Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 70South Africa
Reitz 21 CC v Siebrits and Others (A91/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 70; - (31 January 2024)
Headnotes
the counterclaim of the defendant (respondents) with costs on an attorney and client scale basis. The facts in the dispute between the parties were uncomplicated and can conveniently be summarized as set down below:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Reitz 21 CC v Siebrits and Others (A91/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 70; - (31 January 2024)
Reitz 21 CC v Siebrits and Others (A91/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 70; - (31 January 2024)
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sino date 31 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
APPEAL
CASE NO. A91/2023
COURT A QUO CASE NO.
22068/2020
(1) REPORTABLE: NO/
YES
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO/
YES
(3) REVISED
DATE: 31/1/24
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
REITZ
21
CC
APPELLANT
and
ANDRIES
QUINTUS SIEBRITS
1
ST
RESPONDENT
BRONWYN
DEAN SIEBRITS
2
ND
RESPONDENT
ETHAN
QUINTUS SIEBRITS
3
RD
RESPONDENT
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by e mail. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines by the Judge or his/her secretary.
The
date of the judgment is deemed to be
JUDGMENT
L
I VORSTER, AJ:
1.
This is an appeal against the judgment and order made by
the Court
a quo.
The
Magistrate presiding in the Court
a quo
dismissed the claim of the plaintiff
(appellant) with costs on an attorney and client basis and upheld the
counterclaim of the defendant
(respondents) with costs on an attorney
and client scale basis. The facts in the dispute between the
parties were uncomplicated
and can conveniently be summarized as set
down below:
1.1.
The first and second respondents are the parents of the
third respondent. The third respondent was a student of
North
West University. They were interested in finding
accommodation for the third respondent in Potchefstroom to enable the
third
respondent to attend classes at the university and to obviate
the necessity to commute between Pretoria which is the home and
residence
of the first and second respondents.
1.2.
The appellant is a close corporation and the owner of a
premises in Potchefstroom which is developed into a residence with
rooms
suitable for accommodation for students. The respondents
decided to take up the accommodation provided by the appellant for
use by the third respondent to obviate the necessity to commute on a
daily basis between Potchefstroom and Pretoria during the
course of
his studies.
1.3.
Consequently a written lease agreement was concluded
between the appellant as lessor and the respondents as lessee.
The intention
was that the third respondent would occupy the leased
premises as residence to enable him to attend classes at the North
West University.
2.
The lease was concluded during October 2019 and the
lease period was from 1
st
of
January 2020 to 15 December 2020.
3.
On the 15
th
of
March 2020 the Covid-19 pandemic was declared a National Disaster in
terms of Section 23(1)(b) of the Disaster Management Act,
No 57 of
2002. That led to regulations published in terms of that Act
which restricted movement of persons across boundaries.
As time
progressed there were various levels of restriction of movement of
persons. The various stages of limitation of movement
is not
strictly relevant in this dispute. The fact is that on the 20
th
of June 2020 the leased premises was vacated by the
lessees and the keys of the premises as well as the remote control
which was
used by the lessees were handed back to the lessors.
That led to the summons being issued by the appellant and the
respondents
defending that action and instituting a counterclaim. The
attitude of the respondents was that the imposition of the
regulations
restricting movement of persons across boundaries
rendered the occupation of the leased premises by the third
respondent impossible
and that consequently they resiled from the
agreement and manifested that intention by delivering the keys and
the remote control
on the leased premises.
4.
The appellant consequently issued summons against the
respondents. The amount claimed is R8 355,00 which is the
amount
consisting of several amounts payable in terms of the
agreement in the case of the premature cancellation of the agreement
by the
respondents. An alternative claim was also submitted
which is premised on the allegation that the respondents repudiated
the agreement between the parties and the amounts consisting of
alleged damages is then claimed in the alternative. The amount
so claimed is R16 500,00.
5.
The respondents defended the action and counterclaimed
for the remission of rental paid in terms of the contract in April,
May and
June 2020 as well as the repayment of the rental deposit it
paid and a remote control deposit. The claim in reconvention is
premised on the common law doctrine of supervening impossibility (
vis
major
). The respondents’
counterclaim is based on the impossibility created by the movement
restrictions imposed by the regulations.
