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[1990] ZASCA 83
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Hodes v Broadacres Investments Ltd. and Another (622/88) [1990] ZASCA 83 (6 September 1990)
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622/88
N v H
HERBERT BERTRAM HODES Appellant
and
BROADACRES INVESTMENTS
LIMITED First Respondent
DE PUNT PLASE DIAMANTMAATSKAPPY
(EDMS) BEPERK Second Respondent
SMALBERGER, JA -
622/88
N v H
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
HERBERT BERTRAM
HODES Appellant
and
BROADACRES INVESTMENTS LIMITED First
Respondent
DE PUNT PLASE DIAMANTMAATSKAPPY
(EDMS) BEPERK Second Respondent
CORAM: SMALBERGER, MILNE, et
EKSTEEN, JJA
HEARD: 16 AUGUST 1990
DELIVERED: 6 SEPTEMBER
1990
J U D G M E N T SMALBERGER, JA :-
The first respondent ("Broadacres") is a duly incorporated company. It owns all the shares in the
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2 company Strykpunt Beleggings Limited
("Strykpunt").
Strykpunt in turn holds all the shares in a number of other
companies including the second respondent ("De Punt") and Strandfontein
Minerale
(Eiendoms) Beperk ("Strandfontein"). The appellant ("Hodes") was previously the
majority shareholder in Broadacres. On 11
July 1978 a written agreement ("the
agreement") was entered into between Hodes, certain other shareholders in
Broadacres ("the shareholders"),
one Seymour as nominee for the purchaser ("the
purchaser"), Broadacres and Turf Holdings Limited ("Turf"). The agreement
provided
for the sale by Hodes and the shareholders to the purchaser of all the
shares in Broadacres held or beneficially owned by them. Prior
to the conclusion
of the agreement Hodes contracted with Broadacres for the purchase of the whole
of Broadacre's shareholding in
Turf; in addition Broadacres sold off all its
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3
assets save its shareholding in Strykpunt and
its
claims against Strykpunt and its subsidiaries. The
effect of the
agreement was to vest control of
Broadacres, and through it, Strykpunt and
its
subsidiaries, in the purchaser. In the agreement
Strykpunt and its
subsidiaries are referred to
collectively as "the Strykpunt Group".
The present appeal turns upon the proper .
interpretation of clause 11.2 of the agreement.
That
clause provides:
"11. INDEMNITY
HODES hereby indemnifies the PURCHASER and BROADACRES and the Strykpunt Group as it will emerge after the implementation of this
agreement -
11.1
11.2 against any claims for taxation or penalty thereon arising out of the activities of BROADACRES and the Strykpunt Group prior to the effective date and out of the sale of TURF shares.
/4
4 (The "effective date", in terms of the agreement, was 30
June 1978.)
In the court a quo (subject to what is said later in this
regard) Broadacres and De Punt successfully sued Hodes for R174 737-87 plus
interest and costs
arising from Hodes' failure to perform in terms of the
indemnity furnished by him. It is against this judgment that Hodes appeals
with
leave of the court a quo. Before considering the true meaning of clause
11.2, and the liability of Hodes in terms thereof, it is necessary to have
regard
briefly to the circumstances which gave rise to the action against
Hodes.
It is common cause that Hodes obtained control of Broadacres, and
thereby of Strykpunt and its subsidiaries, in 1969. De Punt was
at all relevant
times the cessionary of a mining lease with the State,
..../5
5 in consequence of which it had the right to recover precious stones in a certain area. In August 1976 an agreement was entered into between De Punt and Strandfontein. It provided for Strandfontein to conduct, on behalf of De Punt, the recovery of precious stones under the mining lease. It further obliged Strandfontein to account and pay over to De Punt the net proceeds of any sale of precious stones so recovered. In the June 1977 financial statements and tax returns of De Punt and Strandfontein (which at the time were both under the effective control of Hodes), the proceeds of the sales of precious stones recovered from the mining lease area were reflected as the income, not of De Punt (as should have been the case), but of Strandfontein. This income was set off against the large assessed loss (in excess of one million rand) which Strandfontein had accumulated. De Punt's tax
/6
6 return reflected no income from mining operations during
that year. The financial statements and tax returns of De Punt and Strandfontein
for the 1978 tax year (a period during which Hodes was still in control)
followed substantially the same pattern. Strandfontein was
again (incorrectly)
reflected as the recipient of the proceeds of the sales of precious stones mined
in the area concerned, and the
income so received set off against its assessed
loss.
