Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 794South Africa
Van's Auctioneers Gauteng CC v Theron N.O and Others (34810/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 794 (30 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 July 2025
Headnotes
on Thursday, 11 June 2015 at 11:00; and
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van's Auctioneers Gauteng CC v Theron N.O and Others (34810/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 794 (30 July 2025)
Van's Auctioneers Gauteng CC v Theron N.O and Others (34810/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 794 (30 July 2025)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
34810/2016
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
30 July 2025
SIGNATURE:
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J
In
the matter between:
VAN’S
AUCTIONEERS GAUTENG CC
Plaintiff
and
LAMBERTES
NICOLAAS THERON N.O.
First
Defendant
V
& K TRUST DIENSTE
CC
Second Defendant
(Represented
by HERMAN VENTER N.O.
(in
their capacity as the Trustees of the Theron Boerdery Trust)
and
LAMBERTUS
NICOLAAS
THERON
Third party
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff, an auctioneering company, claims commission from the
defendant, the Theron Boerdery
Trust (“the Trust) in terms of
an exclusive written mandate concluded between the parties for the
sale of three immovable
properties owned by the Trust at public
auction. In the
alternative
to the relief claimed against the
Trust the plaintiff has a claim based on estoppel against the third
party, Lambertus Nicolaas
Theron (“Theron”).
[2]
The plaintiff called two witnesses and upon closure of its case, the
defendants and the third
party brought an application for absolution
from the instance.
[3]
Prior to considering the merits of the application it is apposite to
have regard to the legal
principle guiding applicants of this nature.
Legal principle
[4]
In
Gordon Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera and Another
2001
(1) SA 88
(SCA), the Supreme Court of Appeal summarised the test
applicable to an application for absolution as follows:
“
[ 2] The test
for absolution to be applied by a trial court at the end of a
plaintiff's case was formulated in Claude Neon Lights
(SA) Ltd v
Daniel
1976
(4) SA 403
(A)
at 409G
- H in these terms:
'. . . (W)hen
absolution from the instance is sought at the close of plaintiff's
case, the test to be applied is not whether the
evidence led by
plaintiff establishes what would finally be required to be
established, but whether there is evidence upon which
a Court,
applying its mind reasonably to such evidence, could or might (not
should, nor ought to) find for the plaintiff. (Gascoyne
v Paul and
Hunter
1917 TPD 170
at 173; Ruto Flour Mills (Pty) Ltd v Adelson
(2)
1958
(4) SA 307 (T)
.)'
This implies that a
plaintiff has to make out a prima facie case - in the sense that
there is evidence relating to all the elements
of the claim - to
survive absolution because without such evidence no court could find
for the plaintiff (Marine & Trade Insurance
Co Ltd v Van der
Schyff
1972
(1) SA 26 (A)
at 37G -
38A; Schmidt Bewysreg 4th ed at 91 - 2). As far as inferences from
the evidence are concerned, the inference relied
upon by the
plaintiff must be a reasonable one, not the only reasonable one
(Schmidt at 93). The test has from time to time been
formulated in
different terms, especially it has been said that the court must
consider whether there is 'evidence upon which a
reasonable man might
find for the plaintiff' (Gascoyne (loc cit)) - a test which had its
origin in jury trials when the 'reasonable
man' was a reasonable
member of the jury (Ruto Flour Mills). Such a formulation tends to
cloud the issue. The court ought not to
be concerned with what
someone else might think; it should rather be concerned with its own
judgment and not that of another 'reasonable'
person or court. Having
said this, absolution at the end of a plaintiff's case, in the
ordinary course of events, will nevertheless
be granted sparingly but
when the occasion arises, a court should order it in the interests of
justice.”
[1]
Plaintiff’s
claims against the Trust
[3]
Both of the plaintiff’s claims against the Trust is based on a
written agreement granting an
exclusive mandate (“the mandate”)
to the plaintiff to auction three immovable properties of the Trust.
The properties
were referred to by Mr Pretorius, the first witness
who testified on behalf of the plaintiff, as Lot 1, Lot 2 and Lot 3.
I will
refer herein to the properties as such. Claim 1 is based on
the original mandate and claim 2 on an amended version of the
mandate.
Claim1:
[4]
The original mandate was signed on 8 May 2015 and the general terms
of the mandate were as follows:
4.1
the plaintiff is entitled to 7,5% agent
commission payable by the purchaser;
4.2
the auction was to be held on Thursday, 11 June 2015 at 11:00; and
4.3
an amount of R 133 078, 00 for advertising was payable by the
Trust.
[5]
The agreement, furthermore, contains the following term:
“
The CLIENT
agrees that the minimum price of R 45 million (excluding VAT) will be
accepted if obtained. The deposit will be paid
over to the
conveyancers trust account after confirmation and deductions of
expenses and fees. It is agreed the CLIENT hereby undertakes
to
provide an EXCLUSIVE MANDATE to the AGENT/AUCTIONEER for purposes of
selling/ marketing the CLIENTS PROPERTY for the period
dated as
follows: FROM THE DATE OF SIGNING HEREOF UP TO AND INCLUDING 26 June
2015.”
