Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 270South Africa
Willemse v Cronje and Others (7608/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 270 (18 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
18 September 2024
Judgment
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## Willemse v Cronje and Others (7608/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 270 (18 September 2024)
Willemse v Cronje and Others (7608/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 270 (18 September 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN)
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NUMBER: 7608/ 2023
In
the matter between:
MARIUS
JOHANNES WILLEMSE
APPLICANT
And
WESSEL
MARTHINUS CRONJE
FIRST RESPONDENT
ANNA
PETRONELLA CRONJE
SECOND RESPONDENT
TARTOUWA
(PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
Before:
The Hon. Ms Acting Justice Ralarala
Heard:
05 August 2024
Delivered:
18 September 2024
JUDGMENT
RALARALA,
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
In this matter the applicant seeks an order enforcing a pre-emptive
right in respect of farm properties in his favour against
the
respondents and certain further declaratory relief related to the
aforesaid enforcement of the pre-emptive right.
[2]
The applicant’s right of first refusal stems from a joint will
of the first respondent’s grandparents. The will
that vested
the applicant with the right of first refusal to lease and buy the
first respondent’s farm properties before
the said properties
are sold to a third party, in Afrikaans provides as follows:
“
3.5 Indien
enigeen van die trusts of persone genome in 3.1 sy of haar
plaaseiendom wil vervreem of verhuur, moet hy of sy
eers die
eiendom vir dieselfde prys aan ons oorblywende seuns en daarna aan
ons skoonseuns aanbied, alvorens dit aan n’ buite
persoon
verkoop of verhuur word,”
An
English loose translation reads:
“
If anyone of
the trust or persons named in 3.1 intends to alienate or rent out his
or her farm property, he or she shall first offer
the property at the
same price to our remaining sons and thereafter to our sons-in -law,
before the sale or lease of it to an outside
person.”
The
application is opposed by the first respondent who is the registered
owner of the said farm properties.
[3]
The applicant is the son in law of the testator and the first
respondent is the grandson of the testator, the second respondent
is
the daughter in law of the testator and the mother of the first
respondent, while the third respondent is a prospective buyer
of the
said farm properties. The order sought by the applicant is in the
following terms:
“
1. That the
applicant’s pre-emptive right in terms of Conditions 1B
and 2B of the title deed on T16732/2010 (“the
titled deed”)
in respect of the properties Portions 24 (Portion of Portion 8) and
Portion 25 (Portion of Portion 12) of the
Farm Tartouwa no 296,
Hassequa Municipality, division of Riversdale, Western Cape (“
the properties”), has been triggered
on 31 January 2023 when
the first and third respondents had entered into the deed of sale in
respect of the properties annexed
to the founding affidavit, marked
annexure “A”;
2. that the exercise
of the applicant’s pre-emptive right by means of the written
and signed offer, annexed to the founding
affidavit marked annexure
“B”
alternatively
/and or annexure “C”,
accords with the provisions of title deed condition B, and
constituted a proper exercise of his
pre-emptive right in respect of
the properties provided for in conditions B in title deed no 16732/10
alternatively
shall the first respondent be ordered to make an
offer to applicant within 10 days of the order herein , to purchase
the properties
on the terms set out in the deed of sale that the
first respondent had concluded with the third respondent;
3. that the lease
agreement entered into between the first respondent and the third
respondent on 25 April 2022 in respect of the
properties as per
annexure “D” had been entered into in breach of title
deed conditions 1B and 2B, and stands to be
set aside;
4. that the second
respondent by consenting to the sale of the properties to the third
respondent as evident from annexure “A”,
has irrevocably
waived her right of usufruct registered in her favour in respect of
the properties
alternatively
is deemed to have waived the
title deed conditions 1B and 2B;
6.
(sic
) that
such further/ alternative relief be granted to the applicant as the
court may deem meet.”
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
[4]
The genesis of this saga is a joint will of Wessel Marthinus Cronje
and Andrea Cornelia Cronje which was accepted by the Master
of the
High Court in terms of the Wills Act 7 of 1953.To fully comprehend
the issues to be determined in this application
,
it is
necessary to outline the background of the facts.
[5]
The first respondent as the grandson of the testator, inherited the
farmland subject to an usufruct as well as pre-emptive rights,
both
of which form part of the subject matter of this application. Upon
the death of the testator, Wessel Marthinus Cronje, who,
predeceased
his wife Andrea Cornelia Cronje, the relevant portions of the farm
were registered in the name of the first respondent
with the second
respondent’s right of usufruct and the applicant’s right
of pre-emption thereto.
