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[2023] ZAFSHC 243
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MEC: Free State Provincial Government: Department of Police, Roads and Transport v Sedtrade (Pty) Ltd (1845/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 243 (19 June 2023)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
number: 1845/2022
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
MEC:
FREE STATE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT:
Applicant
DEPARTMENT
OF POLICE, ROADS AND TRANSPORT
And
SEDTRADE
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
HEARD
ON:
09
FEBRUARY 2023
JUDGMENT
BY:
DANISO, J
DELIVERED
ON:
This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email and by release to SAFLII. The
date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 19 JUNE 2023 at 14H00.
[1]
On 23 June 2022 judgment was granted against the applicant by
agreement between the
parties (consent order) pursuant to action
proceedings instituted by the respondent as plaintiff against the
applicant as defendant
for unpaid invoices relating to the upgrading
of the road between Deneysville and Heilbron in terms of a contract
concluded between
the parties on 13 September 2016.
[2]
In terms of the said consent order the parties agreed that:
“
1.
The defendant is to pay to the plaintiff the amount of R7 332 809.60;
2.
The defendant is to further pay to the plaintiff the amount of
R8 060 952.12;
3.
Each party to pay its own costs.”
[3]
In this opposed application, the applicant seeks an order for the
rescission or variation
of the consent order based on the common law
ground of
iustus
error
and
this is due to the fact that the applicant’s acting director of
Legal Services Mr Monyane, authorised the applicant’s
attorney
to consent to the order under the mistaken belief that the respondent
had completed the works and thus entitled to the
payment. It was only
after Mr Monyane submitted a motivation for the payment that he
became aware that the respondent had not completed
the works and that
the applicant’s project manager Mr Ndaba had also refused to
sign the certificate of completion for that
reason. The photographs
taken at the site
[1]
depicts
about a kilometre of incomplete road works.
[4]
It is the applicant’s case that the consent order ought to be
rescinded for
the reason that if the respondent is paid as per the
consent order, that would amount to fruitless and wasteful
expenditure as
all the contractual payment would be exhausted whilst
the project is incomplete. The court is also entitled rescind the
order on
just and equitable grounds to guard against an abuse of
public funds.
[5]
The respondent opposition is premised on the grounds that the
application is motivated
by an ulterior purpose. The applicant simply
seeks to avoid a perfectly valid obligation to pay the respondent
because, pursuant
to the consent order no payment was made by the
applicant with the result that approximately two months later on 1
September 2022
the respondent had to issue a warrant of execution for
the enforcement of the consent order.
[6]
The respondent explains that the defences relied upon by the
applicant namely, incomplete
works and unsigned completion
certificate existed before the consent order was issued. The matter
was discussed between the applicant’s
officials before the
settlement agreement was concluded and Mr Ndaba was present together
with other applicant’s officials
at the meeting where the
settlement agreement was ultimately concluded and later reduced into
writing by the applicant’s
head of department. Mr Monyane’s
error if any, it did not have an effect in the conclusion of the
settlement agreement which
resulted in the consent order therefore it
does not vitiate the consent order. There is also no evidence that
there purported error
was induced by misrepresentation on the part of
the respondent.
[7]
As regards the photographs depicting the incomplete work, the
respondent states that
the photos are not an adequate reflection of
the road. The outstanding work is actually in relation to the extra
one kilometre
which the applicant had first to obtain authorisation
from the Provincial Treasury and since no authorisation was obtained
by the
applicant the respondent could not build that road. According
to the respondent, the application is both morally and legally
repugnant
it must accordingly be dismissed with costs on a punitive
scale.
[8]
In terms of the common law a consent order may be rescinded on
justus
err
or
where it can be shown that the denier of liability laboured under a
mistake alternatively on
justa
causa
based on a good and sufficient cause shown warranting the rescission
namely, there is bona fide defence which
prima
facie
carries
some prospect of the applicant succeeding on the merits.
[2]
[9]
The background facts leading to the conclusion of the settlement
agreement which resulted
in the consent order do not support the
applicant’s contention that Mr Monyane laboured under a mistake
when he authorized
the applicant’s attorney to conclude a
settlement agreement with the respondent. His haphazard conclusion of
a settlement
agreement which resulted in the consent order to pay a
debt which was disputed was merely a pure neglect of his obligations
to
ensure that the applicant averts the legal risks including the
risk of fruitless and wasteful expenditure of public funds. I am
thus
not persuaded that the applicant’s reliance on
justus error
is legally sustainable.
[10]
On the papers, it is not in dispute that roadworks in relation to
about a kilometre of the road
is incomplete and that with regard to
the complete part of the road there are snags which have not been
attended to by the respondent.
The parties are in disagreement with
regard to the reasons for the incomplete works. A contractor is not
entitled to the final
payment until the building project is
complete.
[3]
The onus is on the
respondent to allege and prove that ‘everything was done that
had to be done in terms of the contract’
on which they rely for
its claim. For this reason, it does appear that
prima
facie,
the
applicant’s defence to the respondent’s claim carries
some prospects of success. The application is also
bona
fide
as
the applicant is desirous to be heard in the main action accordingly,
the applicant has made out a case for the rescission of
the consent
order on the basis of just cause.
[11]
Turning to the issue of costs. Notwithstanding the conclusion that I
have come to, I am not persuaded
by the applicant’s contention
that the respondent should be saddled with the costs based on its
opposition of the application.
The respondent had a judgment granted
in its favour by consent after a protracted period of settlement
negotiations the respondent
was therefore entitled to oppose the
application.
[12]
On the other side, the applicant’s conduct and how it shaped
the proceedings which resulted
in the consent order being granted has
been reprehensible, it is indeed a conduct which is well within the
type of conduct considered
to warrant a punitive cost order as
asserted by the respondent.
[13]
In the result,
I
make the
following order:
(1)
The court order dated 23 June 2022 is hereby rescinded.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the costs on attorney and client scale.
N.S. DANISO, J
APPEARANCES:
Counsel on behalf
of Applicant:
Adv. B.S. Mene SC
Instructed by:
State Attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN
Counsel on behalf
of Respondent:
Adv. S. Grobler
(SC)
Instructed by:
Raees Chothia
Attorneys
C/O Honey Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
Annexure “DPRT6” of the applicant’s founding
affidavit.
[2]
D E Van
Loggerenberg et al Er
a
smus
:
Superior Court Practice 2nd edition (2015) at B1–308.
[3]
Dalinga
Belleggings (Pty) Ltd v Antina (Pty) Ltd
1979
(2) SA 56
(A).