Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 779South Africa
Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 779 (10 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 779 (10 October 2022)
Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 779 (10 October 2022)
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sino date 10 October 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 40591/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
10/10/2022
In
the matter between:
KOLEKA
BUBU
Applicant
And
JUDITH
LYDIA KAY
First Respondent
L
AND W PROPERTIES (BARRY SCOTT)
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The applicant seeks a declaratory order that an
agreement of sale of immoveable property she entered into with the
first respondent
is valid and enforceable, alternatively the return
of her deposit with interest.
2.
Only the first respondent participated in these
proceedings. I will refer to her as the respondent for convenience.
The second respondent
is the estate agent who brokered the agreement.
PRELIMINARY
ISSUES
3.
Before I deal with the facts, there are some
preliminary matters to note.
4.
First, the applicant sought to file a
supplementary replying affidavit as of right. No application for
condonation was made either
on paper or from the Bar. The respondent
pointed out that the court is entitled to consider this affidavit
pro
non scripto
. The additional affidavit was
then withdrawn.
5.
Second, the applicant uploaded onto the Caselines
portal a document from her bank approving a loan of R3,5 million,
dated 25 August
2021, on 25 March 2022, a few days before the
hearing. This document was not under cover of an affidavit nor filed
in any way that
made it possible for the court to take notice of it.
It was therefore not before the court.
6.
Third, the applicant’s counsel was not
properly prepared for argument. She was unable to give the court page
references. Despite
being warned more than once by the court not to
refer to evidence outside the papers, she continued to do so. She was
directed
to refer herself to the Legal Practice Council for this.
This conduct is also relevant to the costs order.
7.
Fifth, the applicant is required to upload a
chronology with her heads of argument and practice note. This
chronology is intended
to assist the judge in determining how the
facts unfolded in the case. It is not, except where it is necessary
in specific circumstances,
to establish when the various documents
were filed. In this case the applicant’s chronology simply set
out when documents
were filed, which was completely unhelpful. Again,
this impacts on the costs order that the court may make.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
8.
The parties entered an agreement of sale of
[....] G [....] Road, Saddlebrook (“the property”) on 19
August 2020. The
purchase price was R8 million with a deposit to be
paid immediately of R5 million and the remainder to be paid within
eight months
of the offer being accepted.
9.
The applicant was to occupy the property, with
occupational rent of R20 000 per month.
10.
On breach, the other party was entitled to cancel
if the breach had not been remedied ten days after notice of the
breach was given.
If the cancellation was due to the purchaser’s
breach, the seller would be entitled to retain R1 million from the
deposit,
less the agent’s commission, alternatively sue for
damages.
11.
The applicant had difficulty in paying the R3
million balance and successfully requested a three month extension.
In exchange the
respondent was then entitled to be paid R250 000
per month for three months. That amount would count towards the
purchase
price, would be paid to the respondent from the deposit, and
would be non-refundable. The first R250 000 would be applied to
the agent’s commission.
12.
The applicant was not able to secure the required
guarantee from her bank, or a cash amount, for the remaining payment
in time.
On 20 July 2021, the respondent then gave the applicant
notice of her breach, affording her ten days to remedy it. On 4
August
2021, no payment having being made, the agreement was
cancelled and the applicant given notice to vacate the property.
13.
On 5 August 2021, the applicant sent to the
respondent an “approval in principle” from her bank,
dated 04 August 2021,
but the respondent did not change her mind.
14.
The facts as set out above are common cause.
ISSUES
15.
The applicant submits, without providing better
proof than the “approval in principle” that she was not
unable to comply
with the agreement, she has the R3 million ready and
the transfer should go ahead. She submits that it cannot be found
that she
failed to fulfil her obligation. She contends that the
respondent is acting in bad faith and wants to sell the property for
a higher
price as well as to retain money from the deposit as a
penalty. She accuses the respondent of “unilaterally”
cancelling
the contract.
16.
It is not clear to the court on what basis the
applicant maintains in affidavit and written argument that she has
not failed to
fulfil her obligations when it is clear that she did
not pay the remaining R3 million, either within eight months or
within the
further three months afforded to her.
17.
The contract was cancelled in accordance with its
conditions, after the applicant was given the requisite notice of her
breach.
The cancellation is therefore valid, in terms of the
contract. To the extent that the applicant submits that the
respondent ought
to have given her an extension, she already had an
extension, and there was no obligation to give either the first
extension or
a further one.
18.
It was also submitted in written and oral
argument that
sections 19
and
27
(1) of the
Alienation of Land Act, 68
of 1981
, protected the applicant and that the respondent had not
complied with these. Neither of these grounds was pleaded.
Nevertheless
I consider them briefly.
19.
Section 19
of the
Alienation of Land Act requires
a seller to give a purchaser 30 days to remedy a breach, rather than
ten.
20.
