THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPORTABLE
Case number : 680/2002
In the matter between :
SOIL FUMIGATION SERVICES LOWVELD CC APPELLANT
and
CHEMFIT TECHNICAL PRODUCTS (PTY) LTD) RESPONDENT
CORAM : HARMS, CAMERON, MTHIYANE, BRAND and
HEHER JJA
HEARD : 18 MARCH 2004
DELIVERED : 31 MARCH 2004
Summary judgment – unliquidated counter claim for amount less than claim in
convention – can in principle constitute ' bona fide defence' to corresponding part of
claim – court's discretion to refuse su mmary judgment despite defendant's failure to
comply with provisions of rule 32(3)(b).
_________________________________
JUDGMENT
_________________________________
BRAND JA/
2
BRAND JA :
[1] In the High Court, Jo hannesburg, the present respondent ('plaintiff')
instituted action against the appellant ('defendant') for payment of the
sum of R1 260 829,18 together with interest and co sts. When the
defendant entered an appearance to defend, the plaintiff brought an
application for summary judgment. In the opposing affidavit filed on
behalf of the defendant, no defence was offered to the plaintiff's claim
and the material allegations in the particulars of cl aim were not denied.
Instead the defendant resisted the claim in the form of a counterclaim for
unliquidated damages, arising out of an alleged breach of contract by the
plaintiff, for 'at least' R590 492,50. Despite this opposition the court a quo
(Willis J) granted summary judgment in favour of the plaintiff for the full
amount of its claim. Subsequently he granted leave to the defendant to
appeal to this court.
[2] The defendant's contention in the court a quo was that its
unliquidated counterclaim for damages constituted a bona fide defence,
as contemplated in rule 32 (3)(b), to the whole of pl aintiff's claim, despite
the fact that the plaintiff's claim was for more than double the amount of
the counterclaim. As authority for this proposition, the defendant relied
on the decision in Wilson v Hoffman and Another 1974 (2) SA 44 (R)
3
which was followed in H I Lockhat (Pty) Ltd v Domingo 1979 (3) SA 696
(T). Though the latter case was a j udgment of the same division binding
on Willis J, he was nevertheless sati sfied that it had been wrongly
decided to the extent that it was in conflict with the judgment of Corbett J
in Stassen v Stoffberg 1973 (3) SA 725 (C). The latter decision, so Willis
J found, constitutes aut hority for the further prop osition that where a
defendant in summary judgment proc eedings raises a counterclaim for
an unliquidated amount which is less than the amount of the plaintiff's
claim, the defendant must show its bona fides by paying the balance into
court. On this premise he held that, because the defendant in the present
case had failed to make any paym ent into court, its counterclaim
constituted no bona fide defence at all and that, consequently, the
plaintiff was entitled to summary judgment for the full amount of its claim.
[3] It appears that Willis J's understanding of the Stassen case was
largely influenced by the following statement by Corbett J (at 729A-C):
'Ek sal aanvaar dat ingevolge die Eenvormi ge Hofreëls - en in besonder Hofreël 22
(4) - 'n verweerder wat die hoofeis erken, by magte is om 'n ongelikwideerde teeneis
as 'n verweer op te werp: dat indien die teeneis die hoofeis oorskry dit 'n geldige
verweer uitmaak ten opsigte van die hoofeis in sy geheel (sien Spilhaus & Co. Ltd. v
Coreejees, 1966 (1) SA 525 (K)); en indien die teeneis minder as die hoofeis is, die
verweerder die verskil geregtelik kan inbetaal en op dié wyse 'n bona fide verweer
4
teen die hele hoofeis opwerp (sien Kroonklip Beleggings (Edms.) Bpk v Allied
Minerals Ltd 1970 (1) SA 674 (K)). Waar 'n verweerder aan die ander kant 'n
ongelikwideerde teeneis opwer p sonder om die hoeveel heid daarvan enigsins te
bepaal - of trouens om enige poging aan te w end om dit te bepaal - en waar dit blyk
dat die teeneis heelwaarskynlik aansienlik minder as die ho ofeis is en geen regtelike
inbetaling geskied het nie, openbaar s odanige "teeneis", na my mening, nie 'n bona
fide verweer vir die doeleindes van summiere vonnis nie.'
