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[2010] ZAGPJHC 140
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Structured Connectivity Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Absolute Africa Supply Chain Services (Pty) Ltd (32318/08) [2010] ZAGPJHC 140 (5 February 2010)
IN THE SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 32318/08
Reportable
in:
SAFLII, JDR (Juta) and JOL
(LexisNexis) only
DATE: 05/02/2010
In the matter between:
STRUCTURED
CONNECTIVITY SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
ABSOLUTE
AFRICA SUPPLY CHAIN SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Defendant
JUDGMENT
WILLIS J:
[1] In this trial action, the
Plaintiff claims the sum of R874 101,98 arising from damage to goods
which allegedly occurred in transit
from one destination to another.
The defendant counterclaims R600 162, 31 in terms of an alleged
agreement of sale entered into
between the parties. This agreement is
denied by the plaintiff.
[2] It is common cause that a
so-called “joint venture” which counsel for the parties
and the various witnesses referred
to as “Comdev” secured
a lucrative contract to supply prefabricated banking branches to
Barclays bank in various countries
in Africa: Ghana, Uganda and
Tanzania (which included Zanzibar). These prefabricated branches were
made up in South Africa and
then transported to their countries of
destination for assembly at the sites where they were to function as
branches. Comdev secured
the services of the plaintiff to procure the
materials and to arrange for their delivery in a prefabricated
condition to their
sites of destination. The plaintiff, in
turn, entered into a written agreement with the defendant for the
defendant to provide
logistical, warehousing and transport services
to the plaintiff in respect of these prefabricated banking branches.
[3] Although it had originally
been intended that the goods would be sent by seafreight to their
countries of destination
and then transported overland by road in
trucks to the actual sites of assembly, pressure of time resulted in
the goods being airfreighted
to the countries of destination,
then warehoused and thereafter transported overland in trucks to the
actual sites.
Part of the prefabrication included decals made
of hard plastic in “Barclays blue” which contained the
logo of the
bank. As part of the prefabrication the decals had been
attached to certain of the panels made up in South Africa before
their
despatch to their countries of destination. In all the
countries concerned various of these decals had become damaged or
scratched
to an extent that would be unacceptable to Barclays and had
to be replaced. The damage occurred in July 2007. It is the
replacement
of these damaged decals that has given rise to the
plaintiff’s claim.
[4] It is common cause that the goods
were insured by the defendant for their journey up until their
airfreight journey had been
completed. They were not insured for
their overland journey on road in trucks from the warehousing in
their countries of destination
to the actual sites of assembly. Part
of the dispute between the parties had initially been whether the
agreement between the parties
provided for their insurance for this
part of the journey as well. The defendant contended that there was
no such agreement and
that, in any event, it would not have been
possible to obtain such insurance. The plaintiff, on the other hand,
contended that
insurance right up to delivery on site of assembly
formed part of the agreement between the parties. Although quite a
lot of time
was taken up in the trial on this issue, it ultimately
became irrelevant. The reasons for this are the following:
(i) The defendant had to concede that
the risk in respect of damage in transportation remained with the
defendant until the goods
had been delivered to the plaintiff at
site;
(ii) the evidence established, on a
balance of probabilities, that the goods had indeed been expertly
packaged, loaded, strapped
and transported for the airfreight portion
of their journey and indeed that they had been in an undamaged
condition right up to
the stage of their warehousing near the
airports in their country of destination.
The case therefore turns on a narrow
issue: were the goods damaged while being transported on trucks from
these warehouses to the
sites of assembly or were they damaged on
these sites after delivery had taken place?
[5] Mr Gareth Botha, a director of the
plaintiff, testified that the site managers at the various sites had
reported to him that,
upon unpacking the goods after delivery, the
damage had been uncovered. The damage could not have been detected
before unpacking
out of the packaging and, in any event, almost all
the signatures on the delivery notes were of persons who were not
employees
of the plaintiff or duly authorized to sign on its behalf.
Mr Johan Herbst, the plaintiff’s on-site project manager
in
Tanzania testified that the damage had to have occurred during
transportation as much of the damage (which was similar in every
instance that he saw) was apparent at the time when the goods were
being unpacked. He specifically and firmly denied that the goods
could have been damaged in the way that they were, on site. Mr Herbst
went further: it was clear that damage was caused by friction
or the
rubbing of the various panels against each other. Mr Ernest Seagreen
the Plaintiff’s on-site project manager at three
of the sites
in Tanzania gave evidence which was substantially the same as Mr
Herbst. Mr Seagreen described the damage as “skaafmerke”
which he emphatically disavowed could have been caused on site. He
said that Mr Johan Voges, the project manager at the other four
sites
in Uganda and who was not available to testify had reported to him
the same problem. The plaintiff’s witnesses all
gave evidence
of high quality. It is common cause that the panels in question were
protected in the packaging by a 2mm thick synthetic
insulation known
as “aerothene”. Although there was a difference of
opinion as to the quality of the roads in
question, it was clear that
long distance haulage was involved in almost every instance and that
the roads could not be described
as being “as smooth as a
baby’s bottom”.
[6] Apart from Mr Derek Westerne, the
managing director of and majority shareholder in the defendant, the
defendant’s witnesses,
Mr Johan Herselmann, Mr Anton Groenewald
and Mr Alain Da Costa all gave evidence as to the high standard of
the packaging of the
goods which were being transported. None of them
gave evidence of a direct nature as to what caused the damage. Mr Da
Costa conceded
that he could not exclude the possibility that the
goods had been damaged when they were transported on the trucks. It
should also
be borne in made that, although the goods were stacked on
to strapped palettes for their air freight, they were unstacked from
these palettes for sorting before they were transported on trucks. Mr
Westerne gave evidence as to what had been agreed between
the
parties.
