Sandenbergh v Sandenbergh (293/2004) [2006] ZANCHC 27 (28 April 2006)

78 Reportability
Arbitration Law

Brief Summary

Arbitration — Appointment of arbitrator — Dispute between siblings regarding boundary demarcation and costs of fencing — Appellant contests appointment of arbitrator and claims prescription of respondent's claim — Court finds that a dispute exists warranting arbitration and that the proposed arbitrator's fees are reasonable — Appellant's objections dismissed; arbitration to proceed with new arbitrator appointed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an appeal to the High Court of South Africa (Northern Cape Division, Kimberley) against an order granted by the court a quo (Lacock J) in motion proceedings. The appeal was heard by Kgomo JP, Majiedt J and Molwantwa AJ, and judgment was delivered on 28 April 2006.


The appellant, Mr Leon Sandenbergh, is an attorney practising in Bellville in the Western Cape. The respondent, Mr Hercules Sandenbergh, is a farmer in the Prieska district in the Northern Cape. The parties are brothers and adjacent landowners by inheritance, and their dispute arose from the practical and financial consequences of re-establishing boundaries and related obligations.


The procedural history began with an action (Case 1367/98) in which the appellant (as plaintiff) sought the respondent’s eviction from part of a farm allegedly occupied unlawfully. That litigation was settled on 20 October 1999, and the Deed of Settlement was made an order of court. The settlement included mechanisms for resolving disputes about boundary fence costs and land surveyor fees, including arbitration by a named arbitrator (Mr J W Wilmans). When Mr Wilmans later withdrew due to a dispute regarding his fees, the respondent approached the court a quo to substitute a new arbitrator and to obtain related relief. The court a quo granted the substitution and also extended the time period for the arbitration award in terms of section 23 of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965. The appellant then appealed, with leave.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned the enforceability and implementation of the settlement’s arbitration mechanisms, including whether the respondent’s claims had prescribed, whether the statutory time period for making an award should be extended, and whether the court could substitute an arbitrator in a settlement order.


2. Material Facts


The parties inherited adjacent farms pursuant to their late parents’ joint will. Historically, these farms had been worked as a consolidated unit for decades, and the boundary fence between them had collapsed, leaving uncertainty regarding the precise boundary. This lack of a clearly defined boundary contributed to disputes about occupation, fencing, and surveying.


In the earlier litigation (Case 1367/98), the parties settled and embodied their agreement in a court order on 20 October 1999. Material provisions for present purposes included that the respondent would contribute R30 000 towards the appellant’s legal costs and that disputes regarding (a) reasonable and necessary costs of erecting the boundary fence and (b) the land surveyor Mitchell’s fees for pegging the boundary fence were to be resolved by agreement, failing which they were to be referred to arbitration by Mr J W Wilmans, who would make a final determination.


The respondent referred the disputes to Mr Wilmans for arbitration on 29 June 2000, requesting him to determine a procedure. On 17 July 2000, Mr Wilmans responded, indicating he was willing to act as arbitrator on stated terms, including a fee of R800 per hour (VAT excluded) and a proposed procedure requiring the parties to provide documentation, written objections, reasons, and (if necessary) evidence at a hearing conducted in a manner akin to civil proceedings in the magistrates’ court.


The respondent’s attorneys forwarded Mr Wilmans’ letter to the appellant’s attorneys and sought confirmation of acceptance. On 2 October 2000, the appellant indicated to Mr Wilmans that his terms were acceptable and provided further information. Thereafter, Mr Wilmans indicated he still awaited the appellant’s reaction to proceed. By December 2000, Mr Wilmans complained of a lack of response from the appellant’s attorneys and warned of consequences.


In January 2001, the appellant’s attorneys for the first time challenged the R800 per hour tariff as excessive and suggested that non-acceptance rendered Mr Wilmans’ procedure nugatory. On 29 January 2001, Mr Wilmans declined to proceed at a reduced tariff and suggested another person be appointed so he could hand over the file. Subsequent correspondence reflected efforts by the respondent to retain Mr Wilmans or to secure agreement on a replacement arbitrator, but the appellant did not suggest alternative names, and at one stage stated that no useful purpose would be served by replying to correspondence and that he would not do so in future.


There was a later lull of approximately 18 months between August 2002 and March 2004. Ultimately, on 18 March 2004, the respondent launched an application in the court a quo seeking an amendment of the 1999 court order to substitute Mr Wilmans with retired Judge President M D J Steenkamp as arbitrator, together with ancillary relief relating to arbitration and costs. During argument, and in response to the appellant’s prescription point and reliance on section 23 of the Arbitration Act, the respondent obtained an amendment to seek an extension of the four-month statutory period for the making of an arbitration award, extending it to 28 February 2005.


The court a quo granted an order substituting Judge Steenkamp for Mr Wilmans, amending the settlement order accordingly, extending the award period to 28 February 2005, and ordering the appellant (as respondent in the application) to pay costs.


In the appeal proceedings, a preliminary dispute also arose regarding security for costs under Rule 49(13). The respondent objected to the form of security tendered by the appellant (a personal suretyship by a partner in the appellant’s law firm and a conditional trust payment). The appeal court issued an ex tempore order that the security was sufficient, reserving costs of that interlocutory issue for later determination.


3. Legal Issues


The appeal required determination of interrelated questions involving both statutory interpretation and the exercise of judicial discretion.


A central issue concerned the application of prescription: specifically, the meaning of the phrase “the debt is the object of a dispute subjected to arbitration” in section 13(1)(f) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, and the consequent postponement mechanism in section 13(1)(i). This was primarily a question of law (interpretation), applied to the established chronology of the parties’ conduct.


A second principal issue concerned section 23(b) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965, namely whether the respondent had shown “good cause” for extending the statutory time limit for making an arbitration award, notwithstanding delays and notwithstanding arguments that the arbitration had not properly commenced. This required an assessment of law and discretion, informed by the factual record of cooperation or obstruction.


A further issue was whether the court a quo was correct to substitute a new arbitrator (Judge Steenkamp) for the named arbitrator (Mr Wilmans) in the settlement order, given that the original arbitrator had withdrawn and the parties could not agree on a replacement. This involved the application of the settlement order and arbitration framework to the changed circumstances.


Finally, the court had to determine whether the appellant had furnished “good and sufficient security” for costs on appeal in terms of Rule 49(13), and how costs should be allocated in respect of the interlocutory security application and the appeal as a whole.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the section 23(b) extension question, the appeal court treated the matter as the extension of a statutory time limit, not condonation for non-compliance with a rule of court. The court emphasised that section 23(b) permits extension “on good cause shown”, whether the time has expired or not. On a conspectus of the record, the court considered that the respondent had placed before the court extensive evidence of repeated attempts—through his attorneys and through Mr Wilmans—to move the arbitration forward, and that the matter did not reflect a simple default by the respondent.


Although the record showed a substantial delay (including an 18-month period before the March 2004 application), the court endorsed the essential finding that the failure to complete arbitration within the statutory period was attributable primarily to the appellant’s lack of cooperation and obstruction, including late challenges to the arbitrator’s fee and prolonged failure to engage meaningfully with requests to appoint an alternative arbitrator. Against that background, the appeal court held that the respondent had shown good cause and that there was no basis to interfere on appeal with the discretion exercised by Lacock J.


The prescription argument turned on whether, notwithstanding the stalled arbitration and Mr Wilmans’ withdrawal, the disputes had been “subjected to arbitration” so as to delay completion of prescription under section 13(1)(f) and (i) of the Prescription Act. The appellant contended that because Mr Wilmans’ willingness to act was expressed as conditional, and because he later declined to proceed, the debt was never truly subjected to arbitration. The court rejected this, holding that in ordinary grammatical usage the phrase “subjected to arbitration” denotes the referral or submission of the dispute for arbitration, rather than the later stage of an arbitrator’s acceptance, assumption of jurisdiction, or substantive commencement.


