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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Afgri Operations (Pty) Ltd v Oberholzer and Others (1306/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 6 (10 February 2022)
Afgri Operations (Pty) Ltd v Oberholzer and Others (1306/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 6 (10 February 2022)
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sino date 10 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: 1306/2020
In
the matter between:
AFGRI
OPERATIONS (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
JJ
OBERHOLZER
First Defendant
UITKYK
DIGGERS CC
Second Defendant
AM
KRIEL N.O
(In
her capacity as Trustee of the Hoop Familie Trust)
Third
Defendant
JP
KRIEL N.O
(In
his capacity as Trustee of the Hoop Familie Trust)
Fourth Defendant
HP
SWART N.O
(In
his capacity as Trustee of the Hoop Familie Trust)
Fifth Defendant
Bench:
P.A.L. Gamble
Heard:
9 November 2021
Delivered:
10 February 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email and release to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 12h00 on Thursday 10 February
2022.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an exception taken by the plaintiff
(“AFGRI”) to the plea and claim in reconvention filed
herein by the first
defendant (“Oberholzer”). The factual
background thereto, if just a little complex, is not particularly
controversial.
2.
On 28 November 2016, AFGRI concluded a
written agreement of sale (“the sale agreement”) with the
second defendant (“Diggers”)
in terms whereof it bought
certain agricultural land situated in the district of Caledon from
Diggers for the sum of R13 million.
This agreement is not in issue.
3.
On the same day, says AFGRI, it concluded a
further written agreement with Oberholzer (“the commission
agreement”),
in terms whereof it undertook to pay him agent’s
commission in the amount of R1 million in respect of the said sale to
it
by Diggers, on the basis that he had introduced the property to
AFGRI and was the effective cause of the sale.
4.
As will appear later, the structure, terms
and conditions of this agreement are in issue: Oberholzer contends
that there were terms
agreed orally in addition to those contained in
the written agreement, which AFGRI disputes. For the present,
however, I shall
refer only to the terms of the written agreement.
5.
The commission agreement provided for
payment to Oberholzer of the said sum of R1 million in two equal
tranches. The first tranche
of R500 000 was payable on the date
of signature of the sale agreement and was so paid by AFGRI to
Oberholzer, while the balance
of the commission was due by AFGRI upon
fulfilment of certain suspensive conditions stipulated in cl 8 of the
sale agreement.
6.
The second tranche of the commission was
never paid by AFGRI which alleged that it was not due in that certain
of the suspensive
conditions had not been met. Relying on an express
provision in the commission agreement to which reference shall be
made more
fully hereunder, AFGRI sought to recover the first tranche
from Oberholzer.
7.
When Oberholzer failed to repay the amount
claimed by AFGRI, it issued summons out of this court on 23 January
2020 for payment
of the sum of R500 000 together with interest
and costs. No relief was sought against Diggers which was joined in
the suit
only by virtue of its potential interest therein. The third
to fifth defendants – the trustees for the time-being
representing
the Hoop Familie Trust (“the Trust”) - were
similarly joined because of the Trust’s potential interest in
the
litigation. In this regard it was alleged by AFGRI that on 4
August 2017, it, Diggers and the Trust concluded a written addendum
to the sale agreement in terms whereof Diggers was substituted with
the Trust as the seller under the sale agreement.
8.
In April 2020 Oberholzer filed a plea to
AFGRI’s claims and elected to prefer a claim in reconvention
against it. AFGRI then
took exception to both the plea and the claim
in reconvention alleging that the former failed to disclose a defence
to its claim,
that the latter failed to disclose a cause of action
and that Oberholzer’s case, as a whole, was accordingly bad in
law.
The exception was heard virtually by this Court on 7 November
2021. Before considering the various pleadings relevant to the
exception
I shall briefly deal with the approach thereto.
THE
APPROACH ON EXCEPTION
9.
The
principles as to the adjudication of an exception are by now trite.
In the present circumstances, the factual averments made
in the plea
and claim in reconvention are to be taken as being correct unless
they are so improbable that they cannot be accepted.
[1]
The test to be applied to those averments is whether on all possible
readings of such facts no cause of action is made out.
[2]
It is for AFGRI to further satisfy the court that the conclusions of
law for which Oberholzer contends in his plea and claim
in
reconvention, cannot be supported on every interpretation that can be
placed on the facts
[3]
. In this
regard, an excipient is confined to the complaint contained in the
notice of exception.
