Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 990South Africa
Chiodaroli N.O and Others v Yeboprop 7 Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (18020/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 990 (4 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Chiodaroli N.O and Others v Yeboprop 7 Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (18020/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 990 (4 October 2024)
Chiodaroli N.O and Others v Yeboprop 7 Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (18020/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 990 (4 October 2024)
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sino date 4 October 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No: 18020/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 04/10/24
SIGNATURE:
In the application
between:
ALDO
GIOVANNI CHIODAROLI N.O
FIRST APPLICANT
DORA
ELKE BANTZ N.O
SECOND APPLICANT
MARK-
COLIN LAHNER N.O
THIRD APPLICANT
And
YEBOPROP
7 INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
And
E10
PETROLEUM SA (PROPRIETARY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
E10
PETROLEUM AFRICA (PROPRIETARY)
THIRD RESPONDENT
LTD
JUDGMENT
BAQWA
J
:
Introduction
1.
The applicant herein seeks an order for the
commercial eviction of the respondent from commercial premises
situated at Portion 101,
Doornrandjes, Pretoria, Gauteng.
2.
The respondent conducts the business of a
petrol station and a convenience store from the premises.
The facts
3.
On May 2016, at Pretoria, the
applicants (the Trust) represented by the first applicant and the
respondent represented by Asgharali
Ismail entered into agreement of
lease (the commercial lease agreement).
4.
In term of the agreement the respondent
leased from the Trust, the leased premises for a period of 5 (five)
years commencing on
1 May 2016 and set to terminate on 30 April 2021
at a base monthly rental of R65 000.00 (Sixty-five Thousand
Rands) including
VAT per month, utility charges of R19 288.00
(Nineteen Thousand Two Hundred and Eighty-Eight Rands)
excluding VAT- which
was to be adjusted in accordance with Eskom
tariff increases, together with a proportionate contribution to rates
of R812.70 (Eight
Hundred- and Twelve Rand and Seventy Cents)
excluding VAT per month, which amount would be adjusted in accordance
with any rate
charges.
5.
The respondent took occupation of the
property in accordance with the commercial lease agreement and has
been conducting the business
of a petrol station and convenience
store from the premises for the past 7 years.
6.
According to the applicants the respondent
has repeatedly breached the terms of the commercial lease agreement
through:
6.1 Repeated late
payment of rentals, rate and utility charges between September 2016
and January 2018
6.1 Repeated
non-payments of rentals, rates and utility charges from May 2019 to
date of application
6.3 Failing to
re-instate the deposit after same was applied to arrear rentals
6.4 Failing to keep
the property clean and tidy
6.5 Failing to avoid
the accumulation of refuse in or about the property
6.6 Interfering with
the electrical installation serving the property
6.7 Failing to keep
the toilet facilities on the property clean and sanitary
6.8 Failing to provide
security on the property from inception of the commercial lease
agreement to date
6.9 Failing to ensure
that the service station and convenience store are open for business
over the period of January 2020 to March
2021
6.10 Failing to ensure
that lawns and gardens of the property are maintained in a tidy and
aesthetically pleasing condition
6.11 Failing to paint
and maintain all structures and surface of the property
6.12 Failing to
maintain the condition of the property and equipment in good order
and condition
6.13 Failing to
promptly repair and make good all damages occurring to or on the
property
Admissions by
respondent
7.
The respondent has admitted the following
breaches in its answering affidavits
7.1 Late payment of
rentals from 2016 to 2018
7.2 Non-payment of
rentals from 2018- 2019
7.3 failure to
reinstate the deposit
7.4 Failure to ensure
that lawn and gardens of the property are maintained in a tidy and
aesthetically pleasing condition
8.
The respondent has raised a defence which
can be summarised as follows, firstly it was not in breach of the
commercial lease- agreement
and there was a valid renewal of the
lease. Secondly applicant’s application is fatally flawed as it
failed to deliver a
notice calling on the respondent to rectify its
breach.
9.
The respondent’s further defence is
that it did not have beneficiary occupation of the property for a
period of about 22 months
but still continued to make payments in
accordance with the lease. It alleges therefore that these payments
constitute overpayments
and that in the circumstances it is not
indebted to the applicant.
10.
In substantiation of the lack of beneficial
occupation, the respondent alleges that it was deprived of same for
approximately 22
months of which a month was a virtual shutdown due
to a provincial road on which the property is located being
completely closed
and diverted for road construction. According to
the respondent this alleged closure was tantamount to vis major
foreshadowed in
the lease agreement. The respondent contends that it
is entitled to a credit for the period during which it did not trade
and tenders’
payment of any rental due to the applicant once
the alleged credit are advanced to the respondent. It is common
cause, and it was
confirmed by the respondent’s counsel that it
has not made any rental payments since February 2020 and that it has
occupied
the property free of charge.
