Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 443South Africa
Verni-Speciality Construction Projects (PTY) Ltd v Ahlstrom Structural Design Engineers (PTY) Ltd and Another (23819/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 443 (4 July 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Verni-Speciality Construction Projects (PTY) Ltd v Ahlstrom Structural Design Engineers (PTY) Ltd and Another (23819/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 443 (4 July 2022)
Verni-Speciality Construction Projects (PTY) Ltd v Ahlstrom Structural Design Engineers (PTY) Ltd and Another (23819/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 443 (4 July 2022)
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sino date 4 July 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
23819/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In the matter between:
VERNI-SPECIALITY
CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS
(PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
And
AHLSTROM
STRUCTURAL DESIGN
First Defendant
ENGINEERS (PTY) LTD
MOTAUNG
AND MOKORO BUSINESSZONE CC
Third Party
JUDGMENT
FISHER J:
Introduction
[1]
This
case involves a simple claim for goods and services sold and
delivered.
[2]
It
is not in dispute that the plaintiff provided the services and
delivered the goods. The dispute relates to the identity of the
party
who contracted for the goods and services. The defendant claims that
it was not the contracting party but rather that another
corporation,
being Motaung & Mokoro Businesszone CC (‘MMB’) was
the party who contracted with the plaintiff for
the goods and
services supplied. The defendant alleges that, whilst it concluded
the agreement, it did so as MMB’s agent.
[3]
Thus,
the matter is to be determined on the facts.
[4]
The
defendant introduced MMB as a third party in order to seek
indemnification it in the event of liability. The third party played
no part in the proceedings. The defendant seeks that its case against
the third-party be postponed because it appears that the
notice of
the trial date was not served on the third party.
I turn to the defendant’s
case with reference to the evidence.
The evidence
[5]
The
plaintiff is a specialist construction company with expertise in
concrete repair, corrosion protection, waterproofing and the
supply
and installation of speciality construction chemicals.
[6]
During May 2018, the defendant requested that the
plaintiff provide it with a quotation for the supply and installation
of acid
brick lining to a sulphuric acid tank at Eskom’s
Lethaba Power Station.
[7]
The
plaintiff led the evidence of Messrs Vernon and Trenton Botha,
respectively the CEO and the general manager of the plaintiff
and
also father and son. I will refer to them as Messrs Botha senior and
junior.
[8]
Mr
Botha senior testified as to how the contract was concluded. A verbal
inquiry for a quotation was made by Mr Dirk Dekker of the
defendant.
The official quotation which followed shows that it was addressed to
Mr Dekker by Mr Botha junior. The quote was accepted
and an official
instruction was given by Mr George Lishea, a structural engineer
employed by the defendant, for the work to be
executed.
[9]
Mr
Lishea’s letter of instruction dated 04 September 2018
was sent
to Mr Botha junior. It was written under the defendants letterhead
and read as follows:
“
RE: LETHABO POWER
STATION ACID BUND REPAIR
We hereby confirm
that screed was applied and finished on the 1st of September 2018.
This letter serves as a confirmation for Verni
to begin with the
installation of the acid bund tiles in the water treatment plant at
Lethabo Power Station.
Please note that
site induction has to be completed as soon as possible prior to
working on site. Please contact Lefu Motaung to
arrange site
induction on [….] or [….].”
[10]
Messrs
Botha senior and junior were both cross examined extensively as to
their knowledge relating to the alleged agency relationship
between
MMB and Ahlstrom. They consistently maintained that they were never
informed nor did anything lead them to believe that
the defendant, in
contracting with the plaintiff in its own name, was doing so on
behalf of any other party. They maintained that,
as the request for
quotation and the instruction to commence the work all emanated from
the defendant, there was nothing which
suggested to them that they
were not contracting with the defendant.
[11]
It emerged in
the course of cross examination of Mr Botha senior that the plaintiff
had been erroneously cited as ‘’Verni
Speciality
Construction
Projects
’’
when the correct name of the plaintiff is “Verni
Speciality Construction
Products
”
.
The correct name appears on all the documents and there was clearly a
mistake made in the declaration. This was fully explained.
[12]
When the
plaintiff closed its case, Mr van Gass, for the defendant seized upon
this error in the plaintiff’s citation. He
brought an
application for absolution from the instance based on the error; the
contention being that the plaintiff was a different
party. Perhaps
this was seen as a way out of a hopeless case.
[13]
The
absolution was refused. The reasons for such refusal are that the
mistake was patent, I had been told by Ms Shahim for the plaintiff
that the necessary formality of correcting the error by amendment
would be attended to and the test for absolution was not, on
any
basis, met.
