Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 211South Africa
Camps Bay Investment Trust Proprietary Limited v Infusion Social Club Camps Bay Propriety Limited (14487/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 211 (19 August 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Camps Bay Investment Trust Proprietary Limited v Infusion Social Club Camps Bay Propriety Limited (14487/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 211 (19 August 2024)
Camps Bay Investment Trust Proprietary Limited v Infusion Social Club Camps Bay Propriety Limited (14487/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 211 (19 August 2024)
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sino date 19 August 2024
FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Commercial
premises –
Misrepresentation
by tenant
– Nature of
business – Non-disclosure that tenant would be selling
cannabis products – Trading activities
inconsistent with
trading activities for building – Terminated lease agreement
– Agreement was conditional on
complete and accurate
disclosure – Undertaking only surfaced after breach and
valid termination of lease – Manifestly
unreasonable conduct
– No alternative remedy – Application succeeds.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NUMBER: 14487 /
2024
In the matter between:
CAMPS BAY
INVESTMENT TRUST
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(Registration Number:
2022/871627/07)
Applicant
and
INFUSION SOCIAL
CLUB CAMPS BAY
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
(Registration Number:
2023/782936/07)
Respondent
Coram: Wille, J
Heard: 10 July 2024
Order: 11 July 2024
Reasons requested: 24
July 2024
Reasons delivered: 19
August 2024
REASONS
WILLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This was an urgent application for the eviction of the respondent
from commercial premises. The matter came before me in the
urgent
fast lane during the court recess. I considered the matter overnight
and issued an order the following day.
[1]
[2]
After that, the respondent curiously filed a request for reasons and
an application for leave to appeal on the same day. It
is unclear why
the respondent requires reasons if it, in the absence thereof, could
adequately formulate sufficient grounds for
an application for leave
to appeal. It may be that the respondent refuses to abide by the
terms of the order granted.
[2]
[3]
The respondent is an incorporated private company and trades as the
‘
Infusion
Social Club’
as
its business. The applicant is also a private company, and its trade
consists of managing a portfolio of property investments.
The
premises from which the respondent conducts its business is a single
shop in a portion of the subject property owned by the
applicant.
[3]
[4]
The applicant’s business is a family investment business that
has done business for many generations. This family business
is
respected in the local community and earned the trust of the
residents and traders. The property is situated in an upmarket
address on the beachfront. It is a two-story building that is
occupied by several tenants, including doctors and estate agents.
There is also a restaurant area in the building, which occupies part
of the ground floor and part of the upper floor via an internal
staircase. The applicant employed a model for the selection of
tenants to occupy its premises. The core selection criteria related
to the symbiotic business relationship that any prospective tenant
would enjoy with the other current tenants and their businesses
conducted in the property so that they would operate harmoniously.
[4]
OVERVIEW
[5]
The premises were previously occupied by a business concern that
operated a restaurant as a café where patrons could
enjoy a
coffee, freshly pressed juice, or a smoothie. It was a health-minded
space attracting families and the local community.
This business was
in keeping with the applicant’s community and health-minded
approach and operated symbiotically with other
tenants who occupied
the property. This café was, however, not financially
profitable and ran into arrears in connection
with its rental
payments to the applicant.
[5]
[6]
The respondent approached the applicant with a proposal whereby the
respondent invested capital and resources to assist the
café
in improving its operations and making its business profitable.
Ultimately, the café’s business proved
too distressed to
be resuscitated, and it was not feasible to continue operating. After
that, the respondent proposed that it would
take over the café's
business and enter into a new lease agreement with the applicant.
[6]
[7]
At all material times, the applicant understood (and it is alleged
that the respondent so represented to it) that the respondent
would
be conducting the same business as the café had undertaken
previously. This representation was reinforced by the express
representations contained in a written presentation submitted to the
applicant by the respondent.
[7]
[8]
After that, the café’s lease was terminated, and the
respondent concluded a commercial lease agreement (including
an
addendum) to lease the premises from the applicant. The lease
agreement contained a vitally important material term in which
the
respondent agreed to use the premises to conduct the business
ordinarily undertaken by a restaurant, which included cooking
and
selling food and serving drinks and alcohol.
[8]
CONTEXT
[9]
Following this historical context, the respondent agreed that it
would not do or suffer to be done anything that might create
a
nuisance to the other tenants or occupants who occupied the property.
It also agreed that it would punctually and fully comply
with the
laws, by-laws, and regulations, particularly those about the business
carried on by it, and would not commit or allow
to be committed any
act calculated to be a nuisance and to disturb the peace and
enjoyment of the public.
[9]
[10]
In addition, the respondent agreed that if it committed any breach of
any lease agreement terms and failed to remedy such breach
within
seven days after receipt of prior notice, the applicant would have
the right to terminate the lease without further notice
and retake
possession of the premises. Thus, the lease would terminate, and the
respondent would immediately give the applicant
vacant possession of
the premises.
