Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 929South Africa
Greyling v Meiring and Another (59852/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 929 (17 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Greyling v Meiring and Another (59852/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 929 (17 September 2024)
Greyling v Meiring and Another (59852/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 929 (17 September 2024)
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sino date 17 September 2024
SAFLII
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER:
59852/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 17 SEPTEMBER
2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between: -
ELIZABETH
MARGARIETHA JOHANNA GREYLING
Plaintiff
(ID: 8[...])
And
WERNER
JACOBUS
MEIRING
First Defendant
(ID: 8[...])
DRAINSURE
(PTY) LTD t/a DRAINSURE PLUMBING
Second Defendant
This judgment is issued
by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of this
judgment is deemed to be 17 SEPTEMBER 2024.
JUDGMENT
COLLIS J
INTRODUCTION:
[1] The Plaintiff has
instituted three claims against the Defendants. All three claims stem
from verbal contractual agreements between
the Plaintiff and the
First Defendant. On its part the First Defendant has also instituted
one counterclaim.
[2] It should be
mentioned that during the trial the First Defendant had made an
election not to proceed with the Counterclaim.
[3] The three contractual
claims pursued by the Plaintiff emanates from three verbal agreements
between the parties with the following
terms:
3.1
Claim 1 is for the repayment of a loan advanced by the Plaintiff to
the First Defendant, for the business of the Second Defendant.
[1]
In respect of this claim, the First Defendant admits that the
Plaintiff loaned money for the business of the Second
Defendant but disputes that any money is still owing.
[2]
3.2. Claim 2 instituted
by the Plaintiff is for the repayment of monies spent towards
planning for their wedding. The parties were
engaged and the
Plaintiff claims from the First Defendant, 50% of the expenses
incurred by her. Consequently, she is holding him
liable for 50% of
the damages that she would not have incurred if the wedding had
proceeded. The wedding was called off a month
before it was due to
take place. Initially it was the Defendants’ contention that he
did not deny the wedding expenses incurred,
but denies being liable
for 50% of the costs.
3.3 In respect of Claim 3
instituted by the Plaintiff, she claims that she was employed by the
Second Defendant and entitled to
a salary. In this regard she claims
that she was employed by the Second Defendant from January 2021 to
April 2021 with a salary
of R24 000.00 per month and she is claiming
her salary for the entire period. In support for this claim the
Plaintiff places reliance
on an employment letter issued by the
Second Defendant to her.
DEFENCES
[4] In respect of the
loan the Defendant does not deny that the parties had exchanged
certain sums of money between themselves,
evidencing the
characteristics of a loan and loan repayments in relation to the
business of the Second Defendant.
[5] The Defendants do
however dispute the terms of such loan, specifically the date and
amount thereof. The amount that has to be
repaid as claimed by the
Plaintiff is also placed in dispute.
[6]
The second claim as mentioned, stems from the parties’
engagement which had been called off. The Plaintiffs’ evidence
in this regard it that the First Defendant verbally agreed to be
liable for half of the wedding costs and she is claiming half
of the
wedding costs that she could not recover after the wedding was
cancelled.
[3]
[7] The First Defendant
denies having ever agreed to be liable towards 50% of the wedding
costs. In light of the fact that this
was a verbal agreement, one
party’s word can only be measured against that of the other
party, subject to disputes over interpretation.
[8] In regards the
Plaintiff’s third claim for salary due to her, the Defendants
deny that the Plaintiff was ever employed
by the Second Defendant and
accordingly it is the Defendants’ case that she cannot claim a
salary from them.
Claim 1 – Loan:
[9] In respect of the
loan amount the Plaintiff testified that the First Defendant
approached her for a loan to which she agreed
and that she paid the
loan in instalments into the Second Defendant’s bank account
for the business of the Second Defendant.
[10] It is not denied
that the monies were paid to the Second Defendant and the First
Defendant admitted that the repayments of
the loan were made from the
Second Defendant’s bank account.
[11] In respect of this
claim, the main dispute between the parties is whether the amount of
R84 199.99 is still owing by the Defendants.
The Defendants maintain
that the amount of R84 199.99 should be set-off against payments
allegedly owed by the Plaintiff for rent
and for alleged legal costs
incurred to defend the actions in the Magistrate’s Court.
[12]
The parties were referred to the schedule provided by the Defendants
in their Plea
[4]
and the
Plaintiff stated that she is in agreement with the schedule, apart
from the payments that the First Defendant wishes to
subtract for
alleged rent and legal costs for the actions instituted in the
Magistrate’s Court.
