Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 8South Africa
Bruwer N.O and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Phillip Fourie Family Trust (918/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 8; 2022 (6) SA 214 (WCC) (28 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
28 January 2022
Judgment
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## Bruwer N.O and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Phillip Fourie Family Trust (918/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 8; 2022 (6) SA 214 (WCC) (28 January 2022)
Bruwer N.O and Others v Trustees of the time being of the Phillip Fourie Family Trust (918/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 8; 2022 (6) SA 214 (WCC) (28 January 2022)
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sino date 28 January 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CIRCUIT LOCAL
DIVISION, GEORGE)
Case No: 918/2020
In
the matter between:
HENDRIK
BRUWER N.O
First Plaintiff
MARLISA
BRUWER
N.O.
Second
Plaintiff
JACO
VAN HEERDEN N.O.
Third Plaintiff
FRANCOIS
SLABBERT N.O.
Fourth Plaintiff
and
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE TIME BEING
OF
THE PHILLIP FOURIE FAMILY TRUST
Defendant
JUDGMENT
RE
DEFENDANT’S SPECIAL PLEA OF PRESCRIPTION:
DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY ON 28 JANUARY 2022
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The defendant has raised a special plea of
prescription against the plaintiffs’ particulars of claim which
was served on 8
July 2020. Neither party elected to lead evidence,
and the matter was set down for argument before me on 27 January
2022.
[2]
The plaintiffs’ claim is based on an
alleged repudiation of an oral agreement which was concluded in April
2016 at Knysna
between the plaintiffs’ trust (“
the
Bruwer Family Trust”
) and the
defendant (“
the Phillip Fourie
Family Trust”
).
It
is alleged that in terms of the oral agreement the Philip Fourie
Family Trust agreed to sell 10% of its shareholding in a company
called Motto Holdings (Pty) Ltd for a consideration of R1.2 million,
and that the parties would conclude a written deed of sale
of the
shares. Pending the conclusion of the written agreement the Bruwer
Family Trust was to make part-payment in respect of the
purchase
price of the shares.
[3]
According to the
plaintiffs’ particulars, the Bruwer Family Trust effected
various payments amounting to R808 273,66
to the Philip Family
Trust or to third parties nominated by the latter, in terms of the
oral agreement. The payments are indicated
in a schedule “A”
attached to the particulars. The plaintiffs further allege that the
Philip Fourie Family Trust repudiated
the oral agreement by
neglecting and or refusing to enter into a written agreement in
respect of the sale of shares within a reasonable
time,
notwithstanding written demand. As a result of the repudiation, the
plaintiffs accepted the repudiation and cancelled the
agreement on or
about 11 June 2019.
[4]
As a result of the
repudiation the plaintiffs seek repayment of the amount of
R808 273,66, alternatively damages for breach
of contract, and
in the further alternative, a claim of unjustified enrichment.
[5]
The basis for the
defendant's special plea is two-fold. First, the defendant points out
that the alleged oral agreement of April
2016 was entered into more
than three years prior to the summons being dated, issued and served
upon the defendants.
Secondly,
the defendant points out that, in terms of schedule “A”
the payments allegedly made by the plaintiffs in terms
of the oral
agreement were made in the period between 18 April 2016 and 6
February 2017. Since the summons was only served on 8
July 2020,
these amounts were also affected more than three years prior to the
issue of the summons.
B.
THE LAW
[6]
It
is settled law that a person invoking prescription bears a full
onus
to prove it. A defendant bears the full evidentiary burden to prove a
plea of prescription, including the date on which a plaintiff
obtained actual or constructive knowledge of the debt. The burden
shifts to the plaintiff only if the defendant has established
a prima
facie case.
[1]
[7]
The defendant's
special plea is based on
sections 10(1)
and
11
(d) of the
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
.
