Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 63South Africa
Petzer v Dixon (A07/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 63 (24 March 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Petzer v Dixon (A07/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 63 (24 March 2023)
Petzer v Dixon (A07/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 63 (24 March 2023)
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sino date 24 March 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
NCA
AND LOAN BETWEEN FRIENDS
CONTRACT
– Loan – National Credit Act – Arm’s
length – Loan between friends to start business
together –
Defence to claim for repayment that lender not registered as a
credit provider – Once-off transaction
concluded to assist
friend – Did not profit from the loan – Parties not
independent of each other – NCA
not applicable –
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: A07/2023
In
the matter
between:
MANDY
PETZER
Appellant
And
KAREN DIXON
Respondent
Heard: 17 March 2023
Delivered: 24 March 2023
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives via
email and released to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 24 March 2023 at 10h00.
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole judgment granted against the
appellant by the
Cape Town Magistrates Court on 12 August 2022 for
payment of R47,000 plus interest payable to the respondent pursuant
to a personal
loan of R117 000 advanced by the respondent to the
appellant on 18 March 2014.
[2]
The respondent issued summons against the appellant on 30 July 2019
in which she claimed
the sum of R47 000 arising from a personal loan
agreement she advanced to the appellant. In the summons, the
respondent averred
that on 18 March 2014 at Cape Town, she lent and
advanced the sum of R117 000 to the appellant in terms of an oral
loan agreement.
The loan was repayable on demand, with interest at 10
percent per annum. The respondent pleaded that the appellant paid her
the
sum of R70 000 on 30 August 2016, leaving the balance of R47 000
due and payable.
[3]
The appellant defended the claim and raised two defences. The
appellant admitted the
loan but averred that the loan agreement
conflicted with the provisions of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005
(“the NCA”)
in that the respondent was not a registered
credit provider at the time of the loan agreement. The appellant also
instituted a
counterclaim and sought to rectify the settlement
agreement between the appellant and the respondent in which the
respondent sold
her shares to the appellant. The appellant pleaded in
her counterclaim that the parties' settlement agreement extinguished
the
R47 000 that the respondent claimed against her.
[4]
The trial court dismissed the appellant’s defences and the
counterclaim and
granted judgment in favour of the respondent. The
appellant seeks to overturn this finding. The appellant further seeks
an order
in this court to uphold the appeal with costs, dismissing
the respondent's claim in terms of the loan agreement.
THE
FACTUAL MATRIX
[5]
The appellant and the respondent (“the parties”) became
friends around
2008 – 2009 through a mutual friend. They got
acquainted and became friends to the point where they spent much time
together.
They met each other’s families and attended each
other’s weddings. It came to pass that the appellant wanted to
purchase
a franchise from Sorbet. The appellant wanted her own
business, and as friends, they started to talk about it.
[6]
The appellant and the respondent decided to start the business, and a
lot of funding
was required to set up the business. The parties
agreed that each would fund a portion of the capital into the
business and get
shareholding therein. The parties further agreed
that the respondent would have 35 percent shareholding in the company
and the
appellant would have 65 percent shareholding. The respondent
provided her 35 percent capital contribution. Unfortunately, the
appellant
could not fund her 65 percent share of the funds required
to start the business. To assist her, the respondent provided the
appellant
with a loan of R117 000 to enable the appellant, as a
friend, to realise her desire to set up a Sorbet franchise business
under
the company, Kandy & Co (Pty) Ltd.
[7]
The respondent funded the appellants’ share of the capital from
her extra access
bond facility which she had with the bank. The
respondent knew that the appellant was eager to pursue the
opportunity of opening
a franchise. She knew that with these funds,
the appellant would pursue an opportunity that she really wanted. The
loan was made
available to the appellant on the basis that the
appellant would pay the same interest rate that the bank was charging
the respondent.
The effect of this was that the respondent would not
make any profit on the loan to the appellant. The overall purpose of
the loan
was to assist the appellant as a friend and to do her a
favour.
[8]
The respondent testified in the court
a quo
that she was not
in the business of loaning people money. She testified that she had
never before lent money to anybody else and
only made this loan to
the appellant because of their friendship. She valued the friendship
she had with the appellant, and it
is something that she would not do
for anyone else. She would not even do it for all her friends. Her
relationship with the appellant
was exceptional, and she thought it
was the right thing to do.