[6]
The joint will provided for a pre-emptive right to lease and buy the
farm property to the testators’ remaining sons and
thereafter
sons in law, prior to leasing or sale of the properties to an
outsider. The first respondent’s title deed in respect
of the
said farm properties mirrors the said provision of the joint will in
this regard.
[7]
Notwithstanding, the contents of the afore mentioned will, the farm
properties were leased to the third respondent without affording
the
applicant the right to exercise his pre-emptive right. Notably, the
lease agreement provides a right of first refusal to the
third
respondent in the event that the first respondent wishes to sell the
properties. Pursuant, thereto, the first respondent
proceeded to sell
the farm properties to the third respondent without prior affording
the applicant the opportunity to exercise
his pre-emptive right. The
third respondent made an offer to purchase which was accepted by the
first respondent and two sale agreements
were concluded.
[8]
Pursuant thereto, the applicant was informed of the sale agreement
and invited to make an offer to purchase the properties on
similar
terms. In the event of the applicant or any other person who derived
the same right from the joint will of the testator,
electing not to
exercise the pre-emptive right, they were requested to consent to a
waiver of the right. The applicant elected
to exercise the right and
conveyed his intentions and presented the first respondent with an
offer to purchase, which was at variance
with that made by the third
respondent. The difference manifested
in
the applicant’s offer to purchase pertaining to only the farm
properties with the exclusion of the farm implements; immovable
property improvements and livestock amongst other things. Ultimately,
culminating into the purchase price offered by the applicant
varying
from the total amount offered by the third respondent. It is that
offer to purchase in the exercise of the right of pre-emption
and the
related usufruct to the farm properties that are subject of this
application.
ISSUES
TO BE DETERMINED
[9]
The crisp questions to be determined in this judgment are the
following: first is at what stage was the applicant’s
pre-emptive
right triggered; whether the applicant in the exercise of
his pre-emptive right is entitled to determine the terms of the sale
of the properties, to the extent that it differs from the terms of
the sale concluded between the first and the third respondents.
Second, whether the conclusion of a lease agreement between the first
and the third respondents was in breach of the pre-emptive
right.
Third, whether the second respondent’s consent to the sale of
the farm properties between the first and third respondents
amounted
to an irrevocable waiver of the second respondent’s right of
usufruct.
APPLICANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[10]
The applicant asserts that, upon the death of the testator, the
relevant portions of the farm were registered in the first
respondent’s name with the second respondent having a right of
usufruct thereto.
[11]
The applicant avers that the pre-emptive right in respect of the farm
and the usufruct in favour of the second respondent created
by
clauses 3.5 and 3.1.1 of the joint will are also contained as
conditions A and B respectively in the title deed. The first
respondent contends that he did not take note of the aforementioned
pre-emptive rights as he had not been living on the farm and
the
second respondent managed the farm until his return in 2013.
Moreover, no indication was given that any of the family members
wished to purchase any farm bequeathed to the other beneficiaries. In
2016 due to a financial strain the first and the second respondents
decided to lease the farm.
[12]
On 20 February 2023 the applicant received an email correspondence
from Mrs Elizna Lotz of M. J Vermeulen Inc., attorneys practising
in
Riversdale, informing him and other addressees to this particular
correspondence, that the first respondent had received an
offer to
purchase the properties subject to the pre-emptive right, at a price
of R10,5 million with a suspensive condition allowing
the purchaser
35 days from the date of acceptance of the offer, to procure finance
for R 8, 5 million. The email also conveyed
that, in the event
they had interest to purchase the farm properties they were invited
to furnish M.J Vermeulen Inc. with a written
offer to purchase the
properties on similar terms. In the event they were not keen to
purchase the properties they were requested
to sign a waiver of the
pre-emptive right which would be registered with the Deeds Office.
[13]
The applicant asserts that the email contents did not divulge that an
offer to purchase the properties for R8 ,5 million
had been
received and accepted by the first respondent on 31 January 2023.The
applicant was also not informed that a second sale
agreement was
concluded by the first and third respondents in respect of farm
equipment and stock amongst other things at the consideration
of R2
million.