[4] These remarks by Corbett J must, of course, be understood, first,
against the factual background of the Stassen case and, second, in the
light of the authorities to which he referred. As to the facts of the Stassen
case, it appears that the plaintiff' s claim was for the balance of the
purchase price of an immovable prope rty. The defence raised by the
defendant was that the plaintiff had failed to complete the house on the
property in a workmanlike manner, as he contracted to do. The
defendant did not even c onsider his defence to be in the nature of a
counterclaim for damages. He thought he was raising the exceptio non
adimpleti contractus. As a consequence, he proffered no evidence as to
what the cost of remedying the plaintiff's unworkmanlike performance of
the building operations would be. The remarks by C orbett J followed
upon his essential finding that the exceptio non adimpleti contractus was
inappropriate since the building c ontract relied upon by the defendant
5
was a contract different from the sale agreement that formed the basis of
the plaintiff's claim.
[5] Spillhaus & Co. Ltd. v Coreejees (supra) , to which Corbett J
referred, was one of two judgment s by Watermeyer J in which he
resolved the issue whether, as a matte r of principle, the requirement of a
bona fide defence in summary judgment proceedings can be satisfied by
the defendant raising an unliquidated claim for damages which exceeds
the sum of the plaintiff's claim. In this case, as in the earlier case of
Weinkove v Botha 1952 (3) SA 178 (C) 183A-D, Watermeyer J held that,
if, as a matter of pleading a defendant is allowed to raise the existence of
an unliquidated counterclaim which exceeds the amount of the claim as
a defence to the plaintiff's claim, it must also be permissible to raise that
same defence in answer to an application for summary judgment.
[6] The other case to which Corbett J referred, ie Kroonklip Beleggings
(Edms) Bpk v Allied Minerals Ltd (supra), went one step further. In that
matter the alleged amount of th e defendant's counterclaim for
unliquidated damages was less than the plaintiff's claim, but the
defendant had paid the difference in to court. In these circumstances
Grosskopf AJ found (at 676H) that:
6
'Such a cause of action, raised by way of counterclaim, coupled with the payment
into Court of the balance of plaintiff's claim, would in my view constitute a bona fide
defence for the purpose of summary judgment proceedings. (Vide Weinkove v Botha,
1952 (3) SA 178 (C) ; Spilhaus & Co. Ltd. v Coreejees , 1966 (1) SA 525 (C) at p.
529, and Rule of Court 22 (4)).'
[7] It appears to me that the key to the understanding of all these
judgments, including Stassen, is to be found in rule 22(4). It provides
that:
'If by reason of any claim in reconvention, the defendant claims that on the giving of
judgment on such claim, the pl aintiff's claim will be extinguished either in whole or in
part, the defendant may in his plea refer to t he fact of such claim in reconvention and
request that judgment in respect of a cl aim or any portion t hereof which would be
extinguished by such claim in reconv ention, be postponed until judgment on the
claim in reconvention. Judgm ent on the claim shall, eith er in whole or in part,
thereupon be so postponed unless the cour t upon the application of any person
interested, otherwise orders, but the court, if no other defence has been raised, may
give judgment for such part of the claim as would not be extingu ished, as if the
defendant were in default of filing a plea in respect thereof, or may, on the application
of either party, make such order as it seems meet.'
[8] Against this background I cannot agree with the court a quo' s
interpretation of the remar ks by Corbett J in the Stassen case. More
particularly, I do not agree that Co rbett J must be u nderstood to have
7
said that where a count erclaim raised by the de fendant is for less than
the plaintiff's claim, the defendant can establish his bona fides only by
paying the balance into court. Such sentiment would be in conflict with
the dictates of logic and ordinar y human experience. After all, a
dishonest defendant is even more li kely to inflate his unliquidated
counterclaim to the extent where it exceeds the amount of the plaintiff's
claim. In short, payment into court of the balance has nothing to do with
bona fides at all and Corbett J did not say that it does. What Corbett J
referred to was the result of a rather simple arithmetical exercise. If the
counterclaim put up by the defendant is le ss than the plaintiff's claim, the
defendant cannot be said, in this ma nner, to have put up a defence to
the whole of the plaintiff's claim. If, howe ver, the balance is covered by a
payment into court, a defendant succeeds, in the words of Corbett J:
'[om] op dié wyse 'n bona fide verweer teen die hele hoofeis op te werp'.
