Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 94South Africa
Kommandantsdrift v Brits and Others (5171/2015 ; 4070/2015) [2025] ZAWCHC 94 (13 January 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Kommandantsdrift v Brits and Others (5171/2015 ; 4070/2015) [2025] ZAWCHC 94 (13 January 2025)
Kommandantsdrift v Brits and Others (5171/2015 ; 4070/2015) [2025] ZAWCHC 94 (13 January 2025)
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sino date 13 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.5171/2015
Case
No.4070/2015
In
the matter between:
KOMMANDANTSDRIFT
Plaintiff
and
JOHANNES BRITS
First
Defendant
NICO LE ROUX
Second
Defendant
REGISTER OF DEEDS
Third
Defendant
ABSA BANK LIMITED
Fourth
Defendant
Coram:
NUKU J
Heard
on:
21 November 2024
Delivered
on:
13 January 2025
JUDGMENT
NUKU,
J
[1]
The ongoing dispute between the parties in this matter relates to
the validity of two transfers of the property known as The Farm
Oude
Zanddrift Number 446, situated in the Division of Uniondale, Western
Cape Province (
the property
). The first is the transfer of the
property from the plaintiff to the second defendant which was
registered at the Deeds Office
in Cape Town on 21 September 2000 (
the
first transfer
). The second is the subsequent transfer of the
property from the second defendant to the first defendant which was
registered at
the Deeds Office in Cape Town on 17 July 2008 (
the
second transfer
).
[2]
The property is currently registered in the name of the first
defendant under Deed of Transfer Number T 47986/2008 and two mortgage
bonds are registered over the property, one in favour of Absa Bank
Limited, the fourth defendant and the other in favour of
Sentraal-Suid
Kooperasie Limited (
SSK
). SSK is not a
party to these proceedings because it elected to abide the court’s
decision when these proceedings were
brought to its attention.
[3]
The property is a product of a consolidation of the following two
properties, namely Portion
3 (a portion of portion 2) of the Farm
Zand Drift Number 118 (
Micheal’s Farm
) and Portion 2 (a
portion of portion 1) of the Farm Onder Zanddrift Number 119 (
the
Wedge
) in respect of which the Certificate of Consolidated Title
Number T90464/1994 was issued by the Registrar of Deeds, Cape Town on
29 November 1994.
[4]
Prior to the consolidation referred to above Micheal’s Farm
had been registered in the names of Mr Micheal Arnaoldus Le Roux
(
Micheal
) and Mrs Petra Le Roux and this may explain why it
became known as Micheal’s Farm. The Wedge, on the other had
been part
of another property known as Portion 1 of the Farm Onder
Zanddrift Number 119 which was registered in the name of Mr Meyer Le
Roux
(
Mr Le Roux
), the father of Mr Meyer Le Roux (
Meyer
),
Nico Le Roux (
Nico
) and Micheal.
[5]
During 1993, Mr Le Roux subdivided Portion 1 of the Farm Onder
Zanddrift Number 119 to create the Wedge which he transferred to
Micheal and his wife during 1994. Micheal and his wife, in turn
consolidated the Wedge with Micheal’s Farm to create the
property as mentioned in paragraph 3 above.
[6]
The plaintiff acquired the property from Micheal and his wife in
terms of a Deed of Transfer
registered at the Deeds Office in Cape
Town on 11 December 1997 under Deed of Transfer Number T119146/1997.
Meyer is the sole member
of the plaintiff.
[7]
During 2000, the plaintiff and the second defendant concluded an
agreement for the sale of the property (
the 2000 agreement of
sale
) pursuant to which the property was transferred to the
second defendant as described above. It is now common cause that the
plaintiff
and the second defendant laboured under a common mistake
that they were only dealing with Micheal’s Farm and not the
Wedge
or the property. It is because of this common mistake that
Parker J declared the agreement of sale void, a decision which the
first
defendant has unsuccessfully appealed.
[8]
During 2008, the first and second defendants concluded an agreement
for the sale of the property
(
the 2008 agreement of sale
)
pursuant to which the property was transferred to the first
plaintiff. Again, Parker J has determined that this agreement of sale
is void because of the common mistake that the first and second
defendants laboured under when they concluded the agreement, namely
that they were dealing with Micheal’s Farm and not the Wedge or
the property.
