Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 856South Africa
Nel and Others v Cilliers (A208/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 856 (7 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 November 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 856
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Nel and Others v Cilliers (A208/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 856 (7 November 2022)
Nel and Others v Cilliers (A208/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 856 (7 November 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_856.html
sino date 7 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A208/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
Date:
07 NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
NEL:
JJG
FIRST
APPELLANT
IVY
JEWEL 3 (PTY) LTD
SECOND
APPELLANT
IVY
JEWEL 4 (PTY) LTD
THIRD
APPELLANT
LABONTE
1 (PTY) LTD
FOURTH
APPELLANT
LABONTE
2 (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
APPELLANT
SILKBLAZE
3 (PTY) LTD SIXTH
APPELLANT
SILKBLAZE
4 (PTY) LTD SEVENTH
APPELLANT
RUSTY
ROSE 52 (PTY) LTD
EIGHTH
APPELLANT
And
CILLIERS:
PJJ RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
ALLY
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The dispute between
the parties in the Court
a
quo
centred
around two agreements entered into between the parties and referred
to during the trial as “D1” and “D2”.
The
appellant’s claim was for payment of the cash amount of R 6
million in paragraph 2 of “D2”,
alternatively
,
in the event that “D2” was found to be unenforceable, the
balance of an amount of R 23 million arising from paragraph
2 in
“D1”.
[2]
The court dismissed
the appellant’s claims, which in turn led to the appeal under
consideration, leave having been granted
by the Court
a
quo
.
The
grounds of appeal as raised by the Appellant are contained in
Caselines and need not be repeated here save to make a specific
point
insofar as is necessary.
[3]
Counsel on appeal were the same Counsel representing the respective
parties in the
Court
a quo
.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[4]
It is common cause that First Appellant and the Respondent entered
into two agreements
described in the Court
a quo
as ‘D1’
and ‘D2’.
[5]
It is appropriate to deal with the agreement described as ‘D2’
first for
the reason that that is how the Appellants founded their
claim and alternatively relied on the agreement described as ‘D1’
should ‘D2’ be found to be invalid and unenforceable.
[6]
The agreement described as ‘D2’ contained the following
clauses:
“
OOREENKOMS
AANGEGAAN DEUR EN TUSSEN:-
PEET CILLIERS
En
KOOS NEL
NADEMAAL die partye ʼn
ooreenkoms aangegaan het op 18 Februarie 2008 in terme waarvan die
bedrag van R30 miljoen (DERTIG MILJOEN
RAND) terugbetaalbaar sou wees
binne ʼn drie jaar tydperk en
NADEMAAL die partye
die ooreenkoms her onderhandel het, nou kom die partye soos volg
ooreen:-
1.
Die bedrag van R6 miljoen (SES
MILJOEN RAND) is onmiddelik betaalbaar welke bedrag reeds betaal is.
2.
Cilliers onderneem om ʼn
verdere R6 miljoen (SES MILJOEN RAND) in kontant in drie gelyke
jaarlikse paaiemente te betaal. Die
eerste betaling sal op die eerste
besigheidsdag van Maart 2012 geskied en dieselfde vir die twee
daaropvolgende jare. Voormelde
jaarlikse paaiemente sal ook
saamgestelde rente insluit wat maandeliks bereken sal word teen die
heersende Absa prima koers plus
3,5% vanaf Maart 2011.
3.
Cilliers sal verantwoordelikheid
aanvaar vir volle uitstaande balans van ongeveer R5 miljoen op die
sewe erwe wat in die Legend
& Safari oord geleë is. Cilliers
sal ook die maandelikse paaiemente asook die munisipale fooie van
ongeveer R70 000
per maand (in totaal) vanaf 1 Junie 2011
betaal, betaalbaar voor of op 30 Junie 2011.
4.
Die uitstaande BTW wat
tergubetaalbaar sal wees aan die Ontvanger sal ookby die kapitale
bedrag gevoeg word en sal die BTW bedrag
rente dra tot teen die
heersende prima koers waarvoor Cilliers aanspreeklikheid aanvaar.
5.
Cilliers aanvaar
verantwoordelikheid om 4 hotel kamers op elk van die sewe erwe te bou
en volledig toe te rus met meubels oor ʼn
drie jaar tydperk
wwarvan die bouery op die eerste twee erwe afgehandel moet wees aan
die einde van April 2012. Die volgende 4
hotel kamers moet voltooi
wees aan die einde van April 2013 op nog twee erwe en die laaste drie
erwe voor of op einde April 2014.
6.
Die aandeelhouding in die
voormelde sewe erwe sal dan verdeel word op ʼn basis van 82% ten
gunste van Nel en 18% ten gunste
van Cilliers.Dit word vermeld dat
Koos die gemagtigde verteenwoordiger van al die verskye maatskaapye
is.
