Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 9South Africa
Kidrogen RF (Pty) Ltd v Nordien and Others (A159/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 9 (30 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
30 January 2023
Judgment
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## Kidrogen RF (Pty) Ltd v Nordien and Others (A159/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 9 (30 January 2023)
Kidrogen RF (Pty) Ltd v Nordien and Others (A159/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 9 (30 January 2023)
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sino date 30 January 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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FLYNOTES:
RECTIFICATION OF LEASE AGREEMENT
EVICTION –
Locus standi – Company – Directors signing lease –
Document referring to directors as lessors
in their personal
capacity – Rectification – Case for rectification not
made out in founding papers – Lessee
at all material times
considered the company to be the lessor – Rectification
granted on appeal.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: A159/2022
In
the matter between:
KIDROGEN
RF (PTY)
LTD
Appellant
and
SHAAN
NORDIEN
First
Respondent
TAVIA
NORDIEN
Second
Respondent
ALL
OTHER PERSONS OCCUPYING
THE
PROPERTY AT
6[…]
T[…] Street, Parklands, Western
Cape
Third Respondent
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN
Fourth
Respondent
Coram:
Acting Judge President P L Goliath, Justice J Cloete
et
Justice
D Thulare
Heard:
18 January 2023
Delivered
electronically:
30 January 2023
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J (GOLIATH AJP
et
THULARE J
concurring)
:
Introduction
[1]
The central issue in this appeal, which is with special leave of the
Supreme
Court of Appeal, is whether the Court a quo (“trial
Judge”) was correct in dismissing the appellant’s
application
for the eviction of the first to third respondents (save
where otherwise indicated “the respondents”) on the
ground
that the appellant lacked the required
locus standi
.
[2]
The grounds of appeal are essentially that the trial Judge erred in
finding
that:
2.1
The lease agreement concluded with the first respondent and relied
upon by the appellant
was one in which two individuals (Mr Essa
Davids and Mr Andile Peter) in their personal capacities were
lessors rather
than the appellant;
2.2
The appellant’s application for rectification of the written
version of the lease
agreement to reflect it as lessor had to fail
since: (a) the appellant was obliged to make out a case for
rectification in
its founding papers, but only applied for
rectification shortly before the hearing by way of notice and after
all affidavits had
been filed; (b) the application for
rectification was an impermissible attempt to substitute one
contracting party with others
without joining Messrs Davids and
Peter; and (c) if rectification were to be granted it would
prejudice the respondents.
Relevant
background facts
[3]
It is
worthy of emphasis that this is one of those matters where close
scrutiny of the affidavit evidence, together with the objective
documentation, is required in order to determine whether the defences
raised by the respondents on the issue of
locus
standi
were such that they warranted dismissal of the application.
[1]
[4]
I say this because in raising the appellant’s lack of
locus standi
as a defence, reliance was also placed by the
first respondent on his various other dealings with the appellant. As
I will seek
to demonstrate however, this does not assist him. It
should also be noted that the second and third respondents are in
truth the
“passengers” of the first respondent (being his
former wife and their adult son) since they did not raise any
independent
defences of their own.
[5]
On the papers the following facts are common cause. The appellant is
the
registered owner of a residential immovable property situated at
6[…] T[…] Street, Parklands, Western Cape, also
known as erf 6[…] Parklands (‘
the property’
).
The respondents accept that as registered owner the appellant had
locus standi
to launch the proceedings for their eviction.
[6]
An oral agreement of lease was concluded in respect of the property
on
1 November 2017 for a period of 2 years. On the date before
it expired, i.e. on 30 October 2019, the written lease
in
issue was signed. It records in clause 4 that ‘
[t]his lease
will commence on the 1
st
November 2017 and
will, subject to the provisions of paragraph 17 below, continue for 2
years from that date’
. Clause 17 deals with cancellation.
Clause 17.2 makes provision for the lease to continue upon expiry of
the lease period on a
month-to-month basis. Clause 17.3
stipulates that ‘
[t]he lease will however, not continue
automatically as aforesaid while the Lessee is in breach or default
of any of the terms of
this lease’.