(My emphasis.)
[9] What Corbett J did not deal with ex plicitly, was the question in the
present case, namely whether as a matter of principle a counterclaim for
a lesser amount could be r egarded as constituting a ' bona fide defence'
to that part of the plaintiff's claim which the counterclaim, if successful,
would extinguish. The dictates of lo gic referred to by Watermeyer J in
8
Weinkove and Spillhaus & Co. Ltd., in my view, indicate that it could. The
reasoning adopted by Watermeyer J was that if it is permissible for a
defendant, by way of a plea, to ra ise the existence of an unliquidated
counterclaim as a defence to the plai ntiff's claim, then, it should be
equally permissible to raise that def ence by way of affidavit in summary
judgment proceedings. Rule 22(4), and particularly the second part
thereof, specifically allows the defendan t to put up a counterclaim for a
lesser amount as a defence to the extent of that amount. In the light of
these provisions I can, as a matter of principle, see no reason why a
defendant should not be allowed to raise the same partial defence by
means of a counterclaim for a lesser amount in summary judgment
proceedings. A defendant who fails to pay the balance into court runs the
risk that summary judgment may be granted for the balance together
with the costs resulting from the summary judgment application. In order
to avoid this risk a defendant may t herefore be well advised to follow the
example of Kroonklip Beleggings (Edms) Bpk by paying the balance into
court.
[10] In order to be successful in a defence, the defendant must, of
course, comply with the provisions of rule 32(3)(b), which requires a full
disclosure of the nature and the grou nds of the counterclaim as well as
9
the material facts upon which it relie s. Failure to comply with these
provisions will not necessarily m ean, however, that summary judgment
will follow. In accordance with th e provisions of rule 32(5), the court
retains an overriding discretion to refuse summary judgment. This
overriding discretion pertains not only to that part of the claim which
would be extinguished by the counterclaim, but also to the balance of the
claim. In short, the court retains a di scretion to refuse the application for
summary judgment in its entirety, ev en where a defence to only a part of
the claim has been raised. Although not spelt out like that in the rather
terse judgments in Wilson v Hoffman and another (supra) and H I
Lockhat (Pty) Ltd v Domingo (supra) relied upon by the appellant, this
overriding discretion may afford t he explanation why summary judgment
was refused in these cases, also in re spect of that part of the plaintiff's
claim which exceeded the amount of the counterclaim.
[11] With regard to the court's overri ding discretion to refuse summary
judgment even where the defendant's affidavit does not measure up to
the requirements of rule 32(3)(b), it has been said that, in view of the
extraordinary and stri ngent nature of the su mmary judgment remedy,
that discretion may be exercised in a defendant's favour if there is doubt
as to whether the plaintiff's ca se is unanswera ble and there is a
10
reasonable possibility that the defe ndant's defence is good. (See eg
Maharaj v Barclays Bank Ltd 1976 (1) SA 418 (A) 425H; Tesven CC and
Another v South African Bank of Athens 2000 (1) SA 268 (SCA) 277H-J.)
The reason why the remedy of su mmary judgment is referred to as
'stringent' and 'extraordinary' is becaus e it effectively closes the door of
the court on the defendant without affording an opportunity to ventilate
the case by way of a trial. When the answer raised in the opposing
affidavit is in the nature of a count erclaim instead of a plea, the position
is, however, somewhat differen t. Even where summary judgment has
been granted for that part of the clai m that would be extinguished by the
counterclaim, the defendant can still pursue the counterclaim by issuing
summons in a separate action. Of course, summary judgment would
deprive the defendant of a significant procedural advantage. But the fact
remains that the doors of the court are not finally closed. Moreover, in
the rule 22(4) situation where a coun terclaim is raised as a defence in
pleadings, the rule specifically affords the plaintiff an opportunity to apply
for earlier adjudication of the clai m. The court then has a discretion
whether or not to postpone judgment on the claim in convention pending
its decision on the countercla im. (Regarding the exercise of this
discretion, see eg Truter v Degenaar 1990 (1) SA 206 (T) 211E-F and
Consol Ltd v Twee Jo ngegezellen (Pty) Ltd 2002 (2) SA 580 (C) 584J-
11
585J.) In summary judgment proceedings, the plaintiff has no opportunity
to bring such application. Rule 32(2) expressly provides that the
defendant has the last say. In Cape Town Transitional Metro
Substructure v Ilco Homes Ltd 1996 (3) SA 492 (C) 501B-C it was held
that an application for summary judgment cannot be regarded as an
application for earlier adjudication of the plaintiff's claim under rule 22(4).
Consequently, so it was held, the court's discretion envisaged by rule
22(4) does not arise in summary judgm ent proceedings. This line of
reasoning loses sight of the provisions of rule 32(6) as well as the very
fact that in summary judgment proceedings the plaintiff is deprived of the
procedural benefit that ru le 22(4) otherwise enables it to seek.. In these
circumstances, I can see no reas on why a court considering an
application for summary judgment shou ld not, in the exercise of its
overriding discretion under rule 32(5), have regard to the different
considerations that arise when the def ence put forward is by way of a
counterclaim as opposed to a plea.
[12] Against this background, I rever t to the present appeal. As appears
from the aforegoing, the reasoning of the court a quo which formed the
basis of its judgment did not re st upon accurate analysis of general
principle. Consequently, that reasoning cannot be upheld. This, however,
12
is not the end of the matter. The alternative argument raised on behalf of
the plaintiff was that th e defendant had failed to 'disclose fully the nature
and grounds of [its counterclaim] an d the material facts relied upon
therefor', as required in terms of rule 32(3)(b). The evaluation of this
argument requires a somewhat more detailed analysis of the particulars
of claim and the defendant's opposing affidavit.
[13] According to the particulars of claim the plaintiff's claim of
R1 260 829.18 was mainly for the purcha se price of a chemical used for
soil fumigation, called methyl bromide, which had been sold and
delivered to the defendant over the period 9 May 2001 to 30 June 2002.
All these sales were concluded purs uant to a writte n credit agreement
('the credit agreement') entered into between the parties on 9 May 2001
and were alleged to have be en governed by 'conditions of sale' in the
credit agreement.
[14] The defendant's opposing affida vit was deposed to by its sole
member, Mr M D Koppenol. As al ready indicated, Koppenol did not
dispute any of the materi al allegations in the particulars of claim. His
answer, on behalf of the defendant, was formul ated by way of a
counterclaim. The affidavit is any thing but a model of clarity and
simplicity. The starting point of Koppenol's versi on appears to be a
13
written credit agreement in virtually the same terms as the one relied
upon by the plaintiff, save that it was not concl uded between the plaintiff
and the defendant, but between the plaintiff and a company, Soil
Fumigation Services (Pty) Ltd (' the company') and that it had been
entered into on an earlier date, ie 29 January 2000. Koppenol also
referred to another agreem ent between the plaintiff and the company
which was concluded orally in May 2000. In terms of this oral agreement,
so Koppenol contended, the plainti ff appointed the company as its sole
distributor of methyl bromide in South Africa while the company
undertook to buy this chemical exclusively from the plaintiff. For the sake
of convenience, I shall refer to t he oral agreement as 'the sole supplier
agreement'. Further terms of the sole supplier agreement relied upon by
Koppenol were:
(a) The plaintiff agreed to pay commi ssion to the company on sales of
methyl bromide to third parties.
(b) The plaintiff's mark-up woul d not exceed nine percent on the
landed costs of the chemical.
(c) 'Landed costs' would include the purc hase price paid by the plaintiff
to its overseas suppliers as well as freight, clearing, forwarding,
and other charges for which the plaintiff would be responsible.
(d) The plaintiff would at all times make full disclosure of the purchase
14
price and other charges paid by it so that the company could
monitor these costs.
[15] As to how the defendant (ie the close corporation) came into the
picture, Koppenol contended that:
'On or about the 9 th May 2001, I advised [the plainti ff's representative] that [the
company] would cease trading due to legal action pending against it and that all the
business of [the company] would be taken over by [the defendant].'