[14]
Undeterred by
the refusal of absolution, Mr Van Gass closed his client’s
case. Ms Shahim duly sought the correcting amendment.
[15]
Mr Van Gass
then argued that he was entitled to a postponement of the trial for
the purposes of responding to the amendment. When
I pointed out that
I would not allow the postponement and granted the amendment, Mr van
Gass sought to reopen the defendant’s
case. I allowed this. Mr
van Gass then sought to amend the plea in a manner which he argued
was consequential on the amendment
which, as I have said, only
entailed a correction of name. The application for amendment was
opportunistic. It sought to plead
agency when in fact reference to
the plea shows that it was not properly pleaded. The application by
the defendant to amend was
thus refused.
[16]
Mr van
Gass was thus ultimately and reluctantly put to proving his client’s
defence of apparent agency and Mr Ahlstrom was
called.
[17]
He confirmed
that the defendant had contracted previously with the plaintiff on
another transaction and that Mr Dekker of the defendant
had dealt
with Mr Botha junior in the concluding of the order. He conceded that
the order was in the name of the defendant. He
testified that the
employer on the project in issue was Eskom and the principal
contractor, MMB. The defendant was, he said, the
consulting engineer
appointed by MMB to design and manage the project. He testified
further that the defendant was contracted by
the proprietor of MMB,
Mr Lefu Motaung to arrange sub-contractors to perform work on the
project. The arrangement between the defendant
and MMB was thus, he
said, that MMB would then pay the sub-contractors so ‘arranged’
directly.
[18]
The plaintiff
was, according to Mr Ahlstrom, one such sub-contractor. Mr Ahlstrom
testified that it was known to the plaintiff that
the defendant was
acting in the capacity as agent and not as principal in concluding
the contract.
[19]
Mr
Ahlstrom sought to suggest that, by virtue of the reference to Mr
Motaung in Mr Lishea’s letter confirming that the work
could
commence, the plaintiff ought to have inferred that Mr Motaung was
the principal contractor. This, in circumstances where
the letter
makes no mention of MMB but only of Mr Lefu Motaung in his personal
capacity. Both Messrs Botha confirmed that they
were under the
impression that Mr Motaung was in charge of the security on site and
that there was no reason for them to believe
that he was, in fact,
the principal contractor.
[20]
After
the plaintiff had left the site, the project suffered a setback when
there was an acid spill which compromised the floor of
the tank. Mr
Ahlstrom explained that he then negotiated an arrangement with Mr
Botha junior to the effect that the plaintiff would
come back onto
site and deal with the spill if it were paid an interim amount of
R100 000 on the account. It appears from
the correspondence,
which I examine in more detail later, that the amount of R
100 000 was ultimately paid by Mr Ahlstrom.
He testified that he
‘personally’ paid this money to get the project back on
track. He then suggested that it had been
a loan to MMB.
[21]
When asked,
in examination in chief, what his comment was on the evidence of Mr
Botha senior that he had no knowledge of Mr Motaung
being the
representative of the principal contractor until this was raised in a
letter ex post facto, Mr Ahlstrom testified somewhat
hesitatingly, as
follows:
“
Mr
van Gass
:
Mr Botha senior said that the first time he heard of a third party or
Lefu Motaung is when you wrote
the
letter of 7 May 2019
.
What would you say in response to that?
Mr
Ahlstrom
:
Uhm,
it is not true because uhm Mr Vernon Botha phoned me in January to
ask for his money that was not paid. Uhm I said to him,
I am not the
guy that you need to phone. You need to phone Lefu Motaung of Mokoro
Business Zone. And uhm I described that the only
time that we will
get the monies we all as in ASDE [the defendant], them and Motaung is
when the contract is finished because,
at that point in time, he was,
they moved off site. So, it is after they moved off site that they
started harassing us for, for
monies they were due for a project that
was not finished. That, that uhm that is my answer. “(Emphasis
added).
[22]
This letter of 07 May is
important in that it is the first communication emanating from
the
defendant which suddenly raises the alleged agency. I examine this
letter later in the context of the correspondence.
[23]
A further
reason posited by Mr Ahlstrom as to why the plaintiff should have
known that it was contracting with MMB was because the
only manner in
which workman could access the site was by abiding by safety
protocols which were imposed by Eskom through the principal
contractor and the documentation relating to these protocols
reflected that MMB was the principal contractor on the project. The
point appears to be that the plaintiff should have known that the
defendant was a sub-contractor and not the principal contractor.
The
implication seems to be that one sub-contractor would not usually
contract in its own name with another sub-contractor.