The 24 Berrylands
Property:
[13] The Defendants’
schedule provides that a total amount of R15 500.00 should be set-off
against the loan for rental allegedly
owed by the Plaintiff to the
First Defendant at a property known as 24 Berrylands.
[14] From the evidence
led in this regard, it is common cause that the Plaintiff was not a
signatory to the 24 Berrylands lease.
The Plaintiff contends that she
never resided at 24 Berrylands and that it was the First Defendant’s
residence. The First
Defendant first stated that the Plaintiff would
sleep over occasionally and then maintained that the Plaintiff
resided with him
at 24 Berrylands.
[15]
The First Defendant made reference to the rental contract
[5]
signed by the parties for the property they rented together and known
as Club Nautique, where the joint address provided for the
parties
was 24 Berrylands. The Plaintiff maintained that the 24 Berrylands
property was never her residence and it was never agreed
that she
would pay rent for the property.
[16] The First Defendant
did not lead any evidence in support of his contention that it was in
fact agreed that the Plaintiff would
pay rent for the 24 Berrylands
property. The First Defendant further admitted that it was never
agreed that the rental amount could
be set-off against the loan
amount.
[17]
He further did not institute a Counterclaim for such rental allegedly
owed by the Plaintiff.
In the absence of a counterclaim for the
rental at the 24 Berrylands property, the First Defendant cannot
claim such rental and
cannot claim set-off of such rental.
The Club Nautique
Property:
[18]
In the Defendants’ Plea, the Defendants seem to claim that a
total amount of R50 074.00 should be deducted from
the loan for
alleged rental owed by the Plaintiff for the Club Nautique property
for the period of November 2021 to May 2021.
[6]
[19] During her testimony
it was admitted by that Plaintiff that she had agreed to pay half of
the rental at the property and that
she had in fact not done so. Her
version was that as she had resigned from her employment in order to
be employed by the Second
Defendant, and as such, she was reliant on
her salary to pay such rent. As she never received a salary from the
Second Defendant,
she was therefore unable to pay such rent.
[20] The Plaintiff
further testified that it was never agreed that the arrear rental
could be set-off against the loan.
[21]
In this regard the First Defendant testified, that the Plaintiff did
in fact make payments towards the lease in the amounts
of R6 200.00,
R7 000.00, R5 000.00 and R70 000.00 but that the first three payments
made by the Plaintiff, which she stated was
for the loan to the
Second Defendant were in fact payments made for the rent for the Club
Nautique property. The First Defendant
also testified that the R70
000.00 paid by the Plaintiff on 18 February 2021 was also not part of
the loan advanced by her, but
rather that it was Plaintiff’s
50% contribution towards rent and electricity/utilities for ten
months in advance.
[7]
[22]
This version as testified to by the First Defendant, i.e. the version
of set-off was however not pleaded by him and is contrary
to
correspondence directed by his attorney on his behalf to the
Plaintiff’s attorney which specifically states that the
payments were made in terms of the loan. This was further the
Defendants pleaded case, where it was pleaded that all amounts paid
by the Plaintiff were in respect of the loan.
[8]
[23] Notwithstanding what
was put to him, the First Defendant was steadfast in his denial and
maintained that the payments so made
were made towards the payment
for rent.
[24]
The version so testified to by the First Defendant is completely
improbable if one considers the inconsistencies. This version
so
testified to, is also not his pleaded case before the Court on point
and in the absence of an amendment to his Plea, it cannot
be said
that it supports his pleaded case. It is trite that parties are bound
by their pleadings.
[9]
[25] When the First
Defendant was asked how the Plaintiff would contribute towards rental
considering that she was not employed
at the time, the First
Defendant testified that upon resigning from her previous employment,
the Plaintiff had put in a claim for
a Retirement Annuity registered
in her name to be paid out in due course. On his version she would
then use this money to contribute
towards the Club Nautique rent.
[26] This version as
testified to by the First Defendant is further improbable as no
person can rely on a retirement payout as income
to pay rental, in
circumstances where the amount of payment and the date of payout
remains uncertain and where rental is expected
to be paid monthly.
[27] In the absence of
the evidence presented by the First Defendant in support of his
pleaded case, this Court cannot find in favour
of the First Defendant
in respect of Claim 1. Accordingly, I am satisfied that the
Plaintiff has discharged her
onus
and is to be awarded this
Claim.
