Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 812South Africa
Ahmed v Mazari and Others (21/5384) [2022] ZAGPJHC 812 (14 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ahmed v Mazari and Others (21/5384) [2022] ZAGPJHC 812 (14 October 2022)
Ahmed v Mazari and Others (21/5384) [2022] ZAGPJHC 812 (14 October 2022)
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sino date 14 October 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21/5384
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
14
October 2022
In
the matter between:
ZAIBIONEZA
AHMAD
Applicant
And
AMAR
MAZARI
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT, KEMPTON PARK
Second Respondent
MARTO
LAFITTE & ASSOCIATES INC
Third Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
VILJOEN
AJ
[1]
In this application, the applicant seeks an
order directing the first respondent to sign all documents necessary
to effect the transfer
of certain immovable property to the
applicant, and some ancillary relief.
[2]
The relief sought in the original notice of
motion was expanded in an amended notice of motion, served on the
first respondent on
14 June 2014. The amendment purported to
introduce further relief and, additionally, purported to join the
Sheriff as the second
respondent. The object of the amendment was to
provide a direction to the Sheriff to sign the relevant transfer
documents if the
first respondent fails to do so.
[3]
There is some controversy as to the
propriety of the amended notice of motion. It must be mentioned that
there was no application
for the joinder of the Sheriff to the
proceedings nor were the provisions of Rule 28 followed in amending
the relief sought. The
amendment and the joinder of the Sheriff,
therefore, are irregular.
[4]
Nevertheless, it does not appear to me that
any prejudice resulted from the amendment considering the limited
scope thereof and
the fact that it did not change the essential
question raised in the application.
[5]
As regards the Sheriff, I am of the view
that entrusting the execution of an order of the court to the Sheriff
falls within the
ambit of the Sheriff’s ordinary functions.
Moreover, the amended notice of motion was served on the Sheriff who
took no issue.
[6]
The applicant’s claim is premised on
an agreement, styled “
Alienation
Agreement
”, concluded between the
applicant and the first respondent on 7 August 2015.
[7]
The alienation agreement was, on the first
respondent’s version, preceded by several other agreements
relating to the sale
of the property in question. Since the
alienation agreement replaced whatever earlier agreements might have
existed, I need not
consider those any further.
[8]
In terms of the alienation agreement, the
first respondent sold to the applicant the property known as Erf
[....], Rhodesfield Township,
Registration Division IR, Province of
Gauteng.
[9]
The agreed purchase price is R950,000.00.
The applicant acknowledges that only upon payment of the full
purchase price would she
become entitled to transfer of the property.
In the founding affidavit, she makes the following allegations
regarding her performance
of the terms of the alienation agreement:
9.1.
In paragraph 15: “
I
confirm that I have signed and complied with all my obligations to
effect transfer of the property in my name, by the second
respondent.
”
9.2.
In paragraph 19: “
I
confirm that the full purchase price was paid in ful
l.”
9.3.
In paragraph 20: “
I
confirm that the occupational rent is paid up to date
.”
[10]
The first respondent’s answering
affidavit denies that the applicant paid either occupational rental
or the agreed purchase
price. The first respondent alleges, further,
that based on the applicant’s breach of contract he cancelled
the alienation
agreement by written notice on 19 March 2019.
[11]
The applicant argues that the first
respondent’s sole defence to the claim is that the alienation
agreement had been cancelled.
Her focus in reply is thus on
discrediting the purported cancellation as “
a
fabrication
”. In argument, the
applicant contended that the resultant dispute of fact was neither
real and genuine nor
bona fide
and
that I should reject the first respondent’s version.
[12]
In the alternative, it was argued that I
should refer the matter to oral evidence. There was some ambivalence
in the argument as
to the exact question to be referred to oral
evidence: i.e., the cancellation of the alienation agreement or the
payment of the
purchase price.
[13]
The
cancellation of the alienation agreement is somewhat of a red
herring. Whilst the lawful cancellation of the agreement certainly
would prevent specific performance thereof, the applicant’s
cause of action is only complete upon payment of the purchase
price
in full. Proof of the fact of payment is thus crucial to the
applicant’s success.
