Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 923South Africa
Crystal Ball Properties 27 (PTY) Ltd and Another v Mbalati N.O and Others (3406/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 923 (20 November 2022)
Headnotes
the respondents’ grounds of appeal are as follows: a) The court erred in finding that no oral lease had been concluded between the fourth respondent and Ms Rossen, alleged to be acting on behalf the applicants. It was contended in this regard that there was a dispute of fact that could not be resolved in motion proceedings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Crystal Ball Properties 27 (PTY) Ltd and Another v Mbalati N.O and Others (3406/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 923 (20 November 2022)
Crystal Ball Properties 27 (PTY) Ltd and Another v Mbalati N.O and Others (3406/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 923 (20 November 2022)
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sino date 20 November 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 3406/2022
In
the matter between:
CRYSTAL
BALL PROPERTIES 27 (PTY)
LTD First
Applicant
(Reg
No. 2005/004960/07)
CRYSTAL
BALL PROPERTIES 58 (PTY)
LTD Second
Applicant
(Reg
No. 2006/010620/07)
and
DZUNISANI
ALDWORTH MBALATI N.O. First
Respondent
LINDOKUHLE
CHARLENE MBALATI N.O. Second
Respondent
KEVIN
KRISHENPAUL SARABJIET
N.O. Third
Respondent
DZUNISANI
ALDWORTH
MBALATI Fourth
Respondent
THE UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF
39
KILLARNEY ROAD,
SANDHURST Fifth
Respondent
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY Sixth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
- APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
1)
The first, second, fourth and fifth respondent
(“the respondents”) apply for leave to appeal against the
judgment and
order of this court given on 20 November 2022 evicting
them from a residential property.
2)
The first and second respondent are cited in their
capacity as trustees of the Genesis trust (“Genesis”).
The fourth
respondent is also cited in his personal capacity. He,
together with his wife (the second respondent) and their two
children, reside
in the immovable property owned by the applicants
situated at 39 Killarney Road, Sandhurst (“the property”).
The third
respondent, an independent trustee of Genesis, has since
resigned.
3)
On 12 January 2021 the parties concluded an
agreement (in terms of an offer to purchase) whereby Genesis
purchased the property
from the applicants for an amount of R35
million. The respondents took occupation of the property on 20
January 2021. Genesis paid
the initial amounts required as deposit
for the purchase. It however, failed to pay the balance of the
purchase price of R32 million.
On 25 November 2021 the applicants
cancelled the agreement of sale and demanded the respondents vacate
the property. These demands
were not heeded and on 17 February 2022
the applicants brought an application to evict the respondents from
the property.
The rest of the facts appear from the judgment I
handed down on 20 November 2022 in which I granted the eviction.
4)
In summary the respondents’ grounds of
appeal are as follows:
a)
The court erred in finding that no oral lease had
been concluded between the fourth respondent and Ms Rossen, alleged
to be acting
on behalf the applicants. It was contended in this
regard that there was a dispute of fact that could not be resolved in
motion
proceedings.
b)
The court erred in finding that even if an oral
lease had been established, the applicants had cancelled such lease
on notice to
the respondents and therefore, that the respondents
could not rely on the alleged lease to remain in occupation of the
property.
c)
The respondents contend, based on the alleged oral
lease, that they were not unlawful occupiers at the time eviction
proceedings
were instituted. They accordingly contend that the
application under the PIE Act 19 of 1998 was irregular and
incompetent.
d)
The
court erred in not upholding the respondents’ interpretation of
the Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981 (“the Act”),
that
section 15(1) applied to all deeds of alienation contemplated in the
Act, not merely to contracts in terms of which land was
sold on
installment.
[1]
e)
The court erred in finding that Genesis had not
established an enrichment lien in respect of the repairs, renovations
and alterations
that it had carried out to the property after taking
occupation in January 2021.
f)
The court erred in refusing to admit a
supplementary affidavit filed by the respondents to support Genesis’
enrichment claim.
