Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 590South Africa
Du Plessis v Strauss (46833/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 590 (26 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Du Plessis v Strauss (46833/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 590 (26 June 2023)
Du Plessis v Strauss (46833/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 590 (26 June 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: 46833/18
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
JUDGE KUNY
26 JUNE 2023
In the matter between:
CORNELIUS MARTHINUS DU
PLESSIS
Applicant
and
HERMANUS ALBERTUS STRAUSS
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KUNY J
1)
The applicant instituted motion proceedings
against the respondent on 3 July 2019 seeking the following order:
1
Declaring that the Agreement of Sale of Member’s Interest in
the close
corporation Alrette Rentals CC, registration number 2[...],
concluded between the applicant and the respondent during May 2017,
has been validly cancelled by the applicant.
2
Ordering the respondent to make payment to the applicant of a sum of
R2
500 000 together with interest thereon at the rate of 10,25% per
annum from 1 June 2019 to date of payment.
3
Cost of suit.
4
Alternative relief.
2)
The respondent counter-applies for the following
relief:
1.
That the agreement entered into between the parties on 1 June 2017
(annexure “A”
to the respondent’s answering
affidavit) be rectified as follows:
1.1.
Clause 7.3 thereof is deleted;
1.2.
Clause 10.2 thereof is rectified by inserting,
at the beginning of
the clause, the following: “
Save for certain income tax
returns and annual financial statements that have not yet been
submitted, ...
”
1.3.
The following further clause is inserted after clause 10.2 thereof:
“
10.3
The CLOSE CORPORATION shall be obliged to
take all reasonable steps
to ensure that the outstanding income tax returns and annual
financial statements referred to in 10.2
above are submitted to SARS,
and the SELLER undertakes to assist the CLOSE CORPORATION therein”
2.
The applicant is ordered to forthwith sign all documents and take all
steps necessary
for purposes of registering, in the records of CIPC,
the applicant as the sole member of Alrette Rentals CC (registration
no 2[...])
(“the close corporation”);
3.
The applicant is ordered to take all reasonable steps and sign all
documents for purposes
of procuring the release of the respondent
from his suretyship obligations to BMW Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
in respect of the
close corporation’s obligations to it;
4.
The applicant is ordered to pay the respondent’s costs of the
counter application;
5.
That such further and/or alternative relief be granted to the
respondent as the
court may deem fit.
3)
The matter was set down for hearing on the
ordinary opposed motion court roll on 12 May 2022. However, soon
after argument commenced,
it became clear that insufficient time had
been allocated for the hearing of the matter. Accordingly, by
agreement between the
parties, the matter was postponed to permit a
special allocation. Argument resumed on 23 August 2022.
4)
The dispute between the parties concerns an
agreement for the purchase and sale of the members’ interest in
Alrette Rentals
CC (“the close corporation”) entered into
on 1 June 2017 (“the agreement”). In terms of the
agreement the
applicant purchased 100% of the respondent’s
membership interest in the close corporation for an amount of R2.5
million.
5)
The applicant alleges that he is entitled to an
order confirming the cancellation of the agreement based on the
respondent’s
breach thereof on two grounds:
a)
The failure of the respondent to deliver a tax
clearance certificate in respect of the close corporation as provided
for in clause
7.3 of the agreement.
b)
A breach of the warranty in clause 10.2 of the
agreement that the close corporation has and will have at the
effective date complied
with all the provisions of the Close
Corporation Act and all laws relating to income tax or any other
legislation which may affect
the close corporation. It is alleged in
this regard that the close corporation did not have an operating
licence required in order
to legally conduct businesses carried on by
divisions of the close corporation, namely The Buzz and Avo
Transfers.
6)
In a letter of demand dated 25 April 2019 the
applicant called upon the respondent in terms of clause 14.1 of the
agreement to remedy
the aforesaid breaches within 14 days of the
notice, by the delivery of:
a)
A tax compliance certificate confirming that as at
the effective date of the agreement (ie. 1 June 2017) the close
corporation had
complied with all provisions of the Tax Act and Value
Added Tax Act.
b)
An operating licence issued in terms of the
National Land Transport Act 5 of 2007 in favour of the close
corporation in respect
of four Toyota Quantum minibuses and two
Toyota Avenza vehicles.
