Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 478South Africa
Kerja (Pty) Ltd v Milga Properties (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (2024-049477) [2025] ZAGPPHC 478 (16 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kerja (Pty) Ltd v Milga Properties (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (2024-049477) [2025] ZAGPPHC 478 (16 May 2025)
Kerja (Pty) Ltd v Milga Properties (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (2024-049477) [2025] ZAGPPHC 478 (16 May 2025)
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sino date 16 May 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
2024-049477
In the matter between:
KERJA
(PTY) LTD
Applicant / Respondent
a
quo
and
MILGA
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Respondent / Applicant
a
quo
JUDGMENT (Leave to
Appeal)
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
The applicant seeks leave to appeal against
the judgment and order delivered on 25 March 2025 in terms of which I
ordered that Kerja
(Pty) Ltd (
Kerja
)
be evicted from commercial property owned by Milga Properties (Pty)
Ltd (
Milga
).
The order was, amongst others, premised on the valid cancellation by
Milga of a written lease in terms of which Kerja had occupied
the
property.
2.
The
judgment found that Kerja was not entitled to exercise an option to
purchase
[1]
the leased property,
as sought in Kerja’s counter application, in view of Kerja’s
admitted failure to meet its financial
commitments in terms of the
lease.
3.
In terms of the judgment, Milga’s
eviction application succeeded whilst Kerja’s
counter-application was dismissed with
costs.
4.
Milga opposed the application for leave to
appeal.
5.
As appears from the judgment, it was common
cause between the parties that Kerja had fallen into arrears with its
payment obligations
under the lease. As the breach had not been
rectified by Kerja, Milga canelled the lease agreement, entitling it
to repossess its
property.
6.
Kerja has not sought to appeal the finding
in the judgment that the failure by Kerja to comply with its payment
obligations under
the lease disentitled it to exercise the
conditional pre-emptive right to purchase the property. The order
dismissing the counter-application
is also not sought to be appealed
against.
7.
The
grounds upon which leave to appeal is sought are that I erred:
[2]
(i)
in finding
that the lease had been validly cancelled, in that I failed to
consider that ‘
a
second settlement agreement, although with the proviso to determine
the outstanding amount’
was
to be ‘
seen
as a counter- offer to the written agreement,
’
and in failing to give effect to s 48 of the Consumer Protection Act;
(ii)
in finding that Kerja had failed to
meet its obligations without considering the ‘copious amounts’
it had spent on improvements
it effected to the property, with the
result that Milga was unduly enriched at the expense of Kerja, and
further, without considering
that Kerja did not
owe the monies as claimed by Milga ‘
based
on the property improvements, applying the set-off principle
’;
(iii)
in entertaining the eviction
application in circumstances where an interested party had not been
joined, which interested party
had launched a joinder application
after judgment was reserved but before judgment was delivered;
(iv)
By failing to reflect a date of
eviction in the order and in not providing a reasonable time-frame
for Kerja to vacate the premises.
8.
I provided full and detailed reasons for
the orders I made in the judgment, which I abide by.
9.
I
intend to deal only with certain novel points raised in the
application for leave to appeal. As to the first ground listed above,
the provisions of the Consumer Protection Act were not relied on by
Kerja in the eviction application and also did not feature
in any of
the papers that served before court, such as to enable the point to
be canvassed fully in the affidavits.
[3]
This ground was in any event not pursued in oral argument at the
hearing of this application. The judgment dealt fully with the
settlement agreement concluded between the parties, including its
breach and cancellation. No second settlement agreement came
into
being for reasons provided in the judgment.
10.
As to the second ground listed above, as
indicated in the judgment, Kerja did not pursue a claim for
improvements in the matter,
nor was a case of undue enrichment
advanced by it
a quo.
Kerja admitted being in arrears with payment in its answering
affidavit. A Judgment had also been obtained against it in the
Magistrates
Court on account of such arrears, which judgment was duly
executed upon by Milga.
11.
As to the third ground listed above, the
point of non-joinder was considered in the judgment and dismissed for
reasons given therein.
The issue of joinder having already been
finally adjudicated upon, it could not be reconsidered by means of a
further joinder
application.
12.
As
to the fourth ground listed above, as indicated in the judgment, the
lease and settlement agreements were respectively cancelled
on 17
April 2024 and 8 January 2024.
[4]
Kerja’s occupation became unlawful pursuant to the
cancellation, notwithstanding which, it remained in occupation of the
premises. The eviction application was launched on 6 May 2024.
Judgment was delivered on 25 March 2025, when an order was granted
obliging Kerja to immediately vacate the premises. Kerja had had an
entire year to make arrangements to vacate the premises or
to have
contingent plans in place in the event that its opposition to the
eviction application was not upheld. Kerja has remained
in occupation
pursuant to its application for leave to appeal. It filed a ‘Notice
of Appeal’ on 28 March 2025, despite
the fact that it had not
yet been granted leave to appeal. The application for leave to appeal
was heard in May 2025.
13.
At
the hearing of the matter, further novel points were raised in
argument from the bar, which were not contained in the ‘Notice
of Appeal’ and which were also not covered by the pleadings in
the eviction application. The respondent, Milga, did not contend
for
any unfairness to it if the court were to consider same.
[5]
14.
Further novel points raised in oral
argument pertain to the import of clause 37 of the lease and Milga’s
own non-compliance
with the lease in not providing a property that
was fit for purpose; and reliance on the integration rule in support
of the contention
that the intentions of the parties, which were not
contained in the written lease, ought to have been considered by the
court.
15.
I terms of Clause 37 of the lease:
“
T
he
parties acknowledge and agree that they have undertaken to each other
to do all such things, take all such steps and to procure
the doing
of all such things and the taking of all such steps as may be
necessary, incidental or conducive to the implementation
of the
provisions, terms, conditions and import of this lease"
16.
Clause 37 must
be
read in the light of the whole agreement, including clauses 33 and 24
thereof. In terms of clause 33 (i):
“
The
Lessor does not warrant, and this lease is not made on the basis: i.
that the leased Property is or will at any time be fit
for the use
set out in clause 9 of the lease or for any other purpose whatsoever"
In
terms of clause 24:
"The
Lessee shall have no claim any damages, remission of rent or
otherwise, against the Lessor, for any failure of or interruption
in
the supply of water, gas, electricity or other amenities provided to
the leased Property, whether such interruption arises from
the
negligence of the Lessor, the Lessor's servants, viz. major, casus
fortuitus, or any other cause whatsoever."
17.
Kerja
contended that clause 37 was a ‘pivotal’ clause so much
so, that clause 37 ‘overrides’ other clauses,
such as
clause 20,
[6]
as well as the
‘unilateral termination by Milga of the lease’ under
clause 27 of the lease agreement. That the clause
has such overriding
effect, is certainly a novel proposition for which no authority was
provided and which, in my view, has no
cognizable foundation in law.
Issues that Kerja had experienced with electricity metres and a lack
of electricity supply and certain
municipal accounts, all pointed, so
it was contended, to Milga’s non-compliance with clause 37.
Therefore, so it was further
contended, Kerja was within its rights
to withhold payments under the lease for as long as Milga did not
perform. Suffice it to
say that none of these contentions hold merit
in the light of the provisions of clauses 33 and 24 of the lease.
18.
In
Johnson
v Leal
1980(3) SA 927 (AD) at 943 B-C, the integration rule was explained as
follows:
"Dealing
first with the integration rule, it is clear to me that the aim and
effect of this rule is to prevent a party to a
contract which has
been integrated into a single and complete written memorial from
seeking to contradict, add to or modify the
writing by reference to
extrinsic evidence and in that way to redefine the terms of the
contract."
19.
The integration rule is of no assistance to
Kerja. Clause 36 of the lease expressly provided that “
no
alteration, variation, amendment or purported consensual cancellation
of this lease or any addition thereto or deletion therefrom
shall be
of any force or effect unless reduced to writing and signed by or on
behalf of the parties hereto.”
20.
In
terms of
section 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
,
leave to appeal may only be given where the judge concerned is of the
opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of success;
or in terms of
s 17(1)(a)(ii)
, where there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard, including conflicting
judgments on the matter under
consideration. As was made plain in
In
Kruger
v S,
[7]
in
order to meet the test for the grant of leave to appeal, ‘
more
is required than the mere ‘possibility’ that another
court might arrive at a different conclusion.’
Quoting
from
S
v Smith
,
[8]
the court went on to state that it is not enough that the case is
arguable on appeal or not hopeless, instead the appeal must have
‘
a
realistic chance of succeeding.’
21.
Having
regard to the aforegoing, and having dispassionately considered my
judgment, I remain unconvinced that Kerja has met the
required
threshold for being granted leave to appeal. In my view, none of the
grounds listed in the ‘notice of appeal’
or argued from
the bar enjoy any reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
[9]
No submissions were made in relation to
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Act and no compelling reasons were either advances for allowing an
appeal.
22.
The general rule is that costs follow the
result. I see no reason to depart therefrom.
23.
Accordingly, the following order is
granted:
ORDER
1.
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
AVRILLE MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
9 May 2025
Judgment
delivered
16 May 2025
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be have been at
10h00 on 16 May 2025.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Applicant(Kerja):
Adv
L. Marx (Trust Account Advocate)
together
with Adv GA Ferris
Counsel
for Respondent (Milga):
Adv
M Joubert
Instructed
by:
Ronel
Hill Attorneys
[1]
The
option to purchase encompassed a conditional pre-emptive right and
was contained in clause 2 of the lease.
[2]
Some
grounds were duplicated in the ‘Notice of Appeal’ filed
of record and as such, need not be considered separately.
[3]
See
Minister
of Safety & Security v Slabbert
(668/2008)
[2009]
ZASCA 163
(30 November 2009) at paras 11 & 12.
[4]
Per
annexures ‘TA19’ (cancellation of lease) and ‘TA17’
(cancellation of settlement agreement) to the
founding affidavit.
[5]
See
Moroka
v Premier of the Free State Province and Others
(295/20)
[2022] ZASCA 34
(31 March 2022) at paras 36-38.
[6]
In
terms of
clause
19
,
the lessee was not entitled to make any structural or other
alterations on the property without written authorisation by the
lessor. In terms of
clause
20
,
“in the event where the Lessor made alterations to, additions
to, or installations on the Property with the written authorisation
of the Lessor and not exercise his right to purchase the property at
the end lease or if the lease is legally terminated or cancelled
during the term thereof, such alterations to, additions to, or
installations on the Property shall at the time of the termination
of the agreement, become the property of the Lessor and the Lessee
shall not be entitled to any compensation in respect thereof."
[7]
2014
(1) SACR 647
(SCA) at paras 2-3.
[8]
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA) para 7.
[9]
As
per the test was set out in cases such as
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(724/2019)
[2121]ZASCA 31 (31 March 2021) at par 10 and
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Ongezwa Mkhitha & The Road Accident
Fund
[2016]
ZASCA 176
(25 November 20160 at paras 16-17.
In
Mkhitha
at
par 17, quoting from
S v Smith
,
par 7, the following was said: ‘
An
applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of
success on appeal.
A
mere possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is not
hopeless, is not enough.
There
must be a sound, rational basis
to
conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal
.’
(footnote omitted) (emphasis added)
.
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