Mnandi Property Development (Pty) Ltd v Ekurhuleni Local Council and Others (20018/2010) [2012] ZAGPJHC 6 (20 January 2012)

78 Reportability
Contract Law

Brief Summary

Contract — Agreement — Existence of agreement — Applicant claimed payment for external electrical and water services allegedly installed on behalf of the first respondent in Helderwyk Township — Dispute arose regarding whether an agreement was concluded between the parties for the provision of these services — Evidence presented indicated no agreement was ever reached, as negotiations did not culminate in a binding contract — Court held that the applicant's claim was not supported by any valid agreement and dismissed the application.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings took the form of a motion application in which the applicant sought payment from the first respondent municipality for the cost of certain township engineering services. The applicant, Mnandi Property Development (Pty) Ltd, claimed reimbursement primarily for external electrical services and, additionally, for water services installed in connection with the development of the Helderwyk Township (Registration IR Gauteng).


The first respondent was the Ekurhuleni Local Council (with other respondents cited, although the dispute and relief were directed materially at the first respondent). The applicant grounded its claim on section 71A of the Town Planning and Townships Ordinance 25 of 1965 and initially alleged the existence of an agreement recorded in correspondence.


The matter first came before the court on 2 December 2010, where a dispute of fact emerged from the papers. An order was then made (by agreement between the parties’ representatives) referring defined issues to oral evidence, namely whether an agreement existed that the municipality would pay for the external electrical and water services, and whether any claim under such an agreement had prescribed. The referral order also recorded that the applicant abandoned all other bases for its claim aside from the alleged agreement.


Oral evidence commenced on 7 February 2011. The evidence was not concluded then and a postponement followed. The matter returned for continuation during court recess in January 2012, at which stage the court reconsidered whether further oral evidence would serve any purpose and ultimately dismissed the application.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant purchased the land on which the township was later established when it was still farmland. The township was subsequently proclaimed under section 69 of the Town Planning and Townships Ordinance 25 of 1965. During the township’s development, the applicant installed certain services connected to water and electricity provision and later sought a refund of its expenditure.


The applicant’s monetary claim was for R6 158 925 in respect of external electrical services allegedly installed on behalf of the municipality, and R425 527 for water services installed in the same township (with further claims for interest and costs). On the papers, the applicant initially relied on what it characterised as an agreement “recorded” in a letter dated 8 February 2006 from relevant municipal regional directors. The court identified that the annexed letters did not support the asserted contractual foundation: one letter was found to have no relevance to the applicant’s case, and the other recorded that installation responsibilities would lie with the developer to municipal specification, but did not constitute an agreement by the municipality to reimburse the applicant.


Following the December 2010 order, the applicant delivered further particulars stating that the agreement was oral, while also asserting that it was “reflected in several documents and correspondence.” The applicant did not allege a contract that was partly oral and partly written. The particulars concerning the identity of municipal representatives and the date(s) of conclusion were provided in general terms and described the agreement as having been concluded “over a protracted period of time from February 2006 to 2008.”


At the hearing of oral evidence, the applicant led the evidence of Mr Cronje, a consulting engineer who represented the applicant on the relevant engineering service issues. Mr Cronje’s evidence, supported by documents emanating from the applicant and confirmed by him, was that while negotiations were protracted and there were attempts to settle and agree the amounts payable, no agreement was ever reached between the parties on the issues giving rise to the claim.


A further material feature, as it emerged in the court’s assessment, was that the township had been proclaimed without an agreement having been concluded beforehand allocating responsibility for payment for the relevant services, notwithstanding ordinance provisions requiring clarity on that allocation prior to proclamation.


Legal Issues


The central legal issue was whether the applicant had proved the existence of an agreement between it and the municipality in terms of which the municipality would pay for the external electrical services and external water services installed by the applicant. This issue required a determination of fact, assessed against the contractual foundation the applicant had elected to stand on.


A secondary issue identified in the referral order was whether, if such an agreement existed, the claim had prescribed. However, the court’s resolution of the contractual issue rendered it unnecessary, on the court’s approach, to determine prescription.


