Eagle Ukhozi Civils (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eastern Cape Development Corporation (CA211/2022) [2023] ZAECMKHC 59 (9 May 2023)

80 Reportability
Banking and Finance

Brief Summary

Execution — Rescission of judgment — Default judgment — Appellants sought rescission of default judgment granted in favor of the respondent for non-payment under a loan agreement — Appellants claimed they were unaware of the summons due to improper service and provided explanations for their delay in applying for rescission — Court found that appellants established good cause for rescission by providing reasonable explanations for their default and demonstrating bona fide defenses to the respondent's claim, including the argument that the respondent assumed responsibility for collecting payments from the municipality.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings concerned an appeal to a Full Court of the Eastern Cape Division (Makhanda) against the dismissal of a common-law rescission application. The appellants, Eagle Ukhozi Civils (Pty) Ltd (first appellant) and Mpendulo Ndlazi (second appellant, the company’s sole director and surety), sought the rescission and setting aside of a default judgment previously granted in favour of the respondent, the Eastern Cape Development Corporation (an organ of state established under provincial legislation).


The procedural history began with the granting of default judgment on 30 October 2018 by Jaji J. That judgment, among other things, terminated a construction loan agreement and ordered payment of R579 302.32. In June 2020, the appellants launched an application for rescission of that default judgment, but the rescission application was dismissed with costs by Nhlangulela DJP on 3 December 2020. Leave to appeal was initially granted only on a limited basis, after which the appellants petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal and obtained leave to appeal on the grounds set out in their notice of appeal. The respondent did not oppose the appeal.


The dispute arose from a construction-finance arrangement linked to a municipal roads contract, including a loan agreement, a cession of municipal receivables, and a suretyship. The central controversy in the rescission proceedings was whether the appellants had shown good cause for rescission by providing a reasonable explanation for default and demonstrating bona fide defences with prima facie prospects of success.


2. Material Facts


During 2015, the Mnquma Local Municipality awarded the first appellant a contract for the construction and resurfacing of municipal roads. The first appellant then obtained loan finance from the respondent in the amount of R960 000, and the parties concluded a Construction Loan Agreement. The loan was repayable within nine months. The structure of the arrangement contemplated that amounts payable by the municipality to the first appellant would be channelled to the respondent by way of a cession agreement, and that the respondent would manage and administer the funds received and pay suppliers directly. The first appellant would become entitled to profits only once the loan had been repaid in full and the agreement terminated. It was common cause that the respondent paid the R960 000 to suppliers identified by the first appellant.


The loan agreement also provided that if the first appellant failed to pay instalments when due, the respondent would be entitled, among other things, to terminate the agreement and institute legal proceedings. In addition to the cession arrangement, the second appellant had previously executed a deed of suretyship on 18 December 2015, binding himself as surety and co-principal debtor for sums owed by the first appellant to the respondent.


At some stage the payments from the municipality “dried up”. The respondent demanded payment from the appellants of R579 302.32. When payment was not made, the respondent instituted action seeking termination of the loan agreement, payment of the amount claimed, and ancillary relief. The appellants did not enter an appearance to defend, and default judgment was granted.


In the rescission application, the appellants alleged that they had not received the summonses and learned of the default judgment only on 17 January 2020, when the sheriff served a warrant of execution on a third party (Mr Ntsholo) and attached and removed a truck he had bought from the first appellant. The summons had been served at the first appellant’s domicilium citandi et executandi during May 2018, and service was effected by affixing copies to the door because nobody was present. The appellants attributed their lack of awareness of the action to the second appellant’s frequent travel, the premises being unoccupied for long periods, and the absence of staff due to financial difficulty linked to the municipality’s failure to pay invoices.


The appellants further explained that the delay in launching rescission (filed in June 2020) resulted from practical difficulties experienced by their attorneys in obtaining missing documents, awaiting counsel to settle papers, and the impact of the strictly enforced Covid-19 lockdown.


As to defences, the appellants asserted (in substance) that they were not in breach of the loan agreement because, on their version, the cession arrangement and the structure of the transaction meant that repayment was to be sourced from municipal payments and that the respondent had assumed responsibility for collecting those payments. They also contended that a clause effectively placing the risk of municipal non-payment on the first appellant was contrary to public policy and unenforceable. In addition, they alleged a counterclaim against the respondent in the amount of R1 216 714.64, premised on the respondent’s alleged failure (as cessionary) to collect outstanding debts from the municipality, which counterclaim would, if successful, extinguish the respondent’s claim.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the appellants had satisfied the requirements for common-law rescission by showing good cause, which in turn required a reasonable explanation for the default (and for the delay in bringing the rescission application) and the demonstration of a bona fide defence with prima facie prospects of success.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to facts, rather than the resolution of the ultimate merits of the contractual dispute. A further issue concerned the approach adopted by the court a quo, including whether it misdirected itself by treating the application as one under Rule 42(1) and by evaluating the defences as though deciding their merits rather than determining whether triable issues had been raised.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Full Court reaffirmed that, under the common law, an applicant for rescission must establish good cause by meeting two requirements: providing a reasonable explanation for the default and showing a bona fide defence with prima facie prospects of success. The court stressed that satisfying only one requirement is insufficient, and failure to establish both may justify refusal of rescission.


The court held that the appellants’ explanation for default was reasonable in the circumstances. Service had been effected at the domicilium by affixing to the door, and the respondent could not dispute the appellants’ assertion that they were unaware of the action. The court accepted that the appellants had shown they were not in wilful default. Regarding the time taken to launch rescission, the court considered the realities affecting litigants during the early stages of the Covid-19 lockdown and concluded that the delay, viewed in context, was not unreasonable.


On the defence requirement, the court emphasised that a rescission court is not required to determine the merits in full. It is sufficient if the applicant sets out facts which, if proved at trial, would constitute a valid defence. Against that standard, the court found that the appellants had raised multiple defences that were bona fide and had prima facie prospects. In particular, the allegation that the respondent had assumed responsibility for claiming payment from the municipality, if established at trial, could constitute a complete defence by undermining the respondent’s contention that the first appellant was in breach of the repayment obligations in the manner alleged.


The court further accepted that the pleaded counterclaim, if proven, could operate as a defence because a counterclaim that would extinguish the plaintiff’s claim constitutes a bona fide and complete defence for rescission purposes. The court also treated the public policy challenge as a potentially valid defence if substantiated at trial, noting that South African contract law recognises that enforcement of a contractual term may be refused where enforcement would be contrary to public policy. In this regard, the court referred to the Constitutional Court’s guidance that values such as fairness, reasonableness, and good faith have relevance when determining whether enforcement would offend public policy, and that pacta sunt servanda is not the only controlling principle under the Constitution.


The Full Court concluded that the court a quo had misdirected itself by approaching the matter as though it were brought under Rule 42(1) (error in granting judgment), when it was brought under the common law, and by appearing to evaluate the merits of the defences rather than asking whether the appellants had raised triable issues. On the correct approach, the appellants had met both elements of good cause. The dismissal of rescission was therefore incorrect, and the appeal had to succeed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal was upheld. The Full Court set aside the order of the court a quo and substituted it with an order rescinding and setting aside the default judgment granted on 30 October 2018 under case number 1299/18.


The respondent was ordered to pay the appellants’ costs of the appeal, and also the costs of the rescission application on the party-and-party scale.


Cases Cited


Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe v Fick 2013 (5) SA 325 (CC).


Sanderson Technicol v Intermenua 1980 (4) SA 574 (WLD).


Soil Fumigation Services Lowveld CC v Chemfit Technical Products (Pty) Ltd 2004 (6) SA 29.


Beadica 231 CC and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Oregon Trust and Others 2020 (5) SA 247 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Eastern Cape Development Corporation Act 2 of 1997.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 42(1).


Held


The Full Court held that the rescission application was brought under the common law and that the court a quo misdirected itself by treating it as if it were a Rule 42(1) rescission and by approaching the matter as though it had to decide the merits of the defences rather than whether triable issues were raised.


It held further that the appellants provided a reasonable explanation for their default and for the timing of the rescission application, including that they were not in wilful default and that the Covid-19 lockdown context was relevant to the delay.


It held that the appellants disclosed bona fide defences with prima facie prospects of success, including a defence grounded in the structure and effect of the cession-related arrangements, a pleaded counterclaim capable of extinguishing the respondent’s claim, and a public-policy challenge to enforcement of the relevant clause. On that basis, good cause was established and rescission should have been granted.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Common-law rescission requires an applicant to show good cause, comprising both a reasonable explanation for the default and the existence of a bona fide defence that has prima facie prospects of success; establishing only one of these elements is insufficient.