[10]
[11]
Necessary for this case was that the respondent contractually agreed
that it would not under any circumstances have any claim
or right of
action whatsoever against the applicant for damages or losses of
whatsoever nature and that no act on the part of the
applicant in
accepting any payments or amounts from the respondent would in any
way be regarded as a waiver by the applicant of
any of its
rights.
[11]
[12]
Further, an addendum to the lease, among other things, contained the
following express terms:
(a)
the respondent would settle the arrears of the former tenant, (b) the
consent of the applicant for the respondent to be a tenant
would be
entirely dependent on the nature of the business conducted on the
premises and, (c) and that a symbiotic relationship
with the other
tenants was specified as a pre-requisite for the applicant to accept
the respondent as a tenant in the premises.
In summary, the
respondent would not commit or allow any act to be committed that
would result in a nuisance that would disturb
the enjoyment of the
premises by the other tenants or the public in general.
[12]
[13]
Following the conclusion of these commercial agreements, the
applicant was contacted by
several
tenants in the building and informed that the respondent would be
selling cannabis to the public from the premises and that
the
respondent would be operating a cannabis ‘smoking lounge’
from the premises. These tenants informed the applicant
they would
terminate their leases if this continued. In addition, a group of
concerned residents expressed their dismay that the
applicant was
facilitating the sale of cannabis to minor children and stated that
they would not support the tenants in the building
should this
position be allowed to continue.
[13]
[14]
A meeting with the representative of the respondent followed, who
conceded that the respondent would be selling cannabis to
the public
from the premises. The applicant explained that the sale of cannabis
in any context was inconsistent with the applicant’s
family's
values and the stated and agreed requirements of the lease agreements
for the business to be operated symbiotically with
the other tenants
conducting business from the building.
[14]
[15]
The respondent also conceded that the food offered in the restaurant
would be infused with cannabis products, including
‘tetrahydrocannabinol’,
which is a scheduled substance
with psychoactive properties.
It
was undisputed that the respondent had failed to mention the
cannabis-related trading activities to the applicant. According
to
the applicant, these trading activities were inconsistent with the
trading activities for the building. The respondent insisted
that
excluding these cannabis-related trading activities from the
respondent’s business model was not feasible.
[15]
[16]
The applicant terminated the lease agreement because of this impasse
concerning the respondent’s trading activities.
The termination
followed because of the alleged
non-disclosure
and because an integral part of the respondent’s intended
business model was not a symbiotic fit with the applicant.
After
that, settlement discussions ensued, and the applicant alleged that
the matter was settled because the respondent agreed
that the lease
agreement had been validly terminated.
[16]
CONSIDERATION
[17]
Notwithstanding the allegation that the occupancy of the premises had
been settled and that the lease agreement had been validly
terminated, the respondent remained in occupation of the premises.
Belatedly after that, the respondent alleged (for the first
time)
that
it had not materially breached the lease agreement and that no right
to cancel the lease agreement had accrued to the applicant
to warrant
the termination of the lease agreement. This was then the core issue
for determination in this application.
[17]
[18]
An analysis of the papers revealed
that
the respondent materially misrepresented the true nature of its
business by failing to disclose its cannabis business activities
to
the applicant fully. The lease agreement was conditional on a
complete and accurate disclosure. Further,
from
a reading of the papers, it seemed to me that the respondent
structured its business in an attempt to exploit a perceived loophole
in the law which prohibits the sale of cannabis but permits the
growing thereof by individuals for personal consumption.
[18]
[19] It was difficult (if
not impossible) to understand on what legal basis the respondent
contended it was in lawful possession
and occupation of the leased
premises and thus refused to vacate them. The respondent’s
stance was that it seemingly wanted
to wish away the materiality of
its non-disclosures with complete disregard for the extant provisions
of the lease agreement and
the addendum to it.
[19]
[20]
The only avenue left for escape by the respondent was to undertake
that it would not trade with these cannabis-related products
from the
premises. This it belatedly did. In the circumstances, this
undertaking was to be evaluated, considering the respondent's
overall
and general business model, which promoted the sale of
cannabis-infused substances (by its group of companies) from several
other premises where it conducted business to be its core and primary
business. This undertaking was also given after a number
of breaches
had manifested.
[20]
[21]
Despite
the termination of the lease, the respondent remained in unlawful
occupation of the premises and refused to vacate the premises.
What
was of concern was that despite the express statement by the
respondent that notwithstanding the valid termination of the
lease,
it steadfastly refused to vacate the premises. I say this because the
respondent
conducted
a business that was not disclosed to the applicant, and the lease
agreement was conditional on the nature of the respondent’s
trading activities. A condition which the respondent did not
meet.
[21]
[22]
What remained was the undertaking by the respondent that it would
refrain from conducting cannabis-related business from the
premises.
This undertaking only surfaced after the breach and valid termination
of the lease. The respondent’s entire business
model and core
business were inconsistent with the type of business the applicant
had expected and contractually demanded from
its tenants.