ALLEGED
ORAL LEASE
5)
It is correct that in my judgment I did not deal
in any detail with the grounds on which I rejected the allegation
that an oral
lease had been concluded. However, I made a definitive
finding that the alleged oral lease did not raise a real, genuine or
bona fide
dispute
of fact. In coming to this finding, I considered the following
remarks of Corbett JA in
Plascon Evans
Paint Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) to be apposite:
The
power of the Court to give such final relief on the papers before it
is, however, not confined to such a situation.
[2]
In
certain instances the denial by respondent of a fact alleged by the
applicant may not be such as to raise a real, genuine or
bona fide
dispute of fact
.
[emphasis added]
6)
I did not reject the existence of an oral lease on
the basis of the probabilities alone. The existence of the alleged
oral lease
was totally inconsistent with the facts, even those
advanced by the respondents. Conversely, the applicants’ denial
that
an oral lease had been concluded was consistent with all the
facts presented on the papers.
7)
The respondents’ reliance on the message of
Rossen stating “
February rent is
due Tuesday but we won’t invoice him as we don’t have an
agreement so he needs to pay that on time”,
was disingenuous. As pointed out by the applicants, this
payment related to occupational rent that was provided for
in the
offer to purchase. The respondents continued to pay occupational rent
after the agreement of sale had been cancelled and
after they had
been put on terms to vacate the property. The reference to “
February
rent”
was clearly a reference to
the occupational rent. The above statement “
we
don’t have an agreement”
and its implications are clear.
8)
The applicants produced contemporaneous WhatsApp
communications between Ms Rossen and the applicants’
representatives, supporting
their contention that the meeting that
had taken place on 30 January 2022 with the fourth respondent had
been in connection with
a potential new offer for the property. No
mention was made in these communications of the conclusion of any
lease whatsoever.
9)
Tellingly, in correspondence emanating from the
respondents’ attorneys soon after the oral lease was alleged to
have been
concluded, no mention was made of the alleged lease. On 2
March 2022, the respondents’ attorneys addressed a letter to
the
applicants’ attorneys in which they state:
7
Our clients vehemently deny that our clients are allegedly occupying
your
clients’ properties illegally. You and your clients are
again informed, for the umpteenth time that our clients are inter
alia exercising liens over the properties due to the modifications
and improvements made to the properties by our clients. Our
clients
have also been paying the rental and utilities in respect of the
properties timeously.
10)
Similarly, on 11 Feb 2022 the respondents’
attorneys stated in a letter to the applicants’ attorney:
6
We deny that our client is in unlawful occupation of the properties.
We
reaffirm our client’s lien over the properties. We further
confirm that your offices continue to hold in trust the sum of
R 2
500 000.00 in respect of the deposit, and furthermore confirm that
you have released the sum of R 500 000.00 to your clients
already,
despite the offer to purchase agreement being cancelled some time
ago.
11)
The applicants refer in paragraph 55 of their
replying affidavit to the fact that there had been discussions
between the parties’
attorneys on 31 January 2022 concerning
the revival of the sale, and that this had been followed up by a
letter from the respondents’
attorneys on 3 February 2022. The
applicants alleged that no mention was made in this letter of an oral
lease having been concluded
on 30 January. The respondents’
attorneys were invited to disclose the above letter (presumed to be
without prejudice), to
rebut this allegation. However, they did not
do so. It can therefore be inferred that no mention was made of the
alleged oral lease
in this letter.
12)
It is inconceivable, had an oral lease in fact
been concluded, that the respondents’ attorneys would not have
asserted the
existence of the lease in their letters addressed to the
applicants’ attorneys. Their vigorous protestations regarding
the
respondents’ right to remain in occupation of the property
allege an enrichment lien only. The silence in relation to the
alleged oral lease, together with all the other surrounding evidence,
leads to the inescapable conclusion that no such lease was
ever
concluded.
13)
It
was common cause that the alleged conclusion of an oral lease was
only raised for the first time by the respondents’ in
their
answering affidavit filed on 18 March 2022. Accordingly, when in
February 2022, the applicants instituted proceedings to
evict the
respondents, they did not and could not have foreseen or anticipated
an allegation that an oral lease had been concluded.
The applicants
were within their rights to deal with this issue in reply. Indeed, it
was incumbent on them to do so. The rule that
a party cannot
supplement his or her case in reply is not cast in stone.
