Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 610South Africa
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (081761/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 610 (24 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (081761/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 610 (24 June 2025)
Sable Place Properties 106 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Visa Security Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (081761/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 610 (24 June 2025)
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sino date 24 June 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
081761-2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
SABLE
PLACE PROPERTIES 106 (PTY) LTD
1
st
Applicant
REDEFINE
PROPERTIES LTD
2
nd
Applicant
TADVEST
COMMERCIAL (PTY) LTD
3
rd
Applicant
and
VISA
SECURITY GROUP (PTY) LTD
1
st
Respondent
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
2
nd
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER
GRANTED ON 17 JUNE 2025
MINNAAR AJ:
Introduction:
[1]
On 17 June 2025, after having heard counsel on behalf of the
applicants and the first respondent, the following order
was made in
the urgent court:
1) That
non-compliance with the Rules of court with reference to time frames
and service is condoned and that the matter is
heard as urgent in
terms of Rule 6(12)(a).
2) That the first
respondent, and any other persons, entities or bodies, and employees,
as the case may be, acting through
the first respondent, is hereby
ordered to forthwith vacate the applicants’ property at
Hertford Office Park, 9[…]
B[…] Road, V[…] V[…],
Sandton, Gauteng.
3) That the second
respondent, and any other persons, entities or bodies, as the case
may be, acting through, or under the
second respondent, are hereby
restrained, and interdicted, from attending upon the applicants’
property at Hertford Office
Park, 9[…] B[…] Road, V[…]
V[…], Sandton, Gauteng, with the aim and sole, or other
purpose of:
a Demanding that
the applicants employ them as security service providers, at the
applicants’ property at Hertford
Office Park, 9[…] B[…]
Road, V[…] V[…], Sandton, Gauteng; and
b Frustrating, and
interfering with, the applicants’ business thereat; and
c Harassing and
intimidating tenants, employees and security service providers of the
applicants; and
d Interfering
with, harassing or intimidating the applicants’ managers,
and/or security service providers; and
e Without limiting
the generality of the aforesaid, prohibited from doing anything
whatsoever related to or in connection
with the harassment,
intimidation and assault of the applicant’s employees, its
security or other contractors, tenants and
security service provider
and preventing the applicants’ security and other contractors
from performing their daily duties
and functions.
4) That the second
respondent be and is hereby directed to assist the applicants by
accepting complaints from the applicants,
and pursuant thereto, and
removing any of the first respondent or its employees from the
applicants’ aforesaid property.
5) That the second
respondent be and is hereby further directed to assist the applicants
to consider and investigate the complaints
on the merits thereof, to
consider whether or not an arrest can and must be made in terms of
the court order regarding the conduct
of the first respondent, or any
other persons, entities or bodies at the applicants’ premises
who interfere with, harass,
intimidate or assault the applicants’
property managers, its employees, its contractors, tenants and
security service providers.
6) That the first
respondent be ordered to pay the costs of this application on scale C
in terms of Rule 67, read with Rule
69.
[2]
I pause to state that the second respondent delivered a notice to
abide by the decision of the court.
[3]
On a perusal of prayer 3 of the granted order, read with the contents
of prayer 3 of the notice of motion and the contents
of the founding
affidavit, it is evident that the reference to the ‘second
respondent’ in prayer 3 of the granted order,
should be
reference to the ‘first respondent’. In terms of the
provisions of Rule 42(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of
Court
the
court may, in addition to any other powers it may have,
mero
motu
or upon the application of any
party affected, rescind or vary an order or judgment in which there
is an ambiguity, or a patent
error or omission, but only to the
extent of such ambiguity, error or omission. In the premises, any
reference to the ‘second
respondent’ in prayer 3 of the
granted order constitutes a patent error, and as such, prayer 3 of
the order is varied to
refer to the ‘first respondent’
and not to the ‘second respondent’.
The
applicants’ case:
[4]
The applicants are the joint owners of the Hertford Office Park
(‘HOP’). HOP is managed by the management
agent, Strive
Real Estate Specialists (Pty) Ltd (‘Strive’).
[5]
As landlords, the applicants employ security companies from time to
time to provide security services for the benefit
of the tenants and
the protection of their buildings at HOP.
[6]
At no stage did the applicants conclude a contract with the first
respondent for the rendering of security services.
[7]
In November 2024, the contracted security service provider at HOP was
Stallion Security Group (‘Stallion’).
According to the
applicants, the first respondent appeared to be a subcontractor of
Stallion, as the first respondent provided
services at HOP. Absent a
contract between the applicants and the first respondent, the
presence of the first respondent became
untenable and unlawful, and
an election was made that the security contract would go out on
tender. The first respondent tendered,
but the tender was not
successful. This was communicated to the first respondent on 14 March
2025.
[8]
The successful bidder was Fidelity Services Group (‘Fidelity’),
and the security contract was awarded to Fidelity.
Fidelity was
appointed on 26 May 2025, with the commencement date on 1 June 2025.
[9]
Various correspondences from Stallion, Strive, and the attorneys
acting for Strive and the applicants were directed to
the first
respondent and the attorneys representing the first respondent to
inform the first respondent that it has no entitlement
to be on the
premises of HOP and that the first respondent should vacate the
premises of HOP. The first respondent flatly refused
to vacate the
premises.
[10]
On 31 May 2025, Fidelity attended the premises and found the first
respondent and its employees in occupation thereof.
The first
respondent and its employees refused to grant the Fidelity staff
access to the property. It is alleged that Mr Kimera,
the general
manager of the first respondent, was surrounded by men with automatic
guns in riot helmets. Mr Kimera informed the
Fidelity manager that
Fidelity will not be allowed access to the premises of HOP. Fidelity
approached the South African Police
Service in Midrand for
assistance. Mr Kimera also attended. A docket was opened, but the
members of the second respondent regarded
it as a civil dispute and
refused to become involved. I pause to remark that this refusal of
the members of the second respondent
to assist where there were
allegations of firearms and hostility being involved is a cause of
concern. This might explain the rationale
behind the second
respondent’s election to deliver a notice to abide by the
outcome herein.
[11]
It is the case of the applicants that there is no contract between
the applicants and/or Strive and the first respondent,
and as such,
the first respondent has no entitlement to remain on the premises of
HOP and to provide security services for which
it will not be paid.
Ample notice and opportunity were granted to vacate the premises by
30 May 2025, but the first respondent
remains steadfast in its
occupation of the premises.
The
first respondent’s case:
[12]
The first respondent is placing reliance on a partly written partly
oral, alternatively tacit agreement between the first
respondent and
Abreal Property Management (‘Abreal’) (which is now
Strive) and/or Keypoint Intelligence (Pty) Ltd (‘Keypoint’).
[13]
It is the first respondent’s case that the purported
agreement was concluded in February 2021. The first respondent was
represented
by Mr Kimera. Abreal was represented by Me Mandie Spies,
the operations manager at Waterfall Precinct and Mr David Louw, its
Head
of Operations. Keypoint was represented by Mr David Conradie,
Operations Manager and Mr Billy Steyn, director.
[14]
It is alleged that, in terms of the agreement, the first respondent
would provide security services to Strive and Keypoint
in the newly
established Waterfall Ridge Precinct. The security services were to
be provided for 5 (five) years.
[15]
In attempting to prove the existence of the contract, the first
respondent attached various correspondence dating back
to February
2021. According to the first respondent, Keypoint merged with
Stallion in May 2022, and Stallion was forthwith only
to provide the
management of the CCTV system.
[16]
In October 2023, the first respondent, on the request of Mr John Lax,
the Operations Manager at Strive, provided Strive
with a draft
Service Legal Agreement. Further attempts were made to have this
Service Legal Agreement signed with the successors
of Mr Lax.
[17]
On the first respondent’s version, Stallion terminated the
first respondent’s services on 1 November 2024.
On 25 November
2024, the first respondent informed Stallion that it would continue
to provide security services. On 27 November
2024, Stallion conveyed
to the first respondent that Stallion is entitled to terminate the
first respondent’s services as
there is no contract between
Stallion and the first respondent. It was pertinently stated that no
fixed-term agreement was ever
concluded with the first respondent.
Subsequent correspondence on the issue also forms part of the first
respondent's answering
affidavit.
[18]
On the events that occurred on 31 May 2025, it is the case of the
first respondent that it was Fidelity’s personnel
and presence
that inflamed the situation and that the first respondent had no hand
in the volatile situation.
[19]
The first respondent’s case is that the application is not
urgent and that the applicants will be able to obtain
substantial
redress in due course through a claim for damages. According to the
first respondent, the applicants have failed to
make out a case for
final relief. The first respondent further raised a point of
misjoinder relating to Strive and Stallion.
Conclusion:
[20]
The first respondent’s entitlement to remain at HOP and
to render security services is premised on the alleged partly
written,
partly oral,
alternatively
tacit agreement concluded
in February 2021.
[21]
Save for correspondence and the draft Service Level Agreement
that first came to light in October 2023, the first respondent
presents
no written agreement.
[22]
This
leaves the first respondent to rely on the tacit agreement. The legal
position on the establishment of a tacit contract is
clear. To
establish a tacit contract, it is necessary to allege and 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.
In deciding
whether a tacit contract was concluded, the law objectively considers
the conduct of both parties and the circumstances
of the case
generally.
[1]
[23]
On the evidence before me, the first respondent failed to
prove that a tacit contract, spanning 5 (five) years, was concluded
back
in 2021. There is no objective evidence to support this
contention by the first respondent.
[24]
On 25 November 2024 (annexure SK14 to the answering
affidavit), the first respondent’s attorney addressed a letter
to Stallion
in response to the 1 November 2024 letter of
cancellation. Reference is made to the agreement reached with Mr Rami
Avivi (Mr Avivi
does not feature in the answering affidavit as one of
the persons who was involved in negotiating and concluding the
purported
agreement). What is, however, lacking from the reference to
the alleged agreement is any specifics as to the terms and conditions
of the alleged agreement. Strikingly, no mention is made of the
duration of the alleged agreement.
[25]
In response to this letter, Stallion
pertinently stated that there is no agreement with the first
respondent, and more pertinently
that no fixed-term agreement was
ever concluded with the first respondent (annexure SK15 to the
answering affidavit).
[26]
By inference, Stallion's response and
insistence that no agreement as alleged was entered into clearly does
not constitute the most
plausible probable conclusion from all the
relevant proven facts and circumstances that a contract has come into
existence. The
first respondent failed to prove unequivocal conduct
giving rise to an inference of consensus on a balance of
probabilities.
[27]
There is no
nexus
between the first respondent and the applicants. The first respondent
was not successful in the tender to provide security services
to HOP,
and as such, the first respondent has no entitlement to render such
services and to remain in occupation of the premises.
[28]
Stallion terminated the first respondent’s
service on due and reasonable notice in November 2024. Despite this
termination,
the first respondent was adamant that it was entitled to
render the security services. The first respondent took no steps to
lodge
legal proceedings to enforce the alleged tacit contract on
which reliance is placed.
[29]
Urgency stems from what occurred on 31 May
2025 when the first respondent, despite being given reasonable
notice, failed to vacate
the premises and, in this steadfast refusal,
prevented Fidelity from assuming their duties.
[30]
On the final relief granted, this court was
satisfied that the applicants made out a case that they have a clear
right, that there
was an injury actually committed or that an injury
is reasonably apprehended and that there is no other satisfactory
remedy available
to the applicants.
Costs
[31]
The
discretion in granting costs is trite.
[2]
[32]
The
determination as to what scale of costs would be applicable under the
party and party scale regime is dictated by the provisions
of Rule
67A of the Uniform Rules of Court. Rule 67A(3) provides that a court
“shall”, when making a party and party
costs order,
“indicate the scale in terms of rule 69, under which costs have
been granted”. Those scales have been
inserted into rule 69(7)
under the amendment that created rule 67A. They are scales “A”,
“B”, and “C”.
Rule 67A(4) provides for the
right to apply for an order determining which parts of the
proceedings, if any, were urgent, and whether
the costs of more than
one counsel may be recovered. The effect of that subrule is,
notionally, that a different scale could be
assigned to the services
of each counsel whose fees are allowed under the rule.
[3]
[33]
Scale A is the lowest scale and will apply
by default where no scale is specified. Scale B falls in the middle
of the spectrum and
scale C is the highest scale when party and party
costs are ordered. The effect of the different scales of costs is to
determine
the rate at which costs can be taxed.
[34]
The
complex nature of the matter and how the case was presented to the
court are among the factors to consider when setting a scale
under
the rule.
[4]
[35]
The application involves complex matters
such as the granting of an interdict and contractual rights. The
complexity of these kinds
of applications needs no elaboration. The
costs on scale C are justified.
[36]
These are the reasons for my judgment.
[37]
Prayer 3 is varied to read:
3)
That
the first respondent, and any other persons, entities or bodies, as
the case may be, acting through, or under the first respondent,
are
hereby restrained, and interdicted, from attending upon the
applicants’ property at Hertford Office Park, 9[…]
B[…]
Road, V[…] V[…], Sandton, Gauteng, with the aim and
sole, or other purpose of:
i.Demanding
that the applicants employ them as security service providers, at the
applicants’ property at Hertford Office
Park, 9[…] B[…]
Road, V[…] V[…], Sandton, Gauteng; and
ii.Frustrating,
and interfering with, the applicants’ business thereat; and
iii.Harassing
and intimidating tenants, employees and security service providers of
the applicants; and
iv.Interfering
with, harassing or intimidating the applicants’ managers,
and/or security service providers; and
v.Without
limiting the generality of the aforesaid, prohibited from doing
anything whatsoever related to or in connection with the
harassment,
intimidation and assault of the applicant’s employees, its
security or other contractors, tenants and security
service provider
and preventing the applicants’ security and other contractors
from performing their daily duties and functions.
MINNAAR AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
For
the Applicants: Adv G T Avvakoumides SC instructed by Mark Efstratiou
Inc.
For
the First Respondent: Adv B L Manentsa with Adv T Ngakane instructed
Adams and Adams
For
the Second Respondent: No appearance: Notice to abide filed by the
State Attorney
Date
of Hearing: 17 June 2025
Date
of reasons for judgment: 24 June 2025
[1]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Ocean Commodities Inc
1983
(1) SA 276
(A) at page 292;
Mühlmann
v Mühlmann
1984
(3) SA 102
(A) at pages 123-124;
Joel
Melamed & Hurwitz v Cleveland Estates (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 4
;
1984 (3) SA 155
(A);
NBS
Bank Ltd v Cape Produce Co (Pty) Ltd
2002 (1) SA 396
(SCA);
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Nurcha Development Finance Pty) Ltd
and others
2019 (3) SA 379
(SCA) at paras 16-21
[2]
Ferreira
v Levin NO & Others; Vryenhoek & Others v Powell NO and
Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC) at paragraph 3
[3]
Mashava
v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd
(2022/1840) [2024] ZAGPJHC 387 (22 April 2024) at par 7 to 9
[4]
Mashava
at par 14
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