[9]
In declaring the two agreements of sale void, Parker J either
omitted or was not called upon to deal with the issue of the validity
of the transfers pursuant to which the property was transferred. When
the matter served before the Supreme Court of Appeal, that
court
declined to decide the issue as a court of first instance and
referred it back to this court for determination. Thus, this
court is
required to determine the validity of the first and second transfers.
The plaintiff appreciating that a decision on this
issue is not
dispositive of the entire list between the parties, has indicated
that the issue of a consequential relief, in the
event of the
transfers being declared void, will have to be dealt with at a later
stage.
[10]
No additional evidence was led for the purposes of determining
the validity of the transfers and the court was requested to
determine
the issues based on the evidence that was led in the trial
before Parker J. That evidence has been summarised both in the
judgment of Parker J, as well as the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment
and in my view, it is not necessary to summarise it again.
It
suffices to state that what that evidence boiled down to is that the
plaintiff never intended to sell the property to Nico and
Nico never
intended to purchase the property from the plaintiff because both
parties intended to buy and sell Micheal’s Farm.
Further, Nico
never intended to sell the property to the first defendant because as
he only meant to sell Micheal’s Farm
which as his understanding
was that he had only acquired Micheal’s Farm from the
plaintiff.
[11]
The submissions made on behalf of the plaintiff, paraphrased amount
to this –regarding the first
transfer - the plaintiff had no
intention of transferring the property to the second defendant
because it never intended to sell
the property to the second
defendant in the first place. Similarly, the second defendant had no
intention of taking ownership of
the property as he, when taking
ownership of the property, laboured under the mistaken idea that he
was taking ownership of Michael’s
Farm, this being the property
he understood to have bought from the plaintiff.
[12]
As regards to the second transfer – the submissions are that
the second defendant who did not regard
himself as the owner of the
property had no intention of passing ownership of the property to the
first plaintiff. This is because
he could never have intended to pass
ownership of something that he did not think was his. The submission
goes further that judging
from the conduct of the first defendant, he
also could not have intended to take ownership of the property. Thus,
so goes the submission,
the common mistake that vitiated the
agreements of sale should also vitiate the transfers.
[13]
The conduct of the first defendant referred to above is the fact that
the first defendant had allowed the
plaintiff to continue with its
farming operations on the Wedge, in the period between 2008 and 2012,
without a demur. This, however,
only changed when the first defendant
engaged the services of a land surveyor who advised that the extent
of the property includes
the Wedge. In short, the argument is that
the first defendant, prior to the advice by the land surveyor, did
not regard the Wedge
as part of the property.
[14]
It was submitted on behalf of the first defendant that the
plaintiff is not entitled to claim retransfer of the property because
Nico, in signing the necessary documents on the basis of which the
transfer of the property was effected, signalled his intention
to
pass ownership of the property to the fist defendant. It was
submitted further that the voidness of the underlying agreement
for
the sale of property is irrelevant for the purposes of determining
the validity of the transfer of the property. The latter
argument is
based on the land registration system that South Africa has adopted
called the abstract system of transfer in terms
of which the validity
of the transfer does not depend on the validity of the underlying
agreement pursuant to which the transfer
is effected.
[15]
Both
parties approached the matter from a correct legal position that the
abstract system of land registration applies with the
result that the
underlying agreement pursuant to which the transfer is registered is
not determinative of the validity of the transfer.
In this regard
both parties referred the court to the decision of the Supreme Court
of Appeal in
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
[1]
where Brand, JA stated the following:
‘
In accordance with
the abstract theory the requirements for the passing of ownership are
twofold, namely, delivery – which
in the case of immovable
property, is effected by registration in the Deeds Office –
coupled with a so-called real agreement
or “saaklike
ooreenkoms”. The essential elements of the real agreement are
an intention on the part of the transferor
to transfer ownership and
the intention of the transferee to become owner of the property…
Broadly stated, the principles
applicable to agreements in general
also apply to real agreements. Although the abstract theory does not
require a valid underlying
contract, for example sale, ownership will
not pass – despite registration of transfer – if there is
a defect in the
real agreement…” (footnotes omitted)
[16]
None of the parties take issue with the first requirement for the
passing of transfer, namely, the registration
of the property at the
Deeds Office in Cape Town in the name of the first defendant. The
issue is whether such registration was
coupled with the so-called
real agreement and as Brand JA stated, the principles applicable to
agreements apply to real agreements.