[4]
10.
That having been said, there is a subtle
difference between the adjudication of an exception to a party’s
particulars of claim
and a plea and claim in reconvention.
“
It
seems clear that the function of a well-founded exception that a
plea, or part thereof, does not disclose a defence to the plaintiff’s
cause of action is to dispose of the case in whole or in part. It is
for this reason that exception cannot be taken to a part of
a plea
unless it is self-contained, amounts to a separate defence, and can
therefore be struck out without affecting the remainder
of the plea…
It
has also been said that the main purpose of an exception that a
declaration does not disclose a cause of action is to avoid the
leading of unnecessary evidence at trial… Save for exceptional
cases, such as those where a defendant admits the plaintiff’s
allegations but pleads that as a matter of law the plaintiff is not
entitled to the relief claimed by him… an exception
to a plea
should consequently also not be allowed unless, if upheld, it would
obviate the leading of ‘unnecessary’
evidence.”
[5]
11.
When dealing with an exception based on an
alleged failure to disclose a cause of action, the court will
consider whether the pleading
in question either expressly or by
implication alleges –
“…
(E)very
fact which it would be necessary for the [defendant] to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right to the judgment
of the
Court. It does not comprise every piece of evidence which is
necessary to prove each fact but every fact which is necessary
to be
proved.”
[6]
12.
Finally,
in order to succeed with an exception that a cause of action has not
been disclosed, it must be shown that
ex
facie
the
allegations made by Oberholzer (and any document upon which his cause
of action may be based), the claim in reconvention is
in fact bad in
law: it is not sufficient that it may be construed to be bad in
law.
[7]
THE
SUSPENSIVE CONDITIONS CONTAINED IN THE SALE AGREEMENT
13.
Cl
8 of the sale agreement contains the stipulated suspensive
conditions.
[8]
Accordingly, the
property was required to be subdivided and rezoned to Business Zone 3
by 15 August 2017, failing which the sale
would be regarded as
cancelled. In such event, any amounts paid by AFGRI to Diggers under
the sale agreement were to be immediately
repaid to it, together with
interest thereon.
OTHER
MATERIAL CLAUSES IN THE SALE AGREEMENT
14.
Cl
9 of the sale agreement provides that Diggers was responsible for
certain of the costs associated with the sale, including the
cost of
subdivision and rezoning of the property. Further, the parties agreed
to draw up an alternative deed of sale of the property
after its
subdivision in the event that the Registrar of Deeds required
same.
[9]
15.
Cl
7 of the sale agreement is claimed by AFGRI to constitute the
customary so-called “sole memorial clause” which is
intended to confirm that the terms contained in the sale agreement
are the only record of the parties’ agreement.
[10]
Oberholzer says that cl 7 is grammatically incomprehensible and falls
to be regarded as
pro
non scripto.
The
reason for that will become apparent later.
THE
COMMISSION AGREEMENT
16.
As
prefaced above, the commission agreement records that Oberholzer was
the effective cause of the sale of the property by Diggers
to AFGRI
and that he was thus entitled to commission of R1m payable by AFGRI,
with the second tranche of R500 000 payable
upon fulfilment of
the suspensive conditions recorded in cl 8 of the sale agreement. In
the event that these conditions were not
complied with, Oberholzer
was obliged forthwith to repay to AFGRI any monies already paid to
him under their agreement and was
precluded from recovering any
further amounts from AFGRI. The commission agreement also expressly
records that it was subject to
the terms and conditions contained in
the sale agreement.
[11]
OBERHOLZER’S
CASE
17.
In his claim in reconvention, Oberholzer
incorporates the entire contents of para 6 of his plea to AFGRI’s
claim in convention
and asks for an order declaring that the
suspensive conditions in cl 8 of the sale agreement be deemed to have
been fulfilled and
that AFGRI be ordered to pay to him the second
tranche of the commission (R500 00) together with interest and costs.
18.
The allegations made in para 6 of
Oberholzer’s plea are thus the foundation of his case both in
convention and reconvention
and must be cited in full.
“
6.
