
(SCA) at paragraphs [55] to [60].
[13]
In this case it is clear, in my view, that
Sanlam laboured under the genuine misapprehension that Ms Pillay had
in fact agreed,
on behalf of herself and Future Energy, to be bound
by the provisions of clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of the agreement and
that that
misapprehension was caused by the conduct of Ms Pillay in
signing the agreement. The first two questions formulated in
SONAP
must therefore be answered in favour of
Sanlam. The outcome of this case is therefore dependent on the third
question: would a reasonable
person in the position of Sanlam have
laboured under the same misapprehension?
[14]
There are a number of considerations that
would, in my view, have influenced the reasonable person. First, Ms
Pillay is a businesswoman.
She is, in the words of Willis J (as he
then was) in
Langeveld v Union Finance
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2007 (4) SA 572
(W)
at paragraph [12], “
no
‘babe-in-the-wood’, never mind an illiterate.”
Second, there was nothing that stopped Ms Pillay from reading and
considering the agreement before signing it. Third, Ms Pillay
was not
prevented from first obtaining legal advice on the agreement before
signing it. It is clear from Ms Pillay’s email
to which she
attached the signed version of the agreement, that she took the
liberty of asking Sanlam’s attorneys advice.
There is no
evidence that she could not have sought their advice regarding issues
she did not understand or agree with prior to
signing the agreement.
Fourth, Ms Pillay in no way indicated that she did not read or
understand the agreement before signing it.
Fifth, there is no
general obligation on an offeror to enquire whether or not the other
party to the agreement has read and understood
the agreement. Sixth,
having regard to the fact that the agreement was concluded to settle
the parties’ respective rights
and obligations in relation to
the action and the underlying tenancy, clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of
the agreement cannot be described
as so unusual or unduly onerous as
to be unexpected. Seventh, the wording of clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of
the agreement is clear
enough that it could be understood by a
businesswoman like Ms Pillay. In this regard, it must be remembered
that Ms Pillay is the
sole member of Future Energy and concluded the
commercial lease which contains clauses that are much more complex.
She also executed
a suretyship that contains words and phrases that
would have been much more difficult to understand. Eighth, the
signing of a settlement
agreement is not something novel in this
country like the case was with post litigation insurance in
Constantia
.
Provisions like those contained in clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of the
agreement are not unusual in settlement agreements.
[15]
In all the circumstances, I am therefore
satisfied that, as a matter of probabilities, the reasonable person
in the position of
Sanlam would have inferred, from the fact that Ms
Pillay signed the agreement, that her true intention was to bind
herself and
Future Energy to the provisions of clauses 1.1, 1.4 and
1.5 of the agreement. I believe that the reasonable person would not
have
enquired from Ms Pillay at the time whether she appreciated the
meaning of those clauses. The legal consequence of this finding
is
that Future Energy and Ms Pillay are held bound by the provisions of
clauses 1.1, 1.4 and 1.5 of the agreement. It follows that
the
application must succeed.
[16]
As to the question of costs, Sanlam seeks
an order that Future Energy and Ms Pillay pay its of the application
on the attorney and
client scale. In light of my finding that Future
Energy and Ms Pillay are bound by the provisions of clause 1.5 of the
agreement,
I see no reason why such an order should not be made.
[17]
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The settlement agreement concluded between
the parties, a copy of which agreement is attached to the founding
affidavit as “FA1”,
is made an order of Court.
2.
The Respondents shall pay the Applicant’s
costs of this application on the attorney and client scale.
This judgment is
handed down electronically by uploading it on CaseLines.
L.J. du Bruyn
Acting Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg
Date heard:
25 April 2022
Judgment
delivered:
30 June 2022
For the Applicant:
Ms C.J. Bekker
Briefed
by Hadar Incorporated
For the First and Second
Respondents:
Mr K. Naidoo
Briefed
by Nishlan Moodley Attorneys
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