For purposes of the protections contained in
Chapter 2 of the
Alienation of Land Act (which
includes
section 19)
,
however, a contract is defined as an agreement for sale of land where
payment is made “in more than two instalments over
a period
exceeding one year”. The contract in this case is clearly not
that kind of contract.
Section 19
does not assist the applicant.
21.
Section 27
protects a purchaser in an instalment
sale who has paid more than 50% of the purchase price. The purchaser
is entitled to demand
transfer on condition that a mortgage bond is
simultaneously registered in the seller’s favour to secure the
balance of the
purchase price and interest. The terms of redemption
and interest rate on the mortgage bond cannot be more onerous than on
the
original agreement.
22.
Section 27
also does not assist the applicant.
Firstly, no tender of a mortgage bond in favour of the respondent has
been made. Secondly,
it is not clear to me, nor is it common cause,
that the sale is an instalment sale agreement of the sort
contemplated in the section.
23.
The section clearly contemplates a longer term
agreement, with interest payable, where regular instalments are paid
to defray the
purchase price and interest. If this was not the case,
section 27(2)
would not be able to limit interest on the amount
secured by the mortgage bond to a rate not more onerous than in the
original
agreement.
24.
The respondent contends in the answering
affidavit, and with reference to the terms of the agreement, that the
agreement is essentially
for a cash sale, rather than an instalment
sale. It was also not contemplated that the agreement would rely on a
bond being procured,
as those parts of the agreement have been
deleted by the parties.
25.
I agree with the respondent that the character of
the agreement is not one of an instalment sale. It does not provide
for regular
payments or for interest. The mere splitting of the
purchase price into two or three lump sums, not of equal size, over a
relatively
short period, does not result in an instalment sale
agreement. This is particularly the case where the first payment made
of R5
million was already over 50%. On the applicant’s argument
the applicant was then already entitled to demand transfer. This
is
clearly not the case.
26.
In addition, the addendum to the agreement, which
provided for the three month extension, provides that the R3 million
is to be
paid in cash.
27.
Section 27
therefore does not apply.
28.
The applicant then submits that the penalty
clause is inconsistent with the Conventional Penalties Act, 15 of
1962, because it allows
the respondent both to retain a penalty and
to claim damages. This is not the case. Clause 8.1 of the agreement
clearly requires
the seller to make an election whether to retain the
R1 million as
rouwkoop
or to claim damages. The seller is not entitled to do both.
29.
It is clear that the agreement has been cancelled
as a result of the applicant’s (purchaser’s) default. The
applicant
is therefore liable for the costs provided for in terms of
the agreement.
30.
The applicant seeks an order that, if the
agreement is cancelled, the respondent refunds to her the full R5
million deposit. I cannot
make that order. The applicant has not made
out a case that the three payments of R250 000 that were
non-refundable should
be returned to her. In addition, clause 8.1
seems to permit the remainder of the agent’s fee, if any, to be
deducted. Finally,
I cannot make the election for the respondent
whether it retains the R1 million or sues for damages.
31.
That said, it is not open to the respondent to
retain the whole deposit as security for the damages claim she
intends to institute,
as set out in the cancellation letter. The
contract does not make provision for retention of the deposit. The
respondent does not
deal with retention of the deposit as security
for damages in the answering affidavit or in argument. Nor does the
respondent ask
for an order permitting it to retain the deposit.
32.
The respondent seeks an order that the balance of
the deposit (plus applicable interest) remaining the trust account be
paid to
the applicant on her vacating the property, after the second
respondent’s fees have been paid. I see no reason why that
order
is not appropriate.
CONCLUSION
33.
For the reasons set out above, the application is
not successful, either in the main relief sought or in the
alternative. The agreement
was properly cancelled as a result of the
applicant’s breach and the applicant will be entitled to the
refund of the remainder
of the deposit once she vacates the property.
The remainder of the deposit is the R5 million less the three
payments of R250 000
and the balance of the agent’s fee
owing to the second respondent (taking into account that the first of
the R250 000
payments was to be applied to the agent’s
fee). In addition, if the respondent elects to accept the R1 million
rouwkoop
that may be
retained in accordance with clause 8.1.
34.
As far as costs are concerned, the manner in
which this matter has been litigated is cause for concern. I have set
out the issues
at the beginning of this judgment. I consider also
that the applicant has raised points which clearly do not apply in an
effort
to present a case that, wrongly, looks arguable. I consider
that costs on a punitive scale are appropriate.
35.
I make the following order:
(a)
The application is dismissed with costs on an
attorney and client scale.
(b)
The respondent is to refund the balance of the
applicant’s deposit, together with interest in accordance with
clause 1.1 of
the agreement, upon the applicant vacating the
property.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant:
N Shaik-Peremanov and V Kunju
Instructed
by:
Tshabuse Attorneys
Counsel
for the first respondent:
L van Gass
Instructed
by:
Naudè Dawson Inc
Date
of hearing:
12 April 2022
Date
of judgment:
10 October 2022
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