In the latter half of 1978 the purchaser, after acquiring control of
Broadacres (and hence Strykpunt and its subsidiaries), appointed
new auditors
who carried out certain financial investigations. These revealed that De Punt's
and Strandfontein's financial statements
and tax returns for the 1977 and 1978
tax years had been incorrect - as the net income from the proceeds of the sale
of precious
stones
/7
7 should have been attributed to De Punt and not to Strandfontein. In consequence, adjusted financial statements for De Punt and Strandfontein for the tax years in question were submitted to the Commissioner for Inland Revenue. This caused the Commissioner to issue (as he was entitled to) revised assessments for the tax years 1977 and 1978. In terms of the revised assessments De Punt was required to pay an additional amount of R174 737-87 by way of tax (including the State's share of profits). At the same time Strandfontein's assessed loss was re-instated by an amount equal to the net income wrongly attributed to it. An appeal by De Punt against the revised assessments to the Transvaal Income Tax Special Court was unsuccessful.
In due course Broadacres and De Punt instituted the action already referred to against
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8
Hodes for payment of R174 737-87, being De Punt's
additional tax
liability. Ultimately the matter came
before GORDON, AJ, in the Witwatersrand
Local Division.
Prior to the hearing the parties agreed upon a stated
case
for adjudication by the court in terms of Rule 33
of the Uniform Rules of
Court. After reciting certain
introductory facts, the stated case records
that De
Punt's revised tax assessments were upheld by the
Transvaal Income
Tax Special Court. A copy of the
judgment of that court was annexed to the
stated case,
and it was recorded "that the facts as set out therein
are
correct and, further, that there are no further
facts which are relevant to
the interpretation of
claúse ll(b)". (The reference to clause ll(b)
should
be to clause 11.2.) The stated case then proceeds
(at times somewhat inelegantly):
"5. The second plaintiff (De Punt) duly paid the amount of the additional
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9
assessment raised upon it.
6. The assessed loss re-instated by the revised assessments .... was set off against taxable income earned by Strandfontein in years after the effective date, thus reducing the amount of tax which Strandfontein was obliged to pay in subseguent years. Strandfontein is and was not a diamond mining company and its rate of tax was lower than that of second plaintiff which was a diamond mining company.
7. (a) The plaintiffs (Broadacres and
De Punt) contend that on a proper construction of clause ll(b) (11.2) of the agreement, the defendant (Hodes) is obliged to pay to the plaintiffs the amount which the second plaintiff was obliged to and did pay consequent upon the revised assessment on it.
(b) The defendant contends that on a proper construction of claim ll(b) (11.2) of the agreement he is obliged to pay to the plaintiffs the amount of any loss which the Strykpunt Group (and/or the first plaintiff) may have suffered as a result
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10
of the revised assessments
raised against Strandfontein and against the second plaintiff, such loss being the difference in the financial position of the Strykpunt Group (and/or the first plaintiff) had the revised assessments on both Strandfontein and the second plaintiff been raised when the respective original assessments were raised, on the one hand, and the financial position of the Strykpunt Group (and/or the first plaintiff) as a result of the original assessment being followed by the revised assessments on the other.
(c) It is agreed that the amount of the loss on the assumptions in (b) above is R62 742.
8. The parties request a ruling from the court as to which of the above interpretations is correct, and an order that the defendant pay to the plaintiff (sic) the amount consequently owing, with costs."