11.
The
locus classicus regarding the interpretation of contracts and
documents such as statutes is case of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
in which the following was said
;
“Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the
words used in a document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading the particular provision or provisions in the light of
the
document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon
its coming into existence. Whatever the nature of the
document,
consideration must be given to the language used in the light of the
ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the context
in which the
provision appears; the apparent purpose to which it is directed and
the material known to those responsible for its
production. Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of all these factors. The process
is objective not
subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads
to insensible or unbusinesslike results or
undermines the apparent
purpose of the document.” “The inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision
itself,” read in
context and having regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to the preparation and production
of the document. All
this is consistent with the “emerging trend in statutory
construction.” It clearly adopts as the
proper approach to the
interpretation of documents…… that from the outset one
considers the context and the language
together with neither
predominating over the other. This is the approach that courts in
South Africa should now follow, without
the need to cite authorities
from an earlier era that are not necessarily consistent and
frequently reflect an approach to interpretation
that is no longer
appropriate.”
12.
Clause 14 of the commercial lease agreement
states as follows;
14. 1 The lessee shall
(save as provided in clause (12.6) have no claim for damages against
the lessor and may not withhold or delay
any payment due to the
lessor and may not withhold or delay any payment due to the lessor by
reason directly or indirectly of:
14.1.1 a breach by the
lessor of any of its obligations under this lease occasioned due to
any event of vis major or any other cause
beyond the reasonable
control of the lessor.
14.1.5 any
interruption of or interference with the enjoyment or beneficial
occupation of the premises, unless proven by the lessee
to have been
occasioned by the lessor or its employees and /or agent.”
13.
The respondent has committed numerous
non-payment breaches as enumerated in paragraph 6 above and he has
not made any payments since
February 2020. These breaches are in
flagrant breach of clause 14 of the commercial lease agreement and
more importantly, they
are not desputed by the respondent.
14.
The respondent relies heavily on clause 16
of the commercial lease agreement and more particularly on clause
16.3.2 which provide
as follows:
“
The
lessee shall not be liable for any rent for so long as it is deprived
of beneficial occupation of the premises.”
15.
Clause 16 should however be read and
understood contextually in its entirety and not be quoted selectively
as the respondent purports
to do. It provides as follows:
“
16
Damage to or Destructions of
premises”
16.1
Should the premises be destroyed or damaged to an extent which
prevents the lessee from having beneficial occupation of the
premises…..the lessor shall be entitled within 30 days after
written notification of such destruction or damage, to determine
whether or not this lease shall be cancelled, and shall notify the
lessee of its decision in writing within such period. Should
the
lessor not notify the lesser not notify the of its decision within
such period, then it shall be deemed to have elected to
cancel this
lease.
16.3 Should the lessor
elect not to cancel this lease, then;
16.3.1 The lessor
shall re-instate, at its cost, the premises as quickly as possible in
the circumstances;
16.3.2
The lessee shall not be liable for any rent for so long as it is
deprived of beneficial occupation of the premises;
16.
The heading or title of clause 16,
namely, “Damage to or destruction” clearly indicates the
circumstances to which the
clause applies. In the present case there
has never been an allegation of damage or destruction of the property
by the respondent
or any other person. The applicability of the
clause does therefore not arise. Secondly the applicant has never
received any notification
of damage or destruction of the property.
This would therefore not mean the respondent did not follow the
procedure prescribed
in the clause and can therefore claim protection
in terms thereof.
17.
Further, to escape liability in terms of
16.3.2 respondent would have to render evidence that the property was
destroyed or damaged
to the extent that such damage prevented
beneficial occupation of the premises and that the applicant received
notice of such destruction
and determined that the lease would not be
cancelled by reason thereof and notified the respondent in writing of
such decision.
Such evidence has not been forthcoming from the
respondent.
18.
Clause 14 provides that the respondent may
not withhold or delay payment due to the applicant by means of breach
by the applicant
due to an event of vis major or any other cause
beyond the reasonable control of the applicant or any interruption
of, or interference
with enjoyment or beneficial occupation of the
premises.
19.
There is no ambiguity in the language of
the commercial lease agreement and it would seem that the
respondent’s claim to a
right to withhold any rental due in
terms of the agreement is not sustainable.
Estoppel
20.
The respondent has become so brazen and
defiant in his breach of the commercial agreement as not only to
admit the several breaches
committed as stated above but also to
claim that the applicants are now estopped from raising the question
of rental paid post
the first day of each month.