[14]
Pursuant thereto, the applicant’s intention to exercise his
pre-emptive right to procure the properties was conveyed
to the first
respondent. Upon request the applicant received the title deed from
which he learnt,
inter alia,
of the lease agreement concluded
between the first and the third respondents. In a letter addressed by
Ms Lotz it was conveyed
that the purchase price was R10, 5 million,
comprising of R8,5 million in respect of land and R2million in
respect of the “los
goed” and farm implements. It was
further stated in the letter that the purchase of the “los
goed”, and the land
was as agreed between the first and third
respondents, inseparable.
[15]
The letter was silent regarding the nature and terms of the sale
agreement between the first and third respondents. In particular,
that it relates to the two separate sale agreements and that the sale
has not been entered into between the same parties. The sale
agreement in respect of the farm properties annexure “A”
to the founding affidavit between the first and the third
respondent,
was also co- signed by the second respondent, by so doing, the second
respondent effectively, waived her right of usufruct
as regards the
properties in respect of the first respondent.
[16]
The applicant denies that the two sale agreements are inseparable and
inter-dependant of each other. In amplification of this
point, the
applicant posited that he adopted this view due to the fact that, two
sale agreements which are annexures “A”
and “L”
to the founding affidavit, made no reference to each other in their
respective contents. The applicant in the
replying affidavit, avers
that the sellers in respect of the two sale agreements are not the
same in that the second respondent
co-signed annexure “A”,
the sale agreement in respect of the two farm properties and the
first respondent’s wife,
Yolande Cronje co-signed the sale
agreement annexure “L” relating to the farm improvements.
[17]
The applicant further contends that the immovable improvements
effected to the farmland became and formed part of the farmland
by
virtue of its permanent attachment to the land, and selling such
improvements separately from the farm is untenable in law.
The
applicant asserts that the sale of the farm implements, farm
equipment and live stock form part of the first respondent’s
and Yolande Cronje’s communal estate and thus sale of these
assets required her signature.
[18]
Additionally, the applicant contends that on proper interpretation of
Conditions B of the title deed annexure “F”
to the
founding affidavit, the applicant’s pre-emptive right and the
exercise thereof could not be made subject to the purchase
of
anything other than the two properties subject to the pre-emptive
right as provided for in the title deed. Moreover, the applicant
asserts that, the pre-emptive right to the farmland cannot be
circumvented by attaching more things to an offer to purchase the
land subject to the right of pre-emption. The applicant
maintains that the trigger event was the sale agreement in respect
of
the farmland concluded between the first and third respondents as per
annexure “A”.
[19]
The applicant through his attorneys, conveyed his willingness and
intention to exercise his pre-emptive right and proceeded
to provide
the respondents’ attorneys with a written and signed offer to
purchase at the price and on terms provided for
in the deed of sale
entered into with the third respondent in respect of the farm
properties. The said offer to purchase being
at a consideration of
R8,5 million which pursuant to receipt thereof on 05 April 2023 the
respondents’ attorneys conveyed
to the applicant’s
attorneys that the offer to purchase was rejected.
RESPONDENT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[20]
The first respondent, responding to the applicant avers that, the
sale agreement concluded with the third respondent was structured
such that it comprises two written agreements. It is further asserted
that, it was always within the contemplation of the parties
that the
sale of the farm would be inextricably linked to the sale of the
movable assets on the farm and the immovable improvements
to the
farm, such as the homestead, sheds and boundary fences.
[21]
The sale agreement, the respondents assert, is structured into two,
one pertaining to the sale of the farmland for R8 5million
and
that regarding the sale of movable assets and immovable improvements
for R2 million. The first and third respondents convened
a meeting on
27 January 2023 wherein it was resolved that it would make commercial
sense to structure the sale in two different
written agreements, one
relating to the sale of farmland and the other relating to the
movable, and immovable improvements. This
resolution having been
motivated by the benefit they stand to derive from the depreciation
in value of the movable assets and immovable
assets. The process also
involved the first respondent’s accountants to ensure that the
sale structure agreed upon would
conform with the first respondent’s
farming business. The first respondent contends further, that he was
ignorant to the
fact that his ownership of the farm is subject to a
right of pre-emption in favour of others, including the applicant.
The first
respondent averred that he had always intended to sell the
farm as a going concern for a sum not less than R10.5 million,
however,
the applicant adopted the view that he is entitled to
purchase the farm at a discount of R8.5 million and significantly
below its
market value.
[22]
The first respondent opposes the application, it is averred, because
the trigger event entitling the applicant to exercise
his right to
pre-emption was the R10.5 million sale agreement of the farm, between
the first respondent and the third respondent.