In support of this construction, the court accepted the interpretive approach adopted in the court a quo: the ordinary meaning was consistent with the Legislature’s apparent intent to prevent prescription running while a creditor pursues an approved alternative dispute-resolution process. The court relied materially on Murray & Roberts Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Upington Municipality 1984(1) SA 571 (A), treating it as authority that prescription is delayed once the parties have entered upon the dispute-resolution process constituting arbitration, and that “subjection” is satisfied by the submission of the dispute to the designated mechanism. The court reasoned that an interpretation postponing subjection until an arbitrator formally assumes jurisdiction would be untenable and could lead to impractical or absurd outcomes.


The court engaged with the authorities invoked by the appellant, distinguishing Bhoola v Bhoola 1945 NPD 109 on the basis that it addressed a different statutory and conceptual question: when arbitrators “enter upon the reference”, which concerned commencement of the three-month period under earlier arbitration legislation and depended on the full constitution and acceptance of a multi-member tribunal. The court noted the conceptual distinction, also reflected in section 23(a) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965, between an arbitrator’s “entering on the reference” and being “called on to act”. Similarly, the court distinguished Members of the Sugar Industry Central Board v Maritz and Another 1984(4) SA 101 (T) as a case about whether a mere agreement to arbitrate (without initiation) delays prescription; by contrast, in the present matter the respondent had moved beyond a bare agreement and had initiated arbitration by referring the dispute to the named arbitrator. The court also observed that the tenor of the Sugar Industry decision supported the view that the impediment arises when a creditor takes appropriate steps, namely initiating arbitration proceedings.


The court also addressed a fairness-related point arising from the appellant’s stance. It reasoned that, had the appellant considered the arbitration unreasonably delayed or redundant, he could have sought relief under section 3(2) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965. The appellant did not do so, and the court accepted the finding that it was the appellant who was largely responsible for delay. The court therefore concluded that prescription had not run its course in the manner alleged by the appellant.


On the substitution of the arbitrator, the court’s reasoning flowed from the above conclusions. It accepted that the settlement order contemplated arbitration to resolve defined disputes and that the withdrawal of Mr Wilmans created a practical impasse. In circumstances where the parties could not agree on a replacement and where the respondent sought an amendment to the court order to give effect to the arbitration mechanism, the appeal court found no appealable error in the substitution ordered by the court a quo.


On the security for costs issue, the court held that Rule 49(13) does not prescribe a specific form of security, but requires good and sufficient security, assessed objectively against the risk of non-payment. While acknowledging that an attorney’s personal suretyship is unusual and should be discouraged, the court held that in the circumstances it was sufficient. The court took into account uncontroverted facts including the appellant’s professional standing as an attorney and officer of court, his financial means, the surety’s standing, and the relatively modest amount involved (R45 000). The court therefore confirmed that the appeal should proceed and later determined that the reserved costs of that interlocutory dispute should follow the outcome of the appeal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal court dismissed the appeal and upheld the order of the court a quo, including the substitution of Judge M D J Steenkamp as arbitrator and the extension of the time period for making an arbitration award to 28 February 2005.


The appellant was ordered to pay the costs of the appeal. The court further directed that such costs were to include the costs of the respondent’s interlocutory application under Rule 49(13) relating to security for costs.


Cases Cited


Murray & Roberts Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Upington Munisipaliteit 1982(3) SA 385 (NC).


Murray & Roberts Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Upington Municipality 1984(1) SA 571 (A).


SA Breweries v Grinaker Construction 1986(1) SA 191 (D & CLD).


Bhoola v Bhoola 1945 NPD 109.


Members of the Sugar Industry Central Board v Maritz and Another 1984(4) SA 101 (T).


Majunga Food Processes SARL v SA Dried Fruit Co-operative Ltd 2000(2) SA 94 (C).


Ridon v Van der Spuy and partners (Wes-Kaap) Inc 2002(2) SA 121 (C).


Legislation Cited


Prescription Act 68 of 1969, section 13(1)(f) and section 13(1)(i).


Arbitration Act 42 of 1965, section 1 (definition of “arbitration agreement”), section 3(2), section 23(a), and section 23(b).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 49(13).


Held


The court held that the respondent had shown good cause under section 23(b) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 for extending the time period within which an arbitration award had to be made, and that the court a quo’s extension to 28 February 2005 involved no appealable misdirection.


The court held further that, for purposes of section 13(1)(f) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, a dispute is “subjected to arbitration” when it is referred or submitted to arbitration. The court rejected the contention that such subjection requires the arbitrator to have accepted appointment, assumed jurisdiction, or commenced substantive proceedings, and concluded that the respondent’s initiation of arbitration delayed completion of prescription as contemplated by sections 13(1)(f) and 13(1)(i).


The court also held that the security for costs tendered by the appellant constituted good and sufficient security under Rule 49(13) on an objective assessment of the circumstances, notwithstanding that a personal suretyship by an attorney was regarded as a practice to be discouraged.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The discretion to extend the statutory time limit for making an arbitration award under section 23(b) of the Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 depends on whether good cause is shown on the papers, and an appeal court will not interfere absent a material misdirection in the exercise of that discretion.


For purposes of section 13(1)(f) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, a debt becomes the object of a dispute “subjected to arbitration” upon the referral or submission of the dispute to arbitration, and not only once an arbitrator has accepted appointment or entered upon the reference. The consequent postponement mechanism in section 13(1)(i) operates to prevent completion of prescription until at least one year after the relevant impediment ceases.


Under Rule 49(13), security for costs on appeal must be good and sufficient, and the adequacy of security is assessed with reference to the objective risk of non-payment in the particular circumstances; the rule does not prescribe a single mandatory form of security.

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[2006] ZANCHC 27
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Sandenbergh v Sandenbergh (293/2004) [2006] ZANCHC 27 (28 April 2006)

