Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 408South Africa
Van Reenen and Another v Heidi Homes (Pty) Ltd (A80/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 408 (23 April 2024)
Headnotes
judgment is refused and the first and second defendants are granted leave to defend the action.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Reenen and Another v Heidi Homes (Pty) Ltd (A80/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 408 (23 April 2024)
Van Reenen and Another v Heidi Homes (Pty) Ltd (A80/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 408 (23 April 2024)
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sino date 23 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No:
A80/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:03.04.2024
In
the matter between:
TOBIAS
JOHN VAN
REENEN
First Appellant
CAROLINE
MALAUZAT
Second Appellant
and
HEIDI
HOMES (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
ORDER
On
appeal from the Pretoria Magistrate’s court:
1 The appeal is upheld
with costs.
2. The order of the
court a quo is set aside and replaced with the following order:
2.1
The application for summary judgment is refused and the first and
second defendants are granted leave to defend the action.
2.2 Costs in the cause.
JUDGMENT
WINDELL J:
[1]
This is an appeal against the order
and judgment of the Magistrate’s court Pretoria (the court a
quo), that granted summary
judgment against the first and second
appellants for payment of R150 000 for estate’s
commission. The central issue
for determination on appeal is whether
the learned magistrate erred in concluding that the appellants have
not disclosed a bona
fide defence to the action and failed to raise
any issue for trial.
[2]
The background facts to this appeal
are common cause. On 31 July 2022 the appellants mandated the
respondent, Heidi Homes (Pty)
Ltd, duly represented by Mr Piet Kruger
(“the estate agent”), to procure a willing and able
purchaser for the appellants'
immovable property which will result in
a net amount to the appellants of R2 700 000.00. It is common
cause on the pleadings
that the parties agreed that the respondent
would be entitled to commission in respect of the mandate being
achieved, in an amount
of R150 000.00. Hence, the respondent was
mandated to market the appellants' immovable property for an amount
of R2 850 000.00,
to achieve the aforementioned (net) amount and
commission.
[3]
The estate agent presented the offer
to purchase to the appellants on 12 September 2021. The offer was for
an amount of R 2 850 000.00.
Clause 13 of the offer, however,
included the following ‘inclusion’ in respect of
‘FIXTURES AND FITTINGS’:
"Specific
Inclusions: COMPLETION OF RENOVATIONS TO THE MAIN AND SECOND
BATHROOMS (SHOWER, TOILET, SINK/S AND BATHS ETC)"
[4]
The appellants declined to
accept the offer. No contract of sale was thus entered into between
the appellants and the interested
buyer, and the appellants
subsequently mandated another estate agent to market the property for
the same amount of R2 850 000.00
[5]
Aggrieved with the appellants
refusal to accept the offer, the respondent instituted action against
the appellants in which it sought
specific performance of the
mandate. In its particular of claim (POC) the respondent relied on a
partly written and partly oral
(alternatively tacit) mandate. In para
5.4 of the POC it is alleged that it ‘was an express,
alternatively implied term of
the mandate that the Plaintiff shall be
entitled to payment of its commission upon procuring a willing and
able purchaser for the
full purchase price of R2 850 000.00.’
It is therefore contended that the mandate contained no other special
terms or condition
and as such, upon procuring a willing and able
buyer for the amount of R2 850 000.00, the respondent
fulfilled its mandate
and is entitled to its commission.
[6]
The appellants denied these
allegations and pleaded that the respondent would only be entitled to
estate agents commission if (a)
an offer to purchase acceptable to
them was signed by them and the purchaser, and (b) all suspensive
conditions contained in the
offer to purchase were fulfilled.
According to the appellants, they were entitled to reject the offer
made as it included a suspensive
condition, which was not part of the
mandate, namely that the second bathroom be renovated. They explain
it as follows in paragraph
10.2 of their plea:
‘
10
The Defendants admit that the offer was for the full purchase price
but plead that the offer contained conditions that placed
a financial
burden on the defendants which would have resulted in the Defendants
not receiving the required net amount of R 2 700
000.00 as referred
to by the Plaintiff in paragraph 5.3.2of its particulars of claim;
10.2.1 The offer was
conditional on the Defendants "completing" renovations of
the main and second bathroom (clause 13
of annexure X3 to the
particulars of claim)";
10.2.2 The Defendants
had renovated the main bathroom when the property was placed on the
market;
10.2.3 The Defendants
never undertook to renovate the second bathroom, which renovation
would have cost a substantial amount of
money resulting in the
Defendants not receiving the required minimum net amount of R 2 700
000.00.’