[3]
14)
In my view, the applicants did not introduce a new
cause of action in reply. Their case, and the steps they took to
evict the respondents
after having cancelled the sale, remained
constant throughout. Having been confronted for the first time in the
respondents’
answering affidavit with an allegation that a
monthly oral lease had been concluded, the applicants, in my view,
were entitled
to adopt the stance that in any event, they would
cancel such lease.
15)
On
general principles a party is entitled to plead in the alternative,
even where claims are inconsistent.
[4]
The position taken by the applicants did not cause prejudice or
occasion any embarrassment to the respondents and the applicants
cannot be faulted for their cancellation of the alleged lease in the
alternative. The respondents’ submission that
the
applicants’ should have withdrawn their eviction application,
cancelled the oral lease, and then re-instituted fresh
proceedings to
evict the respondents, is nothing short of perverse.
16)
It was conceded in argument of the matter, that
the fourth respondent and his family could not rely on Genesis’
alleged enrichment
lien to claim beneficial use and enjoyment of the
property. The only right to occupy relied upon by them, flowed from
the alleged
oral lease. In my view, there is no reasonable
possibility that another court would uphold the existence of the
alleged lease.
Accordingly, the fourth and fifth respondents’
defence cannot succeed and their application for leave to appeal
against their
eviction must fail.
ALLEGED
ENRICHMENT LIEN
17)
Genesis conceded both in argument of the main
application and the application for leave to appeal, that in light of
the contractual
arrangements between the parties, the existence of
its alleged enrichment lien could only be substantiated if the
respondents’
interpretation of section 15(1) of the Act were
upheld.
18)
In this regard, the respondents contend that the
words “an agreement” in section 15(1) of the Act, in the
context in
which it is used, is intended to apply to all deeds of
alienation for the sale of land, and not merely contracts for the
sale of
land on installments. This intention, the respondents argue,
is to be gleaned from the fact that section 15(1) uses the word “an
agreement” in place of the word “a contract”.
19)
The respondents’ argument proceeds on the
basis that section 15(1)(b) prohibits the enforcement of a
stipulation in a deed
of alienation whereby a party forfeits a claim
for necessary expenditure and improvements to a purchased property.
They attempted
to persuade the court that the stipulations in clause
7.4 of the offer to purchase namely, that Genesis was not entitled to
make
alternations and additions and would vacate the property if the
agreement is terminated, amounted to forfeiture clauses and
therefore,
were unenforceable.
20)
The respondents’ argument in relation to
section 15(1) is unsustainable. It ignores the context in which the
words sought
to be interpreted, are used. Furthermore, it ignores the
definitions attributed to the terms used in section 1 of the Act. It
also
ignores the distinct Chapters into which the Act is divided and
their subject matter. These aspects have been fully dealt with my
judgment and it is not necessary to repeat what I have said there. In
my view, there is no reasonable prospect that another court
would
uphold the interpretation contended for by the respondents.
21)
A further glaring deficiency in the respondents’
argument in relation to section 15(1)(b) is that clause 7.4 of the
offer
to purchase does not contain a forfeiture clause as envisaged
in this subsection. The undertakings in clause 7.4, relied upon by
the applicants are the following:
a)
No tenancy shall be created by the Trust taking
occupation prior to transfer and the Trust shall immediately vacate
the property
upon termination or cancellation of the agreement.
b)
The Purchaser shall not be entitled to make any
alterations or additions to the Property prior to Transfer.
22)
These undertakings remain unaffected by section
15(1)(b), even if the interpretation contended for by the respondents
were to be
accepted. However, as I held, the interpretation cannot be
supported.
23)
In argument of the eviction application, the
applicants referred the court to
De
Aguiar v Real People Housing (Pty) Ltd
2011 (1) SA 16
(SCA)
.
The decision is apposite. In that case the appellant (being a lessee)
had agreed to purchase the property in which he resided
and had
undertaken, in similar terms to this matter, to vacate the said
property should he be unable to pay or secure the purchase
price by
an agreed date.
24)
Subsequently, on appeal, the appellant sought to
raise an enrichment lien as a defence to an application to evict him.
