Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 476South Africa
Bidvest Bank Limited v Kwane Fleet Services (PTY) Limited and Another (2021/44121) [2022] ZAGPJHC 476 (22 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bidvest Bank Limited v Kwane Fleet Services (PTY) Limited and Another (2021/44121) [2022] ZAGPJHC 476 (22 July 2022)
Bidvest Bank Limited v Kwane Fleet Services (PTY) Limited and Another (2021/44121) [2022] ZAGPJHC 476 (22 July 2022)
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sino date 22 July 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No.: 2021/44121
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
Date:22/07/2022
In
the matter between:
BIDVEST BANK LIMITED
Applicant
and
KWANE
FLEET SERVICES (PTY) LIMITED
First Respondent
RAND
WEST CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The applicant sold various vehicles and other
equipment (“the
vehicles) to the first respondent in terms of an instalment sale
agreement (“the agreement”)
pursuant to which it reserved
ownership. The first respondent then, with the knowledge of the
applicant, on sold this equipment
to the second respondent
municipality. It is not disputed that the municipality uses the
vehicles in discharging its constitutional
objectives of ensuring the
provision of services to the communities and in promoting a safe and
healthy environment as provided
for in sections 152(1)(b) and (d) of
the Constitution, such as in making road markings, for waste and
effluent removal and on landfill
sites.
2.
The first respondent defaulted on the monthly
payments under
agreement, which resulted in the applicant instituting these motion
proceedings for the recovery of the full outstanding
indebtedness
under the agreement, and failing payment thereof, the repossession of
the vehicles.
3.
The first respondent opposed the matter primarily
on the basis that
it disputed the outstanding quantum and that this dispute was
sufficient to trigger the dispute resolution clause
in the agreement,
which provided that any dispute arising out of or in connection with
the agreement must, if not resolved by the
parties’ senior
executives, be submitted to arbitration.
4.
The municipality, which was cited by the applicant
as the second
respondent, opposed the application and sought its dismissal on the
basis that the applicant in seeking to repossess
the vehicles would
prejudice the municipality in delivering upon its constitutional
mandate to the communities that it served.
5.
Presumably having
realised that it may not have done enough in its answering affidavit
for there to be an arbitral dispute sufficient
to trigger the
arbitration clause, the first respondent shortly before the hearing
delivered a supplementary answering affidavit
in which it adduced
expert evidence by a registered accountant and auditor under oath
seeking to demonstrate that there was a basis
for disputing the
quantum of the applicant’s claim. The first respondent in that
supplementary affidavit asserts that based
upon its expert evidence
its indebtedness to the applicant is R39 878 711.09 and
that the updated amount as as claimed
by the applicant is
incorrect.
[1]
6.
The first respondent effectively admitted
its indebtedness to the
applicant in the amount as calculated by its expert, but disputed the
balance.
7.
The issue that crystalised before me what
was to be done with the
balance of the claim, which the first respondent disputed. More
particular, was this dispute in relation
to the balance, to use the
language of Gauntlett AJ in
Delfante v Delta Electrical
Industries Limited
1992 (2) SA 221
(C) at 227F-H sufficiently
palpable and genuine to constitute a dispute that would trigger the
arbitration clause, and so require
these proceedings to be stayed
pending the outcome of arbitration proceedings?
8.
The municipality, who had no contractual relationship
with the
applicant as it was not a party to the instalment sale agreement
between the applicant and the first respondent and also
perhaps
realising that it may not have made out a case in its answering
affidavit why the relief sought by the applicant should
not be
granted, at the eleventh hour as the first respondent had done,
delivered a supplementary affidavit. In that affidavit the
municipality, relying upon the court’s powers in terms of
section 172(1) of the Constitution to make any order that
is
just and equitable when deciding a constitutional matter within its
power, sought that should the court be inclined to grant
a
repossession order against the first respondent, the execution of
that order be stayed for 180 days to enable the municipality
to
effectively make alternative arrangements with a new service provider
for the provision of vehicles that would be needed to
continue to
render those services that the municipality was presently rendering
to the community using the financed vehicles. As
part of this remedy
the municipality also indicated that it would make payment to the
applicant of the monthly amounts due under
the agreement for the
duration of that six-month suspension period.
9.
During the lunch adjournment, the parties
agreed that the dispute
relating to the balance of the applicant’s claim should be
referred to arbitration and that therefore
there was no need for the
court to decide this dispute on the papers and/or whether it
triggered the arbitration clause.
10.