[7]
It
is trite that in summary judgment applications a respondent is not
required to deal exhaustively with the facts and the evidence,
provided they have disclosed their defence and the material facts
upon which the defence is based with sufficient particularity
to
enable the court to find that they have a bona fide defence (satisfy
the court by affidavit). Satisfy does not mean prove. The
appellants
thus only needed to set out facts which, if proved at trial, will
constitute an answer to the respondent's claim.
[1]
[8]
In my view, the appellants have
indeed done so, and the learned magistrate ought to have found that
they have presented trial-worthy
arguments and disclosed a bona fide
defence to the action. I say thus because of the following alleged
facts, which, should the
appellants prove them, would negate the
respondent's claim.
[9]
First,
the appellants assert that receiving a net sum of R2 700 000.00 from
any sale of the property was a material term of the
mandate. Implicit
in this term is that the estate agent could not have included Clause
13, which would have made the transaction
conditional and prevented
them from receiving R2 700 000.00. The respondent will bear the onus
in the main case to prove that the
mandate did not include such term.
See
Van
Huyssteen NO and Another v Mila Investment and Holding Company (Pty)
Ltd
.
[2]
[10]
Second, the appellants contend that
the respondent knew full well that Clause 13 was outside the purview
of its mandate and that
its inclusion made the transaction
conditional. When the respondent sent the appellants the offer to
purchase, the estate agent
issued an email on 13 September 2021 in
which he stated the following:
‘
In
my opinie is dit 'n baie goeie offer... Die enigste voorwaarde is dat
die tweede badkamer ook oor gedoen word en dat dit steeds
n bad en
stort het. Die koper hou van die kleure, afwerking ens van die eerste
badkamer en sal graag die tweede badkamer naastenby
sg (sic) wil he.’
[11]
This is disputed by the respondent.
In the affidavit supporting the application for summary judgement, it
is argued that since the
appellants already had the necessary
samples, it was ‘only reasonable and good practice to record
that such renovations should
be completed.’ It is further
alleged that the appellants have already started these improvements.
The appellants contested
this, claiming that once they made the
decision to sell the house, they had no plans to carry out the second
bathroom's renovations.
[12]
Third, the respondent's claim is not
for damages for breach of contract. It is a claim for specific
performance based on the respondent's
alleged due performance of its
mandate which it claims contained no other or further
material/special terms, (a contention that
is being contested). Under
the circumstances it was premature for the learned magistrate to find
that it was "incumbent"
on the appellants to have signed
(and presumably to have accepted) the offer.
[13]
There
are clear factual disputes raised by both parties. In the context of
a summary judgement application, the court is not charged
with
ascertaining the substantive merit or likelihood of success of a
defence. In
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E and D Security
Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal
held that such court ‘is concerned only with an assessment of
whether the leaded defence is genuinely
advanced as opposed to a sham
put up for purposes of obtaining delay. A court engaged in that
exercise is not going to be willing
to become involved in determining
disputes of fact on the merits of the principal case.’
[14]
The appellants have disclosed the
nature and grounds of their defence with sufficient particularity and
have set out the material
facts upon which their defence is based.
The learned magistrate erred in granting an order for summary
judgment. The order of the
Magistrate's Court, Pretoria, under case
number 42935/2021 thus falls to be set aside on appeal.
[15]
In the result the following
order is made:
1. The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2. The order of the
court a quo is set aside and replaced with the following order:
2.1
The application for summary judgment is refused and the first and
second defendants are granted leave to defend the action.
2.2 Costs in the cause.
L WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I agree
R MKHABELA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered: This
judgement was prepared and authored by the Judges whose name are
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 23 April 2024.
Date
of Hearing
:
30 January 2024
Date
of Judgment
:
23 April 2024
Appearances:
For
the Appellants:
Adv
Y Coertzen
Instructed
by:
Walters
Attorneys
Pretoria
For
the Respondent
:
Mr
J Nysschens
Instructed
by:
Johan
Nysschens Attorneys
Pretoria
[1]
Breytenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976 (2) SA 226
(T);
IPH
Finance Proprietary Limited v Agrizest Proprietary Limited
(unreported, WCC case number 21771/2023 dated 28 February 2023 at
para [11].
[2]
(593/16)
(2017) ZASCA 84
(2 June 2017) at [26].
[3]
(3670/2019)
(2020] 2AWCHC 28;
2020 (6) SA 624
(WCC) (30 April 2020)
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