Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 647South Africa
Hosi Technologies (PTY) Limited v Bebeza (A3125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 647 (6 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary of relevant facts
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 647
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Hosi Technologies (PTY) Limited v Bebeza (A3125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 647 (6 September 2022)
Hosi Technologies (PTY) Limited v Bebeza (A3125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 647 (6 September 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_647.html
sino date 6 September 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: A3125/2021
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
In the matter between:
HOSI
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LIMITED
Appellant
And
NOMVULA
BEBEZA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Todd
AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an appeal against a judgment and
order handed down in civil proceedings in the Randburg Regional Court
on 11 August 2021.
2.
The respondent had instituted proceedings
against the appellant claiming damages arising from an alleged breach
of contract. The
court
a quo
found that there had indeed been a breach of contract and ordered the
appellant to pay the respondent damages in the amount of
R72,000
together with interest, and costs.
3.
That is the order against which the
appellant now appeals.
Summary of relevant
facts
4.
The contract which gave rise to the dispute
was one under which the respondent was engaged to provide services to
the appellant
as an independent contractor.
5.
Under clause 1 of the contract the
respondent was engaged to render services as an independent
contractor in the capacity of Automation
Tester, reporting to the
“Test Lead”. The appointment was for a one year project
commencing October 2019 and ending
October 2020. The project was
described as involving work “in the BAU Division on a
non-disclosed project at MTN”.
6.
Clause 3 of the contract regulated the
performance of the services, requiring the respondent to render
services under the general
direction and to the satisfaction of the
reporting line manager and of the appellant generally, and it
precluded either party from
making alterations or additions or
variations to the services without prior written instruction and
agreement.
7.
The remainder of clause 3 of the contract
regulated termination of the contract. This provided for termination
of the contract on
three distinct grounds. The first was if the
contractor (the respondent) failed to execute her duties, in which
event the appellant
was entitled to terminate the contract on grounds
of “non-performance” on giving one week’s written
notice. This
ground is not relevant.
8.
The second ground was that either party had
a right to terminate the contract (without being required to give any
reason) by giving
the other party one month’s written notice.
The formulation of this ground in the contract was as follows:
“
Termination
of the contract by both parties will be one month’s written
notice”.
9.
The third ground provided for the automatic
termination of the contract in the event that a service level
agreement between the
appellant and MTN terminated. This ground was
formulated in the contract as follows:
“
The
Contract will also effectively terminate when the service level
agreement between Hosi Technologies (Pty) Ltd terminates, you
shall
be informed in writing of this termination.
”
10.
The background to the third ground of
termination of the contract was that the respondent, in common with
other similarly situated
independent contractors, had been engaged by
the appellant to assist in carrying out the appellant’s
obligations to MTN under
a service level agreement that had been
concluded between the appellant and MTN. It was common cause between
the parties that although
MTN was not expressly referred to in the
third ground of termination, the service level agreement being
referred to there was the
service level agreement between MTN and the
appellant. The effect of this was that if that service level
agreement came to an end,
the respondent’s contract with the
appellant would terminate at the same time.
11.
The respondent was entitled to be paid
“according to the number of hours worked in a day” at an
agreed hourly rate.
She was required to render a monthly invoice
against which she would be paid by no later than the 30
th
of each month.
12.
The source of the dispute that subsequently
arose was a communication to the appellant by MTN sent by email dated
30 April 2020.
The email reads as follows:
“
Due
to the IT budget cuts applied for our 3+9 budgets for 2020 and the
project demand across business unit expected to drop drastically,
it
is an unfortunate situation that MTN needs to let go of about 34
resources from a total of 38 across all testing streams. We
have to
reduce capacity drastically considering the available budget for the
remainder of the year and also that the project demand
is also
slowing down. The reduction of the resources is effective 4 May 2020.
The below information is how we are going to respond
to the effective
changes;
All resources
allocated to the dedicated stream will not be required as of 4 May
2020 and should not continue under those projects.
Unless if the
testers allocated are paid from the business budget.
…
Please
take note that MTN is not cancelling the contractual agreement for
the testing services, as in when resources are required
a service
request will be sent to all suppliers and follow a fair process to
onboard required capacity going forward.
”
13.
It is common cause that this communication
from MTN signaled a dramatic reduction in the volume of work that the
appellant would
be required to deliver to MTN. It was also common
cause, however, that it did not serve to terminate the service level
agreement
between MTN and the appellant.
14.
Having received this communication from MTN
the appellant’s response as regards the respondent and
similarly situated independent
contractors was to inform them that by
reason of the provisions of clause 3 of their contracts, their
contracts were terminated
with immediate effect.
15.
