Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 705South Africa
Van Vuuren v Van Der Walt (49480/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 705 (26 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 September 2022
Headnotes
in P v P[3] that the court in Sawides v Sawides[4] potentially opened the door to a successful reliance on duress under circumstances where the duress, although subjectively reasonable, may be objectively speaking, unreasonable. [8] Christie in The Law of Contract in South Africa suggested:[5]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Van Vuuren v Van Der Walt (49480/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 705 (26 September 2022)
Van Vuuren v Van Der Walt (49480/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 705 (26 September 2022)
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sino date 26 September 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 49480/2018
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
26
September 2022
In
the matter between:
ALBERTUS
JEREMIAH JANSEN VAN VUUREN PLAINTIFF
and
MATHILDE
VAN DER WALT
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff and the defendant
concluded an oral agreement in terms whereof the plaintiff conducted
renovation and improvement
work on the defendant’s property at
Farm [....] V[....], Gauteng (the farm). The parties did not, before
the work commenced,
comprehensively discuss the full extent of the
work, or the costs thereof. As time passed and the defendant obtained
funds, additional
work was added. The plaintiff and the defendant
were, at the very least, at that stage, close friends. After the
renovations were
done at the farm, the plaintiff resided for a
substantial period of time at the defendant’s property at [….]
N[....]Street,
M[....], Pretoria (M[....]), without paying rent. He
did some maintenance – and repair work on the property, while
she resided
at the now-renovated farm property. A dispute arose
between the parties regarding outstanding payment for the work done
by the
plaintiff at the farm.
[2]
As
their friendship deteriorated, the dispute became more intense. The
plaintiff obtained a quantity surveyor’s report that
he claims
provided a complete breakdown of the work done, but the parties could
not come to an agreement regarding the final amount
due and payable.
In the meantime, the defendant concluded a lease agreement with a
third party regarding the M[....] property.
She informed the
plaintiff of the lease agreement and asked him to vacate the
property. On 26 April 2017, the defendant signed
an acknowledgment of
debt wherein she acknowledged that an amount of R314 711.04 was due
and payable to the plaintiff in relation
to the work done on the
farm. The plaintiff subsequently instituted an action based on the
defendant’s failure to pay the
amount of R314 711.04 in respect
of the renovation and improvement work done at the farm, as
acknowledged by the defendant to be
the amount due and payable to the
plaintiff.
[3]
The defendant admitted to signing the
acknowledgment of debt but pleaded that it was signed under duress.
She denied that the quantity
surveyor’s report gave a true
reflection of the work done by the plaintiff and stated that she
disputed the correctness thereof
all along. She confirmed during
evidence that she acknowledges that she owes the plaintiff money, but
disputes the extent of the
claim. The defendant instituted a
counterclaim against the plaintiff for faulty workmanship that she
had to repair at her own costs,
at both the farm and M[....]
properties.
[4]
The parties are throughout referred to
as plaintiff and defendant for purposes of clarity.
Before
considering the issues, it is necessary to reflect on the credibility
and reliability of the parties. Counsel for the defendant,
in her
heads of argument, criticised the plaintiff and submitted that he was
not an honest and forthright witness. I have had the
opportunity to
observe the demeanour of both the plaintiff and the defendant and to
listen carefully to their evidence. They are
both intelligent and
well-articulated. I did not get the impression that the plaintiff or
the defendant intentionally tried to
mislead the Court or knowingly
told an untruth. It is possible that their evidence with regard to
some incidents is not so reliable,
but I have no reason to conclude
that they were untruthful.
The
plaintiff’s claim
[5]
As far as the plaintiff’s claim is
concerned, the first issue to be considered, is whether the defendant
signed the acknowledgment
of debt under duress. The issue as to the
quantification of the plaintiff’s claim only arises if the
defendant makes out
a case that the acknowledgment of debt was signed
under duress.
[6]
It
is trite that a contract entered into under duress may be voided by
the innocent party. The party relying on duress must prove:
[1]
(i) a threat of considerable evil to the person concerned; (ii) that
the fear was reasonable; (iii) that the threat was of
an
imminent or inevitable evil and induced fear; (iv) that the threat or
intimidation was unlawful or
contra bonos mores;
and
(v) that the contract was concluded as a result of the duress.