7.
Cilliers onderneem om die
onbeswaarde 50% aandelhouding wat deur die Peet Cilliers Familie
Trust gehou word in die eiendom wat in
die Baviaanskloof Wêreld
Erfenis gebied geleë is aan Nel te sedeer as sekuriteit vir die
utistaande verpligting.”
[7]
The ‘D1’ agreement contained the following clauses:
“
1.
VERY LAST MINUTE. COM
Peet
Cilliers koop Koos Nel se 2% (twee present) aandeel in VERY LAST
MINUTE.COM vir die bedrag van R3 000 000 –
00 (Drie
miljoen rand). Vermelde bedrag is betaalbaar voor of op einde Maart
2008, is nie rentedraend nie, en die transaksie sal
“Belasting
vriendelik” wees.
2.
LEGEND GOLF EN SAFARI RESORT (PTY) LTD – LANDGOED
Peet
Cilliers koop Koos Nel se 5% (Vyf present) aandeel in Legend Golf en
Safari Resort (Pty) Ltd vir die bedrag van R30 000 000
–
00 (Dertig Miljoen Rand). Vermelde bedrag is betaalbaar voor of op
einde Februarie 2011, is nie rentedraend nie, en die
transaksie sal
“Belasting vriendelik” wees.
3.
LEGEND GOLF EN SAFARI RESORT (Pty) LTD – 7 ERWE
Al
7 (Sewe) erwe word in Koos Nel se naam gekoop en deur hom self
finansier by Absa Bank teen prima -2%. Die eerste twee erwe sal
deur
Peet Cilliers so gou as moontlik verkoop word teen minstens
R2 500 000 – 00 per erf, om sodoende die ander
vyf
erwe te financier. Wins en verlies sal gelykop tussen Cilliers en Nel
verdeel word na behoorlike voorsiening vir rente en moontlike
belasting implikasies.
4.
LENING VAN R2 000 000 – 00 (TWEE MILJOEN RAND)
Vermelde
lening sal voor of op einde Maart 2008 aan Koos Nel terug betaal
word, insluitende renete bereken teen prima -2%, vanaf
22/3/2007 tot
en met datum van betaling, en sal uiteraard ook “Belasting
vriendelik” wees.”
[8]
It is clear from the record on appeal that the First Appellant was
the only person
to testify in the Court a quo.
[9]
The First Appellant confirmed agreements ‘D1’ and D’2’.
ANALYSIS
AND EVALUATION
[10]
In my view, the following issues warrant determination on appeal:
10.1.
Whether ‘D2’ is a Credit Agreement in terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
, as amended?
10.2.
Whether ‘D1’ can be revived if ‘D2’ is
declared to be unlawful and invalid?
10.3.
Whether ‘D1’ was inchoate or not and whether reliance on
the inchoateness by the Respondent was appropriate in
law;
10.4.
Whether ‘D1’ was a Credit Agreement in terms of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (“the Act”), as
amended?
[11]
Accordingly the first issue for determination as set out above is
whether ‘D2’ falls
within Section 8 of the Act, meaning,
can it be described as a credit agreement?
[12]
Firstly, the Appellants conceded in a pre-trial minute that clauses
2, 3 and 4 of ‘D2’
fall within the ambit of Section 8 of
the Act. Secondly, what logically must follow such a concession is
surely that the agreement
between the First Appellant and the
Respondent is unlawful in terms of Section 89 (2) of the Act for the
reason that the neither
of the First Appellant and the Respondent
were registered as credit providers in terms of the Act.
[13]
However, Counsel for the Appellants, submitted in the Court
a
quo
and in this Court that ‘D2’ is not a credit agreement but
rather a negotiation or ‘settlement’ of a dispute
regarding the payment of the R30 000 000-00 [thirty million
rand]. As I understand this argument, if the agreement can
be
described as a ‘settlement’ then in terms of
Ratlou
v MAM Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
‘D2’
is not a credit agreement in terms of the Act and is therefore
neither unlawful nor invalid.
[14]
This submission, firstly, flies in the face of the concession made by
the Appellants which concession
was never withdrawn.
[15]
Furthermore as found in the Court
a quo
, which finding I agree
with, the settlement of a dispute never formed part of the pleadings
and cannot be relied on by the Appellants.
[16]
Accordingly in my view, t
he
Ratlou
[2]
decision
is not applicable to this case because, as stated above, the
pleadings do not lend themselves to such a conclusion nor
did the
testimony of the First Appellant in the Court
a
quo
.
