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1988
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[1988] ZASCA 174
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B&B Hardware Distributors (Pty) Ltd v Administrator, Province of Cape of Good Hope and Another (548/87) [1988] ZASCA 174; [1989] 2 All SA 146 (A) (1 December 1988)
Case Nr. 548/87
E du P
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SO
UTH
AFRICA
(APP
ELLATE
DIVISION) In the matter
between:
B & B HARDWARE
DISTRIBUTORS (PTY) LTD
..Appellant
THE
ADMINISTRATO
R OF THE PROVINCE OF
THE CAPE
OF GOOD HOPE First
Respondent
R McCARTHY & CO (PTY) LTD Second Respondent
Coram
:
RABIE ACJ, HOEXTER, VAN HEERDEN, GROSSKOPF, et
EKSTEEN
JJA.
Heard: D
elivered
:
3 November 1988 1 December 1988
JUDGMENT RABIE AC
J:
On the return day of a rule
nisi
which called upon the respondents to
show cause why the appellant should not
2
be declared to be the owner of certain goods, and why the respondents should
not be ordered to hand over the said goods to the appellant,
the Eastern Cape
Division (
per
Jennett J) held that the appellant was the owner of the
goods, but that it was estopped from asserting its ownership therein. The
rule
nisi
was accordingly discharged with costs. The appeal is against that
order. The facts of the case, in so far as relevant to the appeal,
are set out
hereunder.
The appellant trades as a supplier of ironmongery. Its principal place of
business is in Selby, Johannesburg. In March 1984 the Provincial
Administration
of the Cape of Good Hope (the first respondent) and a company called Thomas
Construction (Pty) Ltd entered into a
written agreement in terms of which the
company (hereinafter referred to as "Thomas Construction") was to erect a
hospital at King
William's Town. According to Mr E.H. Escreet, who deposed to
the appellant's foundina affidavit and who is a director of the appellant,
he
was requested by Thomas Construction
3
early in March 1985 to quote for the supply of ironmongery to be used in the
construction of the hospital. On 9 March 1985 - thus
Escreet - he telephoned Mr
David Gradwell, who was employed by Thomas Construction as the "construction
buyer" in respect of the
aforesaid hospital contract. They discussed the
quotation required by Thomas Construction, and Escreet undertook to submit
prices
to Thomas Construction in due course. On 25 March 1988 Escreet again
spoke to Gradwell on the telephone. Gradwell told him that Thomas
Construction
would in all likelihood place an order with the appellant. On 11 April 1985 the
appellant sent a written quotation to
Thomas Construction. On 19 May 1985
Gradwell telephoned Escreet and advised him that Thomas Construction would be
placing an order
with the appellant. On that occasion (i.e., 19 May 1985),
Escreet says, it was agreed between himself and Gradwell that all goods
to be
supplied by the appellant would be supplied subject to the appellant's "standard
terms and conditions", one of which terms
was that ownership in any
4
goods supplied would remain vested in the appellant until the full purchase
price of such goods had been paid to the appellant. On
20 May 1985 Thomas
Construction sent a number of "buying orders" to the appellant, and during the
period September to October 1985
goods to the value of R84 573.35 were sent to
Thomas Construction and delivered at the building site in King William's
Town.
Escreet's aforesaid statements relating to his dealings with Gradwell
and the agreement concluded between them on 19 May 1985 are
confirmed by
Gradwell in an affidavit deposed to by him.
Thomas Construction was liquidated provisionally on 12 November 1985, and
finally on 18 December 1985. At that stage it had not made
any payment for the
goods it had prdered from the appellant. The liguidators of Thomas Construction
also made no payment to the appellant
in respect of the purchase price of the
goods. On 31 January 1986 the appellant caused a letter to be sent to the
liquidators in
5
which it cancelled its agreement with Thomas Construction and
demanded the
return of the goods it had sold and delivered
to Thomas Construction.
In February 1986 the first respondent entered
into
an agreement with the second respondent (R.
McCarthy and
Company (Pty) Ltd) in terms of which the second respondent
was to complete the work left unfinished by Thomas
Construction. Thereafter the first respondent also entered
into an agreement with the liquidators of Thomas Construction
in terms of which Thomas Construction sold its plant and
eguipment on the building site to the second respondent.