Claim 2-Wedding Expenses
[28] In this regard, the
Plaintiff testified that when she got engaged to the First Defendant,
it was agreed that they would each
pay half of the wedding costs. She
testified that her father had passed away and that her mother had no
money with which to assist
them financially.
[29] In this regard, it
was her testimony that in preparation of the wedding she incurred the
following expenses, namely:
29.1 Venue costs–
R20 500.00
29.2 Décor and
Flowers – R10 000.00
29.3 Wedding makeup –
R1 800.00
29.4 Gowns and slippers –
R1 600.00
29.5 Wedding dress
material – R 6 900.00
29.6 Wedding cake –
R 2 990.00
29.7 Bridesmaids’
dresses – R700.00 and that she will only claim from the First
Defendant 50% of the wedding costs incurred.
[30] The Plaintiff in
addition and in support of this claim, had called her mother who
testified that she had spoken to both the
Plaintiff and the First
Defendant and explained that she did not have any money to assist
them with any wedding expenses traditionally
expected and that they
would need to pay for the wedding on their own. Furthermore, she
testified that the policies that were left
to her by her late husband
would only pay out in five years’ time and as such that she had
no money to assist them.
[31] In respect of this
claim, the version of the First Defendant was also contradictory.
Firstly, it was his version that he had
offered to pay half of the
wedding expenses but that the Plaintiff insisted to pay for the
wedding herself. This version was however
was never put to the
Plaintiff and she could not comment thereon.
[32] It however is a
version that is simply improbable. No woman about to be married,
would carry all wedding expenses by herself,
when the whole notion of
a wedding is to bring two persons together for them to start sharing
a life, including expenses incurred
to commence such union.
[33] A further version
presented by the First Defendant on point was that he does not deny
that the wedding expenses were incurred
by the Plaintiff, but rather
that he himself had paid for more than half of the expenses incurred.
This assertion so made by the
First Defendant, was also not supported
by any documentary evidence presented by him as proof that payment(s)
were in fact made
by him. Absent this documentary proof presented by
him, this Court would find it difficult to give credence to such
version, this
notwithstanding the fact that this version is at
variance to his initial version presented before this Court.
[34] Consequently, this
Court is satisfied that the Plaintiff has discharged her
onus
in respect of the wedding expenses incurred in the amount of R20
945.00.
Claim 3-Salary
[35] In respect of the
Plaintiffs’ claim for salary owed to her, she testified that
she was employed by the Second Defendant
from the 1st of January 2021
to the end of April 2021 for a monthly salary of R24 000.00. She
testified that as part of her employment
she managed the First
Defendant’s social media as well as debt collections and that
she worked full days.
[36]
In support of her claim the Plaintiff referred to a letter written by
the First Defendant on behalf of the Second Defendant
to the bank
whereby her employment was confirmed.
[10]
[37] This letter provides
that the Plaintiff is a temporary employee and that she would receive
a monthly salary of R24 000.00 from
May 2021.
[38] In this regard it
was her testimony that it was agreed between the parties that she
would be paid R24 000.00 from the 1st of
January 2021 as that is when
her employment started and that the First Defendant provided her with
the letter in order for her
to get a loan to support the Second
Defendant.
[39] In respect of this
claim, Mr. Meiring, in his Plea denied that the Plaintiff was ever
employed by the Second Defendant, however
during his testimony he
gave evidence that the Plaintiff was temporarily employed as provided
for in his letter to the bank. This
evidence is not as per his
pleaded case and neither was the Plea of the Defendants ever amended.
[40]
During cross-examination, the First Defendant was directed to a
letter from his attorney
[11]
where it was again admitted that the Plaintiff was employed by the
Second Defendant. The testimony therefore advanced by the First
Defendant that the Second Defendant never had the financial means to
employ the Plaintiff is therefore contradictory to the letter
directed by his attorney.
[41] The Plaintiff having
been temporarily employed by the Second Defendants firm, it follows,
that at the very least on his version
that the Plaintiff ought to
have been earning a salary for the work performed by her and further
only having earned a salary, she
would have been able to carry her
expenses. Absent the earning of any remuneration, it follows that she
would have found it difficult
to meet her responsibilities.
[42] On the probabilities
therefore, this Court accepts that the Plaintiff was indeed employed
by the Second Defendants’ firm
and is owed the amount of salary
due for the period in question. More so in the absence of any
rebuttal evidence being presented
by him.
