Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 866South Africa
Bredenkamp and Another v Bredenkamp and Others (053472/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 866 (30 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Bredenkamp and Another v Bredenkamp and Others (053472/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 866 (30 August 2024)
Bredenkamp and Another v Bredenkamp and Others (053472/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 866 (30 August 2024)
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sino date 30 August 2024
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Note:
Draft
order found in PDF version of the judgment.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 053472/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
30 AUGUST 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
GORDON
LESLIE BREDENKAMP
1
st
Applicant
SOFIA
JOHANNA BREDENKAMP
2
nd
Applicant
and
KAREL
FRANCOIS BREDENKAMP
1
st
Respondent
BREDENKAMP
ATTORNEYS INC
2
nd
Respondent
DAWID
LOUIS BREDENKAMP
3
rd
Respondent
DAMSAK
(PTY) LTD
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(This
matter was heard in open court but judgment was delivered
electronically by uploading it onto the electronic file of the matter
on Caselines and the date of the judgment is deemed to be the date of
uploading thereof onto Caselines)
BEFORE:
HOLLAND-MUTER J:
[1]
A serious family feud is the underlying cause of the dispute between
the parties. The Applicants,
Gordon and Sofia Bredenkamp, pensioners
and married to one another, were involved in various litigious
disputes between them and
their eldest son, Karel Bredenkamp, the
First Respondent.
[2]
The Third Respondent, Dawid Bredenkamp, is the brother of Karel and
son of Gordon and Sofia. Dawid
and Damsak's roles in the feud are
rather petty.
[3]
Gordon and Sofia seek an order substituting a map attached to the
mediation agreement dated 13
October 2021 with a new alleged final
map and certain amendments now proposed to the initial mediation
agreement, and to have the
initial mediation agreement, as amended,
made an order of court. They also seek specific performance by Karel
of the amended mediation
agreement. Karel opposes such relief.
[4]
Karel and Gordon entered into an informal agreement during 2012
whereby Karel was to reside on
the parents' farm (the later subject
of the litigation between them), Karel embarking on pecan nut farming
and also practising
law from the renovated house. Gordon is the owner
of portion 1, farm Hartbeesfontein 484 JR, District Cullinan. Karel
renovated
the homestead on the farm, maintained and used a landing
strip and hanger (constructed by himself) and established pecan
orchards
on the farm.
[5]
All went well until Karel needed security of tenure of the portion of
the farm which he occupied,
on which the hanger and airstrip was
situated and on which he was conducting his pecan nut farming
operations.
[6]
This sparked part of the acrimony between them. Gordon even attempted
to have Karel evicted from
the farm without success resulting in an
adverse cost order against Gordon. In an attempt to resolve the
acrimony and various pending
litigation between themselves, the
parties entered into mediation discussions before Advocate Gerard
Naude SC. The mediation culminated
in a Mediation Agreement reached
and entered into on 13 October 2021between them.
[7]
The mediation agreement is the object of dispute. Gordon and Sofia
seek to amend the mediation
agreement with reference to later
settlement proposals and to enforce the later purported amended
mediation agreement. Karel opposes
both the amendment and enforcement
of the agreement, premised thereupon that the mediation agreement was
repudiated by Gordon by
conduct, leaving Karel to believe that
Gordon's actions unequivocally conveyed Gordon's intention
not
to be bound by the mediation agreement dated 13 October 2021. Gordon
disputes this inference by Karel.
[8]
The parties entered onto mediation before Naude, (the "Mediator")
to try and resolve
the on-going legal battles. The mediation
discussions were partly centred round the subdivision of the farm. A
preceded interim
agreement, each individually endorsed in manuscript
by the parties and separately signed by Gordon on 30 September 2021
and on
1 October 2021 by Karel, provided that Karel may approach a
town planner to discuss the viability and costs implications of the
envisaged subdivision of the farm.
[9]
The interim agreement provided that should Gordon have any further
requests of subdivision of
the farm, such requests be directed by
Gordon not later than 4 October 2021to Karel, the date later for
further requests extended
to 11 October 2021.