[9]
During the business operation, the parties had to make another
additional capital
injection to the business. The appellant paid the
sum of R70 000 on behalf of the respondent, thus reducing the loan
amount from
R117 000 to R47 000. At the beginning of 2019, the
respondent urgently needed to exit the business operation due to her
work commitments
to W[...]. The parties agreed that they would get a
valuation of the respondent’s shares to see how much they were
worth.
They decided they would get three valuations; one from the
franchise Sorbet, one from their accountant, and one from an
independent
external party.
[10]
The shareholding was valued, and after several email exchanges, the
appellant eventually made
an offer to the respondent. On 12 February
2019, in an email addressed to the respondent, the appellant made the
following offer:
‘My full and final offer is R672 500 for all
outstanding loans and your 35 percent shareholding in Kandy & Co
(Pty) Ltd’.
The appellant also noted that this is her full and
final offer of what she is prepared to pay the respondent. The
appellant agreed
to pay this amount as follows: R100 000 within seven
days of the signature of the agreement and, thereafter, a minimum of
R23 854
per month for 24 consecutive months on the first of every
month commencing on 01 April 2019.
[11]
Attached to that email was a draft sale agreement of the respondent’s
shares to the appellant
and a resolution for the respondent to resign
as a director. The two documents were attached for the respondent’s
signature.
The attached sale of shares agreement did not refer to the
settlement of any loans. The appellant informed the respondent that
there was nothing more she could offer, and should the respondent not
accept her offer, she would have to wait until the appellant
sold the
business in two to three years, and this would mean that the
respondent would still be obliged to meet the requirements
from the
franchisor as a shareholder and to meet all the operating
requirements.
[12]
On 13 February 2019, the respondent emailed correspondence to the
appellant. In it, the respondent
stated, among other things, that, as
far as she understood, her loan account with the company was settled.
The respondent stated
that she has agreed to the amount of the
respondent’s offer for her shareholding. The respondent also
stipulated in her email
that she requested the appellant three times
the balance of the loan amount (‘R47 000’) between them.
She was not sure
why the appellant was not answering her on this. The
respondent requested the appellant to give her feedback on this so
that she
could plan ahead. In response, the appellant informed the
respondent that there was a smaller amount due. However, she will
check
the respondent’s loan account and revert.
[13]
On 15 February 2019, the respondent signed the sale of shares
agreement and returned same to
the appellant for signature. The
appellant as well signed the agreement. It is worth repeating that
the sale of shares agreement
did not include the outstanding loans
that the appellant referred to in her email attaching the agreement.
On 21 February 2019,
the respondent sent an email to the appellant in
which she sought clarification regarding the R47 000 loan amount that
was still
due and outstanding. In that email, the respondent informed
the appellant that all other loan accounts were paid except the
personal
loan that she made to the appellant. There was no response
to this correspondence. On 08 March 2019, the respondent wrote a
follow-up
email to the appellant stating that a shortfall of R47 000
was still outstanding from the loan advanced to the appellant.
[14]
In response, on 23 March 2019, the appellant informed the respondent
via email that she was still
waiting for the 2019 figures to be
completed and signed off and that once that was done she would
revert. However, on 02 June 2019,
the appellant informed the
respondent that her offer of 12 February 2019 included the personal
loan settlement. She denied being
indebted to the respondent for the
sum of R47 000 or any sum of money.
[15]
Pursuant thereto, the respondent issued summons against the appellant
and claimed payment of
the loan balance in the sum of R47 000. On the
other hand, the appellant defended the action and raised the two
defences discussed
above to the respondent's claim.
[16]
The appellant contended that to the extent that her email of 12
February 2019 was inclusive of
all outstanding loans and expressly
stated that it is in full and final settlement of the respondent’s
claim, the respondent’s
claim against her has been
extinguished. As explained above, the appellant also instituted a
counterclaim in which she sought the
rectification of the sale of
shares agreement to reflect that against payment of the purchase
consideration of shares, the appellant’s
indebtedness to the
respondent on account of the loan agreement of 18 March 2014 was
extinguished and that neither party would
have a claim against the
other arising out of the loan.
THE
DISPUTED ISSUES
[17]
From the foregoing, this court finds that there are two issues for
consideration in this matter.
The first issue is whether the court
a
quo
was correct in finding that the NCA does not find application
in this matter and,
secondly,
whether the outstanding balance
due under the personal loan agreement was settled in terms of the
sale of shares agreement concluded
between the parties on 15 February
2019, in terms of which the appellant purchased the respondent’s
35 percent shareholding
in Kandy & Co (Pty) Ltd. These issues
will be considered in turn below.