[43] Consequently, the
Plaintiff in respect of this claim, is awarded payment in the amount
of R96 000.00.
Costs
[44] As per the
Plaintiff’s pleaded case she seeks costs of a Party and Party
High Court scale, this notwithstanding that
her monetary claims fall
within the Magistrates Courts jurisdiction.
[45] In support of being
granted this scale of costs, she presented the evidence of her
instructing attorney, Ms. Du Plessis who
testified that the first
action which was instituted in the Randfontein Magistrates Court, was
in fact an error on their part and
as such they paid the Defendants’
taxed costs incurred.
[46]
The special plea filed by the Defendants in the Randfontein case,
provided their registered address as an address in Randburg.
[12]
This Plea however did not set out the First Defendant’s
address. She thereafter conducted a search of the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission’s (hereinafter referred to as
“CIPC”) database, which showed that the Second
Defendant’s registered address was located in Central
Johannesburg.
[13]
[47]
In order to ensure that they issue further proceedings out of the
correct court, correspondence was directed to the Defendants’
attorneys requesting the First Defendant’s address as well as
whether the Second Defendant’s registered address would
be
changed.
[14]
[48] The said attorneys
refused to provide an address in respect of the First Defendant nor
give an undertaking in respect of the
Second Defendant.
[49] Ms. du Plessis
further testified, that in light of the fact that they did not know
where the First Defendant lived and that
the whole cause of action
did not arise within one province, they decided to follow the Second
Defendant’s registered address
as that would also be the First
Defendant’s employment address.
[50]
Summons was as a result issued out of the Johannesburg Central
Magistrates Court and a special plea was again filed by the
Second
Defendant claiming its registered address is in Randburg.
[15]
Pursuant thereto, Ms du Plessis again consulted the CIPC’s
database and found that the Second Defendant had changed its
registered address to its attorney’s address in Krugersdorp
after they received the letter requesting whether the address
would
be changed.
[16]
[51] The action was again
withdrawn, but as it was clear that the Second Defendant had
deliberately changed its registered address,
they decided to use the
address as provided for in the Special Plea and issued out of the
Randburg Court.
[52]
This action was similarly withdrawn after service could not
successfully be made. The sheriff’s return
[17]
clearly indicated that the Defendants had left the property. Should
the matter have continued on an unopposed basis it would be
unlikely
for the Plaintiff to be successful in light of the sheriff’s
return of non- service.
[53] Ms. Du Plesssis
further testified that instead of continuing with the action in
Krugersdorp with the risk of the Second Defendant
again changing his
registered address prior to the action being served, the Plaintiff
decided it would be more cost effective to
continue in the High
Court, hence the relief to seek costs on a High Court scale.
[54] On behalf of the
Plaintiff it was therefore argued, that the Defendants at all times
knew the Plaintiff’s intention to
serve on the Second
Defendant’s address and that same was deliberately changed.
They provided an address in their special
plea for the Second
Defendant that was not being used by the Second Defendant.
[55] It is as a result if
this action, that the Plaintiff had no option but to continue in the
High Court, preventing the risk of
the Defendants evading the court’s
jurisdiction again.
[56] Further that the
Plaintiff could not use the address of the First Defendant, as they
firstly did not know where the First Defendant
resided, and further
in the absence of reliance of the whole cause of action arising out
of one magisterial district, she had no
choice but to institute
proceedings out of the High Court.
[57] On behalf of the
Defendants it was submitted that although the High Court has
concurrent jurisdiction to entertain monetary
claims falling within
the jurisdictional limit of the Magistrate’s Court, the action
should never have pursued out of the
High Court as this has caused
both parties to incur unnecessarily high legal fees, which could have
been avoided.
[58]
It is for this reason that the Defendants had pleaded that costs in
this action should be paid by the Plaintiff on a punitive
scale,
considering that the monetary amount claimed falls within the
jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s Court.
[18]
[59]
Further, albeit that the Plaintiff claimed that she was forced to
institute this action out of the High Court, as a result
of the First
Defendant’s failure to voluntarily disclose his residential
address and the Second Defendant’s registered
address which
kept on changing,
[19]
there
was no such obligation on the Defendants to assist the Plaintiff with
these addresses. As the Defendants at all times were
represented by
an attorney, the Rules
[20]
of
the Magistrates Court provided for service to be affected on the
attorney.
[21]
This manner of
service was not elected by the Plaintiff.