7)
The
respondent was advised that in the event of the respondent failing to
comply with the demand, the applicant would cancel the
agreement and
tender return of his member’s interest in the close corporation
to the respondent.
[1]
8)
On 20 May 2019, GJ Pienaar of attorneys Pienaar
Kemp Inc (“Pienaar”) responded to the above letter in the
following
terms:
a)
Difficulties arose with SARS in regard to
obtaining a tax clearance certificate. The respondent (through his
wife) was in the process
of regularising the close corporation’s
position. Pienaar requested that a reasonable period be given to
obtain the tax clearance
certificate.
b)
At the time that the respondent conducted the
shuttle business he did not apply for an operating licence. The
business conducted
by Buzz and Avo Transfers is not the main business
of the close corporation. Vehicles belonging to the transfer
businesses
could be rented out whilst the issue pertaining to the tax
clearance certificate and operating licences were being sorted out.
c)
Should it not be possible to obtain operating
licences because a tax clearance certificate had not been issued, the
issue would
have to stand over until the certificate was obtained.
The applicant could rely on the indemnity provided in clause 17 of
the agreement
to claim any losses that may be suffered.
d)
The reasons stated by the applicant were not valid
grounds for cancelling the agreement and any attempt to do so would
be regarded
as a repudiation of the agreement.
9)
In a letter dated 31 May 2019, addressed to
Pienaar, the applicant notified the respondent as follows:
a)
He elected to cancel the agreement with effect
from 31 May 2019.
b)
On the above date the applicant would hand the
keys of the business to the manager, Jan Lotz, and remove all his
personal possessions
from the premises.
c)
The applicant claimed repayment of the sum of R2.5
million against tender of the delivery of a signed amended founding
statement
CK2 in terms of which he resigned as a member of the close
corporation.
d)
The applicant claimed payment of an amount of R244
558 in respect of loans that he made to the close corporation from
time to time.
A separate letter of demand in respect of this claim
would be sent.
CONCLUSION OF THE
AGREEMENT FOR THE SALE OF MEMBERS INTEREST
10)
The Business was defined in the agreement as the
car rental business owned by Alrette Rentals CC trading under the
name and style
Avo Car Rentals inclusive of the shuttle business
divisions respectively known as The Buzz and Avo Transfers.
11)
In January 2017 the applicant took up employment
with the close corporation to enable him to consider and investigate
purchasing
the member’s interest of the respondent in the close
corporation. The applicant and respondent were personal friends. The
respondent’s wife, Sarette Strauss, was the accounting officer
of the close corporation.
12)
The applicant at first expressed an intention to
purchase a 50% member’s interest for R3 million. Pienaar was
instructed to
prepare a draft purchase and sale agreement. Included
in the purchase was the member’s interest of the respondent in
Duzack
Property Investments CC. This entity owned the immovable
property on which the close corporation traded.
13)
The
applicant contends that the first draft of the agreement (annexed to
the applicant’s founding affidavit marked B
[2]
)
was sent to the parties by Pienaar on 7 March 2017. However, it
emerged from the papers that Annexure B was in fact the second
draft
of the agreement. To demonstrate this the respondent annexed a
portion of a draft that did not contain the drafting note
after
clause 8.2 “
Plus:
Tax Clearance certificate and the new fleet facility.
”
The applicant accepts the respondent’s allegations that this
was the first draft. Annexure B is accordingly referred
to as the
second draft.
14)
After the second draft was produced, the applicant
indicated that he would like to acquire 100% of the business. He
proposed an
initial payment of R2.5 million and the balance to be
paid in instalments. It was also proposed that Duzack be excluded
from the
purchase and that the trading premises be leased by the
close corporation until the applicant had sufficient cash resources
to
purchase the property. The applicant’s proposal in this
regard is reflected in an email that he sent Pienaar on 7 April 2017
stating:
$
Ek COP wil die heIe besigheid Koop teen R 3,000
000.00. Maar gaan net as intrapslag R2,500 000.00 betaal en die
balans af betaal.