[24]
However, Mr
Ahlstrom conceded that the relationship with Mr Motaung was not the
usual building contract. For a start there was no
written agreement
between the defendant and MMB and there seems to have been a
significant lack of clarity and formality in the
relationship between
Mr Ahlstrom and Mr Motaung. He testified as follows in relation to
this relationship:
“
Ms
Shahim
:
So why was it not put in writing in this instance?
Mr
Ahlstrom
: Because the, the, because
Lefu Mokoro [seemingly a reference to Mr Motuang] asked us for
assistance. And it was a verbal agreement
that I would assist him.
And I gave him a quotation and he agree, he said yes he agrees to
this quotation. And that is why I assisted
him with this.”
[25]
Mr Ahlstrom’s
evidence was to the effect that the defendant had sourced a number of
quotations including that of the plaintiff
and that he had passed
them on to Mr Motaung who decided that the plaintiff’s
quotation was the most cost effective and thereupon
the defendant had
contracted with the plaintiff in accordance with the quotation.
[26]
Mr Ahlstrom,
under cross examination, admitted that he had not specifically told
the plaintiff that he was acting on behalf of MMB.
He stated - ‘it
was inferred.’
[27]
Mr Ahlstrom
conceded that there was no evidence in the trial bundle that the
quotation in issue had been sent by the defendant to
MMB. He conceded
also that he did not ask the plaintiff to send the quotation to MMB.
He furthermore conceded that he ‘made
an error’ when the
defendant received the first invoices in the name of the defendant by
not asking that it be corrected
and sent to MMB.
[28]
As is often the case, reference
to the correspondence in the determination of the true
intention of
the parties and the true state of affairs is instructive.
[29]
In response to a tax invoice
sent by Ms Dianne Munnik, the accounts administrator of the
plaintiff
reflecting the amount of R 444 716 .89 to be due, Mr Ahlstrom
wrote the following:
‘
Please note that
the work has [not] been completed yet on site. Please invoice upon
completed works.’
[30]
Later, after yet a further
demand had been made, Mr Ahlstrom wrote the following to Mrs
Munnik:
‘
Please forward
quantities used to prove your monthly claim. Also, send sign off of
quantities by on site foreman to verify claim’.
[31]
These are not responses which
one would expect from a person who believes the contact
is not with
his company. The clear implication is not that the amount is not
owed, but rather that ,in relation the first email,
the invoice is
premature and in relation to the second, that information verifying
the claim is sought. This is telling. A picture
is created of a
person who is casting about to find some way to avoid paying a debt
which is due.
[32]
The exchange continued with Mr
Ahlstrom writing the following to Ms Munnik and Mr Botha
junior:
‘
Dianne, Trenton,
Can I please remind you
that your QCP was only approved on Friday 29 March 2019. Thus, Verni
needs to invoice us and only on invoice
received it is 30 days
payment terms.
Your method of sending us a statement dating back
to the 1" of march is rather inappropriate. Also, your statement
doesn't
reflect our R100 000.00 payment to complete the work. Please
send through your invoice as per quoted price.
I trust that this
will be in order,’ (Emphasis added.)
[33]
Mr Botha junior replied as
follows:
‘
Carl,
Trust you well? If you
read the email sent from Di, it is automatically generated by our
accounting system, so not inappropriate.
I'd like to bring your
attention to our quotation which you accepted.
The payment terms
accepted are "PROGRESSIVE MONTHLY CLAIMS PAID 30 DAYS FROM
INVOICE" so on this premise we will accept
the final payment 30
days from QCP sign off, i.e. paid at the end of April. However, the
invoice which you only paid 100K towards
is a progress claim for
verticals and is way overdue. Kindly send through POP asap.’
(Emphasis added.)
[34]
Further demands for payment
followed and the relationship between the parties deteriorated
further. The state of affairs appears clear. The payment was due but
payment was not flowing from Eskom.
[35]
It was at this point that Mr
Ahlstrom wrote the letter of 07 May 2019. The letter amounts
to a
volte- face
from a position that payment was not
yet
due
to a position that it was not due
at all
.
[36]
The letter of 07 May has been
carefully crafted. It sets out at some length the project
structure
and the various roles and responsibilities of the parties on site. It
states the following in relation to its role in
the debacle:
‘
3. CURRENT
FINANCIAL STATUS AND FAILURE OF PAYMENT
ASDE is the
designer and quality manager of the project and specified that the
Client (ESKOM) should use the Acid Proofing Tile
that Verni
manufactures. This tile is a good quality tile and requires a
specialist to install. MOTAUNG AND MOKORO BUSINESSZONE
requested that
ASDE (PTY) LTD to require a quotation from VERNI as to what it will
cost to install the tiles for this project.