AD PARAGRAPHS 9 TO 11, AND 15 TO 20 (including all subparagraphs)
- First
Defendant avers that:
First
Defendant avers that:
6.1.1
on or about 2008 November 2016 and at or near Centurion,
alternatively Caledon Plaintiff, duty represented by P. Roux and
First Defendant, acting personally, concluded a partly written,
partly oral agreement (‘the commission agreement’)
in
terms whereof, inter alia, First Defendant would be engaged and
entitled to oversee and be involved in the steps required to
attain
fulfillment of the suspensive conditions contained in enclosed 8 of
the agreement of sale, annexure ‘
AFGRI 1
’;
6.1.2
A copy of the written part of the commission agreement is annexed to
the particulars of claim, marked ‘
AFGRI 2
’, the
content whereof is incorporated as if separately set out herein,
which contains the express provisions of the commission
agreement;
6.1.3
the further express, alternatively tacit, alternatively implied terms
of the commission agreement were that Plaintiff would:
6.1.3.1
not be entitled to resile from or cancel the agreement
of sale unless
and/or until the period for fulfillment of the suspensive conditions
had expired;
6.1.3.2
not be entitled to prevent the fulfillment of the suspensive
conditions;
6.1.3.3
remain liable to First Defendant for payment of the commission
payable in the event of Plaintiff failing to comply with
the terms
pleaded in par 6.1.3.1 and 6.1.3.2 above;
6.1.4
on or about 4 August 2017 and at or near Centurion, Plaintiff and
Second Defendant to Fifth Defendant concluded a written
addendum to
the agreement of sale, as reflected in a copy thereof, annexure
‘Afgri3’ to the particulars of claim, the
content whereof
is incorporated, as if separately set out herein (‘the
addendum’);
6.1.5
in terms of the addendum the 9 (NINE) month
period for fulfillment of
the suspensive conditions in terms of clause 8 of the agreement of
sale was abolished, but the provisions
of clause 8 of the agreement
of sale otherwise remained the same;
6.1.6
despite First Defendant’s continuous endeavour to procure the
fulfillment of the suspensive conditions, and prior to
fulfillment
thereof, Plaintiff, acting in breach of the commission agreement:
6.1.6.1
cancelled the agreement of sale; and/or
6.1.6.2
prevented the fulfillment of the suspensive conditions;
6.1.7
alternatively, and in any event:
6.1.7.1
Plaintiff bought other immovable property;
6.1.7.2
Plaintiff intentionally prevented the fulfillment of the suspensive
condition, by resiling from the agreement of sale prior
to
fulfillment thereof;
6.1.7.3
in view of Plaintiff’s intentional prevention of
the
fulfillment thereof, the suspensive conditions are deemed to have
been fulfilled;
6.1.8
In the premises, First Defendant is entitled to:
6.1.8.1
retain the amount of R 500 000, 00 paid to him;
6.1.8.2
payment of the balance in the amount of R 500 000,00 which
is due and
payable by Plaintiff.
6.2
Subject to the aforegoing:
6.2.1
First Defendant admits that he did not repay any money to Plaintiff;
6.2.2
each and every allegation by Plaintiff is denied, as if separately
traversed, in particular, that Plaintiff is entitled to
repayment of
any money and Plaintiff is put to the proof thereof.”
THE
ADDENDUM TO THE SALE AGREEMENT
19.
In para 6.1.4 of his plea to the claim in
convention, Oberholzer references the aforesaid addendum to the sale
agreement, Annexure
“AFGR 3” to the particulars of claim
herein. This is a tripartite agreement dated 7 August 2017 in which
AFGRI, Diggers
and the Trust agreed to the substitution of the Trust
as the seller of the property in the place of Diggers through the
cession
of the sale agreement to the Trust.
20.
The
addendum records that the original sale agreement had been concluded
in November 2017 (sic)
[12]
and
that fulfilment of the two suspensive conditions contained therein
within the agreed 9 month period had not been possible but
that it
was the intention of the parties that the terms of the sale agreement
were to remain in force.
[13]
The parties further confirmed that the Trust had in the interim taken
transfer of the property from Diggers and that AFGRI had
agreed to
such transfer being effected subject thereto that the sale agreement
would be ceded by Diggers to the Trust. In light
thereof the parties
intended to make certain consequential amendments to the sale
agreement.
21.
The
parties to the addendum agreed that the sale agreement be
supplemented by the inclusion of an additional clause therein which
recorded the cession of the sale agreement from Diggers to the
Trust.