[17]
The applicability of the Act generally and Section 40 in particular,
to agreements ‘D1’
and ‘D2’ was an issue
throughout the proceedings in the Court
a
quo
and also formed part of the submissions in this Court. In this regard
the insightful and in my view, authoritative judgement of
Du
Bruyn N.O and Others v Karsten
[3]
needs mentioning:
“
[18]
The real issue in this appeal is whether the full court in Friend was
correct in finding that that the NCA was directed
only at those in
the credit industry and did not apply to single transactions where
credit was provided, irrespective of the amount
involved. The court
in Friend para 28 held that notwithstanding the fact an agreement may
be a credit agreement in terms of the
NCA, this did not necessarily
mean that the credit provider was obliged to register in terms of s
40(1)(b). For this interpretation
the full court relied on the
purpose of the NCA, set out in s 3 which is, ‘to promote and
advance the social and economic
welfare of South Africans’ in
order to achieve ‘a fair, transparent, competitive,
sustainable, responsible, efficient,
effective and accessible credit
market and industry, and to protect consumers’. Bearing this in
mind the court found that
the provisions of the NCA were meant to
regulate those participating in the credit industry and persons who
frequently provide
credit, and was not applicable to once-off
transactions.
[19]
The court a quo’s stance was further complicated by a number of
decisions in the same division which held
that Friend had been
wrongly decided. In Van Heerden v Nolte
[4]
the court found that the ratio decidendi in Friend was inconsistent
with the approach taken by the Constitutional Court in National
Credit Regulator v Opperman & others
.
[5]
Similarly,
Potgieter v Olivier & another,
[6]
although the court held that it was bound by Friend, it differed with
the finding therein on the grounds that the tenets of interpretation
of statutes do not permit such a meaning.
[7]
[20]
There can be no doubt that the approach adopted in Friend is
pragmatic and makes good sense. However, it is difficult
to marry
this interpretation with the unambiguous text of the NCA. Section 40
of the NCA sets out the circumstances under which
registration as a
credit provider is applicable. The section, in relevant part,
provides that:
(1)
A person
must apply as a credit provider if–
(a)
that
person, alone or in conjunction with any associated persons, is the
credit provider of at least 100 credit agreements, other
than
incidental credit agreements;
(b)
the
total principal debt owed to that credit provider under all the
outstanding
agreements,
other than incidental credit agreements, exceeds the threshold
prescribed in terms of section 42(1).
(2)
In
determining whether a person is required to register as a credit
provider –
.
. . .
(3)
A person
who is required in terms of subsection (1) to be registered as a
credit provider, but who is not so registered, must not
offer, make
available or extend credit, enter into a credit agreement or agree to
do any of those things.
(4)
A credit
agreement entered into by a credit provider who is required to be
registered in terms of subsection (1) but who is not
so registered is
an unlawful agreement and void to the extent provided for in section
89.’
[21]
Section 40(1) was amended by Act 19 of 2014 to delete any
reference to 100 credit agreements. It now reads as follows:
‘
A
person must apply to be registered as a credit provider if the total
principal debt owed to that credit provider under all outstanding
credit agreements, other than incidental credit agreements, exceeds
the threshold prescribed in terms of s 42 (1).’
Therefore
the amount of credit provided that is now the sole determining factor
to ascertain whether a credit provider is obliged
to register.
"
[18]
It is clear, in my view, that
Du
Bruyn
[8]
applies
to ‘D2’ for the reason that ‘D2’ is a credit
agreement within the meaning of Section 8 as read with
Section 40 (1)
of the Act. For the reason that neither the Appellant nor the
Respondent were credit providers within the meaning
of the Act, ‘D2’
must be found as I do find, to be unlawful and unenforceable.
[19]
The next issue for determination as stated above, is whether ‘D1’
can be revived
after a finding that ‘D2’ is a credit
agreement that is unlawful within the meaning of the Act?
[20]
Counsel for the Appellants submitted that the Appellants pleaded
conditionally that should ‘D2’
be found to be unlawful
and unenforceable then Appellants’ claims are based on ‘D1’.
[21]
In this regard Counsel for the Appellants stated that where a
novation or substitution is incomplete
for the reason that the
novated contract is unlawful and unenforceable, the previous contract
revives. Counsel placed reliance
on the case of
Acacia
Mines Ltd v Boshoff
[9]
for this submission.
[22]
Now this case also mentions the fact that novation has to do with the
intention of the parties
as to the abandonment of the previous
contract.
[23]
It is therefore only proper to investigate whether the parties to
‘D2’ had such intention
to abandon ‘D1’, if
so, then no further reliance can then be placed on ‘D1’
for any claim.
[24]
It should be noted that the First Appellant testified that ‘D2’
had replaced ‘D1’.
In my view that is an abandonment of
‘D1’ and same cannot be resuscitated. Once that occurs,
one is only left with
‘D2’ and since ‘D2’ has
been found to be unlawful and unenforceable, ‘D1’ cannot
be relied
upon as a claim against the Respondent.
[24]
I now deal with whether ‘D1’ was inchoate or not and
whether reliance on such ‘inchoateness’
by the Respondent
is appropriate in law.