It was held
that the appellant’s purported reliance on an
enrichment lien was incompatible with his undertaking to vacate the
property
should be unable to pay the purchase price. The court also
held that no amount of further evidence relating to improvements
could
avoid the consequences of the appellant’s undertaking or
affect the outcome of the application.
25)
The case for the applicants
in
casu
is stronger than in
De
Aguiar.
Side by side with the
undertaking to vacate the property upon termination or cancellation
of the sale, Genesis undertook not to
make any alterations or
additions to the property prior to transfer. In terms of an
exchange of correspondence soon after
the respondents took
occupation, the applicants consented to Genesis making certain
specified alterations and repairs. However,
Genesis expressly agreed
that these would be at its own expense and that in respect of some of
the alterations, it would have to
reinstate the property if the sale
did not go though. This adds considerable force to the argument that
the respondents’
right to an enrichment lien was not permitted
in terms of the parties’ agreement.
De
Aguiar’s
case also reinforces the
basis of my decision to disallow the respondents’ further
affidavit, tendered at a very late stage,
containing evidence
relating to the alleged improvements to the property.
26)
The applicants urged me to dismiss the application
for leave to appeal and to order the respondents to pay the costs on
an attorney
and client scale. I was referred to clause 15.3 of offer
to purchase where the following is provided:
15.3
Should a party choose to enforce rights by way of legal proceedings
then the parties agree that any costs
awarded will be recoverable on
the scale as between attorney and own client unless the Court
specifically determines that such
scale shall not apply. ln which
event the cost will be recoverable in accordance with the scale of
costs so ordered.
27)
I held in the eviction application that the above
clause did not compel the court to award costs on a higher scale or
override its
discretion in relation to costs. However, it shows that
the parties anticipated that in litigation between them, a court
should
incline towards an award of costs on a higher scale, unless it
was found that the circumstances do not warrant such an order. The
applicants have been deprived of their ability for over a year to
exercise their rights of ownership over their very valuable
residential property. The sale was cancelled due to the failure of
Genesis to pay the purchase price. The applicants run a substantial
risk of not being able to recover compensation from the respondents
for damages they claim they are suffering arising from inappropriate
alterations alleged to have been made by the respondents and from
their inability to regain possession of their property. They
facing
ongoing and mounting prejudice caused by the refusal of the
respondents to vacate. In the circumstances, I am of the view
that
the grant of costs against the respondents on an attorney and client
scale is justified.
28)
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1
The first, second, fourth and fifth respondents application for leave
to
appeal is dismissed.
2
The first, second, fourth and fifth respondents are ordered to pay
the costs
of the application on an attorney and client scale, such
costs to include the costs of two counsel.
________________________
JUDGE
S KUNY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of application for leave to appeal: 5 December 2022
Date
of judgment: 7 December 2022
Applicants’
counsel
:
Adv PT Rood SC
rood@group621.co.za
Adv
E Kromhout, kromhout@law.co.za;
Instructed
by Lowndes Dlamini Inc, allan@lowndes.co.za;
allanpa@lowndes.co.za; greg@lowndes.co.za
First,
Second, Fourth and Fifth Respondents’ counsel
:
Adv
A Bester SC
andybester@andybester.co.za
Adv
R Bosman rossbosman@counsel.co.za
Instructed
by Fairbridges Wertheim Becker. graham.h@fwblaw.co.za
[1]
In
section 1 of the Act, ‘contract’
(a)
means a deed of alienation under which land is sold against payment
by the purchaser
to, or to any person on behalf of, the seller of an
amount of money in more than two instalments over a period exceeding
one
year 2;
(b)
includes any agreement or agreements which together have the same
import, whatever
form the agreement or agreements may take;
[2]
Plascon Evans
Paint Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd (supra) at page 635
“
...
a final order .......... may be granted if those facts averred in
the applicant’s affidavits which have been admitted
by the
respondent, together with the facts alleged by the respondent,
justify such an order”
[3]
Body
Corporate, Shaftesbury Sectional Title Scheme v Rippert’s
Estate and Others 2003 (5) SA 1 (C)
[4]
Jardin
v Agrela
1952 (1) SA 256
(T), Barclays National Bank Ltd v Pretorius
1978 (3) SA 885
(O), p887
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