Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 879South Africa
HPROP (PTY) Ltd v Venn and Muller Incorporated (53599/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 879 (9 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 November 2022
Headnotes
judgment wherein the Applicant/Plaintiff seeks an order against the Respondent on the following terms:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## HPROP (PTY) Ltd v Venn and Muller Incorporated (53599/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 879 (9 November 2022)
HPROP (PTY) Ltd v Venn and Muller Incorporated (53599/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 879 (9 November 2022)
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sino date 9 November 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.: 53599/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.NO
09/11/2022
In
the matter between:
HPROP
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant/Plaintiff
and
VENN
AND MULLER INCORPORATED
Respondent/Defendant
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN ELECTRONICALLY BY CIRCULATION
TO
THE PARTIES AND/OR LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES BY EMAIL, AND
BY
UPLOADING ONTO CASELINES
Judgment
is deemed to be handed down at 10h00 on 09 November 2022
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
H CONSTANTINIDES AJ
1.
This is an application for summary judgment wherein the
Applicant/Plaintiff seeks
an order against the Respondent on the
following terms:
(a)
Payment of the amount R281 087,23;
(b)
Payment of interest on the aforesaid amount calculated at the
rate of
7% per annum, from date of demand until date of payment;
(c)
Costs of suit on the attorney and client scale.
(d)
Further and/or alternative relief.
2.
This application is opposed by the Respondent/Defendant.
3.
In the Particulars of Claim the cause of action is ostensibly based
on
a tacit Agreement of Lease allegedly concluded between the
Applicant and the Respondent on or about the 10
th
May
2019.
4.
The Plaintiff is claiming payment of outstanding rental, ancillary
charges
due, owing and payable by the Defendant in respect of the
premises.
5.
The Plaintiff in its Particulars of Claim sets out that Voorslag
Ontwikkelings
Korporasie (Pty) Limited(“VOK”) on or about
the 1
st
March 2018 and at Pretoria, duly represented by
I.S. Badenhorst, and who was previously the owner of the premises,
and the Defendant
Venn and Muller Partnership (“the
Partnership”) duly represented by Gert Johannes Cloete and
Joseph Murray Kotze, who
are both “Directors” of the
partnership, entered into a written Lease Agreement (“the
Lease”) in terms
of which VOK let the premises to the
partnership.
6.
It is was a material express,
alternatively
tacit,
further
alternatively
implied term of the lease that:
“
10.1
In terms of clause 3 of the lease, the lease would commence on 1
March
2018 and would terminate on 28 February 2021 (‘the
initial period’);
10.2
In terms of clause 4 of the lease, the monthly rental payable by
the
partnership which would escalate at 6% per annum, would be the
following:
10.2.1
rental:
R13 834,80;
10.2.2
operating costs: R5 920,20;
10.2.3
parking base:
R1 103,85
[1]
7.
According to the Applicant, on the 1
st
August 2018 the
partnership was terminated and ceased to exist. After the termination
date of the partnership, VOK represented
by I S Badenhorst and the
Defendant represented by Gert Johannes Cloete and/or Joseph Murray
Kotze entered into a Lease Agreement
in respect of the premises (“the
first tacit Agreement”).
8.
In terms of the alleged first tacit Agreement, after the termination
date
the partnership the Defendant continued to occupy and lease the
premises from VOK on the same terms and conditions as reflected
in
the Lease. VOK continued to invoice and charge the Defendant for its
occupation of the premises in accordance with the terms
and
conditions reflected in the lease.
9.
The Defendant made various payments of the monthly rentals and
ancillary
charges to VOK as per the terms and conditions reflected in
the Lease.
10.
On the 10
th
May 2019 the Plaintiff took transfer of the
premises and became the registered owner thereof and the Plaintiff
alleges that the
Plaintiff and the Defendant entered into a Tacit
Lease Agreement in respect of the premises (“the second tacit
agreement”).
11.