It is the first
respondent’s further contention that the implementation of the
sale agreement was motivated by commercial
considerations and did not
amount to an amendment of their initial agreement. The first
respondent elaborates further, that the
sale is a so called zero
rated VAT sale, as there are no transfer duty payable, the parties,
as they are both VAT registered in
this case, would account for VAT.
[23]
Since the farm is sold as a going concern VAT is rated at zero
percent. The first and third respondents’ actions in their
two
agreement structure, instead of a single agreement, used a stratagem
that was foresight driven. This was based on the notion
that, the
purchaser may benefit in future through the daily depreciation of
particular assets as an expense in the farming enterprise.
Ultimately, this would enable the purchaser to claim the annual
depreciation in the said assets over years as an expense in their
income tax return. In light of the afore mentioned, it is asserted
that the applicant is entitled to exercise his right of pre-emption
and purchase the farm for R10.5 million.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND ANALYSIS
[24]
The principles regarding pre-emptive rights are well established in
our law. A pre-emptive right creates an obligation on the
registered
owner of the property to offer the property to the holder of the said
right first, should the owner decide to sell it.
Essentially, the
exercise of the pre-emptive right is at the behest of the owner of
the property. The SCA in
Deon Nel v Petrus Jacobus de Beer &
Another
(406/21)
[2022] ZASCA 145
; 2023(2) SA 170 (SCA) (26
October 2022) considering the question of pre-emptive rights,
referred to
Owsianick v African Consolidated Theatres
(Pty) Ltd
1967(3) SA 310 (A), where the court observed as
follows:
“
A right of
pre-emption is well known in our law. . . and it is to be
distinguished from an option to purchase . . . The granter
of the
right of pre-emption cannot be compelled to sell the subject of a
right. Should he, however, decide to do so, he is obliged,
before
executing his decision to sell, to offer the property to the grantee
of the right of pre-emption upon the terms reflected
in the contract
creating that right.”
[25]
In
Mokone v Tassos Properties 2017(5) SA 456 para 56,
the
court observed as follows:
“
In the event
that the conduct of the grantor of the right of pre-emption has
culminated in the sale of land to a third party, it
seems necessary
to understand the import of the so- called Orynx mechanism. This was
expressed thus:
In the event that a
seller concludes a contract of a sale with a third party in breach of
a right of pre-emption, the [holder of
the right of pre-emption] may,
through a unilateral declaration of intent, step into the position of
the third party. A contract
of sale is then deemed to have been
between the seller and the holder of the right of pre-emption.”
[26]
In
Plattekloof RMS Boerdery (Pty) Ltd v Dahlia Investment Holdings
(Pty) Ltd
(667/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 182
(15 December 2022) at
paragraph 10, the SCA in the determination of an appeal on this
point, quoted an extract from
GB Bradfield Christie’s Law of
Contract in South Africa
8 ed (2022) at 77:
“
Regarding
breach of preference contract, there are essentially two issues. The
first is whether in the given circumstances the right
of preference
was ‘triggered’ and if so, the second is what remedies
the right holder has in the event of breach of
the contract granting
the preference right. The answers to these questions depend on the
terms on which the right has been granted,
and these terms vary.”
[27]
In the instant matter, the applicant’s pre-emptive right
encapsulates a right to lease the farm properties provided for
in
clause 3.5 of the joint will and so registered under Conditions 1B
and 2B of the title deed, in terms of which the farm properties
in
question are registered in the first respondent’s name. It
is common cause that the first respondent did not offer
the farm
properties to the applicant for purposes of concluding a lease
agreement or sale agreement to the holders of the pre-emptive
right,
upon formulating the intentions to lease and sell the relevant
properties. It is so that the first respondent claims to
have been
ignorant of the right, notwithstanding that it is derived from his
grandfather’s will that bequeathed to him [the
first
respondent] the said farm properties and later became registered in
his title deed. I agree with the applicant, the first
respondent’s
account in this regard is preposterous and cannot be justified.
