On 11 March 2015, the High Court granted part of the claim sought by Valentine Ziswa and his wife Margaret Ziswa (the cross appellants) against Graeme Shaun Chadwick and Landos (Pvt) Ltd (the cross respondents).
The court a quo dismissed the claims of the cross-appellants as against the second cross-respondent in their entirety and granted part of the claims as against the first cross respondent.
The cross appellants seek a reversal of the dismissal orders issued a quo.
The order issued by the court a quo reads as follows:
“In the result, it is ordered that:
1. The plaintiffs claims against the second defendant are hereby dismissed with costs.
2. The plaintiffs claim (a) against the first defendant succeeds only in the sum of $8,808 which the first defendant is directed to pay the plaintiffs.
3(a) The plaintiffs claim (e) partially succeeds to the extent of the 4km LTC Electric cable while the rest is hereby dismissed.
(b) The first defendant shall pay to the plaintiffs the sum of $84,000 being the replacement value of the LTC electric cable removed from the plaintiffs farm.
4. The first defendant shall pay the plaintiffs the sum of $780 being value of labour hired to clear tobacco stalks and related expenses.
5. The plaintiffs claims (b), (c), (d), (f), (g), (j) and (l) are hereby dismissed.
6. Absolution from the instance is granted in respect of plaintiffs claims (h) and (k).
7. The plaintiffs shall pay 20% of the first defendant's costs of suit.”
The first cross appellant is Valentine Ziswa (Ziswa) while the second cross-appellant is his wife, Margaret Ziswa. I will cumulatively refer to them in this judgment as the lessor.
The first cross-respondent is Graham Shaun Chadwick (Chadwick) and the second cross-respondent is Landos (Pvt) Ltd (the Company).
Graham Shaun Chadwick was a director in Landos (Pvt) Ltd, which he also used as his special purpose vehicle or agent to conduct his farming operations on Ziswa Farm (the farm) and on three other surrounding farms, namely, Gijima, Kelvin, and Landos.
THE BACKGROUND
On 20 March 2015, Graham Shaun Chadwick filed a defective Notice of Appeal against the cross appellants, which did not indicate the part of the judgment he sought to impugn.
He, thereafter, filed a contested chamber application for condonation and extension of time within which to appeal on 11 January 2018, which was dismissed with costs on 21 March 2018.
The effective disposal of the main appeal in this manner left the cross appeal pending.
FACTS
On or before 1 September 2008, Valentine Ziswa and Graham Shaun Chadwick entered into a verbal agreement for the lease of the farm and the inventoried equipment. The description, quantities, and state of the leased equipment was recorded in the comprehensive inventory the parties drew in October 2008.
The tobacco season in Zimbabwe generally runs from September to August and sales generally take place between March and June.
Graham Shaun Chadwick was on the farm during the 2008-2009, 2009-2010, 2010-2011, and 2011-2012 seasons (hereinafter called the first, second, third, and fourth seasons, respectively).
On 9 January 2009, Valentine Ziswa and Graham Shaun Chadwick signed a 10-year lease agreement.
On the same date, Valentine Ziswa and his wife (the First Partner) executed a second “Joint Venture Agreement” (JVA) with Graham Shaun Chadwick (Second Partner) for the “long term development” of the farm.
The two agreements were backdated to 1 September 2008.
Graham Shaun Chadwick not only leased the farm and the inventoried property, but, in addition, undertook to erect permanent structures (in each season) of an equivalent value to the seasonal rental payable.
In terms of clause 1 and clause 2, Graham Shaun Chadwick leased “the land, together with all buildings and other permanent improvements and certain immovables” for the ten year period from 1 September 2008 to 31 August 2018 for the purpose of growing “30ha of tobacco, 40ha of maize, 20ha of wheat and any other crop agreed between the parties.”
In terms of clause 3, the rental payable would be “6 per cent on the US$ of the gross turnover of the crops produced on the said land inclusive of bonuses and hailstorm insurances.”
In respect of tobacco, the rent was to be paid into the lessor's FCA by stop order raised at the auction floor, and cash payments were to be made in respect of other crops.
In addition to the rental, Graham Shaun Chadwick would, in terms of clause 4(d), be responsible for the repairs and maintenance of tractors and the inventoried equipment leased to him with effect from 1 September 2008.
Lastly, clause 9 stipulated that:
“This agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties, and no representation or undertakings given by one of them to the other of them prior to the execution hereof, and no variation of the conditions hereof, shall have any force or effect unless recorded in writing and executed by the parties hereof.” (The underlining covers the handwritten portions of the otherwise typeset agreement).
The Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) substantially duplicates the lease agreement. Clause 3 thereof reads as follows:
“3. The rent payable by the lessee to the lessor shall be 6 per cent per centum of the gross turnover in respect of the crops produced on the said land, and payment of such rent/lease shall be secured by means of STOP ORDER given by the lessee in favour of the Company against proceeds of tobacco sold through TOBACCO SALES FLOOR. Such PAYMENT shall be executed and registered as soon (sic) may be after the signing of this lease. 31 MARCH, 3 APRIL, 6 END OF JULY. MAIZE 1.5 TON MONTHLY.” (The underlined words and figures are handwritten)
It was common cause that the two agreements are complementary and separate and distinct. The requirements of the Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) were additional to the rental payable.
It was also common cause, that, Graham Shaun Chadwick was an active councillor for the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association (ZTA) for six (6) years and had been its Vice-President for another two (2) years.
He introduced the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association (ZTA) proforma lease and Joint Venture (JV) agreements, and, together with Valentine Ziswa, supplemented and annotated the terms and conditions therein by hand.
Graham Shaun Chadwick grew maize during the first season only and abandoned it in subsequent seasons in preference to the more lucrative tobacco crop. He never grew wheat on the farm.
Graham Shaun Chadwick did not abide by the direct deduction method prescribed in the agreements. He did not disclose to the lessor his prior preferential stop order obligations to the Zimbabwe Leaf Tobacco Company (Pvt) Ltd.
By 10 May 2010, Graham Shaun Chadwick had repaired a weir, put in a pump and generator, laid underground irrigation pipes, erected a centre pivot, paid for the labour for the reconstruction of a burnt down tobacco barn “maintained” all 14 barns by putting in place the necessary appurtenances for curing tobacco, repaired furnaces and sheds, and, at a cost of US$2,700 constructed 11 two roomed staff houses.
By letter dated 22 February 2011, Graham Shaun Chadwick offered to increase lease rental to 8%.
The offer was not accepted.
Instead, the lessor made the counter offer proposed in the detailed draft agreement, which the lessor signed on 13 March 2011.
The counter-offer was, in turn, rejected by Graham Shaun Chadwick.
Between 10 January 2012 and 18 May 2012, the parties failed to amicably resolve the lessor's demands for arrear rentals, maintenance of the leased equipment, and the repatriation of leased property that Graham Shaun Chadwick allegedly took to other farms.
In frustration at the impasse, the lessor sought to exercise a lien over the tobacco produce that was on the farm.
They were, by consent, interdicted by Graham Shaun Chadwick and Landos (Pvt) Ltd, on 24 May 2012 in case No. HC5477/12.
On 10 June 2012, the Ziswas instigated the arrest of Graham Shaun Chadwick for theft of some of the 2008 inventoried property. The complete police docket, compiled by Sergeant N'andu (IO), was produced by consent as exhibit 5.
Sergeant N'andu (the IO) first attended at the farm on 12 June 2012. On 19 June 2012, he conducted a verification or “exit” inventory with Valentine Ziswa and a proxy of Graham Shaun Chadwick, at the direction of the Area Public Prosecutor for Rusape (APP).
By letter dated 2 July 2012, Graham Shaun Chadwick cancelled the lease agreement and immediately vacated the farm.
On 5 September 2012, the Area Public Prosecutor for Rusape declined to prosecute, adjudging the criminal complaint to be a civil dispute.
On 26 September 2012, the lessor issued summons against the defendants claiming an aggregate sum of US$456,699 under 13 heads. These comprised of the following claims:
(a) Arrear rentals of US$64,160 for the fourth farming season;
(b) A refund of rates and levies of US$1,980 paid to the Makoni Rural District Council for the fourth farming season;
(c) The lessor's share of the hailstorm insurance proceeds of US$5,500 in respect of the second farming season;
(d) The outstanding developments for the first three farming seasons, represented by the value of the centre pivot that was removed from the farm, in the sum of US$67,507;
(e) Other enumerated property valued at US$187,707 that was also removed from the farm;
(f) The estimated damages to recovered property of US$15,905;
(g) US$7,600 for the damage to the fence and gates on the farm;
(h) US$15,008 for the repairs to the damaged tobacco barns and flue pipes;
(i) US$780 for removing the fourth season tobacco stalks;
(j) US$26,313 for vandalized overhead water storage tanks, pipes, workers houses, electrical underground cables, dams, pump unit, boreholes, and transformer;
(k) US$15,000 for maize deliveries contractually due to the lessor during the second to fourth farming seasons;
(l) US$4,240 for the tobacco seedlings grown on the farm and sold to other farmers;
(m) US$45,000 damages for loss of income in respect of the 2012/2013 tobacco cropping season caused by the premature and abrupt termination of the agreements.
THE PROCEEDINGS A QUO
The lessor made the following contentions:
The two agreements had separate and distinct obligations. Landos (Pvt) Ltd had a direct and substantial interest in the two agreements, and was, together with Graham Shaun Chadwick, therefore liable for the various contractual breaches that gave rise to the 13 claims.
The lessor's documentary and oral evidence established both liability and quantum in respect of claim (a), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (j), (k) and (l) at the higher rate of 8 per cent and not at the 6 per cent in the two agreements.
The lessor abandoned claim (m) and conceded that Graham Shaun Chadwick and Landos (Pvt) Ltd be absolved from the instance in respect of claims (b), (c) and (i) on the ground that the lessor had failed to established the due amounts.
Graham Shaun Chadwick conceded that the annotations formed part of the terms agreed by the parties on 9 January 2009.
Counsel for Graham Shaun Chadwick argued, that, the lessor failed to establish both liability and quantum.
He submitted, on the authority of Agricultural Finance Corporation v Pocock 1986 (2) ZLR 229 (S), that, the oral variation of the rental rate from 6 per cent to 8 per cent in violation of the non-variation clause (Clause 9 of both agreements) of the agreements was inefficacious and invalid.
He also relied on the twin principles of privity and sanctity of contracts enunciated in CHRISTIE: The Law of Contract in South Africa, 6th ed, 2010 Lexis Nexis…, to call for the dismissal of all the claims sought against Landos (Pvt) Ltd.
Counsel, however, conceded that Graham Shaun Chadwick was liable for unpaid rental of US$8,808 for the fourth season and US$36,000 for the LTC line [falling under claim (e)] and not the respective US$64,160 and US$84,000 sought by the lessor.
He further contended, that, as the lessor had failed to establish liability or where liability had been established, the quantum thereof in respect of claims (b), (c), (d), the remainder of (e), (f), (g), (h) and (j), the claims fell to be dismissed.
Counsel requested the court a quo to discard the evidence of the valuator for the reason that it was unconventional and unprofessional.
He argued, that, the valuation was in breach of the 'objective' and 'appreciable help' standards expected of expert evidence that are propounded in Stock v Stock 1981 (3) SA 1280 (A)…,; Gentiruco AG v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd 1972 (1) SA 589 (A)…,; and Menday v Protea Assurance Co. Ltd 1976 (1) SA 565 (E)…, and articulated in SCHWIKKARD & Van der MERWE's Principles of Evidence, Juta 2009…,.
He, therefore, prayed for the dismissal of claims (d) (e), (f), (g), (h) and (j), which rested on the valuator's computations.
Counsel further contended, that, the claims ought to be dismissed for the further reason that the lessor had not amended the quantum to reflect the new amounts touted by the valuator some of which were higher than the individual breakdowns set out in annexures 2 and 3 to the summons.
THE FINDINGS A QUO
The court a quo made the following findings:
The only effectual agreements were the lease and the Joint Venture agreements dated 9 January 2009 and not the draft agreement of 13 March 2011.
The operational rental rate was 6 per cent and not 8 per cent. This was because the offer of 22 February 2011 had not been accepted nor had the non-variation clause been invoked.
Valentine Ziswa was an inconsistent, unreliable, untruthful, and greedy witness.
He prevaricated on whether the tenure of the agreements was 5 years, 8 years, or 10 years and whether the rental rate was 6 per cent, 8 per cent, or 10 per cent.
He was greedy because he unjustifiably claimed for municipal imposts, maize deliveries, seedlings, and hailstorm insurance proceeds, which were all not covered by the two agreements. He also demanded for the value of the centre pivot, which he had categorically rejected as constituting a permanent structure.
The court a quo also excoriated the valuator for flaunting his professional qualifications and experience at the expense of conventional valuation principles. It, therefore, discarded his depreciated replacement cost computations.
Graham Shaun Chadwick, whose demeanour was highly extolled, was found to be a truthful, good, and reliable witness.
His status as an accomplished tobacco farmer with 20 years experience, and who exuded confidence and conceded where he was liable, endeared himself to the court a quo at the expense of Valentine Ziswa whose penchant for renting out instead of farming on his own account was deplored by the court.
Notwithstanding the contrary general findings on credibility of Valentine Ziswa and the valuator, the court a quo believed Valentine Ziswa's oral testimony on the US$780 claim on tobacco de-stalking and the chartered accountant's valuation of the LTC line. It, however, dismissed the rest of their evidence on the valuation of all the other claims. It further held that seedlings were not a crop as they could not be sold at the auction floors.
The court a quo dismissed the claims against Landos (Pvt) Ltd on the twin basis of lack of privity of contract and sanctity of contracts.
It held, that, these cardinal legal principles could not be negated by Graham Shaun Chadwick's directorship of the company, his use of the company's letterhead in correspondence with the lessor and bank account to effect payment of his lease obligations.
It issued the order that I adverted to at the commencement of this judgment.
Aggrieved by the order granted a quo, the lessor appealed to this Court on the following grounds:
“1. The court a quo erred in not finding that the reduction of part of the agreement between the parties to writing and the existence of the non-variation clause notwithstanding, on the entirety of the evidence before the court, the agreement between the parties consisted in part of the written portion and in part of the oral agreement sworn to by the cross appellants.
2. The court a quo erred, for the stronger reason, in not finding that the second cross respondent was privy to the whole of the agreement between the parties and in dismissing the claim against it.
3. The court a quo erred in its treatment of the evidence and assessment of the cross appellants claim with the result, that, the court misdirected itself in its gratuitous conclusions on the first cross-appellant's demeanour and motives culminating in the rejection of the cross-appellants claims on this flawed basis.
4. The court a quo erred in not finding that the rent for the use of the cross-appellants farm varied from 6 per cent to 8 per cent of the gross annual turnover realised on the farm.
5. The court a quo erred, in any event, in accepting the appellant's bare testimony that the sum of US$21,000 paid to the cross appellants was towards the rental for the 2011-12 season and in deducting the same from the rental due and owing to the cross appellants.
6. The court a quo erred in its treatment of the evidence in concluding, that, the claim for the tonnage of maize was not within the parameters of the agreement of the parties and in rejecting the cross-appellants testimony regarding the quantum thereof.
7. The court a quo erred in holding, that, the claims for the centre pivot and generator did not fall within the parameters of the developmental agreement.
8. The court a quo erred in holding that the seedlings produced on the cross appellants farm, but sold elsewhere, were not produce for the purposes of the parties agreement, and in rejecting the cross-appellants quantification thereof.
9. The court a quo erred in finding, as it did, that there was no evidence to substantiate the cross appellants claim (e) (property removed and not returned) and claim (g) (removed and/or damaged fences and gates) and in finding the property could have been unusable.
ALTERNATIVELY
The court a quo erred, in any event, in dismissing the said claims as opposed to granting absolution from the instance.
10. The court a quo erred in rejecting the evidence of Pange purely on the basis that he had used one as opposed to three quotations which had been sourced by the cross-appellants, and had applied the general accounting depreciation formulae without a physical examination of the property in question.
11. The court a quo erred in not awarding the claim for the irrigation pump, which the appellant conceded in his evidence and offered to compensate for the same.
12. The court a quo erred in accepting as true the appellant's testimony based solely on the fact that he managed to impress the judge in terms of his demeanour.”
The cross-appellants sought the success of the cross appeal with costs, the amendment of the judgment a quo by granting, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved:
(i) Arrear rentals of $67,502=40 for the 2011-12 season (being 8 per cent of gross realization of US$843,780 from sale of 205,800kgs at US$4=10 per kg);
(ii) Alternatively, judgment in the sum of US$50,626=80 being 6 per cent of the above gross realisation;
(iii) Judgment in respect of claims (d), (f), (j) and (i);
(iv) Judgment for the reduced sum of US$364,729 as particularised in exhibit 3; and
(v) Costs of suit against the cross respondents.
THE ISSUES
The issues that arise from the grounds of appeal are the following:
1. Whether the variation clause was waived by the parties to the lease agreement.
2. Whether the second cross-respondent was liable to the lessor's claims.
(a) Rentals for the fourth season (a portion of claim (a)).
(b) The value of the developments in lieu of the Centre Pivot (claim (d)).
(c) Damages for missing equipment (including the irrigation diesel pump whose liability was conceded) (claim (e)) and for damaged property and equipment on the farm (claim (f)).
(d) Repairs to tobacco barns (claim (h)).
(e) Vandalized overhead water tanks, reservoirs, boreholes, and staff houses and their connecting pump unit, cables, electrics, and pipes claim (j).
(f) Maize deliveries due for the second to fourth seasons (claim (k)).
(g) Value of tobacco seedlings (claim (l)).
3. Whether or not the court a quo properly exercised its discretion in respect of costs.
THE ARGUMENTS BEFORE THIS COURT
At the onset of his submissions before this Court, counsel for the lessor abandoned claims (b), (c) and (g).
He persisted with the appeal against the dismissal of the entire claim against the company, the part dismissed in respect of claims (a) and (e), and the dismissals against claims (d), (f) (h), (j), (k) and (l).
Counsel for the lessor contended, that, the dismissal of the lessor's claims against Landos (Pvt) Ltd was erroneous.
He argued, that, the resolution passed by Landos (Pvt) Ltd, on 18 May 2012, authorising Graham Shaun Chadwick to “represent the company in any legal matter against Mr and Mrs Ziswa” before the institution of action proceedings on 26 September 2012, showed that it had a direct and substantial interest in the two agreements.
He further argued, that, the main credibility findings in favour of Graham Shaun Chadwick and against Valentine Ziswa, upon which the court a quo premised its dismissal of the lessor's claims were, on the totality of the adduced evidence, irrational.
He argued, that, notwithstanding the embodiment of the non-variation clause in the lease agreement, the lessor had, contrary to the finding a quo, established that Graham Shaun Chadwick had, by conduct, waived the lease rental rate from 6 per cent to 8 per cent on the second and subsequent seasons.
He further argued, that, the valuation testimony of the chartered accountant had proved the damages suffered by the lessor as at the date Graham Shaun Chadwick cancelled the agreements and vacated the farm.
Lastly, he contended that the costs order granted a quo constituted a patent failure in the exercise of discretion warranting interference by this Court.
Per contra, counsel for Graham Shaun Chadwick and Landos (Pvt) Ltd vehemently supported the impugned findings and conclusions of the court a quo.
He argued, that, the claims against Landos (Pvt) Ltd were rightly dismissed because it was not privy to the lease agreements.
He strongly contended, that, having acted as an agent, it could not be sued either separately or together with its principal.
He further contended, that, the non-variation clause precluded the lessor from relying on any variation derived from an oral agreement or on the offer to increase the rate to 8 per cent which they did not accept.
He submitted, that, an oral agreement could not waive a non-variation clause.
He further contended, that, the court a quo had not relied on the demeanour of the witnesses only but also on the inconsistencies that characterized the evidence of the lessor's star witness, Valentine Ziswa.
Lastly, he contended that the valuator's testimony was rightly discarded for being both unconventional and unprofessional.
Counsel impugned his competence on two bases:
(i) The first was that he had relied on the quotations availed to him by Valentine Ziswa without conducting a physical inspection of the equipment.
(ii) The second was that he had further relied on internet sites, that he failed to disclose, in ascertaining the life span of some of the equipment listed in exhibit 3.
ANALYSIS OF THE LAW AND THE FACTS
DAMAGES FOR MISSING AND DAMAGED PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
In the judgment a quo, at p15, entry 2 dated 12 June 2012 of Sergeant N'andu's running diary in the docket is reproduced. It reads:
“This date I went out to attend the scene of crime at Ziswa farm. Observations made at the scene were that farm equipment were (sic) not taken away as whole but some crucial parts were being removed from each and every equipment e.g. on Boom Sprayer only nozzles and pump were removed and the other part was left behind. Almost all farm equipment and electrical gadgets were left like that. It was pure 'vandalism'. Taking it from the accused's version that he was 'taking' out his properties, leaves a lot to be desired considering the way he was removing the parts from equipment.”
On 15 June 2012, the Public Prosecutor directed Sergeant N'andu to compare the entry and exit inventories and physically ascertain whether any property was missing.
On 19 June 2012, Sergeant N'andu made the following 12th entry in the running diary:
“Both the accused and the complainant have the inventory carrying the same information of farm implements which both of them have signed. I physically checked all the farm implements together with complainant and Richard Banda, security officer who was representing the accused. We noted that some implements were available but were in the condition which did not satisfy the complainant. Some farm implements were missing. The accused said that he was in custody of most of the missing implements since he had access to the farm implements when he was running Ziswa farm after he had entered on (sic) a lease agreement with the complainant for the past four years until now.
While I was still on the farm, the accused brought back some of the farm implements which was (sic) in his custody. The complainant is now regarding the returned farm implements as recovered property.
The accused is willing to repair all the farm implements which are not working, like the tobacco barns, boreholes, electric pumps, and other implements. Complainant is not willing (sic) his implements to be repaired before the case is heard before the court.
The final handover/takeover was then done and signed by both complainant and accused who was represented by his security officer, namely, Richard Banda.”
The latter entry showed that, whole items of equipment rather than just some parts on some of the equipment, had been removed by Graham Shaun Chadwick from the farm.
This was in consonance with the concession to similar effect of Graham Shaun Chadwick under cross examination on pp534-537 of the record of proceedings. I reproduce excerpts of that cross-examination below:
“Q. Line 4 of your warned and cautioned statement says, all the items on the inventory of stolen property which were at Ziswa Farm when I moved onto the farm can be accounted for as they would be moved from Ziswa Farm to Kelvin Farm where our work is, do you notice that?
A. Yes.
Q. So, faced with an inventory of the property and the alleged stolen property, you say it can be accounted for, that is your reply, you notice that?
A. Yes.
Q. After recording of the warned and cautioned statement, did you return any property to Ziswa Farm?
A. Yes, I think we did, a lot.
(p536)
Q. So, even whilst the police were still investigating, you were bringing back some of the equipment?
A. Correct.
Q. And, you accept that at the verification process there would have been a list of the missing equipment, correct?
A. As far as I am aware, all of the equipment was returned, otherwise I would have been arrested, otherwise it would have been stolen property; so, as far as I am aware, every single item was returned and Assistant Inspector N'andu signed for it. But, I would like Mr Banda to witness that because he was there, I wasn't.
(p537)
Q. Okay, so, let us sum up your evidence on this aspect; you are happy for us to say that you accept that some equipment was removed, some was returned, but, you don't know what was returned or the state in which it was when it was returned?
A. According to Banda.
Q. You would rather leave Mr Banda, you do not wish to talk about it, except to accept that it was removed and returned in some state?
A. Yes”
In the summons, the lessor sought compensation for missing property in claim (e) in the sum of US$187,707 and badly damaged property in claim (f) in the sum of US$15,905.
In oral testimony, he deferred to the depreciated replacement cost provided by the valuator he assigned to value the property.
The valuator, a highly qualified and experienced chartered accountant was undoubtedly qualified for the job. It was common cause that he did not physically inspect the equipment. He relied on the information, as to age and state of the missing and damaged property, availed to him by Valentine Ziswa.
He supplemented deficient information with online research.
He was shown exhibit 2, the colour photographs of some of the damaged property. He received 34 quotations encompassing each item, which were sourced between 8 October 2012 and 30 October 2015. He prepared an excel spread sheet cataloguing the equipment on the entry inventory and denoting the description and quantities of each item, cost per unit, gross replacement cost, rate of depreciation, the depreciation, the depreciated replacement cost, and the supplier of the cost per unit quotation.
He applied IAS 16 to compute the depreciated replacement cost of each item.
The categories comprised 'tractors and related equipment' 'building improvements' 'building, irrigation, curing, and water pumping equipment' and 'tools'.
The court a quo said of his evidence:
“Pange may be an accomplished professional, but, I have serious difficulties with his evidence. He appears to have been an armchair expert, if not a disinterested witness, content with only flaunting his professional qualifications and expecting the court to accept his testimony hook, line, and sinker without justification. He relied entirely on information fed to him by an unreliable witness, Ziswa, who has been shown to have a penchant for inconsistencies and wanting to exaggerate claims…,. From where I am standing, the entire valuation process, except perhaps for the formula gleaned from international standards, was fictitious and extremely unreliable.”
In my view, these strong words blinded the court from appreciating what the task of the valuator was.
It is clear that the could not, even if he was so inclined, physically assess the property listed in claim (e) for the simple reason that it was missing and was, therefore not to hand.
While he could have inspected the vandalized property on site at the farm, some of that property was captured in graphic colour photographs which were produced a quo as exhibit 2.
Lastly, his real task was to apply the depreciating rate and his general valuation expertise to the quotations sourced by the lessor. He indicated to the court a quo how he went about his task.
The duty of an expert is to provide appreciable help to the court in arriving at an estimated value of the damages suffered by a party in the position of the present lessor.
It is not possible to provide an exact value to such items.
The only way he could help the court was to dispassionately apply his valuation knowledge to the task at hand. He discharged that task to the best of his ability.
Indeed, even the sceptical Graham Shaun Chadwick conceded, at p549 of the record of proceedings, that, the valuator used an acceptable accounting method, although he was not an expert in farming or agricultural equipment.
The nature of the evidence required in respect to compensatory damages was set out by this Court in the case of Wynina (Pvt) Ltd v MBCA Bank SC27-14…, thus:
“It is an accepted principle of our law, that, some types of damage are difficult to estimate, and, the fact that they cannot be assessed with certainty or precision will not relieve the wrongdoer of the necessity of paying damages for his breach of duty. The principle is not a novel one and decided authorities have gone so far as to state, that, a court doing the best it can with insufficient material may have to form conclusions on matters on which there is no evidence and to make allowance for contingencies - even to the extent of making a pure guess: see Esso Standard SA (Pty) Ltd v Katz 1981 (1) SA 964.”
To similar effect was GREENBERG J in Arendse v Maher 1936 TPD 162 where he pertinently observed that:
“It remains, therefore, for the Court, with the very scanty material at hand, to try and assess the damage. We are asked to make bricks without straw, and if the result is inadequate, then, it is a disadvantage which the person who should have put proper material before the Court should suffer. The means that I have at hand are extremely unsatisfactory, but, I propose to rely to some extent on the figures appearing from the decision in Chisholm's case and to be guided by those figures.”
It seems to me, that, had the court a quo appreciated that in terms of clause 4(d) of the two agreements Graham Shaun Chadwick was “responsible for the payment of the cost of the repair and maintenance of tractors and equipment leased with effect from 1 September 2008” it would not have overly concerned itself with the state and condition of the items at his point of entry.
The duty to keep the leased property in a good state of repair was his.
The lessor established that he handed usable equipment to him. Graham Shaun Chadwick used the property, and, instead of repairing it, cannibalized some of it and left the other in an un-usable state at exit.
Once the lessor had provided the best evidence of the damages he suffered at the hands of Graham Shaun Chadwick, he cast the evidentiary burden on Chadwick to show either that no damages were suffered or that they were incurred in a lesser amount.
It was not enough for Graham Shaun Chadwick to merely fold his arms and criticize the best evidence provided by the lessor without producing alternative evidence.
I am satisfied, that, the court a quo therefore misdirected itself in assessing the probative value of the valuator's testimony.
The assessment of the court a quo was inconsistent with the totality of the facts. The decision thereon was reached contrary to the evidence at hand. It stands to be set aside.
The ninth ground of appeal, in so far as it does not relate to claim (g) [which was abandoned on appeal], and the tenth ground are accordingly upheld.
In respect of claim (e), the lessor claimed US$187,707 as set out in Annexure 2 to the declaration.
There are 40 sets of missing items. There are no quotations raised for two (2) sets. (No.5 and 22). The amounts claimed in the summons, in most of the remaining sets, were equivalent to the gross replacement values that appear in the chartered accountant's schedule (exhibit 3). There are other items in which the amounts in annexure 2 were either higher or lower than the depreciated replacement value in exhibit 3.
I have, in each of these instances, adopted the lower amount for two reasons:
(i) The first being that the lessor could not be awarded the higher amount without amending their summons.
(ii) The second being that the lower amount was the one the lessor proved.
The total depreciated replacement cost for the proven 38 sets of items, less the US$84,000 granted a quo for the LTC electric line, would be US$68,257.
The lessor is therefore entitled to this additional amount in respect of claim (e).
Claim (f) relates to the damages claimed for 23 sets of recovered property, which is listed in annexure 3 to the declaration in the sum of US$15,905. The depreciated replacement cost established in evidence is in the sum of US$13,831.
The lessor is entitled to this amount under claim (f).
The established depreciation replacement cost for barn repairs in schedule 3 is US$41,000 for claim (h). The claim in the summons is US$15,008.
In view of the plaintiff's failure to amend their summons to reflect the higher amount, the amount due to them is the lower of the two amounts. They are entitled to the amount claimed in the summons of US$15,008.
It was therefore remiss of the court a quo to have granted absolution from the instance.
Claim (j), in the sum of US$26,313 related to vandalized overhead water storage tanks, pipes, workers houses, underground cables, water reservoirs, cast iron pipes, pump unit, electrics at the borehole and on the transformer.
Liability for this claim was established by Valentine Ziswa and Sergeant N'andu's oral evidence and reinforced by the photographs (exhibit 2).
The bare denials of Graham Shaun Chadwick were insufficient to offset this overwhelming testimony.
Graham Shaun Chadwick admitted, that, the cables were dug out from the barns for security reasons and restored at the next curing season.
The only issue is whether the quantum claimed was established.
The lessor did not prove the depreciated cost of effecting repairs to these vandalized items. The proper relief a quo should have been an absolution from the instance and not a dismissal of the claim.
This will be reflected in the amended order of the court a quo that will ensue.
IRRIGATION PUMP
The missing pump house pump, which Graham Shaun Chadwick took responsibility for damaging, forms part of the lessor's claim (e). It is accounted for in this judgment under that head.
In the premises, the eleventh ground of appeal is upheld.