Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 669South Africa
E -Sport Entertainment (PTY) Ltd v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd: In re: South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Online Arena Enterprises (PTY) Ltd t/a ORENA.com and Others (34125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 669 (7 September 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## E -Sport Entertainment (PTY) Ltd v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd: In re: South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Online Arena Enterprises (PTY) Ltd t/a ORENA.com and Others (34125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 669 (7 September 2022)
E -Sport Entertainment (PTY) Ltd v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd: In re: South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Online Arena Enterprises (PTY) Ltd t/a ORENA.com and Others (34125/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 669 (7 September 2022)
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sino date 7 September 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 34125/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
7
September 2022
In
the matter between:
E-SPORT
ENTERTAINMENT (PTY) LTD
EXCEPIENT
(Registration
Number: 2016/487339/07)
And
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME
(RF) LTD
RESPONDENT
(Registration
Number: 1991/002706/06)
In
re: the matter of
SOUTH
AFRICAN SECURITISATION
PROGRAMME
(RF) LTD
PLAINTIFF
(Registration
Number: 1991/002706/06
And
ONLINE
ARENA ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
t/a
ORENA.COM
FIRST DEFENDANT
(Registration
Number: 2013/121161/07)
E-SPORT
ENTERTAINMENT (PTY) LTD
SECOND DEFENDANT
(Registration
Number: 2016/487339/07
TUCCONI,
LUCA TANCREDI
THIRD DEFENDANT
(Registration
Number: 9106265145082)
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
Parties
/ their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on Case Lines. The date
of the
judgment is deemed to be the 7
th
of September 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
The second defendant in this case brought this application in terms
of rule 23 of
the Uniform Rules of Court wherein it excepts to the
plaintiff’s particulars of claim to the summons on the grounds
that
the particulars of claim do not disclose a cause an action.
[2]
At the commencement of the hearing of this case, counsel for the
second defendant
informed the court that the plaintiff has already
obtained judgment against the first and third defendants and that it
is only
the second defendant that is defending this matter. For the
sake of convenience, I propose to refer to the parties as the
excipient
and the respondent.
[3]
The genesis of this case is that
the respondent has issued summons against the excipient,
the first
and third defendants for the return of certain goods and payment of
the sum of R487 167.26 based on the Master Rental
Agreement
which was concluded between The Rental Company Trust (Trust Number:
IT 616/96)
(“The Trust”)
and the first defendant
on the 29
th
of September 2017. Under the Master Rental
Agreement, the first defendant rented certain equipment for a period
of sixty (60) months
and undertook to pay therefore a rental amount
in the sum of R19 043.53 per month.
[4]
On the 13
th
of September 2017 the excipient and the third
defendant signed unlimited deeds of guarantee in terms of which they
bound themselves
as guarantors and co-principal debtors with the
first defendant, jointly and severally, in favour of The Trust or its
cessionary/ies
in the event of a cession of whatsoever nature and
however arising for the due and proper fulfilment of all the
obligations of
the first defendant arising from or out of the terms
of the Master Rental Agreement between the first defendant and The
Trust or
from any cause howsoever arising.
[5]
The Trust performed all its obligations arising in terms of the
Master Rental Agreement
and at the instance of the first defendant
and made the equipment available for its use. On the 21
st
of September 2011 The Trust concluded a deed of Main Cession
Agreement with Sunlyn (Pty) Ltd (formerly known as Sunlyn Rentals
(Pty) Ltd with registration number: 1988/000147/07
(“Sunlyn”)
in terms whereof The Trust, inter alia, ceded existing and future
rental agreements to Sunlyn. The cession was dependant on Sunlyn
making an offer which is acceptable to The Trust which offer would be
acceptable to TheTrust only when payment of the provisional
purchase
price is made.
[6]
Both the The Trust and Sunlyn having fulfilled their obligations in
terms of the Main
Cession agreement. On the 2
nd
of
November 2016 Sunlyn conclude a written Main Cession Agreement with
Fintech Underwriting (Pty) Ltd with registration number;
2002/025400/07
(“FUN”)
in terms whereof Sunlyn,
inter alia, ceded existing and future rental agreements to FUN. The
cession was dependant on FUN making
an offer which is acceptable to
Sunlyn which offer would be acceptable to Sunlyn only when payment of
the provisional purchase
price is made. FUN and Sunlyn fulfilled
their obligations in terms of the Main Cession Agreement.