[28]
The parties, are not in agreement as to when the applicant’s
right of pre-emption was triggered. The applicant’s
view is
that the ‘trigger’ was the conclusion of the sale
agreement as envisaged in annexure ‘A’ [to the
founding
affidavit] by the first and third respondents on 31 January 2023. The
first respondent contends the trigger is the decision
of the first
respondent to sell the farm which decision he made on 27 January
2023. The other diverse aspect in this regard manifests
in the
parties’ perceptions. The applicant’s view is that the
R8.5 million farm properties’ sale agreement which
annexure ‘A’
embodies, activated his pre-emptive right and not the agreement
pertaining to the sale of movables and
immovable improvements. The
SCA in
Plattekloof,
supra,
and the High Court [ the
court aquo], determined that the package deal offer triggered
Plattekloof’s
pre-emptive right. At paragraph 12 the
court remarked as follows:
“
Ultimately the
question is whether clause 10 means that
the right of
pre-emption would only be activated if the respondent receives an
offer for the two portions on their own
. I do not think
so. First, on the ordinary meaning of clause 10, the respondent
obtained an offer to purchase the ‘Premises’,
even though
it was part of a wider offer
.”(underlining supplied)
[29]
What can be extracted from the preceding passage is that the event
that activates or triggers the pre-emptive right would be
the receipt
of the offer by the grantor of the pre-emptive right as opposed to
the conclusion of the sale agreement. In
casu
the offer was
made on 26 January 2023, and the sale agreement was finalised on 31
January 2023. My view is that based on the
Plattekloof
judgment
the offer that occurred on 26 January 2023 triggered the applicant’s
pre-emptive right to the farm properties and
not the conclusion of
the sale agreement as asserted by the applicant. For it was at that
stage that the first respondent was obliged
to approach the
applicant, given that it was opportune for the applicant to exercise
his pre-emptive right, but the first respondent
failed him in that
regard.
[30]
Nevertheless, pursuant to the conclusion of the sale agreement with
the third respondent on 31 January 2023, the first respondent
afforded the applicant the opportunity to exercise his right of
pre-emption. The applicant has made an offer to purchase to the
first
respondent, however, the said offer has been rejected by the first
respondent, on the basis that the applicant has not matched
the third
respondent’s offer. Invariably, the applicant’s exercise
of his pre-emptive right is a unilateral declaration
of his intent to
step into the shoes of the third respondent, and buy the properties
at a predetermined price.
Van Aardt And Another v Weehuizen
And Others
2006(4) SA 401 at 408 para 14;
Associate South
African Bakeries (Pty) Ltd v Orynx & Vereinigte Backereien (Pty)
Ltd en Andere
1982 (3) SA 893(A)
at 907E-F.
[31]
Basically, the offer is based on the terms offered by the third
party. The applicant argues that the written offer would be
in terms
on which the pre-emptive right was granted in the title deed
Condition B thereof. The first respondent argued that on
03 January
2023 an offer was received from the third respondent for purchase of
the farm properties for R9 million which was rejected
by the first
respondent. A second offer of R10.5 million was received on 25
January 2023, from a neighbour which was also not accepted,
however,
that formed the basis of a subsequent offer from the third respondent
the next day for the same amount. Crucially, the
applicant in reply
did not address this particular issue, thus it remains
uncontroverted. The offer was accepted and based on the
offer the
second respondent agreed to waive her right of usufruct in respect of
the properties. The formulation of the sale agreement
was adopted by
the parties in light of it making business sense.
[32]
The applicant contends that all immovable improvements effected to
the farmland form part of the farmland and the separate
sale of such
immovable improvements is untenable in law. At the hearing Mr Van der
Merwe argued on behalf of the applicant, that
the first respondent is
forcing the applicant to an offer to purchase not only the farm
properties but the movables and immovable
improvements, which amounts
to the burdening of the pre-emptive right. In this regard, reliance
was sought on
Plattekloof supra
. In
Plattekloof
the
right of first refusal was in relation to two portions of a farm that
became subject of a sale of eight portions of the farm
with a third
party. The pre-emptive right was in terms of a certain clause 10
embodied in a lease agreement which expressly indicated
that the
pre-emptive right was in respect of the two portions of the farm. The
SCA after consideration of the High Court’s
interpretation of
the relevant clause, determined that the appellant’s right of
first refusal was in respect of the two portions
of the farm and not
the entire package deal, meaning, inclusive of the six other portions
that are the subject of the sale agreement
with the third party.