[7]
This document also reflects that Messrs Davids and Peter were the
lessors
and the first respondent the lessee. Messrs Davids and Peter
have at all material times been two of the appellant’s
directors.
Clause 23 provides under the heading ‘
Warranty of
Authority’
that ‘
[t]he person signing this lease
on behalf of the Lessor expressly warrants his authority to do so’.
Messrs Davids and Peter signed the lease, as did the first
respondent.
[8]
Also on 30 October 2019 an addendum was concluded, which made
provision
for the annual increase in rental to decrease from 15% to
10% per annum effective from an earlier date, being 31 July
2019.
In paragraph 20 of her judgment the trial Judge referred to the
fact that this addendum was only signed by the first respondent.
However the first respondent admitted the appellant’s
allegations that the addendum was in fact concluded, and concluded
on
that date (despite the addendum reflecting, for a reason not
explained, the date of 13 July 2019).
[9]
The addendum carries the letterhead of the appellant and records that
it ‘
is hereby a part for all purposes of the Lease Agreement
between… Andile Peter on behalf of Kidrogen (Pty) Ltd as
Landlord
and Shaan Nordien
(i.e. the first respondent)
as
tenant’.
At the foot of the addendum Mr Peter is
reflected as the appellant’s chief executive officer.
[10]
From 1 November 2019 the lease continued on the same terms and
conditions on a month-to-month
basis, terminable on one month’s
notice. Despite the first respondent’s allegation that the
appellant was not a party
to the lease, he admitted the appellant’s
allegations that
it
: (a) duly performed in accordance
with the terms of the lease agreement, and (b) placed the first
respondent in occupation
of the property on 1 November 2017.
[11]
The first respondent also admitted that the
appellant
provided
him with 3 months rental relief for the period March to May 2020
as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, and that an
acknowledgment of
debt was concluded between the appellant and himself in this regard.
On 7 October 2020 the appellant by
way of email requested
payment of the arrears due under the “relief arrangement”
and the first respondent informed
it that he was awaiting funds from
his offshore account and would make such payment before the end of
October 2020. This did not
occur and the first respondent has since
made no further payments on account of rental.
[12]
Although the first respondent maintained that the appellant was
obliged to deduct the “relief
arrangement” rental from a
service fee due to him in terms of an unrelated agreement, he
pertinently did not dispute liability
to the
appellant
.
Moreover, not once before the filing of his answering affidavit did
the first respondent take issue with the rental invoices being
generated in the name of the appellant or suggest directly, or
indirectly, that the oral lease agreement concluded in 2017 and
confirmed in 2019 in writing, as well as the addendum referred to
above, were not concluded between himself and the
appellant
.
[13]
On 5 February 2020 the appellant and first respondent concluded
an agreement of sale
in respect of the property. This was seemingly
superseded by a second agreement of sale concluded on 8 March
2020. I say “superseded”
because the first respondent
admitted that the February 2020 agreement of sale was validly
cancelled by the appellant, albeit much
later on 16 February
2021. The first respondent sought to advance another defence based on
the March 2020 agreement of sale.
[14]
This defence was premised on clause 4 thereof which provides that
neither party would be
liable for payment of occupational rental, and
that ‘
[t]he lease agreement contemplated under paragraph 2.1
above shall endure until the date of registration of transfer. Should
the
sale be cancelled for any reason whatsoever, the lease agreement
shall remain in full force and effect’
. In turn clause 2.1
records that ‘
[t]he the Purchaser is in occupation of the
Property in terms of an existing lease agreement’.
The
first respondent contended that, given clause 4, the lease could not
be validly cancelled.
[15]
As previously mentioned the first respondent set out (in some detail)
what he alleged to
be the history of his business/employment
relationship with the appellant, including his appointment on
15 January 2018 as
the managing director and 10% shareholder of
one of its subsidiaries, as well as the disputes which subsequently
arose between
himself and the appellant in relation thereto. To my
mind nothing much turns on this, primarily for three reasons.