A further procedural and evaluative issue arose during the oral evidence process: whether, in motion proceedings referred to oral evidence under the relevant rule, the court could properly terminate the oral evidence process and decide the matter without hearing further witnesses where continuation would not serve a useful purpose, particularly given the defined and limited scope of the referral.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that, by agreement recorded in the referral order, the applicant had confined its case to a single foundation: the existence of a specific agreement obliging the municipality to reimburse the applicant for the relevant external services. The court treated this procedural narrowing as decisive in framing what had to be proved for the application to succeed.


On the evidence, the court found that the documents initially relied upon as evidencing an agreement did not, on their terms, establish any undertaking by the municipality to pay the applicant. In particular, the letter relied upon in relation to electricity recorded that installation of external and internal services would be the developer’s responsibility to municipal specification; it did not amount to a reimbursement agreement.


The court placed substantial weight on the oral evidence of Mr Cronje, described as a critical witness for the applicant’s case. That evidence, corroborated by the applicant’s own documentation, was understood as establishing that the parties had engaged in negotiations and attempts to reach a settlement, but that no agreement was concluded. The court reasoned that ongoing negotiations and attempts to agree a figure did not constitute an agreement, and that a court could not convert an “attempt at reaching an agreement” into a concluded contract.


In addressing whether to hear further oral evidence, the court relied on the principle that a referral to oral evidence in motion proceedings is intended to be limited to defined disputes of fact, and is not a mechanism to convert the matter into a full trial. The court referred to the explanation in Herbstein and Van Winsen (as quoted in the judgment) concerning the restrictive purpose of the rule governing oral evidence in applications. On authority, the court accepted that it is open to a court to conclude that it is unnecessary to hear oral evidence and to decide the matter on the papers, and considered it equally appropriate, after hearing the evidence of a witness central to the applicant’s case, to decide that no useful purpose would be served by continuing.


The court also took into account that the proposed further witness, Mr Brown, was the deponent to the founding affidavit and that the documentary foundation in that affidavit had already been identified as defective in demonstrating a concluded agreement. The court further noted that any evidence Mr Brown might give asserting that an agreement existed would be contradicted by Mr Cronje’s evidence to the contrary, and it treated Mr Cronje’s evidence as dispositive of whether a contract had been concluded.


On this basis, the court exercised its procedural control to halt the oral evidence proceedings and to determine the application at that stage. Given the applicant’s abandonment of alternative causes of action and the absence of a proved agreement, the court concluded that the application could not succeed and should be dismissed.


Outcome and Relief


The application was dismissed.


The court ordered the applicant to pay the costs of the application, including the costs of two counsel. The costs order also included all reserved costs to date and the costs of the necessary attendance of Mr Smith.


Cases Cited


Wallach v Lew Geffen Estates CC [1993] ZASCA 39; 1993 (3) SA 258 (A).


Combrinck v Rautenbach 1951 (4) SA 357 (T).


Legislation Cited


Town Planning and Townships Ordinance 25 of 1965 (sections 69 and 71A).


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 16(5)(g) (as referenced in the judgment in relation to the referral to oral evidence).


Rule 6(5)(g) (as referenced in the judgment in relation to oral evidence in motion proceedings).


Held


The court held that the applicant failed to establish the existence of any agreement with the first respondent municipality obliging the municipality to reimburse the applicant for external electrical and water services installed in the development of Helderwyk Township.


Given that the applicant had, by agreement recorded in the referral order, abandoned any basis for relief other than the alleged agreement, the absence of a concluded agreement was fatal to the application. The court further held that it was procedurally appropriate to terminate the oral evidence proceedings once the evidence of the applicant’s critical witness demonstrated that no agreement had been reached, and that continuing with further witnesses would not serve a useful purpose.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A referral to oral evidence in motion proceedings is intended to be limited in scope to defined disputes of fact, and does not entitle parties to expand the proceedings into a full trial; the inquiry must remain confined to the issues specified by the court in the referral.


Even where oral evidence is permitted in application proceedings, the matter remains motion proceedings and does not become a trial action; accordingly, the court retains control to prevent the process from becoming a “roving commission” beyond the defined disputes.


A court may conclude, in appropriate circumstances, that it is unnecessary to hear oral evidence and may decide the matter on the papers; and, having heard evidence on the defined issues, it may also determine that no useful purpose would be served by continuing to hear further witnesses where the decisive issue has been resolved on the evidence already led.