Reportable:
YES / NO
Circulate
to Judges: YES / NO
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to Magistrates: YES / NO
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to Regional Magistrates: YES / NO
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern
Cape Division)
Case
Nr: 293/2004
Case
Heard: 20/03/2006
Date
delivered: 28/04/2006
In
the matter:
L
SANDENBERGH APPELLANT
versus
H
A SANDENBERGH RESPONDENT
Coram:
Kgomo JP
et
Majiedt J
et
Molwantwa AJ
JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
KGOMO
JP et MAJIEDT J:
THE
BACKGROUND AND THE RELIEF SOUGHT
The
appellant, Mr Leon Sandenbergh, is an attorney with a firm of
attorneys in Durban Road, Bellville, Western Cape. The respondent,
Mr Hercules Sandenbergh, is a farmer in the district of Prieska,
Northern Cape. The parties are siblings who are involved in a
titanic battle on a subject-matter which appears from the Notice of
Motion below. It is this
“broedertwis”
,
as the Trial Judge,
Lacock
J,
characterized the
dispute, which blinded the parties from settling the main and
ancillary issues finally and keep them apart or,
better still,
reconcile them. The appellant approaches the court with the leave
of the
court a quo
.
The
appellant
was the plaintiff in Case 1367/98 (Northern Cape) in which he
claimed against the respondent (as defendant) his eviction from a
portion of Portion 1 (Leeukop) of the farm Middelwater Nr 99,
Prieska, Northern Cape, which he contended the respondent was
occupying
illegally. On the obverse the respondent denied the
allegation in his plea. In his earlier affidavit resisting Summary
Judgment
he blamed the fluidity of the situation on the lack of a
defined or established boundary.
On
the 20
th
October 1999 the case was settled out of Court and the terms of the
Deed of Settlement were made an order of Court. The relevant
clauses for purposes of adjudicating the current dispute are the
following (translated):
“
1. The
defendant (the farmer) is ordered to make a contribution in the
amount of R30 000,00 (Thirty thousand Rand) in respect
of the
legal costs incurred by the plaintiff (the attorney), which sum is
payable before 31 October 1999 to attorneys Duncan &
Rothman,
Kimberley.
As
far as the boundary fence which demarcates the parties’ respective
farms is concerned, which fence has been erected by the
farmer-defendant, the parties undertake, as soon as possible, to
reach agreement in respect of the reasonable and necessary costs
incurred in the erection of the fence (by the defendant):
The
defendant shall present to the plaintiff’s attorney a written
account in which he details how the amount (of the costs incurred)
is composed and computed.
The
defendant shall simultaneously therewith furnish documentary proof
of the costs incurred by him for purchasing material and/or
for the
employment of labour.
In
the event of the parties failing to reach agreement within 14
(fourteen) days of the furnishing of the specified account and
accompanying vouchers relating to the aforesaid costs, then Mr J W
Wilmans (an attorney) will, in accordance with a procedure
he has
devised, as the arbitrator, make a final determination in this
connection.
Half
the amount so determined as the costs, either by agreement or by Mr
Wilmans, will be paid by the plaintiff to the defendant’s
attorneys Messrs Joseph & van Rensburg, within 10 (ten) days of
the boundary fence being fully completed.
The
parties agree that the boundary demarcating the respective farms
shall be relocated so that the boundary where the access road
crosses over to the defendant be diverted in the following manner …
(details omitted).
In
order to give effect to the aforegoing re-demarcation:
The
plaintiff shall transfer a portion of the existing Suiderkruis-camp
(distinctively marked on the chart), to the defendant;
The
defendant shall in turn transfer the existing Pan-camp (differently
marked), to the defendant.
(Sub-paras 4.3 –
4.6 have to do with improvements and the land identified in paras 4.1
and 4.2 (above) of the Deed of Settlement).
5 – 7 (irrelevant)
………………………………………………………………………….
8.1 The parties note
that their respective liabilities, if any, pertaining to the account
of the landsurveyor, Mr Mitchell, in respect
of his professional fees
as regards the pegging of the boundary fence is in dispute;
8.2 The
parties refer this dispute concomitantly to the arbitrator, Mr J W
Wilmans, for final adjudication of what constitutes fair
and
reasonable compensation for the land surveyor’s services and what
the parties’ respective liabilities against each other
therefor
are.
9 – 10
(irrelevant) ………………………………………………………………………”
Mr
Wilmans withdrew as arbitrator because there was a dispute over his
fees. This led the respondent-farmer to approach the c
ourt
a quo
for the following
relief, after negotiations for a substitute arbitrator failed (also
translated):
“
1. That
the order granted in Case No 1367/98 by this court, as set out in the
Deed of Settlement marked Annexure “A” to the founding
affidavit,
be amended by the deletion of the name “Mr J W Wilmans” in paras
2.3 and 8.2 thereof and to substitute the name “M
D J Steenkamp”
therefor.
That
it be declared that the parties are obliged:
To
subject themselves to arbitration by the aforesaid M D J Steenkamp
relating to the issues referred to in the aforementioned
paras 2.3
and 8.2 (of the Deed of Settlement);
Each
one is to pay half the fair and reasonable compensation of the
arbitrator, to wit; the amount of R800,00 per hour (VAT excluded),
as well as any necessary expenditure incurred by the arbitrator,
pending the award of any costs order by the arbitrator involving
the arbitration.
That
the respondent-attorney be ordered to pay the costs of this
application on the attorney and client scale.
Further
and/or alternative relief.”
The
siblings inherited a farm each – Middelwater and Leeukop –
pursuant to the joint-will of their late parents. These farms
lie
adjacent to each other. The dispute was precipitated by the fact
that their father, and his father before him, farmed these
farms as
a consolidated unit, apparently since about 1934. The demarcating
boundary fence between the farms had been collapsed
leaving only
ill-defined beacons or pointers of what may have separated the
farms. The sibling’s father, who was predeceased
by his wife, was
the usufructuary on the properties.
THE APPELLANT’S
CASE AND PRESCRIPTION
The
appellant
’s
attitude or objection to the appointment of Mr Wilmans as an
arbitrator or a substitute to Mr Wilmans are the following:
That
the
appellant
’s
accounting has revealed that he is not indebted to the respondent,
alternatively that the amount owed is so meagre that the
appointment of an arbitrator is unnecessary and unjustified. The
short answer to this postulate is that there is in existence
a
dispute between the parties and therefore a triable issue relating
to who owes who and how much. This is precisely one of
the
components of the arbitrator’s brief to determine. It is not for
this court to now usurp the functions of an arbitrator;
Appellant
reckons that the fee of R800,00 to be paid to Judge Steenkamp, a
retired judge president, is too exorbitant having regard
to the
elementary issues involved and the amount in dispute – estimated
by the appellant-attorney to be in the region of less
than
R100 000,00 (One Hundred Thousand Rand). The appellant
intimates that many local (Prieska) attorneys have indicated
that
they would do the arbitration for much less.
Whilst
the
appellant
-attorney
cannot exactly be typified as penny-pinching stingy, he certainly is
exceedingly tight-fisted. R800,00 per hour at current
going-rates
whether it be for a very experienced and senior attorney like Mr
Wilmans or the respected Judge President Steenkamp,
the proposed rate
is eminently reasonable. To suggest that the rate is excessive is
fallacious. Besides, the respondent’s attorneys
have directed
several letters to
appellant
’s
attorneys before this application was launched requesting the
appellant to suggest an alternative arbitrator but appellant remained
indifferent and even lacked the courtesy of a response between 29
January 2001 and 26 September 2001. Even on the latter date no
name
was suggested by the appellant as requested. The appellant does not
question the suitability of Judge Steenkamp to discharge
his
impending mandate;
The
appellant-attorney averred in his Answering Affidavit that the
respondent-farmer’s claim has prescribed due to the effluxion
of
3 (three) years in terms of the Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
(hereinafter referred to as “
the
Act
”) and that he has
not applied for the extension of time in terms of
section 23
of the
Arbitration Act, No 42 of 1965
.
There
is considerable merit to point 6.3 made by the appellant. The
record shows that:
The
respondent-farmer, acting in terms of the Deed of Settlement,
referred the matter to the arbitrator, Mr Wilmans, on the 29
th
June 2000 to adjudicate upon the issues in dispute. He also
provided Mr Wilmans with a copy of
“die
volledige hofrekord vir u inligting en agtegrond”
.
Mr Wilmans was in that letter also requested
“om
die prosedure te bepaal hoe dat hierdie arbitrasie sal geskied…
“
.
On
the 17
th
July 2000 Mr Wilmans obliged. The contents of his letter will go
some way to resolving the question whether the dispute had
already
been “subjected to arbitration” by Mr Wilmans as contemplated
in
section 13
(1) (f) and (i) of the
Prescription Act. The
terms
of this letter directed to respondent’s attorneys read:
“
L
Sandenbergh v H A Sandenbergh Saakno 1367/98
Ons
erken ontvangs van u brief van 29 Junie 2000 tesame met die
aanhangsels daarby wat Mnr Wilmans deurgewerk het.
Die
skrywer hiervan wil dit op rekord plaas dat hy bereid is om as
arbiter op te tree, onderhewig aan die volgende voorwaardes en
voorgestelde prosedure, naamlik:
Koste
van arbiter
:
Die
arbiter se koste word vasgestel op R800,00 (BTW uitgesluit) per
uur, insluitende vir enige reistyd en inspeksies.
Die
arbiter se koste sal in gelyke dele deur elkeen van die partye
betaal word binne 14 dae vanaf die datum waarop die arbiter
se
beslissing m.b.t. paragrawe 2.3 en 8.2 van die skikkingsooreenkoms
per faks aan die partye en/of hulle regsverteenwoordigers
gestuur
is.
Prosedure
:
Die
verweerder sal die skriftelike uiteensetting en dokumentêre
stawing vermeld in paragrawe 2.1 en 2.2 van die skikkingsooreenkoms
onmiddellik aan die arbiter beskikbaar stel;
Die
eiser sal die besware wat hy teen enige van die items of bedrae
daarvan of die dokumentêre stawing daarvan t.o.v. die
uiteensetting
en dokumentêre stawing vermeld in paragrawe 2.1 en
2.2 van die skikkingsooreenkoms onmiddellik aan die arbiter
beskikbaar stel;
Elkeen
van die partye sal hulle skriftelike redes onmiddellik aan die
arbiter beskikbaar stel t.o.v. die vraag of dit noodsaaklik
was of
redelik noodsaaklik was, al dan nie, dat van die dienste van die
landmeter, Mitchell, gebruik gemaak moes gewees het waarna
verwys
word in paragraaf 8.1 van die skikkingsooreenkoms; en/of die
landmeter se dienste of die resultaat daarvan enigsins en
indien
wel, tot watter mate bygedra het tot die bereiking van die
skikkingsooreenkoms;
Volledige
besonderhede van die ure wat deur die landmeter se dienste in
beslag geneem is, volledige besonderhede van al die werk
wat hy
gedoen het en volledige besonderhede van die tarief per uur, sowel
as reiskoste en ander uitgawes waarvolgens sy rekening
saamgestel
is, moet ook verskaf word, tesame met elkeen van die partye se
kommentaar of besware ten opsigte daarvan.
‘
n
Volledige lys van al die geskilpunte wat volgens elkeen van die
partye se siening deur die arbiter in oorweging geneem moet word,
vir doeleindes van sy beslissing;
Indien
enige van die partye dit gerade of noodsaaklik ag dat ‘n inspeksie
ter plaatse gedoen moet word, moet sodanige party ‘n
volledige
motivering daarvoor skriftelik aan die arbiter voorlê;
Op
ontvangs van die voorgaande stukke sal die arbiter met die
regsverteenwoordigers van die partye skakel om ‘n geskikte datum,
plek en tyd te bepaal waartydens die arbiter getuienis sal aanhoor
wat enige van die partye aan hom wil voorlê. Sodanige sitting
sal
onderhewig wees aan dieselfde prosesregtelike reëls m.b.t.
verteenwoordiging van die partye en kruisondervraging van getuies,
toelaatbaarheid van getuies en inhandiging van dokumente as wat geld
vir siviele hofsake in die Landdroshof;
Die
partye moet vooraf besluit en ooreenkom of die beslissing van die
arbiter finaal en bindend op die partye sal wees sonder enige
reg
van appél of nie;
Die
vraag of enige van die partye deur die arbiter beveel moet word om
enige gedeelte van die ander party se regskoste m.b.t. die
arbitrasie-verrigtinge te betaal of nie, sal oorgelaat word aan die
uitsluitlike diskressie van die arbiter.
Sal u asseblief ‘n
afskrif van hierdie brief aan die eiser se prokureur stuur vir sy
aandag.”
On
26 July 2000 the respondent’s attorney did what they were asked,
by furnishing a copy of Mr Wilmans’ letter, Annexure
“J”, to
the appellant’s attorneys. On 2
nd
October 2000 having not received any reaction, the respondent’s
attorneys notified the appellant once again that Mr Wilmans
is
prepared to act as arbitrator and enquired whether
“u
kliënt akkoord gaan met die koste van die arbiter”
;
On
the same latter date (02/10/2000) the appellant informed Mr Wilmans
that his terms are acceptable and furnished the further
requested
information and documentation to Mr Wilmans. On the 11
th
October 2000 Mr Wilmans wrote to respondent to acknowledge receipt
of the additional information and documentation aforesaid
and
intimated that he is still awaiting the appellant’s reaction in
order for him to deal further with the matter;
On
the 11
th
December 2000 Mr Wilmans, in a last-ditch effort, wrote to
appellant’s attorneys and decried the fact that no response to