RELEVANT
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
The
applicability of the NCA
[18]
The appellant contends that the credit agreement between the parties
conflicted with the NCA
as the respondent was not registered as a
credit provider when the loan agreement was concluded. The appellant
ostensibly relied
on section 40(4) of the NCA, which provides that a
credit agreement entered into by a credit provider who is required to
be registered
in terms of subsection 1 but who is not so registered
is an unlawful agreement and void to the extent provided for in
section 89.
Meanwhile, the respondent pleaded that the NCA did not
apply to their loan agreement because the parties did not deal with
each
other at arm’s length when they concluded the personal
loan agreement.
[19]
Section 4(1) of the NCA provides that the NCA applies to every credit
agreement between parties
dealing at arm’s length and made
within, or having an effect within, the Republic, save for a few
exceptions. Section 4(2)(b)(iv)
states that parties are not dealing
at arm’s length in any agreement in which each party is not
independent of the other
and consequently does not necessarily strive
to obtain the utmost possible advantage out of the transaction.
Simply put, the NCA
does not apply to credit agreements concluded
between parties where the parties are not dealing at arm’s
length.
[20]
The term “arm’s length” is not defined in the NCA
however; the term is circumscribed
for purposes of greater certainty
in section 4(2)(b) of the NCA. For present purposes, the relevant
parts of section 4(2)(b) provides
as follows:
‘
(2) For greater
certainty in applying subsection (1)-
(b) In any of the
following arrangements, the parties are not dealing at arm's length:
(i) a shareholder loan or
other credit agreement between a juristic person, as consumer, and a
person who has a controlling interest
in that juristic person, as
credit provider;
(ii) a loan to a
shareholder or other credit agreement between a juristic person, as
credit provider, and a person who has a controlling
interest in that
juristic person, as consumer;
(iii) a credit agreement
between natural persons who are in a familial relationship and- (aa)
are co-dependent on each other; or
(bb) one is dependent upon the
other; and
(iv) any other
arrangement-
(aa) in which each party
is not independent of the other and consequently does not necessarily
strive to obtain the utmost possible
advantage out of the
transaction; or
(bb) that is of a type
that has been held in law to be between parties who are not dealing
at arm's length.’
[21]
In
Heydenrych v Forsyth
2022 JDR 1655 (GJ) para 19, the court
noted that although the NCA does not define dealing at arms’
length, it is apparent
that the legislature intended that credit
agreements between natural persons who are (a) in a familial
relationship, and who are
co-dependent on each other or where the one
is dependent upon the other, and (b) any agreement where each party
is not independent
of the other and does not strive to obtain the
utmost advantage out of the transaction, are not within arm’s
length and thus
not susceptible to the provisions of the NCA.
[22]
In
casu,
the respondent averred that the NCA does not apply to
the personal loan agreement concluded between them as the parties did
not
deal at arm’s length when they entered into the personal
loan agreement. At the hearing of this appeal,
Mr Van der
Linde
, who appeared for the appellant, argued that the court
a
quo
placed undue weight on the oral evidence of the respondent
that she believed that the loan was not conducted at arm’s
length.
Counsel contended that the court
a quo
did not
consider whether the appellant and the respondent were independent of
each other when the contract was concluded.
[23]
It is worth mentioning that the wording of section 4(2)(b)(iv)(aa) of
the NCA discussed above
is a codification of the dictum of Trollip
JA, in
Hicklin v Secretary for Inland Revenue
1980 (1) SA 481
(A) at 495 A-B, where the learned justice describes the arm’s
length criterion as follows: ‘It connotes that each party
is
independent of the other and, in so dealing, will strive to get the
utmost possible advantage out of the transaction for himself.’
[24]
In this case, the appellant and the respondent had a closely knitted
friendship. The respondent
testified that she became involved in
opening the Sorbet franchise with the appellant because she knew it
was something the appellant
wanted. If not for that, she would not
have become involved in opening the said business. When the appellant
could not raise her
65 per cent share of the capital required to
start the business, the respondent was willing to assist her and
provided the appellant
with a personal loan of R117 000. This loan
enabled the appellant, her close friend, to realise her dream of
setting up the Sorbet
franchise business.