And that:
'it was agreed that all agreements between [the plaintiff] and [the company] would be
transferred to [the defendant] as well as t he outstanding debits in [the plaintiff's]
books and the outstanding credits in [the com pany's] book … Thereafter all business
would be concluded between [the pl aintiff] and [the defendant]. A new credit
agreement was also entered into between [the plaintiff] and [the defendant].'
[16] The new credit agreement referred to by Koppenol is obviously the
credit agreement relied upon by the plai ntiff in its particulars of claim.
Koppenol did not say why it was necessary for this new agreement to be
entered into if all agreements betw een the plaintiff and the company had
already been transferred to the defendant.
[17] From the outset, however, so Koppenol alleged, the plaintiff
15
reneged on its undertaking to discl ose its costs and other charges.
Consequently, so Koppenol continued, the company only realised at a
much later stage that the plaint iff had exceeded the agreed mark-up of
nine percent by a considerable margin. Koppenol also relied on a further
breach by the plaintiff of the sole supply agreement, constituted by the
fact that it sold methyl bromide directly to a client of the company.
[18] The amount of the counterclaim is estimated by Koppenol to be 'at
least' R590 492.50. From his explanat ion as to how this estimate is
arrived at, it appears that the c ounterclaim comprises three parts. The
first part is for an amount of R499 792.57, whic h is said to be the
aggregate of the estimated amounts by which the plaintiff exceeded its
agreed mark-up of 9%. In this court the argument was raised on behalf of
the defendant, for the first time, th at although Koppenol's allegations
under this heading were couched in the form of a counterclaim, they also
constitute a defence to the plainti ff's claim. This new argument gave rise
to difficulties of its own. As indicated, the amount of the plaintiff's claim is
not denied by Koppenol. The absenc e of such denial can hardly be
reconciled with an intended defence that in terms of their contract, the
plaintiff was not entitled to the amo unt claimed. The counterclaim is for
repayment of amounts paid indebite whereas the defence proposed by
16
the new argument is a deni al of liability for amounts which had not yet
been paid. The two cannot be equated merely because both are founded
on allegations of overcharging by the plaintiff. I find it unnecessary,
however, to dwell on these difficult ies for too long. As will appear from
what follows, it makes little differenc e to the overall evaluation of the
case whether the complaint that plai ntiff had been guilty of overcharging
is considered as a defence or as part of a counterclaim.
[19] The second part of the counte rclaim contended for by Koppenol is
for sales commission in an estimate d amount of R118 200, which the
company is alleged to have lost dur ing March 2001 when the plaintiff
sold methyl bromide directly to one of the company's customers. The
third part of the counterclaim is for lo ss of profit in the sum of R22 500,
which the defendant allegedly suffered during April 2002, when, as a
result of the plaintiff's overcharging, it was unable to finalise a sale of
methyl bromide to a potential customer.
[20] Somewhat intriguing is the fact that the total amount of the
counterclaim, ie R590 492.50, is R 50 000 less than the sum of its three
constituent parts. For this discrep ancy there was no explanation on
behalf of the defendant, ei ther on affidavit or in argument. However, as
appears from what follows, it is plain that the defendant's case is afflicted
17
by ailments of a far more serious kind.
[21] The defendant's claim for repa yment of overcharges (which
represents by far the largest part of its counterclaim) is founded on
allegations which are decidedly in conflict with the provisions of the credit
agreement relied upon by the plaintif f, more particularly, with the
stipulation in clause 1 of the 'general conditions', that the purchase price
of goods sold and deliv ered pursuant to the c redit agreement would be
determined by the plaintiff's 'current price list on date of delivery, unless
otherwise agreed upon in writ ing'. The price struct ure relied upon by the
defendant as the basis f or its counterclaim is admittedly not based upon
any list price. Having regard to the proviso in clause 1, such deviation
could be relied upon only if embodied in a written agreement. The
plaintiff's insistence that this prov iso is valid and enforceable, is clearly
supported by the decisi ons this court, eg in SA Sentrale
Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en andere 1964 (4) SA 760 (A) and,
somewhat more recently, Brisley v Drotsky 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA). In order
to overcome this critical impedimen t, the defendant's counsel relied on a
letter by Koppenol to the plaintiff in which he referre d to 'an agreement
on a cost price and 9% mark-up'. Th is argument, however, soon proved
to be unsustainable. The first difficulty was that, on a proper
18
interpretation of the letter, it does not purport to be the written
manifestation of an agreement or ev en the recordal of the terms of an
agreement. On the contrary, its stat ed purpose was to establish a
recordal of Koppenol's unilateral unders tanding of what he described as
an oral agreement which was (allegedl y) entered into nine months
before. Secondly, the letter is dated 26 March 2000. It therefore predated
the credit agreement relied upon by t he plaintiff which was entered into
on 9 May 2001. In these circumstances, it is obvious that the letter
cannot be construed as a written agreement to deviate from the
provisions of the subsequent credit agreement. When this objection to
the written agreement argument became apparent, the defendant's
counsel changed direction by relyin g on the defence of rectification.