[60] A Court has a
discretion in awarding the appropriate costs order to a successful
litigant. In
casu
no explanation has been given as to the
reason why service of the initiating documents was never affected, on
the legal representative
of the Defendants in circumstances where it
was known to the Plaintiff that the Defendants were legally
represented.
[61] In exercising my
discretion, I am of the view that absent such explanation and given
the fact that the Plaintiff’s monetary
claim falls within the
Magistrates Court jurisdiction, the Plaintiff being the successful
party should only be awarded costs on
a Magistrates Court scale.
Counterclaim
[62] As mention
supra
,
the First Defendant at the commencement of the hearing had indicated
that it will not persist with its Counterclaim. This was
done after
the commencement of the proceedings and not prior. As such the
Defendants’ presented no evidence in respect of
its
Counterclaim.
[63]
The evidence however presented by the Plaintiff was to the effect
that the Plaintiff’s attorneys had paid an amount of
R3 529.77
of the Bill of Costs into the bank account of Defendants’
attorneys in respect of the first action which was instituted.
[22]
[64] As no further taxed
Bills of Costs were presented into evidence, and no evidence lead
regarding the amount incurred in defending
the other two actions
issued out of the Magistrate’s Court, the Defendants have
failed to discharged their
onus
in respect of the
Counterclaim.
[65] Consequently,
notwithstanding an indication at the commencement of the proceedings
that it would not proceed with its Counterclaim,
it will be
appropriate for the Counterclaim in the circumstances to be dismissed
with costs.
ORDER
[66] In the result the
following order is made:
Claim 1:
66.1 Payment in the
amount of R84 199.99 by the Defendants jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved;
66.2 Interest on the
abovementioned amount at a rate of 7% p.a. from 31 January 2022 to
date of final payment;
Claim 2:
66.3 Payment in the
amount of R20 945.00 by the First Defendant;
66.4 Interest on the
abovementioned amount at a rate of 7% p.a. from 31 of January 2022 to
date of final payment;
Claim 3:
66.5
Payment in the amount of R96 000.00 by the Second
Defendant;
66.6 Interest on the
abovementioned amount at a rate of 7% p.a. from 31 January 2022 to
date of final payment;
66.7 Costs of suit on a
Magistrates Court Party and Party scale.
68.8 The Defendants
Counterclaim, is dismissed with costs.
C. COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv
AM Raymond
Instructed
By:
Suze
Buitendag Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendant:
Adv.
RP Taljaard
Instructed By:
Kapp Attorneys
Dates
of Hearing:
08
th
February 2024
09
th
February 2024
30
th
May 2024
Date
of Judgment:
17
September 2024
[1]
Paragraphs
5 to 17 of the Particulars of Claim – Caselines pages 002-5 to
002-7
[2]
Paragraphs
4 and 5 of the Plea – Caselines pages 002-20 to 002-25
[3]
Paragraphs
18 to incorrectly numbered 16 of Particulars of Claim –
Caselines pages 002-7 to 002-8
[4]
Paragraph
5.1 of the Plea – Caselines pages 002-22 to 002-25
[5]
Club
Nautique Rental Agreement in Trial Bundle – Caselines page
008-115
[6]
Paragraph
5.1 of the Plea – Caselines page 002-24
[7]
Note
that the Lease Agreement was scheduled to terminate only on 1
January 2022.
[8]
Plea:
Paras 4.1:4.2 – P002-20.
[9]
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993 (3) SA 94
(A) at
108D-E
[10]
Second
Defendant’s letter to the Bank – Caselines 008-62
[11]
Letter
from Defendants’ attorney – Caselines 008-138
[12]
Defendants’
Special Plea in Randfontein – Caselines page 008-172
[13]
CIPC
search dated 8 November 2021 – Caselines 008-184
[14]
Letters
from the Plaintiff’s Attorney – Caselines pages 008-182
and 008-188
[15]
Special
Plea in the Johannesburg Court – Caselines page 008-211
[16]
CIPC
search on 9 September 2021 – Caselines page 008-226
[17]
Sheriff’s
return – Caselines page 008-246 and 008-247
[18]
Plea:
Para 3 – P002-20.
[19]
PoC:
Paras 30:32 – P002-9.
[20]
MCR9(3)(h)
& R9(3)(j).
[21]
See
first Email from Defendants’ attorney dated 23 May 2021 –
P008-138.
[22]
Proof
of Payment – P008-178.
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