Bothma v Chalmar Beef (Pty) Ltd (2145/2017) [2018] ZAFSHC 132 (14 September 2018)

80 Reportability
Commercial Law

Brief Summary

Agency — Authority of agent — Dispute over authority to bind principal — Plaintiff, a cattle farmer, sought payment from defendant for cattle sold through its agent, Oelrich — Defendant contended Oelrich lacked authority to act on its behalf due to failure to meet internal policy requirements — Court found no express or implied authority granted to Oelrich to bind the defendant — Plaintiff failed to establish Oelrich's ostensible authority or that he acted as the plaintiff's agent, thus the defendant was not liable for payment.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings were a civil action for payment arising from a disputed sale of cattle. The plaintiff, C.A. Bothma, a cattle farmer from Tweespruit, sued the defendant, Chalmar Beef (Pty) Ltd, a private company, for payment of the purchase price of cattle allegedly sold to the defendant, together with interest.


The matter came before the Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein, and was heard over 28 and 29 August 2018, with judgment delivered on 14 September 2018. The plaintiff claimed R647 884.80 plus interest at 10.25% from 7 March 2017, contending that the defendant purchased 79 head of cattle through its agent, Mr Oelrich, and failed to pay the plaintiff. The defendant denied liability, alleging that Oelrich lacked authority to bind it because its internal purchasing requirements were not complied with.


The dispute concerned the law of agency in a commercial livestock transaction and, specifically, whether the defendant was bound by the acts and representations of Oelrich in circumstances where the defendant asserted that he did not have the required mandate for this particular purchase.


Material Facts


It was common cause that on 17 January 2017 Oelrich, who was a buyer for and backgrounder of the defendant, was requested by the defendant’s CEO, Mr Wethmar, to purchase two truckloads of cattle at an auction in Bloemfontein. While Oelrich was at the auction, the plaintiff contacted him via SMS stating that he had calves for sale at R24 per kilogram. The plaintiff and Oelrich agreed on the price and that Oelrich would fetch the calves the next day.


It was also common cause that, because Oelrich could only buy enough cattle at the auction to fill one truck, the CEO asked him to source additional cattle nearby to fill the second truck. Oelrich communicated with the CEO about other cattle (specifically mentioning Morabe Trading), and the CEO provided a price at which the cattle were to be purchased. The defendant’s evidence was that Oelrich followed the company’s usual procedure by consulting the CEO in that regard.


On 18 January 2017, Oelrich attended at the plaintiff’s farm, inspected the animals, and loaded 79 calves onto a truck. The plaintiff queried the use of a yellow truck (associated in his mind with another buyer), and Oelrich explained it was Frankor Transport’s truck and that the defendant was Frankor’s client. The plaintiff and Oelrich agreed that Oelrich would send an invoice to the defendant on the plaintiff’s behalf, consistent with what the plaintiff described as common practice in cattle transactions. The cattle were transported to a weighbridge to be weighed and then delivered to the defendant.


On 19 January 2017, Oelrich issued a tax invoice to the defendant, but the invoice was not in the plaintiff’s name. Instead, it was issued by Morabe Trading to the defendant, reflecting a sale of 79 calves weighing 23 680 kg at R22.76/kg, with a levy payable to the Red Meat Producers Organisation and VAT added. The defendant paid Morabe Trading an amount of R579 886.15 on the same date and later paid Oelrich commission for the transaction on 26 January 2017.


It was further common cause that the plaintiff received no payment from anyone for the cattle. The plaintiff thereafter issued his own invoice, dated 1 March 2017, to the defendant for R647 884.80, calculated on the basis of 23 680 kg at R24/kg plus VAT. Oelrich was later sequestrated and Morabe was liquidated.


The plaintiff testified (and the court accepted as undisputed in its reasoning) that it was common practice for agents in the livestock trade to issue invoices on behalf of sellers, and that he had done so in prior transactions. He further stated that he did not know of Morabe Trading and believed he had sold to the defendant through the defendant’s agent. The CEO denied certain aspects of an alleged later telephone conversation, but the court considered that nothing turned on that dispute.