[25]
Counsel for the Appellants submitted that the issue of an ‘inchoate
agreement’ cannot
be relied on by the Respondent for the reason
that this issue was never pleaded and in is trite in civil
proceedings that parties
are bound by the pleadings. Furthermore, so
it is submitted, the Court
a quo
did not have to decide the
issue for the same reason, namely, the ‘inchoateness’ of
the agreement.
[26]
Now the real issue regarding the agreement ‘D1’ is that
the Plaintiff himself testified
that there were certain issues that
needed to be clarified and this related to the issue of ‘belasting
vriendelik’
as well as when payment was to start.
[27]
Whilst it is correct that a party may not raise a defence that has
not been pleaded, the same
cannot be said of a party whose obligation
it is to prove an agreement, indicating that such agreement is not
complete. It is my
view that in such circumstances a party can be
held to his/her statement that the agreement is not complete. The
First Appellant
pertinently mentioned that he and the Respondent were
still to discuss how exactly certain clauses will be performed
[10]
.
This clearly evidences incompleteness.
[28]
The result of this circumstance is therefore that ‘D1’ is
inchoate and thus cannot
be used to advance the claims of the
Plaintiff.
[29]
Should I be wrong in the above reasoning regarding the incompleteness
of ‘D1’, the
question still remains whether ‘D1’
in and of itself is a credit agreement and if so whether such
agreement is lawful.
[30]
Section 8
(4) of the
National Credit Act
[11
]
provides as follows:
“
An
agreement, irrespective of its form but not including an agreement
contemplated in subsection (2)
,
constitutes a credit
transaction if it is-
(a)
a pawn transaction or discount transaction;
(b)
an incidental credit agreement, subject to
section 5(2)
;
(c)
an instalment agreement;
(e)
a lease; or
(d)
a mortgage agreement or secured loan;
any
other agreement, other than a credit facility or credit guarantee, in
terms of which payment of an amount owed by one person
to another is
deferred, and any charge, fee or interest is payable to the credit
provider in respect of-
(i)
the agreement; or
(ii)
the amount that has been deferred.
”
[31]
Having regard to the abovementioned Section, it is my view that the
deferment of payment of the
amount of R30 000 000-00
[thirty million rand] as contained in ‘D1’ falls foul of
the abovementioned Act
and thus unlawful and unenforceable. On this
ground also, the Appellants’ claim must fail.
CONCLUSION
[32]
In conclusion therefore, I am of the view, for the reasons stated
above, that the appeal must
fail and there is no reason to alter the
norm that the party succeeding is entitled to their costs.
In
the result
I
propose the following order.
a).
The Appeal is dismissed.
b).
The Appellants to pay the costs of the Appeal which costs shall
include the costs of two Counsel where
employed, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
G
ALLY
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree.
T
BOKAKO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree and it is so ordered.
N
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUISEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of virtual hearing: 7
September 2022
Date
of judgment:
07
November 2022
Appearances:
Attorneys
for the Appellants:
JACO
ROOS ATTORNEYS INCORPORATED
jana@jacoroos.co.za
Counsel
for the Appellants:
Adv. A.B. Rossouw SC
[with
him Adv. J.H.A. Saunders]
Attorneys
for the Respondent:
SAVAGE JOOSTE &
ADAMS INCORPORATED
jonathanh@savage.co.za
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv.
J.D. Maritz SC
[1]
2019
(5) SA 117 (SCA)
[2]
supra
[3]
2019
(1) SA 403 (SCA)
[4]
Van
Heerden v Nolte
2014
(4) SA 584
(GP) para 14.
[5]
National
Credit Regulator v Opperman & others
[2012]
ZACC 29
;
2013
(2) SA 1
(CC) (
Opperman
)
.
[6]
Potgieter
v Olivier & another
2016
(1) SA 272
(GP) (
Potgieter)
para
28 and 30-33.
[7]
See
also
Naude
& another v Wright
[2017] ZAGPPHC 646 para 26 where the court held it was bound by
Friend
.
[8]
supra
[9]
1958
(4) SA 330
AD @ D
[10]
Record:
Volume 2 paginated page 200 et seq
[11]
34
of 2005
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Nel N.O and Others v Astrotail 109 (Pty) Ltd and Another (30326/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 873 (21 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 873High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Nel v South African Veterinary Council (33971/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 679 (9 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 679High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Nel v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (2025-218236) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1365 (22 December 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1365High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Nel N.O and Another v Mulaudzi and Others (2024/063817) [2025] ZAGPPHC 421 (5 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 421High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Ex Parte Nel and Others (094974/2024; 099273/2024; 103517/2024; 099376/2024; 098532/2024; 094973/2024; 091407/2024; 113545/2024; 113455/2024; 114126/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 18 (13 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 18High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar