Court name
Supreme Court
Case number
SA 9 of 2009
Title

Southline Retail Centre CC v BP Namibia (Pty) Ltd (SA 9 of 2009) [2011] NASC 26 (09 June 2011);

Media neutral citation
[2011] NASC 26













REPORTABLE



CASE NO.: SA 9/2009





IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF NAMIBIA








In
the matter between:
























SOUTHLINE
RETAIL CENTRE CC



APPELLANT



and







BP NAMIBIA
(PTY) LTD



RESPONDENT









CORAM:
Strydom AJA, Mtambanengwe AJA et O’Regan AJA





Heard
on:
15/10/2010





Delivered
on:
09/06/2011









APPEAL
JUDGMENT









O’REGAN
AJA:






  1. BP
    Namibia (Pty) Ltd (“BP”), the respondent, obtained an
    order in the High Court evicting Southline Retail Centre CC
    (“Southline”), the appellant, from property in Rehoboth
    where Southline operated a petrol station on land leased from BP.
    Southline disputes that BP was entitled to an order of eviction and
    has now approached this Court on appeal seeking the setting aside of
    the eviction order.






Factual
Background



  1. On
    31 August 2005, Southline entered into a lease with BP that was to
    run for a fixed period of three years from 1 September 2005 till 31
    August 2008. At the same time, Southline entered into a franchise
    agreement and a supply agreement with BP, which were to be valid
    only for as long as the lease agreement endured. At its core, the
    dispute between the parties concerns whether the appellant lawfully
    exercised an option to renew the lease agreement for the period 1
    September 2008 to 31 August 2009. The appellant asserts it did, but
    the respondent denies this and asserts that the eviction order
    granted by the High Court should stand.







  1. The
    relationship between the parties during the subsistence of the lease
    appears not to have been amicable. According to Southline, it
    repeatedly complained to BP about the quality of support it was
    getting from BP in relation to the operation of the service station.
    Finally on 18 August 2008, Southline referred a complaint to the
    Minister of Mines and Energy (the Minister) in terms of section
    4A(2) of the Petroleum Products and Energy Act, 13 of 1990 as
    amended (“the Act”). The core of Southline’s
    complaint, crisply stated, was that BP was not providing it with
    adequate franchising support and was not honouring its obligations
    to provide fuel to the petrol station in terms of the supply
    agreement, The complaint outlines what Southline saw to be the
    unsatisfactory response of BP, as the franchising company, to its
    concerns. The complaint also mentions the fact that BP was refusing
    to permit Southline to exercise what the complaint refers to as a
    “right of first refusal” in relation to a renewal of the
    lease agreement.








  1. Shortly
    after Southline referred the complaint to the Minister, on 28 August
    2008, its lawyers wrote a letter to BP in which they stated “you
    are hereby informed that our client exercises its option as
    envisaged in clause 2 of the Agreement of Lease”. Southline
    then refused to vacate the premises on 31 August 2008. When
    Southline refused to vacate the leased premises, BP launched an
    eviction application in the High Court on 19 September 2008 and set
    the matter down for hearing on 26 September 2008 on an urgent basis.
    Southline filed answering affidavits opposing the eviction
    application as well as a conditional counter-application on BP on 25
    September 2008. At the hearing on 26 September 2008, the High Court
    struck the application from the roll with costs for want of urgency.
    BP then re-enrolled the application again for hearing on 2 February
    2009 by way of notice of set down. Manyarara J granted an eviction
    order on 13 March 2009 and Southline filed its notice of appeal on
    20 March 2009.








Appellants’ submissions



  1. In
    its written argument, the appellant raised the following two
    arguments in limine:








  • Paragraph
    E 9(b) of the High Court Practice Directions is in conflict with
    article 12(1)(a) of the Constitution which guarantees, in the
    context of the right to a fair trial, “adequate time and
    facilities for the preparation” of a defence. According to
    the appellant’s written submissions, the paragraph is
    constitutionally improper because it does not expressly provide a
    respondent who has had to prepare answering papers in great haste to
    counter an urgent application with an opportunity to supplement its
    answering papers once the application has been struck from the
    urgent roll. Counsel for the appellant abandoned this argument at
    the hearing of this matter and consequently nothing further need be
    said about it.


  • The
    Minister should have been joined as a party because, as the sale of
    petroleum products is regulated by legislation falling within the
    remit of the Minister and as the facts of the present case are
    concerned with an agreement concerned with the petroleum retail
    industry, the Minister has a direct and substantial interest in it.
    Moreover, the appellant had directed a complaint concerning the
    franchise agreement to the Minister requesting the appointment of an
    arbitration tribunal, a matter that further indicated that the
    Minister had a direct interest in the outcome of this case.








  1. In
    addition, the appellant raises the following arguments on the
    merits:




  • Clause
    2 of the Lease Schedule provided the appellant with an option to
    renew the lease for one year from 1 September 2008 to 31 August
    2009, which option the appellant exercised on 28 August 2008.


  • Alternatively,
    if the Lease Schedule, properly interpreted, does not afford an
    option to the appellant, but an option to the respondent only, the
    respondent’s decision not to exercise the option was unlawful
    and in breach of article 16 of the Constitution in that it
    constituted an expropriation without value and in conflict with
    section 4A(1)(b) of the Act.


  • Alternatively,
    the appellant asserts that it has a lien over the property in
    respect of improvements it has made to the shop situated on the
    premises.








Respondent’s arguments



  1. The
    respondent argued that




  • There
    was no need to join the Minister because even if the Minister did
    have a direct interest in the proceedings, which the respondent
    disputed, the Minister would suffer no prejudice by not being
    joined.


  • The
    lease agreement terminated by effluxion of time on 31 August 2008
    and the respondent was then entitled to require the appellant to
    vacate the property.


  • The
    lease agreement, properly construed, did not afford the appellant an
    option to renew the period of the lease agreement.



  • Clause 2 of the Lease Schedule was
    not in violation of article 16 of the Constitution (the property
    clause), nor is it in breach of article 18 of the Constitution (the
    administrative justice clause).


  • The
    lease agreement was not in conflict with section 4A of the Act.


