Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1045South Africa
Billion Property Developments v Nevzomark (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/104985) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1045 (13 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 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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## Billion Property Developments v Nevzomark (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/104985) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1045 (13 October 2024)
Billion Property Developments v Nevzomark (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/104985) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1045 (13 October 2024)
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sino date 13 October 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023/104985
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 13/10/2024
In
the matter between:
Billion
Property Developments
Plaintiff
And
Nevzomark
(Pty) Ltd
First Defendant /
Excipient
Ali
Ozer
Second Defendant / Excipient
JUDGMENT
AMIEN
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This matter involves an application for an
exception raised by the Excipients in terms of Rule 23(1) of the
Uniform Rules of Court
on the basis that the Plaintiff’s
Particulars of Claim lack the necessary averments to sustain a cause
of action and should
therefore be struck out with costs.
[2]
The Plaintiff, Billion Property
Developoments instituted proceedings against the Defendants,
including the First Defendant namely,
Nevzomark Pty (Ltd) and the
Second Defendant namely, Ali Ozer acting as surety for the First
Defendant. The Plaintiff claims that
the Defendants breached their
obligations arising from a written lease agreement entered on 9 March
2021 between the Plaintiff
and the First Defendant and claims arrear
rental in the amount of R1 619 233.05.
[3]
The parties to the lease agreement are the
First Defendant as the lessee and the Plaintiff as the lessor.
[4]
The lease agreement is signed by one
Zandile Kogo, acting in his capacity as Director of the Plaintiff and
on behalf of the Plaintiff
as lessor, and Ali Ozer, acting in his
capacity as Director of the First Defendant namely, Nevzomark Pty
(Ltd) and on behalf of
the First Defendant as lessee.
[5]
A deed of suretyship is annexed as
“”Annexure C”” to the lease agreement.
[6]
The lease agreement is duly dated and
signed by representatives of the lessor and lessee, and witnesses.
Each page of the lease
agreement including the deed of suretyship is
duly initialed by the representatives of the parties, and witnesses
to the agreement.
[7]
The lease agreement identifies the Second
Defendant (Mr Ali Ozer) as a surety to the agreement in which his
details are included
namely, identity number, residential address
(No. 1[...] F[...] Road, Norwood, 2117), profession as Director,
telephone number,
email address, and annual income.
[8]
The lease agreement involves the leasing of
premises namely, Shop No. 2[…], Forest Hill City, 6[...]
F[...] B[...] Street,
Monavoni, Pretoria West.
[9]
The deed of suretyship comprises two pages.
On the second page, it is blank where it says “Signature”.
However, both
pages are initialed by Ali Ozer.
[10]
The Defendants raise the following grounds
for their exception to the Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim.
10.1.
That the lease agreement is between the
Plaintiff and the First Defendant, not between the Plaintiff and the
Second Defendant. The
Second Defendant also did not assign a
domicilium citandi et executandi
anywhere in the lease agreement.
10.2.
That the suretyship agreement, which the
Plaintiff relies on as its cause of action did not come into
existence and any reliance
on it is bad in law.
10.3.
That the Plaintiff failed to plead
compliance with the provisions of the General Law Amendment Act 50 of
1956 relating to the registration
of the lease agreement as a long
lease.
[11]
The
Second
Defendant
subsequently
abandoned
the
third
exception
in
para
10.3. above, so there is no need to address it.
[12]
The second ground to the exception will be
dealt with first, after which the first ground will be addressed.
## Second ground to the
Defendants’ Exception
Second ground to the
Defendants’ Exception
[13]
The Defendants claim that the Plaintiff’s
cause of action against the Second Defendant is primarily based on a
deed of suretyship
that is not in existence because it was not signed
by the Second Defendant.
[14]
The Defendants contend that the suretyship
agreement was initialed at the bottom by Ali Ozer but not signed by
or on behalf of the
Second Defendant, which is substantially
non-compliant with section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act.
[15]
Section 6 of the General Law Amendment Act
provides:
“
Formalities
in respect of contracts of suretyship
No contract of suretyship
entered into after the commencement of this Act, shall be valid,
unless the terms thereof are embodied
in a written document signed by
or on behalf of the surety: Provided that nothing in this section
contained shall affect the liability
of the signer of an aval under
the laws relating to negotiable instruments.”
[16]
Section 6 makes it clear that a deed of
suretyship must be in writing and signed by the named surety or by
someone who signs on
the surety’s behalf.
