Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 135South Africa
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 135 (6 June 2023)
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 135 (6 June 2023)
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 135 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
number: 3518/2023
In
the matter between:
K2021765242
(SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THIBAULT
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First respondent
ABRAHAMS AND
GROSS
Second respondent
ATLANTIC
SEABOARD
PROPERTIES
(PTY)
LTD
Third respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Fourth
respondent
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
DELIVERED
ON 6 JUNE 2023
VAN
ZYL AJ:
The
issues
1. I
delivered the main judgment in this matter on 25 April 2023.
For the reasons
set out in that judgment, I dismissed the applicant’s
application, with costs.
2. In
the course of the subsequent application for leave to appeal, the
same issues were
raised (as grounds of appeal) as had been submitted
in support of the grant of the main application. I do not
intend to discuss
these aspects in any detail. The reasons set
out in the main judgment suffice. I make brief remarks:
2.1.
As to whether the first
respondent in fact opposed the application
:
The first respondent delivered a notice of intention to oppose.
It was the only respondent to do so. It appointed
attorneys for
that purpose and relied on Mr Hayes to depose to the answering
affidavit. That is the end of the matter.
It is –
contrary to the applicant’s argument – a typical
Ganes
v Telecom Namibia Ltd
[1]
situation: “…
In
my view it is irrelevant whether Hanke had been authorised to depose
to the founding affidavit. The deponent to an affidavit
in motion
proceedings need not be authorised by the party concerned to depose
to the affidavit. It is the institution of the proceedings
and the
prosecution thereof which must be authorised…
.”
2.2.
Mr Hayes, the deponent to the answering affidavit, states expressly
that he
deposes to the affidavit in opposition to the application.
Since only the first respondent opposed the application, the Hayes
affidavit could only have been delivered in support of such
opposition, that is, on the first respondent’s behalf.
2.3.
In any event, Mr Grant Elliot, who deposed to a confirmatory
affidavit in relation
to the main answering affidavit, is in fact the
representative of and chief operating officer for the first
respondent. This
appears from the sale agreements attached to
the founding affidavit as well as to the answering affidavit.
He signed the
sale agreement on the first respondent’s behalf.
2.4.
As to whether the first respondent (as opposed to the second
respondent) regarded the 6 February 2023 email as a repudiation
:
Mr Karrim addressed Mr Elliot when he sent that email (and the
subsequent ones). He sent it to, amongst others, the
conveyancers (represented by Mr Hayes), to the first respondent
(represented by Mr Elliot), and the estate agents (represented
by Mr
Harris). Mr Elliot – and thus the first respondent - was
aware of what was transpiring.
2.5.
From the sale agreement it is clear that the firm of attorneys
undertaking
the conveyancing is also the first respondent’s
attorney. When Mr Hayes therefore refers to “
our
client
” and states that “
our instructions are
”
to accept the repudiation, it is logical to accept that his
instructions came from the first respondent. As he states
in
his affidavit: “…
I replied informing [Mr
Karrim] that Thibault Investments accepted the company’s
repudiation. I also confirmed my instructions
that our client
will hold the company liable for all wasted costs…
”
2.6.
As to Mr Karrim’s authority
: The resolutions are
framed in wide terms. Mr Karrim was authorised to “
act
on behalf of and to make decisions on behalf of the company”
.
This would entail any decision in relation to the transactions, and
if a decision so taken amounts to a repudiation, then
the company has
(through its duly authorised representative) repudiated.
2.7.
Mr Karrim’s co-director was, moreover, copied in on the
impugned email
and the subsequent ones, and therefore knew what the
state of affairs was. He did not raise any protest in relation
to the
communications at the time.
2.8.
As to the conveyancers’ duties
: The applicant
argues that context is everything. Mr Karrim’s email was simply
an expression of his frustration with
the delays in the transfer
process; thus, the conveyancers should have pacified him, and advised
him as to the consequences of
his actions.
2.9.
The problem for the applicant is that context does not exist only in
relation
to one party to a transaction. The first respondent’s
situation forms part of the context, and the 6 February 2023 email
should be regarded objectively within the context as a whole.