The parties were also able to agree upon a formulation of a
suspension
of execution to address the municipality’s concerns
in relation to continued service delivery. It therefore also became
unnecessary
for me to decide to what extent the court was able to and
should make the order sought by the municipality as falling within
the
ambit of section 172 of the Constitution.
11.
The parties prepared and agreed upon a draft order in terms of which
inter alia
the first respondent is ordered to make
payment of the admitted portion of the indebtedness, that the dispute
in relation to the
balance of the indebtedness is to be determined in
arbitration as provided for in the agreement and that should the
first respondent
fail to make payment of the admitted indebtedness,
then the vehicles would be repossessed, save that the repossession
would not
take place for a period of six months provided that the
second respondent made payment of monthly instalments in respect of
those
vehicles for that six-month period.
12.
What the parties could not reach agreement on was the issue of costs
and the date by which the first respondent had to make payment of the
admitted portion of the indebtedness, and so requires the
court to
determine these two issues.
13.
The applicant submits that the first respondent should be ordered
to
make payment of the admitted indebtedness within ten days of the
order. In contrast, the first respondent contends that thirty
days is
appropriate. The applicant in support of its position stated that
ordinarily the order would be executable immediately
and therefore a
ten-day period was more than reasonable. The applicant also pointed
out that in the event that payment only had
to be made within thirty
days, this would have a knock-on effect on the second respondent’s
obligation to make payments of
the monthly instalments commencing on
1 August 2022 should the first respondent not make payment of
the admitted indebtedness.
14.
The municipality did not raise any difficulty as to its ability to
make payment of the first instalment on 1 August 2022, as
provided for in the draft order. In my view, the first respondent
should be afforded until 12 August 2022 in which to make payment
of the admitted indebtedness. The municipality’s obligation
to
make the first instalment if the first respondent does not pay the
admitted indebtedness by 12 August 2022 is adjusted to 15 August
2022, with the succeeding instalments to be paid on the first day of
each month, commencing on 1 September 2022. The municipality
is
not prejudiced in that it effectively has two weeks longer to make
payment of the first instalment than otherwise proposed in
the draft
order.
15.
In relation to the issue of costs, the applicant seeks that the first
and second respondents be ordered to pay the costs of the applicant
jointly and severally. The applicant submits that it has had
substantial success, particularly given that the admitted portion of
the indebtedness was only admitted shortly before the hearing.
The
applicant submits that the arbitration proceedings and the costs that
will follow thereupon would take care of who should bear
the costs in
relation to the dispute that remains between the parties, and the
referral of that dispute to arbitration should not
detract from a
favourable costs order in its favour in these proceedings.
16.
The municipality during the course of argument adopted the position
that it did not seek any costs against any party and that no costs
should be granted against it.
17.
I agree that the applicant has had substantial success and is
entitled
to the costs of the application. It was only very late that
the first respondent submitted its supplementary affidavit, and which
contributed to the agreed proposed order.
18.
Insofar as the second respondent is concerned, the second respondent,
although not a party to the agreement, opposed the application,
delivered an answering affidavit and heads of argument and sought
that the application be dismissed in its entirety. Even in its
belated supplementary affidavit of 19 July 2022, it still persisted
that the application be dismissed in its entirety while
simultaneously seeking, incongruently, some form of equitable relief
in
terms of section 172 of the Constitution. It was only during the
course of argument that the municipality relented, appreciating
that
the crafting of an equitable remedy did not allow for a dismissal of
the application in its entirety.
19.
Although opposing the application, the municipality raised no legally
cognisable defence against the applicant. The municipality could have
from the outset sought to rely upon section 172 and to advance
an
appropriate remedy, but did not do so until the eleventh hour.
20.
In my view, the second respondent should be liable for the
applicant’s
costs arising from the opposition, jointly and
severally with the first respondent.
21.
An adaption that I have made to the draft order other than in
relation
to the two issues above is to provide for a stay of the
application in relation to the dispute that is to be decided in
arbitration,
thereby enabling the parties to return to court in these
proceedings under this case consequent upon the outcome of the
arbitration
proceedings, should that become necessary and so avoid
the need for proceedings to start afresh to enforce any arbitration
award
as may be made.
22.
Finally, I wish to express my gratitude to the legal representatives
of all three parties in the manner in which the hearing was conducted
and their co operation with each other in reaching such
agreement as they did upon most of the order to be granted.
23.
The following order is granted:
23.1. The Master Agreement in
respect of the purchase and sale of vehicles on instalment sale,
dated 26 March 2019 (annexed
as “FA3” to the founding
affidavit) (“the Master Agreement”) is rectified by the
substitution of “Kwane
Capital (Pty) Limited”, wherever
it appears, with “Kwane Fleet Services (Pty) Limited”.