Negotiations, attempts to settle, or efforts to reach agreement do not constitute a concluded agreement; the existence of a contractual obligation depends on proof that consensus was achieved, and the absence of consensus is fatal where the claim depends exclusively on contract.

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[2012] ZAGPJHC 6
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Mnandi Property Development (Pty) Ltd v Ekurhuleni Local Council and Others (20018/2010) [2012] ZAGPJHC 6 (20 January 2012)

IN THE SOUTH
GAUTENG HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO
:
20018/2010
DATE
:
2012-01-20
In
the matter between
MNANDI
PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT(PTY)LTD
Applicant
And
EKURHULENI
LOCAL COUNCIL AND OTHERS
Respondents
J U D G M E N T
WILLIS, J
:
[1]  The applicant
has approached the court by way of motion proceedings for an order
that the first respondent paid an amount
of R6 158 925- in respect of
external electrical services installed by the applicant allegedly on
behalf of the first respondent
in the township known as Helderwyk
Township registration IR Gauteng.  The claim is based upon the
provisions of Section 71
A of the Town Planning and Townships
Ordinance, Number 25 of 1965.  The applicant also claimed an
amount of R425 527-in respect
of the provision of water services
installed by the applicant in the same township.  There are
additional claims for interest
and costs.
[2] The matter first came
before me on the 2 December 2010. In the founding affidavit it is
clear that the applicant relies on a
so-called agreement. In
paragraph 30 of the founding affidavit the applicant alleges that the
agreement:-
"Was recorded in
letter dated 8 February 2006 from the respective regional directors
of Water and Electricity Services who
had been duly authorised to
enter into these undertakings on behalf of the municipality".
Copies of these letters
were annexed to the affidavit. They were marked as annexures SB 4A
and SB 4B.
[3] Annexure SB 4A was a
letter addressed by the Regional Director of Water Services for the
first respondent to Mr Van Rooyen of
Development Planning.  It
bears no relevance whatsoever to the applicant's case. Annexure SB 4B
is a letter directed by Mr
De Villiers, the Regional Director of
Electricity of the first respondent to Mr Brown, who was the
representative of the applicant.
In that letter it is said as
follows:-
"The installation of
the external electrical services between the proposed township and
Van Eck Park substation and all internal
electricity services will be
the responsibility of the developer to the specification of the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality:
Municipal infrastructure:
Electrical Division".
Clearly, that letter does
not constitute an agreement.
[4] There was a dispute
of fact on the papers before me. This was apparent when I heard the
matter on the 2 December 2010.
I now wonder whether it was wise
to have made the order which I did on the 2 December 2010.  It
seemed to me at the time that
it should surely be a simple matter to
decide whether an agreement was entered into or not.  After all,
one would have expected
there to be clarity on an issue such as this.
[5] It is common cause
that the applicant bought the land on which the township is now
extant while it was still farmland. The township
was proclaimed in
terms of Section 69 of the 1965 Ordinance.  The applicant's
claim is for a refund of expenditure which it
occurred for certain
services relating to the provision of water and electricity which
were installed by the applicant when it
developed the township.
[6] The detail of terms
of the order which I made on the 2 December 2010 were settled
ultimately between the representatives of
the different parties.
The issue referred to oral evidence was whether or not an agreement
was concluded between the applicant
and the first respondent that the
applicant would install external electrical services and external
water services at the cost
of the first respondent and whether or not
the applicant's claim for payment under any such agreement had become
prescribed.
It also pertinently recorded in the order, made by
agreement between the parties, that the applicant abandoned all other
bases
for its claim other than the existence of the agreement
referred to above.
[7] In the order which I
made it was also specified that the applicant would furnish the first
respondent with particulars before
the 14 January 2011 on the
following:-
1.
Whether or not the agreement was in writing or oral.
The identity of the
persons who represented the parties in concluding the agreement.
The dates of conclusion
of the agreement.
[8] These now were the
replies to those further particulars:-
Ad paragraph 4.1
The agreement was oral and is reflected in several documents and
correspondence as recorded in the respective agreements.
The applicant is blowing
hot and cold.  On the one hand, it said that the agreement was
oral and on the other it said it is
contained in documents.  It
is not alleged that the agreement which was concluded between the
parties was partly oral and
partly in writing.
Ad paragraph 4.2
The identity of the persons who represented the parties at the
relevant stages over the period of time are reflected in the
respective
documents and correspondence.
This answer would have
been excipiable for vagueness if it had been contained in a pleading
in a trial action.
Next,
Ad paragraph 4.3
The agreement to pay the applicant's claim
for external services to the township was concluded over a protracted
period of time
from February 2006 to 2008 and took place at the
premises of the municipality.
[9] Mr
Peter
who,
together with Mr
Georgiades
, appears for the applicant,
objected when the court convened to hear the oral evidence on 7
February 2011.  Mr
Peter
protested that he really did not
know what case he had to meet.  It is reasonable that I should
be chastised for having adopted,
once again, a benevolent attitude to
the applicant.  I took the approach that if the particulars
provided were vague we should
first hear what the applicant's case is