[25]
It is common cause that the appellant funded the loan from an access
bond facility she had with
her bank. The loan was made available to
the appellant on the basis that the appellant would pay the same
interest rate the respondent
was being charged by her bank. The
appellant would repay the respondent the same amount plus interest
that the respondent would
have paid the bank on the amount withdrawn
from her access bond account. The respondent stood to gain
nothing from the loan
agreement transaction. During the trial at the
court below, the respondent testified that the loan agreement was
concluded on terms
that did not benefit her. She did not profit from
the loan, but for all intents and purposes, she just wanted to help
her friend
start a business.
[26]
In my view, the parties were not independent of each other.
The appellant
sought the respondent’s assistance for financial
support to fund her share of the capital. The respondent was a silent
partner
and needed the help and expertise of the appellant to start
and operate the franchise business. From the evidence led at the
court
a quo
, it cannot be said that the parties strove to gain
the maximum possible benefit for themselves out of the transaction.
To the contrary,
the parties assisted each other as acquaintances.
Even after the expiration of five years since the loan was concluded,
the respondent
only claimed what was agreed upon. She only charged
the appellant the interest she paid to the bank. She did not charge
the appellant
penalties on the arrears. She loaned the appellant R117
000, and the latter paid her R70 000 leaving a balance of R47 000 due
and
payable. She claimed this amount in her summons at the court
a
quo
and nothing more.
[27]
In the circumstances, I am of the view that the NCA does not find
application in this matter.
The appellant and the respondent were
certainly not dealing at arm’s length. See
Cloete v Van Den Heever NO
2013 JDR 1075 (GNP).
In my opinion, the transaction between the parties fell within the
ambit of the provisions of
section 4(2)(b)(iv) of the NCA discussed
above.
[28]
Furthermore, I share the views expressed by
Mr Engelbrecht
,
who appeared for the respondent, that the respondent was in any event
not required to be registered as a credit provider to lawfully
conclude the personal loan agreement in that the personal loan
agreement was concluded on 18 March 2014. At that time, section
40(1)
of the NCA provided as follows:
‘
(1) A person must
apply to be registered as a credit provider if –
(a)
That person, alone or in conjunction with any
associated person, is the credit provider under at least 100 credit
agreements, other
than incidental agreements; or
(b)
The total principal debt owed to that credit
provider under all outstanding credit agreements, other than
incidental credit agreements,
exceeds the threshold (‘R500 000
at the time’) prescribed in terms of section 42(1).’
[29]
The respondent’s evidence was that her loan to the appellant
was the first she had ever
made to anyone. It was only for R117 000.
The respondent was not in the business of lending credit to
consumers. She did not strive
to benefit or profit from the loan.
T
his was the once-off transaction that she
concluded to assist her friend. See
Friend
v Sendal
2015 (1) SA 395
(GP). But
in any event, as pointed out by
Mr Engelbrecht
,
the total of the loan to the appellant of R117 000 plus the
loans advanced by the respondent to the company of R67 245,
and
even including other amounts paid by the respondent during 2014 for
the franchise to be purchased and commence business of
R221 722,
i.e. R405 967, fell below the R500 000 threshold at the
time.
[30]
In my view, the respondent was not required to be
registered as a credit provider at the time of the conclusion
of the
personal loan agreement. Thus, section 40(4) of the NCA does not
apply. Given these considerations, it follows that the
court
a quo
was correct in its conclusion that the NCA does not find application
to the loan agreement between the parties. This leads me to
the
alternative defence raised by the appellant that the sale of shares
agreement extinguished the respondent's claim.
Rectification
of the sale of shares agreement
[31]
The appellant contended that the written sale agreement concluded
between the parties on 15 February
2019, in which the respondent sold
her shares in Kandy & Co to the appellant, does not correctly
reflect the parties’
agreement or common intention. The
appellant contended that the sale of shares agreement did not record
the settlement of the respondent’s
claim under the personal
loan agreement against the appellant. The appellant asserts that this
was caused by a bona fide mutual
mistake between the parties.
[32]
Mr Van der Linde
argued on behalf of the appellant that on a
plain reading of the appellant’s offer to the respondent of 12
February 2019,
to which the sale of shares agreement was attached,
two things are suggested:
first
, that the offer is for all
outstanding loans, and
secondly
, that the offer is also for
the 35 percent sale of the shares. He contended that the court
a
quo
erred in dismissing the appellant’s counterclaim
seeking the rectification of the sale of shares agreement to reflect
that
that sale agreement was inclusive of all outstanding loans that
the appellant owed the respondent. It was asserted on behalf of
the
appellant that the reference to
all outstanding loans
in the
appellant’s offer (in the 12 February 2019 email) included the
respondent’s claim under the personal loan agreement.