Essentially then this involves a
factual enquiry whether the registration of the property at the Deeds
Office in Cape Town in the
name of the first defendant was coupled
with an intention on the part of Nico to transfer ownership and the
intention on the part
of the plaintiff to become owner of the
property.
[17]
On the acceptance of the common cause facts that Nico never
intended to purchase the property from the plaintiff it seems to me
that it follows logically that he could never have intended to give
what he never thought he had in the first place. Otherwise,
Nico
would have had to have two intentions at odd with each other, that is
one intention to sell only Micheal’s Farm and
another intention
to give transfer of the property. For that conclusion to be reached
one would need clear evidence that Nico had
become aware of the fact
that he had acquired not only Micheal’s Farm but the entire
property. His awareness of this fact
would have to be shown to exist
prior to him signing documents necessary to pass transfer. No such
evidence was presented in this
matter.
[18]
In my view, the first defendant misconstrued the plaintiff’s
argument as if plaintiff relied on the voidness of the agreements
of
sale as its basis of attacking the validity of the transfers. This
may have been due to the fact that the plaintiff prefaced
its
arguments with reference to the judgment that declared the agreements
of sale void. But that was not the end of the plaintiff’s
argument as paragraph 19 of the plaintiff’s heads of argument
makes plain:
‘
As important as
the court’s declaration that the contracts were void ab initio,
is the reason why they were found to be void.
They were found to be
void because both parties did not intend to buy, sell and transfer
the property. They intended to buy, sell
and transfer something else,
i.e the property less the piece of land known as the wedge, a piece
of land known as Micheal’s
Farm.’
[19]
I must hasten to add that the reason that the agreements were
found to be void, did not include the fact that the parties never
intended to transfer the property as that issue was left
undetermined. That court held that the parties intended to buy and
sell
something (Micheal’s Farm) but the agreements recorded the
Merx as the property due to a common mistake between the parties,
as
the property. But as I understand the plaintiff’s argument it
is that the parties could never have intended to give and
take
transfer of something different to which they intended to buy and
sell in the first place. So, the argument relies not on
the
invalidity of the agreements of sale but on the mistake which
resulted in the agreements of sale being found to be void.
[20]
In my view, the fact that Nico signed the necessary documents to
pass transfer of the property to the plaintiff cannot assist the
plaintiff in the absence of evidence to support a conclusion that
Nico intended to give transfer of the property to the first
defendant. The first defendant also gave no evidence to suggest that
he regarded himself as the owner of the property from the date
of its
registration into his name. This is hardly surprising in view of the
fact that it took him approximately four years before
he started
laying claim to the Wedge and that this only came about after he had
consulted a land surveyor. Had he regarded himself
as having acquired
the property including the Wedge, he would have undoubtedly asserted
his rights soon after taking transfer of
the property.
[21]
The first defendant has also sought define a “real
agreement” with reference to the
Deeds Registries Act, 47 of
1937
, as amended (
Deeds Registries Act
>) and the regulations
promulgated thereunder. This, however, cannot assist the first
defendant in that it cannot provide evidence
of the presence or
absence of an intention of the transferor to pass transfer as well as
an intention on the part of the transferee
to become owner of the
property being transferred.
[22]
Reference
was also made to some academic writings criticising the abstract
system and in particular an extract from
LAWSA
[2]
where the author states:
‘
The most serious
objection to the abstract principle is that it works unfairly towards
the transferor who is left with a condictio
on the ground of unjust
enrichment instead of a rei vindication. The transferor is especially
hard hit in cases where the transferee
is insolvent. Since the
transferee acquired ownership in the article, he or she can also give
valid title to a third party who
will be protected against the claims
of the first transferor. The abstract principle thus gives preference
to considerations of
legal certainty over considerations of fairness.
In this sense the abstract principle supports the principle of
publicity. Third
parties who rely on the impression that a transfer
has been competed are protected.’
[23]
With reference to the above passage it was submitted that titles
of the first defendant (as the second transferee), Absa Bank as
well
as SSK (as bondholders over the property) are protected because they
can rely on the accuracy and reliability of the documents
held by the
Deeds Office which are public documents.