According to the Applicant, the circumstances in respect of the
second Tacit
Lease Agreement were as follows:
11.1. After the Plaintiff
became the registered owner of the premises, the Defendant continued
to occupy and lease the premises
from the Plaintiff on the same terms
and conditions as reflected in the Lease;
11.2. The Plaintiff
continued to invoice and charge the Defendant for its occupation of
the premises in accordance with the terms
and conditions reflected in
the Lease;
11.3.
The
Defendant made various payments of the monthly rentals and ancillary
charges to the Plaintiff after the Plaintiff became the
registered
owner of the premises as per the Terms and Conditions reflected in
the Lease.
[2]
12.
The Applicant states that subsequent to the initial period referred
to in the
Lease, the Defendant remained in occupation of the premises
and continued to lease the premises
on a month to month basis
on the same conditions and terms of the Second Tacit Agreement which
terms and conditions are reflected
in the Lease.
(Emphasis
added)
13.
The Plaintiff stated that the Defendant failed to pay rental, parking
rent,
electricity, water, effluent and operating costs due in terms
of the Lease and as at the 1
st
November 2021 was indebted
to the Plaintiff in the amount of R281 087.23 and attaches a
statement marked “
C”
reflecting the Defendant’s
alleged indebtedness to the Particulars of Claim.
14.
The Plaintiff alleges that the Statement which is annexed to the
Particulars
of Claim is incorrect in the following respects:
14.1.
The statement was addressed to the partnership and not the Defendant;
14.2.
The Plaintiff charged the Defendant a letter of demand fee in the
amount of R339.25 as well as storage rental
charges which totals
R6775.12.
15.
The Plaintiff submits that the aforesaid incorrect amounts have
already been
deducted from the amount of R288 201.60 which is
reflected in the statement.
THE
DEFENDANT’S POINTS IN LIMINE
16.
The Defendant has pleaded that this Court does not have jurisdiction
to entertain
this action for summary judgment proceedings due to the
fact that the alleged oral agreement was entered into in Pretoria and
the
Defendant’s place of business as well as his
domicile
is in Pretoria.
17.
The aforesaid objection is unsustainable due to the fact that the
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg has concurrent jurisdiction with the
Gauteng Division, Pretoria. This has been confirmed in the Government
Gazette
Notice dated the 15
th
January 2016 published in
GG39601. Therefore the aforesaid point
in limine
stands to
fail
18.
The second point
in limine
which the Defendant takes is the
fact that the Deponent to the Affidavit for Summary Judgment is not
able to swear positively to
the facts alleged in the Founding
Affidavit as there is no indication as to whether he was the
authorised representative of the
Plaintiff at the time that the
alleged tacit Agreement was concluded.
19.
Nicholas
Obel (“Obel”), the Deponent to the
Affidavit
in support of the Summary Judgment
[3]
Application states the
following:
“
1.
I am a major businessman and a Director of Big Bell Investments (Pty)
Ltd t/a Citynet (“Citynet”)
a private company …
carrying on business and having its registered address.. …
2.
Citynet are the managing agents of the premises situated at Unit
[....], [....] C [....] Avenue,
W [....] H [....], Pretoria (‘the
premises’). I am authorised to institute proceedings on behalf
of the plaintiff as
appears from the resolution annexed hereto marked
“SJ1”.”
20.
Obel has stated that he has in his possession and under his control
all the
Plaintiff’s records and other documents relevant to the
subject matter of the application and he has
access and insight
into those records and documentation on a continuous basis
.”
(emphasis added)
21.
The Defendant states that Obel cannot possibly swear positively to
the facts
alleged in the Founding Affidavit as the Applicant relies
on a tacit agreement, and Obel does not allege that he represented
the
Applicant when this Agreement was concluded or negotiated.
Furthermore, it is not clear whether Obel as Managing Agent managed
the Applicant when the Agreement was concluded.
22.