[7] Various criticisms can be levelled
at the evidence of Mr Westerne:
(i) aspects of his version which
should have been put to the plaintiff’s witnesses were not –
for example (a) that Mr
Botha had specifically been told by him
that there would be no insurance for the transportation by road in
the countries
of destination and (b) that a “fabricated”
or at very least misleading insurance claim had been submitted with
the
knowing co-operation of Mr Botha;
(ii) His description of the manner in
which the goods had been packed differed from that of his own
witness, Mr Da Costa;
(iii) He was prepared to mislead the
insurers as to the possibility that the goods could have been damaged
during their being airfreighted;
(iv) The documentation upon which he
relied in support of the counterclaim appears to have been contrived,
containing detail that
matches in a fine degree and to an extent that
cannot be mere coincidence with that upon which the plaintiff has
relied for
its claim;
(v) He not infrequently contradicted
himself and when confronted therewith said that he had “made a
mistake”;
(vi) He eventually conceded that there
had been no agreement between himself and Mr Botha in regard to the
subject matter of the
counterclaim but reasoned that the plaintiff
was liable as the defendant was not responsible for the value of the
goods which the
defendant had replaced.
Accordingly, the defendant’s
counterclaim cannot succeed. It must be dismissed.
[8] Insofar as the plaintiff’s
claim is concerned, the defendant relied, essentially, upon the
plaintiff’s
onus
to prove that, as matter of
probability, the goods had been damaged while they had been
transported on road in their countries
of destination and not after
they had been delivered to their sites of ultimate destination. In
other words, other than to shrug
his shoulders, hold up his hands in
resignation and suggest that the damage could have been caused by
“anything”, Mr
Wannenburg
, who appeared for the
defendant, could not indicate what could account for the
damage. It seems to me that, as a matter of
probability, the goods in
question were indeed damaged while they were being transported
overland by trucks in their countries
of destination (i.e. before
they had been delivered to the assembly sites). I come to this
conclusion for the following reasons:
(i) exactly the same type of damage
occurred to the same goods at different sites and in different
countries – suggesting
that there must have been a common
denominator;
(ii) the common denominator is the 2mm
thick aerothene between the panels during transportation – one
hardly needs to be an
expert to deduce that this would have been
inadequate to safeguard against the friction that would inevitably
accompany the transportation
of goods in trucks over long distances
on less than perfect roads;
(iii) clear and convincing evidence
was given that the damage to the decals was indeed caused by
friction;
(iv) much of the expert packing,
stacking and strapping for the airfreight would have had to have been
undone when the airfreight
journey had been completed;
(v) no other explanation for why the
damage should have been of the nature it was suggests itself.
[9] It is common cause that the cost
of replacing the decals was an amount of R874 101.98 and that,
pending the resolution of the
dispute, Comdev had paid an amount of
R672 144.14 to Sign Out CC on behalf of the plaintiff in order to
ensure that the damaged
goods were replaced timeously. Comdev
has yet to pay an amount of R201 957.84. Mr
Wannenburg
submitted, in one breath, that the plaintiff had, accordingly
suffered no loss, and in the next breath that, alternatively, the
plaintiff’s proven damages stood at R201 957.84 less than that
which had been claimed. In my view, the payment by Comdev
was clearly
res inter alios acta
: the contract in question was between the
plaintiff and the defendant, the plaintiff suffered its loss when the
breach occurred
and is entitled to be recompensed by the defendant -
the payment by Comdev is a collateral matter. (See
Santam
Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk v Byleveldt
1973 (2) SA 146
(A)
at 150F; 153B-D and 168 and
AA Alloy Foundry (Pty) Ltd v Titaco
Projects (Pty) Ltd
2000 (1) SA 639
(SCA) at paragraph [11].) The
plaintiff’s quantum of damages has been proven in the amount it
has claimed. It seems from
the uncontested allegations in the
pleadings that the date from which
mora
interest can safely be
determined to run is 26th July, 2007.
[10] Finally, there is an issue which
has been raised by Mr
Wannenburg
in his heads: the plaintiff
had failed to comply with certain conditions in the defendant’s
general terms and conditions
to which reference was made in Annexure
“A” of the agreement between the parties in regard to
timeous reporting of
the loss. These terms and conditions were,
according to the defendant, available on request. Quite apart from
any other considerations,
I agree with Mr
Du Plessis
who
appeared for the plaintiff that as this aspect had never even been
pleaded by the defendant, it cannot even be considered now.
[11] Judgment is given for the
plaintiff against the defendant as follows.
A.
The defendant is to pay the plaintiff:
(a)
R874 101,98;
(b)
Interest on the aforesaid sum at the rate
of 15,5%
per annum
from
26th July, 2007 to date of payment;
(c)
Costs of suit.
B.
The
defendant’s counterclaim is dismissed with costs.
DATED AT JOHANNESBURG THIS 5th DAY
of FEBRUARY, 2010.
N.P. WILLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Advocate
D.T. v R. Du Plessis
Attorneys
for the Plaintiff:
Le Roux Vivier & Associates.
For
the Defendant:
Advocate
W. Wannenburg
Attorneys
for Defendant:
Sim & Botsi Attorneys Inc.
Dates
of hearing:
14th -18th September, 2009 and
26th January, 2010.
Date
of judgment:
5th February,
2010.