Specifically, the appellant communicated to
the respondent, by letter dated 4 May 2020, that “
due
to the extraordinary circumstances the company finds itself in due to
the Covid 19 situation and the restrictions implemented
by the
Government to contain the situation, we as Hosi Technologies have
taken a decision to terminate your contract due to our
clients
conditions that have deteriorated to an unprecedented level and them
having to drastically reducing headcount
(sic)”.
The letter concluded that should the situation change and the company
find itself in a better position it would “afford
you the first
opportunity”.
16.
This stance was queried by the respondent,
who pointed out that each party had a right under the contract to
give one month’s
notice to terminate the contract. The
respondent contended that the contractual consequence of the
termination of the service level
agreement by MTN could not be
invoked because that was not what had occurred.
17.
The response to this, communicated by email
from the appellant’s Mr Mkhacana, was that “
as
per the agreement if the SLA is terminated the agreement between you
and Hosi effectively terminates no notice period is due
”.
18.
There were subsequent interactions between
the parties in which they restated their respective positions. These
further interactions
did not serve to resolve matters and are not
further relevant for present purposes.
Decision of the court
a quo
19.
The court
a
quo
found that it was clear that
partial cancellation of the Service Level Agreement between the
appellant and the MTN had not been
considered or provided for in
terms of the contract concluded between the parties, and that this
was not a ground for termination
of the contract by the appellant
without invoking the 30 day notice period.
20.
The court also accepted the appellant’s
contention that it had been unable to perform under the contract on
grounds of supervening
impossibility of performance, and found that
it was impossible for the appellant to perform under the contract
because it did not
have automation testing projects allocated to it
by MTN that it could offer to the respondent for the further duration
of her contract.
21.
The court ordered the appellant to pay
damages in an amount equivalent to the respondent’s loss of
earnings during the notice
period, being the amount of R72,000. This
was the average of the monthly fees that the respondent had received
during the period
of the contract prior to its termination.
Issues in the appeal
22.
In this appeal the appellant advances two
main contentions. The first is that the court
a
quo
erred in its interpretation of the
contract, and should have found that, properly interpreted, the
contract terminated automatically
when MTN gave notice that it no
longer required the appellant to provide the services that had thus
far been rendered by the respondent.
In other words, the appellant
contends that on the facts the court should have found that the
contract had terminated on the third
ground provided for in clause 3
of the contract (referred to in paragraph 9 above).
23.
The appellant’s second main
contention is that in light of the conclusion the court
a
quo
had reached that there was a
supervening impossibility of performance, the court erred in finding
that the appellant was nevertheless
obliged to give notice to
terminate the contract, and that it should have concluded that in
those circumstances, even if this was
not a situation contemplated in
the third ground of termination provided for in the contract, no
notice was required.
Analysis
24.
As regards the appellant’s first
contention Mr Modiba, counsel appearing for the appellant, submitted
that on a proper interpretation
of the provisions of the contract the
third ground of termination provided for in the contract was
sufficiently broad, having regard
to its rationale and the presumed
intentions of the parties when they concluded the contract, to extend
to a situation in which
the service level agreement with MTN did not
terminate, but where only the services specifically provided by the
respondent were
no longer required by MTN.
25.
Put differently, the appellant contends
that the third ground of termination extended to a situation in which
there was a reduction
in the volume of work required to be performed
for MTN under the service level agreement with the result that the
services of the
respondent were no longer required. This is in effect
what occurred here.
26.
In
support of this submission Mr Modiba referred us to the decisions of
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
KPMG
Chartered Accounts (SA) v Securefin Ltd
[1]
and in
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd.
[2]
He invited us to depart from the words used in the contract by having
regard to the background and surrounding facts which indicated
the
purpose and intention of the parties.
[3]
The appellant submitted that the termination was based on the
“rationale of the contract”, and specifically the
proposition
that where there was no work available to perform there
was no need to give notice, in the same way as would have been the
case
where the service level agreement was terminated. In advancing
this submission the appellant essentially contends that the rationale
behind the third ground of termination was that if there was no
longer any work to be performed by the respondent for MTN the
contract with the respondent would terminate with immediate effect,
without any need to give notice.
27.
The difficulty with this submission is that
it seeks, in effect, to achieve a complete rewriting of the contract
between the parties,
and the insertion of a term which on the
evidence was not in fact contemplated by them when they concluded
their contract. The
appellant did not seek rectification of the
contract. This was hardly surprising since both parties agreed that
the specific situation
that had arisen had not in fact been
contemplated by them when they concluded their contract.
28.
The appellant has also not contended for an
implied term. It would in our view have been difficult for it, if it
had pleaded an
implied term, to establish a term to the effect that a
reduction in resources required by MTN that impacted the respondent
would
also result in an automatic termination of the contract.