[16]
First, the Memorandum of Understanding which it is common cause set
out the terms of the
envisaged relationship was only concluded
on14 December 2017, more than a month after conclusion of the
lease on 1 November
2017. Second, it is undisputed that the
later written version of that lease incorporated all of the terms of
the previously concluded
oral lease (as amended slightly by the
addendum thereto) save, of course, for the disputed issue of the
identity of the lessor.
Third, on the first respondent’s
version, he was initially ‘
promised’
by the
appellant
that the property would form part of his salary
package. It was also recorded in clause 6.1 of the Memorandum of
Understanding
that the appellant was the registered owner of the
property and that it was occupied by the first respondent in terms of
‘
a lease agreement’.
Discussion
on
locus standi
[17]
It was
contended by
Mr
Wilkin
,
who appeared for the appellant, that against this background the
trial Judge should have rejected the respondents’ version
as
far-fetched and untenable on the basis of the Plascon-Evans rule
[2]
and
Wightman
,
[3]
and that in these circumstances, it was not really necessary for the
appellant to have applied for rectification in the alternative.
Given
the view that I take on the issue, I do not believe it necessary to
deal with
Mr Wilkin’s
primary contention.
[18]
The main application was enrolled for hearing before the trial Judge
on 15 September
2021. In its notice in terms of uniform rule 28,
served on 30 August 2021, the appellant sought to amend the
written lease
by the insertion of ‘
Kidrogen RF (Pty) Ltd
(Lessor) herein represented by’
Messrs Davids and Peter,
and followed with ‘
both persons duly authorised for and on
behalf of the Lessor’
.
[19]
On 9 September 2021 the respondents delivered their notice of
objection, resulting in the
appellant making application on notice
for leave to amend, which was delivered on 14 September 2021, which
application was argued
together with the main application the
following day. In these circumstances there could not have been any
serious suggestion that
the respondents would be prejudiced.
[20]
The
respondents’ grounds of objection, encapsulated in its notice,
were that: (a) an applicant has no
locus
standi
to seek rectification of an agreement to which it is not a party;
(b) misjoinder, on the basis that the relief sought was
not
competent when Messrs Davids and Peter had not been joined; and
(c) no grounds for rectification had been advanced in
the
founding papers. It is noted that the respondents appear to have
raised an additional ground before the trial Judge (since
she
referred to it at paragraph 10.4 of her judgment), namely that
rectification is not ordinarily competent in application proceedings.
However given the clear prescripts of rule 28(3), I do not intend
dealing with that additional ground.
[4]
[21]
In
Spiller
[5]
the Court pointed out that:
‘…
In
the one sense a contract is the documentary record of an agreement.
In the other it is the underlying agreement itself. This
may already
have been concluded orally or tacitly; or its conclusion may not have
preceded the moment when, sharing a common contractual
intention, the
parties executed the document which was supposed to express it. In
either case the one sort of contract is merely
the other’s
outward and visible sign…
It
is not the agreement between the parties which, on the other hand, is
rectified. The Court has no power to alter it. To do so
would be to
amend their common intention and in effect to devise a fresh pact for
them. That is their exclusive prerogative. All
that the Court ever
touches is the document…
To
do this is necessary because, when the document does not faithfully
record the agreement but mistakenly reflects something else
that was
not meant, it is unreliable and misleading as evidence… The
evidence, instead of being rejected as unreliable,
must consequently
be corrected so that it matches the true facts and thus becomes
reliable. When all is said and done, this is
the theoretical
justification for rectification…’
[22]
That the
first ground of objection is misplaced is demonstrated in
Lazarus
[6]
where it was held that:
‘…
In
principle I can see no reason why the doctrine of rectification
should not be applied where a document wrongly records the identity
of a party so as to give effect to the intent of the true parties in
terms of a prior oral agreement or understanding between them.
Such a
result is quite consistent with the decision of the Appeal Court in
Magwaza’s case,
[7]
since
there is a formally valid suretyship contract which is capable of
rectification. It must also be borne in mind that the underlying
transaction must not be confused with the document which embodies it.