[1]
[14]
Surprisingly given the first respondent’s
direct challenge, the applicant makes no attempt to adduce further
evidence to rebut
the first respondent’s denial that the
purchase price had been paid in full. Exceptions exist to the general
rule against
the amplification of a case in reply, if indeed the
applicant was taken by surprise by the denial of payment. The
applicant also
did not seek the supplementation of her founding
papers with detailed evidence of the payments she alleges to have
made.
[15]
Herein lies the applicant’s
fundamental difficulty.
[16]
In
motion proceedings, affidavits serve the dual purpose of encompassing
both pleadings and evidence. It is required of an applicant
to set
out the facts necessary to establish a
prima
facie
case
in the founding papers in as complete a way as the circumstances
demand.
[2]
[17]
Thus, if the present applicant’s
papers fail to set out as fully as the circumstances demand the facts
underpinning her cause
of action, more specifically payment of the
purchase price, then the applicant risks a finding that no
prima
facie
case is made out.
[18]
In
general, bald allegations of fact place an applicant at risk since
she will usually not be allowed to set out a more comprehensive
case
in reply.
[3]
As was evident from
the argument on behalf of the applicant, she was fully cognisant of
the requirement to make out a complete
case in the founding papers.
[19]
I have referred above to the allegations in
the founding papers relating to payment. They are plainly rather
bald, to say the least,
and more akin to allegations one expects in
particulars of claim than the comprehensive factual exposition
required in a founding
affidavit. It bears repetition that
establishing compliance with her payment obligations is vital to the
applicant’s case.
[20]
The founding affidavit makes it clear that
the matter is of some import to the applicant, as well it should be.
The purchase price
of R950,000.00 that is at stake is not a trivial
amount.
[21]
The payment arrangements for the balance of
the purchase price span 48 months and are in part conditional upon
inter alia
the
installation of a pre-paid electricity meter. The applicant should be
expected to have anticipated that considering the number
of
instalments and the period over which they were payable, a careful
exposition of the times, manner and amount paid would be
necessary;
even more so in the face of a pointed challenge to the bare averment
of payment.
[22]
From the answering affidavit, a wider
context appears. The parties between 2010 and 2015 concluded a series
of agreements for the
purchase of the property in question. Each of
these, according to the first respondent, failed due to non-payment
by the applicant.
[23]
Within
this context, the applicant ought reasonably to have applied herself
with far greater rigour and attention to detail to the
drafting of
her founding papers, specifically concerning her payment history.
[4]
[24]
I cannot conclude that the applicant’s
affidavits read as a whole make out a case that the applicant paid
the full purchase
price. That being the case, the matter cannot be
decided in the applicant’s favour on her papers. I stress that
this is no
final finding on the merits of the applicant’s
claim.
[25]
In
these circumstances, a referral of the question of payment to oral
evidence is inappropriate. The procedure of referring a dispute
to
oral evidence is not intended as a mechanism through which an
applicant can supplement an ambiguous or uncertain case or affidavits
that do not make out a cause of action.
[5]
[26]
In the above premises, I make the following
order:
The application is
dismissed with costs.
H
M VILJOEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 10 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 14 October 2022
Appearances:
Attorneys
for the applicant: JOUBERT SCHOLTZ INC
Counsel
for the applicant: ADV D DE KOCK
Attorneys
for the first respondent: SHUMANI F SILAMULELA ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the Respondent: MR S F SILAMULELA
[1]
Wolpert
v Steenkamp
1917
AD 493
[2]
SA
Football Association v Mangope
(2013)
34 ILJ 311 (LAC) at [9]
[3]
Enyuka
Prop Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Delport Van Den Berg Inc
2019 JDR 1043 (GP) at [32]
[4]
C.f.
Democratic
Alliance v Kouga Municipality and others
[2014]
1 All SA 281
(SCA) at [21]
[5]
Minister
of Land Affairs and Agriculture and others v D&F Wevell Trust
and others
2008
(2) SA 184
(SCA) at [58]
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