Moet net n skedule aanheg. Sal dit later stuur.
$
Dan huur COP die gebou teen n bedrag per maand
tot ek reg is en vermoee het op die gebou te koop.
$
Ek
dink ek lees dit raak in die kontrak dat die besigheid se belasting
betaal is tot op datum, maar voeg net by dat Avo moet n TAX
clearance
certificate verskaf met ondertekening van die kontrak asseblief.
15)
On
2 May 2017 Pienaar responded by email setting out his understanding
of the terms of the new proposed agreement and calling for
comment
and instructions.
[3]
It is common cause that certain further discussions ensued between
the parties in terms of which the applicant reverted to the
purchase
of 50% of the close corporation for an amount of R2 million. The
applicant’s revised proposals were communicated
to Pienaar in
the forms of comments in the body of Pienaar’s email of 2 May
2017.
16)
Pienaar
proceeded to produce the third draft (Annexure E to the founding
affidavit), reflecting the purchase of a 50% members interest
in the
close corporation (excluding Duzack) for an amount of R2 million.
[4]
17)
It is common cause that after the third draft was
produced the applicant and the respondent met to discuss and
negotiate the terms
of the final agreement. The applicant alleges
that the parties made handwritten notes and amendments on the third
draft and this
was provided to Pienaar to enable him to produce the
final agreement that was signed by the parties. The respondent denies
that
the draft with the handwritten notes was furnished to Pienaar
and alleges that the notes and amendments on the third draft were
“far removed” from the final version of the agreement
that was ultimately signed. However, a comparison between the
two
versions shows that most of the handwritten marks on the third draft
were in fact carried through to the final version.
18)
On 9 May 2017 under cover of an email, Pienaar
provided the final redrafted agreement to the parties. This was
signed by them at
Boksburg in each other’s presence,
purportedly on 1 June 2017 (“the agreement”). It provided
that the applicant
purchased 100% of the respondent’s members
interest in the close corporation for an amount of R2 500 000. The
effective date
of the sale was 1 June 2017.
19)
The
cover page of the agreement indicates that the parties to the
agreement are respondent as the seller, the applicant as the
purchaser and the close corporation. However, the parties are defined
in the body of the agreement as “The SELLER and PURCHASER
referred to collectively”.
[5]
The respondent accepts that the agreement was not signed by the close
corporation and did not argue that it was a party to the
agreement.
DISPUTED CLAUSES IN
THE AGREEMENT
20)
The respondent alleges the following in his
answering affidavit in regard to the agreement:
a)
Pienaar was not aware at the time that he drafted
the agreement that the close corporation’s tax clearance
certificate was
not available and could not be procured until SARS
had corrected an “error in their system”.
b)
Clause 7.3 read with clause 10.2 contained
important factual inaccuracies, namely, as was known to the parties
at the time the agreement
was concluded, that the close corporation
was not compliant with tax legislation and a tax clearance
certificate could not be issued
to the close corporation.
c)
Pienaar
included Clause 7.3 in the agreement as a result of a
misunderstanding or lack of proper instructions. It is alleged that
the inclusion of this clause was a “drafting error”.
[6]
d)
Pienaar
was under the erroneous impression that the tax certificate
contemplated in clause 7.3 was either already available or could
easily be procured on short notice.
[7]
Had Pienaar known that a tax clearance certificate could not be
produced “on demand” he would not have included clause
7.3 in the agreement.
e)
It was not the intention of the parties when they
entered into the agreement that the respondent would personally be
obliged to
procure and deliver a tax clearance certificate to the
respondent.
f)
Clause 7.3 and 10.2 do not correctly reflect the
true common intention between the parties and these clauses of the
agreement stand
to be rectified.