[6]
Notwithstanding the express terms of the mandate, the plaintiff
averred a further term in its
particulars of claim, to wit; “
Should
the trust breach in any respect and sell itself all the properties or
some of the properties, the trust will become liable
to the Plaintiff
for agency commission calculated at 7,5% of the price at which the
trust accepted in selling such property or
properties, either by
itself or through the assistance of another agent.”
[7]
In respect of this further term, Pretorius testified that, on 15
April 2015 when he was introduced
to the properties by Theron, a
trustee of the Trust, he informed Theron that the Trust would be
liable for commission should one
/ all of the properties be sold
prior to the auction by a third party and/or the Trust. Theron did
not respond to the aforesaid
statement.
[8]
After the aforesaid statement, the mandate was prepared by the
plaintiff and was signed by the
parties on 8 May 2015. The written
agreement did not contain the statement.
[9]
In clear breach of the mandate and on 18 May 2015, the Trust sold Lot
1 for R 9 million.
[10]
The plaintiff’s claim in respect of the selling of Lot 1 is
formulated as follows in its particulars
of claim:
“
The trust sold
the said… for the amount of R 9 million and by virtue of the
agreement the Plaintiff pleads that it is entitled
to payment to it
by the trust of commission at a rate of 7,5% plus VAT calculated on R
9 million.”
[11]
The claim is for specific performance of a term that was not
contained in the written mandate.
[12] It
is trite that reliance on a term that is not contained in a written
contract between parties is inadmissible.
The rule is referred to as
the parol evidence rule and was discussed as follows in
Johnston v
Lelal
1980 (3) SA 927
(A) at 938 D to 939 A
“
This denial of
recourse to evidence of an oral consensus applies to earlier,
contemporaneous or subsequent oral agreements. In many
instances
recourse to evidence of an earlier or contemporaneous oral agreement
would, in any event, be precluded by the so-called
"parol
evidence rule" (see Van Wyk v Rottcher's Saw Mills (Pty) Ltd
(supra at 996)) or, more correctly, that branch of
the "rule"
which prescribes that, subject to certain qualifications (to which
some reference will be made later), when a
contract has been
reduced to writing, the writing is regarded as the exclusive
embodiment or memorial of the transaction and no
extrinsic evidence
may be given of other utterances or jural acts by the parties which
would have the effect of contradicting,
altering, adding to or
varying the written contract (see National Board (Pretoria) (Pty) Ltd
and Another v Estate Swanepoel
1975
(3) SA 16
(A)
at 26A -
D and the cases F there cited). The extrinsic evidence is
excluded because it relates to matters which, by reason
of the
reduction of the contract to writing and its integration in a single
memorial, have become legally immaterial or irrelevant
(National
Board case supra at 26C). This parol evidence rule or "integration
rule" (as it was termed in the National
Board case supra at 26D;
see also Venter v Birchholtz
1972
(1) SA 276 (A)
at 282)
does not preclude evidence of a subsequent oral agreement
contradicting, altering, adding to or varying a written
contract (see
Venter v Birchholtz (supra at 282E - G)), but in the case of
contracts governed by s 1 (1) such a subsequent oral
agreement could
be of no force or effect if it sought to contradict, etc a material
term of the written contract (see Venter v
Birchholtz (supra at 282E
- G)), where the several effects of the requirement of writing
("skrifvereiste") under s 1
(1) and the integration H
rule ("integrasiereël") are distinguished by JANSEN
JA: and see also Kuper v Bolleurs
1913 TPD 334
at 336 - 7; Van Wyk v
Rottcher's Saw Mills (Pty) Ltd (supra at 996); Neethling v Klopper en
Andere
1967
(4) SA 459
(A)
at 464 -
5). Similarly, a prior or contemporaneous oral agreement, evidence of
which was not precluded by the integration rule,
as, for example, a
contemporaneous oral agreement that the written contract be subject
to a suspensive condition (see Stiglingh
v Theron
1907 TS 998
at
1003), would be rendered of no force or effect by s 1 (1) if it
purported to contradict,
etc a material term of
the written contract (cf Du Plessis v Nel
1952
(1) SA 513
(A)).”
[2]
[10] I
am mindful that the rule has been tempered by more recent judgments,
but the relaxation of the rule in
certain insistences pertain to the
interpretation of agreements and not the insertion of a wholly new
term that forms the subject
matter of the claim.
[11] In
the result, I am of the view that the plaintiff did not make out a
prima facie
case in respect of claim 1.
Claim 2
[12]
Subsequent to the sale of Lot 1, the parties agreed that the original
mandate be amended to provide for the
sale by public auction of Lot 2
and Lot 3. All the other terms of the mandate remained the same.
[13]
Lot 2 and Lot 3 was not sold at the public auction held on 11 June
2015. The confirmation period in terms
of the mandate expired on 26
June 2015 and thereafter, on 19 August 2015, the Trust sold Lot 2 to
Toüa Bosveld Boerdery CC
for an amount of R 3 500 000,
00. It is common cause that Mr Toüa a representative of the
Closed Corporation was
a registered bidder at the public auction that
was held on 11 June 2015.