In assessing a bona fide defence for rescission, an applicant need not prove the defence on the papers; it is sufficient to allege facts which, if established at trial, would constitute a valid defence, as the rescission court is concerned with whether triable issues exist rather than with finally determining the merits.


A counterclaim that would extinguish the plaintiff’s claim may constitute a complete defence for purposes of establishing good cause in rescission proceedings.


Contractual enforcement may be refused where enforcement of a term would be contrary to public policy, and public policy analysis in contract law is constitutionally informed; abstract values such as fairness, reasonableness, and good faith are relevant to public-policy enquiry, and pacta sunt servanda does not automatically trump other constitutional considerations.

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[2023] ZAECMKHC 59
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Eagle Ukhozi Civils (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eastern Cape Development Corporation (CA211/2022) [2023] ZAECMKHC 59 (9 May 2023)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CAPE DIVISION
– MAKHANDA)
CASE NO.:CA211/2022
Matter heard on: 11
April 2023
Judgement delivered
on: 9 May 2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
In the matter between: -
EAGLE UKHOZI CIVILS
(PTY) LTD                                 First

Appellant
MPENDULO
NDLAZI                                                        Second

Appellant
and
EASTERN CAPE
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION       Respondent
JUDGMENT
SMITH
J:
Introduction
[1]
On 30 October 2018, Jaji J granted default judgment against the
appellants, inter alia, terminating a ‘Construction
Loan
Agreement’ (the loan agreement) concluded by the first
appellant and the respondent, and ordering them to pay to the
latter
the sum of R579 302.32. The appellants subsequently
unsuccessfully applied for an order rescinding the judgment. The

