Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 616South Africa
Africa Best Foods (PTY) Ltd v DSV South Africa (PTY) Ltd (42576/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 616 (29 August 2022)
Headnotes
the exception rule cannot be used in a case to attack (the vagueness of) a contract relied upon by a party, an exception is only concerned with pleadings. Hence in considering the pleadings the signed agreement between the parties is not relied upon by the Plaintiff to establish the cause of action. The Plaintiff has not pleaded any contractual terms and conditions to support its delictual claim. Neither is the agreement POC1 pleaded to be incorporated by reference. Plaintiff bases its cause of action on the lack of duty of care which surfaces outside the signed agreement.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Africa Best Foods (PTY) Ltd v DSV South Africa (PTY) Ltd (42576/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 616 (29 August 2022)
Africa Best Foods (PTY) Ltd v DSV South Africa (PTY) Ltd (42576/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 616 (29 August 2022)
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sino date 29 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 42576/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
NOT
REVISED
29/08/2022
In
the matter between:
AFRICA’S
BEST FOODS (PTY) LTD
PLAINTIFF
And
DSV
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
DEFENDANT / EXCIPIENT
The judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties and or parties’
representatives by e-mail and by
being uploaded to Caselines. The
date and time for the hand down is deemed on 29 August 2022 at 12H00.
J U D G M E N T
FRANCIS-SUBBIAH,
AJ
[1]
The plaintiff entered into an agreement with the Defendant for the
transportation
of wild mushrooms from South Africa to Italy by sea
freight. Flowing from a dispute arising out of this business
relationship the
Plaintiff issues summons against the Defendant
alleging that the Defendant failed to exercise its duty of care
resulting in the
Plaintiff suffering damages. In response thereto the
Defendant raises an exception to the Plaintiff’s particulars of
claim
submitting that it is bad in law or lacks averments to sustain
a cause of action.
[2]
The Defendant’s amended exception was filed on 28 February 2022
which sets out
the grounds for its exception. These grounds are based
on the contentions that all interaction between the parties is
governed
by the provisions of the written agreement referred to as
“POC1”.
[3]
The Defendant contends that the Plaintiff has failed to plead the
basis in fact and
or law for the existence and or imposition of an
extra-contractual legal duty outside the agreement. Plaintiff’s
claim is
one for pure economic loss, masquerading as a lack of duty
of care. If properly construed the claim is based on the Defendant’s
breach of contractual obligations in terms of the agreement. Such a
claim does not fall within the provisions of clause 40.1.8
of the
agreement and therefore excludes delictual liability. The express
terms of clauses 3,4,7,12, 40.1 and 40.2 in the agreement
also
excludes the Defendant’s delictual liability. Therefore, the
Plaintiff’s claim should be construed to be bad in
law or
alternatively lacks averments to sustain a cause of action and should
be struck off in its entirety.
Background of the matter
[4]
The particulars of claim set out that the Defendant provided sea
freight services
to the Plaintiff for the export of the wild
mushrooms to its customer in Italy in a 20RE reefer container at the
temperature of
minus eighteen degrees Celsius (-18
°
C
)
on the Maersk Shipping Line. When the mushrooms arrived in Italy it
was found that some of the mushrooms had deteriorated as a
result of
product oxidation. The plaintiff’s customer instituted a claim
against the Plaintiff for Ten Thousand Euros, (
€
10 000)
for the loss of the deteriorated mushrooms.
[5]
Following this occurrence, the Plaintiff requested the Defendant to
provide the Maersk
temperature reports relating to the transportation
of the mushrooms from South Africa to Italy. These temperature
reports are accessible
from Maersk’s electronic platform only
to the Defendant. The purpose for requesting the temperature reports
was to institute
a claim to the Plaintiff’s Marine Insurer for
the loss of the deteriorated mushrooms. However, despite numerous
requests
and mutual discussions between the parties (until date of
hearing) the Defendant failed to provide the appropriate Maersk
temperature
reports.