The liquidators' attitude to the appellant's claim that it
was entitled to the return of the goods it had sold to Thomas
Construction was, according to Escreet, that they had no interest in the
goods and that the first respondent had, by
virtue of the provisions of clause 12 of its agreement with
Thomas Construction, become the owner of the goods. (More
will be said about clause 12 of the said agreement later in
6
the judgment.) The State Attorney at Port Elizabeth, acting on behalf of the
first respondent, stated in a letter written - so it
would seem - on 22 May
1986, that the first respondent had "paid for the said goods in terms of a
payment certificate and considered
(itself) to be the owner of the said goods",
and that it was not prepared to give an undertaking that the goods would not be
used
in the construction of the hospitai.
The rule
nisi
, referred to in the first paragraph of this judgment,
was issued on 5 June 1986.
The first respondent's answering affidavit was deposed to by its deputy
director of works, Mr R.F. Delport. In this affidavit he resisted
the
appellant's claim for the return of the aforesaid goods on several grounds. The
first of these grounds was that Gradwell had
no authority from Thomas
Construction to enter into an agreement whereby the ownership in the goods would
remain vested in the appellant
after the goods had been delivered to Thomas
Construction.
7
The other grounds are set out in a paragraph - paragraph 6(d)
of his
affidavit - which I propose to quote in full. It
reads as follows (I have
inserted the letters (A) and (B)
therein to facilitate reference to the main
and alternative
parts of the paragraph):
"(A) I state further that the Applicant,
through its
employees, including the said ESCREET, who had and who have knowledge of the
building industry and the usual provisions
to be found in building contracts,
was aware of the fact that once goods are delivered to a building site the value
of such goods
will be included in payment certificates issued by the architect
and that this would result in the Employer making payment, in accordance
with
such payment certificate, of the value of such goods to the Contractor. This is
what invariably occurs in contracts of this
nature and I have no doubt that the
Applicant was aware of this. Upon payment of the value of such goods by the
Employer to the Contractor
the Employer
8
becomes the owner of such goods. This is also what occurred in the present
instance. The value of the ironmongery in question was
included in payment
certificates issued by the architect and an amount of R84 000,00 was paid by
First Respondent to Thomas Construction
(Pty) Limited in respect of these goods.
By making such payment First Respondent became the owner thereof. I respectfully
contend
that if the Applicant had in fact entered into an agreement whereby it
reserved or intended to reserve ownership of the goods in
guestion it would have
informed First Respondent thereof.
(B)
Alternatively, the Applicant either
deliberately or negligently faiied to inform First Respondent thereof and as a
result First Respondent, in good faitn, made payment
of the value of the goods
to Thomas Construction (Pty) Limited. By reason of the aforegoing it is now not
open to the Applicant to
deny that ownership in the goods in question has passed
to First Respondent as this will
9
result in considerable prejudice to First Respondent. If the Applicant is
entitled to take possession of the ironmongery in question
it will either have
to be repurchased from the Applicant or purchased from another source, which
means that First Respondent will
have to pay twice for the goods in guestion or
for goods of a similar nature. If the Applicant had in fact intended to retain
ownership
of the goods in question it would, in my submission, have informed
First Respondent of this fact; or First Respondent could reasonably
have
expected that it would have been informed thereof."
The second respondent, in an affidavit made by one of its directors, Mr M.R.
McCarthy, supported the first respondent's claim to the
ownership of the
goods.
Jennett J held, as stated before, that the appellant had proved that
it had retained its ownership in the goods, but that it was estopped
from
relying thereon in
10
claiming the return of the goods it had sold to Thomas Construction. This
finding will be discussed later in the judgment.
In this Court the first
respondent did not attack the Court
a quo
's finding that the appellant
reserved its ownership in the goods, as alleged by Escreet. The argument
advanced on its behalf was
devoted solely to the issue of estoppel. It will be
convenient to consider the question of estoppel after I have dealt with the
argument
which the second respondent advanced in this Court.
The argument presented on behalf of the second respondent was not advanced in
the Court
a quo
. It is to the following effect. The appellant's quotation
of 11 April 1985, it is said, was a written offer made by Thomas Construction,
and the buying orders sent to the appellant by Thomas Construction constituted a
written acceptance of the offer; the said offer
and acceptance constituted a
written agreement of sale between the parties; and this agreement
11
of sale was intended to be one on credit, the offer containing no reference
to a reservation of ownership and stating that payment
was to be made within 30
days. The parties, it is said, intended the written offer and each of the buying
orders to contain the whole
of their agreement. Consequently, counsel contends,
citing
Union Government v. Vianini Perro-Concrete Pipes (Pty) Ltd
1941 AD
43
, evidence of the oral agreement alleged by Escreet in terms of which
ownership was reserved to the appellant until it received payment
for the goods
sold by it, is rendered inadmissible by the parol evidence rule. In the
alternative, counsel contends, even it is found
that what the appellant and
Thomas Construction intended was that their agreement should be partly in
writing and partly oral, the
"integration rule", to referred to in
Johnston
v. Leal
1980(3) SA 927(A) at 944, would be applicable, and it would render
inadmissible any extrinsic evidence which contradicts or varies
the written
portion of the agreement. In the result, it is submitted,
12
the appellant is not entitled to prove its alleged reservation of its
ownership in the goods it sold to Thomas Construction.