[33]
It is necessary, therefore to interpret the document from which the
applicant derives his pre-emptive right. The latter originates
from
the testators last will and testament. The relevant parts of the will
reads as follows:
“
AANSTELLING
ERFGENAME
3.1 Indien die
Testateur die eersterwende van ons mag wees, smelt ons, ons boedels
saam en bepaal dat dit soos gevolg as een saamgevoegde
boedel
beredder en verdeel moet word:
3.1.1 Aan ons
kleinseun Wessel Marthinus Cronje bemaak ons plaas eiendome beskryf
as Gedeeltes 25 ( gedeelte van gedeelte 12) van
Tartouwa Nr 296,
Groot 114, 5235 hektaar en Gedeelte 24( gedeelte van gedeelted 9) van
Tartouwa Nr 296, Groot 85, 6533 hektaar
met alle
verbeterings daarop
.”(
underlining supplied)
[No English translation
provided]
The
proper approach is as adopted by the court in
Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) ([2012]
2 All SA 262
;
[2012] ZASCA 13)
Page 603 para18
“
. . . The
present state of the law can be expressed as follows: Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words
used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument, or
contract,
having regard to the context provided by reading
the particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a whole
and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into
existence.
Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration
must be given to the language used in the light
of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which the
provision
appears; the apparent purpose to which it is directed and
the material known to those responsible for its production. Where
more
than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of these factors. The process is objective, not subjective.
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the
document . . . The ‘inevitable point of departure is the
language of the provision itself’, read in context
and having
regard to the purpose of the provision and the background to the
preparation and production of the document.”
(underlining
supplied)
[34]
Discernment necessitates that the clause 3.5 of the will be
considered in conjunction with clause 3.1 of the will for the full
appreciation of the pre-emptive right. Clause 3.5 of the will, makes
reference to clause 3.1 and in clause 3.1.1 the testator bequeaths
the farm properties as described therein with the improvements
effected thereon. Thus, these clauses should be read together. The
testator pertinently expressed that Portions 24 (Portion of Portion
8) and Portion 25 (Portion of Portion 12) of the farm already
had
improvements effected thereon and thus it follows that the properties
upon being alienated, the improvements would form part
thereof.
Against this backdrop, I formulate a view that the testator was
acutely aware, that the pre-emptive right would apply
to the
properties and the improvements thereof. Notably, the applicant also
has full appreciation thereof as demonstrated in paragraph
32 above,
and this in fact partially gives credence to his earlier argument.
Most significantly, in interpreting wills, the wishes
of the testator
must be implemented or given effect. In that process the court will
ascertain from the language used in her or
his last will and
testament in order to give effect to the said wishes.
King and
Others N.N.O. v De Jager and Others
2021 (4) SA 1
(CC) at para
[34]. In my mind, the testator similarly envisaged that the farm
properties would evolve with the times and more improvements
would be
effected as time goes on. Thus, the applicant’s argument that
the improvements added are burdening the pre-emptive
right holder is
not sustainable.
[35]
This matter is quite distinguishable from
Plattekloof
in that
in
casu
the plaintiff is afforded the opportunity to exercise
his pre-emptive right on the farm properties as provided in the will
and
the title deed. There are no other immovable properties involved
in the sale as is the case in
Plattekloof,
which makes sense
why the SCA determined that the pre-emptive right would be burdened
if the right holder would step into the shoes
of the third party and
buy six other portions of the farm he holds no pre-emptive right to.
Comparably, in
Plattekloof
the lease agreement clearly
expressed that the right of pre-emption was in relation to two
portions of the farm that were the subject
of the lease agreement.
[36]
In the current matter the movables and immovable improvements are
part of the two farm properties to which the applicant has
a
pre-emptive right. Importantly, the will is silent on the manner the
farm properties and its improvements would be sold, whether
in terms
of a unitary inclusive sale agreement or multiple sale agreements.
Clearly this decision the testator left with the owner
of the farm
properties, in this case the first respondent. Thus, the afore stated
argument proffered by Mr Van der Merwe for the
applicant is
indefensible, in my view.
[37]
At the hearing of this matter, Mr Van der Merwe argued that the
testator provided for the leasing of the farm properties in
his last
will and testament, indicative of the fact that he foresaw that the
beneficiaries would not be farming themselves. Ostensibly
even prior
to the testator bequeathing the farm properties to the first
respondent, the first respondent’s parents were operating
a
farming enterprise on the relevant farm properties. Crucially, the
first respondent’s assertions that his father, the testator’s
son utilised the farmland as grazing land for dairy cows and
established a drilling enterprise, which business the second
respondent
later continued with pursuant his death, was not
controverted in reply. Thus, in my view, dispels the argument
proffered by Mr
Van der Merwe. Mr Bothma, Counsel for the
respondents argued that the sale agreement in the manner it is
structured
makes business sense therefore, that the sale of the
properties would be as a going concern. I am inclined to agree with
counsel
for the respondents’ argument, that the applicant is
not entitled to select which part of the sale agreement he wishes to
rely on, in that in the exercise of the right of pre-emption, his is
to replace the third respondent in the sale agreement without
more.
In the premises, the applicant’s contention that the sale
agreement as it stands is tantamount to circumventing his
pre-emptive
right has no basis.
[38]
It is timely at this stage to deal with a matter of detail which in
my view commands consideration, of what the terms of the
sale
agreement are that in the exercise of the pre-emptive right the
applicant would be subject to. In my mind, the first respondent
in
now granting the applicant the opportunity to exercise his right of
pre-emption in respect of the sale agreement, such conduct
is not at
all a signal creating a legitimate expectation that the existing
terms of the sale agreement will be obliterated or altered
or tailor
made to meet the applicant’s requirements or fancy. The matter
is also different from one where the pre-emptive
right is not “a
stepping into” on the same terms and makes provision for
negotiations of the terms of the sale agreement
or purchase price
where room exists for further negotiations
.
Mokone v
Tassos Properties
2017 (5) SA 456
(CC)at para 85.
[39]
The first and third respondents had resolved to conclude a sale
agreement of the farm properties formulated in two agreements
which
were the terms that they contend make commercial sense and ideally
suited to their needs at the time. This is also confirmed
by Ms
Sandra van Jaarsveld Director of Fynbos Accountants. The status
quo,
is that there is not a shred of evidence suggesting that the
first and the third respondents in their actions when formulating the
terms of the sale agreement, were not acting in good faith or that
the terms so formulated, are beyond the bounds of commercial
reason
and that they are solely composed for the purpose of prompting
indifference or frustrating the applicant in the exercise
of his
right.
Seteriou v Retco Poyntons (Pty) Ltd
1985(2) 922at 932
para I to J. As borne by the papers the first and the third
respondents in the formulation of the terms of the
sale agreement
paid no consideration to the applicant. Applicant’s argument is
implausible, in my view.
[40]
The expectation is that pursuant to demanding the offer the applicant
upon accepting it he would not only step into the shoes
of the third
respondent, but squarely fit therein where the terms of the sale
agreement are not in conflict with the provisions
that underpin the
pre-emptive right. Evidently, the terms of the sale
agreements are not in conflict with those on
which the pre-emptive
right was granted.
[41]
One more aspect that requires consideration. The applicant also
asserted that, the applicant was deprived the right of first
refusal
by the first respondent to lease the said properties. In
amplification of this contention, the applicant posits further
that,
the first respondent leased the farm properties to the third
respondent without prior affording the applicant the opportunity
to
exercise his right of first refusal. In the premises, the applicant
asserts that the lease agreement entered between the first
and the
third respondents on 25 April 2022, was entered into in breach of
Condition B of the title deed and thus stands to be set
aside. The
respondent in responding to this contention submits that the
applicant was not oblivious to the lease agreement between
the
respondents. The lease, is said to be strictly speaking between the
second respondent and the third respondent a right emanating
from the
usufruct and the usufructuary is not bound by the provisions of
clause 3.5 of the will. Invariably, in the case
of first refusal, if
the landlord decides to lease the properties, she or he must give the
holder of such a right the opportunity
of refusing the lease on the
same terms and conditions agreed upon between the landlord and any
third parties.
[42]
Mr Bothma argued that in view of the second respondent’s
usufruct on the properties, the first respondent could only
lease the
properties, subject to permission granted by the second respondent.
Normally, the remedy available to the applicant in
these
circumstances is that of specific performance. I inter-pose to point
out that the relief sought by the applicant is not a
claim of
specific performance based on Condition B of the title deed, which is
to make an offer to lease the farm properties. Cancellation
of the
lease agreement is a remedy available to the applicant.
[43]
It is apposite at this juncture to deal with what a usufruct actually
entails in this context. A usufruct is a legal right
to occupy or use
or rent out a property for the usufructuary’s benefit. In this
instance the testator bequeathed the farm
properties to the first
respondent subject to the second respondent’s usufruct, to make
sure she has the means to take care
of herself in her life time. In
the circumstances although the testator bequeathed the farm
properties to first respondent, he
assumed the role of a bare
dominium or registered owner of the property without the right to use
or benefit from it until waiver
thereof the second respondent’s
death. It follows therefore that the right to lease the properties is
at this point in time
solely vested in the second respondent as the
usufructuary and not on the first respondent.
[44]
Clearly, this is a situation of competing rights, however, in the
examination of the language used in the will and the formulation
of
its clauses, it is an inescapable fact that sequentially, the
usufruct precedes the right of first refusal, in the sense that
it is
contained in clause 3.1.1 and the applicant’s right of first
refusal is contained in clause 3.5. According to the structure
of the
will, the usufruct is bequeathed first and the nature of this right
and the circumstances thereof dictate that its exercise
would precede
the exercise of the right of refusal, and that of the registered
owner. For practical purposes, discernment demands
that the exercise
of the right of usufruct should precede that exercise of the right of
refusal. My reasoning is that the exercise
of the usufructuary right
is not depended on any eventuality of certain events as its
adversaries are. It is an unconditional right,
even the registered
owner’s right to the property, its exercise is dependent on the
waiver of such usufructuary right or
the death of the usufructuary.
Sensibly, any lease agreement of the farm properties would be at the
behest of the usufructuary
or with her permission, free from the
right of first refusal applicable in respect of the first respondent.
Therefore, my sense
is that, in the life time of the usufructuary the
registered property owner’s right to exercise the same rights
as that enjoyed
by the usufructuary are in abeyance. In this case the
rights would automatically vest on the first respondent on remarriage
of
the second respondent or at her death. In my view, in this
instance the applicant’s right of first refusal in respect of
the lease would only come to a realisation in the event of death of
the usufructuary or waiver thereof. The first respondent only
has the
right to sell the farm properties and that is subject to the
pre-emptive right.
[45]
There is no dispute about this principle. The first respondent
correctly contends that the usufructuary is not bound by the
provisions of clause 3.5 of the will and the conclusion of the lease
agreement was purely in exercise of her usufructuary right.
Similarly, there is no material dispute regarding the cogency of the
latter argument, I say this because the applicant merely proffers
a
debilitated response that fell short of addressing the gravamen of
the first respondent’s contention in this regard. He
merely
states, that, the first respondent is disingenuous in his assertion
that the lease agreement is between the second and the
third
respondent and calls for proof of how the rental monies have been
paid. My view is that, the argument advanced by the applicant
that
the conclusion of the lease agreement on 25 April 2024 is in breach
of his right of first refusal to lease the property is
indefensible.
[46]
One final issue for determination is the irrevocable waiver of the
usufructuary right. The SCA in
Road Accident Fund v Mothupi
[2000]
ZASCA
27;2000(4) SA 38(SCA) at 15 stated that:
“
Waiver is first
and foremost a matter of intention. Whether it is the waiver of a
right or a remedy, a privilege or power, an interest
or benefit, and
whether in unilateral or bilateral form the starting point invariably
is the will of the party said to have waived
it. . .”
The
first respondent categorically stated in his answering affidavit that
the second respondent was only acquiescent to the waiving
of the
usufructuary right on the basis that the purchase price of the farm
was R10.5 million. From this it can be easily comprehensible
that the
intention of the usufructuary is in clear terms in that her intention
was not to unconditionally denounce her right. Clearly,
if the sale
price is not achieved the intention was not to waive her usufructuary
right. While it was the applicant’s contention
that the second
respondent has irrevocably waived her usufructuary right when the
sale agreement was signed, in his reply the applicant
asserts that
the first respondent’s aforementioned averment is irrelevant to
the adjudication of the relief sought. In my
view, the reply
proffered by the applicant in this regard, was not only perplexing,
but more importantly it failed to meaningfully
engage the
respondent’s response in this regard.
[47]
Demonstrably, the applicant belatedly abdicates his initial
perspective of the irrevocable waiver of the usufructuary right.
In
any event, it has become abundantly clear that the applicant’s
contention in this regard is unsustainable. In my view,
it is plain
from the uncontroverted assertions of the first respondent, that it
was not the second respondent’s will to irrevocably
waive her
usufructuary right when the sale agreement was concluded, a proviso
was that R10.5 million should be the purchase price.
Road Accident
Fund v Mothupi supra
.
[48]
The cumulative effect of these factors impels the conclusion that the
application including the declaratory relief sought herein
should
fail and the applicant’s pre-emptive right be exercised in
respect of the terms of the sale agreement between the
first and the
third respondent.
ORDER
[49]
In the result I make the following order:
[49.1] The application is
dismissed with costs, such costs to include costs of counsel on C
scale.
N
E RALARALA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARENCES
For
the Applicant: Adv D.L. Van der Merwe
Instructed
by Roux Attorneys
For
the Respondents: Adv P. Bothma
Instructed
by M J Vermeulen Inc.
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