[6]
Due to the defendant’s failure to provide these temperature
reports timeously
and upon request the Plaintiff could not lodge a
claim with its Marine Insurer and is now subject to a direct claim by
its customer.
The plaintiff complains that arising from a duty of
care to provide the temperature reports, the defendant is by default
grossly
negligent and liable for the sustained consequential damages
in the amount of Ten Thousand Euros. The mushrooms were strictly
required
to remain refrigerated during transit at the temperature of
minus eighteen degrees Celsius and due to the Defendant failing to
provide the temperature reports it is liable in delict.
The legal test on exception
[7]
Whether this is a sustainable claim as set out in the particulars of
claim is dependent
on factors including the test of negligence, duty
of care arising from a commercial relationship, whether the
contractual terms
of the agreement between the parties exclude such
liability and the question of wrongfulness in pure economic loss. But
the test
on exception is for the excipient to satisfy the court that
the conclusion of law for which the plaintiff contends in its
particulars
of claim cannot be supported upon every reasonable
interpretation that can be put upon the facts.-
H v Fetal
Assessment Centre
2015 (2) SA 193
(CC)199B.
[8]
In
Screening & Earthworks (Pty) Ltd v Captial Outsourcing
Group (Pty) Ltd
[2008] 1 SA 611
(B) it was held that the
exception rule cannot be used in a case to attack (the vagueness of)
a contract relied upon by a party,
an exception is only concerned
with pleadings. Hence in considering the pleadings the signed
agreement between the parties is not
relied upon by the Plaintiff to
establish the cause of action. The Plaintiff has not pleaded any
contractual terms and conditions
to support its delictual claim.
Neither is the agreement POC1 pleaded to be incorporated by
reference. Plaintiff bases its cause
of action on the lack of duty of
care which surfaces outside the signed agreement.
[9]
In this regard the Plaintiff submits that the requirement to provide
temperature reports
by the Defendant did not form part of any term or
condition in the contract but arose subsequently from the business
relationship
between the parties. The temperature reports could only
be provided to a customer of the Defendant who did business with the
Plaintiff.
The parties’ reciprocal duties in dealing with the
timeous lodgment of an insurance claim emerged in terms of the
parties
being in business with each other although the conclusion of
the contract was foundational to the business relationship.
Delictual liability
[10]
Courts have recognized that delictual liability may exist and be
pursued even though it is not
regulated by the contractual agreement
itself. This is evident where parties have failed to provide for
every situation arising
from a business relationship. In
G4s
Cash Solutions SA (Pty) Ltd and another v Zandspruit Cash and Carry
(Pty) Ltd and another
(A5061/2021); 23675/2012) [2022]
ZAGPJHC 7 (6 January 2022) paras 24-28, the court confirmed that a
business relationship built
upon an agreement can extend beyond the
agreement and is complimentary to it.
[11] In
Trio Engineered Products Inc v Pilot Crushtec International
(Pty) Ltd
2019 (3) SA 580
(GJ) it was held that the law does
not permit a plaintiff to pursue an alternative claim in delict for a
contractual breach because
that would violate the sanctity of the
contract between the parties and the contract must inform the cause
of action. The Defendant
relies on this judgment to show that
Plaintiff’s delictual claim is based on the Defendant’s
breach of contractual
obligations in terms of the agreement. And such
a claim does not fall within the provisions of clause 40.1.8 of the
agreement.
Clause 3 provides that all and any business conducted
between the parties are in terms of the agreement. Hence the
Defendant would
have absolutely no extra-contractual legal duty to
have transported the mushrooms at a specific temperature and
certainly no duty
to provide temperature reports to the Plaintiff if
read with clauses 40.1, 40.2 and 40.17 of the agreement. Under these
circumstances
the Defendant would not be liable for damages to the
Plaintiff.
[12]
Defendant further argues that it was the Maersk shipping line who (on
the pleaded facts) exercised
the actual custody and actual control of
the container of mushrooms at the time when the damage or loss is
alleged to have occurred.