[7]
On the 15
th
of November 2017 a written Sale and Transfer
Agreement was concluded between FUN and the plaintiff in terms
whereof the Master
Rental Agreement was sold by FUN to the plaintiff
together with the other rental agreements reflected in the electronic
schedule
furnished by FUN to the plaintiff. The plaintiff duly
performed its obligations in terms of the sale and transfer agreement
and
paid the purchase price.
[8]
It is trite that an exception that a pleading does not disclose a
cause of action
strikes at the formulation of the cause of action and
its legal validity. The cause of complaint is not directed at a
particular
paragraph in the pleading but at the pleading as a whole,
which must be demonstrated to be lacking the necessary averments to
sustain
a cause of action. Furthermore, it is trite that exceptions
should be dealt with sensibly since they provide a useful mechanism
to weed out cases without legal merit. However, an overly technical
approach should be avoided because it destroys the usefulness
of the
exception procedure.
(See Telematrix (Pty) Limited v Advertising
Standards Authority SA
2006 1 ALL SA 6
(SCA);
2006 1 SA 461
(SCA))
.
[9]
In
M Ramanna and Associates cc v The Ekurhuleni Development
Company (Pty) Ltd, case No: 25832/2013 (4 April 2014) ZAGPJHC
this
Court stated the following:
“
It is a basic
principle that particulars of claim should be so phrased that a
defendant may reasonably and fairly be required to
plead thereto.
This must be seen against the background of the abolition of the
requests for further particulars of pleading and
the further
requirement that the object of pleadings is to enable each side to
come to trial prepared to meet the case of the other
and not be taken
by surprise. Pleadings must therefore be lucid and logical and in an
intelligible form; and the cause of action
or defence must appear
clearly from the factual allegations made.
The whole purpose of
pleadings is to bring clearly to the notice of the Court and the
parties to an action the issues upon which
reliance is to be placed
and this fundamental principle can only be achieved when each party
states his case with precision”.
[10]
Recently, the Supreme Court of Appeal per Ponnan JA in
Luke M
Tembani and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Another (Case no 167/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 70
(20 May 2022)
referring
to the authorities quoted above stated the following:
“
Paragraph 14:
Whilst exceptions provide a useful mechanism to weed out cases
without legal merit, it is nonetheless necessary that
they be dealt
with sensibly. It is where pleadings are so vague that it is
impossible to determine the nature of the claim or where
pleadings
are bad in law in that their contents do not support a discernible
and legally recognised cause of action, that exception
is competent.
The burden rests on an excipient, who must establish that on every
interpretation that can reasonably be attached
to it, the pleading is
excipiable. The test is whether on all possible readings of the facts
no cause of action may be made out;
it being for the excipient to
satisfy the court that the conclusion of law for which the plaintiff
contends cannot be supported
on every interpretation that can be put
upon the facts.”
[11]
Before proceeding with the discussion, it is useful to restate the
causes of complaint of the
excipient which are subject of this
exception which are as follows:
“
1.
The plaintiff’s locu standi is premises on it having obtained
all the rights and obligations under
the Master Rental Agreement
(“the agreement”) (annexure SAS1a; SAS1b; and SAS1c to
the particulars of claim) following
various cessions. Absent valid
cessions it lacks locus standi and no cause of action is made out.
2.
In particular the plaintiff claims that:
(a)
The agreement was entered into between the first defendant and The
Rental Property
Trust (paragraph 3 of the particulars of claim);
(b)
The Rental Property Trust ceded its rights under the agreement to
Sunlyn Rentals (Pty)
Ltd (paragraph 13 of the particulars of claim
(“the first cession”);
(c)
Sunlyn Rentals (Pty) Ltd thereafter ceded its rights under the
agreement to Fintech
Underwriting (Pty) Ltd (paragraph 17 of the
particulars of claim (“the second cession”);
(d)
Fintech Underwriting (Pty) Ltd thereafter ceded its rights under the
agreement to
the plaintiff (paragraph 22.9 of the particulars of
claim (“the third cession”).
3.
In respect of the first and second cessions, the plaintiff pleads in
detail “Main Cession
Agreement”, both of which contain a
similar term:
(a)For the first
cession (Vide paragraph 11.8):
1.
The
cession of each contract would be a separate and severable
transaction upon the terms and conditions of the Main Agreement.
(b)For the second
cession (Vide paragraph 15.8):
1.
The
cession of each contract would be a separate and severable
transaction upon the terms and conditions of the Main Sunlyn
Agreement.
4.