[10]
The parties met the town planner, Ms Charlotte van der Merwe, on 8
October 2021. They explained to Van der
Merwe that they wish to
subdivide the farm into three portions. Gordon inquired about further
subdivision of the farm into more
than three portions. Van der Merwe
would revert to them later considering the possibility to subdivide
the farm into more portions
considering the provisions of Section 3
of the Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act, 70 of 1970.
[11]
Karel is adamant that the parties never
agreed
to any further subdivisions in excess of the three portions during
the meeting with the town planner but that Gordon could propose
such
as set out in par [9] & [10] supra.
[12]
Gordon did not request/inquire about any further subdivisions into
more than the agreed subdivision into
three portions before 11
October 2021 and the Mediation Agreement was concluded between Gordon
and Karel on 13 October 2021. A
map indicating the subdivision was
annexed to the mediation agreement.
[13]
The question about the envisaged costs of the subdivision was
addressed in the mediation agreement. The mediation
agreement
provided for the farm to be subdivided into three portions, two of
the portions to be transferred to Karel and the remainder
of the farm
to be retained by Gordon.
[14]
The purpose of the subdivision was to subdivide the farm in such a
way that the portions of land on which
Karel resides, the hanger and
landing strip and that where the pecan orchards has been established,
be transported to Karel. The
map attached to the mediation agreement
is in support of this subdivision.
[15]
Gordon and Karel jointly performed in terms of the mediation
agreement by appointing Ms van der Merwe as
town planner and the
architect firm, Jordaan Strijdom Architects, to assist, prepare and
file the application for subdivision of
the farm. The appointed
architects used the attached map for the planned subdivision. To
speed up the process, Karel had discussions
with the town planner to
have the application file-ready during December 2021 before all close
down for the annual festive season.
[16]
A representative of the architects, requested by Karel, visited
Gordon on 17 December 2021 to obtain his
signature on the prepared
Application Map as required for the subdivision. Gordon refused to
sign the map stating that he wishes
to subdivide the farm into
additional portions, and that he as owner of the farm can do with the
farm as it pleases. There was
no time deadline set as to when the
documents were to be signed or when the application was to be
submitted to local council.
[17]
Gordon alleged that the proposed access servitudes roads on the
Application Map were different from those
proposed and agreed to
previously, and that that the borderlines of the subdivisions on the
map represented 50 m wide strips. The
response by the architect was
that such border lines would not be visible on the map of that scale.
Gordon's further objection
was that the Application Map presented
only provided for subdivision into three portions with no indication
that consent for future
subdivision would be sought. It must be noted
that the agreed mediation agreement signed by the parties on 13
October 2021 does
not provide for subdivision into more than three
portions, but does not exclude such possibility.
[18]
Gordon and Dawid redrew a subdivision map during the weekend {18 &
19 December 2021) which Dawid emailed
to the town planner on 20
December 2021. This redrawn map indicates subdivision into additional
portions, totalling a number of
six portions. The extent of the
portions to be transferred to Karel remained the same as on the
initial map.
[19]
Karel was of the view that this conduct by Gordon is a clear
indication that Gordon regarded himself no longer
bound by the
existing agreement's terms. Karel indicated in the answering
affidavit (par 4.14
CaseLines
04-211) that he would have
negotiated this new alteration of the agreement with Gordon had he
been approached with such a request.
The failure by Gordon to
approach Karel in this regard led Karel to believe that Gordon was
not willing to honour the existing
mediation agreement, this conduct
viewed by Karel constituting repudiation of the mediation agreement
by Gordon.
[20]
A series of emails were exchanged between the parties wherein
proposals and counter-proposals were made. According to Karel
it
resulted in a "Final Map Agreement" to form the basis to
negotiate and revive and amend the repudiated Mediation Agreement
to
provide for subdivision of the farm into additional portions. (par
22-24 & 39 in the answering affidavit
CaseLines
04-222
;
04-233
).
