Tongaat Hulett Sugar South Africa Limited v Mayola and Other (7694/2020P) [2022] ZAKZPHC 36 (18 August 2022)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Pleadings — Exceptions — Vague and embarrassing — Plaintiff's particulars of claim amended to include invoices and payment details after exceptions raised by First Defendant — Mngadi J. upheld some exceptions but dismissed others — Remaining exceptions related to alleged vagueness and lack of particularity regarding fraud claims — Court found that amendments cured previous defects, providing sufficient detail for First Defendant to plead — Eighth, ninth, and eleventh grounds of exception dismissed with costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings concerned an exception to amended particulars of claim in an action instituted in the High Court of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal Division, Pietermaritzburg. The plaintiff, Tongaat Hulett Sugar South Africa Limited, sued four defendants, namely Nqabomzi Mayola (first defendant), Deetee Transport (Pty) Ltd (second defendant), David Thulani Sibeko (third defendant), and Yali Phindugcobe Joyi (fourth defendant).


The procedural history was central to the decision. After the plaintiff issued summons and delivered particulars of claim, the first defendant delivered twelve grounds of exception. Those exceptions were adjudicated by Mngadi J, who dismissed a number of the grounds (in light of amendments made prior to that hearing) but upheld exceptions relating to the ninth and eleventh grounds (and also found the eighth ground problematic in the earlier iteration), with costs. Following that judgment, the plaintiff delivered a further notice of intention to amend, and filed amended particulars of claim on 6 December 2021, attaching multiple annexures.


The remaining dispute before Bezuidenhout J concerned whether the plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim still failed to comply with the pleading requirements (including under Uniform Rule 18) by being vague and embarrassing, especially given the pleaded allegations of fraud and the alleged lack of adequate particularity to enable the first defendant to plead.


Material Facts


The plaintiff’s pleaded case was that payments were made by it to the second defendant pursuant to invoices and internal authorisations, but that such payments were not due or payable because, on the plaintiff’s version, no services had been rendered and there was no contract or agreement justifying the transport payments.


It was pleaded that the first defendant, in particular, authorised payments in circumstances where the first defendant allegedly knew the payments were not due because no services were performed. The plaintiff also pleaded that the second, third, and fourth defendants accepted payments knowing they were not due and payable and that the second defendant was not entitled to them. In the amended particulars, the plaintiff’s case was expressed as involving an intention to defraud.


In response to the earlier exceptions upheld by Mngadi J, the plaintiff’s amendments included the attachment of extensive documentation. The amendment replaced paragraph 12A to state that annexures B1 to B218 were the invoices reflected in paragraph 12. A further paragraph (13B) was introduced attaching additional documents, including authorisations extracted from the plaintiff’s SAP system (marked C2) and a letter from Rand Merchant Bank dated 3 December 2021 confirming amounts paid by the plaintiff to the second defendant as per the accompanying spreadsheets, together with spreadsheets (marked D1, D2, and D3) detailing deposits and references.


The first defendant persisted with exceptions (in substance corresponding to the previously upheld grounds) on the basis that, despite the attachments, the amended particulars remained vague and embarrassing. It was contended that material details were still missing for purposes of pleading, including contentions that the contract ought to have been attached, that bank statements were not attached, and that the allegations of fraud were inadequately particularised (including the component of intention). The seventh ground (relating to invoices) was not pursued at the later stage.


The plaintiff’s position was that the amended particulars, read with the annexures, identified the relevant payments, dates, recipients, and the basis upon which the payments were said to be unjustified, and that the pleaded case was sufficient to enable the first defendant to plead.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the amended particulars of claim were excipiable on the basis that they were vague and embarrassing, and in particular whether the plaintiff had pleaded its claim (including allegations of fraud) with sufficient particularity to enable the first defendant to plead without suffering serious prejudice.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of procedural pleading principles to the pleaded facts, namely whether the pleadings met the threshold required by the Uniform Rules and the case law governing exceptions. It also involved an evaluative assessment of whether any lack of particularity (if present) produced serious embarrassment and prejudice sufficient to justify the exceptional remedy of upholding an exception.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter by focusing on the amended particulars of claim (rather than revisiting all earlier exceptions), noting that most earlier grounds had already been disposed of by Mngadi J. The court treated the surviving controversy as directed to whether the amendments and attached documents adequately cured the alleged vagueness and embarrassment forming the basis of the exceptions being persisted with.