The parties agreed on key factual admissions, including that Oelrich had been the defendant’s agent for eight years; the 79 head of cattle bought on 17 January 2017 were the same cattle delivered to the defendant; the transporter was instructed and paid by the defendant; Morabe received payment; the defendant paid Oelrich commission; and the plaintiff was not paid.


Legal Issues


The court identified three principal issues for determination.


The first issue was whether Oelrich acted as the plaintiff’s agent, with the consequence (as contended by the defendant) that the plaintiff had authorised Oelrich to act in a way that affected the plaintiff’s ability to claim directly from the defendant.


The second issue was whether Oelrich had express authority to bind the defendant in the disputed transaction. This implicated the internal purchasing procedures described by the CEO and whether the transaction met those requirements.


The third issue, arising because the plaintiff could not prove express or implied authority on the evidence, was whether Oelrich nonetheless had ostensible (apparent) authority such that the defendant was bound, and relatedly whether the defendant was estopped from denying Oelrich’s authority.


These issues primarily concerned the application of legal rules to largely common-cause facts (particularly regarding the parties’ relationship to Oelrich and the outward representation of his authority), as well as evaluative judgments about the reasonableness of the plaintiff’s reliance and the allocation of risk where an agent acted dishonestly.


Court’s Reasoning


The court began by setting out the general concept of agency as representation, in terms of which an authorised person performs a juristic act on behalf of another, with rights and duties arising directly for the principal. The judgment noted that actual authority can be conferred expressly or impliedly, but where actual authority is denied, a third party may seek to bind a principal through doctrines such as estoppel and ostensible authority.


On the defendant’s contention that Oelrich was also the plaintiff’s agent, the court analysed the argument that the plaintiff’s request to Oelrich to issue an invoice on his behalf placed Oelrich in the position of a broker or dual agent. The court rejected this characterisation. It held that the plaintiff did not instruct Oelrich to market or sell cattle on the plaintiff’s behalf; rather, the sale agreement (as between plaintiff and buyer through Oelrich) had already been concluded on price and quantity, and the request to issue an invoice was treated as an incidental, administrative act following the conclusion of the transaction. The court emphasised that a tax invoice was not an essential term (essentialia) of a contract of sale and was required for tax and accounting purposes rather than for the formation of the agreement.


The court further explained that the transaction was in substance a cash sale in which ownership generally passes upon payment, even if delivery occurs earlier. It accepted that ownership had been delivered subject to a suspensive condition, namely payment of the purchase price once the cattle had been weighed and their value determined. This supported the court’s framing that the remaining steps after loading and weighing were the completion of payment under an already agreed sale, not the negotiation of a new agreement by an agent on the seller’s behalf.


Turning to the question of the defendant being bound, the court held that the plaintiff bore the onus to prove both that Oelrich was the defendant’s agent and that he had the requisite authority. The court found that the plaintiff could not establish express or implied authority, particularly in light of the defendant’s reliance on its internal procedures requiring CEO involvement. However, the plaintiff had pleaded estoppel and ostensible authority in replication once authority was disputed.


In addressing ostensible authority and estoppel, the court relied on the Constitutional Court’s exposition in Makate v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd, distinguishing actual authority from ostensible authority and clarifying that estoppel is not a form of authority but a rule precluding a principal from denying authority where the principal’s conduct misled a third party. The court treated ostensible authority as turning on whether the principal’s words or conduct created the appearance that the agent had the power to act, while noting the centrality of a representation in both ostensible authority and estoppel.


Applying these principles, the court held that the defendant had, by its conduct, held out Oelrich as its agent in the Tweespruit area for a prolonged period (eight years). Contracts entered into by Oelrich on the defendant’s behalf were honoured. Although the defendant asserted that Oelrich’s authority was subject to internal limits (such as needing CEO consultation), these limits were not communicated to the plaintiff or other cattle sellers. The evidence further showed that the defendant did not apply a uniform purchasing method for all agents, because another agent could in some instances buy cattle without first contacting the CEO and the defendant would still honour those agreements. The court regarded the lack of communication about differences in authority and procedure between agents as material to whether the defendant had created an appearance of authority.


The court found that the defendant had effectively “put it out there” that Oelrich was its agent, creating a representation that he had authority. It held that the defendant should reasonably have expected that sellers such as the plaintiff would act on the strength of that representation. The plaintiff’s reliance was found to be reasonable and consistent with the general practice of cattle sellers in the area, and the plaintiff suffered prejudice because he was not paid.