[17]
The Defendants aver that the suretyship
agreement was only initialed and not signed by the Second Defendant,
therefore it is not
valid and binding on the Second Defendant and
cannot be relied upon by the Plaintiff as a cause of action.
[18]
The Plaintiff avers that an initial
qualifies as a signature and therefore the Second Defendant is bound
as surety.
[19]
In
Van
Niekerk v Smit and Others
,
[1]
my learned brother Murray J in this division (the Transvaal Division
as it then was) confirmed that a signature includes a signature
by
initials.
[20]
Therefore, the initial of the Second
Defendant on the deed of suretyship qualifies as a signature and it
can be accepted that the
Second Defendant signed the suretyship
agreement.
[21]
The Defendants argue that the surety must
sign in their personal capacity and cannot be bound in their
representative capacity.
[22]
The Defendants contend that Ali Ozer’s
initial on the deed of suretyship was in his representative capacity
as Director of
the First Defendant and that he did not initial in his
personal capacity.
[23]
In
Lategan
and Another NNO v Boyles and Another
,
[2]
my
learned brother Le Roux J also in this division (Transvaal
Provisional Division as it then was) found that a surety can be bound
in their personal and/or representative capacities.
[24]
I
would like to add that through the
caveat
subscriptor
rule
relating to both the lease agreement and the deed of suretyship, the
Second Defendant is deemed to have known that he was named
as a
surety for the lease agreement. By signing the lease agreement and
attaching his initial to the deed of suretyship, he accepted
the
obligations arising from the suretyship agreement, which is accessory
to the lease agreement.
[3]
[25]
Therefore, the Plaintiff’s aversion
that the lease agreement is between the Plaintiff and the First
Defendant, not between
the Plaintiff and the Second Defendant is
moot. Although the lease agreement is between the Plaintiff and the
First Defendant,
by virtue of its accessory nature to the lease
agreement, the deed of suretyship forms part of the lease agreement.
So, by signing
the deed of suretyship, the Second Defendant undertook
to be liable for the debts of the First Defendant under the lease
agreement.
[26]
Having found that the suretyship agreement
is valid and binding on the Second Defendant, it follows that the
Plaintiff established
a cause of action, which arose within the
jurisdiction of this Court. Accordingly, the Plaintiff established
this Court’s
jurisdiction over the Second Defendant.
## First ground to the
Defendants’ Exception
First ground to the
Defendants’ Exception
[27]
The Defendants claim that the Second
Defendant did not assign a
domicilium
citandi et executandi
anywhere in the
lease agreement, and that the
domicilium
citandi et executandi
as pleaded in
para 1.3. of the Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim was not
selected by him.
[28]
The Plaintiff pleads as the
domicilium
citandi et executandi
the residential
address of the Second Defendant as named in the lease agreement,
being No. 1[...] F[...] Road, Norwood, 2117.
[29]
Consequently, the Defendants aver that by
not pleading the Second Defendant’s residential address, the
Plaintiff did not establish
this Court’s jurisdiction over the
Second Defendant through his residential address.
[30]
Although the Plaintiff did not plead the
address in para [29] above as the residential address of the Second
Defendant, it is too
formalistic to suggest that by naming the Second
Defendant’s residential address in the Plaintiff’s
Particulars of
Claim albeit attributable to a
domicilium
citandi et executandi
, is not
sufficient to establish this Court’s jurisdiction over the
Second Defendant by way of his residential address. The
latter is
provided in the lease agreement as the residential address of the
Second Defendant in his capacity as surety. That address
is within
this Court’s jurisdiction.
[31]
Therefore, the Plaintiff established this
Court’s jurisdiction through the cause of action and through
the Second Defendant’s
residential address.
## Order
Order
[32]
In the result, the Defendants exceptions
are dismissed with costs.
W AMIEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Advocate
MJ Motsusi
Instructed
by:
Ditsela
Inc. Attorneys
# Attorney
for the Defendants:
Attorney
for the Defendants:
# S
Bhyat
S
Bhyat
Judgment
number: 2023/104985
Date
heard:
14
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
13
October 2024
This judgment has been
delivered by uploading it to the court online digital data base of
the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to the attorneys of
record of the parties. The deemed date and time for the delivery is
13 October 2024
.
[1]
1952
(3) SA 17
(T) at 25C-F.
[2]
1980
(4) SA 191 (T).
[3]
Corrans
and Another v Transvaal Government and Coull’s Trustee
1909
TS 605
at 612.
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