29.
The simple problem facing the appellant on
the interpretation of the contract is that the contract does in fact
cater for a situation
in which the services of the respondent might
no longer be required during the course of the contract or project.
In that event
the respondent’s services could be terminated by
the appellant giving notice.
30.
In
our view there are no grounds on which to adopt the purposive
interpretation for which Mr Modiba contended. This would in effect
amount to rewriting the contract for the parties, something the
Supreme Court of Appeal specifically warned against in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
:
[4]
“
Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between interpretation
and
legislation; in a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact made.”
31.
In those circumstances we cannot fault the
conclusion of the court
a quo
that notice was required to terminate the contract.
32.
In light of the conclusion reached by the
court
a quo
on the question whether notice was required to terminate the contract
in the circumstances it is difficult to understand the court’s
reasoning in thereafter describing the situation as one involving
supervening impossibility of performance. Nor is it apparent
how or
in what way this contributed to the order which the court
a
quo
made. It appears, from the sequence
of its reasoning, that the court considered this question to be one
that impacted the quantum
of damages that the respondent had suffered
in consequence of the breach. The court’s reasoning appeared to
be that since
the appellant could not in fact have provided further
work to the respondent under the MTN service level agreement, the
amount
of damages should be limited to the fees the respondent could
have charged during the notice period. This was what the court then
ordered.
33.
The appellant is correct that if the
situation had in fact been one in which there was a supervening
possibility of performance,
its failure to perform could not properly
have been held to constitute a breach of the contract. In
supplementary written argument
delivered after oral argument (which
we have decided to admit and have carefully considered) the appellant
characterizes the court
a quo’s
finding that there was supervening impossibly of performance as a
finding of fact with which, the appellant submits, this court
is not
at liberty to interfere in the absence of a cross appeal.
34.
There are a number of answers to this
contention. The first is that the finding of the court
a
quo
that there was supervening
impossibility of performance is clearly not a finding of fact but a
conclusion of law based on the established
facts. The conclusion is
clearly wrong, for reasons explained further below. The second is
that the correctness or otherwise of
the court’s finding in
this regard is placed squarely before us in this appeal by the
appellant’s own submissions,
and we are clearly permitted, and
indeed required, to decide the matter with proper regard to the
correctness or otherwise of the
court’s conclusion on this
score. No cross appeal is required for this court to have regard to
the correctness or otherwise
of findings of fact. An appeal or cross
appeal seeks to attack an order and not only the reasons for it.
35.
Even where findings of fact are concerned,
an appeal court is not constrained in the manner suggested by the
appellant:
“
What must be
stressed here, is the point that has been repeatedly made. The
principle that an appellate court will not ordinarily
interfere with
a factual finding by a trial court is not an inflexible rule. It is a
recognition of the advantages that the trial
court enjoys which the
appellate court does not. These advantages flow from observing and
hearing witnesses as opposed to reading
“the cold printed
word.” The main advantage being the opportunity to observe
the demeanour of the witnesses. But
this rule of practice should not
be used to “tie the hands of appellate courts”. It
should be used to assist,
and not to hamper, an appellate court to do
justice to the case before it. Thus, where there is a misdirection on
the facts by
the trial court, the appellate court is entitled to
disregard the findings on facts and come to its own conclusion on the
facts
as they appear on the record. Similarly, where the
appellate court is convinced that the conclusion reached by the trial
court
is clearly wrong, it will reverse it.”
[5]
36.
Turning
to the question of supervening impossibility of performance, where
changed circumstances make it uneconomical for a party
to carry out
its obligations this does not mean that performance has become
impossible. The point was explained clearly in
Unibank
Savings and Loans v ABSA Bank:
[6]
“
Impossibility
is furthermore not implicit in change of financial strength or in
commercial circumstances which cause compliance
with the contractual
obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable.
Deteriorations of that nature are foreseeable in the
business world
at the time when the contract is concluded
.”
37.
There are simply no grounds on which it can
be contended that it was impossible for the appellant to have given
the respondent notice
of termination of the contract. That the
appellant might have been “out of pocket” in the
circumstances, as it submits
it would, is neither here nor there. Mr
Modiba submitted that it was no longer possible for the appellant to
provide the respondent
with further work to perform for MTN under the
service level agreement. Even if this had been so, however, that did
not preclude
the appellant giving the respondent notice to terminate
the contract.
38.
Other than in circumstances in which the
service level agreement itself was terminated, which it is common
cause did not happen
here, the parties had expressly made provision
in the contract for the possibility that either party might want to
bring the contract
to an end prematurely, by giving written notice to
terminate it.
39.