VERNI issued a quote
addressed to ASDE (PTY) LTD. MOTAUNG AND MOKORO BUSINESSZONE accepted
the quote verbally and instructed ASDE
(PTY) LTD to arrange for VERNI
to install the tiles. ASDE (PTY) LTD in good faith and in the success
of the project instructed
VERNI to continue.
It is at this point
everyone understood the contract and VERNI sent their workers whom
underwent full site induction under the authority
of the principle
contractor (MMB). All VERNI staff got access cards with MMB as
principle contractor.”
[37]
The letter goes on to cast blame
on the plaintiff for the non-payment. Mr Ahlstrom stated
that after
it had contracted with the plaintiff, it was incumbent on the
plaintiff to have sought out MMB and ‘fixed a contract
with it.
This portion of the letter reads as follows:
‘
4. CONSEQUENCES OF
LACK OF CORPORATE PROCEDURES
It is of ASDE (PTY)
LTD opinion that VERNI knew from the beginning of the project that
MOTAUNG AND MOKORO BUSINESSZONE was the principle
contractor and
didn't fix a contract with them directly. The lack of corporate
governance on Verni's side is not the problem of
ASDE (PTY) LTD and
payment needs to be extracted from MOTAUNG AND MOKORO BUSINESSZONE.’
[38]
Thus, it
appears clear that Mr Ahlstrom did not dispute liability until it
became clear that money would not flow to the defendant
from the
project via MMB.
[39]
The following
further aspects of the evidence are, to my mind, important in
relation to the probabilities:
·
There was no indication that the quotation was
sought on behalf of MMB;
·
The quotation was sent in the name of the
defendant and this was accepted without demur.
·
The defendant instructed the plaintiff to commence
work.
·
It was only on in May 2019 and when the matter of
non-payment had reached the stage of dispute, that Mr Ahlstrom denied
that the
defendant was the contracting party and stated that the
defendant was acting as agent for the main contractor on the project,
MMB.
·
There was no documentary evidence that showed that
the quotation had been emailed to MMB by the defendant.
·
In the letter of 07 May, Mr Ahlstrom went as far
as to suggest that the plaintiff should seek payment directly from
Eskom and not
MMB.
·
There was no independent evidence of an agency
agreement between MMB and the defendant.
·
The high watermark of the evidence as to the
knowledge of the plaintiff that it was contracting through the agency
of the defendant
with a third party is that this should have been
inferred from the fact that Mr Motuang was the person charged with
statutory safety
requirements on site that this meant that he was the
main contractor on the project.
·
Messrs Botha Junior and senior were good witnesses
and their evidence that they had no knowledge that they were dealing
with anyone
other than the plaintiff is compelling, particularly due
to the fact that it is common cause that the plaintiff never had
dealings
directly with MMB and the documents all reflect, on the face
of then, that the defendant was acting as principal.
·
Mr Ahlstrom was hard pressed to suggest that there
was any firm evidence to suggest that the plaintiff was aware of the
alleged
agency and, to his credit, he conceded this point.
The
disputes
[40]
Ms
Shahim argues that agency has not been properly pleaded. She says
that even if it had been pleaded, the case has not been established
on the evidence. I move to deal with each of these arguments.
Agency not pleaded
[41]
Ms Shahim
argues that a distillation of the plea reveals the case of the
defendant to be that, in performing the work, the plaintiff
was not
acting as the defendant’s agent but rather that the defendant
had entered into an agreement with MMB and that the
plaintiff
performed under this agreement.
[42]
She argues that the defendants
plea is so poorly constructed that its case is difficult
to fathom.
[43]
Whilst I
accept that the plea is not a model of clarity, I must also consider
that no exception was taken to the pleadings and that
there was no
objection to the leading of the evidence relating to the alleged
agency. In the circumstances, it is my inclination
to deal with the
matter on the merits.
[44]
Mr van
Gass clarified, in argument, that the case of the defendant is that
the defendant concluded the agreement with the plaintiff
not as
principal but as agent.
[45]
Thus the question to be
determined is whether the defendant has established the agency
on the
facts.
Has the defendant
established the defence of agency?
[46]
From all the
evidence, it appears clear that the defendant did not act as agent.
It entered into the agreement in its own name.
[47]
There is no
basis to find, on the evidence, that the contract was not that as set
out in the written quotation by the plaintiff.
The evidence shows no
engagement by the defendant with the transaction on the basis that it
was not, itself, the contracting party
until the demand for payment
was made. There was, furthermore, no evidence of the alleged agency
agreement between the defendant
and MMB. Mr Motuang was never called.