The court applied established principles governing exceptions. It relied on authority emphasising that the purpose of an exception is not to secure technical advantage or to embarrass an opponent, but to resolve issues expeditiously or to protect a party against embarrassment that is sufficiently serious to warrant the costs and consequences of exception proceedings. In this connection, the court emphasised that pleadings must be read as a whole, and that an exception is not properly directed at non-self-contained fragments.


The court further applied the standard two-stage enquiry for an exception on the ground of vagueness and embarrassment, namely whether the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that it is vague, and whether the vagueness causes embarrassment amounting to prejudice. The court also endorsed the approach that an exception of this kind should not succeed unless the excipient will be seriously prejudiced.


On the facts as pleaded and as supplemented by the annexures, the court concluded that the relevant exceptions had been cured. The court considered that the attached invoices and payment documentation clearly indicated which payments were made, when they were made, and to whom they were made. The plaintiff’s pleaded case that there was no contract, no agreement, and no services rendered was treated as providing the essential basis for the alleged unlawfulness of the payments. The court reasoned that, on this footing, the first defendant was placed in a position to plead.


In dealing specifically with the fraud-related criticism, the court held that the particulars of claim (with reference to the pleaded paragraphs dealing with the absence of any payment being due and the alleged intention to defraud) contained sufficient averments to sustain a fraud-based claim at pleading stage. The court’s assessment was that the pleaded allegations, together with the attached documents, enabled the first defendant to understand the case being advanced and to plead thereto. The court also relied on the principle that where evidence could be led consistent with the pleaded cause of action, the pleading is not excipiable.


Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the first defendant’s eighth, ninth, and eleventh grounds of exception to the amended particulars of claim. The dismissal was accompanied by an order that the exceptions were dismissed with costs.


Cases Cited


Living Hands (Pty) Ltd v Ditz 2013 (2) SA 368.


Trope v South African Reserve Bank and Another and Two Other Cases 1992 (3) SA 208 (TPD).


Home Talk Developments (Pty) Limited and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (2017) 3 All SA 382 (SCA).


Technical Systems (Pty) Limited and Another v RTS Industries and Another (2020) JOL 47895 (WCC).


Francis v Thorp 2004 (3) SA 230 (C).


McKalrey v Cawood NO 1980 (4) SA 525 (Z).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 18.


Held


The court held that, after the plaintiff’s amendments dated 6 December 2021 and the attachment of the invoices, SAP authorisations, and bank confirmation documentation, the pleaded claim contained sufficient particularity to enable the first defendant to plead. The court further held that the amended particulars were not vague and embarrassing in a manner causing serious prejudice, and that the pleaded allegations were sufficient, at pleading stage, to sustain a fraud-based claim. The first defendant’s eighth, ninth, and eleventh grounds of exception were therefore dismissed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An exception is a procedural mechanism aimed at resolving a case (or part of a case) expeditiously or protecting a party from serious embarrassment, and it is not intended to facilitate technical point-scoring or to embarrass an opponent.


In determining an exception, pleadings must be read as a whole, and an exception should not be directed at portions of pleadings that are not self-contained.


An exception on the ground that a pleading is vague and embarrassing requires a two-stage assessment: first, whether the pleading lacks particularity to the extent of vagueness; and second, whether the vagueness results in embarrassment that causes prejudice to the excipient. Such an exception should not be upheld unless the excipient would be seriously prejudiced.


Where a pleading is framed such that evidence could be led to disclose a cause of action as alleged, the pleading is not excipiable on the basis of vagueness and embarrassment.


In matters involving allegations of fraud or dishonesty, the pleadings must contain sufficient averments and particularity to inform the opposing party of the case to be met; however, the adequacy of particularity is assessed in context, including the pleaded allegations read with incorporated or attached documents that clarify the claim.

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[2022] ZAKZPHC 36
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Tongaat Hulett Sugar South Africa Limited v Mayola and Other (7694/2020P) [2022] ZAKZPHC 36 (18 August 2022)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
CASE NUMBER:
7694/2020P
In the matter between:
TONGAAT HULETT SUGAR
SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED                      Plaintiff
and
NQABOMZI
MAYOLA                                                                            First

Defendant
DEETEE TRANSPORT (PTY)
LTD                                                       Second

Defendant
DAVID THULANI
SIBEKO                                                                     Third

Defendant
YALI PHINDUGCOBE
JOYI

Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
BEZUIDENHOUT J:
[1]
Plaintiff instituted an action against the four Defendants.
First Defendant
thereafter raised twelve grounds of exception to the
particulars of claim.  These exceptions were heard by Mngadi J.
who upheld
some of the exceptions and dismissed the others.
Prior to the matter being heard by Mngadi J. Plaintiff made certain
amendments
to the particulars of claim and it was then held by Mngadi
J. that the amended particulars of claim addressed the grounds of
exception
raised in the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth,
tenth and twelfth grounds of exception and dismissed them
accordingly.
[2]
What remained were the grounds raised in respect of the seventh,
eighth, ninth and
eleventh grounds of exception.  The seventh
ground related to the failure to attach invoices to the particulars
of claim.
The eighth ground related to the failure to furnish
details of the alleged payments procured rendering the pleadings
vague
and embarrassing.  Mngadi J. also found that the ninth
ground and eleventh ground were justified, were vague and
embarrassing
and accordingly those exceptions were upheld with
costs.
[3]
After the judgment of Mngadi J. Plaintiff filed a notice of intention
to amend its
particulars of claim and the particulars of claim were
amended on 6 December 2021.  This was firstly by deletion of the
existing
paragraph 12A and substituting it with the following 12A
“attached marked B1 to B218 are the invoices reflected in
paragraph
12 of the particulars of claim”.  Secondly by
the insertion of a new paragraph numbered 13B and which reads “13B

attached hereto are 13B.1 marked C2 of the authorisations extracted
from Plaintiffs SAP system, 13B.2A marked D1 a copy of a letter
from
Rand Merchant Bank dated 3 December 2021 confirming the amounts paid
by Plaintiff to Second Defendant as per the spread sheet
attached D1,
13B.2B marked D2 the first spread sheet referred to in D1 as an
amount deposited and 13D.2C marked E3 the second spread
sheet
referred to in D1 as reference”.
[4]
It was submitted by Mr. Gumbi on behalf of the excipient that the
exceptions in respect
of the previous grounds of exception relating
to grounds 8, 9 and 11 are still pursued as they do not comply with
rule 18.
This is as per the notice of exception
dated 4 February 2022.  It was submitted that the contract must
be attached
to the particulars of claim and the bank statements were
not attached and that the action should be therefore be dismissed
with
costs.
[5]
It was submitted that Plaintiff’s action is based on fraud
allegedly committed
by First Defendant and that paragraph 17 of the
particulars of claim states “The second, third and fourth
defendants accepted
payments from the plaintiff knowing that same
were not due and payable and that the second defendant had an
entitlement to same.”
It was further contended that the
intention to defraud or misappropriate the money was not dealt with
and there was insufficient
particularity for First Defendant to
plead.  It was submitted that the requirements for fraud or
misrepresentations was not
set out in the particulars of claim.
The attaching of the invoices as annexures B1 to B218 and
spreadsheets of the payment
of the invoices to Second Defendant as
per annexures D1 to D3 does not cure the defects in the particulars
of claim and that it
therefore remains vague and embarrassing.
It is therefore contended that Plaintiff’s particulars of claim
dated 6 December
2021 was still vague and embarrassing.  First
Defendant did not pursue the seventh ground of exception.
[6]
Plaintiff has submitted that it is expressly pleaded in the
particulars of claim that
First Defendant authorised the payments in
circumstances where those payments were not due and where First
Defendant knew that
they were not due as no services had been
rendered.  It was submitted therefore that there was nothing
further that could
be provided besides the invoices from which it was
apparent that they were generated by First Defendant.  The
payments were
made to Second Defendant and it is alleged that no work
or function was done by Second Defendant to have entitled it to such
payment
and that Frist and Second Defendant were well aware that no
work was done and that no payments were therefore due.
[7]
The exception accordingly only relates to the amended particulars of
claim and the
excipient cannot except against the whole particulars
of claim again as the majority of the exceptions were dismissed by
Mngadi
J.
[8]
The eighth exception was, in my view, cured after the ruling of
Mngadi J. in that
the documents which are attached as B1 to B218 and
D1 to D3 and to which I have referred to above clearly indicate which
payments
were made, when they were made, to whom they were made and
it is specifically pleaded that there was no contract and that there