Section 10(1)
provides
“
Subject
to the provisions of this Chapter and of Chapter IV, a debt shall be
extinguished by prescription after the lapse of the
period which in
terms of the relevant law applies in respect of the prescription of
such debt.”
[8]
Section 11(d)
provides:
“
save
where an Act of Parliament provides otherwise, three years in respect
of any other debt.”
[9]
Another section that is relevant to
these proceedings is
section 12(1)
, which provides that, subject to
certain provisions which are not relevant to these proceedings,
prescription shall commence
to run as soon as the debt is due. And,
in terms of
section 12(3)
, a debt
shall
not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge of the
identity of the debtor and of the facts from which the debt
arises.
[10]
The
word “debt” does not refer to the “cause of
action”, but more generally to the claim, and accordingly,
in
deciding whether a ‘debt’ has become prescribed, one has
to identify the “debt”, or, put differently,
what the
“claim” was in the broad sense of the meaning of that
word.’
[2]
[11]
In
Makate
v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
[3]
the
Constitutional Court adopted the dictionary meaning ascribed to the
word ‘debt’ in the
Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary
[4]
,
and concluded
[5]
that a debt is:
[1]
something owed or due: something (as money, goods or services) which
one person is under an obligation to pay or render to another;
[2] A
liability or obligation to pay or render something; the condition of
being obligated
.’
[12]
There
have been different expressions of when a ‘debt is due’.
It has been said a ‘debt is due’ when it
is owing and
already payable or immediately claimable or immediately exigible at
the election of the creditor.
[6]
Put differently, there must be a debt in respect of which the debtor
is under an obligation to perform immediately.
[7]
It has also been said that a debt is due when the creditor acquires a
complete cause of action for the recovery of the debt, that
is, when
the entire set of facts which the creditor must prove in order to
succeed with his or her claim against the debtor is
in place or, in
other words, when everything has happened which would entitle the
creditor to institute action and to pursue his
or her claim.
[8]
[13]
Still,
there is a difference between when a debt comes into existence, and
when it becomes recoverable, although these dates may
coincide.
[9]
[14]
A
right to claim performance under a contract ordinarily becomes due
according to its terms or, if nothing is said, within a reasonable
time, which in appropriate circumstances, can be immediately.
[10]
[15]
As
it was put in
Munnikhuis
v Melamed
:
‘
If
a debtor fails or refuses to perform some time after the debt becomes
due, the failure or refusal does not give rise to
a fresh or
different debt
unless
the creditor then cancels the agreement
.
If the creditor does not, it remains entitled to sue for performance.
The breach of contract does not, however, create a new cause
of
action for specific performance. It may well create a new cause of
action for cancellation, and even for damages”.
[11]
C.
HAVE THE CLAIMS PRESCRIBED?
[16]
As I have already
indicated, the main relief sought by the plaintiff is restitution,
alternatively damages for breach of the oral
agreement, and in the
further alternative, a claim based on unjustified enrichment.
[17]
It
has been held
[12]
that
the
obligation to restore arises on cancellation of a contract as a
matter of law and the claim for restitution is a contractual
remedy.
Similarly,
the cause of action for damages resulting from the repudiation of an
obligation which was to be performed in terms of
the agreement only
accrues when the plaintiff elected to cancel the contract and to
treat it as at an end.
[13]
This much appears from the plaintiffs’ particulars, at any
rate, where it is stated that
the
damages claimed flow from the cancellation of the oral agreement
resulting from the breach of contract.
[18]
In
other words, in respect of the restitution and damages claims, a
'debt' within the contemplation of the
Prescription Act became
due
when the plaintiff elected to cancel the contract and to treat it as
at an end.
[14]
To put it
differently, the defendant’s “
debt
to
make restitution or to pay damages becomes due in terms of
s 12(1)
of
the
Prescription Act, when
the innocent party exercises his or her
election to accept the repudiation, rescind the contract and the
election is communicated
to the party who has repudiated”.