and thereafter, if necessary, the court could grant a postponement in
order to enable the
first respondent to investigate into the matter.
[10] Testimony was given
by Mr Cronje, a consulting engineer who, in effect, represented the
applicant at all material times on
the issues relating to the
provision of the engineering services namely the water and
electricity.  Mr Cronje’s own
evidence, confirmed by
numerous documents provided by the applicant, and which Mr Cronje
himself confirmed, reflected the position
between the parties as
having been the following: although there may have been protracted
negotiations between the applicant and
the first respondent, although
there may have been innumerable attempts to reach an amicable
settlement in the matter and to agree
on the amount to be paid to the
applicant, no agreement was, in fact, ever reached.  I repeat
for emphasis: no agreement was
ever reached between the parties on
the issues that give rise the applicant’s claim. None of the
documents upon which Mr
Cronje relies to show that there was,
indeedt, an agreement support his case in any way whatsoever.
[11] I agree with Mr
Peter
that this whole unfortunate debacle arises from the fact
that the parties failed to comply with the provisions of the relevant
ordinance which require that the agreement as to who was liable to
pay for what should have been concluded before the proclamation
of
the township.  The proclamation of the township occurred without
there having been any such agreement.  The moral
of this saga is
that those persons who wish to contract for the development of
properties with municipalities must make sure that
all i's are dotted
and t's crossed before they embark on providing services.  Any
other route is likely to end in tears -
as has happened in this
matter.  The parties are not the only ones to have shed tears.
The court too has engaged in much weeping,
wailing and gnashing of
teeth, over a protracted period of time.
[12] The practice in this
division for the last few years has been that if a matter is referred
by a judge for the hearing of oral
evidence, the judge making the
referral is expected to hear the oral evidence. That judge must make
time available in court recess
or on a spare afternoon or over a
weekend to hear the matter.  I have, accordingly, specifically
had to make sacrifices to
find time to try to resolve the matter.
[13] We heard oral
evidence on the 7 February 2011.  After Mr Cronje had given
evidence, Mr
Peter
, acting on behalf of the first respondent,
asked for a postponement. As this was reasonably requested in the
circumstances, I granted
the postponement. We have tried in vain,
over a long period of time, to find a date that suits all the parties
as well as the court
for the hearing of oral evidence. Finally, we
were able to agree on yesterday and today. It is presently court
recess. Yesterday,
for various reasons, the matter did not proceed.
We proceeded today.  Mr Cronje concluded his evidence. Mr
Putte
r, who appears for the applicant, informed the court that
he wished to call Mr Brown (who was the deponent to the founding
affidavit)
to testify on behalf of the applicant.
[14] I then raised the
point,
mero motu
, as to whether any useful purpose would be
served by continuing the agony in this matter and by hearing Mr
Brown.  I may point
out that today is Friday afternoon.  We
are in court recess.  I do not have further time to make
available for the hearing
of this matter in court recess.  I
certainly do not have time in the first term to hear this matter and,
in the second term,
I shall be away on sabbatical oversea. Therefore,
if we were to try to continue this matter we would be looking at a
very long
adjournment. The most important factor that weighs with me
has been set out in Herbstein and Van Winsen’s
The Civil
Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of Appeal of South
Africa
, Volume 1, 5th Edition by Cilliers, Loots and Nel at
p465:-
The
object of Rule 16(5)(g) (the rule under which I referred the matter
to oral evidence) is manifestly to restrict the scope and
the ambit
of the inquiry and the number of witnesses to limits defined by the
court, and in so to inhibit abuse of the procedure
that the sub rule
provides by attempts to convert the application into a full-dress
trial, while at the same time enabling the
court to inquire fully
into the ‘specified issues’ on which there is a dispute
of fact.  It has been said that
the ordering of oral evidence
does not give either party the right to a roving commission and to
put before the court any facts
which that party thinks it would like
the court to be aware of. The issues must be defined and the inquiry
must be limited to its
proper scope.
[15] In the case of
Wallach v Lew Geffen Estates CC
[1993] ZASCA 39
;
1993 (3) SA 258
(A) it was
held that it is open to a court to which a matter has been referred
for oral evidence to hold that it is unnecessary
to hear oral
evidence and to decide the matter on the papers.
A fortiori,
I
consider that it is within my power (and indeed appropriate in
circumstances such as this) for me to decide, after a witness who
was
clearly critical to the whole case has finished his evidence, that no
useful purpose will be served by continuing with the
matter.
[16] As was said in the
case of
Combrinck
v
Rautenbach
1951 (4) SA 357
(T) at
359G to H, even if evidence is allowed under Rule 6 (5) (
g
),
the proceedings remain motion proceedings and do not become a
rauw
actie
.  It should further be born in mind that the witness
whom Mr
Putter
proposed to call, Mr Brown, deposed to the
founding affidavit.  I have already referred to certain critical
defects in that
founding affidavit: the documents upon which both Mr
Brown and Mr Cronje relied to show that there was an agreement do not
support
this contention at all. Such evidence as Mr Brown may give
relating to an agreement having been concluded is entirely
contradicted
by the evidence of Mr Cronje.  Mr Cronje's evidence
is clearly to the effect that, at all relevant times, the parties
were
attempting to reach an agreement, but did not succeed in doing
so.  An attempt at reaching an agreement cannot be made by a