his letters of the 11
th
October and 2
nd
November 2000 had been received. He then placed the respondent on
terms that unless a reaction is received by the end of January
2001
he will conclude that appellant is satisfied with his terms and the
determination of his procedures and cautioned
appellant
of the consequences of such nonchalance;
On
the 15
th
January 2001 the appellant’s attorneys spewed vitriol and for the
first time queried the R800,00 per hour rate chargeable by
Mr
Wilmans and intimated that the non-acceptance of the tariff has the
effect of rendering the procedures determined by Mr Wilmans
nugatory;
On
the 29
th
January 2001 Mr Wilmans informed the parties that he is not
prepared to undertake the arbitration for a reduced tariff. He

suggested that another person be appointed in his place so that he
may hand over the file to such person. It must be stated that
respondent had no qualms with Mr Wilmans’ tariff;
The
respondent entered into correspondence, between the 22
nd
February 2001 and the 24
th
May 2001, with appellant’s attorneys on the one hand and Mr
Wilmans on the other in an endeavour to persuade them that Mr

Wilmans be retained as arbitrator, but all efforts came to naught;
On
the 27
th
June 2001 and again on the 14
th
August 2001 the respondent tried valiantly to get the appellant to
suggest a name or names as substitute(s) for Mr Wilmans, with
no
success. On the 26
th
September 2001 the appellant responded by telling the respondent
that their ultimatum (of the 10
th
September 2001, apparently to seek relief from the Court) had
expired and that no useful purpose would have been served to have
replied to their previous correspondence and that he will not do so
in the future;
Further
one-way correspondence was nevertheless dispatched to the appellant
on 5
th
December 2001, the 5
th
March 2002, the 28
th
June 2002 and the 7
th
August 2002. The appellant’s failure to reply should not have
surprised the respondent because he was told in so many words
on
the 26
th
September 2001 (see para 7.9 (above)). However, such attitude from
the appellant and his attorneys, all officers of this Court,
though
the appellant is also a litigant, is strongly deprecated because it
is gravely unprofessional and borders on being unethical;
There
followed a considerable lull, 18 months in fact, from the 7
th
August 2002 (See par 7.9 (above)) until the applicant launched this
application on the 18
th
March 2004. It is mainly this unexplained delay that Adv D J van
der Walt, for the appellant, latched upon both in the
court
a quo
and before us to
contend that the respondent has shown no good cause for what he
labelled a wanton disregard for the time-related
rules of Court.
The
appellant-attorney makes the following averments in his Answering
Affidavit in support of his contention that the applicant’s
claim
has prescribed (the re-numbering is ours):
“
Die
uitwissing van die verpligting deur verjaring
Die
skikkingsooreenkoms is reeds op 20 Oktober 1999 onderteken. Meer as
drie jaar het sedertdien verloop.
Die
Applikant se vordering vir betaling ten opsigte van-
landmeterkoste
was opeisbaar toe die landmeter destyds sy rekening op 16 Mei 1999
aan die Applikant gelewer het;
koste
aangegaan in die oprigting van die gedeelte van die heining was
reeds opeisbaar voor die sluiting van die skikkingsooreenkoms
by
voltooiing van die gedeelte van die heining gedurende September
1999 en laastens op 30 September 1999.
Die
Applikant se vordering ten opsigte van die gedeelte van die heining
is ‘n vordering wat binne 3 jaar vanaf dit opeisbaar geword
het
kragtens die bepalinge van die Verjaringswet, No 68 van 1969, (“die
Verjaringswet”) verjaar. Die Applikant se vordering
ten opsigte
van landmeterkoste, wat ookal die regsaard daarvan mag wees, is
insgelyks onderhewig aan ‘n verjaringstermyn van
3 jaar.
Die
vorderinge was derhalwe reeds onderskeidelik uitgewis op 15 Mei 2002
en 29 September 2002.
Indien
dit bevind sou word dat die geskille, nadat dit op 29 Junie 2000
deur middel van aanhangsel “H” na Mnr Wilmans vir beslegting
verwys was, van arbitrasie onderhewig was is verjaring voltooi. Ek
vestig die Hof se aandag daarop dat:
Die
Applikant volgens aanhangsel “H” die tersaaklike geskille op 29
Junie 2000 na Mnr Wilmans as arbiter vir optrede en beregting
verwys het;
Die
Applikant se prokureur (alhoewel op onreëlmatige wyse
korrespondensie te skikking gewissel aan Mnr Wilmans geopenbaar
het)
Mnr Wilmans op 2 Oktober 2000 versoek het om die dispute
tussen ons te bereg soos wat dit uit aanhangsel “M” blyk;
Mnr
Wilmans, as arbiter, op die dispuut begin ingaan het, soos wat dit
uit die korrespondensie aangeheg by die funderende beëdigde
verklaring blyk onder meer uit bylaes “J” en “O”;
Mnr
Wilmans nie binne 4 maande soos vereis deur Artikel 23 van die
Arbitrasiewet sy toekennng gemaak het nie;
Daar
geen verlenging van die gemelde tydperk van vier maande kragtens
die bepalinge van Artikel 23 van die Arbitrasiewet geskied
het nie;
Die
vorderinge gevolglik nadat die gemelde 4 maande verloop het nie
meer aan arbitrasie onderhewig was nie; en
Die
vorderinge derhalwe kragtens die bepalinge van die Verjaringwet
verjaar het aangesien meer as drie jaar verloop het sedert
die
vorderinge opeisbaar geword het, alternatiewelik sedert 29 Junie
2000 verder alternatiewelik sedert 29 Oktober 2000 verloop
het,
selfs indien die voltooiing van verjaring uitgestel was gedurende
die 4 maande waartydens die vorderinge aan arbitrasie
onderworpe
was.
Ek
voer voorts en in ieder geval aan dat ‘n arbiter, by gebrek aan
verlening van die voormelde tydperk van 4 maande vasgestel
kragtens
die bepalinge van Artikel 23 van die Arbitrasiewet, nie geregtig is
om die betrokke geskille te bereg nie en die Hof dus
nie in die
geldende omstandighede ‘n arbiter ter vervanging van Mnr Wilmans
behoort aan te stel nie.
Die
Applikant se aansoek behoort derhalwe met koste geweier word.”
Realizing
the prescription dilemma facing him, the respondent-farmer applied
during the course of the hearing before
Lacock J
in October 2004 for and obtained an amendment to his Notice of
Motion which incorporated the following addition:
That
the four months period within which an arbitration award had to be
made by virtue of Annexure “A” (the Deed of Settlement)
to the
Founding Statement and as contemplated in
section 23
of the
Arbitration Act, No 42 of 1965
, be extended to the 28
th
February 2005.
At
the conclusion of the hearing the
court
a quo
made the following
order (portions not appealed against have been omitted):
“
(C
) Die
arbiter vermeld in die bevel verleen deur hierdie Hof onder saakno
1367/98, en soos vervat in die skikkingsooreenkoms hierby
aangeheg as
bylae “A” synde Mnr Wilmans, word hierby vervang deur Regter M D
J Steenkamp en word Regter M D J Steenkamp as arbiter
aangestel in
die plek van Mnr Wilmans;
(D) Die
voormelde skikkingsooreenkoms en hofbevel word dienooreenkomstig
gewysig;
(E) Die
tydperk waarbinne ‘n arbitrasie toekenning gemaak moet word uit
hoofde van bylae “A” hiertoe (soos gewysig), en soos
voorgeskryf
kragtens art 23 van Wet 42 van 1965, word verleng tot 28 Februarie
2005;
(F)
Die respondent (now the appellant-attorney) word gelas om die koste
van die aansoek te betaal.”
THE
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
The
kernel of the appellant’s grounds of appeal could be summarised in
these terms: That the
Court
a quo
erred:
In
having granted the respondent-farmer the four months extension of
time within which the arbitrator had to make his award in
terms of
section 23
(a) of the
Arbitration Act and
that the award period
should not have been prolonged to the 28
th
February 2005;
In
having found that Mr Wilmans was prevented from making his award
within the stipulated four months period primarily because
the
appellant-attorney was recalcitrant;
In not having found
that the respondent-farmer sought an indulgence from the Court and
was accordingly obliged to place sufficient
facts and reasons
before the Court to enable the Court to exercise its discretion in
the respondent-farmer’s favour. That,
consequently, the
respondent-farmer gave inadequate or no explanation for his
tardiness respecting to the long delays generally
and between
particular dates, viz from 14 August 2001, alternatively 26
September 2001, further alternatively 28 June 2002 to
18 March 2004
when this application was filed;
In
having substituted Judge Steenkamp for Mr Wilmans.
Mr
van der Walt argued that Mr Wilmans’ acceptance of his brief was
conditional (“die skrywer is bereid om as arbiter op te
tree
onderhewig aan die volgende voorwaardes” – see letter quoted in
para 7 of this judgment) and the act of thereafter declining
to
proceed with the arbitration has had the effect of the matter or the
debt never having been “the object of a dispute subjected
to
arbitration”. Apart from the legal interpretation that will
follow at a later stage this argument is hollow for the following
reasons:
Mr
Wilmans’ condition is a non-sequitur and may even be read pro non
scripto because he was not going to render his services
free of
charge and the parties expected to pay him a reasonable fee;
The
Deed of Settlement which was made an order of court by consent
stipulated as a prerequisite (in clause 2.3 thereof) that in
the
event of the parties failing to reach an agreement within 14
(fourteen) days of the furnishing of the specified account and