[14]
The plaintiff’s claim based on the aforesaid facts is set out
as follows in its particulars of claim,:
“
13.
In the result the
Plaintiff pleads that the Plaintiff:
13.1
Introduced the purchaser to the trust.
13.2
That the purchaser was at all relevant stages willing and able to
purchase the said farm.
13.3
That by introducing the representative of the purchaser to the
property and the trust the Plaintiff was the
effective cause of the
sale agreement.
14.
In the result the
Plaintiff is entitled to commission of 7,5% on the purchase price of
R 3,5 million, which
is the amount of R 262 500, 00.”
[15]
Although the plaintiff’s pleaded case is not based on the
amended mandate, Mr Pretorius with reference
to the mandate to sell
at public auction, testified that the auction process, as is common
practice, included the possibility to
sell the property in terms of a
private treaty or contract, before or after the auction, and that
this often happened especially
in the confirmation period.
[16] Mr
Hershensohn SC, counsel for the plaintiff, furthermore, submitted
that the mandate was not only in respect
of the public auction, but
also allowed the plaintiff to sell the properties after the auction,
because the plaintiff’s exclusive
mandate only expired on 26
June 2015.
[17] In
view of the plaintiff’s pleaded case that it was the effective
cause of the sale, the evidence pertaining
to the terms of the
amended mandate and what is common practice in the auctioneering
industry, is irrelevant.
[18]
The plaintiff must present evidence that
prima facie
supports
its claim; to wit that it was the effective cause of the sale of Lot
2 to Toüa Bosveld Boerdery CC on 19 August
2015.
[19] Mr
Hershensohn referred to various authorities dealing with the
principles applicable to an estate agent
that received a mandate from
a seller to sell property by private treaty. The authorities are not
helpful or applicable to the
facts in
casu.
[20]
When a seller gives an estate agent a mandate / exclusive mandate to
sell his/her property, the estate agent
advertises the property at
his/her own costs and spends considerable time introducing potential
purchasers to the property. It
follows that should the property be
sold by anyone else and it transpires that the purchaser was
introduced to the property by
the estate agent, the estate agent is
deemed to have been the “
effective cause “
of the
sale and is entitled to commission.
[21] In
casu, the
only mandate received by the plaintiff from the
Trust was to sell the properties by public auction. This much was
confirmed by
Pretorius in his evidence. It was expressly agreed
between the parties that the plaintiff will only be entitled to
commission if
the properties were sold at the public auction and that
the commission will be payable by the successful bidder/purchaser.
[22] It
was, furthermore, agreed that the Trust will pay for the
advertisement costs. To suggest that the plaintiff
is in these
circumstances, the “
effective cause “
of any
subsequent sale by private treaty to a registered bidder, is
astonishing to say the least.
[23] Mr
Potgieter SC, counsel for the defendants, referred to the matter of
Martin v Currie
1921 TPD 50
in which an auctioneer’s
entitlement to commission was discussed. Mr Potgieter referred
to the following remarks in
the
Currie
matter:
23.1 “
I
think it is clear that the employment of an auctioneer does not give
him any authority except to sell by auction.”
23.2
“
An
auctioneer is employed to sell property by auction on the conditions
arranged; if he sells the property he gets his commission:
if he does
not sell the property he gets no commission. That is the risk he
takes, but he protects himself by a contract that the
seller shall
pay the cost of advertising. I think the law in England is the
same.”
[3]
[24]
Having had regard to the plaintiff’s pleaded case, I am of the
view that the plaintiff has failed to
make out a
prima facie
case
for the relief claimed in claim 2.
Alternative
claim against the third party
[25]
The alternative claim only pertains to claim 1. The Trust pleaded
that Theron did not have the authority
to bind the Trust when he gave
the exclusive mandate to the plaintiff. This is so because the Trust
has another Trsutee and the
Trust Deed provides that a decision to
dispose of trust assets must be taken by both trustees.
[26] In
the event that the court finds that the Trust is not bound by the
terms of the exclusive mandate, the
plaintiff sought to hold Theron
personally liable for the plaintiff’s claim. No such finding
has been made, and it follows
that the alternative claim falls away.
Conclusion and costs
[27]
In view of the findings
supra
, the defendants’
application for absolution from the instance must succeed with costs.
I am satisfied that the complexity
of the matter justifies counsel’s
fees on scale C.
ORDER
The
following order is granted.
The
application for absolution from the instance is granted with costs,
which costs include all reserved costs orders. Counsel’s
fees
on scale C.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD:
21,
22, 23 and 25 July 2025
DATE
DELIVERED:
30
July 2025
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv J
Hershensohn SC
Adv
R de Leeuwe
Instructed
by:
Barbard
& Patel Incorporated
Counsel
for the defendants and the Third Party:
T.
A.L.L Potgieter SC
Instructed
by:
Weavind
& Weavind Incorporated
[1]
Gordon Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera and Another (384/98)
[2000] ZASCA 33; 2001 (1) SA 88 (SCA); [2000] 4 All SA 241 (A)
[2]
Johnston v Leal (245/78) [1980] ZASCA 58
[3]
Martin
v
Currie
1921 TPD 50
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