21)
As regards the complaint that there was a breach
of the warranty because the close corporation did not have an
operating licence
in respect of the transport of passengers, the
respondent alleged as follows:
a)
During January 2017, the applicant, as manager of
the close corporation, completed an application for “accreditation”
of the close corporation as a tourist transport operator. The
respondent signed the application on behalf of the close corporation
on 15 February 2017. The form required that an original tax clearance
certificate be attached.
b)
He (the respondent) should not have signed the
above application because it was not necessary for the close
corporation to obtain
“accreditation” in respect of Avo
Transfers. The reason given was that it did not transport passengers.
c)
There were existing valid transport permits for
the vehicles in the Buzz division. It is alleged in this regard that
Bernadette
de Klerk had already applied and paid for permits prior to
her selling The Buzz to the close corporation. The Department of
Transport
had approved the permits in December 2016 and the applicant
merely had to collect them.
d)
Instead of collecting the permits, the applicant
took it upon himself to lodge new applications for permits.
e)
The Buzz, which transports passengers on a small
scale, was compliant at the effective date.
f)
At the time Mr Pienaar wrote his letter of 20 May
2019, he had not yet considered and researched the issues in relation
to the requirements
and existence of permits. These were only
required and had in fact been obtained in respect of “the Buzz
minibus”.
To the extent that Pienaar’s letter concedes
that such permits were required for the close corporation’s
other business
activities, such concession was incorrect as a matter
of law.
RECTIFICATION
22)
The grounds for rectification claimed by the
respondent in respect of clause 7.3 were essentially that the
inclusion of this clause
was a drafting error caused by a
misunderstanding or by Pienaar not having proper instructions.
23)
It is clear from the applicant’s email to
Pienaar dated 7 April 2017, that the applicant intended that a clause
be inserted
in the agreement relating to the provision of a tax
clearance certificate. Clause 7.3 (as it appears in the final
agreement) started
out as a drafting note in the second draft.
However, it appeared in its final form in the third draft, and it was
a term of the
final agreement.
24)
On the facts that are not in dispute the inclusion
of clause 7.3 was a unilateral error that arose either from the
respondent not
having furnished Pienaar with proper instructions in
regard to the formulation of the terms of the agreement or from a
misunderstanding
on his part, or both.
25)
As appears from the third draft of the agreement,
there were handwritten marks against clause 7.3 as follows: there was
a tick in
the margin against clause 7.3, “tax clearance
certificate” was underlined and the clause 11.2 was circled.
The markings
appeared in the actual document as follows:
7.3 The delivery of the
tax clearance certificate as envisaged in clause 11.2 below shall be
delivered to the PURCHASER upon demand.
26)
The applicant alleges in his replying affidavit
(which also served as his answering affidavit to the counter
application) that he
and the respondent went through the third draft
agreement together. He further alleges that the tick was made by him
and the underlining
and circle were made by the respondent.
27)
The respondent, as applicant in the counter
application, bears the onus to prove that the agreement does not
reflect the common
intention of the parties. The respondent did not
dispute the allegations in relation to the above marks. On the basis
of the principles
set out
Plascon Evans
Paint Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) these allegations must therefore be accepted. The
marks prove that the respondent agreed to the inclusion of clause
7.3, was
fully aware of its presence in the final agreement, and
voluntarily assumed the obligation to provide a tax clearance
certificate
upon demand.
28)
In
National &
Overseas Distributors Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato Board
1958
(2) SA 473
(A) at page 479G-H Schreiner JA held as follows:
Our law allows a party to
set up his own mistake in certain circumstances in order to escape
liability under a contract into which
he has entered. But where the
other party has not made any misrepresentation and has not
appreciated at the time of acceptance
that his offer was being
accepted under a misapprehension, the scope for a defence of
unilateral mistake is very narrow, if it
exists at all. At least the
mistake (error) would have to be reasonable (justus) and it would
have to be pleaded.
29)
In
George v Fairmead
(Pty) Ltd
1958 (2) SA 465
(A) at p471
the court said:
When can an error be said
to be
justus
for the purpose of entitling a man to repudiate
his apparent assent to a contractual term? As I read the decisions,
our Courts,
in applying the test, have taken into account the fact
that there is another party involved and have considered his
position. They
have, in effect, said: Has the first party the
one who is trying to resile been to blame in the sense that by
his
conduct he has led the other party, as a reasonable man, to
believe that he was binding himself?