accompanying vouchers relating to the costs in question, then Mr
Wilmans will, in accordance with a procedure he has devised
as
arbitrator (
“volgens
‘n prosedure deur hom bepaal as arbiter”)
do certain things. In the letter quoted in full in para 7.2 of
this judgment Mr Wilmans did no more than was required of him.
The
preamble in the letter
“onderhewig
aan die volgende voorwaarde”
becomes immaterial;
The
appellant-attorney, firstly, unjustifiably queried the R800,00 per
hour tariff. Secondly, he feebly suggested that the referral
to
arbitration was premature because the account and invoices supplied
to him were unsatisfactory. In raising the latter point
he does
not realise that he unwittingly underscores the fact that a dispute
has indeed arisen between him and his brother –
only soluble by
the arbitrator;
The respondent-farmer
therefore acted correctly and within the scope of the Deed of
Settlement to refer the dispute to Mr Wilmans
for arbitration and
was not dependant upon the whims of the appellant-attorney to do
so.
Lacock
J
did not deal specifically with the respondent-farmer’s delay of 18
months between his last communication on the 7
th
August 2002 and when this application was filed on the 18
th
March 2004. See para 7.11 above. However, the following
observation by the Learned Judge at p 20 para 8.4 of his judgment is
equally apposite to this situation:
“
8.4 Die
redes waarom die eerste arbiter, Mnr Wilmans
,
nie binne ‘n tydperk van vier maande soos deur die voormelde
aangehaalde artikels vereis, ‘n toekenning gemaak het nie, is
primêr
te wyte daaraan dat die respondent (the attorney) versuim
het om enige medewerking te bied vir die beslegting van die geskille
by
wyse van arbitrasie. Die direkte gevolg van hierdie gebrek aan
samewerking vanaf die kant van die respondent (attorney) was dat
Mnr
Wilmans nie die geskil kon bereg binne die neergelegde periode van
vier maande nie, en later verplig was om as arbiter te onttrek”.
Indeed
if the appellant-attorney did not employ his obstructionist
stratagems this matter would in all probability have been laid
to
rest in 2000. Whilst the respondent-farmer and his attorneys could
and should have acted with due promptitude and better dilligence
to
bring this matter to court, the appellant-attorney should not be
allowed to benefit from this invidious situation which he has
precipitated.
THE
LAW AND DECIDED CASES
Adv
van Niekerk, SC, who appeared before us on behalf of the
respondent-farmer, has correctly alluded to the fact that the
present
matter concerns the extension of a statutory time limit
(i.e. as contained in
sec. 23(b)
of the
Arbitration Act) and
not the
condonation of non-compliance of a Rule of Court.
Sec 23(b)
reads:
“
Provided
that the Court may, on good cause shown, from time to time extend the
time for making any award, whether that time has expired
or not”
.
This
is not a case where there is a default of sorts on the part of the
respondent; on the contrary, the respondent has demonstrated
fully
on the papers the numerous efforts undertaken by himself (through
his attorneys) and by attorney Wilmans to get the arbitration
process going
.
To
summarise: we are of the view that, on a conspectus of all the facts
and circumstances pertaining to this aspect, the respondent
has
shown good cause for the extension sought. We cannot find any fault
with the approach adopted by
Lacock J
in this regard, nor are there any grounds on which his findings can
be interfered with on appeal in this regard.
The
nub of the enquiry regarding prescription is to be found in the
provisions contained in sec. 13(1)(f) and (i) of the Act. These
sections read as follows:
“
(1) If –
(a) ……..
(e) ………
(f)
the debt is the object of a dispute subjected to arbitration; or
(g) ……… (h) ………
(i) the
relevant period of prescription would, but for the provisions of this
subsection, be completed before or on, or within one
year after, the
day on which the relevant impediment referred to in paragraph (a),
(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g) or (h) has ceased
to exist, the period
of prescription shall not be completed before a year has elapsed
after the day referred to in paragraph (i).”
As
indicated in para 12,
supra
,
Mr Van der Walt has contended that Mr. Wilmans’ refusal to act as
arbitrator (due to the lack of co-operation from the appellant
and
lack of consensus on his fees, according to Mr Wilmans), had the
effect of the debt never having been “the object of a dispute
subjected to arbitration”. Consequently, so he contended, sec.
13(1)(f) and (i) did not find application in this matter.
The
essence of the question to be determined here is the meaning of
“subjected to arbitration”.
Lacock J
sought to answer this question with reference to:
The
ordinary grammatical dictionary meaning of the phrase;
The
intention of the Legislature in the codification of provisions
relating to terms of prescription, particularly in ascertaining
the
fundamental objective of the stipulations contained in
sec. 13(1)(f),
supra
;
The
relevant case law, in particular the decision in
Murray
& Roberts Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Upington Municipality
1984(1)
SA 571 (A
).
We
propose dealing with these three aspects above,
seriatim
.
Mr
van der Walt initially had no quarrel in his Heads of Argument with
the approach of the learned Judge
a
quo
regarding the ordinary dictionary meaning of the phrase. During
argument, however, he has handed up a bundle of extracts from
other
dictionaries in an attempt to show that
Lacock J
had erred in his conclusion. If anything, the extracts in Mr Van
der Walt’s bundle tend to support the conclusion reached by
Lacock J
.
We
do not find it necessary to repeat the ample examples referred to by
Lacock J
.
We have no doubt that the learned Judge was correct in his finding
that “subjected to arbitration” in its ordinary, grammatical
dictionary meaning entails the mere referral or submission of a
dispute for arbitration.
Mr
van der Walt has, neither in his Heads of Argument nor in his oral
argument before us, made any submissions regarding the findings
of
Lacock J
with regard to the Legislature’s intention. This is not
surprising. Suffice it to state at this juncture that there can be
little doubt that the Legislature has clearly intended that the term
of prescription should be extended in instances where a claim
process can be concluded finally through an alternate process, such
as arbitration. The learned Judge correctly refers to the
following
dictum
in the
Murray
and Roberts
case
,
supra,
at
580A-C as authority:
“
An
arbitration agreement is therefore in a sense an impediment to the
recovery of a debt by means of legal proceedings, but it is
one
because it provides an alternative means of resolving disputes which
carries the approval of the law. This applies a fortiori
where a
dispute has actually been subjected to arbitration. The creditor is
protected against the running of prescription because
there exists an
impediment to his approaching the ordinary courts, and the impediment
exists because he is taking appropriate alternative
steps to recover
his debt. It is against this background that s 13 (1) (f) of the Act
should in my view be interpreted and applied.”
Similarly,
we are in agreement with
Lacock
J
that what the Legislature had undoubtedly envisaged in sec. 13(1)(f)
is that the term of prescription is postponed through the
mere act
of initiating arbitration (i.e. referral/submission). Since the
emphasis is on attaining finality and certainty in legal
disputes,
it is difficult to understand how it could be otherwise. To uphold
the contention advanced by Mr van der Walt, namely
that the dispute
will only become subjected to arbitration once the arbitrator has
accepted his appointment and has commenced the
arbitration, would be
untenable in law and may lead to absurdity. What if the arbitrator
dies or becomes incapacitated after referral
but prior to the
appointment coming to his knowledge? To borrow from the example
quoted by
Lacock
J
in his judgment – what would the position be if an arbitrator is
agreed upon subsequent to negotiations between the parties only
some
three months after the referral? Is the arbitrator in these
circumstances expected to conclude his/her work within one month?
An
interpretation which accords with the one propounded by Mr van der
Walt would not only militate against the ordinary grammatical
dictionary meaning of the phrase and be contrary to the clear
intention of the Legislature, but would also be in direct conflict
with authoritative case law, as we now proceed to show. In the
Murray
and Roberts
case,
supra
,
a construction contract contained a dispute resolution clause 69, in
terms whereof a dispute was to be referred firstly to the
engineer
appointed in terms of the contract, thereafter to a mediator and
finally to a single arbitrator. At 580 H the Court
(per
Grosskopf
AJA
,
as he then was) held that:
“
Clause
69 accordingly provides an extra-judicial means of resolving a
dispute between the parties. Once the parties have entered upon
the
procedures which it lays down, they will achieve certainty about the
debt (or alleged debt) which forms the subject-matter of
their
dispute. Such certainty will arise from the decision of the engineer,
the opinion of the mediator or the award of the arbitrator.”
The