[21]
Karel is adamant that although a Final Map Agreement was arranged, it
merely forms the basis for continued negotiations and
was in no way
agreed (actually or implied) that the existing (or repudiated)
mediation agreement should be deemed amended.
[22]
Both parties however stuck to their different views resulting in at
least four further mediation sessions on 18 January, 2
February, 16
February and 8 April 2022.
[23]
The detail of each individual email exchanged need not be
recited·here but for the two important emails dd 16 April
2022
as annexed as
Annexures FA-11 & FA -13
(CaseLines
04-20-22).
Karel replied in FA-13 that
"
To
confirm, we would like to subdivide the farm without being forced to
Install any services (water, sewage or electricity. The
9 units and
the remainder will be used for farming.... There should be sufficient
underground water in the area to support 9 additional
units as and
when it becomes necessary".
[24]
Any reservations Karel may have had regarding additional costs were
addressed by Gordon. Karel emailed the architect Rossouw
on 16 April
2022 (
FA-13
) to confirm the subdivision of the farm into 9
portions. Gordon telephonically instructed Rossouw to proceed with
the application.
[25]
A remarkable about turn occurred on 9 June 2022 when Karel reverted
to his earlier view point that Gordon repudiated the mediation
agreement by conduct and adopted the view that he was no longer bound
by the mediation agreement. Karel insisted that the subdivision
was
for only four portions and conveyed his view that unless Gordon
succeeds to convince a court that he {Gordon} did not repudiate
the
mediation agreement, there was no binding agreement.
[26]
Further mediation was suggested and the parties met on 2 August 2022
and 3 February 2023. Gordon's attorney provided Karel's
attorney with
a further revised map before the mediation on 3 February 2023. The
parties agreed on 3 February 2023 that the latest
map provided will
either serve as an amendment of the Mediation Agreement in dispute
or, on Karel's version, will form part of
a reviewed amended
Settlement Agreement.
[27]
The parties are at logger heads as to who repudiated the Mediation
Agreement. Both Gordon and Karel are of the view that the
other party
repudiated the agreement.
REPUDIATION:
[28]
A party who asserts that the other party has repudiated the contract
must allege and prove the allegation. To rely on repudiation,
the
innocent party must allege and prove (a) repudiation of a fundamental
term of the contract, ie conduct that exhibits objectively
a
deliberate and unequivocal intention not to be bound any longer to
the contract; (b) an election to terminate, and (c) communication
of
such election.
Amler's Precedents of Pleadings 6th ed 301.
[29]
Repudiation is a serious matter and not lightly presumed. In
Datacolor International (Pty) Ltd v lntramarket (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001 (2)
SA 284
(SCA) (16)-(18)
it was held that “
The perception
is that of a reasonable person placed in the position of the
aggrieved party. The test is whether such a notional
reasonable
person would conclude that proper performance (in accordance of the
true interpretation of the agreement) will not be
forthcoming"
and "whether an innocent party will be entitled to resile from
the agreement will ultimately depend on the
nature and the degree of
the impending non-or ma/performance" and "the conduct from
which the inference of impending
non- or ma/performance is to be
drawn must be clearcut and unequivocal".
[30]
It is clear that repudiation requires a refusal to comply with a
material or important provision of an agreement,
while failure to
comply with an immaterial provision/term would not amount to breach
of contract and would not constitute repudiation.
See
Van
Rooyen v Minister van Openbare Werke en Gemeenskapsbou
1978 (2) SA
835
(A) AT 845-6.
[31]
The question to be answered in this matter is (a) what was the main
objective of the mediation agreement
and (b) is this purpose defeated
by the later actions/deviations from the initial map as attached to
the Mediation Agreement signed
on 13 October 2021.
[32]
In my view the main objective is the subdivision of the farm into
three portions to secure Karel's tenure
and to secure his continued
residing on the portions of the farm. Karel conceded this in his
answering affidavit par [3.7] on
Caselines
04-203-204. There
were also other related aspects regarding financial commitments
undertook by Karel towards Gordon and Sofia. The
portions agreed to
be transferred to Karel after subdivision were clearly marked on the
map attached to the Mediation Agreement,
resulting that Gordon would
retain the remainder of the land after subdivision.
