Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 304South Africa
City and Atlantic Real Estate CC t/a Remax Living v Smith and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2 July 2025) (7118/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 304 (2 July 2025)
Headnotes
liable to the third respondent for commission, it must be borne in mind, the Smiths did not oppose the application and the dispute regarding commission would be between them and third respondent. This was also raised in the judgment. In any event the applicant’s application is against the Smiths, and not one as between applicant and third respondent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## City and Atlantic Real Estate CC t/a Remax Living v Smith and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2 July 2025) (7118/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 304 (2 July 2025)
City and Atlantic Real Estate CC t/a Remax Living v Smith and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2 July 2025) (7118/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 304 (2 July 2025)
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sino date 2 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 7118/2023
In the matter between:
CITY AND ATLANTIC REAL
ESTATE CC
t/a
REMAX
LIVING
Applicant
and
MICHAEL
IAN FRAIN
SMITH
First Respondent
ALISON
CAROL SMITH
Second Respondent
KAPSTADT
INTERNATIONAL PROPERTIES CC
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT - LEAVE TO
APPEAL
PARKER
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal by the third respondent in
terms of sections
17 (1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act No.10 of
2013 (“the Act”) against the whole of the judgment and
order delivered
on 13 December 2024 including that of costs, the
essence of which is that the third respondent would have reasonable
prospects
of success on appeal.
[2]
The parties shall be referred to as applicant and respondents as
cited in the main application.
The grounds of appeal are, pertinent
to;
2.1 The
factual disputes
2.2 The
applicant’s mandate
2.3 Effective
cause of the sale
2.4 The
Smiths
The factual disputes
[3]
The factual disputes are to a
certain degree interlinked with the effective cause of sale.
The
argument advance by the third respondent is that since the applicant
sought final relief in motion proceedings the onus
was on the
applicant to prove on a balance of probabilities the terms of the
mandate and that it was the effective cause of the
sale. The
submissions made by the third respondent is that the third
respondent raised disputes of fact, which factual
disputes
arise in circumstances where the applicant seeks final relief the
relief should be granted in favour of the applicant
only if the facts
alleged by the respondent in their answering affidavit read with the
facts it has admitted to justify the order
prayed for as the test
adopted in
Plascon
Evans Paints (Tvl) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
the court can only reject the version of the respondent if the
absence of bona fides is abundantly clear and manifest and
substantially
beyond question.
[ 4]
Furthermore the third respondent argues the court erred in elevating
the fact that the applicant had
introduced the ultimate purchaser
(“Mr. Pears”) to the property almost a year before the
sale and failed to consider
the lapse of time which had occurred
since the said introduction and in not concluding that the third the
respondent was the ultimate
proximate and effective cause for the
sale.
[5]
In this regard the judgment was clear that Mr. Pears was introduced
by the applicant
for reasons canvassed in the judgment arriving at
the decision that the applicant was the effective cause of the sale.
[6]
In arriving at the conclusion that the applicant was the effective
cause of the sale, the
onus was discharged, albeit that the onus was
not expressed in the words “onus” in the judgment.
The terms of the
mandate
[7]
The third respondent raised the same arguments it had done at the
hearing of the main application.
In this regard paragraph 19 of the
judgment, after examining the provisions of clause 3.2, found
the text to be straightforward
and unambiguous. As such I
disagreed with the third respondent that a factual dispute exists
regarding whether applicant
was the effective cause of the sale and
therefore did not deem it appropriate to refer the matter to oral
argument or trial.
[8]
What the third respondent now seeks to do on the appeal is to rely on
the use of a word
“
where after
” as opposed to
“
whereafter
” and accordingly accords a different
interpretation to the words. However, the third respondent in
the attempt to
giving effect to the construction of the words
and the interpretation, does not alter decision arrived at in the
judgment. Accordingly,
I am not persuaded that any other
interpretation prevails.
Effective cause
[9]
Again, this aspect together with the previous grounds are
intertwined. In respect
of this ground of appeal the third
respondent contends there is a conflation in respect of two separate
issues namely that of the
interpretation of the contract with the
effective cause of the sale. This pursuit on this application
for leave to appeal
together with the material dispute of facts
, were argued at the hearing of the main application. The findings
arrived at in the
judgment found that the purchaser was introduced to
the property during the mandate period as the main, if not
sole, determinative
effect. I am not persuaded that a factual
and legal dispute as contended by the third respondent exists giving
rise to a
green light to be granted for leave to appeal to either the
Full Bench of this Honorable Court or alternatively to the Supreme
Court of Appeal.
[10]
Where the judgment referred to the Smiths as possibly being held
liable to the third respondent for commission,
it must be borne in
mind, the Smiths did not oppose the application and the dispute
regarding commission would be between them
and third respondent. This
was also raised in the judgment. In any event the applicant’s
application is against the Smiths,
and not one as between applicant
and third respondent.
Any persuasions by the
third respondent that the disputes point to there being two effective
causes cannot be sustained.