Mr van Gass told me from the Bar that the defendant ‘couldn’t
find him.’
I was not told of any steps taken to locate Mr
Motuang.
[48]
The defendant
appears to rely on the mere fact that it was not the principal
contractor on the project to suggest that the plaintiff
should have
known that it was contracting through an agent. Clearly this does not
suffice, particularly in light of the concession
that the
relationship with Mr Motaung was not clear.
[49]
Whatever the relationship
between Messrs Motaung and Alstrom, it is clear that Mr Ahlstrom
did
not convey to anyone that he was acting as agent.
[50]
Even
if one accepts that Mr Ahlstrom was acting as agent on the basis of
an agreement between himself and Mr Motuang, which, to
my mind is
unlikely, his failure to disclose this agency is fatal to the
defendants case on the basis of the doctrine of the undisclosed
principal. In terms of this doctrine an agent who does not disclose
that he is acting as an agent is personally liable.
[1]
Conclusion
[51]
In the circumstances, I find
that the defendant has failed to establish on the facts (i)
that
there was an agreement between MMB and the defendant that the
defendant would act as agent for MMB in concluding the agreement
with
the plaintiff and (ii) that, in concluding the agreement, it acted as
agent.
[52]
On the probabilities, it emerges
that the defendant entered into the agreement as principal
and that
when it was not paid by its client, MMB it sought to suggest that the
payment should be obtained from MMB directly.
[53]
There was
also some alleged consternation as to the quantum. The respondent
alleged that there was a miscalculation of the amount
due in the
amount of between R25 000 and R30 000. Despite my attempts to
attain some agreement between counsel as to the quantum
or some
clarity from Mr van Gass as to the basis for the proposed reduction
of the claim, none was forthcoming. The defendant has
thus shown no
basis on which the claim made in the summons should be reduced.
[54]
The payment
was due in terms of the statement, but the plaintiff did not
specifically plead nor prove the mora date. It is thus
proper that it
be dealt with on the basis of the demand. This was made at the
beginning of May 2019. It seems to me that a proper
date for the
interest to run from is thus 01 June 2019.
[55]
The
rate of interest was said in terms of the plaintiff’s standard
terms and conditions to be charged at ABSA’s prime
overdraft
rate.
[56]
The defendant
disputed that it received the terms and conditions which included
this rate as well as a provision for attorney/client
costs for
recovery of the amounts owing. There was no proof that the terms and
conditions were sent. The quotation states that
the terms and
conditions are available on request. The plaintiff has, to my mind,
not established that these standard terms applied.
The plaintiff also
did not establish the rate of interest claimed. In the circumstances,
I will not award costs on the attorney
and client scale as per the
agreement. I will furthermore grant interest at the prescribed rate.
Costs
[57]
Ms Shahim
argued that the costs should be paid on a punitive scale in that the
defence raised was so patently without any merit
that the only
conclusion to be drawn was that it was vexatious.
[58]
Whilst there
are elements of vexatious conduct which extend even to the manner in
which Mr van Gass has conducted the proceedings,
to my mind, this is
not sufficient to attract a punitive order. Arguably, this matter
should have been dealt with by way of exception
– but I make no
finding in this regard.
Third
party claim
[59]
Although the case for the
postponement of the third party claim was not made on any cogent
basis, I am not disposed to unsuit the defendant as against the third
party at this stage – whatever that may be worth in
due course.
Order
[60]
In all the
circumstances I make the following order:
1.
The defendant is to pay the plaintiff R430 659.29.
2.
The defendant is to pay the plaintiff interest on
this amount at the prescribed rate of interest such interest to run
from 01 June
2019 to date of payment.
3.
The defendant is to pay the costs of the action as
well as all reserved costs relating to the case.
4.
The defendant’s case against the Third Party
is postponed sine die.
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 08 -10 February 2022
, matter then postponed sine die
for the typing of the record and subsequent delivery of heads of
argument.
Heads
of argument
:
Plaintiff
duly delivered heads to office of Fisher J on
March
2022
as
directed.
Defendant
failed to deliver heads to the office of Fisher J; the attention of
Fisher J was directed to the defendant’s heads
(which had been
filed but not delivered to Fisher J) only on
27 June 2022
.
Judgment
delivered:
04 July 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv C Shahim.
Instructed
by
:
Thomson Wilks Inc.
For
the 1
st
Defendant:
Adv L van Gass
Instructed
by
:
Van der Merwe & Van der
Merwe Attorneys.
[1]
See :
Cullinan
v Noordkaaplandse Aartappelkernmoerkwekers Kooperasie Bpk
1972 (1) S 761 (A) 767.
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