[14]
The effect of this
cession agreement was thus (i) to place the Trust in the shoes of
Diggers, (ii) to preserve all of AFGRI’s
rights under the sale
agreement and (iii) to oblige the Trust to fulfill Diggers’
extant
obligations
thereunder to AFGRI.
22.
The parties to the addendum agreed further
that cl 2.1 of the sale agreement be varied to record that 10% of the
purchase price
of the property (R1,3m) had been deposited into the
business account of attorneys PJ Rust (who apparently acted for the
Trust)
upon signature of the addendum and that the said sum would be
transferred to the attorneys’ trust account where it would
attract interest. In addition, cl 4 of the sale agreement was amended
to provide for transfer of the property by Guthrie and Rushton
Attorneys as soon as possible after the successful subdivision and
rezoning thereof.
23.
Cl
8 of the sale agreement was subjected to significant reconstruction
by virtue of the addendum.
[15]
In the circumstances, it was recorded that –
·
Diggers and the Trust would continue with
the necessary steps to effect subdivision and rezoning of the
property;
·
The transfer of the property to AFGRI would
take place as soon as possible after the successful subdivision and
rezoning of the
property;
·
AFGRI would be entitled to take the
necessary steps on behalf of Diggers and the Trust in the event that
it considered that either
of those parties was not acting in good
faith;
·
In such event, AFGRI would be entitled to
take the necessary steps itself to procure the subdivision and
rezoning of the property.
24.
Lastly,
the addendum reflected the parties’ recordal that they had read
(and understood) the terms and conditions of the addendum
and
confirmed that they regarded themselves as bound thereby. Further,
the parties agreed that the contents of the addendum could
be
disclosed to all relevant third parties prior to the signature
thereof.
[16]
25.
The addendum did not deal with Oberholzer’s
role in the introduction of the property to AFGRI and his entitlement
to commission
in respect of the original sale between it and Diggers,
but in practical terms, the conclusion of the addendum did not affect
the
basis of the legal relationship between Oberholzer and AFGRI. He
continued to be regarded as the effective cause of the sale, having
introduced AFGRI to the property, prior to the transfer of ownership
to the trust. Similarly, Oberholzer’s entitlement to
the agreed
commission (and the payment thereof in two tranches) continued to be
dependent on the fulfilment of the suspensive conditions.
THE
GROUNDS OF EXCEPTION
26.
Alleging that Oberholzer’s plea and
claim in reconvention failed to disclose a defence and/or cause of
action and were thus
bad in law, AFGRI set forth its detailed grounds
of exception as follows:
“
1.
In paragraph 2 of the First Defendant’s Counterclaim, he
incorporates by way of reference, the content of paragraph 6 of
his
Plea (including all subparagraphs) in which he pleads as follows:
1.1
The Plaintiff and the First Defendant
concluded a
part (sic) written, part
oral Commission Agreement
in terms of
which the First Defendant was appointed and ‘
entitled
to oversee and be involved in the steps required to attain fulfilment
of the suspensive conditions, contained in clause
8 of the Agreement
of Sale.’
1.2
That, despite the First Defendant’s
endeavours to procure the fulfillment of the suspensive condition
contained in paragraph
8 of the Agreement of Sale and before the
fulfilment thereof, the Plaintiff, breached the Commission Agreement
by preventing the
fulfillment of the aforesaid suspensive condition
and as a result, the First Defendant became entitled [to] payment of
his commission.
2.
The First Defendant’s Plea and Counterclaim fail to disclose a
defence or cause of action and is (sic) bad in law for the
following
reasons:
2.1
The Commission Agreement specifically stipulates that the agreement
is subject to all terms and conditions contained in the
Agreement of
Sale.
2.2
The Agreement of Sale has the following material and express terms:
2.2.1
No representations made for or on behalf of the parties unless
recorded in the agreement will be of any force and effect and
the
agreement constitutes the whole of the agreement between the parties
relating to the matter.
[17]
2.2.2
The Seller will be responsible for the fulfillment of the suspensive
condition in clause 8 and all costs associated with the
fulfillment
of such condition.