[11]
On any construction, which the respondent on appeal against the
judgment that the applicant did
not discharge the onus which was on
it proving in that it was the effective cause, due to the purported
time delay between the
original introduction of the purchaser to the
ultimate sale concluded by the 3rd respondent, and other factors such
as the role
the third respondent played in causing and concluding the
ultimate sale through numerous and effective steps I cannot find
compelling
reasons why the appeal should be granted in favour of the
applicants who contend that another court may find other
reasons
and arrive at a another conclusion. Even third
respondent’s attempt to rely on a
nova acta
interveniens
which broke the causal change between the original introduction by
the applicant and the ultimate sale by the third
respondent does not
prevail.
The Smiths
[12]
For reasons stated above, I had already articulated that the Smiths
do not dispute the applicant's
claim , in this regard see paragraph
27 of the judgment. What the third respondent drives is the
view that the Smiths oppose
the applicant’s claim and therefore
the payment of the commission held in trust for the disputed
commission was
made pending the outcome of the main
application. This cannot be further than the truth. If
the Smiths were opposing
the applicant in its application, then it
begs the question why they did not do so. It is clear that the Smiths
acknowledge that
commission is due, however, because there was a
dispute between applicant and the third respondent, they paid the
commission into
a trust account until the dispute was resolved.
The test
[13]
There is nothing new in the arguments in this leave to appeal. In
short, all that it leaves me is
to do is apply the test in
terms of section 17 to assess whether the grounds of appeal have met
the threshold for the leave
to appeal.
[14]
In terms of Section 17(1), the threshold required for granting leave
to appeal has become more
stringent. In Caratco (Pty) Limited v
Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[2]
,
an applicant for leave must satisfy the court considering the appeal,
whether the applicant would have a reasonable prospect of
success or
that there are some other compelling reasons why the appeal should be
heard;
“
If
the court is unpersuaded of the prospects of success, it must still
inquire whether there is a compelling reason to entertain
the appeal.
A compelling reason includes any important question of law or a
discrete issue of public importance that will
influence future
disputes. But here too, the merits remain vitally important and are
often decisive”
[15]
An applicant must convince the court that there truly is a reasonable
prospect of success “
a
mere possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is hopeless
is not enough. There must be a sound, rational basis to
conclude that
there is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.”
[3]
[16]
Caratco was also followed in Ramakatsa and others v African
National Congress and another,
[4]
with the interests of justice is now paramount in deciding whether
orders including interlocutory orders are applicable however
as to
what is in the interest of justice it requires a careful weighing up
of all Germaine circumstances before a flexible approach
could be
adopted.
[17]
The other compelling reasons why the appeal should be heard as raised
by the third respondent
in its application for leave to appeal,
related to that of public interest, however it takes the matter
no further as a ground
sufficiently for a leave to appeal be
granted.
Costs
[18]
The third respondent argued that given that the Smiths abided the
outcome of the Court, there
could be no grounds for costs to be
paid jointly and severally against all the respondents . In
this regard the Smiths filed
an affidavit and to abide the court’s
decision. However as argued by the applicant ,the Smiths are liable
to pay it the commission
and the dispute is one as between applicant
and the Smiths and not the third respondent. One cannot escape that
the applicant incurred
costs to bring this application including
applicant having to consider the Smiths affidavit. There are no
reasons why the Smiths
should also not have to pay the costs of this
application , “
jointly
“ and as worded in the
judgment at paragraph 31.4 of the order, “
where
appropriate.
” Importantly , the Smiths have not taken
the costs order on appeal and therefore the costs occasioned by this
application
for leave to appeal , cannot be raised against the
Smiths.
Conclusion
[19]
A long lapse of time does not necessarily deprive an estate agent of
his/her commission, although
it is one of the factors that a court
may take into account in ascertaining whether the chain of causation
between the introduction
and the sale has been ruptured.
[5]
I was not convinced that the rupture of time and that a
rupture, sufficiently excluded the applicant and on that basis
found
that the exertions of the applicant was the effective cause of
action.
[20]
Having duly considered the submissions made by the third respondent
and the applicable legal
principles, it is my view that the threshold
for section 17(1) has not been met and accordingly the leave to
appeal is not granted.
[21]
Accordingly it is ordered:
a)
The appeal is dismissed.
b)
The third respondent shall
bear the costs of the application including the costs of
counsel where so employed on scale B
PARKER AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv A Smalberger SC
Instructed
by:
Werksman Attorneys
Mr. R
Gootkin
For
the First & Second Respondents:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr
Mr. R
Marcus
Counsel
for the Third Respondent:
Adv R Stelzner SC
Instructed
by:
MacGregor Stanford Kruger Inc.
Mr. D
MacGregor
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email.
[1]
1984
(3 ) SA 620 . See also Islam v Kabir (C280/2010)[ 2011] ZAECGHC 9
(11 April 2011)
[2]
(982)
[2020] ZASCA 17
;
2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA) (25 March 2020) para [2]
[3]
MEC
for health, Eastern Cape v Mkitha and Another
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25
November 2016) paragraphs [16]- [18]
[4]
[2021]
JOL 49993
(SCA). Also, MV Smart Men's Metals Logistics Zijiang Co
Ltd V owners and underwriters of MB Smart and another 20251 SA 392
SCA
[5]
Mano
et Mano Ltd v Nationwide Airlines (Pty) Ltd and Others
2007 (2) SA
512
(SCA) para [20]
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