Renewal of the
Commercial Leave
21.
The respondent claims that the commercial
lease had been renewed between itself and the applicants.
Clause 4 of the
agreement provides:
Duration
4.1 This lease shall
become effective on the commencement date and shall subsist for the
lease period, subject to the remainder
of this clause.
4.2 On the express
condition that the lessee has not breached the lease during the
initial lease period, the lessee has not breached
the lease during
the initial lease has not breached the lease during the initial lease
period, the lessee shall have the option
to renew the lease on the
same terms and conditions for a further period of 5 (five) year after
the expiry of the initial lease
period…
1.1.2 “commencement
date” the 1
st
of May 2016;
1.1.5 “Lease
period” means a period of 5 years from the commencement date,
as well as the period for which the lease
is renewed subsequently,”
22.
It is abundantly clear from the evidence
tendered by the applicant that the respondent had breached the lease
agreement during the
initial lease period. That fact is put beyond
any doubt by the respondent’s own admissions.
23.
It is equally evident that despite the
respondent’s contention that it had breached the agreement on a
number of occasions
and that it continues to do so from 20 February
2020 to date. It still contends that it validly renewed the
commercial lease agreement
on 29 October 2020. It is self-evident
that when this contention is examined against the contents of clause
4.2 of the commercial
lease agreement, it is factually and legally
not sustainable.
24.
A
similar matter was adjudicated by the Appellate Division in
OK
Bazaars (1929) Ltd v Cash-in CC
[2]
which
concerned a lessee’s right to renewal where the lessee was in
breach of the terms of a commercial lease agreement. The
lessee was
in breach of the terms of a commercial lease agreement. The renewal
clause in dispute stated:
“
3
Right of Renewal
3.1
Provided the lessee shall have faithfully carried out the terms and
conditions of this lease and provided the lessee is in no
way in
default hereunder at the expiration of the lease, then the lessee
shall have the right of renewing this lease for a further
period of
nine years and 11 months upon the same conditions and at the same
rental as herein set out save that there shall be no
further right of
renewal.
3.2
In the event of the lessee desiring to exercise the right of renewal
aforementioned, written intention to exercise such option
must be
given to the lessor not less than six months before the date of
expiry of this lease, failing which such before the date
of expiry of
this lease, failing which such right of renewal shall cease.”
25.
The court (OK Bazaars) interpreted the
provision of clause 3 in the following manner:
i.
“
Notice
must have been given in terms of clause 3.2;
ii.The
lessee must in no way be in default under the lease at its
expiration; and
iii.As
at that that date the lessee must have faithfully carried out the
terms and conditions of the lease.”
26.
The appellate division referred to the
court a quo’s is interpretation with approval where Hoexter AJ
said
(at p575)
“
For
the reasons which follow I consider that Scott J correctly construed
the meaning of clause 3. In construing clause 3 as he did,
the trial
judge relied upon the decision of a Natal Full Court in Seaborn v
Smith.
[3]
In that case a lessor applied for the ejectment of his lessee under a
written lease and there fell to be interpreted clause 11
of the lease
which stated (at 34 IG);
“
The
lessee observing all the terms and covenants of this lease shall have
the right after the expiration of the term hereof to renew
this lease
for a further period of three years……, provided she
gave written notice of her intention three months
before the expiry
of the original terms of the lease. From time to time the lessee had
failed to pay rent an due date. Before the
expiration of the original
lease. The lessee wrote stating that she intended to exercise of the
original lease the lessee wrote
stating that she intended to exercise
such option. The lessor replied by letter that to renew had been
forfeited through the lessee’s
failure to pay rent timeously.
After this letter by the lessor the lessee again paid her rental
late; and she did not vacate at
the end of the lease.”
In the court of the
first instance the learned judge held that at the lessee could
exercise her right of renewal provided that at
the date of giving
such notice she had paid her rent to date, and that she had remedied
any previous breaches. This decision was
reversed on appeal. The full
court ruled that the right of renewal could not come into existence
until the end of the lease, and
therefore that the lessee’s
performance should be examined until the end of the lease. Assuming
in favour of the lessee that
the lessor had previously waved payment
of rent, the full court proceeded to hold that the lessee’s
late payment after the
lessor’s aforementioned letter was a
breach and that the lessee had therefore forfeited the right to
renewal.
Waiver
27.
Whilst the appellate division seemed to
have considered the issue of late payments to have been waived by
lessor in favour of the
lessee that issue ought to be treated
differently in the present case as Clause 24 deals with the issue as
follows:
“
Non
Waiver
No waiver of any of
the terms and conditions of this Agreement will be binding for any
purpose, unless expressed in writing and
signed by the party giving
the same, and any such waiver will be effective only in the specific
instance and for the purpose given.