While recognising that both plaintiff and defendant were victims of Oelrich’s deception (including the false invoicing through Morabe Trading), the court held that the risk of an agent’s dishonest misrepresentations falls on the principal who selected and held out the agent as trustworthy, rather than on the contracting third party who had no say in that selection. In this regard, it relied on Randbank BPK v Santam Versekeringsmaatskappy BPK, applying its principle that the principal bears the risk of the agent’s dishonesty and concealment in such circumstances.


On quantum, the court did not award the full claimed amount. It accepted that the defendant had paid the levy amount due to the Red Meat Producers Organisation, and held that this amount should be deducted from the subtotal before VAT was applied. The court therefore calculated the amount due as R647 374.14, rather than the amount originally claimed.


Outcome and Relief


The court upheld the plaintiff’s claim on the basis that Oelrich had ostensible authority to bind the defendant in the transaction, with the result that the defendant was liable to pay the plaintiff for the cattle delivered.


Judgment was granted ordering the defendant to pay the plaintiff R647 374.14, together with interest at 10.25% per annum from 7 March 2017 to date of full payment. The court further ordered the defendant to pay the costs of suit, the parties having agreed that costs should follow the result.


Cases Cited


Makate v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd 2016 (4) SA 121 (CC)


Benoni Produce & Coal Co Ltd v Gundelfinger 1918 TPD 453


Jacobs Levitatz and Braude v Kroonstad Roller Mills 1921 OPD 38


Eriksen Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton and Another 1973 (3) SA 685 (A)


Ravene Plantations Ltd v Estate Abrey 1928 AD 143


Randbank BPK v Santam Versekeringsmaatskappy BPK 1965 (4) SA 363 (AD)


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that Oelrich was not the plaintiff’s agent merely because he was asked to perform an incidental administrative act (issuing an invoice) after the parties had agreed on the material terms of the sale. The plaintiff therefore remained entitled to claim against the buyer if the buyer was bound.


The court held that the plaintiff did not prove that Oelrich had actual (express or implied) authority to bind the defendant on the defendant’s version of its internal procedures. However, the court found that the defendant’s conduct over time created an outward appearance that Oelrich had authority to purchase cattle on its behalf, and that the plaintiff reasonably relied on that appearance to his detriment. On that basis, Oelrich had ostensible authority, and the defendant was bound despite the agent’s dishonesty.


The court held that the defendant bore the risk of its agent’s dishonest misrepresentations in the circumstances. It awarded the plaintiff the adjusted amount reflecting deduction of the levy already paid, plus VAT, interest, and costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party alleging that it is entitled to hold a principal liable for an agent’s conduct bears the onus of proving both the existence of an agency relationship and the agent’s authority, whether actual or ostensible, to bind the principal in the relevant transaction.


An agent is not rendered the seller’s agent (or a broker acting for both parties) merely because the seller authorises the agent to perform an incidental, administrative act after the conclusion of the sale, such as issuing a tax invoice. A tax invoice is not an essential term of a contract of sale and does not, without more, establish a mandate to negotiate or conclude the agreement on the seller’s behalf.


Where a principal, by words or conduct, creates an appearance that a person has authority to act as its agent, and third parties reasonably rely on that appearance, the agent may be found to have ostensible (apparent) authority to bind the principal, even if internal limitations on the agent’s mandate exist but were not communicated to the third party.


Estoppel in this context operates as a rule precluding a principal from denying an agent’s authority where the principal’s conduct misled the third party into believing the agent was authorised. Ostensible authority and estoppel are conceptually distinct but both depend centrally on a representation by the principal (expressly or by conduct).


Where an agent acts dishonestly and deceives both the principal and the third party, the risk of the agent’s dishonest misrepresentations may fall on the principal who selected and held out the agent as trustworthy, rather than on an innocent third party who had no role in that selection and reasonably relied on the appearance of authority.