Neither of the
aforesaid submissions can be sustained. It is clear from Escreet's affidavit,
referred to above, that it was not the
intention of the parties that the written
quotation of 11 April 1985 and the buying orders which followed thereon should
embody the
whole of their agreement. It is incorrect to say, too, that oral
evidence relating to the reservation of ownership is inadmissible
for being in
conflict with the written portion of the agreement. The offer which Thomas
Construction accepted when it forwarded its
buying orders to the appellant
consisted not solely of the quotation as set out in the document dated 11 April
1985, but of that
quotation as amended by the subsequent reservation of
ownership by Escreet on 19 May 1985. This appears, as I have said, from the
affidavit of Escreet to which I referred above. It also appears from
13
certain passages in his answer to affidavits filed by the respondents, viz.
"The question of reservation of ownership
in and to the goods by the
Applicant had already been resolved when the order was placed on it by Thomas
Construction", and: "I state
the goods were supplied pursuant to the conditions
contained in Quotation IMQ 113/85 - dated 11 April, but that the Applicant's
standard
terms and condition, including the reservation of ownership were
incorporated in addition to the conditions contained in the said
quotation, at
the time that the order was placed by Thomas Construction on the Applicant". It
appears, therefore, that the agreement
between the appellant and Thomas
Construction was that contained in the offer of 11 April 1984, as subsequently
amended, and the
buying orders which followed on, and constituted an acceptance
of, the offer as so amended. In the circumstances there can be no
objection,
based on the parol evidence rule, to the admission of evidence relating to the
question of the
14
reservation of ownership.
I turn now to the question of estoppel, on which,
as
I said above, Jennett J held against the appellant. In
dealing with this
issue, the learned Judge, after referring
to the cases of
Oakland Nominees
(Pty) Ltd v. Gelria Mining
& Investment Co (Pty) Ltd
1976(1) SA 441(A) at 452 A-G
and
Akojee v. Sibanyoni and Another
1976(3) SA 440 (W) at 442 F-
H, said:
"In the present case applicant delivered goods to Thomas Construction for the
purpose that they be installed in the building that
Thomas Construction was
engaged upon and in which event the goods would accede to the building.
Applicant must have contemplated
the goods would be at the building site in
circumstances no different from other building materials and thus with the
applicant's
consent in such a manner as to proclaim that the
dominium
or
j
us disp
o
nendi
thereof vested in Thomas Construction. Applicant
clothed Thomas Construction with the apparent authority vis-à-vis first
respondent
to dispose of the goods as if they were part of Thomas Construction's
materials and
15
applicant cannot set up his private agreement with Gradwell that ownership in
the goods was not to pass to Thomas Construction until
the purchase price
therefor had been paid.
On behalf of applicant it was argued that it was in fact negligence on the
part of first respondent's architect that caused first
respondent to purchase
the goods from Thomas Construction and there was indeed provision in the main
agreement between first respondent
and Thomas Construction that the architect
should satisfy himself as to the ownership of goods in Thomas Construction
before certifying
that first respondent should or could make payment to Thomas
Construction therefor. The position in the present case is however that
the
architect could only have learned of the arrangement between applicant and
Thomas Construction by making enquiries of either
applicant or Gradwell, and in
my view there was no call for the architect to do so. I am of the view that
applicant's representation
by conduct was negligently made and at the very least
in order to protect itself applicant should have informed first respondent
and/or first respondent's architect of the terms of agreement between applicant
and Thomas
16
Construction.
Accordingly I am of the view that applicant is estopped from asserting its
rights to the goods concerned which means in turn that
the
rule nisi
must
be discharged."
The first part ("A") of paragraph
6(d) of Delport's affidavlt, quoted above, deals with the contention that the
first respondent became
the owner of the goods by paying to Thomas Construction
the amount reflected in "payment certificates issued by the architect", i.e.