The Defendant’s aforesaid point in limine raises a valid
dispute due to
the Defendant’s plea that an oral agreement and
not a tacit agreement was concluded between the parties. There is no
indication
where Obel obtained “personal knowledge” of
the information relating to the three pleaded versions of the rental
agreements.
Therefore, it cannot be accurate that Obel has all the
information pertaining to the cause of action available to him when
he deposed
to the Affidavit in support of the Application for Summary
Judgment. Obel does not provide the court with material information
and/or facts to enable the court to ascertain how he has personal
knowledge to enable him to swear positively to the facts of this
matter in order to enable the court to ascertain whether he indeed
has such knowledge more particularly relating to the alleged
tacit
agreements and or leases which had been entered into previously and
there is no date as to when Obel was appointed as managing
agent for
the Applicant..
23.
The third objection which the Defendant has is that the nature of the
Plaintiff’s
claim is not susceptible to summary judgment as it
is not based on a liquid document or for a liquidated amount in money
as annexure
“
C
” is not accurate in many respects
which is admitted by the Plaintiff.
24.
The Defendant denies that a tacit agreement was concluded between the
parties
and submits that an oral Agreement was concluded in Pretoria
for a fixed rental.
25.
The Defendant denies the terms of the alleged tacit agreement. The
Applicant
has taken the point that the Respondent did not plead the
terms of the oral agreement. The aforesaid argument is countered by
the
Respondent stating that the Applicant had its legal remedies in
terms of Uniform Rule 23(1), and by serving a Notice of Exception
if
they deem this necessary.
26.
The
Respondent is denying that it is indebted to the Applicant.
[4]
27.
The fact that the Plaintiff on its own accord admits that the
statement is incorrect
and attempts to rectify it in the particulars
of claim, application for summary judgment and the further heads of
argument thereby
renders the speedy ascertainment of a liquidated
amount questionable.
28.
The Defendant alerted the Court to the fact that there was a waiver
clause in
the written Lease Agreement between VOK and Venn and Muller
Partnership dated the 1
st
March 2018. which stipulates as
follows:
“
20. Waiver or
concession
Any waiver or
concession that may be made by the LESSOR to the LESSEE will not
prejudice the rights of the LESSOR in terms of this
lease agreement.
Especially the acceptance of rental or a reduced amount thereof will
not be regarded as a waiver of the LESSOR
of his rights in terms of
this lease agreement. This lease agreement represents the total
agreement between the parties and no
guarantees, promises, terms or
amendments of any nature whatsoever will be binding upon the LESSOR,
unless in writing and signed
by both parties thereto”.
[5]
29.
Clause 35(2) states:
“
No extensions
of time, or waiver, or relaxation of any of the provisions or terms
of this lease agreement shall operate as an estoppels
against any
party in respect of such party’s rights hereunder, nor shall it
operate so as to preclude such a party from thereafter
exercising its
rights strictly in accordance with this lease agreement.”
[6]
30.
The Applicant’s Counsel in argument referred the Court to
Clause 22 of
the Written Lease Agreement which related to the
transfer of shares and change in partnership wherein the Lessee
required the Lessor’s
written permission to change to an
incorporated company and in the event of change of partnerships, the
partners remained jointly
and severally liable in terms of the
Agreement to the Lessor.
31.
The Respondent’s Counsel countered the aforesaid by stating
that no formalities
in clause 22 had been triggered, nor was the
aforesaid pleaded by the Applicant.
32.
The Applicant objected to the fact that the Respondent’s
Counsel pointed
out the waiver clause and that the formalities of
clause 22 of the Written Agreement relating to transfer of shares and
change
of partnership and the new entity had not been complied with.
The Applicant argued that the aforesaid defence by the Respondent
should have been raised in its Plea and in the Affidavit Opposing
Summary Judgment to enable the Applicant to deal with same fully
in
the Summary Judgment application.
33.
Due to the aforesaid, the Court afforded the parties on the request
of the Applicant’s
Counsel, an opportunity to file
Supplementary Heads of Argument.