30)
On 14 February 2017 the applicant sent an email to
the respondent advising him that a new application for permits had to
be made
and that the tax clearance certificate was needed in this
regard. On 10 April 2017 the applicant sent a further email to the
respondent
asking for the tax clearance certificate for the
applications to the Department of Transport. It was known to
the parties
prior to settling and signing the agreement 2017 that the
close corporation required the original tax clearance certificate in
order to obtain a permit to transport passengers.
31)
Both parties were cognisant of the fact that a tax
clearance certificate would be required in order to obtain passenger
transportation
permits from the Department of Transport. The
applicant made it clear at the time that the agreement was negotiated
that he required
a tax clearance certificate and there was nothing in
his conduct that could have mislead the respondent or Pienaar in this
regard.
32)
Pienaar’s alleged lack of knowledge at the
time he produced the various drafts of the agreement of the tax
status of the close
corporation does not assist the respondent. Had
the respondent insisted on the deletion of clause 7.3 before the
final agreement
was signed, the applicant may well have withdrawn
from the agreement. By agreeing to the insertion of clause 7.3 the
respondent
led the applicant to believe that the tax clearance
certificate could be provided if it was called for. I cannot find
that clause
7.3 was erroneously inserted in the agreement. However,
even if there was an error, viewed objectively against the facts,
such
error could in any event not be said to be reasonable.
33)
There has been debate in our law about the nature
of a warranty. In
Protea Property
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Boundary Financing Ltd (formerly known as
International Bank of Southern Africa Ltd) and others
2008
(3) SA 33
(C) the court stated:
[36]
............. counsel for the first defendant referred to two types
of warranties found in the
law of insurance, namely affirmative and
promissory: a warranty is affirmative if the party concerned warrants
the truth of a representation
regarding an existing fact, and
promissory when the party concerned warrants the performance of
a certain act or that a given
state of affairs will exist in the
future. Counsel sought to apply this distinction to contracts in
general. Having done so, they
argued that if the clause in question
were to be interpreted as being an affirmative warranty of fact, it
could never serve as
the basis for a claim for specific performance
because, to the knowledge of the plaintiff, the warranty was
incorrect at the time
when it was given ......... If, on the other
hand, the clause were to be interpreted as a ‘promissory’
warranty, certain
other problems would arise, with which I shall deal
below. [footnotes omitted]
34)
The
court
Protea
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd
went
on to point out that as a special term, the term ‘‘promissory’’
is a misnomer. It reasoned that all
warranties are promissory in that
they give rise to an obligation or promise to perform.
[8]
The court concluded in paragraph 39:
[39]
In the final analysis, there is no unanimity among the authorities as
to what the expression
‘warranty’ connotes, save that it
is a contractual term. It accordingly becomes necessary, as pointed
out by Farlam
JA in Masterspice (Pty) Ltd v Broszeit Investments CC,
‘in every case where the expression is used, to examine the
terms
of the contract in question closely in order to endeavour to
ascertain in what sense the parties have used it’. [footnotes
omitted]
35)
The basis for the rectification to the wording of
the warranty in clause 10.2 and the insertion of a new warranty as
clause 10.3,
is obscure. The respondent alleges that the close
corporation was not tax compliant when the agreement was signed
because of an
error in the SARS’s e-filing system. The argument
appears to be that because this was known to the parties, the
warranty
contained in clause 10.2 could not have been agreed to by
them. This also appears to be the justification for rectifying the
agreement
by inserting a new term (as clause 10.3) that requires the
close corporation to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the
outstanding
income tax returns and annual financial statements are
submitted to SARS.
36)
I can find no basis whatsoever for the
rectification of clause 10 in the manner contended for by the
respondent or in any other
way. The proposed rectification is
contrary to the undertaking given in clause 7.3. It would eviscerate
the warranty in clause
10.2 given in relation to the compliance by
the close corporation with tax legislation. By granting such relief
the court would
be rewriting the contract for the parties. No basis
has been alleged on which it can or should do so.