It is the latter which is rectified to conform to the true
intention,
not the former
[referring to
Spiller
]…’
[23]
It is convenient to deal with the third ground of objection before
the second. It is so
that in the present matter no grounds for
rectification were made out in the founding papers. However as I see
it this is not the
end of the matter. At the time when the main
application was launched the first respondent had never even hinted
(quite the contrary,
when regard is had to the admitted objective
evidence) that the lease was not one between the parties. The
historical facts demonstrate
that at all material times up to the
delivery of his answering affidavit the first respondent clearly
considered the appellant
to be the lessor, despite the obvious
mistaken reference in the written version of the lease to Messrs
Davids and Peter in their
personal capacities as lessors.
[24]
Put differently, until delivery of the answering affidavit the first
respondent neither
seriously nor unambiguously took issue with the
written recordal of the lease by contending that it did not in fact
reflect the
parties’ true intention. Nor did he even positively
assert in the answering affidavit that he had in fact concluded a
lease
with Messrs Davids and Peter in their personal capacities.
[25]
In this
regard what was stated in
Propfokus
[8]
by the Supreme Court of Appeal is instructive:
‘
Propfokus’s
case throughout the proceedings was that the true agreement between
the parties is correctly reflected in the
written agreement, as
amended. Wenhandel never disputed this stance during the course of
the correspondence exchanged between the
parties’ respective
attorneys… Moreover after Propfokus’s attorney had
purported to cancel the agreement on
its behalf, Wenhandel’s
attorney threatened Propfokus, on 5 May 2005, with “’n
aansoek vir ’n verklarende
bevel dat gemelde koopkontrak geldig
en afdwingbaar is en vir ’n bevel wat oordrag gelas’.
There is nothing in the correspondence preceding the launch of the
proceedings by Wenhandel to indicate that it was of the view that
the
written agreement as amended did not reflect the common intention of
the parties and, accordingly, fell to be rectified.
As
was contended by counsel for Propfokus, notwithstanding the fact that
Propfokus’s attitude towards clause 2 of the written
agreement
as amended was conveyed several times to Wenhandel, the latter did
not challenge this attitude at any time prior to the
launch of the
application. On the contrary, the issue of rectification was raised
by Wenhandel for the very first time in the notice
of motion. That
being so, Wenhandel could hardly have established that its intention,
independently of Propfokus, was different
to that reflected in the
written agreement as amended. Much less could Wenhandel have
established that both parties had an intention
which differed to that
appearing from the (amended) written agreement.’
[26]
Of course the reverse factual matrix applies in the present instance,
but to my mind, the
principle is the same. In the particular
circumstances of this case, the appellant cannot fairly be criticised
for failing to specifically
advance a case for rectification in the
founding papers.
[27]
However,
should I be wrong, it is my view that assistance for the appellant
may also be found in
Shoprite
Checkers
[9]
and
Van
der Merwe NO.
[10]
In
Shoprite
Checkers
the Court stated:
‘…
the
crisp question turns on the nature of that which was agreed between
the parties. An examination of the content of the consensus
prompts a
consideration of the concept of bona fides which underpins
contractual relationships. The concept of bona fides has proved
to be
somewhat elusive with regard to its definition and scope…
Whatever the uncertainty, the principle of good faith must
require
that the parties act honestly in their commercial dealings. Where one
party promotes its own interests at the expense of
another in so
unreasonable a manner as to destroy the very basis of consensus
between the two parties, the principle of good faith
can be employed
to trump the public interest inherent in the principle of the
enforcement of a contract.
This
concept of good faith is congruent with the underlying vision of our
Constitution… To rely on the strict written words
of a
contract and to ignore an underlying oral agreement which not only
shaped the written agreement but which forms part of the
essential
consensus would be to enforce the very antithesis of integrity and
good faith in contractual arrangements…’
[11]
[28]
In
Van der Merwe NO
it was stated:
‘
[9]
As far as is known, no trust by the name of the Clarke Bosman Trust
existed. In context it is obvious that Clarke and Bosman
were
intending to represent the Hydraberg Property Trust. After all, it
was only in that capacity that they must have expected
to take
transfer of the fixed property from the registered owners and thus be
placed in a position to fulfil the obligation under
the contract to
give transfer of the property to the option grantee/purchaser. There
is no other sensible explanation for their
action in playing the role
they did in the execution of the deed of contract…
[10]
In the applicants’ replying affidavit it was averred in
response that rectification was not required, but that “a
notice of intention to amend the notice of motion [would]
nevertheless, insofar and if this [might] be necessary, be filed in
due course to provide for the rectification of the name of the seller
trust”. A notice of intention to amend was not filed.
Instead,
application was made from the bar at the commencement of the hearing
to amend the notice of motion by introducing a prayer
for the
appropriate rectification of the deed.
[11]
The respondents’ counsel was somewhat equivocal in his attitude
to the application to amend the notice of motion. He
certainly did
not consent to it. In my view there was no cogent basis to oppose the
amendment sought. It was foreshadowed in the
papers and, as
mentioned, the mistake regarding the description of the Trust is
essentially conceded in the respondents’
answering papers. The
application for the amendment of the notice of motion will
accordingly be granted.’
[29]
As far as
the third objection (based on misjoinder) is concerned there is
similarly no merit in this ground. In
Movie
Camera
[12]
it was stated:
‘
[25]
In the light of these facts Mr Van Blerk, who together with Mr Slon
appeared for the plaintiff, sought to avoid the conclusion
that
rectification ought to be ordered by submitting that since the
plaintiff was not a party to the conclusion of the contract
rectification should not be granted as it would adversely affect the
rights of an innocent party, the plaintiff. While Van Tonder
was the
chairman of the old MCC, i.e. the party with whom the restraint was
concluded, he was of course at the time of the signing
of the
agreement in fact the chairman of the plaintiff. In this regard I
agree with Mr Rose-Innes’s submission that in the
refence to
innocent third parties the word “innocent” means
“innocent of knowledge”. Were this not so,
a party having
knowledge of a particular state of affairs would be able to snatch at
a bargain by ignoring such knowledge. Humphrys
v Lazer Transport
Holdings and Ano (supra) at 396D; Industrial Finance and Trust
Company v Heitner 1961 (1) 516 at 522E-F. Furthermore
the test is
that rectification will be granted where the requirements therefor
have been met “if innocent third parties will
not be unfairly
affected thereby”. Meyer v Merchants Trust Ltd
1942 AD 244
at
254.’
Termination
of the lease
[30]
It is undisputed that the first respondent materially breached the
lease by failing to
pay rental despite being put to terms in
accordance with clause 16.1 thereof, and that the appellant cancelled
the lease by written
notice on 24 November 2020, calling upon
the respondents to vacate by 31 December 2020, which was
followed with a further
letter to similar effect on 19 February
2021.
[31]
The first respondent however relied on clause 4 of the March 2020
agreement of sale which,
as previously stated, provided for the lease
to remain of full force and effect notwithstanding any cancellation
of that sale.
During argument
Mr Quixley
, who together
with
Ms Gabriel
appeared for the respondents, had no answer to
how, on the first respondent’s version, a lease purportedly
concluded with
Messrs Davids and Peter (unrelated parties) could not
be cancelled in terms of an agreement of sale entered into between
the appellant
and first respondent. He attempted to advance an
argument in the alternative based on this Court finding that the true
parties
to the lease were indeed the appellant and first respondent.
This was never the first respondent’s case and accordingly
nothing
more needs to be said about it.
[32]
The first
respondent also relied on the lockdown regulations prevailing at the
time of termination of the lease, contending that
if found that the
lease was validly cancelled, such cancellation would nonetheless
amount to an unfair practice as contemplated
in s 4B(9) of the
Rental Housing Act
[13]
since
his inability to pay rental was allegedly directly connected to the
implementation of those regulations. There is no merit
in this for
the following reasons. First, on his own version, he had ample
offshore funds to pay what was owing to the appellant
at the time.