23.2. The first respondent is to
pay the applicant by 12 August 2022:
23.2.1.
R39 878 711.09;
23.2.2.
interest on the aforesaid amount at the rate of 10.25% (being the
current prime
rate of 8.25% plus 2%) per annum calculated daily and
compounded monthly from 1 July 2022 to date of payment.
23.3. The balance of the
applicant’s claim, as set out in the notice of motion and
affidavits is referred to arbitration
in terms of the provisions of
the Master Agreement, as rectified.
23.4. To the extent that the
first respondent fails to make payment to the applicant as set out in
sub-paragraph 2 above,
the following vehicles, currently in the
possession of the second respondent, are to be attached by the
sheriff having jurisdiction
or his deputy, wherever they may be found
and are to be forthwith delivered into the possession of the
applicant:
23.4.1.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.2.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.3.
D2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.4.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.5.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.6.
Deal number
2197336
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR
C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.7.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.8.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.9.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.10.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.11.
2019 CWE330 (E44) 6X4 A/T COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.12.
2019 PKE 250 (H37) 4X2 A/T
COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.13.
2019 PKE 250 (H37) 4X2 A/T
COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.14.
2019 PKE 250 (H37) 4X2 A/T
COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.15.
2019 PKE 250 (H37) 4X2 A/T
COMPACTOR C/C
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.16.
2019 CAT 426F2
BACKHOE LOADER 4X4
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.17.
2019 CAT MD320D2
WHEEL EXCAVATOR
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.18.
2019 CAT 426FE
BACKHOE LOADER 4X4
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.19.
2019 N-SERIES NPR 400 CREW
CAB AT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.20.
2019 CANTER LIFT FEB-150
AMT DC
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: 4P10A88333
23.4.21.
2019 CANTER LIFT FEB-150
AMT DC
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.22.
2019 N-SERIES MNR 250 AMT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.23.
2019 N-SERIES MNR 250 AMT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.24.
2019 N-SERIES NPR 400 CREW
CAB AT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.25.
2019 N-SERIES NPR 400 CREW
CAB AT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.26.
2019 N-SERIES NPR 400 CREW
CAB AT
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.27.
2019 F-SERIES FVZ 1400 CREW
CAB AT
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.28.
2019 UD CWE330 (E42) 6X4
A/T
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
23.4.29.
2019 N-SERIES NPR 400 CREW
CAB A/T
Registration Number: [....]
Chassis Number: [....]
Engine Number: [....]
(“the vehicles”).
23.5. The order in terms of
sub-paragraph 4 above is suspended for a period of 6 months,
calculated from the date of this
order, subject thereto that the
second respondent pay an amount equal to the monthly instalment,
inclusive of the services, with
respect to the vehicles in an amount
of R1 914 079.28, commencing on 15 August 2022 and
thereafter on or before the 1
st
day of each subsequent
month commencing 1 September 2022 for the duration of the 6-month
suspension period.
23.6. In the event that the
second respondent fails to make any payment as is set out in the
preceding sub-paragraph, the
applicant shall be entitled to pursue
execution for recovery of any amount due and unpaid and to act
pursuant to sub-paragraph
4 above in taking possession of the
vehicles.
23.7. Any abatement claimed by
the first respondent and arising from any payment made by second
respondent pursuant to this
order shall stand to be determined in the
arbitration referred to in sub-paragraph 3 above. Any payments made
by second respondent
to the applicant which were not accounted for in
the first respondent’s expert report, shall stand to be
determined in those
arbitration proceedings.
23.8. This application is stayed
in relation to the dispute referred to arbitration pending the
outcome of the arbitration.
23.9. The first respondent is to
pay the applicant’s costs.
23.10.
The second respondent
is to pay the applicant’s costs arising
from the opposition in these proceedings, jointly and severally with
the first respondent.
Gilbert
AJ
Date
of hearing:
20 July 2022
Date
of judgment:
22 July 2022
Counsel
for the applicant:
Advocate G Kairinos SC
Instructed
by:
Du Toit Sanchez-Moodley Inc
Counsel
for the first respondent:
Advocate N Lewis
Instructed
by:
Magagula Attorneys
Counsel
for the second respondent: Advocate O
Mokgotho
Instructed
by:
De Swardt Myambo Hlahla Attorneys
[1]
On
18 July 2022 the applicant delivered a supplementary affidavit
giving an updated outstanding indebtedness, as at 18 July 2022,
of
R44, 004, 415.04, together with interest thereon at the prime rate
of 2% per annum as from 15 July 2022, having taken into
account
certain payments that had since been made.
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