The case for the respondents
was that those movement restrictions rendered it impossible for the
third respondent to occupy the
leased premises for purposes of
attending classes at the NWU University. The defence was that
the purpose of the lease agreement
was to enable the third respondent
to occupy the leased premises and attend classes at the University.
6.
It is clear from what is set out above that the correct
interpretation of the lease agreement between the parties lies at the
heart
of the resolution of the disputes between the parties.
The plaintiff (appellant) claim is for an agreed amount payable by
the respondents in terms of the contract in the event of the
respondents effecting a premature cancellation of the contract. That
of necessity relates to the repudiation of the contract by the
respondents which took place as an unlawful attempt to cancel the
contract. The question is therefore whether the premature
handing of the keys and remote control back to the lessor amounted
to
a repudiation of the contract or not. The same question arises
in relation to the interpretation of the question whether
on a proper
construction of the contract the appellant had a duty to ensure that
the third respondent remain able to occupy the
leased premises to
attend classes at the University. In such
interpretation of the agreement the appellant as
lessor would be
practically in the position of an insurer of the third respondent
liable for damages in the event of the third
respondent being
precluded by circumstances beyond the control of the parties to
occupy the leased premises for purposes of attending
the NWU
University.
7.
As is clear from what is said above, the correct
interpretation of the lease agreement between the parties lies at the
heart of
the decision of the case between the parties in the
Magistrate’s Court. The Court
a quo
had
the following to say:
“
17.
Context is everything. Therefore it is not necessary to go
deeply with the principles applicable
to the interpretation of
contract. Once a contract has been repudiated the aggrieved
party may choose to keep the contract
in place and enforce
specific performance or accept the repudiation and proceed to cancel
the contract and claim damages.”
8.
In paragraph 27 of the judgment the Court said the
following:
“
27.
For the reasons above I find that the defendants have on a balance of
probabilities discharged the onus
that the unforeseeable supervening
circumstances outside the Parties’ control or desire prevented
them from honouring the
lease agreement.”
9.
She then dismissed the claim of the appellant and upheld
the counterclaim of the respondents for remission of rental and the
deposits
paid in terms of the contract. She also ordered attorney and
client costs on the basis that it was a novel case and therefore
attorney
and client costs were justified.
10.
The lease agreement between the parties is a written
agreement which provides for accommodation being made available by
the appellants
to the third respondent for accommodation purposes in
order to enable him to attend classes at the NWU University. It
is
settled law that the words of a written agreement is the starting
point in the interpretation process of what exactly the contract
means. An apt summary of the principles relating to
interpretation of written contracts is to be found in
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd & another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd & others 2022(1) SA 100 (SCA) at paragraph
25
:
“
25.
An analysis must commence with the provisions of the subscription
agreement that have relevance to deciding
whether Capitec Holdings
consent was indeed required. The much cited passages from Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
Municipality offer guidance
as to how to approach the interpretation of words used in a
document. It is the language used,
understood in the context in
which it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the provision
that constitutes the unitary exercise
of interpretation. I
would add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not be
used in a mechanical fashion.
It is a relationship between the
words used, the concept expressed by those words and the place of the
contested provisions in
the scheme of the agreement (or instrument)
as a whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to which a
coherent and salient
interpretation is determined.”
11.
In paragraph 26 that judgment the following
warning is said:
“
Endumeni is not
a charter for judicial constructs premised upon what a contract
should be taken to mean from advantage point that
is not located in
the text of what the parties in fact agreed. Nor does Endumeni
licence judicial interpretation that imports
meaning into a contract
so as to make it a better contract or one that is ethically
preferable.”
12.
In the instant case the lease agreement is an
uncomplicated document which provides for the lease of a room in a
building on a property
in Potchefstroom to the lessee, the term of a
lease to be approximately one year and a clause protecting the lessor
in the case
of a premature cancellation of the lease by the lessee,
in which case a certain amount is payable by the lessee to the
lessor.