[33]
Meanwhile,
Mr Engelbrecht
argued on behalf of the respondent
that the respondent understood the reference to loans in the
appellant’s offer to be referring
to her business loans to the
company and not the personal loan to the appellant.
Mr Engelbrecht
argued that the respondent did not understand it to include her claim
regarding the personal loan agreement, which she considered
separate
from the company's business. He submitted that when the respondent
signed the share sale agreement, for all intents and
purposes, it was
for the sale of her shares in the business and nothing else.
[34]
For the sake of completeness, the email correspondence incorporating
the alleged offer is reproduced
hereunder and states as follows:
“
My full and final
offer is R672 500 for all outstanding loans and your 35 %
shareholding in Kandy & Co (Pty) Ltd.
This is my full and final
offer and what I can and am prepared to pay you.
I simply cannot pay you
more and don’t know where I’m going to get the money.
My intention will be to
pay you a lump sum of R100 000 within 7 days of signing and the
balance of R572 500 to be paid off in monthly
instalments of R23833
33 each over 24 months.”
[35]
It is trite that a document that incorrectly records the contract
between two parties may be
rectified to conform to the common
intention. In such a case, the parties are in agreement, and what is
rectified is not the contract
itself as a juristic act but the
document in question because it does not reflect what the parties
intended to be the content of
their juristic act. See Hutchison and
Pretorius (eds)
Law of Contract in South Africa
4 edition
(2022) at 121. Thus, the rectification of a written agreement is a
remedy available in instances where the agreement,
through a common
mistake, does not reflect the true intention of the contracting
parties or where it erroneously does not record
the agreement between
the parties. See
P V v E V
(843/2018) ZASCA 76 (30 May
2019) para 16.
[36]
The predominant requirement for rectification is a common continuing
intention of the parties,
which is not reflected in the agreement.
See
B v B
[2014] ZASCA 14
para 20. In
Tesven CC v South
African Bank of Athens
[1999] 4 All SA 396(A)
para 16, the
Appellate Division, as it then was, held that ‘to allow the
words the parties actually used in the documents
to override their
prior agreement or the common intention that they intended to record
is to enforce what was not agreed, and so
overthrow the basis on
which contracts rest in our law.’
[37]
The onus is on the party claiming rectification, in this case, the
appellant, to show, on a balance
of probabilities, that it should be
granted. In
Soil Fumigation Services Lowveld CC v Chemfit
Technical Products (Pty) Ltd
2004 (6) SA 29
(SCA), the Supreme
Court of Appeal held that such an onus is difficult to prove and a
party seeking to obtain a rectification must
show the facts entitling
him to obtain that relief in the clearest and most satisfactory
manner.
[38]
In
casu,
and during the trial at the court
a quo
, both
parties acknowledged that they distinguished their loans to the
company and the respondent's loan to the appellant. During
cross-examination, the respondent testified that in their dealings,
the personal loan to the appellant and the loan account to
the
company were always treated separately. In her evidence in chief, the
appellant as well distinguished the two loans. She testified
that the
respondent made a loan to her personally and to the company. In her
email correspondence to Rudi Rudolf and Robyn Zinman
of Sorbet on 09
November 2018, requesting them to give her the fair price of the
respondent’s shares in the company, the
appellant expressly
informed them that she intended to deal with the respondent’s
loan account in the company separately
from the sale of the shares.
[39]
In harmony with this approach, the appellant sent a written draft
agreement to the respondent
regarding the sale of the respondent’s
shares in the company. The draft agreement was sent to the respondent
under cover
of the email dated 12 February 2019. The draft agreement
was silent on the outstanding loans and only dealt with the sale of
shares,
the purchase price, and the payment plan. This was consistent
with the intention of the parties throughout their business
exigencies
to keep the loan to the company, the personal loan to the
appellant, and the sale of the respondent's shares separately.
[40]
This conclusion, in my view, is fortified by the subsequent email
correspondence exchanged between
the parties immediately before the
contract was signed and soon after the sale agreement was concluded.