The learned judge a quo upheld the plaintiffs'
contention and, as previously indicated, gave judgment
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11
against Hodes for the sum of R174 737,87, plus interest
and costs. It is
against this judgment that the
present appeal is directed.
The main contentions advanced on behalf of
Hodes were succinctly set out thus in the heads of
argument:
"Whether on a proper. construction of the indemnity contained in clause 11.2, the appellant (Hodes) had undertaken to hold harmless against taxation the Strykpunt Group and the companies therein as an entity and whether, accordingly, the position of the Strykpunt Group as a whole might be examined to establish what financial conseguences followed the claim for taxation which grounded the action; and
Whether the doctrine of subrogation is applicable on the facts of this case."
With regard to the first contention, the line
of
argument advanced was the following. The purpose
of the agreement was to
transfer the control of
Broadacres, and through Broadacres, Strykpunt and
its
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12
subsidiaries, to the purchaser. What was envisaged was the acguisition by the
purchaser of a restructured group of companies. The
true intention of the
parties in stipulating clause 11.2 of the agreement was to indemnify the
purchaser against any diminution in
the value of such group as a whole in order
to ensure that the purchaser would receive the agreed value of his purchase. As
contended
in the appellant's (Hodes')
heads of argument, "(a)lthough it was
necessary
to frame the indemnity in favour of each legal persona,
it does not follow that the indemnities are to be
viewed in isolation.
On the contrary, the intention of the parties, as expressed in clause 11.2, was
to indemnify the purchaser against
claims for taxation which reduced the value
of the group of companies he had bought". It was therefore necessary, so it was
argued,
to lift the veil of corporate personality, and
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13
to treat the companies forming the group, not as individual personae, but as a notional legal entity, as the parties had intended them throughout to be regarded; on a proper construction of clause 11.2 it was accordingly permissible to have regard to the overall financial position of such entity in order to determine to what extent its value as a whole had been diminished consequent upon De Punt's liability for additional taxation. It was conceded that Hodes was obliged in terms of clause 11.2 to pay the amount of such additional taxation. It was argued, however, that he was entitled (in accordance with the doctrine of subrogation ) to the benefit of the value to the group or entity of the corresponding increase in Strandfontein's assessed loss (once such value was capable of determination and expression in monetary terms), and to deduct such value from the amount owing
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14
by him. It was conceded that this argument only held good if the indemnity in
clause 11.2 was construed as one given, not to each
of the individual companies,
but to such companies as an entity. Such concession was properly made because
if, on a proper construction
of clause 11.2, the indemnity is found to have been
given to each company individually, the doctrine of subrogation would have no
application on the facts of the present matter.
The fundamental flaw in
Hodes' main contention is that it overlooks the clear meaning of clause 11.2.
The principal rule in the interpretation
of contracts is to ascertain the true
intention of the parties to a contract from the language used. In this respect
the court endeavours
as far as possible to give to the language used by the
parties its ordinary grammatical meaning within the context of the agreement
/15
15 as a whole. It is only where such meaning is not clear
that regard may be had to other, considerations (cf. Jonnes v Anglo-African
Shipping Co. (1936) Ltd 1972(2) SA 827(A) at 834 D - G).
Clause 11.2 of
the agreement has already been quoted. It is convenient to recall that it
provides an indemnity to "the PURCHASER and
BROADACRES and the
Strykpunt
Group" against "any claims for taxation
arising out of the activities of
BROADACRES and the Strykpunt Group prior to the effective date". Clause 4.2.1 of
the agreement refers
to Strykpunt and all its subsidiaries (including De Punt
and Strandfontein) by name, whereafter it is provided that "STRYKPUNT BELEGGINGS
BEPERK and its abovementioned subsidiaries are hereinafter referred to as 'the
Strykpunt Group'." It is significant that "the Strykpunt
Group" is not defined
to mean that group of
/16
16 companies, but that the agreement refers to each company individually and then states that they are thereafter to be referred to as "the Strykpunt Group". This is no more than a convenient way of ref erring collectively to Strykpunt and its subsidiary companies. The reference to "the Strykpunt Group" in clause 11.2 is not therefore one to a notional legal entity, but is a shorthand reference to each of the individual companies listed in clause 4.2.1. Similarly, the reference in the introductory part of clause 11 is to each individual company, and in particular to any one of the companies whose activities have given rise to an additional tax claim. This is in keeping with what appears to be the consistent use of the phrase "the Strykpunt Group" throughout the agreement to refer to the individual companies listed in clause 4.2.1.