34.
The Applicant in the further heads of argument stated that, if the
Court finds
that the charges that were placed in issue by the
Respondent relating to the further tacit terms of the Agreement do
not include
VAT, operating costs and parking bay rentals, and that if
the Respondent is afforded the protection of clause 20 of the Lease
which
requires the aforesaid charges to be in writing and signed by
the parties, then the Applicant once again alters the amount claimed
and states that the Court can deduct the water and effluent charges
if the Court finds that these are not due, which is a deduction
of
R14 032.62 from the R281 087.23 and grant judgment in the
amount of R267 054.61.
35.
In paragraph 4.3 of the Amended Particulars of Claim it is alleged
that it was
a tacit term of the Lease that the Partnership would be
liable for VAT on rental, operating costs and rental for parking bay
rental
and effluent and water consumption charges in respect of the
premises.
36.
Clause 20 of the Lease states that the Lease Agreement represents the
total
agreement between the parties and no guarantees, promises,
terms or amendments of any nature whatsoever will be binding upon the
Lessor unless in writing and signed by both parties.
37.
The Respondent’s supplementary Heads of Argument states :
“
3.3
It is therefore clear that the alleged further tacit term of the
agreement could not have
been valid and binding, and Applicant’s
version of the terms of the written agreement is disputable. This is
especially important
as it is Applicant’s case that exactly the
same terms applied in the alleged second tacit agreement.”
[7]
38.
The Applicant’s supplementary Heads of Argument counters the
tacit relocation
of the written Lease Agreement and states that:
“
5.
The parties
tacitly renewed the lease agreement on a month- to month basis on the
same terms as the written lease. This is by no
means a new line of
argument, which is supposedly doomed to fail, as suggested in the
Respondent’s supplementary Heads of
Argument. The Respondent
has not had proper regard to the Particulars of Claim, as amended in
which the Applicant has specifically
pleaded the renewal of the lease
on a month to month basis at paragraph 10 and 11 of the Particulars
of Claim which reads of follows:
’
10.
The circumstances in respect of which the second tacit lease
agreement came into existence are as follows:
10.1
After the Plaintiff became the registered owner of the premises
the
Defendant continued to occupy and lease the premises from the
Plaintiff
on the same terms and conditions as reflected in the
lease.
10.2
The Plaintiff continued to invoice and charge the Defendant for
its
occupation of the premises as per the terms and conditions of the
lease.
10.3
The Defendant made various payments of the monthly rentals and
ancillary charges to the Plaintiff after the Plaintiff became the
registered owner of the premises as per the terms and conditions
reflected in the lease.
11.
Subsequent to the initial period referred to in the lease, the
Defendant remained in occupation of the premises
and continued to
lease the premises on a
month to month basis, and on the same
terms and conditions as a second tacit agreement which terms and
conditions are reflected
in the lease.”
39.
The Applicant’s Counsel submits in her supplementary Heads of
Argument
that after termination of the partnership, VOK and the
Respondent entered into a tacit agreement to occupy the premises on
the
same terms and conditions as reflected in the written lease. This
is allegedly supported by the conduct of the parties as pleaded
in
the Particulars of Claim and the alleged subsequent payments made by
the Respondent in respect of the Lease in the Debtor/Tenant
Transaction Statement.
THE
LAW
40.
Navsa JA in
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stock Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
:
[8]
”
“
[32] The
rationale for summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The
procedure is not intended to deprive a defendant with
a triable issue
or sustainable defence of her/his day in court. After almost a
century of successful application in our courts,
summary judgment
proceedings can hardly continue to be described as extraordinary. Our
courts, both of the first instance and at
appellate level, have
during that time rightly been trusted to ensure that a defendant with
a triable issue is not shut out. In
the Maharaj case at 425G-426E,
Corbett JA was keen to ensure, first, an examination of whether there
has been sufficient disclosure
by a defendant of the nature and
grounds of his defence and the facts upon which it is founded. The
second consideration is that
the defence so disclosed must be both
bona fide and good in law. A court which is satisfied that this
threshold has been crossed
is then bound to refuse summary judgment.