For instance, the appellant’s
email of 12 February 2019 to the
respondent, referring
to all outstanding loans,
is indicative
that the sale of shares agreement and the personal loan are two
distinct juristic acts and the parties intended to
treat it as such.
The contents of this email are different from the draft agreement. In
her email of 13 February 2019, the respondent
made it abundantly
clear to the appellant that she has agreed to the amount of her offer
for her shareholding. She further stressed
that her loan account with
the company had been settled. However, what was due was the personal
loan which she demanded payment
from the appellant three times to no
avail.
[41]
As pointed out by
Mr Engelbrecht
, and correctly so in my view,
it is apparent from the respondent’s response that she
interpreted the appellant’s reference
in her email of 12
February 2019
to all outstanding loans
as a reference to her
loan account in the company. The respondent considered her claim
against the appellant under the personal
loan agreement as a separate
matter.
[42]
Interestingly, and in response to the respondent's email demanding
payment of the shortfall,
the appellant did not inform the respondent
that her offer of 12 February 2019 to the respondent included the
personal loan. Instead,
the appellant reiterated that she remembered
that the respondent loaned her R117 000, and she paid back R70 000.
The appellant
further indicated that she felt another smaller amount
was due but would check and revert.
[43]
Crucially, even after signing the agreement, the respondent continued
to demand payment of the
balance of the loan. On 21 February 2019,
the respondent wrote to the respondent and informed her that the only
issue still remaining
was the personal loan agreement. She wrote
another follow-up email on 8 March 2019, demanding the shortfall of
R47 000 from the
appellant.
[44]
From the mosaic of all the evidence, it is evident that the
respondent did not consider the agreement
reached on 15 February 2019
to have included a compromise of the personal loan agreement. For
more than once, she demanded the
repayment of the shortfall
immediately before the agreement was signed and soon after the
agreement was signed. Significantly,
the appellant did not dismiss
the respondent when she demanded the balance of the loan. The
appellant did not inform the respondent
that the personal loan was
settled as part of the agreement concluded on 15 February 2019. In
response to the respondent’s
demand for the shortfall, on
23 March 2019, the appellant informed the respondent that she
was still waiting for figures (financials)
to be completed and signed
off and would revert once this was done.
[45]
In my view, the appellant’s response of 23 March 2019 to the
respondent’s demand
for the shortfall is diametrically opposed
to her version. The appellant’s response is inconsistent with
the appellant’s
version that there was a common intention
between the parties that the agreement reached on 15 February 2019
compromised the respondent’s
personal loan claim against the
appellant. If indeed there was such common intention, the appellant
would have easily dismissed
the respondent and indicated to her that
her claim was extinguished in terms of their agreement. It was an
utter surprise that
on 2 June 2019, the appellant asserted for the
first time that her offer of 12 February 2019 included the personal
loan settlement.
[46]
I believe that this version is contrived and engineered by the
appellant to avoid paying the
respondent her money. It seems to me
the defence the appellant raised five months after the sale agreement
was signed was an afterthought.
The respondent has demanded payment
of the shortfall amount consistently. She made it clear and in no
uncertain terms to the appellant
more than once that the outstanding
balance due in respect of the personal loan was not extinguished. She
was unequivocal that
the balance of the loan did not form part of the
agreement to sell her shares to the appellant.
[47]
Furthermore, during her evidence in the court below, the respondent
was consistent that she never
understood nor intended that the sale
of shares agreement would compromise her claim for the payment of the
balance of the loan.
It is further common cause that the appellant
did not challenge her on these averments even after the sale of
shares agreement
was signed. The belated email of 2 June 2019 appears
to have been a plan that the appellant contrived to escape liability.
In my
view, the respondent’s version in this regard is
corroborated in all material respects by the appellant’s email
correspondences
dated 13 February 2019 and 23 March 2019, discussed
above.
[48]
On a conspectus of all the evidence placed before court, I am of the
view that the appellant
has failed to prove on a balance of
probabilities a continuing common intention in terms of which the
parties had agreed that the
respondent’s claim under the
personal loan agreement would be compromised as part of the sale of
shares agreement. The court
a quo
was correct in dismissing
the appellant’s defence and her counterclaim for rectification.
[49]
In view of the above considerations, it follows that the appellant’s
appeal must fail.
ORDER
50.
In the result, I would propose the following order:
The appeal is hereby
dismissed with costs.
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and it is so ordered:
CLOETE
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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