[7]
In
order to determine whether the evidence supports a finding that there
was duress, the court should have regard to the person
complaining of
the duress, and the circumstances in which she found herself at the
time. In light of all the relevant factors,
the court needs to
determine whether it was reasonable for the person concerned to have
suffered fear and to succumb thereto.
[2]
Fourie J held in
P
v P
[3]
that the court in
Sawides v Sawides
[4]
potentially opened the door to a successful reliance on duress under
circumstances where the duress, although subjectively reasonable,
may
be objectively speaking, unreasonable.
[8]
Christie
in
The Law
of Contract in South Africa
suggested:
[5]
‘
The
point is that every person who complains of duress is entitled to be
seen as the sort of person he or she is, but to prevent
the remedy
getting out of hand is not entitled to resile from the contract if he
claims to have succumbed to the fear that would
be unreasonable even
for the sort of person he is.’
[9]
Due
to the defendant’s evidence, discussed below, it is also
necessary to keep in mind the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
obiter
remark in
Medscheme
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Bhamjee
[6]
that economic pressure may in appropriate cases constitute duress
that would allow for the avoidance of an agreement.
[10]
The parties were engaged in a
complicated relationship. Although the plaintiff denies it, the
Whatsapp evidence indicates that the
relationship developed into a
romantic relationship. The romantic relationship, and friendship,
deteriorated over time. The defendant
trusted the plaintiff and
ultimately felt betrayed by him.
[11]
The plaintiff assisted the defendant
with some challenges prior to doing the renovations that underpin
this litigation. The defendant
allowed the plaintiff to reside in her
M[....] property and on the farm, and he ultimately moved back to her
M[....] property.
The plaintiff’s evidence is that he moved
into the Mooikoof property because the defendant wanted to sell or
lease the property,
and it was easier to market the property when it
was occupied. The defendant testified the plaintiff had nowhere else
to stay,
and she accommodated him by allowing him to stay in the
M[....] property for free while he would, in turn, do maintenance and
repair
the roof of the property. The party’s business
relationship is contextualised against this background.
[12]
The defendant wanted to renovate her
farm property, and because the plaintiff was, in addition to being a
medical doctor, also a
builder-cum-renovator, they discussed the
plans for the renovations and he commenced with the project. They did
not make a cost
estimation for the project. When the project was
concluded, the defendant disputed the amounts incurred by the
plaintiff, and the
plaintiff obtained a report and cost estimation
from a student quantity surveyor. The defendant was not satisfied
with the report,
and the plaintiff obtained a report from a quantity
surveyor, the Brecher report. The defendant still refused to pay the
amount
claimed by the plaintiff. The parties were in continued
discussions regarding the outstanding amount. In the meanwhile, the
defendant
endeavoured to secure a tenant for the M[....] property
because she was suffering financial difficulty. The plaintiff was
aware
of the fact that the M[....] property would ultimately be
leased out. The defendant secured tenants and informed the plaintiff,
around 22 April 2017, that he had to vacate the property by the end
of April 2017. On 23 April 2017, the plaintiff called the defendant
and informed her that his trusted worker’s son had passed away
and, as a result, he would not be able to move out of the
M[....]
property at short notice. He requested a meeting for them to sort out
the outstanding amounts, and she indicated that she
would only be
available on 26 April 2017.
[13]
The defendant testified that when the
discussion commenced, the plaintiff had a tape recorder with him. She
said thàt is
when she knew that the plaintiff was going to try
and force her into a corner. They discussed the Brecher report in
length. Of
importance is the defendant’s evidence that they
subtracted some of the amounts from the amount that the plaintiff
indicated
was owed to him during this discussion. Then, she
testified: “The two of us drew up the acknowledgment of debt
together”.
She stayed over at the house that evening because it
was late. The following morning the plaintiff confronted her and said
that
although she signed the acknowledgment of debt, he knew she had
no intention to honour it. She said she wanted to pay him but that
she could not. The events that ensued from thereon are not relevant
for determining whether the acknowledgment of debt was signed
under
duress since it occurred after the signing of the acknowledgment of
debt.