No failure or delay on the part
of either party in exercising any right, power or privilege will
operate as a waiver, nor will
any single or partial exercise of any
right, power or privilege or indulgence preclude any other or further
exercise of any other
right, power or privilege.”
28.
In the present case the issue of waiver is
specifically excluded unless expressed in writing and signed by the
author.
29.
Consequently, the respondent’s
persistent late payment of rent amounts to a specific breach of the
terms of the lease agreement
with specific reference to clause 5
which provides that rental shall be paid monthly in advance by no
later than the first day
of each and every month. The applicant’s
perceived acceptance of the respondent’s late payment did not
amount to a
waiver or variation of the terms of the commercial lease
agreement in so far as it concerned the respondent’s
obligation.
30.
In the present case, therefore, the breach
occurred long before the respondent addressed the purported letter of
renewal and continued
even after the applicant had written a letter
to the respondent informing it that a renewal was not possible due to
its breaches
as provided for in the commercial lease agreement. The
decision of the applicant is therefore squarely within the precedent
set
in the
OK Bazaar
case.
Absence of Breach
Notice
31.
Clause 4 which has been referred to and
quoted earlier in this judgment affords the respondents no more than
a conditional right
to renew the lease upon its expiry by effluxion
of time. In this case, there is no question of termination or
cancellation of the
lease which would necessitate a breach notice.
32.
During his address at the hearing of this
application, counsel for the respondent seemed to conflate
cancellation with effluxion
of time and referred to an earlier
application which had been brought by the applicant but later
withdraw which seemed to have
been brought as a cancellation
application. That application has no relevance to the present
proceedings.
33.
In this application the applicants rely on
the expiry of the lease due to the effluxion of time. They are
therefore not required
to deliver a breach notice in accordance with
clause 17 of the commercial lease agreement.
Referral to trial
34.
The respondent also seeks that this The
respondent also seeks that this matter be referred for trial and
submits that there are
disputes that cannot be resolved on paper.
Upon suggesting to him by this court that the relationship between
the parties is governed
by a written lease agreement which fully
addresses whatever points of disagreement there may be, he was hard
pressed to provide
a satisfactory response. Moreover, the respondent
admits some of the breaches alleged by applicant which further
dissipates any
need for oral evidence in a trial.
Intervening Parties
35.
The relationship between the intervening
parties would seem to be that of business partners with the
respondent in that they supply
petroleum to it for purposes of
trading as a petrol station.
36.
Even though their interest seemed to be the
underground petrol tanks and pipes, their existence was irrelevant to
the resolution
of the current application. They did not address any
of the matters raised in the founding affidavit. Instead of
addressing the
court on those issues, they merely supported the
respondent in praying for the dismissal of the application without
advancing any
valid reason for asking for such dismissal. The
applicant had to make “application to compel” the
applicants and the
intervening parties to file heads of argument. He
submits that was because they were all intended to delay the hearing
of the matter
unduly in order to enhance their business interests:
37.
The respondent has remained in occupation
and possession of the property after the expiry of the lease and to
add insult to injury
they have not paid any rental since February
2020.
I find that the
respondent’s continued occupation is unlawful and severely
prejudicial to the applicant.
38.
In the result I make the following order:
1.
The respondent is evicted from and is
directed to vacate portion 101, Doornrandjes, Pretoria, Gauteng
Province (“the property”)
within 30 days from the date of
this order:
2.
Should the respondent fail to comply with
paragraph 1 above, the sheriff of the high court, or his lawful
deputy, for the area within
which the property it situated is
authorised to evict the respondent from the property.
3.
In the event of the respondent re-occupying
the property after eviction referred to in paragraph 1 to 2 above,
the sheriff of the
high court, or his lawful deputy, for the area
within which the property is situated, is authorised to re-evict the
respondent
from the property.
4.
The respondent and intervening parties are
ordered to pay costs of the application including costs of counsel on
attorney and client
scale, jointly and severally, one to pay the
other to be absolved.
SELBY BAQWA J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
13
August 2024
Judgment
delivered:
4
October 2024
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant
Adv
Jaco Du Plessis
jaco@clubadvocates.co.za
Instructed
by
Coetzee
Martinuzzi Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent
Adv
ACJ Van Dyk
Instructed
by
Raees
Chothia Attorneys
raees.chothia@rcalegal.com
[1]
[
2012]
2 ALL SA 262
SCA.
[2]
[1994]
3 ALL SA 570 (AD).
[3]
1955
(4) SA 339
(N).
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