/17
17 The "Strykpunt Group" is not a legal persona and could
not have sued eo nomine for any loss in respect of which the indemnity in
clause 11.2 was given. Nor could it ever have been intended that any one of the
companies listed in clause 4.2.1 might sue in respect of any loss suffered by
any other company arising from claims for taxation.
It was clearly intended that
only the company that actually suffered loss (or the purchaser or Broadacres)
would be entitled to sue
for, and recover, such loss. This is what the words in
clause 11.2 mean when given their literal interpretation.
The wording of
clause 11.2 neither expressly nor by necessary implication supports the main
contention advanced by Hodes. If the parties
had intended that the extent of the
indemnity was to be determined with reference to the diminution in value of
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18
all the companies comprising the group as a whole, one would have expected the agreement to have been couched in more appropriate language. Apart from the language of clause 11.2 indicating the contrary, it is unlikely that the parties would have contemplated an overall value indemnity bearing in mind associated problems with regard to causality and proof. The simple formulation of clause 11.2, which provides for the company actually suffering loss to be indemnified, obviates any conceptual problems in this regard. The fallacy of Hodes' main contention may also be illustrated by the following example. Let it be assumed that after the agreement had been concluded, but before De Punt's liability for additional taxation had been discovered, the shares in De Punt were sold to a third party. Upon determination of De Punt's additional tax liability Hodes could have been sued by
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De Punt in terms of the indemnity furnished under clause 11.2 of the
agreement. De Punt no longer being part of the Strykpunt Group,
any conceivable
benefit to such group arising from the increased assessed loss of Strandfontein
could clearly not be relied upon
by Hodes to reduce De Punt's claim. Nor is
there any basis on which Hodes could have claimed the value of such benefit from
"the
Strykpunt Group" or from Strykpunt or any of its subsidiaries. This
sérves to underline the fact that the parties could not
have intended
clause 11.2, contrary to its clear meaning, to provide an indemnity in respect
only of the diminution of the value
of the group as a whole.
In view of the
conclusion to which I have come it is not necessary to consider the
applicability of the doctrine of subrogation. On
a proper interpretation of
clause 11.2 Hodes was obliged to pay
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20
De Punt the full amount of its additional tax liability. There
was no basis on which Hodes became entitled to a reduction in such
liability.
For the reasons stated, Hodes' liability to indemnify is not limited to a
diminution of the value of the companies involved
as an entity. It is common
cause that if this is so then, as De Punt received no benefit from
Strandfontein's increased assessed
loss, there is no . right that Hodes could
have been subrogated to in order to reduce the extent of his liability. It
follows that
the appeal must fail.
In the court a quo there were two
plaintiffs. The learned judge a quo simply granted judgment "for the
plaintiff" without indicating whether such judgment was in favour of the first
or the second plaintiff,
or both. The right of both plaintiffs to sue was never
in issue. It is common cause, however, that judgment
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21 should have been in favour of the second plaintiff (De
Punt) as the additional tax liability was paid by it. The first and second
plaintiffs (Broadacres and De Punt) were both represented by the same attorneys
and counsel, and in view of their relationship to
each other it is assumed that
the costs of the one were also the costs of the other. It was not suggested
otherwise. It is therefore
not necessary to make any specific order in regard to
the costs of the first plaintiff (Broadacres).
The appeal is dismissed, with
costs. The order of the court a quo is amended to reflect that the
judgment granted is in favour of the second plaintiff.
J W SMALBERGER JUDGE OF APPEAL
MILNE, JA )
) CONCUR
EKSTEEN, JA )