[15]
As Friedman J (as he then was) stated
[16]
:
“
The
purchaser's wrongful repudiation does not per se bring the contract
to an end. The seller is not obliged to accept it immediately;
he has
an election and may take a reasonable period of time in order to
decide whether to accept the purchaser's repudiation. During
that
time, i e until he has exercised his election, it is open to the
purchaser to retract his repudiation and tender performance
of his
obligations. It is only when the seller has exercised his election to
accept the repudiation that the contract is cancelled.
Only when the
date of cancellation has been crystallised can any question of
damages arise. It would be entirely artificial in
a case such as this
to assess the plaintiff's damages by reference to an anterior date,
viz the date of repudiation, on which date
the contract was still
alive and no claim for damages had yet arisen. It seems, moreover,
that those cases in which it has been
held that the decisive date is
the date of repudiation have proceeded on the unwarranted basis that
the innocent party is obliged
to accept the repudiation immediately,
which is clearly not so.”
[19]
Mr
McIntosh, representing the defendants, placed significant reliance on
the
Constitutional
Court
case
of
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty)
Limited
[17]
,
where the following was stated
[18]
:
“
A
further principle has been developed, based on policy considerations,
which provides that a creditor should not by his or her
own inaction
delay the running of prescription. This policy-based principle
appears to have influenced courts to accept as a general
rule that
all debts payable on demand are immediately enforceable on the
conclusion of the contract, and that it is at this point
that
prescription begins to run.”
[20]
However,
as Mr Van Der Merwe representing the plaintiffs correctly stated, the
facts of that case are distinguishable from the current
matter
because it was not dealing with restitution or restitutionary
damages, but with a written loan agreement which expressly
stated
that repayment was “due on demand”. In fact, the judgment
did not deal at all with the case law relating to
restitution and
restitutionary damages, and therefore cannot be read as changing the
state of the law with regard thereto. In any
event, a reading of the
remarks made by Mojapelo AJ in the
Trinity
judgment indicates that the Constitutional Court accepted that there
are instances in which the policy considerations concerning
an
inactive creditor will not avail a litigant. The instances mentioned
in Mojapelo AJ’s judgment are firstly the clear provisions
of
the
Prescription Act, and
secondly the intention of the parties
expressed in a contract.
[19]
I
do not understand these instances to constitute an exhaustive
list.
[20]
What is instructive
for the current case is that the plaintiff pertinently states in the
particulars that it accepted the repudiation
of the oral agreement,
and cancelled the agreement on 11 June 2019, which as I have already
indicated, is a necessary requirement
for a restitutionary claim.
This factor alone takes the factual circumstances of the present case
outside the realm of the discussion
of
Trinity
Asset management v Grindstone
case.
[21]
As regards the
further alternative claim of unjustified enrichment, it is pleaded in
general terms in the plaintiffs’ particulars
of claim, without
specifying the
condictiones
.
For its part the defendant’s special plea deals even more
generally with the plaintiffs’ claim in this regard, stating
that the “
plaintiffs’
claim has prescribed in its entirety”
,
without dealing specifically with the unjustified enrichment claim.
[22]
The
general rule is that prescription begins to run when a debtor
receives a benefit to which (s)he is not entitled, and the creditor
thereupon acquires the right to claim restitution.
[21]
However, prescription will not invariably begin to run as soon as
there is payment or performance without legal cause. Where the
payment or performance is made subject to a condition or
modus
which is not subsequently fulfilled the debt to make restitution only
becomes due when it is settled that the condition or
modus
will not be fulfilled and the prescription period begins to run from
that date.
[22]
In other words,
depending on the
condictiones
,
the due date of the debt for purposes of prescription may be
different. Given the general manner in which the defendant’s
special plea has dealt with the claim regarding unjustified
enrichment, I am not satisfied that it has discharged the
onus
to establish when the debt became due in respect of the unjustified
claim. But in any event, on the facts accepted in the special
plea,
it only became clear that the condition or
modus
agreed to between the parties would not be fulfilled when or after
the letter of cancellation was sent, namely on 11 June 2019.