37)
It is understandable that the applicant would
require the warranties as they stand in clause 10. The fact that the
close corporation
has not complied with the relevant legislation at
the effective date or that the respondent, with hindsight, wished
that he had
contracted on a different footing, is not a basis for the
rectification sought. In the circumstances, I come to the conclusion
that the respondent’s claim for rectification must be
dismissed.
CANCELLATION OF THE
AGREEMENT
38)
Clause 12.3 of the agreement provides:
12.3 If
either party allows the other party any leniency, extension of time
or indulgence the party so doing shall
not be precluded from
exercising its rights in terms of this Agreement in the event of any
subsequent failure by any party to whom
the indulgence, leniency or
extension of time has been granted, nor shall the party so doing be
deemed to have waived any of its
rights to rely on a subsequent
breach of this Agreement by the other party.
39)
Clause 14.1 of the agreement provides:
14. BREACH
14.1 In
the event of either the SELLER or the PURCHASER committing a breach
of any term or condition of this contract
and remaining in default
notwithstanding 14 (fourteen) days written notice calling for the
remedy of his breach, the aggrieved
party shall be entitled without
prejudice to such aggrieved party’s right to claim damages
arising from such breach, either:
14.1.1
to claim an Order for specific performance; or
14.1.2
to cancel this contract.
40)
In further resisting cancellation of the agreement
the respondent contends that the applicant waived his right to cancel
because
of the time lapse between the date on which the agreement was
concluded and the date of demand. Alternatively, it was contended
that the applicant acquiesced in and is estopped from relying on the
unavailability of the said certificate to cancel the agreement.
41)
In
North
Vail Mineral Co Ltd v Lovasz
1961
(3) SA 604
(T) at p606
[9]
the court stated the following in regard to
legges
commissoriae
:
Clause 9 is a lex
commissoria (in the wide sense of a stipulation conferring a right to
cancel upon a breach of the contract to
which it is appended, whether
it is a contract of sale or any other contract). It confers a right
(viz. to cancel) upon the fulfilment
of a condition. The
investigation whether the right to cancel came into existence is
purely an investigation whether the condition,
as emerging from the
language of the contract (a question of interpretation), has in fact
been fulfilled (Rautenbach v Venner,
1928 T.P.D. 26)
42)
The
respondent admits that the close corporation was not compliant with
the provisions of the law relating to income tax as at the
effective
date.
[10]
Furthermore, it was not in dispute that, prior to the final letter of
demand, a number of written requests had been made for the
tax
clearance certificate:
a)
On
28 June 2017, M van der Merwe of VDM Rekenmeesters (the accounting
officer of the close corporation at the time) sent an email
on the
applicant’s behalf to Ms Strauss, requesting the tax clearance
certificates for all the tax numbers.
b)
On 29 January 2018 the applicant sent an email to
Ms Strauss advising her that he required the tax clearance
certificate.
c)
On 28 March 2019 the applicant sent an email to Ms
Strauss asking her whether she had any feedback from SARS in relation
to the
tax clearance certificate for Avo and Alrette Rentals CC and
whether he could obtain same.
43)
In addition to the above, it is common cause that
the applicant and respondent held a meeting on 25 May 2018 to discuss
problems
relating to the close corporation. The applicant alleges
that at this meeting he told the respondent that the close
corporation’s
non compliance with its tax obligations and
the failure to obtain a tax clearance certificate had become an
increasingly serious
problem. This allegation was not denied by the
respondent.
44)
Although the respondent alleged that there were
valid permits in existence, when asked to produce the permits in
terms of Rule 35(12),
he was unable to do so. Instead the respondent
produced documents that showed that in or about 2015 the previous
proprietor of
The Buzz, de Klerk, had made application for permits
and had paid an application fee.