However, it is clear that the lessor protected itself against
eventualities which could affect the right and duties of the parties.
Clause 6 of the agreement reads as follows:
“
6.
Indien die huidige Huurder nie die huurperseel op verstryking van sy
huurdatum ontruim
nie, of indien die Verhuurder om watter rede ookal
nie by magte is om aan die Huurder okkupasie te gee nie, sal die
Huurder nogtans
okkupasie, sodra dit beskikbaar is op ‘n later
datum, aanvaar en die Huurder sal dan geen eis of regte tot enige
skadevergoeding
as gevolg van sodanige vertraging teen die Verhuurder
hê nie.”
The absence of any
provision in the contract or indication that a claim by the lessee as
a result of inability of the lessee to
exercise his rights of
occupation of the leased premises could lawfully be made in such
circumstances is a clear indication that
such eventuality was not
dealt with by the parties as part of the lease agreement and probably
it was deliberately omitted.
There is no other inference
possible due to the fact that the rights of the lessor was protected
in clause 6 of the agreement quoted
above, whereas no similar
provision existed in favour of the lessee in the case of his
inability to exercise his rights in terms
of the contract. At the
time of the formation of the contract, neither of the parties foresaw
the possibility that the Covid-19
epidemic would be declared a
disaster and regulations promulgated to restrict the movement of
people to places as in fact happened.
If that possibility had
been foreseen by the parties, I have no doubt that the contract would
have dealt with such possibility.
13.
The Magistrate found that, as a result of the
limitations imposed by the regulations formulated under the Disaster
Management Act,
the lessee could not exercise his rights in terms of
the agreement as lessee, and that therefore the contract became
impossible
of performance resulting in the cancellation thereof and
the entitlement of the lessee to a remission of rent. In my view that
finding is completely incorrect. In the first instance it is
clear from the evidence that the regulations did not prohibit
the
lessee to occupy the leased premises. What it did was to
restrict the possibility to commute between Pretoria and
Potchefstroom.
That does not mean that execution of the
contract by both the lessor and the lessee became impossible.
The obligation of
the lessor is to provide vacant possession to the
lessee of the leased apartment against payment of the agreed rental.
That
remained possible. The decision of the lessee not to
commute to Potchefstroom whereas he could have taken occupation of
the
leased premises does not amount to impossibility of execution of
the contract. Consequently, the finding of the Magistrate that
the
contract became impossible of execution is clearly incorrect. It
follows that the counterclaim based on impossibility of the
performance of the contract could not succeed.
14.
As far as a claim of the plaintiff (appellant) is
concerned, it is clear that that claim should succeed. The
amount claimed
by the appellant is an amount which is provided for in
the contract to be payable by the defendants in the event of the
defendants
prematurely cancel the agreement. The action by the
third defendant to hand back the keys and the remote control is
clearly
an act of repudiation of the agreement. The acceptance
thereof by the appellant is equal to acceptance of the repudiation
which inevitably leads to cancellation of the agreement.
Consequently, I am of the view that the claim of the appellant as
pleaded
should succeed. As far as costs is concerned, in the
debate during the hearing of this matter it was correctly conceded
that
a cost order on the basis of attorney and clients costs was not
warranted. I agree. In my view the following order should
be made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the Court a quo is set aside and
replaced with the following orders:
2.1.
Judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff
against the first, second and third defendants, jointly and
severally, for the payment
of the amount of R8 335,00;
2.2.
Interest is payable on the aforesaid amount at the
applicable mora interest rate from 3
rd
of July 2020, being the tempore morae, until date of
payment;
2.3.
First, second and third defendants are ordered to pay
the costs of suit of the plaintiff;
2.4.
The counterclaim of the first and second defendants
is dismissed with costs.
L.I.
VORSTER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree, it is so ordered
C.J.
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel for
Appellant:
Adv D Hewitt
Instructed By:
Riekert Terblanche
Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondents:
Adv. R van
Schalkwyk
Instructed By:
JDB Incorporated
Date of Hearing:
25 January 2024
Judgment delivered
on:
31 January 2024
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