R84
000,00. "By making such payment", Delport says, "First Respondent became the
owner" of the goods. Paragraph "A" of paragraph
6(d) being therefore, concerned
solely with establishing the first respondent's claim to the ownership of the
goods, it is necessary
to consider whether part "B" thereof establishes a
defence of estoppel, as found by the Court
a quo
. "B"
17
commences with the statement by Delport that the appellant failed to inform
the first respondent that it had reserved its ownership
in the goods and that
"as a result First Respondent, in good faith, made payment of the value of the
goods" to Thomas Construction.
"By reason of the aforegoing, "he goes on to say,
"it is now not open to the Applicant to deny that ownership in the goods in
question
has passed to First Respondent as this will result in considerable
prejudice to First Respondent." The impression one gets is that
Delport intended
to advance an alternative ground on which the first respondent acquired
ownership in the goods, viz. its payment
of the said amount "in good faith." It
seems to me that when he says that it is not open to the appellant "to deny that
ownership
in the goods has passed to First Respondent", he is, in effect, saying
that the first respondent is the owner. If this is so, it
follows that what is
said in "B" was not intended to be, and is not, a plea of estoppel.
18
I shall, however, assume that Delport intended to raise a defence of estoppel
and that what he meant to say in "B" was that, because
the first respondent paid
the aforesaid amount "in good faith" - i.e., as I understand it, in the belief
that Thomas Construction
was the owner of the goods - it is not open to the
appellant, although it had reserved its ownership in the goods, to rely thereon
in demanding the return of the goods.
The question which then arises is whether, on the aforesaid assumption, "B"
can be said to constitute a plea of estoppel. The person
who raises an estoppel
must
inter
alia show, the onus being on him, that a representation was
made to him and that, relying on the truth thereof, he acted to his detriment.
(See, e.g.,
Union Government v. Vianini Ferro-Concrete Pipes (Pty) Ltd
,
supra
, at 49, and the
Oakland Nominees
case,
supra
, at 452
E-G. It is immediately apparent that it is not expressly stated in "B" what
representation the appellant made to the first
respondent. It is contended
19
on behalf of the first respondent, however, that Delport must be taken to say
that the appellant, by delivering the goods at the building
site without
informing the first respondent of its reservation of ownership therein,
represented to the first respondent that Thomas
Construction was the owner of
the goods, or had the right to dispose thereof. We were referred in this regard
to the statement by
McCarthy, mentioned above, that in his 33 years' experience
in the building industry "it has always been the generally accepted practice
that ownership in materials supplied to a site by a merchant, passes to the main
contractor on delivery of the materials on the site."
Escreet, however, disputes
this and says that in his experience it is "not normal practice" for a building
owner to make payment
in respect of goods before the contractor has paid the
supplier, and he submits that the first respondent, "prior to making any payment
in respect of any goods delivered to site, should have ascertained that it was
capable of acquiring ownership of the goods and that
the
20
contractor, Thomas Construction, had paid its supplier in respect of the
goods". In order to found an estoppel, a representation must
be precise and
unambiguous. (See
Hartogh v. National Bank
1907 TS 1092
at 1104, and the
judgment of this Court in the case of
The Southern Life Association Ltd v.
L.C. van Deventer Beyleveld N 0
; delivered on 22 September 1988). In the
present case, judging by what is said in the papers, I am not sure that it can
be said that
the appellant, by delivering the goods at the building site without
informing the first respondent of its reservation of ownership
in the goods,
clearly and unambiguously represented to the first respondent that Thomas
Construction was the owner of the goods,
or that it had the
jus
disponendi
in respect thereof. I do not, however, find it necessary to give
a final decision on this question, since I am satisfied that, even
if there was
a representation as contended for by the first respondent, there are other
grounds for holding that the first respondent
failed to allege and establish
the
21
necessary elements of a defence of estoppel.
The person who raises such a
defence must, as stated above, allege and prove that he relied on the
representation that was made to
him by the person against whom the defence is
raised, and that, in doing so, he acted to his detriment. The first respondent,
being
a juristic person, must necessarily act through its officials, or other
persons representing it. It cannot, by itself, hold a belief,
or make a
decision. One would, therefore, have expected the first respondent, if it
intended to raise a plea of estoppel, to have
put before the Court evidence by
an official, or officials, to the effect that he, or they, representing the
first respondent, believed
the representation contended for by the first
respondent to be true and acted in reliance thereon. There is, however, no such
evidence.
