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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Makhabo v Viljoen and Others (2022/059140)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 688 (9 July 2025)
Makhabo v Viljoen and Others (2022/059140)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 688 (9 July 2025)
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sino date 9 July 2025
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number: 2022-059140
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: NO
9 June 2025
In the matter between:
FAITH
MAKHABO
Plaintiff
And
PEET
VILJOEN
First defendant
# TAMMY TAYLOR NAILS SA
HOLDINGS
TAMMY TAYLOR NAILS SA
HOLDINGS
T/A TAMMY TAYLOR
NAILS
First defendant
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
email to
the attorneys of record of the parties. The date of the delivery of
the judgment is deemed to be 9 July 2025.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Chabedi AJ
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment in
terms of Rule 32(1) of the Uniform Rules in the amount of R500 000.00
against the first
and second defendants, jointly and severally.
[2]
The
plaintiff
alleges
that
on
16
September
2022
she
paid
the
amount
of R500 000.00 to the second defendant,
Tammy Taylor SA Holdings having been induced to do so by the first
defendant, Mr Peet Viljoen,
who at the time represented the second
defendant. The payment followed negotiations between the plaintiff
and the first defendant
relating to a franchise agreement to be
entered into between the plaintiff and the second defendant.
[3]
The plaintiff claims to have paid the R500
000.00 with the expectation that a valid franchise agreement would be
concluded and in
the event it was not, that the money would be
refunded. The franchise agreement was subsequently not concluded. As
a result the
plaintiff demanded payment of the
R500 000.00 from the defendants and the
defendants refused to pay.
[4]
The plaintiff’s claim against the
first defendant is based on misrepresentation and the claim against
the second defendant
is based on undue enrichment. The defendants are
defending the claims and have filed a joint plea thereto. The first
defendant
is opposing the summary judgment application and has filed
an affidavit. There was no affidavit filed on behalf of the second
defendant
resisting the summary judgment application. At the hearing
of the application though, one counsel filed heads of argument,
appeared
and submitted argument for both the first and second
defendants.
[5]
In this judgment I shall refer to the first
and second defendants, collectively, as the defendants and where
context demands, I
shall refer to the first defendant as Viljoen and
the second defendant as Tammy Taylor SA.
Facts
[6]
In the affidavit filed in support of the
summary judgment, the plaintiff alleges that on
15
September
2022
she
met with
Viljoen
to
negotiate
a
possible
franchise
agreement, a copy of
which was furnished to her for consideration. Viljoen represented to
her that Tammy Taylor SA is the licensee
of Tammy Taylor Nails USA,
being the main holder of the franchise license.
[7]
According
to
the
plaintiff
Viljoen
persuaded
her
to
pay
the
amount
of
R500 000.00 so she could be in a better position for consideration as
entering into a franchise agreement under the name and
style Tammy
Taylor SA was in demand.
[8]
After payment was made, the plaintiff
established that the master license agreement between Tammy Taylor SA
and Tammy Taylor USA,
the main license holder, was terminated in
February 2021. Therefore a sublicense with third parties by way of a
franchise would
not have been legally possible. She became concerned
that Viljoen may have misrepresented Tammy Taylor SA’s
ownership of
the trademark to her in that despite the termination of
the master license agreement, Viljoen represented that Tammy Taylor
SA
was the licensee of Tammy Taylor Nails USA, and therefore legally
entitled to enter into sublicensing agreements with third parties,
in
this case the plaintiff.
[9]
The plaintiff pleaded that the defendants
were aware of the termination because Tammy Taylor USA issued a
“cease and desist
letter” against the defendants for the
continued unlawful use of the trademark in May 2021. The plaintiff
then decided not
to proceed with the franchise agreement and because
no agreement was entered into, the amount of R500 000.00 was not due
and payable
or owing by the plaintiff to the defendants. As a result,
on 23 September 2022 the plaintiff demanded payment of the money from
the defendants and they refused to pay.
[10]
Viljoen and Tammy Taylor SA filed one plea.