That
moment could not have been at the point of the payments being made.
D.
ORDER
[23]
In the
result
the following order is made:
a.
The
defendant’s
special plea of prescription is
dismissed, with costs.
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiffs:
Adv
D van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Mr
D Barnard
Login-Martin
Attorneys Knysna
For
the Defendant:
Adv
B van Voller
Instructed
by:
Mr
Z McIntosh
McIntosh
Attorneys George
[1]
Macleod
v Kweyiya
[2013]
ZASCA 28
;
2013
(6) SA 1
(SCA)
para 10.
[2]
Drennan
Maud & Partners v Town Board of the Township Pennington
[1998]
ZASCA 29
;
1998
(3) SA 200
(SCA)
(212F-J).
[3]
Makate
v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZACC 13
;
2016
(4) SA 121
(CC)
para 87-93.
[4]
5ed
(1993).
[5]
See
paras 85-86.
[6]
See
Electricity
Supply Commission v Stewarts & Lloyds SA (Pty) Ltd
1979
(4) SA 905
(W)
at 908E;
Deloitte
Haskins & Sells Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Bowthorpe Hellerman
Deutsch (Pty) Ltd
[1990]
ZASCA 136
;
1991
(1) SA 525
(A)
at 532H.
## [7]Frieslaar
NO and Others v Ackerman and Another[2018] ZASCA 3 (2 February 2018) para [22].
[7]
Frieslaar
NO and Others v Ackerman and Another
[2018] ZASCA 3 (2 February 2018) para [22].
[8]
Truter
& another v Deysel
[2006]
ZASCA 16
;
2006
(4) SA 168
(SCA)
para 15.
[9]
List
v Jungers
1979
(3) SA 106
(A)
at 121C-D.
[10]
Munnikhuis
v Melamed NO
1998
(3) SA 873
(W)
at 887E-F;
M
M Loubser,
Extinctive
Prescription
(1996)
at 53
;
Hanuscke
Beleggings CC v Kungwini Local Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 112
para
13.
[11]
At
888A-B.
[12]
Baker
v Probert
1985
(3) SA 429
(A) at 438J-439C and 446E.
[13]
See authorities cited in
Cook
v Morrison and Another
(A5058/16) [2017] ZAGPJHC 330 (18 August 2017) at paras [32] –
[35]; See also
Pretorius
v Bedwell
(659 of 2020)
[2022] ZASCA 4
(11 January 2022) para [10].
## [14]Cook
v Morrison and Another(A5058/16) [2017] ZAGPJHC 330 (18 August 2017) para [30].
[14]
Cook
v Morrison and Another
(A5058/16) [2017] ZAGPJHC 330 (18 August 2017) para [30].
[15]
Cook
v
Morrison and Another
para
[35].
[16]
Quoted
with approval in
Culverwell
and Another v Brown
1990
(1) SA 7
(A), at 28A-F.
[17]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Limited v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty)
Limited
(CCCT248/16)
[2017] ZACC 32
;
2017 (12) BCLR 1562
(CC);
2018 (1) SA
94
(CC) (5 September 2017).
[18]
At
para [41]. See also paras [40] and [47] of that case.
[19]
See
paras [46] - [47].
[20]
See,
for example, Froneman J’s comments in the same judgment at
para [156].
## [21]Van
Staden vFourie(36/89)
[1989] ZASCA 36; [1989] 2 All SA 329 (A) (30 March 1989) at 215B-H.
[21]
Van
Staden v
Fourie
(36/89)
[1989] ZASCA 36; [1989] 2 All SA 329 (A) (30 March 1989) at 215B-H.
[22]
Van
Staden op cit
;
De Vos
Verrykingsaanspreeklikkeid
in die Suid Afrikaanse Reg
3 ed 1987 159-160.
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