On this score as well, the defendant
maintains it cannot be held liable for the deterioration of the
mushrooms as it was not under
its control as envisaged in clause
40.1.8 (b).
[13]
However Plaintiff relies on
Trio
to establish that a
separate legal duty arose independently of the contract. The fact
that the relationship between the parties
are governed by contract
does not make the deliberate failure of the defendant to provide the
temperature reports less accountable
of fault. As pointed out in
Lillicrap, Wassenaar and Partners v Pilkington Brothers (SA)
(Pty) Ltd
1985 (1) SA 475
(A), it is further incumbent that a
Plaintiff be able to establish that the conduct complained of is
independently wrongful without
reference to the party’s
contractual obligations. This is pleaded in the particulars of claim.
The issues giving rise to
the cause of action are both factual and
legal. Parties are therefore obliged to lead evidence -
facta
probantia
on the facts before the trial court.
[14] In
Belet Cellular v MTN Service Provider
[2014] ZASCA 181
it was held that the excipient must show that the claim does not bear
the meaning contended for by the plaintiff. In this regard
the
Defendant’s exception is based upon the interpretation of the
written agreement between the parties. It relies on clause
4 of the
agreement that the ‘sole risk’ lies with the Plaintiff.
In this regard the Defendant will have to demonstrate
that the
contract is unambiguous in relation to the pleaded claim. Since the
plaintiff does not rely on the agreement between the
parties by
alleging a claim based on the negligent breach of contract. Any
interpretation and relevance of a contract raised by
an exception may
be held to stand over for the decision at the trial especially if it
appears that the question may be interwoven
with the evidence that
will be led at the trial. The agreement must be considered in its
entirety and not in fragmented parts.
The trial court will be best
suited to pronounce on interpretations of clauses contained in the
agreement of the parties and its
relevance in entirety to the cause
of action.
[15] In
Francis v Sharp
2004 (3) SA 230
(C) 240 it was held
that an exception may be taken only when the vagueness and
embarrassment strike at the root of the cause of
action pleaded, ie
if the other party will be seriously prejudiced if the allegations
remain. No such submissions have been made
in this matter that the
Defendant will be prejudiced.
[16]
Importantly as set out in
Telematrix
Pty Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards Authority
(459/2004)
[2005] ZASCA 73
;
[2006] 1 All SA 6
(SCA) (9 September
2005) “exceptions provide a useful mechanism of weeding out
cases without legal merit.”
For
the defendant to succeed in striking out the plaintiff’s claim
it must show that the plaintiff’s claim is bad in
law. A
delictual claim based on lack of duty of care on the present facts is
not bad in law. A cause of action is made out and
may require the
leading of evidence to distinguish it from any contractual
safeguards.
An
exception therefore cannot succeed on these grounds. In circumstances
where a
Defendant
faces subjective difficulty in pleading it would be appropriate to
request further particulars. Rule 18(4) provides for
pleadings to
contain sufficient particularity to enable the opposing party to
reply thereto.
[17] In
South African National Parks v Ras
2002 (2) SA 537
(C)
at 541, it was held that unless the excipient can satisfy the court
that there is a real point of law or a real embarrassment,
the
exception should be dismissed.
[18] In
the result I am of the view that since the risk of damage to the
mushrooms was within the
contemplation of the parties, the defendant
has failed to demonstrate that the contract between the parties is
unambiguous and
that the particulars of claim are excipiable on every
interpretation.
[19] It is therefore ordered:
1.
The
exception is dismissed.
2.
The
defendant is given leave to file its plea within fifteen (15) days of
this order.
3.
The
costs are reserved and to be determined by the trial court.
R. FRANCIS-SUBBIAH
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division: Johannesburg
Appearances:
Plaintiff:
Mr W C Opperman
Instructed by C &
O Incorporated
Defendant/
Excipient:
Adv E Fasser
Instructed by
Wright, Rose-Innes Inc
Date
Heard:
15 August 2022
Date Judgment Delivered:
29 August 2022
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