In the plea the defendants admit the negotiations, that Viljoen
represented Tammy Taylor
SA and that the plaintiff paid the amount of
R500 000.00 to Tammy Taylor SA. The defendants denied the rest of the
allegations
and specifically that there were any misrepresentations
on the part of Viljoen. They pleaded that the R500 000.00 was a
deposit
in terms of the franchise agreement and deny as a result,
that they have derived any benefit from the payment.
[11]
The affidavit resisting summary judgment is
deposed to by Viljoen. He admits that he negotiated the franchise
agreement with the
plaintiff representing Tammy Taylor SA, but stated
that he no longer does. Viljoen also admits that following the
negotiations
the plaintiff paid the amount of R500 000.00 to Tammy
Taylor SA. He explained that the R500 000.00 was a deposit and in
partial
payment of the full price in terms of a franchise agreement
that the plaintiff has then reneged from.
[12]
Viljoen denied that the R500 000.00 was
paid to Tammy Taylor SA without proper cause and specifically that
there were any misrepresentations
made by him to the plaintiff.
Viljoen denied, in particular, having
derived any benefit from the payment because, as he argues, the money
was not paid to him
but to Tammy Taylor SA, he was never in
possession of the money and therefore was not enriched thereby.
Legal principles
[13]
Rule
32(1) provides that the plaintiff may, after the defendant has
delivered a plea, apply to court for summary judgment on a claim
based on a liquid document; for a liquidated amount in money; for
delivery of specified movable property; or for ejectment. A
liquidated amount in money is an amount which is either agreed upon
or which is capable of speedy and prompt ascertainment
[1]
[14]
Rule(2)(
a
)
and (
b
)
provides that an affidavit made by the plaintiff in support of
summary judgment or by any other person who can swear positively
to
the facts shall, in addition to verifying the cause of action and the
amount claimed and identifying the facts upon which the
plaintiff’s
claim is based, explain briefly why the defence as pleaded does not
raise any issue for trial.
[15]
In
Standard
Bank v Rahme and Similar Cases
[2]
the
court stated the following, in relation to the new requirement in
Rule 32(1) that the plaintiff must briefly explain why the
defence as
pleaded does not raise any issue for trial:
‘
The
amended rule appears to raise the bar and onus for securing summary
judgment. By implication, a plaintiff must satisfy the court
that the
defendant has no defence on the merits when under the old rule, it
was enough to show a defendant lacks a bona fide defence
.’
[16]
Rule 32(3)(
b
)
provides that the defendant may
satisfy
the court by affidavit that the defendant has a
bona
fide
defence to the action. Such
affidavit shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of the defence
and the material facts relied upon.
[17]
In
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd
[3]
the
court stated that Summary judgment proceedings are not intended to
deprive a defendant with a triable issue or a sustainable
defence of
their day in court. The court went to state that “
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 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
.”
[18]
The
well-established principle in the
Mahara
j
[4]
is that the Court must consider, first, 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, and second whether
the defence so disclosed is both
bona
fide
and
good in law. If this threshold has been crossed the court is then
bound to refuse summary judgment.
[19]
In
Maharaj
,
the court continued to state that where the defence is based upon
facts, in the sense that material facts alleged by the plaintiff
in
his summons, or combined summons, are disputed or new facts are
alleged constituting a defence, the Court should not attempt
to
decide these issues or to determine whether or not there 78is a
balance of probabilities in favour of the one party or the other.
The
defendants must fully disclose the nature and grounds of their
defence and the material facts on which it is founded. All a
defendant has to do is set out facts which if proven at trial will
constitute a good defence to the claim.
[5]
Analysis
[20]
The defendants have admitted that the
plaintiff paid Tammy Taylor SA the amount of R500 000.00 and have
refused to pay the plaintiff
the money despite demand. The
plaintiff’s claim is therefore for a liquidated amount and it
was agreed and therefore easily
determinable.
[21]
The question for determination is therefore
whether the defendants have disclosed a
bona
fide
defence to the plaintiff’s
claims.
[22]
Viljoen filed an affidavit resisting
summary judgment in which, while admitting that he represented the
second respondent at the
time, he now stated that he no longer does.