Court, in the aforesaid case, then embarks upon a consideration of
the issue at hand, namely “
whether
the submission of the dispute to the engineer for decision pursuant
to clause 69 amounted to a subjection thereof to arbitration
within
the meaning of s 13(1)(f) of the Act
”
(at 581 F). The Court thereafter concludes as follows (at 582 E-G):
“
Having
regard to the wording of s 13 (1) (f) of the Act as well as its scope
and purpose, I consider that the procedure laid down
by clause 69
taken as a whole must be considered one of arbitration, and that the
dispute in the present case was subjected to such
arbitration when it
was submitted to the engineer. It follows that the completion of
prescription was delayed until one year after
the impediment ceases
to exist (i.e. when the arbitration proceedings come to an end …”
Lacock J
found the
Murray
and Roberts
case,
supra
,
to be
in
pari materia
and consequently relied on same as authority for the view that
“subjected to arbitration” means a mere referral/submission
to
arbitration or conversely stated – a mere initiation of the
arbitration process. Mr van der Walt has sought to distinguish
the
Murray
and Roberts
case, from the present case on the facts. He has contended that,
given the factual distinction, that case is no authority for
the
findings of
Lacock J
.
The facts there are contended by him to be distinguishable in the
following respects:
The
relevant agreement in the
Murray
and Roberts
case, was a construction contract for the completion of a project
against remuneration and therefore a species of the
locatio
conductio operis faciendi
,
whereas the settlement agreement between the parties in the present
case was not;
Attorney
Wilmans had not been an intermediary party to the settlement
agreement (as the engineer in the
Murray
and Roberts
case, was) and therefore not involved in the administration and
execution thereof;
Attorney Wilmans was
entitled to accept or decline his appointment as arbitrator (unlike
the engineer in the construction contract
who had no such choice);
Any further role that
Mr. Wilmans was to play with regard to the settlement agreement was
contingent upon him accepting the appointment
as arbitrator; and,
In the present matter
Mr. Wilmans had declined the appointment and had never acted as an
arbitrator.
Mr
van der Walt argued strenuously before us that in the
Murray
and Roberts
case,
the contracting parties had subjected themselves to the engineer’s
jurisdiction and the latter had been prepared and had
in fact been
bound to exercise such jurisdiction over the parties. In the
present matter Mr Wilmans had acquired no such jurisdiction
over the
parties or over the dispute, so Mr van der Walt submitted.
While
it is so that the agreement in the present matter differs from that
in the
Murray
and Roberts
case, we fail to see how these differences make the judgment in that
case less apposite to the present matter. It would surely
be
fallacious to argue that only disputes in construction contracts
could be subjected to arbitration. Furthermore, we do not
understand the
ratio
decidendi
in the
Murray
and Roberts
case, to be to the effect that a dispute is only subjected to
arbitration once it is referred to an arbitrator
who
has assumed jurisdiction over the parties
.
The primary thrust of appellant’s counsel’s argument in that
case was to the effect that “arbitration” in sec. 13(1)(f)
should be interpreted technically, i.e. that in the three-tiered
dispute resolution mechanism contained in clause 69 of the
contract,
the dispute would be “subjected to arbitration” only
during the third and final stage, viz. referral to the arbitrator.
The
Court pertinently rejected this argument in its finding at
582 E-G, quoted at para 23 above. The crux of the judgment, in
our view, is that completion of prescription had been delayed once
there had been a
referral
of the dispute to the engineer. The judgment most certainly does
not constitute authority for the proposition advanced by Mr van
der
Walt, namely that delay of the period of prescription can only occur
once the arbitrator has accepted his appointment or has
assumed
jurisdiction over the parties.
The
Murray
and Roberts
case
has been followed in:
SA Breweries
v Grinaker Construction
1986(1)
SA 191 (D & CLD)
.
It is of some importance to note that, in the Court
a
quo
in the
Murray
and Roberts
case,
Basson J
(whose judgment had been upheld on appeal) came to the following
conclusion:
“
Ek
kom dus tot die slotsom dat die Wetgewer met die onderwerping van ‘n
geskil aan arbitrasie bedoel het ‘n verwysing van ‘n
geskil
tussen die partye na ‘n persoon om daardie geskil buite die hof te
besleg”.
See:
Murray
and Roberts Construction (Cape)(Pty) Ltd v Upington Munisipaliteit
1982(3)
SA 385 (NC)
at 401 D
.
Mr
van der Walt has relied on the following cases in support of his
argument:
Bhoola
v Bhoola
1945
NPD 109
at 112-113.
Members
of the Sugar Industry Central Board v Maritz and Another
1984(4)
SA 101 (T
)
at 107 A/B-E. In the
Bhoola
case, the parties (who were partners and joint venturers) had
appointed four arbitrators who had accepted appointment, and had
amongst themselves, then appointed a fifth arbitrator. It was
common cause that the parties’ intention had been to have five
arbitrators, four to be appointed by themselves and the fifth to be
appointed by the other four arbitrators. The fifth arbitrator
named
in this manner, refused to act. Thereafter, in the course of
negotiations directed at settling the disputes between the
parties,
one of the four appointed arbitrators died. No agreement could be
reached regarding his successor. As a result the Court
was asked in
an application under sec. 10 of Act 24 of 1898 to appoint a fourth
arbitrator.
A
point
in
limine
was taken by the respondent that the original submission had lapsed,
because the period of three months prescribed by para D of
the
schedule to the aforementioned Act had expired. The Court held that
the period of three months only begins to run from the
time that the
arbitrators had entered upon the reference and it held further that
a body of arbitrators can only enter upon the
reference once all the
individuals comprising that body have been nominated and have
accepted their appointment. The preliminary
point was dismissed.
It bears consideration that the
gravamen
of the
Bhoola
judgment is to be found therein that:
“…..the
body of persons contemplated by the parties as the body to decide
their disputes has not yet come into existence
”
(at 112).
Mr van der Walt
appears to be relying on the following passages from the judgment as
authority for his submissions:
“
It
seems obvious that an arbitrator cannot
enter
upon a reference
until he has been nominated and has accepted appointment”
(at 112; own underlining).
“
This
machinery has been put into operation, but it has not yet performed
its purpose, for Rana, the appointee, has refused to
accept the
appointment”
.
The
obvious mistake in Mr Van der Walt’s line of reasoning is that the
Bhoola
case concerned, not so much the question of when a dispute is
“subjected to arbitration”, but rather
whether
a body of arbitrators can enter upon a reference while all the
individuals comprising such body have not been nominated
and/or have
not accepted appointment.
We have deliberately emphasized the words “enter upon a
reference” in para 24.4(a),
supra
.
The
Bhoola
judgment has to be understood in the context that the three month
period laid down in par (D) of the schedule to Act 24 of 1898
“
begins
to run from the time the arbitrators
enter
upon the reference
”,
(at 112 of the judgment; own underlining).
Consequently,
the enquiry in that case was completely different, namely:
When
does an arbitrator enter upon the reference?
In
the present matter the enquiry is:
When
is a dispute subjected to arbitration?
At
113 of the reported judgment,
Broome J
extensively examines case law to determine what “enter upon the
reference” means. After doing so, he concludes that it means
enquiring into or hearing the case.
It
is of considerable significance to note that the words
“entered
on the reference
”
is to be found in the provisions contained in
sec. 23(a)
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
. That section deals with the time for
making an arbitration award. It stipulates, importantly, that such
award is to be made
within 4 months of the date on which the
arbitrator/s entered on the reference, “
…or
the date on which such arbitrator was … called on to act by notice
in writing from any party to the reference”
.
It is not without significance that the Legislature draws this
distinction between “entering on the reference” and being
“called on to act (by any party to the reference)”. This
distinction accords with the one drawn by us herein. In the
premises
therefore, it is abundantly clear that
Bhoola
v Bhoola
,
supra,
does not support Mr van der Walt’s contentions at all.
In
the
Sugar
Industry
case
supra
,
a dispute had arisen between the first respondent (a sugar grower)
and the second respondent (a miller), concerning payment for
sugar
cane tendered for delivery by the first respondent, which had been
rejected by the second respondent. Clause 13 of the Sugar
Industries Agreement made provision for the submission of any
dispute to the applicant for arbitration. First respondent
submitted
the matter for arbitration and second respondent filed a