Conveyancers, despite having certain legal duties towards both
parties, are not contractual babysitters. If one party’s
conduct (whether done in frustration or not) amounts to a
repudiation, then it is up to the other contract party to elect
whether to accept or reject such repudiation. The conveyancer
has a duty to convey the message. It is not a conveyancer’s
duty to cajole a party out of the consequences of its actions.
2.10. If
the applicant is of the view that the second respondent acted in
breach of any legal duty
owed to the applicant, then it has to take
such action against the second respondent as it deems fit. The
matter of
Bruwer and another
v Pocock & Bailey Ingelyf and another
,
[2]
upon which the applicant relies, involves a claim for damages against
a conveyancer based upon the breach of a legal duty.
The facts
are, however, totally different from those in the present case.
2.11.
As
to whether the first respondent should have given the applicant
notice to remedy its breach in terms of the breach clause included
in
the sale agreement
:
Judicial precedent, including authority from the Supreme Court of
Appeal (see, for example,
Metalmil (Pty)
Ltd v AECI Explosives and Chemicals Ltd
),
[3]
says otherwise. The applicant has not suggested that the case
law relied upon was incorrectly decided.
3. A
new issue was raised for the first time during argument of the
application for leave
to appeal. This was that, because the
guarantees issued by Investec were irrevocable, Mr Karrim could in
fact not have repudiated
the sale agreement. Repudiation was
impossible. Also, since the deposit, transfer fees and other
transfer costs had
been paid, the applicant had performed fully and
thus no repudiation could take place.
4. A
reading of the 6 February 2023 email, however, makes it clear that Mr
Karrim does
not only refer to his threatened attempt at cancelling
the guarantees. He demands return of “
all fees,
Deposits and transfer costs paid
”. He also demands
the repayment of fees paid to Anuva Investments (Pty) Ltd
(represented by Mr Erasmus, addressed directly
in the email), who was
the party involved in the structuring of the transaction.
5. Objectively
viewed, this is an indication of the applicant’s intention not
to
proceed with the transaction, in other words, and at that stage of
the transaction, not to accept transfer when it is offered to
it.
Accepting transfer when it is offered is part of performance (see,
for example,
Legator McKenna
INC and another v Shea and others
,
[4]
and see Van der Merwe
et al
Contract: General Principles
:
[5]
“
If a debtor has
already performed he may nevertheless commit anticipatory breach in
respect of a duty, which he may have in his
capacity as creditor, to
co-operate towards receiving counter-performance from his
co-contractant.”
).
6. If
one demands, prior to transfer, the refund of everything paid in
terms of the sale
agreement, and threatens to cancel guarantees, then
it is logical objectively to infer that transfer will not be accepted
when
it is offered. The fact that the guarantees are
irrevocable does not make any difference. It is the objective
perception
created by the email, reasonably viewed, that renders Mr
Karrim’s conduct a repudiation of the sale agreement.
Conclusion
7. In
these circumstances, I am not of the view that, on any of the issues
raised in the
application for leave to appeal, there is a reasonable
prospect that another court would come to a different conclusion
(section
17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (“the
Act”)), or that there are other compelling reasons as
contemplated
in section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Act why leave to appeal
should be granted. The issues between the parties as they
appear from
the relief sought in the notice of motion have been
determined by this Court, and for that reason section 17(1)(c) of the
Act is
not applicable.
Order
8. In
the premises,
the application for leave to appeal is dismissed,
with costs
.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances
:
For the
applicant
:
M. Nowitz and C.
S. Barclay-Beuthin,
Instructed by
Dirk Kotze Inc.
For the
first respondent
:
P-S Bothma,
Instructed by
Abrahams &
Gross Inc.
[1]
[2004] 2 All SA 609
(SCA) at para [19].
[2]
[2009] ZAWCHC 167
(23 September 2009).
[3]
[1994] ZASCA 96
;
1994 (3) SA 673
(A) at 683H-I.
[4]
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA) at para [22].
[5]
4ed, Juta, 2012 at p 308.
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