  • The
    appellant’s argument that it has a lien in respect of the
    leased property as a result of the improvements it has made to the
    shop must be rejected as there is no evidence to suggest that any
    improvements have been made to the immovable property which are not
    removable and therefore it has not been shown that the respondent
    has been enriched at all.








Issues



  1. The
    issues to be decided in this Court are the following;




  • Whether
    the respondent was obliged to join the Minister as a party to these
    proceedings;


  • Whether
    the lease agreement entitled the appellant to exercise an option to
    renew the lease agreement and if it did, whether the appellant
    exercised its option timeously;


  • If
    the lease agreement does not entitle the appellant to exercise an
    option, whether clause 2 of the Lease Schedule is contrary to the
    provisions of section 4A(1)(e) of the Act because it does not
    provide for reasonable security of tenure, and if it is, what the
    reasonable period protecting security of tenure would be; and


  • whether
    the failure by the respondent to extend the lease agreement is
    contrary to the provisions of article 16 or article 18 of the
    Constitution or section 4A(1)(b)(i),(ii) and (iii) of the Act.







Relevant
legal provisions



  1. For
    ease of reference, the relevant legal provisions shall be set out
    here. Article 16 of the Constitution provides that:








(1)
All persons shall have the right in any part of Namibia to acquire,
own and dispose of all forms of immovable and movable property
individually or in association with others and to bequeath their
property to their heirs or legatees, provided that Parliament may by
legislation prohibit or regulate as it deems expedient the right to
acquire property by persons who are not Namibian citizens.



(2)
The State or a competent body or organ authorized by law may
expropriate property in the public interest subject to the payment of
just compensation, in accordance with requirements and procedures to
be determined by Act of Parliament.”







  1. Article
    18 of the Constitution provides that:








Administrative
bodies and administrative officials shall act fairly and reasonably
and comply with the requirements imposed upon such bodies and
officials by common law and any relevant legislation, and persons
aggrieved by the exercise of such acts and decisions shall have the
right to seek redress before a competent Court of Tribunal.”







  1. Section
    4A(1) of the Act provides that:








Any
dealer agreement concluded between a wholesaler and an operator, any
supplementary provisions to such an agreement, shall be based on and
comply with the following:



  1. ;



  2. in
    so far as the dealer agreement or any provision supplementary
    thereto provides for the exercise of any discretionary powers which
    adversely affect rights or interests, such power shall, subject to
    the other provisions of this section, be exercised in accordance
    with fair and reasonable practices and procedures, which shall
    include -




  1. the
    giving of adequate notice of the exercise of the discretion and the
    nature and purpose thereof, as well as the furnishing of reasons for
    a decision (if requested thereto);


  2. compliance
    with the principle providing the other party reasonable opportunity
    to be heard;


  3. acting
    in good faith having regard to clearly established facts and
    circumstances only; unless it is justifiable and reasonable under
    the circumstances to depart from the requirements set out in this
    paragraph;




  1. notwithstanding
    paragraph (b), in so far as the dealer agreement or any provision
    supplementary thereto provides for the termination of the agreement
    in the event of a breach thereof
    -




  1. in
    the case of a non-material breach, written notice shall be given
    that such non-material breach has occurred and a reasonable period
    shall be allowed to rectify such breach prior to termination of this
    agreement;


  2. in
    the case of a material breach, the agreement may be terminated
    without prior notice or opportunity to rectify the material breach
    if it is fair and reasonable under the circumstances to do so, and
    for the purposes of this paragraph -




(aa)
only a breach of the agreement which relates to a fundamental and
substantive term of the agreement shall be deemed to be a material
breach; and



(bb)
no agreement shall contain a provision deeming all provisions of the
agreement to be material;



  1. reasonable
    access to correspondence, documents and property only in so far as
    they relate to the business of operating an outlet in terms of the
    dealer agreement; and


  2. promotion
    of security of tenure, but subject thereto that a reasonable
    probationary lease period may be provided for in the case where a
    dealer agreement is concluded with a new operator.”








  1. Furthermore,
    section 4A(2) of the Act provides that:




(a)
Without derogating from any other right a person may have in terms of
any other law or with regard to access to a court, where a party is
of the opinion that a provision in a dealer agreement does not comply
with a principle set out in subsection (1), such party may refer the
matter for arbitration as provided for in paragraph (b).



(b)
The Minister shall by notice in the Gazette determine the arbitration
procedure which shall apply with regard to a matter referred to in
paragraph (a) and the Minister may by regulation proscribe any matter
supplementary to such arbitration procedures.”







  1. Section
    4A(3) provides:








(3)
The provisions of this section, in so far as they provide for a
limitation on the right to conduct business relating to the petroleum
industry by any person, are enacted upon the authority of article
21(2) of the Namibian Constitution.”







  1. And
    section 4A(5):








For
the purposes of this section -



  1. wholesaler”
    means any person who imports or distributes petrol or diesel for
    purposes of the wholesale thereof by that person in Namibia or who
    exports petrol or diesel;



  2. operator”
    means any person who conducts business for the sale of petrol and
    diesel at an outlet.”








Joinder




  1. The first issue that arises for
    decision is whether BP should have joined the Minister as a party to
    the proceedings. The appellant argues that the retail petroleum
    industry in Namibia is highly regulated. It asserts that the
    Minister had a direct and substantial interest in these proceedings
    because, firstly, the relationship between the appellant and the
    respondent falls within the purview of section 4A of the Act. In
    particular, the appellant points to section 4A(2)(b) which provides
    that the Minister “shall by notice in the Gazette determine
    the arbitration procedure which shall apply” to a dispute that
    arises as to whether an agreement complies with the provisions of
    section 4A(1). In this regard, the appellant relies on the fact that
    it referred a dispute concerning its relationship with BP to the
    Minister and requested that an arbitration procedure be instituted.
    That complaint, together with these provisions, the appellant
    argues, mean that the Minister has a direct and substantial interest
    in the outcome of the respondent’s application. Secondly, the
    appellant points to regulations 29 and 30 of the regulations
    1
    made in the terms of the Act
    ,
    which provide that if any information on a petroleum licence is to
    be changed, the licence holder shall apply to the Minister for an
    amendment of the licence.