[14]
During cross-examination, the defendant
said she signed the acknowledgment of debt under duress, because she
had no other choice.
The gist of her evidence is that she signed the
acknowledgment of debt to ensure that the plaintiff would vacate the
property so
that she could prepare the property for the tenants.
However, when it was put to the defendant during cross-examination
that the
plaintiff would testify that he never said that he would not
move out unless she signed the acknowledgment of debt, she answered,
“I am not hundred percent sure, but I think he said so.”
[15]
The
common cause facts support a finding that the plaintiff did
renovation work for the defendant and that a dispute arose regarding
the final amount due and payable. After a long discussion, which
resulted in some amounts being deducted, the parties reached an
agreement as to the final amount due and owing to the plaintiff. The
purpose of the acknowledgment of debt was not to give rise
to a new
independent agreement, but to finalise the longstanding dispute
regarding the amount due to the plaintiff. The signed
acknowledgment,
however, constitutes
prima
facie
proof of the amount due to the plaintiff. The defendant did not
succeed in making out a case that she signed under duress, and
the
proof became conclusive. She might have treaded lightly in an attempt
not to conflate the animosity that existed between the
parties at
that time, but the evidence does not show that the plaintiff was
forcing her to sign by threatening that he would not
vacate the
property, whilst knowing that she needed the lease to prevent
economic distress, or that the defendant was convinced
that the
signing of the acknowledgment was the only way in which she could
ensure that the plaintiff would timeously vacate the
property. I can
merely echo Nugent JA’s remark in
Medscheme
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Bhamjee
:
[7]
‘
While
there would seem to be no principled reason why the threat of
economic ruin should not, in appropriate cases, be recognised
as
duress, such cases are likely to be rare. … Something
more - which is absent in this case - would need to exist
for
economic bargaining to be illegitimate or unconscionable and thus to
constitute duress.’
[16]
The plaintiff’s claim stands to be
allowed. It is unfortunate that a project that started out while the
parties were friends,
turned sour and resulted in a situation where
the parties could barely look at each other during the court
proceedings.
Defendant’s
counterclaim
[17]
The defendant did not lead any expert
evidence substantiating her counterclaim. She presented photographs
taken almost a year after
the plaintiff did the work, and hearsay
evidence as to what she was told by different people, whom she
regarded as experts,
who subsequently did repairs at the farm and
M[....] properties, as to what the faults and shortcomings were in
the work done by
the plaintiff. In the result, the defendant’s
claim in reconvention stands to be absolved from the instance.
Costs
[18]
The plaintiff’s claim falls within
the jurisdiction of the regional court. The issues were not
specifically complex. As a
result, although the plaintiff is entitled
to costs, it is justified that costs be paid on a regional court
scale.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The defendant is liable to pay the
plaintiff the amount of R 314 711.04 plus mora interest at the
prescribed rate, from 22 June
2018 to date of final payment, and
costs;
2.
The defendant’s claim in
reconvention is absolved from the instance with costs;
3.
The defendant is to pay the costs on the
regional court scale.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the plaintiff:
Adv.
A M Raymond
Instructed
by:
GTA
KAYSER ATTORNEYS
For
the defendant: Adv.
C Joubert
Instructed
by:
KENNIE
BOONZAIER ATTORNEYS
Date
of the hearing: 26,
27, 28 July 2022
Date
of argument: 29
August 2022
Date
of judgment: 26
September 2022
[1]
Arend v Astra
Furnishers (Pty) Ltd
1974
(1) SA 298
(C) at 306A-C.
[2]
Paragon
Business Forms (Pty) Ltd v Du Preez
1994
(1) SA 434
(SE) at 441D-G.
[3]
(16300/2015)
[2016] ZAGPPHC 931 (10 October 2016) at para 31.
[4]
1986
(2) SA 325 (T).
[5]
6
th
ed,
at 315.
[6]
2005
(5) SA 339
(SCA) at paras [6] and [18].
[7]
2005
(5) SA 339
(SCA) 346.
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