court into an agreement.  There either is an agreement or there
is not.  Accordingly, it seems to me that it is appropriate
to
call a halt to these oral evidence proceedings. This I now do.
I have had the benefit of hearing counsel for the parties
on the
issues raised be me,
mero motu
. It is appropriate that the
application should, at this juncture, be dismissed with costs.
[17] Mr
Peter
has
asked that the costs should include two counsel.  I think this
is appropriate. The amount claimed is around R6 million.
Even today,
this is a relatively large amount of money. Furthermore,  the
reputation of the municipality is at stake.
One would expect
municipalities to pay in terms of their obligations. If it is alleged
that they do not pay, it is a serious matter
indeed. It is a matter
in which the public has an interest.  I therefore have no
difficulty with the question of costs for
two counsel.  I also
see no reason why all the reserved costs should not also be included
in the order.  Mr
Peter
asked that I include in the costs
order a qualification which would allow the costs relating to the
necessary attendances of a
certain Mr Smith, who is now in Cape
Town.  From the correspondence, exchanged between the parties,
it is clear that Mr Smith
represented the municipality on certain key
issues.  It so happens, that after cross-examination of Mr
Cronje today, which
referred to various documents, Mr Smith would no
longer be a necessary witness. Until today it would have been
necessary for the
applicant to consult with him and to prepare with
him.
[17] The following is the
order of the court:-
1.    The
application is dismissed with costs, which costs are to include the
costs of two counsel.
The costs to be allowed
include all costs reserved to date and the costs of the necessary
attendance of Mr Smith.
Counsel for the
Applicant:  Advocate L G F
Putter
.
Counsel
for the First Respondent:  Advocate J R
Peter
, SC (with
him, Advocate C
Georgiades
).
Attorneys
for the Applicant:  AJ Van Rensburg Inc.
Attorneys
for the First Respondent:  Nozuko Nxusani Inc.
Dates
of hearing:  2 December 2010, 7 February 2011, 20 January 2012.
Date
of Judgment:  20 January 2012.