rescission application was argued before Nhlangulela DJP and on 3
December 2020, the learned judge handed down judgment dismissing
the
application with costs.
[2]
The appellants’ application for leave to appeal was only
partially successful since Nhlangulela DJP
granted leave on a limited
ground only. The appellants thereafter petitioned the Supreme Court
of Appeal and were granted leave
to appeal on the grounds set out in
their notice of appeal.
[3]
The first appellant is a duly registered company. The second
appellant is a businessman and the sole director
of the first
appellant. The respondent is an organ of state duly established in
terms of the Eastern Cape Development Corporation
Act, 2 of 1997. The
respondent did not oppose the appeal.
The
facts
[4]
The relevant facts are briefly as follows. During 2015, the Mnquma
Local Municipality (the municipality) awarded
a contract to the first
appellant for the construction and resurfacing of municipal roads.
The latter thereafter successfully applied
to the respondent for loan
finance in the sum of R960 000. The parties then entered into
the loan agreement in terms of which,
inter alia, the respondent
would advance to the first appellant the abovementioned sum as
funding for the construction project.
The loan was repayable within a
period of nine months. In terms of the loan agreement all payments
due to the first appellant by
the Municipality would be paid to the
respondent by virtue of a cession agreement. The respondent would
manage and administer all
monies received from the municipality and
would pay suppliers directly for amounts invoiced to the first
appellant. The latter
would only be entitled to profits once the loan
had been repaid in full and the agreement terminated. It was common
cause that
the respondent paid the initial loan amount of R960 000
to suppliers stipulated by the first respondent.
[5]
The agreement furthermore provided that should the first appellant
fail to pay instalments on the due dates,
the respondent would, inter
alia, be entitled to terminate the agreement and institute legal
proceedings.
[6]
At the same time the parties also concluded the cession agreement in
terms of which the first appellant ceded
to the respondent all
payments due to it by the municipality and the latter would make
payment directly to the respondent.
[7]
The second appellant and the respondent had also previously, on 18
December 2015, entered into a deed of suretyship,
in terms of which
the former bound himself as surety and co-principal debtor with the
first appellant ‘for the due payment
of any sums of money now
owing or which may become owing and claimable’ from the first
appellant by the respondent.
[8]
For reasons which are unimportant for the purposes of the appeal, the
payments from the municipality dried
up and the respondent demanded
payment in the sum of R579 302.32 from the appellants. When they
failed to pay, the respondent
instituted civil action for an order
terminating the loan agreement, payment of the aforesaid amount and
ancillary relief. The
appellants failed to file notices to defend and
the respondent successfully applied for default judgment.
[9]
The rescission application was launched during June 2020. In that
application the appellant sought to show
good cause by asserting that
they have a reasonable and acceptable explanation for their default
and a valid and bona fide defence
to the respondent’s claim.
The
appellants’ explanation for their default
[10]
In explaining the reasons for their default the appellants alleged
that they did not receive the summonses and only became
aware of the
default judgment against them on 17 January 2020 after the sheriff
had served the warrant of execution on one Mr Ntsholo,
attaching and
removing a truck that he had bought from the first appellant. The
summons had been served on the first appellant’s
domicilium
citandi et executandi
during May 2018, but there was nobody at
the premises at the time and service was effected by affixing copies
of the summons to
the door. The second appellant had travelled
extensively during that time and the premises were consequently
unoccupied for long
periods. Because of his dire financial situation
brought about by the municipality’s failure to pay invoices
rendered by
the first appellant, he could not afford to employ staff.
They were therefore unaware of the fact that the respondent had
instituted
civil action against them.
[11]
Regarding their failure to bring the rescission application within
the prescribed time period, the appellants explained
that the delay
was caused by their attorneys’ struggle to obtain copies of
missing documents, waiting for counsel to settle
the application
papers and the difficulties caused by the strictly enforced lockdown
in place at the time.
Bona
fide defence
[12]
The appellants also asserted that they have a bona fide defence to
the respondent’s claim. They denied that they
were in breach of
the loan agreement and asserted that the first appellant’s
contractual duty to pay the instalments had
been transferred to the
respondent by way of the cession agreement. They had informed the
respondent about the municipality’s
failure to pay the invoices
and the latter was thus aware that the first appellant did not
receive any payments from the municipality.
The agreement provided
that the respondent would settle the outstanding balance on the
facility from payments received from the
municipality. They contended
that because the municipality had failed to pay invoices rendered by
the first appellant, the latter
was not under any obligation to pay
the loan instalments. The first appellant could consequently not have
been in breach of the
loan agreement.
[13]
They also contended that the clause which provided that the first
appellant would be in breach if the municipality fails
to pay is
against public policy and thus invalid and unenforceable. They
submitted that it is ‘absurd that where one organ
of state does
not pay, another private person or entity who is a candidate for
development should effectively stand as surety for
an organ of
state.’ They contended furthermore that one of the main objects
of the respondent is to nurture and encourage
the development of
small businesses. It was accordingly against public policy for the
latter, using its disproportionately powerful
bargaining position, to
foist the impugned clause upon it.
[14]
In addition, they contended that they have a counter-claim against
the respondent that would entirely extinguish its
claim. The cession
agreement envisages that the respondent, as cessionary, would collect
outstanding debts from the municipality.
It has failed to do so and
the first appellant consequently has a counter-claim against it in
the sum of R1 216 714,
64.
Findings
of the court
a quo
[15]
For some reason Nhlangulela DJP approached the matter as if it were