Given the nature of the claims in this action and the fact that Tammy
Taylor SA is
a corporate entity, Viljoen did not give any
particularity as to when exactly he ceased to represent Tammy Taylor
SA.
In so doing
Viljoen appeared to attempt to separate himself from Tammy Taylor SA.
[23]
I say attempted because Viljoen and Tammy
Taylor SA were represented by the same counsel briefed by the same
attorney. In the heads
of argument and during oral argument joint
legal submissions were made for both defendants. Viljoen himself also
submitted statements
and argument in his affidavit in defence of
Tammy Taylor SA. The attempt to separate himself from Tammy Taylor SA
in those circumstances,
does not appear
bona
fide
but devised solely to avoid
liability.
[24]
For his part, Viljoen admitted that he held
the negotiations with the plaintiff in relation to the franchise
agreement. He however,
denies that he made any mirepresentations
to
the
plaintiff
and
inducing
her
to
pay
the
the
amount
of
R500 000.00. Just as pleaded by the defendants in the plea, Viljoen
argued that the payment was made as a deposit in terms of
the
franchise agreement.
[25]
It
is a well-established principle of our law that the party relying on
misrepresentation must prove that the representation relied
on was
made, that the representation was false in that what was shown as
fact was not as represented. What the plaintiff must show
is not
merely that it was, or turned out to be, erroneous, but that it did
not represent the
bona
fide
view,
at the time when it was expressed, of the person who expressed it.
The plaintiff must then prove that the representation was
material to
defendants’ representations and that the representations were
intended to induce the person to whom it was made
to enter into the
transaction sought to be avoided
[6]
[26]
In this case, although the plaintiff has
pleaded details of the misrepresentation relating to Tammy Taylor
SA’s license to
trade as such, the defendants, particularly
Viljoen, have failed to plead or submit any evidence to show
otherwise. Viljoen has
failed to attach to his affidavit the license
or any document showing Tammy Taylor SA’s entitlement to enter
into the franchise
agreement, as he represented. Viljoen also did not
attach the franchise agreement on the basis of which the deposit was
purportedly
paid, nor did he state the full franchise price to which
the R500 000.00 was the deposit. In those circumstances, Viljoen also
failed to state the reason for accepting an offer of a deposit, as he
claims, on behalf of Tammy Taylor SA for no legal basis whatsoever.
[27]
Viljoen could not have been of the
bona
fide
view that the representations were
fact and true. The representations were material to the negotiations
relating to the franchise
agreement and the payment of R500 000.00
was made by the plaintiff to Tammy Taylor SA as a direct result of
those representations.
[28]
The fact that Viljoen in his affidavit has
now stated that he does not know the reason why Tammy Taylor SA has
not paid back the
R500 000.00 to the plaintiff, also
indicates
that
he
similarly
could
not
have
bona
fide
regarded
the
R500 000.00 as not refundable in the event the franchise agreement
was not concluded.
[29]
It was argued on behalf of the defendants
that allegations of misrepresentation were ill-suited for summary
judgment and must appropriately
be referred for trial. It was argued
that Summary judgment is an extraordinary remedy, granted only where
it is manifest that the
defendant has no
bona
fide
defence and has entered an
appearance to defend merely to delay the plaintiff’s claim. It
is not intended to short-circuit
disputes that ought to be properly
ventilated at trial.
[30]
I
disagree. The above defences of the defendants leave nothing for
determination at trial. In
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
the
court stated that the fact that there is a triable issue does not
mean summary judgment must be refused only on that basis.
This is
because the enquiry is not whether the plea discloses “an issue
for trial” in the literal sense of those words,
it is whether
the ostensible defence that has been pleaded is
bona
fide
or
not. It is for these reasons that the the rule-maker decided to leave
subrule 32(3) substantively unamended. That is demanding
from the
defendant to show that its defence to the action is
bona
fide
;
i e that its ostensible defence is not a sham.