Corbett JA also warned against requiring of a defendant the precision
apposite to pleadings.
However, the learned judge was equally astute
to ensure that recalcitrant debtors pay what is due to a creditor.
[33]
Having regard to its purpose and its proper application, summary
judgment proceedings only hold terrors and are
‘drastic’
for a defendant who has no defence. Perhaps the time has come to
discard these labels and to concentrate
rather on the proper
application of the rule, as set out with customary clarity and
elegance by Corbett J in the Maharaj cast at
425G-426E.
The purpose of a
summary judgment application is to allow the court to summarily
dispense with actions that ought not to proceed
to trial because they
do not raise a genuine triable issue, thereby conserving scarce
judicial resources and improving access to
justice. Once an
application for summary judgment is brought, the applicant obtains a
substantive right for that application to
be heard, and, bearing in
mind the purpose of summary judgment, that hearing should be as soon
as possible. That right is protected
under section 34 of the
Constitution.”
CONCLUSION:
41.
The Court
is satisfied that one cannot readily ascertain the amount that is
allegedly due and owing by the Respondent to the Applicant.
Due to
the fact that there are conflicting versions relating to the rental
amount and the fact that there are errors in the calculations
of the
amounts that the Applicant claims. Furthermore, the Plaintiff was
under a duty to prove unequivocal conduct that establishes
on a
balance of probabilities that the parties intended to, and did in
fact contract on the terms alleged. It must be proved that
there was
agreement.
[9]
The Plaintiff has
not made out a proper case for the relief it seeks in the summary
judgment application.
42.
The Respondent has placed both the form of the Lease Agreement and
its terms
into dispute and the Respondent claims that
an oral
agreement
came into being
which is supported by a letter
from the Applicant’s Attorneys dated the 20
th
May 2021 which is annexure
“
D”
to the Answering Affidavit which refers to an “oral
agreement” and not a tacit agreement between the Lessor and the
Defendant.
(Emphasis added)
43.
The disputes relating to amounts allegedly due and owing by the
Respondent and
the form and terms of the alleged tacit and/or oral
agreements that were subsequently concluded between the parties are
triable
issues that would require to be fully ventilated in a trial
court between the parties.
The
following order is made :
1.
The application for summary judgment is refused;
2.
Leave to defend is granted to the Defendant on the Plaintiff’s
claim for
payment of the sum of R281 087,23; including the
payment of interest thereon;
3.
Costs are to be costs in the cause.
H
CONSTANTINIDES A J
Acting
Judge of High Court
Gauteng
Division
JOHANNESBURG
Matter
heard on: 27 October 2022
Judgment
handed down on: 9 November 2022
Joshua
Apfel Attorneys
Attorneys
for the Applicant
eMail:
joshua@jaattorneys.biz
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv.
V. Vergano
Du
Preez (Morne) Attorneys
Attorneys
for the Respondent
eMail:
morne@dupresezattorneys.co.za
Counsel
for the Respondent
Advocate
B Bergenthuin
[1]
010 –
5 CaseLines
Para.
10 to 10.3 of the Application for Summary Judgment.
[2]
Paragraphs 13.1 to 15.3 of the Affidavit for Summary Judgment –
010-7
CaseLines
[3]
Affidavit in support of Summary Judgment, paragraphs 1 and 2, page
010-3 CaseLines.
[4]
The Rules of Summary Judgment
[5]
015-52 Caselines
[6]
015-58
[7]
Respondent’s Supplementary Heads of Argument.
[8]
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) at par [32] and [33].
[9]
Standard Bank of SA Ltd v ocean Commodities Inc
1983 (1) SA 276
(A)
at 292
Amlers
precedents of pleadings pp. 94-95[ 6
th
edition]
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