an application for rescission in terms of rule 42
(1), namely that
the default judgment was granted in error. This was an unfortunate
misdirection on the part of the learned judge
since the application
was unambiguously brought in terms of the common law. It also appears
that the learned judge was of the view
that he was called upon to
determine the merits of the defences proffered by the appellants
instead of determining whether they
have raised triable issues in the
sense that the facts put up by them, if established at the trial in
due course, would constitute
a valid defence to the plaintiff’s
claim. This much is also evident from the manner in which he had
couched the order granting
leave to appeal, namely: ‘for
determination of the issue whether the respondent’s right to
claim payment, and the applicants’
corresponding obligation to
pay, under the Construction Loan Agreement was suspended and/or
waived by the terms of the Deed of
Settlement.’
[16]
Regarding the adequacy of the appellants’ explanation for their
default, the learned judge found that their concession
that the
possibility that the summonses were served on the first appellant’s
domicilium citandi et executandi
could not be ruled out, ‘puts
paid to the issue that judgment was granted without prior
notification.’ And regarding
their failure to bring the
rescission application within a reasonable time, the learned judge
found that the long delay was not
explained adequately and was
‘typically the approach of a litigant with a lackadaisical
attitude.’
[17]
For the reasons set out below, I respectfully disagree with the
learned judge’s reasoning and findings.
Discussion
[18]
An applicant for rescission must establish good cause by: (a)
providing a reasonable explanation for his or her default;
and (b)
showing that he or she has a bona fide defence to the plaintiff’s
claim, which has
prima facie
prospects of success. It is not
sufficient for only one of those requirements to be established, and
a failure to establish both
may result in the court refusing to grant
the requested rescission. (
Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe
v Fick
2013 (5) SA 325
(CC), at para 85)
[19]
An applicant is not required to deal fully with the merits and must
only show a
prima facie
defence by averring facts which, if
proved at the trial in due course, would constitute a bona fide and
valid defence to the plaintiff’s
claim. (
Sanderson Technicol
v Intermenua
1980 (4) 574 (WLD), at 575-H) It is also established
law that a counter-claim which will extinguish the plaintiff’s
claim
also constitutes a bona fide and complete defence to the
plaintiff’s claim. (
Soil Fumigation Services Lowveld CC v
Chemfit Technical Products (Pty) Ltd
2004 (6) SA 29)
[20]
I am of the view that the appellants have proffered reasonable
explanations for their default and failure to bring the
rescission
application within the prescribed time period. It was common cause
that the summonses were served on the first appellant’s
domicilium citandi et executandi
and the respondent was unable
to dispute their assertion that they were unaware of the civil action
against them. They have accordingly
shown that they were not in
wilful default. The court must also take judicial notice of the
difficulties encountered by litigants
during the early stages of the
Covid lockdown. The delay in launching the rescission application was
accordingly, in my view, not
unreasonable.
[21]
To my mind the appellants have also shown that they have several bona
fide defences to the respondent’s claim.
The averment that the
respondent had assumed the responsibility to claim payment from the
municipality will, if established at
the trial, constitute a complete
defence to the respondent’s claim, since it would mean that the
first appellant was consequently
not in breach of the loan agreement.
The appellants have also set out sufficient facts to establish that
they have a counter-claim
against the respondent, which if
successful, will extinguish its claim.
[22]
The assertion that the clause on which the respondent relies for its
contention that the first appellant is in breach
of the loan
agreement is against public policy and therefore unenforceable, will
also if proved at the trial, constitute a valid
defence to the
respondent’s claim.
[23]
In our law a court may refuse to enforce a term of a contract on the
basis that it is mala fide, unfair or unreasonable
and therefore
contrary to public policy. The Constitutional Court has
authoritatively pronounced on this issue in
Beadicia 231 CC and
Others v Trustees of the time being of the Oregon Trust and Others
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC), holding that abstract values such as good
faith, fairness or reasonableness have relevance in the application
of contract
law when the question arises as to whether a contractual
provision or the enforcement thereof would be against public policy.
The
Court also emphasized that ‘in our new constitutional era,
the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
is not the only, nor the
most important principle, informing the judicial control of contacts’
and that there is no basis
for elevating the principle above other
constitutional rights. If the enforcement of a contractual term will
implicate a number
of constitutional rights, ‘a careful
balancing act’ is required to determine whether it will offend
public policy.
(At para 87)
[24]
As mentioned, it is not the duty of the court hearing the rescission
application to determine the merits of the defences
averred by the
applicant, but that of the trial court. I am accordingly of the view
that the appellants have also established that
they have bona fide
defences to the plaintiff’s claim, which have
prima facie
prospects of success. The court a quo therefore wrongly dismissed the
application for rescission and the appeal must consequently
succeed,
Order
[25]
In the result the following order issues:
1.
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2.
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and there is substituted the
following order:
(a)
The default judgment granted against the
applicants on 30 October 2018 under case number 1299/18 is hereby
rescinded and set aside.
(b)
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the
application on the party and party scale.
JE
SMITH
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
RWN
BROOKS
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
N
MULLINS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Appellants:     Adv. M Gwala SC with Adv. N
Mathe-Ndlazi
:      Yokwana
Attorneys
10 New Street
MAKHANDA
(Ref.: Mr. Yokwana/E14)
Counsel
for the Respondent:  No Appearance
:  Gravett
Schoeman Attorneys
C/o Neville Borman &
Botha
22 Hill Street
MAKHANDA
(Ref.: Mr. Powers)