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[2018] ZAFSHC 132
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Bothma v Chalmar Beef (Pty) Ltd (2145/2017) [2018] ZAFSHC 132 (14 September 2018)

IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
No.: 2145/2017
In the matter between:-
C. A.
BOTHMA
Plaintiff
and
CHALMAR BEEF (PTY)
LTD
Defendant
CORAM:
MUSI, AJP
HEARD ON:
28 & 29 AUGUST
2018
JUDGMENT
BY:
MUSI, AJP
DELIVERED
ON:
14 SEPTEMBER 2018
[1]
The plaintiff, a cattle farmer in Tweespruit, sued the defendant, a
private company with limited liability, duly registered
and
incorporated in terms of the laws of this Country, for payment of R
647 884. 80 plus 10.25% interest thereon from 7 March 2017
until date
of payment.
[2]
The plaintiff alleged that he sold 79 head of cattle to the
defendant, via the latter's agent, Mr Oelrich. The defendant disputed

this and alleged that Oelrich did not have a mandate to act on its
behalf because a condition precedent was not met by Oelrich.
It
alleged that its Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Mr Wethmar, did not
authorise the purchase in terms of the defendant's policy.
[3]
The undisputed or common cause facts are as follows. On 17 January
2017, Oelrich, who was a buyer for and backgrounder
[1]
of the defendant, was requested by its CEO to purchase two truckloads
of cattle at an auction in Bloemfontein. Whilst the former
was at the
auction, the plaintiff sent him a message via his Short Message
System (SMS) informing him that he had 80 calves for
sale at R24 per
kilogram. They agreed on the price and that Oelrich would fetch the
calves the following day.
[4]
At the auction, Oelrich could only buy cattle that filled one truck.
The CEO requested him to buy other cattle, from farmers
in the
vicinity, to fill the second truck. Oelrich called him and informed
him that Morabe Trading (Morabe) has cattle. He gave
the price at
which he must buy the cattle. Oelrich confirmed that the price had
been accepted.
[5]
On 18 January 2017, Oelrich went to the plaintiff's farm where he
inspected and loaded 79 calves onto a yellow truck. The plaintiff

asked him why he is using a yellow truck because Karan Beef also uses
a yellow truck. Oelrich informed him that it was Frankor
Transport's
truck and that the defendant is Francor’s client.
[6]
They agreed that Oelrich would send an invoice to the defendant on
his behalf. The plaintiff gave his email address to a lady
(Ansie)
who accompanied Oelrich. The cattle were taken to the weighbridge
where they were weighed.
[7]
On 19 January 2017, Oelrich issued a tax invoice from Morabe to the
defendant in terms of which Morabe sold 79 calves weighing
23 680 kg
at R22.76 per kg, which according to the invoice amounted to R509
120.00
[2]
minus
a R447.95 levy payable to the Red Meat Producers Organisation. The
total amount payable amounted to R579 886.15 after 14%
of VAT was
added to the subtotal.
[8]
On 19 January 2017, the defendant paid Morabe an amount of R579
886.15. Oelrich invoiced the defendant R2 772.90 as commission
due to
him for the transaction. The commission was paid on 26 January 2017.
The plaintiff was not paid anything.
[9]
The plaintiff issued an invoice, dated 1 March 2017, to the defendant
for an amount of R647 884.80; this amount represents 23
680kg at R24
per kg plus 14% VAT.
[10]
Oelrich was sequestrated and Morabe was liquidated.
[11]
The plaintiff testified that it is common practice for farmers to ask
an agent to issue an invoice on their behalf. He has
done this with
many other agents without any problems. It was the first time that he
had any business dealings with Oelrich, although
he knew him well.
One week after the transaction he called Oelrich and informed him
that he must arrange that he gets his money
on 1 March 2017, which
would be the following tax year. He heard that Oelrich was accused of
cattle theft and decided to call the
CEO. He was not aware of the
existence of Morabe.
[12]
The CEO informed him that Oelrich stole his (the CEO’s) calves
and that he did not know that Morabe was Oelrich’s
company. The
plaintiff informed the CEO that he sold his calves to the defendant
and that the defendant should pay him. The CEO
then indicated that
the defendant will pay him.
[13]
The CEO testified on behalf of the defendant. He denied the
telephonic conversation that the plaintiff testified about. (During

cross-examination he was confronted with a previous inconsistent
statement wherein he stated that he spoke to the plaintiff. His

denial is implausible but nothing turns on this issue.) He admitted
that Oelrich was one of the defendant’s buyers but testified