special plea of prescription. First respondent, relying on
sec. 13(1)(f)
of the Act, contended that prescription had been
delayed due to the fact that the dispute had been subjected to
arbitration from
the time that the dispute had come into existence
by virtue of clause 13 of the agreement.
The
matter was then heard by
Philips AJ
as a stated case concerning the question of law as to whether the
mere agreement to submit a dispute to arbitration constitutes
the
subjecting to arbitration of such dispute, thus delaying
prescription.
Philips AJ
held that a mere agreement which requires the referring of a dispute
to arbitration was not an “impediment” as provided for
in
sec. 13(1)(i) of the Act. Mr van der Walt has placed specific
reliance on the passages at 107A/B-E of the
Sugar
Industry
case. At 107A Philips AJ held that:
“
For
s13(1)(f) to operate the debt must be ‘the object of a dispute
subjected to arbitration’”.
At 107B-E, the learned Judge states as follows:
“
If
the words "subjected to" are to have any meaning, in
contradistinction to "subject to" or "submitted to",
then they must mean, not that an agreement to refer disputes to
arbitration is in existence, but that there must be a reference
to
arbitration actually proceeding. It is clear from the definition of
"arbitration agreement" in
s 1
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of
1965
, that it is something which provides "for the reference to
arbitration" of disputes. The actual reference, therefore, takes
place after the written agreement. The
reference
means the process of actually deciding the dispute. (
Bhoola
v Bhoola
1945 NPD 109
at 113.) The provisions of clause 13 of the Agreement do not produce
the situation that the dispute is "subjected to"
arbitration.
They merely set up the tribunal to which the dispute
can, in due course, be referred. It would not, for instance, be an
apt use of
language to say that a dispute is "subjected to
action" merely because there is a court which has jurisdiction
over the
debtor. I therefore disagree, with respect, with the remarks
by
MCEWAN
J
obiter. I consequently conclude that prescription ran against the
first respondent from the dates when the dispute arose in 1974,
1975
and 1976, and it was not delayed by the provisions of clause 13 of
the Agreement.
”
Two
observations need to be made regarding the above quoted passages:
The
central enquiry in that case concerned the question whether an
agreement to refer a dispute to arbitration
per
se
,
constituted subjection of the dispute to arbitration. The enquiry
is clearly different in the present case
Philips
AJ’
s
dictum
that “
the
reference means the process of actually deciding the dispute”
and his reliance on
Bhoola
v Bhoola
,
supra
,
must be understood in the context of the
facts
of the
Sugar
Industry
-
and
Bhoola
cases. In the present matter not only had the parties identified
the (sole) arbitrator in the settlement agreement, but the
respondent had set in motion the process by referring the dispute
to Mr. Wilmans for arbitration – thus proceeding beyond the
mere
agreement to arbitrate.
Not
only is the
Sugar
Industry
case (like the
Bhoola
case) therefore distinguishable as we have shown, but the further
dictae
of
Philips
AJ
tend to support not the appellant’s contentions, but rather those
of the respondent, which had been upheld
a
quo
by
Lacock
J
:
Firstly
the learned Judge finds support for his views in the
Murray
and Roberts
(appeal)
case (at 107 F-I);
In
the second place,
Philips
AJ
finds
that: “
However
the whole tenor of
Grosskopf
AJA
’s
remarks (in the
Murray
and Roberts
case), seems to me to show his wholehearted acceptance of the idea
that the impediment comes into existence only when the creditor
takes appropriate steps to recover his debt. Such steps in this
case would
be
the initiation of arbitration proceedings
to bring about a decision of the dispute”
(own
underlining).
The
Sugar
Industry
case therefore, as
Lacock
J
correctly found
a
quo
,
lends no support to Mr van der Walt’s contentions.
To
conclude this aspect regarding prescription: We are
ad
idem
with
Lacock
J
that the
Murray
and Roberts
case
is authority for the view that “subjected to arbitration” means
referral or submission to arbitration. That view also accords
with
the ordinary grammatical dictionary meaning of the phrase as well as
with the clear, unequivocal intention of the Legislature.
Moreover,
as
Lacock
J
correctly pointed out, such a conclusion does not operate unfairly at
all against the appellant. If the appellant had taken the
view that
there had been an unreasonable delay on the part of the appellant in
finalising arbitration, or that arbitration had become
redundant, he
could have approached a Court for relief in terms of
sec. 3(2)
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
. This he did not do. As
Lacock
J
correctly found, it had in fact been the appellant who had been the
delaying party.
THE SECURITY FOR
COSTS ISSUE
Before
we deal with the costs aspect, it is necessary to furnish reasons
for the order which was issued
ex
tempore
on
the preliminary issue regarding security for costs raised by the
respondent: The respondent, as he is entitled to do in terms
of the
provisions contained in
Rule 49(13)
, demanded security for his costs
of appeal. The appellant provided security in the form of a
suretyship by one of the partners
in his law firm, Mr Daniël Nel.
In terms thereof, Mr. Nel bound himself in his personal capacity, as
surety and co-principal
debtor together with the appellant, for the
respondent’s costs of appeal. The respondent found the
form
of security unacceptable and launched an application in which he
sought a declarator that the appellant had failed to comply with
the
provisions of
Rule 49(13)
in that the security tendered is not in an
acceptable form. The respondent also sought an order that the
appeal be struck from
the roll, alternatively that the appeal be
postponed
sine
die
and
that the appellant be ordered to furnish proper security in the form
of an irrevocable and unconditional guarantee by a recognized
financial institution within 10 days, failing which the appellant
would have the right to approach the court for the striking off
of
the appeal.
There
is no issue between the parties regarding the amount of security –
the respondent demanded R45 000.00 and Nel’s personal
suretyship is in that amount. In the course of filing his answering
affidavit, the appellant paid an amount of R45 000.00
into his
Kimberley attorneys’ trust account as
conditional
security.
At the hearing, Mr van Niekerk for the respondent, objected to the
conditionality of the payment. He indicated that
the security
provided would be acceptable once the conditionality attached
thereto had been removed. He also asked for costs of
the
preliminary application.
After
hearing argument, an order was issued
ex
tempore
that
the security tendered is in order and that the appeal should proceed.
We reserved our reasons on the costs aspect.
Rule
49(13)
does not prescribe the
form
which security for costs in an appeal should take; it merely
provides that an appellant should, prior to lodging copies of the
appeal record with the registrar,
“…..enter
into good and sufficient security for the respondent’s costs of
appeal
”.
The Afrikaans text refers to “
voldoende
sekuriteit
”.
Mr
van Niekerk’s argument before us was to the effect that “good”
security means “financially secure, sound or safe” and
that
“sufficient” related not only to the amount, but also the
nature
of the security. In this regard he referred us to
Majunga
Food Processes SARL v SA Dried Fruit Co-operative Ltd
2000(2) SA 94 (C
)
at 96 G-H
whereat
it was held that:
“
To
comply with the objective of giving security in my view, it ought to
be tangible and durable. It ought to possess value and be
negotiable”
.
Mr
van Niekerk further submitted that a personal suretyship can never
be sufficient security, since it has no inherent value and
is not
negotiable. It is quite correct, as Mr van der Walt has submitted,
that the Rule does not require security to be to the
subjective
satisfaction of a respondent on appeal. The rationale behind the
furnishing of security for costs on appeal is to obviate
the risk of
non-payment in an unsuccessful appeal – consequently what needs to
be determined is whether the security furnished
is sufficient having
regard to the
objective
risk of non-payment.
The following facts
stand uncontroverted on the papers:
the appellant is an
attorney, an officer of this Court and a partner in a medium-sized
law firm in Bellville;
the appellant is a
fairly wealthy man with unencumbered assets conservatively valued
at R5 million – an aspect which is
known to the respondent,
his brother;
the surety, Nel, is
an attorney, an officer of this Court and a partner in the
appellant’s law firm aforementioned; and
the amount of
security is, by today’s standards, not very large, namely
R45 000.00.
While
it is somewhat unusual for an attorney to stand surety in his
personal
capacity,
as opposed to his firm standing surety, we do not view this as
insufficient security
per
se
.
The totality of the surrounding facts and circumstances need to be
taken into account on a case by case basis. Nel, as a senior
attorney and officer of this Court, would hardly be expected to
dishonour his written undertakings as surety and co-principal