[33]
The purpose of the agreement was not to restrict Gordon's right of
ownership of the remainder portions of
the farm or to prohibit Gordon
from further subdivisions of the remainder of the farm. This is why
Karel agreed during the further
mediation sessions in February and
April 2023 that Gordon may continue to subdivide the remainder of the
farm into a further 9
portions.
[34]
There is the undertaking by Gordon to cover further additional
expenses resulting from further subdivisions.
There is no indication
that the including of the proposed further subdivisions would slow
the process.
[35]
It has to be noted that both Karel and Gordon would receive exactly
the same portions what they would have
received set out in the
October map. The follow-up proposed maps do not alter the size of the
portions that both Karel and Gordon
would receive as in the October
map. The difference between the October map and the future proposed
maps only concerned Gordon's
portions being subdivided further. Karel
consented to this in his email on 16 April 2022.
(Annexure
FA-13).
[36]
The next question to determine is whether the amended maps defeated
the initial purpose to secure Karel's tenure on the indicated
portions in the October map. It is clear that Karel will still
receive the same portions as indicated on all the maps. None of
the
future proposed maps alter the sizes and positions of the portions
earmarked for Karel in the subdivision. Karel is not burdened
with
any additional costs resulting from the newly proposed subdivision
nor is he in any way put at risk and time it would take
to effect the
new proposed subdivision.
[37]
The Mediation Agreement contained no
lex commissoria
or
forfeiture clause. Any alleged breach by Gordon, if held to exist, is
not material and Karel could not rescind the agreement
based on such
alleged breach. If there was a breach by Gordon, such breach is not
material and rescission of the contract by Karel
not permitted.
Rescission may only take place where material breach of contract is
present, in this matter the court could not
find any material breach
committed by Gordon.
[38]
The last aspect is whether Karel accepted Gordon's repudiation? In
Putco Ltd v TV & Radio Guarentee Co (Pty) Ltd
1985 (4) SA 809
(A) 830 E
it was stated that a notice of cancellation must be
clear and unequivocal. The court is of the view that Van Aardt's
email on behalf
of Karel dd 27 January 2022 does not muster the
requirement of clear and unequivocal notice. Karel merely mentioned
and explained
to his attorney his position towards Gordon which
leaves him no option but to accept the alleged repudiation. It
remains open why
Van Aardt (Karel's attorney) in her email did not
convey Karel's acceptance of the alleged repudiation.
[39]
There were other obligations on Karel in terms of the Mediation
Agreement which he did not comply with. Karel's
defence is that
because of the alleged repudiation by Gordon, no performance was
necessary. The court differs from Karel in this
regard by finding
that there was no repudiation by Gordon. Karel is therefore obliged
to perform in terms of the mediation agreement.
[40]
The court is satisfied that there was no repudiation of the Mediation
Agreement by Gordon and that the application
must succeed. Karel's
version is rejected.
The
following order is made:
ORDER:
The
court is satisfied with the proposed draft order (annexed hereto as
"XYZ") by the Applicants and it is made an order
of court.
The Application, as set out in the draft order, is granted and the
respondents' defence is rejected with costs.
Signed
at Pretoria on 30 August 2024
J
HOLLAND-MUTER
Judge
of the Pretoria High Court
Matter
heard on 5 June 2024
Judgment
handed down on 30 August 2024
Appearances
as on the Draft Order "XVZ" annexed
REGISTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
COUNSEL
WHO APPEARED IN THE MATTER:
ADV
BC STOOP SC
APPLICANTS'
COUNSEL
(INSTRUCTED
BY FUCHS ROUX INC)
083
461 7640 /
benstoop@brooklynadvocates.co.za
ADV
J ROUX SC
FIRST
AND SECOND RESPONDENTS' COUNSEL
(INSTRUCTED
BY BREDENKAMP ATTORNEYS INC)
082
446 1566 /
jroux@gkchambers.co.za
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