45)
In response to the above allegations the applicant
stated that in February 2017 he sent an employee of the close
corporation to
the Department of Roads and Transport to try and
obtain the permits that De Klerk had applied for. It is alleged that
the employee
was advised by an official of the Department that the
close corporation would have to submit a new application for permits,
accompanied
inter alia by a valid tax clearance certificate. The
applicant’s allegations in this regard are supported by
documentary
evidence, including a letter from De Klerk authorising
the employee concerned to collect the alleged permits.
46)
The
evidence shows on a balance of probabilities that the close
corporation was not in possession of an operating licence or permit
in terms of section 50(1)
[11]
at least insofar as The Buzz was concerned. It is not disputed that
permits were a legal requirement for the transport of passengers
for
reward. Accordingly, the warranty stating that the close corporation
had complied with legislation that may have affected it,
was
breached. No rectification in respect of this aspect of the warranty
was sought by the respondent.
47)
In my view, the applicant has established that a
proper demand was made upon the respondent to provide him with the
tax clearance
certificate envisaged in clause 7.3 as well as the
operating licences issued in terms of the National Land Transport Act
5 of 2007
(ie. the permits). There is no evidence that the demand was
complied with.
48)
Furthermore, there is no evidence that the
applicant waived his right to call for a tax clearance certificate.
Insofar as the applicant
may have given the respondent indulgences
and extensions of time within which to provide the tax clearance
certificate, the applicant
is entitled to rely on clause 12.2.
Accordingly, in my view, the lapse of time does not preclude the
applicant from exercising
his right to insist on the provision of
such certificate in terms of clause 7.3, as he did in May 2019.
49)
Clause 14.1 gave the applicant the right to cancel
the agreement in circumstances where a breach is not remedied within
14 days.
It is not necessary to prove that the breach was material or
that it went to the root of the contract. I accordingly find that the
applicant validly cancelled the agreement and is entitled to an order
in terms of prayer 1 of his notice of motion.
RELIEF
50)
The applicant claims payment of R2 500 000
together with interest thereon from the date of cancellation of the
agreement (1 June
2019) to date of payment, at the rate of 10.25%.
The applicant submits that this is the prescribed rate of interest at
the date
of cancellation.
51)
The applicant contends, without reference to any
authority, that it is a general principle that upon cancellation of
an agreement
the parties are required to make restitution of the
performance received. The proposition is of a very general nature.
There are
other remedies available to an aggrieved party who cancels
an agreement and various factors have to be considered in deciding
upon
appropriate relief.
52)
The
grant of an order
restitutio
in integrum
(sought
by the applicant) is said to be found on equitable
considerations.
[12]
Granting equitable relief requires that the relevant considerations
justifying such relief be placed before the court.
53)
Neither party addressed the court, either in their
papers or in argument, on the basis for a fair, just and appropriate
order. I
am not satisfied that all the relevant issues in this regard
have been canvassed on the papers, particularly having regard to
following:
a)
The full amount of the purchase price was not paid
in cash. Part of the consideration was settled by way of the exchange
of a Land
Cruiser vehicle and an unidentified machine. The value of
this property was not specified. It is not alleged whether this
exchange
was based on a contract of sale or barter. This may be
relevant to the manner in which restitution should take place and to
the
payment of interest.
b)
The breaches alleged by the applicant arose at the
time that the agreement was signed. The delay of almost two years
before the
applicant exercised his right to cancel the agreement may
have a bearing on the form of the relief that should be granted to
the
applicant.
c)
The applicant’s claim for interest on the
monies he paid in terms of the agreement forms a substantial
component of his claim.
Issues relating to the rate of interest and
the date on which the payment of interest should commence to run were
not canvassed
on the papers or in argument.
54)
In the circumstances I propose to postpone the
determination of the relief sought in prayer 2 of the notice of
motion to give the
parties an opportunity to deal with this aspect
before an order is made in this regard.
COSTS
55)
The applicant at this stage has established that
he is entitled to a declaratory order that the agreement has been
lawfully cancelled.
The respondent has been unsuccessful in his
counter claim for rectification of the agreement.
56)
In accordance with the usual rules the applicant,
at the very least, is entitled to a portion of his costs pursuant to
the grant
of the relief sought in prayer 1 of the notice of motion.