[18]
2.3
The written part of the Commission Agreement relied upon by the First
Defendant does not place any responsibility for fulfillment
of the
suspensive condition in paragraph 8 on the Plaintiff or the First
Defendant and specifically records that the agreement
is subject to
the terms and conditions of the Agreement of Sale which requires of
the Seller to fulfil the said suspensive condition.
[19]
2.4
The version of the Commission Agreement pleaded by the First
Defendant is contrary to the express written terms of the Commission
Agreement and is therefore inadmissible.
3.
The First Defendant’s Counterclaim further lacks the necessary
allegations to sustain a cause of action and is bad in law
for the
following further reasons:
3.1
The First Defendant wants to blame the Plaintiff for the fact that
the suspensive condition in paragraph 8 of the Agreement
of Sale was
not fulfilled;
3.2
The First Defendant seeks an order declaring the suspensive
conditions contained in clause 8 of the Agreement of Sale to be
deemed to have been fulfilled based on the doctrine of fictional
fulfillment.
3.3
For the First Defendant to make the necessary allegations to sustain
a cause of action he had to plead:
3.3.1
That the Plaintiff, intentionally and deliberately committed and
(sic) act to prevent the Seller from fulfilling the suspensive
condition contained in clause 8 of the Agreement of Sale in order to
escape its obligations in terms of the Agreement of Sale;
3.3.2
That the Plaintiff breached the Agreement of Sale by preventing the
Seller from fulfilling the suspensive condition in paragraph
8 of the
Agreement;
3.3.3
That a breach notice was issued to the Plaintiff by the Seller which
required, the Plaintiff to cease its alleged unlawful
conduct and
that the Plaintiff, notwithstanding such notice, refused to comply
with such demand with the result that the Agreement
of Sale was
cancelled.
4.
Absent the aforesaid allegations, the First Defendant’s
Counterclaim lacks the necessary allegations to sustain a cause
of
action and are excipiable.”
UNDERSTANDING
OBERHOLZER’S CASE
27.
What
do the pleadings tell us? It is common cause that on 28 November 2016
AFGRI agreed to pay Oberholzer R1m by way of commission
for his role
in introducing it to the property: the preamble to the commission
agreement makes the customary allegations seen in,
for example,
estate agency claims that the agent was exclusively responsible for
introducing AFGRI to the property.
[20]
28.
Pursuant to that commission agreement,
AFGRI paid Oberholzer R500 000 upon signature of the sale
agreement with Diggers and
he was entitled to payment of the second
tranche of R500 000 when the property had been subdivided and
rezoned. The latter
process was to be completed within 9 months (i.e.
27 August 2017), failing which Oberholzer would be obliged to repay
the sum of
R500 000 to AFGRI. The contemplated subdivision and
rezoning did not take place within the stipulated period and when he
failed
to do so, AFGRI sued Oberholzer for repayment of the first
tranche.
29.
Oberholzer’s stance is that he is
entitled to the proverbial “money and the box”. In
advancing a defence to AFGRI’s
claim for repayment of the first
tranche and in seeking to justify his entitlement to avoid repaying
the sum of R500 000, Oberholzer
claims that the written commission
agreement upon which AFGRI relies for repayment of the first tranche
was not the full extent
of the agreement which the parties had
concluded. He refers to an alleged oral component of the written
commission agreement concluded
contemporaneously with the written
document in which he claims he was appointed to “oversee and be
involved in the steps
required” to procure the subdivision and
rezoning of the property. He further relies on express, alternatively
tacit, alternatively
implied terms of the commission agreement viewed
as a whole (i.e. the written agreement and the oral portion thereof)
which impinged
on AFGRI’s rights and obligations under the sale
agreement.
30.
And then, in advancing his claim in
reconvention, Oberholzer lays claim to the second tranche on the
basis of the doctrine of fictional
fulfilment. He says that AFGRI
frustrated the fulfilment of the commission agreement (comprising
both the written and alleged oral
components) and that he is
therefore entitled to demand payment of the balance of R500 000
from it. The first question that
then arises is whether it is open to
Oberholzer to rely on any terms concluded orally which seek to
supplement the express terms
of the written agreement.
OBERHOLZER’S
RELIANCE ON TERMS CONCLUDED ORALLY
31.