Though this deserves some credit f or ingenuity, it is clear that the
remedy of rectification is not one whic h easily lends itse lf to a fallback
position by way of afterthought. It is a settled principle that a party who
seeks rectification must show facts entitling him to that relief 'in the
clearest and most satisfactory manner' (per Bristowe J in Bushby v
Guardian Assurance Co 1915 WLD 65 at 71; see also Bardopoulos and
Macrides v Miltiadous 1947 (4) SA 860 (W) 863 and Levin v Zoutendijk
1979 (3) SA 1145 (W) 1147H-1148A). In essence, a claimant for
rectification must prove that th e written agreement does not correctly
19
express what the parties had intended to set out therein. (See eg Meyer
v Merchant's Trust Ltd 1942 AD 244 at 253.) In the opposing affidavit
there is no suggestion whatsoever of any common intention different
from the one recorded in cl ause 1 of the credit agreement.
Consequently, the argument based on rectification cannot succeed.
[22] With reference to t he second part of the count erclaim, which is for
lost sales commission, the opposing a ffidavit is so dev oid of any factual
foundation that it can hardly be said to comply with the requirements of
rule 32(3)(b). Moreover, according to Koppenol, this claim arose during a
period which preceded the advent of the defendant and primarily vested
in the company. How it came about t hat the claim was transferred to the
defendant is not clear from the opposing affidavit. Koppenol's sole
reference to such transfer was th e one quoted (in para 15) above which
recorded an agreement between the pl aintiff and the company 'that all
outstanding debits in the plaintiff' s books and outstanding credits in the
company's books' would be transferred to the defendant. Since it is plain
that the claim under consideration doe s not fall in either of these
categories, it had, on Koppenol's v ersion, never been transferred to the
defendant.
[23] The third part of the countercl aim, for the relatively small sum of
20
R22 500, was for an alleged loss of pro fit. Unlike the claim for lost sales
commission, this claim, according to Koppenol, arose after the defendant
entered into the picture on 9 May 2001. However, this claim is again so
devoid of any factual foundation that it is impossible to determine
whether it can be said to be bona fide or otherwise.
[24] In the light of the aforegoing, I find myself in agreement with the
alternative argument raised by the plai ntiff in this court, namely that the
defendant failed to 'disclose full y the nature and the grounds of [its
counterclaim] and the material fact s relied upon therefor' as required by
rule 32(3)(b). See the classic exposition by Colman J on behalf of the full
court in Breitenbach v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk 1976 (2) SA 226 (T) 228B-H.
[25] What remains to be considered is whether, in these circumstances,
the court a quo should have exercised its overriding discretion to refuse
summary judgment in the defendant's favour. I think not. For the reasons
I have stated (in para 11 above) a c ourt should be less inclined to
exercise its discretion in favour of a defendant in a matter such as this
where the answer to the plaintiff's cl aim is raised in the form of a
counterclaim as opposed to a defence to the plaintiff's claim in the form
of a plea. Moreover, and in any ev ent, a court can only exercise its
discretion in the defendant 's favour on the basis of the material placed
21
before it and not on the bas is of mere conjecture or speculation. On the
material before the court, there is in my view no reason to think that the
defendant's counterclaim has any meri t. For these reason s I believe that
summary judgment was rightly grant ed for the whole amount of the
plaintiff's claim.
[26] The appeal is dismissed with costs.
..……………
FDJ BRAND
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Concur:
HARMS JA
CAMERON JA
MTHIYANE JA
HEHER JA