  1. The
    respondent disputes that the Minister has a direct and substantial
    interest in these proceedings. It states that the issues raised in
    the complaint do not correspond to the relief sought by the
    appellant in this appeal (the setting aside of an eviction order)
    and that the issues raised in the complaint are not directly
    pertinent to the appeal. It notes that the complaint does not raise
    the proper interpretation of clause 2 of the Lease Schedule, which
    relates to the question of whether the appellant had an option to
    renew the lease. In the alternative, the respondent asserts that
    even if the Minister does have a direct interest in the proceedings,
    that interest will not be prejudicially affected by the outcome of
    these proceedings.








  1. On
    several occasions, the High Court of Namibia has cited with approval
    the dictum of Corbett J in
    United
    Watch and Diamond Co (Pty) Ltd and Others v Disa Hotels Ltd and
    Another
    1972 (4) SA 409
    (C) in which the court had to consider whether subtenants of a
    lessee had necessarily to be joined in a matter relating to the
    termination of the lease.
    2
    The court held that the subtenants did not need to be joined,
    reasoning that in order for joinder to be necessary








what
is required is a legal interest in the subject-matter of the action
which could be prejudicially affected by the judgment of the Court.”
(at 415 H)







This crisp encapsulation of the test
for a necessary joinder recognizes that for joinder to be required
the party concerned must have a legal, not merely a financial
interest, which will be prejudicially affected by the proceedings.
The bar is thus set quite high as the facts of United Watch
illustrate. Is that bar met in this case?







  1. It
    will be helpful at the outset to consider briefly the two statutory
    provisions upon which the appellant relies. The first is section
    4A(2) of the Act. Subparagraph (a) of that provision states that
    “without derogating from any other right a person may have …
    or with regard to access to a court”, a person who considers
    that a dealer agreement does not comply with the principles set out
    in section 4A(1) of the Act may refer the matter to arbitration “as
    provided for in paragraph (b)”. Subparagraph (b) then
    provides that the Minister shall by notice in the Gazette determine
    the arbitration procedure that shall apply to a matter referred to
    in subparagraph (a).







  1. The
    precise import of subparagraph (b) is not immediately clear. Does
    the subparagraph give the Minister a general power to provide a
    general arbitration procedure for the determination of issues under
    subparagraph (a)? That may well be its purport, although the
    appellant appears to consider that subparagraph (b) empowers the
    Minister to provide specific arbitration procedures upon request
    each time a dispute arises under subparagraph (a).








  1. Whichever
    is the correct interpretation of subparagraph (b), what is clear is
    that the role of the Minister is merely to determine the arbitration
    procedure and to prescribe any matter supplementary to such
    procedures. Any determination of the dispute is for the arbitrator,
    not the Minister. Moreover, it is clear from the introductory clause
    to subparagraph (a) that the right to proceed to arbitration does
    not derogate from any other right a person may have in terms of
    other laws or “with regard to access to court”. The
    right to arbitration under section 4A(2) is thus supplementary to
    any other rights the parties may have.







  1. The
    second set of statutory provisions relied upon by the appellant are
    regulations 29 and 30 of the Petroleum Products Regulations made
    under the Act
    .3
    Those regulations provide for the procedure to be followed to
    obtain an amendment of a retail (or wholesale) licence by the
    Minister. Regulation 30(3) specifically provides that a wholesaler
    may apply to the Minister for the change of name of the operator of
    a retail licence outlet, where a licence has been granted in respect
    of a retail outlet that is owned by the wholesaler
    ,
    and the agreement between the operator and the wholesaler has lapsed
    through effluxion of time. In these circumstances, the Minister is
    required in terms of regulation 30(4) to give the retail licence
    operator an opportunity to be heard. The regulations do not provide
    that the Minister may vary the contractual relationship between the
    operator and the wholesaler or grant the Minister any power to
    intervene in eviction proceedings that may follow upon the alleged
    termination of a contract of lease. The regulations are concerned
    only with the amendment of the terms of a licence.







  1. In
    the light of these statutory provisions, can it be said that the
    Minister has a legal interest in the subject matter of this case
    that could be prejudicially affected by the determination of the
    case? The subject matter of this case is the question whether the
    respondent is entitled to evict the appellant from its premises. The
    answer to that question will depend on the terms of the lease
    agreement signed by the two parties. The crucial question is
    whether the lease agreement contains an option in favour of the
    appellant to renew the agreement for a period of twelve months. If
    it does, and the appellant exercised that option correctly, the
    respondent is not entitled to an eviction order in these proceedings
    because at the time the proceedings were launched, appellant was
    entitled to be in occupation of the leased premises.








  1. Has
    the Minister a direct legal interest in the proper interpretation of
    the lease agreement? The Minister is not a party to the lease
    agreement, nor does he have any rights or obligations flowing from
    it. The fact that the appellant has referred a complaint to the
    Minister in terms of section 4A(2)(b) of the Act does not alter
    this. The referral of the complaint may require the Minister,
    depending on the correct interpretation of section 4A(2)(b), to
    determine a process for the arbitration of that complaint but the
    existence of a statutory procedural obligation of this sort, even if
    it is terminated by the outcome of these proceedings, something
    which is not certain, does not result in the Minister having a
    direct legal interest in the outcome of these proceedings.








  1. Nor
    do the powers of the Minister under regulations 29 and 30 give rise
    to the Minister having a direct legal interest in the outcome of
    these proceedings. The upholding or setting aside of the eviction
    order made by the High Court may affect whether an application under
    regulations 29 and 30 is made by the respondent, but the Minister
    has no direct legal interest in whether an application of that sort
    is made so these regulations also do not establish that the Minister
    has a direct legal interest in these proceedings.








  1. Finally,
    I turn to consider two further South African authorities cited by
    the appellant in support of its argument that the Minister should
    have been joined in these proceedings. First, the appellant relied
    upon Madadzhe v Chairman, Venda National Liquor Board 1988
    (4) SA 807 (V) at 809. That case concerned an application to review
    the decision of the Venda National Liquor Board to refuse the grant
    of a beer hall licence to the applicant. In terms of the Venda
    Liquor Act, 8 of 1973, the authority to grant a liquor licence
    vested in the Minister of Justice. The Liquor Licensing Board,
    after considering the application, had written to the Minister of
    Justice informing him that the Liquor Board did not recommend the
    grant of the licence to the applicant because another bottle store
    was about to be erected in the area and it was this decision that
    the applicant sought to review. The Liquor Board argued that the
    Minister of Justice should have been joined. The High Court upheld
    this argument reasoning that the Minister was an essential party
    that had to be joined because he may wish to express views as to why
    the decision of the Board should not be set aside, even if those
    views related only to policy.








  1. It
    is not necessary for the purposes of this case to decide whether
    Madadzhe is persuasive authority. It is quite clear that the
    facts of this appeal are distinguishable. Madadzhe concerned
    the review of a decision to recommend the grant of a liquor licence,
    where the final grant of the liquor licence was a matter for the
    Minister. This case concerns the grant of an eviction order based
    on an interpretation of the contract between the parties. The
    Minister has no right, whether under section 4A(2) of the Act or
    under regulations 29 and 30, to determine whether the respondent has
    a right to evict the appellant or not. That is a matter that turns
    upon the proper interpretation of the contract and the facts of the
    case. Nor can it be said that the outcome of the eviction
    proceedings would be prejudicial to the Minister’s interest in
    the proper regulation of the fuel industry.








  1. Secondly,
    the appellant relied upon Nguza and Others v Minister of Defence
    1996 (3) SA 483 (TkS), where the applicants sought an order that
    they were entitled as of right to retire from the Defence Force. The
    consequence of an order in their favour entitling them to retire
    from the Defence Force would have been that they would have been
    entitled to greater pension benefits from the Department of Social
    Welfare and Pensions than if they were to have resigned from the
    Defence Force. The High Court ruled that in the circumstances the
    Minister of Social Welfare and Pensions had “a real and direct
    interest” (at 486D) in the application because if the
    application were to be successful, he would legally be obliged to
    pay increased pension benefits to the successful applicants (and all
    those similarly situated).








  1. Again
    it is not necessary to determine whether the case is persuasive as
    Nguza is clearly distinguishable from the facts in the
    present appeal. Here, the outcome of the proceedings will not
    automatically impose direct legal and financial obligations on the
    Minister of Mines and Energy in respect of either the respondent or
    the appellant. It is true that were the eviction order to be
    upheld, the referral to arbitration of the applicant’s
    complaint against the respondent might be affected in some way, but
    the Minister’s role in relation to the arbitration is merely
    to prescribe a procedure to be followed. Section 4A does not give
    the Minister any direct interest in the substance of the complaint.
    Similarly, it may be that the consequences of this case might result
    in an application for the variation of a licence in terms of
    regulation 29 and 30. Again, however, those provisions specifically
    entitle a wholesaler to apply for the variation of the terms of a
    retail licence when an agreement to operate the licence has
    terminated by effluxion of time. Whether or not the Court concludes
    that the contract has terminated by effluxion of time, no legal
    interest of the Minister under regulation 29 and 30 will be
    affected. The Court will have determined one of the jurisdictional
    facts relevant to the exercise of the Minister’s power to
    amend the licence, but the Minister has no legal interest in the
    determination of that jurisdictional fact. Both cases cited by the
    appellant are therefore distinguishable from the present case.







  1. In
    the light of the reasoning set out above, the appellant’s
    argument that the Minister should have been joined in these
    proceedings fails. I turn now to consider the merits of the case.






Did
clause 2 of the Lease Schedule create an option for the appellant to
extend the lease for a year?



  1. The
    lease agreement contains five parts: the Memorandum of General
    Conditions of Lease, the Equipment Loan Agreement, the Service
    Station Equipment Schedule, the Maintenance Schedule and the Lease
    Schedule. The Lease Schedule contains, amongst other things, some of
    the key terms of the lease including the duration of the lease and
    the rental while the Memorandum of General Conditions contains,
    amongst other things, the description of the leased property.
    Clause 2 of the Lease Schedule under the heading “Duration of
    Lease” provides:








The
lease shall be for a period of 3 (three) years commencing on 01st
September 2005 terminating on 31st August 2008 with the
option of



being
renewed for a further 1 (one) year.”







In the Memorandum of General
Conditions of Lease, the “lease period” is defined as
“the period of duration of the lease as set out in the lease
schedule”.







  1. The
    appellant argues that clause 2 of the Lease Schedule entitled it, as
    the lessee, to renew the lease contract for a further year, which it
    did by its attorney’s letter of 28 August 2008. The
    respondent disputes that the appellant had the right to exercise an
    option to renew the lease and points to clause 4.2 of the Memorandum
    of General Conditions of Lease which stipulates:








The
lessor shall give the Lessee written notice not later than 1 (one)
calendar month prior to the termination of the Lease Period if the
Lessor is prepared to consider granting the Lessee a further lease,
or such other agreement relating to the supply and sale of petroleum
products from the Leased Premises, upon the Lessor’s then
prevailing terms and conditions for such a lease or agreement of
supply.”







  1. The
    High Court held that clause 2 of the Lease Schedule should be read
    with clause 4.2 so that clause 2, properly interpreted, confers an
    option on BP, the lessor, to renew the lease agreement. The High
    Court concluded therefore that Southline, the lessee, was not
    entitled to exercise an option to renew the lease agreement for a
    year.







  1. An
    option to renew or extend the period of a lease, in our law, is a
    form of pactum de contrahendo
    ,
    an agreement to make a contract in the future
    .4
    An option has two components: an offer proposing the conclusion of
    a specific contract, and an agreement not to revoke the offer.
    5
    According to Kerr:








Options
are contracts to keep offers open for a period. Those found in leases
normally give the lessee power to renew the lease or to purchase.”
6







  1. An
    option in a lease agreement relating to the renewal of the lease or
    the extension of the period of the lease is thus normally, though
    not invariably, an irrevocable option in favour of the lessee, not
    the lessor
    .
    The exercise of the option is the acceptance of the offer and it
    must ordinarily be exercised before the original lease has ended.
    7
    The effect of the exercise of an option is ordinarily that the
    contract is renewed on the same terms and conditions as the original
    contract, unless the option stipulates otherwise.
    8







  1. Before
    turning to considering the proper interpretation of clause 2 of the
    Lease Schedule, it will be useful to consider clause 4.2 of the
    Memorandum of General Conditions of Lease. The clause provides that
    the lessor shall give the lessee written notice at least one month
    prior to the termination of the lease period if the lessor is
    prepared to consider the granting of a further lease upon the
    lessor’s then prevailing terms and conditions for such leases.
    As mentioned above, “lease period” is defined as the
    duration of the lease as set out in the Lease Schedule. It thus
    refers to the stipulation in clause 2 of the Lease Schedule that
    provides for three years, with an option to renew for a further
    year.








  1. From
    the above it is clear that Clause 4.2 does not contain an
    irrevocable offer to enter into a further lease by the lessor. Nor
    does it contain an irrevocable offer by the lessee to enter into a
    further lease. It can, in the circumstances, not be construed to be
    an option as an option is an irrevocable offer to contract.








  1. Let
    us turn now to look at clause 2 of the Lease Schedule. It stipulates
    that the lease shall be for a period of three years “with the
    option of being renewed” for a further one year. The clause
    contemplates an option, which as set out above, is an agreement in
    which one party irrevocably offers to the other party the right to
    renew the agreement.








  1. It
    is not clear on what basis the High Court concluded (and the
    respondent in this Court argues) that clause 4.2 of the Memorandum
    of General Conditions of Lease should be read together with clause 2
    of the Lease Schedule. Clause 2 appears to confer an option, an
    agreement in which an irrevocable offer is made by one party to the
    other, whereas clause 4.2 provides for the possibility that the
    lessor may in the future make an offer to the lessee on terms that
    are to be determined at some future date. Clause 4.2 contains
    neither an irrevocable offer by the lessor, nor an irrevocable
    undertaking by the lessee to accept any future offer by the lessor
    if the lessor decides to make it. It is just not accurate to refer
    to clause 4.2 as conferring “an option” upon the lessor,
    as the respondent argues in this Court.








  1. There
    is a further problem of textual consistency with reading clause 2 of
    the Lease Schedule as referring to the provisions of clause 4.2.
    Clause 4.2 does not speak of any limitation on the period in respect
    of which the lessor may make an offer to lease the property in
    future. This is not surprising because clause 4.2 does not bind
    either the lessor or lessee in any way, but merely records that
    there is a possibility of a future lease, the terms of which
    (including its duration) are not determined in clause 4.2. On the
    other hand, clause 2 of the Lease Schedule expressly contemplates
    the renewal of the lease under an option for a period of one year
    only.








  1. In
    the circumstances, the High Court was incorrect when it found that
    clause 2 of the Lease Schedule should be read subject to clause 4.2
    of the Memorandum of General Conditions of Lease. The two clauses
    cannot be read together. Clause 4.2 does not contain an option. It
    merely contains a provision stating that the lessor may decide once
    the lease period is coming to an end to offer the lessee a further
    contract of lease on the same or different terms. It does not
    purport to require the lessor to do so, nor to compel the lessee to
    accept such offer, if ever made. Clause 4.2 is clearly contemplating
    a different or new lease in the future, and not the renewal of the
    existing lease. Both the reasoning of the High Court, and the
    submission of the respondent, that clause 4.2 is a provision
    regulating the “option” referred to in clause 2 of the
    Leas Schedule cannot therefore be accepted.








  1. The
    question thus remains. What is the proper meaning of clause 2?
    Clause 2 stipulates that the period of the lease is three years with
    the option of being renewed for one further year. Clause 2 thus
    appears to contain an irrevocable offer to extend the period of the
    lease for one further year but it does not explicitly state who may
    exercise this option, a matter to which I turn in a moment. Before
    considering that question however, it should be noted that for an
    option to be valid, it must specify with reasonable certainty the
    terms of the renewed lease agreement. Leaving aside the identity of
    the parties, there is certainty with regard to the leased property
    and with regard to the rental. The clause regulating the rental for
    the property (clause 3 of the Lease Schedule) provides a baseline
    rental for the first year of the lease (September 2005 –
    August 2006) and then provides for annual cost of living increases.
    The rental for an additional year’s lease would therefore be
    covered by the cost of living increases contemplated in clause 3 of
    the Lease Schedule.







  1. Respondent
    argued that the absence of an express term as to when the option
    should be exercised provided support for its argument that clause 2
    does not in fact confer an option to renew the lease. As a matter of
    law an option to renew a lease must be exercised before the lease
    expires.
    9
    Although it may be desirable to provide for notification earlier
    than the expiry of the lease, the absence of any express period, or
    manner for notification of the exercise of the option, does not
    render the option invalid. This argument of the respondent can thus
    not be accepted.







  1. In
    summary, other than the identity of the party who may exercise the
    option, all the other essential terms of a renewed contract (leased
    property, rental price and other terms and conditions) are certain.







  1. As
    to the identity of the party who enjoys the option, there are only
    two possible candidates -- the lessee and the lessor. Neither party
    argued that, properly construed, clause 2 created an option per se
    exercisable at the instance of the lessor. Instead the respondent
    argued that clause 4.2 provided the lessor with a right to propose a
    further lease in future, at its discretion, and suggested that
    clause 2 should be read as an adjunct to that clause, an argument
    rejected above. But the respondent did not argue, perhaps
    understandably given the provisions of clause 4.2, that clause 2
    created an option, exercisable at the instance of the lessor,
    separate and in addition to what clause 4.2 conferred upon the
    lessor. Nor did the respondent in its dealings with the appellant
    ever suggest or act on the basis that it enjoyed a separate option
    to renew the lease for a year under clause 2. Moreover, such an
    interpretation of clause 2 would be an unusual one in the light of
    ordinary commercial practice. In all these circumstances,
    interpreting clause 2 as an option in favour of the lessor cannot be
    said to be a reasonable interpretation of the clause.







  1. Given
    that it is not reasonably possible as a matter of construction to
    interpret clause 2 as creating an option in favour of the lessor,
    the question that arises is whether properly interpreted
    ,
    it creates an option in favour of the lessee or whether it must be
    concluded that it is too vague to bear any meaning
    .
    As a general matter of interpretation, a court will try to avoid
    concluding that words in a contract are meaningless.
    10
    Generally, words in commercial contracts are intended to have
    business efficacy and should be interpreted consistently with such a
    purpose. Of course, any interpretation must be consistent with other
    provisions of the contract, and with the statutory provisions
    relevant to the contractual relationship. Moreover, in determining
    the meaning of the provision a court may consider both the conduct
    of the parties and the ordinary commercial practices of the
    environment in which they contract.








  1. There
    is no other provision in the lease agreement that would conflict
    with interpreting clause 2 of the Lease Schedule as affording an
    option to the lessee. Consequently, that interpretation would not be
    repugnant with any other provision of the lease agreement, nor would
    it lead to any absurdity.






  1. The
    respondent points to the conduct of both parties to suggest that
    neither party considered the lessee had a right to exercise an
    option to renew until the lessee asserted the right in writing
    shortly before the end of August 2008. It is clear on the record
    that both parties were aware of the provisions of clause 4.2, and
    that the respondent wrote to the appellant stating that it did not
    intend to extend the agreements. Yet it is also clear that neither
    party construed clause 4.2 as establishing an option of renewal at
    the instance of the lessor. Once it became clear to the lessee that
    the lessor was not going to offer a new lease, and after taking
    legal advice, the lessee sought to fall back on the option in clause
    2. It may well be (and the record suggests so) that the lessee would
    have preferred another long-term contract, of lease as contemplated
    in clause 4.2, rather than renewal for only a year under clause 2.
    Only when it became clear that the lessor would not offer a new
    contract did the lessee purport to rely on clause 2. Even if the
    respondent is correct that the conduct of the parties does not
    suggest that either considered the lessee to have the right to
    exercise an option under clause 2 prior to 28 August 2008, when the
    lessee purported to do so, that of itself cannot be determinative of
    the meaning of clause 2 in the Lease Schedule.
    11
    Particularly as Southline did exercise the option on 28 August
    2008
    .
    So at the very least at that stage, Southline considered that clause
    2 of the Lease Schedule conferred an option upon it.







  1. Another
    consideration is that ordinarily the commercial practice is, as Kerr
    states in the quote above (at para 34), that an option to renew in a
    lease is an option in favour of the lessee. Though not an invariably
    so as a matter of law, general commercial practice suggests that
    options to renew are afforded to lessees by lessors, and reported
    cases in the law reports bear this out. This is not surprising,
    particularly where a lessor has property that is commercially
    attractive, as does the respondent in this case.








  1. There
    is one further important relevant to the interpretation of clause 2
    of the Lease Schedule which is to be found in section 4A(1) of the
    Act . That section (set out in full above at para 11) provides that
    any dealer agreement between a wholesaler and an operator shall be
    “based on and comply with” a range of factors, one of
    which is “promotion of security of tenure”.
    12
    Given the definition of “wholesaler” and “operator”
    in section 4A(5),
    13
    it seems clear that the lease agreement
    ,
    which includes provisions regulating the supply of petrol and diesel
    as well as the lease of land, is a dealer agreement within the
    meaning of section 4A. The statutory principle in section 4A(1)(e)
    clearly seeks to promote the security of tenure of retail operators
    within the industry vis a vis wholesalers. As a statutory principle
    that governs dealer agreements, it is relevant to the interpretation
    of a dealer agreement in case of ambiguity or uncertainty. One must
    presume that both BP and Southline were aware of the principles set
    out in section 4(A)(1) and that they intended to contract in
    accordance with those principles. Given that the Act clearly
    intends to “promote” security of tenure of operators,
    such as Southline, reading clause 2 as affording Southline an option
    would be consistent with this statutory purpose.








  1. In
    all these circumstances, given the principled desirability of
    attaching meaning to clause 2 that is consistent with the other
    provisions of the contract, with commercial practice and with the
    statutory purpose of encouraging security of tenure of retail
    operators in the industry, appellant’s argument that clause 2
    created an option, exercisable at its instance, must be upheld.







  1. The
    appellant’s argument that it exercised an option to extend the
    lease for a period of one year therefore succeeds. The consequence
    is that, at the time the respondent sought to evict the appellant,
    the appellant was in lawful possession of the property and the
    respondent was not entitled to an eviction order. In the result, as
    the appeal succeeds, it is not necessary to consider the other
    arguments raised by the appellant. The eviction order made by the
    High Court must be set aside.








Costs



  1. The
    appellant has succeeded and it is appropriate, therefore, that costs
    should follow the result and the respondent ordered to pay the costs
    of the appellant in this Court and in the High Court, such costs to
    include the costs occasioned by the employment of two instructed and
    one instructing legal representative.







  1. The
    following order is made:







  1. The
    appeal succeeds.








  1. The
    order of the High Court is set aside and replaced with the following
    order:








The application is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include the costs of two instructed and one
instructing counsel.”







  1. The
    respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the appellant in this
    Court such costs to include the costs of two instructed and one
    instructing counsel.


















_________________


O’REGAN
AJA











I
concur.











__________________


STRYDOM
AJA









MTAMBANENGWE, AJA



  1. I
    have read the draft judgment (the judgment) of O’Regan, AJA
    and agree with the first part thereof (up to paragraph [29]). I give
    hereunder the reasons why I find myself unable to agree with the
    reasoning in the rest of the judgment and the order arising from
    that reasoning.







  1. The
    last part of the judgment deals with the central issue namely how
    clause 2 of the Lease Schedule should be interpreted, and whether
    clause 4.2 of the Memorandum of the General Conditions of Lease
    should be read together with clause 2 of the Lease Schedule.







  1. Clause
    2 provides:







The Lease shall be for a period
of 3 (three) years commencing on 01st September 2005
terminating on 31st August 2008 with the option of
being renewed for a further 1 (one) year.”
(My
emphasis)







Whereas clause 4.2 stipulates.







The Lessor shall give the
Lessee written notice not later than 1 (one) calendar month
prior to the termination of the Lease Period if the Lessor is
prepared to consider granting the Lessee a further lease
, or
such other agreement relating to the supply and sale of petroleum
products from the Leased Premises, upon the Lessor’s then
prevailing terms and conditions for such a lease
or agreement
of supply.” (My emphasis)







The High Court (Manyarara, A.J.)
concluded and respondent in this Court argues that clause 4.2 should
be read together with clause 2, so that clause 2, properly
interpreted, confers an option on BP, the lessor, to renew the lease
agreement. As a result the High Court concluded that Southline was
not entitled to exercise an option to renew the lease. O’Regan,
AJA questions the basis on which the High Court could come to such a
conclusion. I respectfully also disagree with the conclusion drawn
by the High Court. On the other hand I disagree with the conclusion
in the judgment that clause 2 and clause 4.2 “cannot be read
together”. (paragraph [40])







  1. The
    judgment concludes (paragraph [40]) and I fully agree, that “clause
    4.2 does not contain an option. It merely contains a provision
    stating that the lessor may decide once the lease period is coming
    to an end to offer the lessee a further contract of lease on the
    same ... terms”. The language used in clause 4.2 leaves no
    doubt that that was what the parties intended. Surprisingly the
    judgment then goes on to seek an interpretation of clause 2 that
    seems to completely ignore this provision.







  1. O’Regan,
    AJA rightly says:








(a) in paragraph [41] of the judgment,
“for an option to be valid, it must specify with reasonable
certainty the terms of the renewed lease agreement”.







(b) In paragraph [45], “As a
general matter of interpretation, a court will try to avoid
concluding that words in a contract are meaningless. Generally words
in commercial contracts are intended to have business efficacy and
should be interpreted consistently with such a purpose...any
interpretation must be consistent with other provisions of the
contract...” It seems to me that logic requires that all these
principles be applied to both clause 2 and clause 4.2 and that an
interpretation of one (clause 2) should be sought that is consistent
with the other (clause 4.2). In other words before other aids to
interpreting clause 2 are resorted to a court should first seek an
interpretation that does not render clause 4.2 meaningless. This
would therefore necessitate that the two clauses should be read
together.







  1. I
    am in agreement with the judgment that clause 2, even if read with
    clause 4.2, does not confer an option exercisable by BP separate and
    in addition to the right conferred on it by clause 4.2. Given that
    the words in clause 4.2 cannot or should not be regarded as
    meaningless what then is the meaning of those words in clauses 2 and
    4.2 which I have underlined in paragraph [3] above. And can they be
    made to harmonise with the vague phrase in clause 2 “with the
    option of being renewed”?







  1. To
    begin with, I see no contradiction in regarding the words “a
    further lease” as meaning an option to lease if you describe
    an option as an irrevocable offer in favour of the lessee, in other
    words as good as a contract to be perfected at the instance of the
    lessee. In this regard, I would uphold respondent’s
    submission (reflected in the judgment (paragraph [40]) “that
    clause 4.2 is a provision regulating the ‘option’
    referred to in clause 2 of the Lease Schedule”, and reject the
    strained reasoning that seeks to give clause 2 a meaning to the
    effect that, standing alone, it gives an option to be exercised by
    the lessee. I would therefore conclude that there was nothing in
    the nature of “an irrevocable option in favour of the lessee”
    until the lessor exercised his right conferred by clause 4.2. The
    conduct of Southline purporting to belatedly (i.e. three or four
    days before the expiry of the lease) resort to clause 2 and
    belatedly exercising the so-called option speaks volumes against the
    interpretation the judgment seeks to put on clause 2.







  1. The
    fact that respondent mistakenly argued that clause 2 gave the lessor
    an option does not prevent this Court from adopting an
    interpretation of the clauses that accords with the language used in
    the contract as a whole, that harmonises clause 2 and clause 4.2 and
    that accords with what the lessee, according to the language of
    clause 4.2 and its own conduct, was entitled to expect, which was,
    in my view, that the lessor would offer it an option to renew the
    lease not “on terms that are to be determined at some future
    date” as the judgment says, but “upon the Lessor’s
    then prevailing terms and conditions” as clause 4.2 says. It
    is simply not correct to say (paragraph [39] of the judgment) that
    “Clause 4.2 does not speak of any limitation on the period in
    respect of which the lessor may make an offer to lease the property
    in future”, it does, when it says, “at least 1 month
    prior to the termination of the lease period”.







  1. With
    respect, it seems to me that the approach taken in the judgment, of
    reading clause 2 apart from clause 4.2 and straining to find that an
    irrevocable option was granted to the lessee, amounts to making a
    contract for the parties. In this regard, I do not understand the
    basis of the judgment concluding (paragraph [46]) that “there
    is no other provision in the lease agreement that would conflict
    with interpreting clause 2 of the Lease Schedule as affording an
    option to the lessee”. That can only be said by regarding the
    words of clause 4.2 as completely meaningless. The conduct of the
    parties, particularly that of appellant, who it must be assumed,
    were fully aware of both clauses, provides a very strong indication
    that neither regarded that clause 2 conferred an option upon the
    lessee (see in particular paragraph [47] of the judgment).







  1. In
    reaching the conclusions I have come to above, I have not ignored
    the other considerations that the judgment took into account, but
    the fact that Southline only belatedly sought to assert that it had
    an option in terms of clause 2 (when “It may well be that the
    lessee would have preferred another long-term contract, of
    lease.....rather than renewal for only a year”), in my opinion
    far outweighs all the other factors considered in the judgment to
    support the principle that “…general commercial
    practice suggests that options to renew are afforded to lessees by
    lessors…” (paragraph [48] of the judgment), and the
    presumption that both parties intended to contract in accordance
    with the principles (security of tenure) set out in section 4A(1) of
    the Petroleum Products and Energy Act, Act 13 of 1990, as amended.
    The simple answer to the first is that provisions in clause 2 and
    clause 4.2 are not the ordinary provisions one finds in contracts of
    lease. In regard to the second (the assumption) and in regard to
    both one must also assume that both parties were aware of these
    principles and deliberately chose the language they used in both
    clause 2 and clause 4.2. Moreover, there is no suggestion on the
    record, nor did either party submit that either of them negotiated
    from a position of inferiority to the other. These considerations
    leave no room for speculation.







  1. In
    all the circumstances I conclude that both appellant’s
    arguments upheld by O’Regan, AJA must be dismissed and in the
    result the appeal fails.







  1. The
    following order is made:







  1. The
    appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
    two instructed and one instructing counsel.















________________________


MTAMBANENGWE,
AJA






Counsel
on behalf of the Appellant: Mr. R. Heathcote


Assisted
By: Mr. D. Obbes


Instructed
By: Kruger, van Vuuren & Co





Counsel
on behalf of the Respondent: Mr. P. B. Hodes SC


Assisted
By: Mr. J. Schickerling


Instructed
By: Engling, Stritter & Partners









1
Regulations 29 and 30 of the Petroleum Products Regulations as
amended (promulgated in Government Notice 155 of 23 June 2000 and
amended in Government Notice 202 of 2002 of 29 November 2002) which
were made under sections 2(1) and 2A of the Act, provide as follows:


29.
(1) A wholesale licence or certificate is not transferable.


(2)
A retail licence is not transferable except by way of amendment of
the licence under regulation 30.


30.
(1) If any information on a licence or certificate is to be changed,
the licence-holder or certificate-holder shall prior to such change
apply to the Minister for an amendment of such licence or
certificate, as the case may be.


(2)
If any such change of information relates –


(a)
…;


(b)
in the case of a retail licence, to a change in the name of the
operator, the records required in terms of regulation 4(2) shall be
supplied with regard to the proposed new operator, and the proposed
new operator shall complete Form PP/1 as set out in Annexure B, in
as far as it is applicable, together with the application for an
amendment.


(3)
Notwithstanding regulation 31(4) and (5), if a retail licence-holder
operates a retail outlet in terms of an agreement with a wholesaler
that is the owner of such retail outlet, that wholesaler may in the
following circumstances apply to the Minister for a change in the
name of the operator, whether to that of the wholesaler or to any
other operator:


(a)
if it is alleged by the wholesale license-holder that the agreement
between the wholesale licence-holder and retail licence-holder –


(i)
…; or


(ii)
has lapsed through the effluxion of time, without renewal of the
agreement; …


(4)
The Minister may not, upon an application in circumstances
contemplated in regulation (3)(a), amend a licence unless a Minister


(a)
has given the relevant retail licence-holder notice in writing of
the wholesaler’s application;


(b)
has invited the retail licence-holder to make representations to the
Minister, within a specified period, not being less than 14 days
after receipt of the notice, concerning the wholesaler’s
application; and


(c)
has after the end of that period considered any representations
made by the retail licence-holder.


(5)
Upon the occurrence of an event referred to in sub-regulation (3)
the wholesaler shall, until the Minister decides on the application
under sub-regulation (4), be deemed to be the holder of the retail
licence, except if, in the circumstances contemplated in sub
regulation 3(a) the fact whether the agreement has lawfully been
terminated or has lapsed is in dispute between the parties.”




2
For Namibian High Court cases adopting this test, see, for example,
Yam Diamond Recovery (Pty) Ltd: In re Hofmeester v Basson and
Others
1999 NR 206 (HC) at 211I – 212A; Kerry McNamara
Architects Inc and Others v Minister of Works, Transport and
Communication and Others
2000 NR 1 (HC) at 7 B – H and 9 I
– J and Clear Channel Independent Advertising Namibia (Pty)
Ltd and Another v Transnamib Holdings Ltd and Others
2006 (1) NR
121 (HC) at para 45.




3
The text of those
regulations is set out at fn 1 above.




4
See the South African decision, Hirschowitz v Moolman and Others
1985 (3) SA 739 (A) at 765I.




5
See DJ Joubert General Principles of the Law of Contract Juta
1987 at 53 and Theron v Pieterse 1995 NR 211 (HC) at 213 G –
H.




6
AJ Kerr The Law of Sale and Lease 3rd ed Lexis
Nexis 2004 at 457.




7
See Clear Channel Independent Advertising Namibia (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Transnamib Holdings Ltd and Others
, cited above n 2,
at para 37. See also the South African decision, Bowhay v Ward
1903 TS 772 at 777-778 and Joubert, cited above n 4 at 55.




8
See, for example, Levy v Banket Holdings (Pty) Ltd 1956 (3)
SA 558 (FC) at 560.




9
See Clear Channel Independent Advertising Namibia (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Transnamib Holdings Ltd and Others
, cited above n 2,
at para 37. See also the following South African decisions: Bowhay
v Ward
, cited above n 7, at 777-8 and Mittermeier v
Skema Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1984 (1) SA 121 (A) at 126 D –
E.




10
See Kühn v Levey and Another 1996 NR 362 (HC) at 336 C –
F. For South African authority on this point, see Soteriou v
Retco Poyntons (Pty) Ltd
1985 (2) SA 922 (A) at 931 G – H;
Burroughs Machines Ltd v Chenille Corporation of SA (Pty) Ltd
1964 (1) SA 669 (W) at 670 G - H; Heathfield v Maqelepo
2004 (2) SA 636 (SCA) at 641 B - F




11
For “in an
action on a contract, the rule of interpretation is to ascertain,
not what the parties’ intention was, but what the language
used in the contract means, ie what their intention was as expressed
in the contract.”
Worman
v Hughes and Others
1948
(3) SA 495 (A) at 505 per Greenberg JA. This approach has been
endorsed by the Namibian High Court in
South
African Iron and Steel Industrial Corporation Ltd v Moly Copper
Mining and Exploration Co (SWA) Ltd and Others
1993
NR 194 (HC) at 204 C – D.




12
Section 4A(1)(e).




13
Section 4A(5) provides that for the purposes of section 4A:


(a)
‘wholesaler’ means any person who imports or distributes
petrol or diesel for purposes of the wholesale thereof by that
person in Namibia or who exports petrol or diesel;


(b)
‘operator’ means any person who conducts business for
the sale of petrol and diesel at an outlet.”