[22]
[23]
The respondent materially misrepresented the business to be conducted
by it and the business it intended to perform. The applicant,
in
turn, entered into the lease agreement on the basis that the
respondent’s business was as disclosed in its business plan.
I
reasoned that the applicant would not have entered into the lease
agreement had it known the true nature of the respondent’s
business, even if the respondent subsequently did not conduct some
aspects of that business from the premises.
[23]
[24] More importantly,
these misrepresentations could not be remedied after the fact.
Further, I found that a settlement had been
reached by which the
respondent agreed to terminate the lease and vacate the premises.
Certain additional breaches of the lease
also manifested in the form
of
disturbances
emanating from the premises (including
smoke
from cannabis consumption) and complaints from other tenants
impacting their businesses. Further, the respondent allowed smoking
inside the premises, violating prevailing extant sub-ordinate
legislation. Finally, the respondent embarked on alterations and
branding to the premises without prior approval from the applicant in
breach of the lease agreement.
[24]
[25]
The applicant demonstrated on the papers that, almost daily,
it
received complaints from the tenants of the building, occupants of
the adjacent premises, and members of the general public
about
how the respondent conducted its trading activities from the
premises. The respondent persisted in using the same branding
(which
features a cannabis leaf) used by its other businesses, and the focus
of its unilateral alterations made to the premises
was inconsistent
with its undertaking regarding the nature of the café business
that it would have conducted going forward.
[25]
CONCLUSION
[26]
I found that the respondent’s conduct, as described, left the
applicant with no alternative but to approach the court
for urgent
relief. Undoubtedly, the applicant stood to lose the business of its
other tenants should the respondent be allowed
to continue to occupy
the premises, and it would have exposed the applicant to liabilities
against its other tenants, who may have
been entitled to cancel their
lease agreements with the applicant. The confirmatory affidavits
alone exhibited that the applicant
ran the risk of having the
premises forfeited as an instrument in unlawful trading
activities.
[26]
[27]
The applicant’s insurer issued a notice of cancellation of the
insurance policy and placed the applicant on notice because
of a
material change in the risk occupancy of the premises and opined that
they were no longer prepared to keep the insurance cover
over the
applicant’s building. Thus, I found that the respondent's
conduct was manifestly unreasonable and allowed the applicant
to
charter its application as a matter of urgency. Finally, the
applicant took several steps to settle the matter amicably before
approaching the court for relief, and there was no other remedy
available to the applicant.
[27]
[28] These are my reasons
for having granted the order together with the costs.
E. D. WILLE
(Cape Town)
[1]
I
ordered the respondent to vacate the premises and ordered costs on
the attorney and client scale.
[2]
The
request for reasons and the application for leave to appeal were
filed together on 24 July 2024.
[3]
The
property consists of a
portion
of Erf 162, Camps Bay, also known as Central Parade, Victoria Road,
Camps Bay.
[4]
The
tenants of the building had to be upstanding citizens, and the
businesses had to be symbiotic with each other.
[5]
The
café was indebted to the applicant in the amount of
R226,836.50 in respect of arrear rental.
[6]
The
respondent would step in the shoes of the previous tenant who
conducted the business of a café.
[7]
The
“business proposal/plan” submitted by the respondent to
the applicant.
[8]
The
lease agreement also recorded that the premises would not be used
for any other purpose without the applicant’s consent.
[9]
This
was a material term of the lease agreement.
[10]
It is
common cause that this notice was given to the respondent by the
applicant.
[11]
This
is important because the respondent belatedly agreed to vacate the
premises upon payment of a large sum of money.
[12]
This
was a material term of the contract of lease read with the addendum
to the lease.
[13]
The
applicant was put on terms by several of its other tenants in the
building.
[14]
The
applicant contended for an accrued right to terminate. (see De Wet
NO v Uys NO 1998 (4) 694 (T) 706).
[15]
At
this time, the respondent insisted that it would be trading with
cannabis-related products.
[16]
The
material before me clearly showed that a settlement between the
parties had been concluded.
[17]
I was
in the main guided by the jurisprudence in Singh v McCarthy Retail
t/a McIntosh Motors 2000 (4) SA 795 (SCA)
[18]
See
the (The Haze Club (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Police and Others [2022]
ZAWCHC 269: [2023] 1 All SA 280 (WCC)).
[19]
This was the reason for
the settlement agreement between the parties shortly after the lease
was signed.
[20]
This
was not engaged with in any material manner by the respondent and
thus must be accepted as correct.
[21]
Thomas
v Henry 1985 (3) SA 889 (A).
[22]
T
his
was one of the reasons for the addendum to the lease.
[23]
The misrepresentation
was material as it founded the applicant's right to terminate the
lease.
[24]
In breach of the lease
agreement and the addendum thereto.
[25]
The
breaches could not be remedied by undertaking to conduct business
contrary to the respondent's business model.
[26]
This
may find application in terms of the
Prevention of Organized Crime
Act, 21 of 1998
.
[27]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardiges (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin’s
Furniture Manufacturers)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W).
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