that Oelrich did not have a mandate to buy cattle without consulting
him. The procedure was that the agent would phone him and
inform him
that there are cattle available for sale. The agent would give him
all the necessary information with regard to the
cattle. The
information would include type, male or female and estimated weight
of the cattle. He would then give the agent a prize
to offer to the
seller. The price would normally be available within 24 hours. After
the parties have reached an agreement in respect
of the price the
agent would phone him and he would then arrange for the cattle to be
picked up, weighed and taken to the defendant.
[14]
Oelrich followed the above procedure when he informed him that he had
sourced 79 cattle from Morabe. The defendant has done
business with
Morabe in the past. According to him the defendant had an agreement
with Morabe and it paid the latter everything
that was due to it.
[15]
The parties agreed on the following facts:
15.1
Oelrich was an agent of the defendant for eight years.
15.2
The 79 head of cattle bought on 17 January 2017 were the same cattle
that were delivered to the defendant.
15.3
The transporter was instructed and paid by the defendant to load the
cattle;
15.4
Morabe received payment for the cattle.
15.5
The defendant paid Oelrich commission for the transaction.
15.6
The plaintiff received no payment whatsoever.
[16]
The issues to be decided are:
16.1
whether Oelrich was the plaintiff’s agent;
16.2
whether Oelrich had express authority to bind the defendant;
16.3
if not, whether he had ostensible authority to do so.
[17]
Agency is the phenomena of representation where one person, duly
authorised to do so, performs a juristic act on behalf of
another,
which act then confers rights and duties directly on the person on
whose behalf it is done.
[3]
The
agent’s actual authority to act on behalf of and bind his or
her principal can be express or implied.
[4]
[18]
Mr Van Tonder, for the defendant, contended that Oelrich was also the
plaintiff’s agent. He based his submission on the
fact that the
plaintiff testified that he authorised Oelrich to issue a tax invoice
for the sale of the calves on his behalf.
[19]
The submission, as I understand it, would put Oelrich in the mould of
a broker. In
Benoni
Produce & Coal Co Ltd v Gundelfinger
[5]
a broker was described as follows:

Now
a broker according to our law is a middleman or intermediary whose
office is to negotiate between two parties until they are
at
ad
idem
as regards the terms upon which they are prepared to buy and sell…
“He is as it were agent for both one and the other
to negotiate
the commerce and affair in which he concerns himself.”

[6]
It
was further stated that:

It
is no doubt true that a broker who approaches a buyer or seller acts
in the first instance as the agent of the person who employs
him but
directly the other party is aware of the fact that he is a broker, he
becomes the agent of both parties not with a plenary
power to bind
both parties as he chooses but to communicate between them until they
are
ad
idem
.’
[7]
[20]
The plaintiff did not ask or instruct Oelrich to sell his
(plaintiff’s) cattle on his behalf. He requested Oelrich to

perform an incidental act after the conditional sale agreement was
concluded. The plaintiff’s undisputed testimony is that
agents
normally issue invoices on behalf of sellers. It is clear that the
business of marketing cattle is done on a trust basis.
The fact that
the buyer’s transport loads the cattle, take them to the
weighbridge and then to the buyer is indicative of
this fact. The
agent would know the weight of the cattle as well as the price per
kilogram. It would therefore be easier for the
agent to issue the
invoice on behalf of the seller.
[21]
He did not ask Oelrich to enter into any agreement with the defendant
on his behalf. There is no evidence or suggestion that
the plaintiff
was going to give Oelrich a consideration, in whatever form, for his
services.
The
parties already agreed on the number of cattle to be sold and the
price to be paid for them. The cattle was transported to the

defendant. The only outstanding things were the weighing of the
cattle and the payment of the agreed price.
[22]
Generally, in a cash sale ownership passes when the price is paid
even if delivery has been given.
[8]
Ownership
of the cattle was conditionally granted.  The condition being
that the purchase price would be paid after the cattle
were weighed
so that their true value could be determined.  This is not
unusual.  In Silberberg and Schoeman
[9]
the
following is said:

The
intention of the owner to transfer ownership need not be absolute,
but may be conditional upon the happening of an uncertain
future
event. In other words, the transferor may deliver the thing to the
transferee, on the understanding that the latter will
acquire
ownership in it if a certain condition is fulfilled, that is, the
delivery is made subject to a suspensive condition.”
[10]
[23]
The tax invoice is not an essentialia of a sale agreement. It is
something that is needed for tax and accounting purposes.
The
submission that Oelrich also acted as the plaintiff’s agent is
without merit.
[24]
The plaintiff seeks to bind the defendant for the representation of
its agent. The plaintiff therefore bears the onus not only
to prove
that Oelrich was the defendant’s agent but also that Oelrich
had the necessary authority to act on behalf of the
defendant in this
transaction.
[11]
It must prove
that Oelrich had express, implied or apparent authority to bind the
defendant.
[25]
It is clear that the plaintiff could not prove that Oelrich had
express or implied authority to bind the defendant. When the

defendant disputed that Oelrich had the necessarily authority to act
on its behalf, the plaintiff pleaded estoppel and ostensible

authority in the replication.
[26]
The inter-relatedness and difference between estoppel and ostensible
authority was definitively discussed and decided by the
majority in
Makate
.
[12]
The Court held as follows:

[45] Actual
authority and ostensible or apparent authority are the opposite sides
of the same coin.  If an agent wishes to
perform a juristic act
on behalf of a principal, the agent requires authority to do so, for
the act to bind the principal.
If the principal had conferred
the necessary authority either expressly or impliedly, the agent is
taken to have actual authority.
But if the principal were to deny
that she had conferred the authority, the third party who concluded
the juristic act with the
agent may plead estoppel in replication.
In this context, estoppel is not a form of authority but a rule to
the effect that
if the principal had conducted herself in a manner
that misled the third party into believing that the agent has
authority, the
principal is precluded from denying that the agent had
authority.
[46] The same
misrepresentation may also lead to an appearance that the agent has
the power to act on behalf of the principal.
This is known as
ostensible or apparent authority in our law.  While this kind of
authority may not have been conferred by
the principal, it is still
taken to be the authority of the agent as it appears to others.
It is distinguishable from estoppel
which is not authority at all.
Moreover, estoppel and apparent authority have different elements,
barring one that is common
to both.  The common element is the
representation which may take the form of words or conduct.
[47] A closer examination
of the original statement on apparent authority by Lord Denning,
quoted below, reveals that the presence
of authority is established
if it is shown that a principal by words or conduct has created an
appearance that the agent has the
power to act on its behalf.
Nothing more is required.  The means by which that appearance is
represented need not be
directed at any person.  In other words
the principal need not make the representation to the person claiming
that the agent
had apparent authority.  The statement indicates
the absence of the elements of estoppel.  It does not mention
prejudice
at all.  That statement of English law was imported as
it is into our law in
NBS
Bank
and other cases that followed it.’
[13]
[27]
Oelrich was the defendant’s agent for a period of eight years
preceding this controversial transaction. This fact was
known in the
Tweespruit area. Contracts entered into by Oelrich on behalf of the
defendant were honoured by it. It is not in dispute
in this matter to
that the defendant gave Oelrich the necessary authority to procure or
buy cattle on its behalf. Oelrich, however,
had to comply with
certain contractual arrangements or work methods between him and the
defendant which were not known to the plaintiff
or other farmers who
sold cattle to the defendant.
[28]
It is common course that the limits to Oelrich’s mandate were
never communicated to the plaintiff or any of the cattle
sellers at
Tweespruit. It was known that Anderson and Oelrich were the
defendant’s agents. The defendant did not have a uniform
policy
or work method with regard to the purchase of cattle by its agents.
In some cases its agent (Anderson) would buy cattle,
albeit small
numbers, without the requirement of phoning the CEO to apprise him of
the type, size or sex of the cattle. The defendant
would honour those
agreements. The difference between the status of the various agents
was not communicated to any cattle seller.
[29]
The defendant put it out there for the farmers in the area to know
that Anderson and Oelrich were its agents. It made a representation,

at least by its conduct, that Oelrich had authority to act on its
behalf. The defendant should reasonably have expected that the