was no agreement for such transportation and that no services were
rendered.  The particulars of claim is therefore not vague
and
embarrassing in that regard and it is possible for First Defendant to
plead thereto.  The ninth ground of exception is
also covered by
the said documents as the same applies to it as in respect of the
eighth ground of exception.  The eleventh
ground also, in my
view, was cured by the said documents as they clearly indicate when
and to whom such payments were made.
It is confirmed by
the bank that these payments were made and accordingly there is clear
indication to First Defendant what the
allegations by Plaintiff are
and accordingly there is sufficient for First Defendant to plead
thereto.
[9]
As was held in Living Hands v Ditz
2013 (2) SA 368
at 374-375 the
object of an exception is not to embarrass ones opponent or to take
technical advantage of technical flaws but to
dispose of the case or
a portion thereof in an expeditious manner or to protect oneself
against an embarrassment which is so serious
as to merit the costs
even of an exception.  Further that pleadings must be read as a
whole and an exception cannot be taken
to a paragraph or a part of
the pleading that is not self-contained.
[10]
An exception will only be upheld if the party is seriously prejudiced
by the particulars of claim
in the manner in which it is.  In
Trope v South African Reserve Bank and Another and two other cases
1992 (3) SA 208
(TPD) it was held that if an exception to a pleading
is on the ground that it is vague and embarrassing it must first be
established
whether the pleadings lacks particularity to the extent
that it is vague and secondly whether the vagueness causes an
embarrassment
of such a nature that the excipient is prejudiced.
The excipient referred to the decision of Home Talk Developments Pty
Limited
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
(2017) 3
All SA 382
(SCA) at paragraphs 29 to 31 that if there are allegations
of fraud or dishonesty it must be supported by particulars and that
the absence of such allegations may render the particulars of claim
expiable.  I was also referred to the case of Technical
Systems
Pty Limited and Another v RTS Industries and Another
(2020) JOL 47895
(WCC) which also refers to the issue of fraud.
[11]
An exception that a pleading is vague and embarrassing ought not to
be allowed unless the excipient
will be seriously prejudiced.
See Francis v Thorp
2004 (3) SA 230
C.
[12]
It was held in McKalrey v Cawon NO
1980 (4) SA 525
(Z) at 526 that if
evidence can be led which can disclose a course of action alleged in
the pleadings the pleadings are not excipiable.
[13]
In paragraphs 13 and 15 of the particulars of claim it sets out that
no payment was due and that
payments were made with the intention to
defraud Plaintiff.  In my view there are sufficient averments
for a claim based on
fraud and that First Defendant would be able to
plead thereto.
[14]
As set out above I am satisfied that the amendments to the
particulars of claim dated 6 December
2021 attaching the various
documents cured any defects there may have been is apparent from a
reading of the said particulars that
it is alleged that there was no
agreement or work to be performed and accordingly that the money was
in no way payable to Second
Defendant.
[15]
In the premises I make the following order:
The eighth, ninth and
eleventh grounds of exception, which were raised by the excipient are
dismissed with costs.
BEZUIDENHOUT J.
JUDGMENT RESERVED
ON:                10
AUGUST 2022
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN
ON:        18 AUGUST 2022
COUNSEL FOR
PLAINTIFF:                  P

J WALLIS SC
Instructed
by:  EVH Incorporated
Umhlanga
Tel:
031 492 7971
c/o:
Viv Greene Attorneys
Pietermaritzburg
Tel:
033 342 2766
Ref:
F Hutton/ah/MAT 1635
COUNSEL FOR
DEFENDANTS:            L
GUMBI
Instructed
by:  Khanyile MB Attorneys Inc.
Germiston
Tel:
011 776 9201
Cell:
073 839 4752
c/o:
L L M Attorney Inc.