As such, neither of the “Main Cession Agreements” in
itself resulted in the cession
of the agreement from the cedent to
the cessionary. In order for that to occur a separate contract of
cession would need to be
entered into.
5.
No separate agreement of cession is pleaded. Instead the plaintiff
pleads as follows:
(a)In respect of the
first cession (Vide paragraph 13):
1.
Subsequent
to the conclusion of the Master Rental Agreement, The Rental Company
Trust and Sunlyn fulfilled all their respective
obligations as per
the Main Cession Agreement, and subsequently The Rental Company
Trust’s rights, title and interest in
the Master Rental
Agreement were ceded to Sunlyn as per the provisions of the Main
Cession Agreement.
(b)In respect of the
second cession (Vide paragraph 17):
1.
Subsequent
to the conclusion of the Master Rental Agreement, The Sunlyn and
Fintech fulfilled all their respective obligations as
per the Main
Sunlyn Cession Agreement, and subsequently Sunlyn’s rights,
title and interest in the Master Rental Agreement
were ceded to
Fintech as per the provisions of the Main Cession Agreement.
6.
Nowhere do the Main Cession Agreement provide an obligation on any
party to provide cession
of the agreement to the cessionary. Indeed,
in each Main Cession Agreement clause 2.1 makes it clear that there
is a discretion
on whether or not to offer any agreements up for
cession.
7.
As such, merely complying with the obligations in terms of the
respective Main Cession Agreement
does not ex lege in a cession and a
conclusion that “subsequently” the cedent’s rights
were ceded to the cessionary
is bad in law.
8.
In the absence of pleaded contracts of cession the rights under the
agreement could not have
passed to the plaintiff and accordingly, on
the plaintiff’s own pleaded version, it lacks locu standi and
no cause of action
is made out.”
[12]
The excipient’s complaint is that the respondent does not have
locu standi to institute
these proceedings against it. It is
contended that the first and second cession agreements between The
Trust and Sunlyn and between
Sunlyn and FUN do not create an
obligation on any of the parties to provide cession of the agreement
to the cessionary. In order
for that to occur, so the argument went,
a separate contract of cession should have been concluded. In the
absence of valid cession
agreements, the respondent does not have
locu standi to institute these proceedings.
[13]
I understand the above authorities to be saying that the Court should
consider the pleading as
a whole when determining whether it lacks
the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action. In this case,
it is undisputed
that the respondent’s cause of action is
premised on the agreement of sale and transfer between itself and
FUN. It is not
in dispute that the Master Rental Agreement was
concluded between the excipient and The Trust. However, Sunlyn made
an offer to
The Trust which offer was accepted and the obligations
arising from the acceptance of the offer were fulfilled by both The
Trust
and Sunlyn which then culminated in The Trust ceding all its
rights, title and interest in the Master Rental Agreement to Sunlyn.
In my judgment the allegation in the pleading that there was a
cession concluded between The Trust and Sunlyn and between Sunlyn
and
FUN is sound in law and the respondent need to prove same by evidence
at the ensuing trial.
[14]
There is no merit in the excipient’s contention that the Master
Cession Agreement provided
for a separate contract to be entered into
by the cedent and the cessionary for the cession to take effect. In
my view, once the
offer is accepted and the obligations of both
parties are fulfilled, the terms of the Master Rental Agreement take
effect and or
comes into play. The respondent’s cause of action
is plainly stated that it is premised on the sale and transfer
agreement
it concluded with FUN. I agree with the respondent’s
counsel that the particulars of claim have served its purpose of
informing
the excipient with sufficient particularity of the case it
has to meet and is able to plead thereto. It follows ineluctably
therefore
that on all possible reading of the facts the pleading
makes out a clear cause of action and therefore the exception falls
to be
dismissed.
[15]
It is not in dispute that the Master Rental Agreement provides that
when the parties are involved
in any court proceedings arising from
this agreement, the costs shall be on the scale as between attorney
and client. Although
the issue of costs is in the discretion of the
Court, I have no reason to interfere with the provisions of the
agreement between
the parties.
[16]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The exception is dismissed with costs on the scale as between
attorney and client.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
29
th
August 2022
Date
of Judgment:
7
th
September 2022
For
the Exceptient:
Advocate AG Campbell
Instructed
by:
StraussDalyInc
Tel: 010 201
8600
nconradie@straussdaly.co.za
For
the Respondent:
Advocate JG Botha
Instructed
by:
ODBB Attorneys
Tel: 011 883
9041
lelanie@odbb. co.za
sino noindex
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