It is not said who, representing the first respondent, relied on the
alleged representation made by the appellant; and there is no
affidavit by
anyone saying that he acted on the faith of
22
such representation. It is not stated who, acting on behalf of the first
respondent, decided that the amount of R84 000 should be
paid to Thomas
Construction, or what induced him to make that decision. There is, also, no
evidence by anyone to the effect that
such payment would not have been made if
it had been known that Thomas Construction had not yet paid for the goods. In
the papers
there are references to payment certificates issued by the architect,
but no such certificates, and no affidavit deposed to by the
architect, were put
before the Court. One does not therefore know what information, if any, the
architect had regarding the ownership
of the goods; and one does not know what
induced him to decide (if he in fact did so) that payment should be made to
Thomas Construction.
In view of the aforegoing I consider that the first respondent failed to
establish that it relied on the representation allegedly
made to it by the
appellant, and that such reliance caused it to act to its prejudice.
23
The following may be added to what has just been said.
The
prejudice of which the first respondent complains is, it
would seem, the fact
that it made payment in respect of the
goods in the belief that it would
thereby become the owner
thereof. It is not clearly stated, however, what
caused the
firat respondent to entertain such belief. There is no
suggestion on the papers that it purchased the goods from
Thomas Construction and that it acquired ownership in that
way. The only ground, it seems, on which it could have
thought that it would become the owner of the goods, was if
it believed that clause 12 of the contract between itself and
Thomas Construction was of application. That clause reads:
"Where in any certificate, of which the Contractor has received payment, the
Architect has included the value of any unfixed materials
and/or goods intended
for and placed on or adjucent to the Works, such materials and/or goods shall
become the property of the Department,
for any loss or damage to which the
Contractor shall be responsible, and
24
they shall not be removed, except for use upon the Works, without the
authority of the Architect in writing." The clause is, however,
not mentioned by
Delport or in any
other affidavit filed by the first respondent, and it is not
stated
anywhere that the first respondent relied thereon.
(The contract between the first respondent and Thomas
Construction, it may
be added, was not put before the Court
by the first respondent, but by the
appellant, when Escreet
replied to allegations contained in Delport's affidavit.)
In any event, if the first respondent intended to say that
it thought that it would become the owner of the goods by
virtue of the operation of the said clause 12, the papers do
not show that there was compliance with the provisions of the
clause. Delport says that payment was made to Thomas
Construction after the issue of certificates by the
architect, but no such certificates were put before the
Court. All that was put before it in this regard, was a
letter which a quantity surveyor, Mr Neville Roy Lloyd, who
25
practises in East London, wrote to "the Director of Works" of the first
respondent on 30 May 1986. In this letter Lloyd stated that
he "recommended"
payments of R70 000 and R14 000 in respect of "ironmongery supplied and stored
on site" during September and October
1985. It will be observed that Lloyd wrote
this letter some seven months after he had made his recommendations, and it is
difficult
to understand why he should have found it necessary to inform the
first respondent of the facts therein stated when it should have
been in
possession of the relevant architect's certificates, if such certificates had
indeed been issued. In his answer to Delport's
affidavit Escreet pointed out
that the first respondent did not put any architect's certificates before the
Court, and said : "The
First Respondent does not state where or if it in fact
made payment to Thomas Construction in respect of the goods and whether same
were in fact certified by the architect for payment." There was no reply to this
by Delport.
26
In view of all this, it seems to me, one cannot say
that
the first respondent has clearly shown what induced it to
believe
that it would become the owner of the goods. It has
not shown, in my opinion,
that it was the representation by
the appellant for which it contends that
caused it to act as
it did. I
I find, therefore, that the plea of estoppel should not have been upheld by
the Court
a quo
, and that the appeal must accordingly succeed. The order
of the Court
a quo
, which must be set aside, cannot simply be replaced by
an order confirming the rule
nisi
. This is so because at the time when
the application was launched some of the goods delivered at the building site
had already been
installed in structures erected by Thomas Construction. Counsel
were agreed that, if this Court should make an order for the return
of goods,
the order should relate to such goods as had not already been incorporated in
buildings at the date of the application.
It is ordered as follows:
27
(1) The appeal is upheld with costs. The costs are
payable by the respondents jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
(2) The order made by the Court
a quo
is set aside, and
the following
order is substituted therefor:
"(a) The respondents
are ordered to
return to the applicant all those goods referred to in Annexure 'B' to the
applicant's founding affidavit which had at the date of
the application not been
incorporated in buildings erected by Thomas Construction (Pty) Ltd in terms of
its agreement
with the first respondent, dated 1 March 1984.
28
(b) The respondents are to pay the
applicant's costs. The costs are payable jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved."
P J RABIE
Acting Chief Justice.
HOEXTER JA
VAN HEERDEN JA
Concur GROSSKOPF JA
EKSTEEN JA