debtor. Compare:
Ridon
v Van der Spuy and partners (Wes-Kaap) Inc
2002(2)
SA 121 (C
)
at 140 D-H. Furthermore, the respondent is well aware that his
brother, the appellant, is a man of considerable financial means.

Moreover, as an attorney and an officer of the court, one would
expect the appellant to pay his debts or face the consequences.
The
practice of an attorney standing surety in his personal capacity in
these circumstances, as Nel has done
in
casu
,
is one which is to be discouraged. We are satisfied, however, that
such suretyship constituted good and sufficient security
in
the circumstances of this case.
THE COSTS
All
that remains is the question of costs. The appellant has been
unsuccessful in the appeal and should pay those costs. We see
no
good reason why in the exercise of our discretion, the reserved
costs of the preliminary application relating to the security
for
costs should not be part of the costs in the appeal, to be paid by
the appellant. The respondent most certainly did not act
unreasonably in bringing the application under
Rule 49(13)
, given
the unusual form of security furnished.
WE
ORDER AS FOLLOWS
:
THE APPEAL IS
DISMISSED WITH COSTS, SUCH COSTS TO INCLUDE THE COSTS OF THE
APPLICATION UNDER RULE 49(13).
______________________ ______________________
F
D KGOMO SA MAJIEDT
JUDGE
PRESIDENT JUDGE
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
I
CONCUR:
______________________
B
C MOLWANTWA
ACTING
JUDGE
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION
For
the Appellant: Adv J G van Niekerk, SC
Instructed
by: Haarhoffs Inc, KIMBERLEY
For
the Respondent: Adv van der Walt
Instructed
by: Duncan & Rothman Inc, KIMBERLEY