However, as the determination of the relief sought in prayer 2 of
the
notice of motion remains outstanding, in my view, it would be
appropriate to reserve the question of costs.
57)
There is a further issue that I wish to draw to
the attention of the parties:
a)
The applicant filed three sets of heads of
argument, dated 11 May 2021 (57 pages), dated 21 September 2021 (72
pages) and concise
heads of argument dated 24 June 2022 (33 pages).
In total the heads of argument were 162 pages in length.
b)
The respondent filed heads of argument drawn by J
Both SC dated 10 April 2022 (34 pages) and concise heads of argument
dated 14
July 2023 (28 pages). In total the respondent’s heads
of argument were 62 pages.
c)
After the first hearing in May 2022 I requested
counsel to file concise heads of argument before the next hearing.
The respondent’s
concise heads were almost as long as the main
heads of argument filed before the first hearing commenced. The
applicant’s
concise heads of argument were even longer.
d)
I consider the applicant’s lengthy sets of
heads to have been unduly prolix. I do not consider the respondent’s
concise
heads to be concise. Documents of this length often detract
from the task of identifying and synthesising the relevant factual
and legal issues. A party’s right to be heard does not afford
counsel free reign to file voluminous heads of argument, and
in some
instances, multiple sets.
e)
Counsel’s attention is drawn to
Caterham
Car Sales & Coachworks Ltd v Birkin Cars (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1998] ZASCA 44
;
1998 (3) SA 938
(SCA) at paragraphs 37 and 38 and to
Ensign Bickford
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v AECI Explosives & Chemicals Ltd
1999 (1) SA 70
(SCA) at 84H-85B-C.
f)
I consider that the costs order in this matter
should reflect the court’s disapproval with the prolixity
referred to above.
Counsel is invited to make submission to the court
in this regard.
ORDER
58)
In the circumstances I make the following order:
1
A declaration is granted that the Agreement of Sale of Member’s
Interest
in the close corporation Alrette Rentals CC, registration
number 2[...], concluded between the applicant and the respondent on
or about 1 June 2017, has been validly cancelled by the applicant.
2
The relief sought in prayer 2 of the applicant’s notice of
motion
is postponed
sine die
.
3
The applicant is granted leave to file a further affidavit in
relation to
the determination of the relief sought in paragraph 2 of
the notice of motion and the respondent is afforded an opportunity
file
an answer thereto. No further affidavits may be filed save with
the leave of the court.
4
The costs are reserved.
JUDGE S KUNY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date of hearing:
12 May 2022 and 23
August 2022
Date of Judgment:
26 June 2023
Applicant’s
counsel:
NGD Maritz SC
Respondent’s
counsel:
E Kromhout
[1]
Although
the applicant purchased a 100% members interest, he only was only
registered as a 50% member at the time the application
was brought.
The respondent retained a 50% member’s interest until such
time as he was released from his suretyship in
favour of BMW.
[2]
Annexure
“B” to the Founding Affidavit, Caselines AA44
[3]
Annexure
“D” to the Founding Affidavit.
[4]
Annexure
“E” to the Founding Affidavit, Caselines A61
[5]
Caselines
AA77
[6]
Paragraph
48.3, Caselines A168
[7]
Paragraph
56.4, Caselines A176
[8]
Protea
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd, supra, paragraph 37
[9]
Cited
in Oatorian Properties (Pty) Ltd v Maroun
1973 (3) SA 779
(A)
at
785
[10]
See
for example para 29, Caselines A147, para 30, Caselines A148, para
39, A153
[11]
National
Land Transport Act, No 5 of 2009
[12]
Bonne
Fortune Beleggings Ltd v Kalahari Salt Works (Pty) Ltd en Andere
1974 (1) SA 414
(NC), Feinstein v Niggli
1981 (2) SA 684
(A), Extel
Industrial (Pty) Ltd v Crown Mills (Pty) Ltd
[1998] ZASCA 67
;
1999 (2) SA 719
(SCA),
Prefix Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others v Golden Empire Trading 49 CC
and Others
2011 (2) SA 334
(KZP)
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