The commission agreement, unlike the sale
agreement which is bound to be in writing by virtue of the provisions
of the Alienation
of Land Act 71 of 1969, was not required in law to
be reduced to writing. In the circumstances, it is generally open to
the parties
to an agency agreement for the payment of commission, to
reduce part of their agreement to writing and further rely on terms
concluded
orally (commonly referred to as ‘parol evidence’
or ‘extrinsic evidence’). I say generally, because if the
parties intended that the written document was intended to constitute
the exclusive recordal of their agreement – applying
the
so-called “integration rule”- oral terms are not
permissible in addition to the written terms.
32.
In
Johnston
[21]
Corbett JA explained the position as follows in circumstances where a
written agreement for the sale of land contained certain
blank spaces
which the parties had omitted to complete.
“
Dealing
first with the integration rule, it is clear to me that the aim and
effect of this rule is to prevent a party to a contract
which is
being integrated into a single and complete written memorial from
seeking to contradict, add to or modify the writing
by reference to
extrinsic evidence and in that way to redefine the terms of the
contract. The object of the party seeking to adduce
such extrinsic
evidence is usually to enforce the contract as redefined or, at any
rate, to rely upon the contractual force of
the additional varied
terms, as established by the extrinsic evidence. On the other hand,
in the case such as the present, where
ex
facie
, the document itself the contract
appears to be incomplete, the object of leading extrinsic evidence is
not to contradict, add
to or modify the written document or to
complete what is incomplete so that the contract may be enforced thus
completed, but merely
to explain the lack of completeness, to decide
why the parties left blanks in a particular clause and what the
integration actually
comprises, and in this way to determine whether
or not the document constitutes a valid and enforceable contract that
is in conformity
with s1(1) of the [Alienation of Land] Act.
Consequently, it does not seem to me that the admission of such
extrinsic evidence
for this purpose in a case of the kind presently
under consideration would be either contrary to the substance of the
integration
rule or likely to defeat its objects. To sum up,
therefore, the integration rule prevents a party from altering, by
the production
of extrinsic evidence, the recorded terms of an
integrated contract in order to rely upon the contract as altered;
the evidence
which it is suggested could be adduced in this case
would be to explain an overt lack of completeness of the document and
at the
same time to determine what has been integrated with the view
to deciding upon the validity of the document as it stands.”
33.
The erstwhile learned Judge of Appeal
continued as follows at 944B –
“…
(I)n
my view, an instructive and relevant analogy is provided by cases of
what is termed a ‘partial integration’. Where
a written
contract is not intended by the parties to be the exclusive memorial
of the whole of their agreement but merely to record
portion of the
agreed transaction, leaving the remainder as an oral agreement, then
the integration rule merely prevents the admission
of extrinsic
evidence to contradict or vary the written portion; it does not
preclude proof of the additional or supplemental oral
agreement…
The question as to whether a written contract constitutes an
integration of the whole agreement or merely a partial
integration is
one which depends on the intention of the parties.”
34.
One
way to ensure that a written agreement complies with the integration
rule and is thus to be regarded as the parties’ “exclusive
memorial” is to include in the written instrument a so-called
“sole memorial clause” thus bringing the document
in
question strictly within the ambit of the integration rule. In such
event the written document would, for example, deprive all
previous
statements of their legal effect
[22]
and the parties would be bound by the four corners of such document.
35.
Consideration of the written commission
agreement relied upon by AFGRI (Annexure AFGR 2 to the particulars of
claim) makes plain
that there is no sole memorial clause recorded in
the document. As such, Oberholzer would be entitled to rely on the
oral terms
contended for in para 6.1 of his plea, provided they do
not conflict with the written terms. Indeed, there does not appear to
be
any such conflict on the pleadings as they stand. While the sale
agreement provides that Diggers will pay the costs associated with
subdivision and rezoning of the property, it does not stipulate which
party is responsible for undertaking the work associated
therewith.
Rather, Oberholzer contends for an expanded version of the clause
which placed the duty of procuring subdivision and
rezoning of the
property at least in part at his door.
36.
The addendum to the sale agreement
(concluded on 2 August 2017 and shortly before the deadline for
compliance with the suspensive
conditions set out in cl 8) makes
express reference to the fact that cl 8 was varied to record that
Diggers and the Trust would
continue to undertake the necessary steps
relevant to the subdivision and rezoning and, further, in the event
that they did not
do so in good faith, AFGRI would be entitled to
step in and take such steps itself. This provision, too, would not be
in conflict
with the oral agreement contended for by Oberholzer.