plaintiff and others would act on the strength of the representation.
The plaintiff clearly relied on the representation that Oelrich
had
authority to act on the defendant’s behalf. The plaintiff’s
testimony that he acted in accordance with the general
practice of
cattle sellers was not challenged. His testimony that he acted in
accordance with how he dealt with other cattle buyers
was also not
questioned or contradicted. The plaintiff’s conduct was
reasonable and in line with the general practice of
cattle sellers in
that area. He was not paid for the cattle. He was prejudiced.
[30]
Oelrich dishonestly and knowingly represented to the defendant that
he received the cattle from Morabe. He dishonestly and
knowingly
represented to the plaintiff that he was buying the cattle on behalf
of the defendant. Both the defendant and the plaintiff
were victims
of Oelrich’s deception.
[31]
Should the defendant be responsible for its agent’s deception?
This question has been answered in the affirmative in
Randbank
BPK v Santam Versekeringsmaatskappy BPK
.
[14]
The headnote to the case reads as follows:

It is the
principal, who also selects his agent and represents him as a
trustworthy person, and not the other party to a contract
who has no
say in the selection, who bears the risk of his possible dishonest
representations and concealments, as also where the
dishonesty
assumes such proportions that the agent, in the nature of things,
will undoubtedly conceal it from the other party and
the principal
would have no knowledge thereof.’
[15]
I
am satisfied that the plaintiff succeeded in proving that Oelrich had
ostensible authority to act on behalf of the defendant.
Oelrich’s
authority as it appeared to others was that he had unlimited
authority to act on behalf of the defendant.
[32]
The plaintiff claimed the amount of R647 884.80, which
represents R 568 320.00 plus 14% VAT. The amount of R447.95, which

was payable to the RPO, was paid by the defendant. The last mentioned
amount should be subtracted from the R 568 320.00. He has
therefore
proved that the defendant is liable to pay him R 567 872.05 plus 14%
VAT = R 647 374.14.
[33]
The parties were in agreement that the cost should follow the
success.
[34]
I therefore make the following order:
34.1 The defendant is
ordered to pay the plaintiff the amount of R647 374.14 plus interest
thereon at the rate of 10.25% pa from
7 March 2017 until the date of
full payment.
34.2 Costs of suit.
___________________
C.J. MUSI, AJP
Appearances:
For
the Plaintiff: Adv D.M. Grewar
Instructed
by McIntyre & Van Der Post
Bloemfontein
For
the Defendant: Adv L.V.R. van Tonder
Instructed
by Lovius Block
Bloemfontein
[1]
A
backgrounder is a farmer who leases grazing land to the defendant.
[2]
The
correct calculation ought to be: 23 680kg x R22.76 = R538 956.80
– R447.85 = R538 508.85 + 14% (R75 391.24)
= R613 900.09.
[3]
Francois
du Bois Editor :
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law,
9
th
Ed 2007, Juta & Co, at page 1225.
[4]
Makate
v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
2016 (4) SA 121
(CC) at para 45.
[5]
1918
TPD 453.
[6]
Ibid
458.
[7]
Ibid
459. See also
Jacobs
Levitatz and Braude v Kroonstad Roller Mills
1921 OPD 38
at 43.
[8]
See
Eriksen
Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton and Another
1973 (3) SA 685
(A) at p694.
[9]
Silberberg
and Schoeman’s:
The
Law of Property
,
5
th
Ed 2006 , LexisNexis.
[10]
See
para 9.2.2.
[11]
Ravene
Plantations Ltd v Estate Abrey
1928 AD 143
at 154.
[12]
Although
the minority differed with regard to the applicability and
traditional use of estoppel, they reached the same conclusion
as the
majority on the facts of that case.
[13]
Ibid
paras [45] to [47].
[14]
1965
(4) SA 363 (AD).
[15]
Ibid
363. The judgment was delivered in Afrikaans.
The
ratio of the decision in Afrikaans at page 372 reads as follows:
‘Dit is redelik dat die prinsipaal wat sy verteenwoordiger

kies en hom voorhou as ‘n betroubare person, en nie die ander
party wat geen seggenskap by die keuse het nie, die risiko
van sy
moontlike oneerlike voorstellings of verswygings sal dra, ook waar
die oneerlikheid so ‘n gestalte aanneem dat die

verteenwoordiger dit uit die aard van die saak ongetwyfeld vir die
ander party sal verberg.’