In summary, there was in fact no obstacle
to the appellant complying with its contractual obligation to give
notice, and it was
entitled to do so. The appellant elected not to
give notice, choosing instead to rely on the contractual provision
that provided
for automatic termination of the contract on
termination of the service level agreement between MTN and the
appellant. But, as
the court
a quo
correctly held, it was common cause that MTN had not cancelled or
terminated its service level agreement with the appellant. As
a
result, that provision did not come into play.
40.
The final matter that remains to be
considered is whether the respondent discharged the onus that she
bore in the court
a quo
to demonstrate that she had suffered damages in an amount equivalent
to the fees she would have charged during the notice month.
Although
this was not a separate ground on which the appellant appealed
against the order of the court
a quo
,
the issue is closely connected to the interpretation of the contract
for which the appellant contended, and was raised in oral
submission.
Consequently it is a matter that in our view requires decision in
this appeal.
41.
The appellant submitted that the absence of
available work from MTN meant that even if the respondent had been
given notice she
would have had no work to do and consequently would
have earned no fees for work performed during the notice period.
42.
Mr Modiba accepted that there were
circumstances in which the respondent had been paid fees during
periods when she had performed
no services for MTN. These, he
submitted, were exceptions. In one instance this occurred during an
induction period, when payment
was made entirely “
ex
gratia
”, and in other instances
it occurred where the appellant could charge MTN for resources that
were made available to it even
though MTN’s own systems were
not functioning or there was some other interruption in work.
43.
In response to this Mr Netshipise, who
appeared for the respondent, conceded that the respondent was not
entitled to charge fees
in circumstances in which she performed no
work. He submitted, however, that on the evidence the respondent was
equipped to perform
services outside the narrow ambit of those for
MTN for which she had been engaged during the contract, and that the
fact that she
had been paid fees at various times during the
subsistence of the contract when she had not actually rendered
services for MTN
demonstrated that it was not necessarily so that she
would not have been paid during the notice period.
44.
Ultimately, Mr Netshipise submitted, the
opportunity was there for the respondent to have been allocated work
during the notice
period had the appellant given her that
opportunity. Mr Netshipise submitted that there were no grounds on
which to reach a positive
conclusion that no work would have been
performed in circumstances in which the appellant had failed to give
notice and to provide
an opportunity for that to happen.
45.
In reply on this issue the second Mr
Modiba, the appellant’s instructing attorney, submitted that it
was possible on the evidence
to determine positively that no work
would have been performed during the notice period.
46.
In our view, and insofar as this is an
issue in the appeal, the evidence did not in fact establish that
there would have been no
work for the respondent at all during the
notice period. Nor did it establish that MTN would not have paid for
services made available
to it during the notice period. The stance
adopted by the appellant was that the respondent’s contract
effectively terminated
on 4 May 2020 in consequence of the MTN email
to the appellant. It took no steps either to allocate work to the
respondent thereafter,
to procure work from MTN, or to seek an
undertaking from MTN to pay the appellant in respect of the
respondent’s services
for the notice period. In those
circumstances we can find no reason to depart from the quantification
of the harm that was suffered,
being damages in the amount of R72,000
as determined by the court
a quo
.
47.
The respondent submitted that this was a
case in which costs should be awarded on a punitive scale. We can see
no justification
for this, and consider this to be a case where costs
should follow the result, on the ordinary scale.
Order
48.
In those circumstances the appeal is
dismissed, with costs.
TODD AJ
I agree.
MUDAU J
REFERENCES
For
the Appellant:
Mr Modiba
Instructed
by:
Sami Modiba Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Mr Netshipise
Instructed
by:
Mudau & Netshipise Attorneys
Judgment
reserved:
11 August 2022
Judgment
delivered:
6 September 2022
[1]
2009
(4) SA 399
(SCA) at para [39]
[2]
2016 (1) SA 518
(SCA) at paras [27], [28], [30] and [35]
[3]
Referring
to
V
v V [2016] ZAGPJHC 311
at para [12]
[4]
2012
(4) SA 593
(
SCA)
at para [18]
## [5]Bernert
v ABSA Bank Ltd2011
(3) SA 92 (CC)at
[106]
[5]
Bernert
v ABSA Bank Ltd
2011
(3) SA 92 (CC)
at
[106]
[6]
2000
(4) SA 191
(W) at 198D-E
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
T obo T v Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Provincial Government (37474/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 961 (5 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 961High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Tladi and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2020/05024) [2022] ZAGPJHC 445 (5 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 445High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Hlomuka v The National Commissioner South African Police Service and Another (2020/23988) [2022] ZAGPJHC 195 (25 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 195High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 371High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation (PTY) Ltd and Another v Redpath Mining (South Africa) (PTY) Ltd and Another (2022/650) [2022] ZAGPJHC 468 (15 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 468High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar