Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 752South Africa
Lubobo and Another v Naidoo and Others (43397/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 752 (4 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lubobo and Another v Naidoo and Others (43397/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 752 (4 October 2022)
Lubobo and Another v Naidoo and Others (43397/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 752 (4 October 2022)
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sino date 4 October 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 43397/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
4
October 2022
In
the matter of:
LUVUYO
LUZUKO LUBOBO
First Applicant
BONGANI
EMMANUEL MLAMBO
Second Applicant
and
MUGANDRAN
NAIDOO
First Respondent
YUDGENDREE
NAIDOO
Second Respondent
UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS PORTION [....] A PORTION OF
FARM
[....], ROODEKRAANS REGISTRATION DIVISION
IQ,
GAUTENG PROVINCE, MEASURING ONE (1)
HECTARE
Third Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ
[1]
The first and second applicants are the co-owners of the property
described
as Portion [....], a portion of Farm [....], R [....],
Registration Division IQ Gauteng Province. They apply for the
eviction from
the property of the first and second respondents and
their minor children, who reside at the property. The application is
thus
one that must comply with the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 19 of 1998.
[2]
On 21 January 2016 the applicants, as joint sellers, and the
respondents,
as joint purchasers, entered into a written agreement of
sale of land by instalment, as allowed in Chapter II of the
Alienation
of Land Act, 68 of 1981.
[3]
The relevant terms of the agreement were as follows:
a)
The applicants sold the property to the respondents for an amount of
R4 million.
This amount would be payable as follows:
i)
A cash deposit of R677 249,00, of which R233 500,00
shall
be paid directly into the applicants’ Standard Bank mortgage
bond account (Standard Bank holds a mortgage bond over
the property
as security for a loan to the applicants), and R443 749,00,
shall be paid directly to the City of Johannesburg
in respect of
amounts due for rates, taxes, and water services.
ii)
Commencing on 29 February 2016, for 24 months, the respondents
shall
pay an amount of R27 000,00 into the applicants’ Standard
Bank bond account, by the 30
th
day of each month.
iii)
The balance shall be settled on 30 March 2018.
b)
Transfer of
the property shall take place upon settlement of the balance of the
purchase price, subject to section 27 of the Alienation
of Land
Act.
[1]
c)
Upon payment of the deposit, the applicants shall give occupation of
the property
to the respondents, who shall bear the risk and benefit
in the property as from that date.
d)
In the event of the respondents breaching the agreement, the
applicants may deliver
a notice to the respondents describing the
obligation which was breached and demanding that it be remedied
within a stated period,
which shall not be less than 30 days, and
provide an indication of the steps which the applicants intend to
take if the breach
is not rectified.
e)
If the breach is not rectified within the stated period, the
applicants have
various options, including claiming specific
performance or cancelling the contract.
[4]
It is common cause that the applicants gave the respondents
occupation
of the property pursuant to the terms of the agreement,
albeit that the applicants contend that they had given the permission
before
the full deposit amount had been paid. Nothing turns on this.
[5]
The basis upon which the applicants sought to establish that the
respondents
were in unlawful occupation of the property, is as
follows:
a)
On about 2 January 2020 the respondent breached the agreement in that
they failed
to pay the R27 000,00 monthly instalment into the
Standard Bank bond account.
b)
The respondents did not settle the municipal account in full, given
that there
was an outstanding amount of R238 226,35 outstanding
as at 22 October 2020.
c)
On 3 August 2020 the applicants, under hand of the first applicant,
caused a
notice of breach to be sent to the respondents via courier,
which they received on 4 August 2020.
d)
The notice does not make any reference to the outstanding municipal
account,
only referring to a failure to pay the R27 000,00. The
applicants demanded that this breach be remedied within 30 days of
receipt of the notice. The notice further listed all the possible
further steps that the applicants had available to them in terms
of
the agreement, should the demand not be remedied.
e)
The respondents failed to remedy the breach.
f)
The applicants terminated the agreement and ordered the respondents
to
vacate the property, which they refused to do.
[6]
The respondents, in turn, admitted that there were some payment
difficulties,
which they blamed on the Covid pandemic, but deny that
they were in breach as stated in the notice, and furthermore denied
that
there was a cancellation of the agreement subsequent to the
notice period. They tendered the arrears that may exist.
[7]
The respondents raised a further issue, namely that the applicants
had
failed to co-operate with them in efforts for them to obtain a
bond in order to satisfy the settlement of the final payment. For
the
reasons set out below, I deem it not necessary to engage with this
issue.
[8]
The applicants’ allegation that they terminated the agreement
is
devoid of any detail – they do not state when this happened,
how it happened, or who communicated it to whom. There is no
reliance
on a written document. This compelled Mr Shongwe, who appeared for
the applicants, to concede that the applicants had
not proven a
cancellation of the agreement.
[9]
Both in his heads of argument and in oral argument, Mr Shongwe
pursued
a case not pleaded by the applicants. He relied on clause 19
of the agreement, which stipulates that, if transfer had not yet
occurred
by 1 May 2018, the respondents shall have the right to
cancel the agreement on notice by 30 May 2018, failing which it shall
be
extended to 31 July 2018. If no transfer had been effected by that
date, the agreement, according to clause 19.3, shall lapse.
[10]
The argument does not fully align with the clause. The respondents
contended that the payment
date for the balance of the purchase
price, which was agreed as the end of March 2018, was extended by
agreement to 15 August 2018.
Mr Shongwe advanced the case that,
accepting the extension to 15 August 2018, the agreement had
automatically lapsed on that date
when payment was not made. But
clause 19 refers to a date for the transfer of the property, which,
in terms of the agreement of
necessity had to be a date sometime
after payment.
[11]
Be that as
it may, whether the agreement had terminated by virtue of transfer
not taking place timeously is not an issue before
me. Two related
principles prevent the applicants from pursuing this argument. A
party may not rely on one issue in its pleadings,
and by extension in
its affidavits, and then at the hearing seek to rely on another.
[2]
Our legal system, for good reason, does not allow ambush litigation.
Furthermore, the Court must determine the dispute identified
by the
parties and that dispute alone.
[3]
[12]
Not only do the applicants not rely on this cause of action in their
application, their
evidence in their founding affidavit contradicts
such a claim. The first applicant’s evidence is that the
instalment due
on 2 January 2020 (presumably the instalment for
December 2019) had not been paid, that in August 2020 a notice of
breach was delivered
to the respondents, and that subsequent to a
failure to remedy the breach the agreement was cancelled. This
evidence is wholly
inconsistent with the case that Mr Shongwe
presented in argument. It appears from the papers before me that the
parties treated
the agreement as extant well beyond the date of 15
August 2018. In this application the dispute is whether there was a
cancellation
consequent upon a breach.
[13]
It does not behove the applicants to argue that it is patent on the
face of the papers
that the balance had not yet been paid, and that
there is a term in the agreement which determines that the agreement
would terminate
if the final payment had not been made.
[14]
Apart from the disjunct between the argument and the wording of the
clause, the issue was
not raised by the applicants, and the
respondents did not have to deal with it. The respondents cannot be
faulted for not having
set out a basis upon which the agreement
survived in 15 August 2018. I am thus not satisfied that this issue
was fully ventilated
between the parties in this application.
[15]
The applicants have not established a
prima facie
case for the
relief that they seek. In the result the application must fail. In
the circumstances it is not necessary for me to
consider whether the
applicants are in breach of the application by virtue of the alleged
failure to cooperate with the respondents
in ensuring that they are
able to obtain a bond for the balance of the purchase price.
[16]
There is no reason why the costs should not follow the result.
[17]
In the result, the application is dismissed with costs.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard:
23 November 2021
Judgment:
4 October 2022
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Mr C Shongwe
Instructed
by:
Sikunyana Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the First, second and Third
Respondents:
Ms Z Kara
(The heads of argument
were prepared by Mr V Mabuza)
Instructed
by:
Amod & Van Schalk Attorneys
Fourth
Respondent:
No appearance
[1]
Section 27 essentially provides that a purchaser who has undertaken
to pay the purchase price of land in instalments over the
period and
has been paid at least 50% thereof is entitled to demand transfer on
condition that a first mortgage bond be registered
over the property
to secure the balance of the purchase price.
[2]
Kali v
Incorporated General Insurances Ltd
1976 (2) SA 179
(D) at 182 A.
[3]
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele an Others
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA) in [13], affirmed in
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) in [234].
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