Second, the National State of Disaster was lifted on 5 April
2022 and accordingly this is no longer a live issue
for purposes of
this appeal.
Justice
and equity
[33]
Given my
finding that the respondents are unlawful occupiers, the provisions
of sections 4(7) and (8) of PIE
[14]
come into play. In the answering affidavit deposed to on 25 March
2021 the first respondent placed the following information
before the
trial Judge.
[34]
He and his ex-wife and son were aged 65, 57 and 23 years old
respectively. He had not earned
an income since March 2020 since the
National State of Disaster was declared, although he remained
employed by the appellant. His
ex-wife was unemployed. His son was a
fulltime law student and dependent upon him for financial support. He
maintained that given
his employment with the appellant, the fact
that it owns the property and that ‘
it was at all times
contemplated that I would ultimately become the owner of the
property’
it would not be just and equitable to evict the
respondents.
[35]
In
Luanga
[15]
it was held that:
‘
[48]
There is therefore a duty on legal representatives in eviction
proceedings, as officers of the court, not only to advise their
clients of the obligation to make full disclosure of all relevant
personal circumstances, but to actively seek and assist their
clients
to present the necessary information. Legal Practitioners
representing respondents in eviction applications cannot hide
behind
the onus to justify bald, unsubstantiated averments regarding
unemployment, impecuniosity and the risk of homelessness.
Nor can an
officer of the court deliberately withhold relevant information in
order to benefit his or her client by causing the
eviction
proceedings to be delayed because the court does not have sufficient
information before it. Even less so can he or she
studiously avoid
acquiring relevant information in order to avoid the obligation to
disclose it to the court. Where the affidavits
are silent on matters
which the respondent should be able to address with relative ease, a
satisfactory explanation should be provided
for the omission. In the
absence thereof, a court may well be justified in drawing the
inference that a bald assertion of impecuniosity
or homelessness is
not genuine and credible.’
[36]
The
respondents have not made any substantive allegations that they would
be rendered homeless by the relief sought and give no
information as
to what will happen in the event that they are evicted. None of the
respondents explain the steps they have taken
to source alternative
accommodation or even investigate this. They disclose nothing about
other accommodation that might be available
to them and are silent as
to friends or family who might be able to assist them even if on a
temporary or emergency basis.
[16]
[37]
What is clear however is that the first respondent has access to
other financial resources.
He referred to offshore funds available to
him when undertaking to pay what was owed to the appellant in terms
of the acknowledgement
of debt. Moreover, on his own version, he was
granted bond approval by Standard Bank of R2 402 037.50 on
13 March
2020 to purchase the property. It can thus fairly be
inferred that he is far from impecunious irrespective of his current
state
of employment. There is also no suggestion that any of the
respondents are in ill health or that the first respondent will not
continue to accommodate the second and third respondents in future
alternative accommodation.
[38]
On the other hand, the appellant has been deprived of rental income
of at least R19 000
per month for almost 3 years. Although some
of the arrear rental was claimed separately in the main application,
that was only
in respect of the period up to February 2021, almost
two years ago. The appellant further placed before the court evidence
of alternative
accommodation in the area in which the property is
situated to which the respondents could move. These were
three-bedroom townhouses
as well as a freestanding house with rentals
ranging between R12 500 and R17 000 per month.
[39]
In all the circumstances, it is just and equitable to grant an
eviction order. During argument
Mr Wilkin
proposed a date for
eviction of 14 days from this Court’s order, failing which the
sheriff will be authorised to evict the
respondents upon expiry of a
further period of 5 days thereafter.
Mr Quixley
proposed one
month in the event of the Court finding that such an order should be
granted. It seems to me that the appropriate
date to fix would be
that proposed by
Mr Quixley.
Arrear
rental claimed
[40]
As mentioned, the appellant also sought an order that the first
respondent pay arrear rentals
accumulated up to and including
February 2021. This is a total sum of R250 800 and the quantum
is not disputed by the first
respondent. The appellant also claimed
payment of R41 707.30 in respect of municipal charges but
Mr
Wilkin
informed us that the latter claim is not persisted with
given that there was no obligation on the part of the first
respondent
to effect payment thereof in terms of the lease.
Costs
[41]
The appellant seeks costs on the punitive scale of attorney and
client. To my mind this
would not be an appropriate order to make
given that the appellant’s own papers were not a model of
clarity, despite my view
that the respondents capitalised on this in
order to raise defences unsustainable in both fact and law.
[42]
In the result I would propose the following order:
1.
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
1.
The application for rectification of the written lease agreement is
granted;
2.
The first to third respondents are ordered to vacate the
immovable property situated at 6[…] T[…] Street,
Parklands,
Western Cape Province, also known as erf 6[...], Parklands
(Cape Town) (“the property”) on or before TUESDAY
28 FEBRUARY
2023 failing which the Sheriff is authorised and
directed to evict them therefrom on MONDAY 6 MARCH 2023 or as soon as
possible
thereafter;
3.
The first respondent shall pay the applicant the sum of R250 800
(two hundred and fifty thousand
eight hundred rand); and
4.
The first respondent shall pay the costs of this application.’
CLOETE
J
I
agree and it is so ordered.
GOLIATH
AJP
I
agree
THULARE
J
For
appellant: Adv
L S Wilkin
Instructed
by: C
K Attorneys (Ms M Engela)
For
first to third respondents: Adv G Quixley together with
Adv P Gabriel
Instructed
by:
Hayes Inc. (Mr R Meintjies)
For
fourth respondent: no
appearance
[1]
Buffalo
Freight Systems (Pty) Ltd v Castleigh Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another
2011
(1) SA 8
(SCA) at para [19].
[2]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A)
.
[3]
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at para [13].
[4]
Rule 28(3) provides: ‘
An
objection to a proposed amendment shall clearly and concisely state
the grounds upon which the objection is founded.’
In
Squid
Packers (Pty) Ltd v Robberg Trawlers (Pty) Ltd
1999
(1) SA 1153
(SECLD) at 1157D-F it was stated that: ‘
Prior
to the amendment of Rule 28 during 1987 it was not a requirement
that a notice of objection should set out the grounds upon
which the
objection was based. However, this is now a requirement, and it is
my view that the amendment to the Rule was introduced
in order to
enable a party who wishes to amend a pleading to know the basis upon
which objection to such proposed amendment is
made, and to avoid the
situation which previously frequently arose, namely that the party
seeking to amend did not know what
the basis of the objection was
and therefore, when applying for an amendment, had to endeavour to
deal with every conceivable
complaint that the other might have…’.
[5]
Spiller
and Others v Lawrence
1976 (1) SA 307
(NPD) at 310A and E and 311A-D.
[6]
Lazarus
v Gorfinkel
1988 (4) SA 123
(CPD) at 131A-C.
[7]
Referring to
Magwaza
v Heenan
1979 (2) SA 1019 (A).
[8]
Propfokus
49 (Pty) Ltd v Wenhandel 4 (Pty) Ltd
[2007]
3 All SA 18
(SCA) at 22c-h.
[9]
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Bumpers Schwarmas CC and Others
2002 (6) SA 202 (C).
[10]
Van der
Merwe NO and Others v Hydraberg Hydraulics CC and Others; Van der
Merwe NO and Others v Bosman and Others
2010
(5) SA 555 (WCC).
[11]
At 215G-216B.
[12]
Movie
Camera Company (Pty) Ltd v Van Wyk and Another
[2003] 2 All SA 291 (C).
[13]
No. 50 of 1999.
[14]
Prevention of Illegal Eviction From and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998
.
[15]
Luanga
v Perthpark
2019 (3) SA 214 (WCC).
[16]
Ives v
Rajah
2012 (2) SA 167
(WCC) at para [34];
Patel
NO and Others v Mayekiso and Others
,
unreported judgment WCC 3680/16, delivered on 23 September 2016
at para [33].
sino noindex
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