[24]
The criticism of the abstract principle, in my view, misses the
point. A transferor who had an intention
to pass transfer of a
property can never be heard to complain about being held to a
transfer that he or she intended to give. The
criticism seems to
conflate situations where a transferor could potentially assail the
transfer based on some defect regarding
the underlying agreement. In
that case it is the real agreement that must prevail regardless of
some defect in the underlying agreement.
A defect in the real
agreement, on the other hand, is fatal to the transfer. This is
because the registration of transfer that
is not coupled with the
real intention does not result in a valid transfer. In my view, there
is thus no merit in this argument.
[25]
To recap, the evidence established that the plaintiff, first and
second defendant all laboured under the mistaken understanding that
the property that they were dealing with was the Micheal’s
Farm. Contrary to that understanding it was the property that
was
transferred and not Micheal’s Farm. It was not even possible
for the parties to transfer Micheal’s Farm as the
latter ceased
to exist, in a form capable of being transferred, when it was
consolidated with the Wedge to create the property.
Such a mistake is
of such a nature as to render the transfer void in that at the time
when the transfer was registered the plaintiff’s
intention in
respect of the first transfer was to give transfer of Micheal’s
Farm. For his part, Nico’s intention was
to become owner of
Micheal’s Farm and not the property. There was thus a defect in
the real agreement the consequence of
which is that there was no
valid transfer of the property. The plaintiff is therefore entitled
to the relief set out in prayers
A1 to A3 of the summons to be
declared as the rightful owner of the property, to have the records
held by the Registrar of Deeds,
Cape Town rectified to reflect it as
the rightful owner of the property as well as an order directing the
third defendant to rectify
its records to reflect the plaintiff as
the rightful owner of the property.
[26]
The above outcome concludes only but one aspect of the litigation
between the parties, that is the issue
of the rectification of the
documents held at the Deeds Office in Cape Town to reflect the
plaintiff as the owner of the property.
There are still outstanding
issues including the monies exchanged between the parties as part of
the purchase price. As well as
mortgage bonds registered over the
property. The parties’ legal representatives did not make it
clear whether the order,
in the event of the plaintiff being
successful, would be carried into effect immediately before dealing
with what the plaintiff’s
legal representatives termed
consequential relief. The parties are at liberty to determine these
issues among themselves failing
which they can approach the court for
direction on whether this order is to be carried into effect
immediately or whether the order
is suspended pending finalisation of
the residual issues including the consequential relief.
[27]
The plaintiff has been successful, and I am of the view that the
costs should follow the result. Only the first defendant defended
the
action and as such the costs are awarded only against him. The
plaintiff has submitted that costs should be awarded on the
C-scale
given the complexity of the matter. I am not persuaded that costs on
the C-scale are warranted. The matter involves an
application of
trite principles to a given set of fact. The facts themselves do not
present any complexity. Costs therefore shall
be awarded on the
B-scale.
ORDER
[28]
In
the result I make the
following order:
28.1 It
is declared that the plaintiff is the owner of the property known as
The
Farm Oude Zanddrift Number 446, situated in
the Division of Uniondale, Western Cape Province (
the
property
)
which is currently
registered at the Deeds Office in Cape Town in the name of the first
defendant under Deed of Transfer Number
T46 007/2008 (
the Deed of
Transfer
);
28.2
The Deed of Transfer and/ or any other deeds or documents held by the
third defendant relating to the property
are be rectified to reflect
the plaintiff as the owner of the property;
28.3
The third defendant is authorized and directed to give effect to the
orders set out in sub-paragraphs 26.1
and 26.2 above;
28.4
The first defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs of
suit on the B-scale including costs
occasioned by employment of
counsel;
28.5
The parties are granted leave to approach
the
court for directions on whether sub-paragraphs 26.1 to 26.3 of this
order are to be carried into effect immediately or whether
they are
to be suspended pending finalisation of the residual issues including
the consequential relief.
L.G. Nuku
Judge of the
High Court
APPEARANCES
For
plaintiff:
P A Myburg
SC
Instructed
by
:
Cluver
Markotter Attorneys, Stellenbosch
For
first defendant:
J I Du
Toit SC
Instructed
by
:
Le Roux
Lamprecht Inc, George
For
Second to
Fourth
defendants:
No appearance
[1]
2010
(1) SA 35
(SCA) at para [22]
[2]
LAWSA
Vol 27, Things, para 13
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