[7]
[31]
As stated above, Tammy Taylor SA is a
corporate entity and at all relevant times was represented by Viljoen
who, beyond denying
some of the material averments relating to his
role, did not ascribe any of the misrepresentations made to the
plaintiff to anyone.
His attempts to diassociate himself from Tammy
Taylor SA in those circumstances in my view points to the lack of
bona fides
in
his own defence.
[32]
Viljoen has simply failed to show
bona
fide
defence to the plaintiff’s
claims of misrepresentation on his part and most importantly, to set
out fully, the facts and evidence
on which the defence that “the
representations were true” is based on.
[33]
Tammy Taylor SA on the other hand, did not
file an affidavit resisting summary judgment. Having admitted in the
plea that it has
received the R500 000.00 and refusing to refund the
money notwithstanding that there was no franchise agreement, Tammy
Taylor SA
had the duty under Rule 32(3) to show that it has a
bona
fide
defence to the claim of undue
enrichment and set out fully the nature and grounds of its defences,
if any, and the material facts
relied upon. Tammy Taylor SA has
failed to do so.
[34]
I therefore find that the representations
made by Viljoen to the plaintiff were false, constituted
misprepresentations and therefore
unlawful. Viljoen’s
misrepresentations in turn induced the plaintiff to pay the amount of
R500 0000.00 to Tammy Taylor SA
and as a result of which the
plaintiff suffered a loss. Viljoen is therefore personally liable for
the plaintiff’s loss and
damages in the amount of R500 000.00.
[35]
Because there was no franchise agreement
subsequently entered into between Tammy Taylor SA and the plaintiff,
the payment of R500
000.00 was not due and payable, Tammy Taylor was
unduly enriched thereby and there is no legal basis for Tammy Taylor
SA to refuse
to pay the money to the plaintiff.
[36]
In
line with the principle in the
Mahara
j
[8]
there
has not been sufficient disclosure by the defendants of the nature
and grounds of their defence and the facts upon which it
is founded.
Their bare denials, particularly of material allegations are simply
not defences that are
bona
fide
and
good in law. Significantly, the defendants have not established a
case for matters for determination at trial. Accordingly,
the
defendants
have failed to cross the threshold required for the refusal of
summary
judgment.
[37]
On the other hand, I am satisfied that the
plaintiff has sufficiently explained her cause of action and the
reasons why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for
trial, as required in terms of Rule 32(1)(b). I find consequently
that the plaintiff has
made out a proper case for summary judgment to
be granted in her favour. I also find no reason to depart from the
regular principle
as to cost, that costs must follow the course.
Conclusion
[38]
In the premises, I make the following
order:
1.
Summary
judgment
is
granted
in
favour
of
the
plaintiff
in
the
amount
of R500 000.00.
2.
The first and second defendants are ordered
to pay to the plaintiff, jointly and severally:
2.1
The amount of R500 000.00.
2.2
Interest on the amount of R500 000.00 at
the rate of 7,75% per annum from the date of demand on 23 September
2022 to the date of
payment.
3.
The
first
and
second
defendants
are
ordered
to
pay
the
costs
of
this application and the main action on
party and party basis.
MPD Chabedi
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
# APPEARANCES
APPEARANCES
For the
plaintiff:
Adv D Gana
ES &
Associates Inc
For the
applicant:
Adv EDL Jacobus
Wiese
& Wiese Inc
Date of
hearing:
2 June 2025
Date of
Judgment:
9 July 2025
[1]
Lester
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Narshi
1951 (2) SA 464
(C); Fatti’s
Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd v Vendick Spares (Pty) Ltd 1962 (1) SA
[2]
Unreported,
GJ case nos 17/46904; 27740/2018; 27741/2018; 3765/2019; 11912/2018
dated 3 September 2019, at paragraph [8].
[3]
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009
(5) SA 1
(SCA) at 11G– 12D.
[4]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 425G–426E.
[5]
Fn5
Supra,.
[6]
Novick
and another v Comair Holdings LTS and Others
[1979] 3 All SA 73
(W)
at 149
[7]
2020
(6) SA 624
(WCC) at para [40]
[8]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 425G–426E.
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