37.
Counsel
for AFGRI argued that the term in the commission agreement which
sought to incorporate the terms and conditions of the sale
agreement
[23]
(and which for
the sake of convenience will be referred to as “the last
term”), effectively incorporated the provisions
of cl 7 thereof
(“HELE OOREENKOMS”
[24]
)
and that the commission agreement was thus hit by the integration
rule.
38.
Counsel for Oberholzer, on the other hand,
contended that the loose translation of cl 7 set forth in para 2.2.1
of the notice of
exception was inaccurate and misleading. Counsel
further submitted that the said cl 7 is unintelligible and thus
unenforceable.
Consequently, it was argued that the commission
agreement contained no sole memorial clause and that it was open to
Oberholzer
to adduce the extrinsic evidence contended for in as much
as this did not contradict the terms of Annexure AFGRI 2.
39.
While I agree that the translation of cl 7
set out in the particulars of claim is inaccurate and potentially
misleading, I do not
believe that it is open to Oberholzer to
blithely argue that cl 7 is to be disregarded. Self-evidently the
clause does not make
grammatical sense: it has been clumsily put
together and there would appear to be at least a verb or two and
possibly other words
missing therein to make it fully comprehensible.
On the other hand, AFGRI has not sought to rectify cl 7 to give it
clear grammatical
meaning and the clause thus remains garbled, to say
the least.
40.
While the clause does record that the
written document constitutes the entire agreement concluded, it is
incapable of proper comprehension
in the language in which it is
cast, and even more so, difficult to translate into English due to
the missing words. That notwithstanding,
the trial court will have to
do its best to understand, firstly, what the parties to the sale
agreement intended to convey through
the use of cl 7, and, once that
has been done, to establish whether it was the intention of the
parties to the commission agreement
to import the meaning thus
attributable to cl 7, into their contract.
41.
The
current approach to contractual interpretation has regard, inter
alia, to a particular term’s contextual setting
[25]
and it is thus impermissible to peer at words in isolation or to
disregard terms simply because they have been poorly drafted.
It is
said that “context is all” and that this necessitates a
“unitary endeavour requiring the consideration
of text, context
and purpose”
[26]
. Such
an approach might include having regard to the heading given to cl
7
[27]
, which, together with
the last phrase therein, is manifestly intended to suggest that the
sale agreement is the exclusive recordal
of the terms related to the
sale of the property, in which event the integration rule would
apply. But, at the end of the day,
there is no longer any debate that
a court interpreting the sale agreement would be entitled to receive
viva
voce
evidence
to place cl 7 in its proper contractual setting to determine whether
it is a sole memorial clause or not.
42.
The same approach applies to the last term
in the commission agreement. I agree with counsel for Oberholzer that
the incorporation
holus bolus
of the terms in the sale agreement into the commission agreement does
not appear to make commercial sense – particularly
since the
agreements (including the addendum) were concluded by AFGRI with
disparate parties unrelated to each other. In my view,
therefore,
Oberholzer would be entitled to ask the trial court to receive oral
evidence to provide background and context to the
last term in the
commission agreement, which is, in my view, otherwise beset by
uncertainty.
43.
I
make these findings, not to bind the trial court to receive such
evidence, but simply to keep the door open for Oberholzer to
move the
court to do so should he be so minded. And I do so, too, because I am
satisfied that Oberholzer is entitled to argue on
exception for a
wide and charitable interpretation of the cause of action advanced in
his plea and claim in reconvention.
[28]
44.
In the result, I conclude that Oberholzer’s
contention for a commission agreement which was partly written and
partly oral
is not legally objectionable and therefore not
excipiable.
FICTIONAL
FULFILMENT
45.
The
doctrine of fictional fulfilment has been the subject of much
analysis by the leading South African writers on the law of
contract.
[29]
Generally
speaking, it finds application where a debtor-party is precluded by
the creditor-party to a contract from fulfilling
its obligations
under the agreement and seeks to rely on the creditor’s
wrongful conduct as a lawful excuse for failing to
discharge its
obligations.
[30]
Applied to
the present case, the enquiry is then whether Oberholzer can seek to
be excused from his obligation under the commission
agreement to
repay the first tranche to AFGRI through reliance of AFGRI’s
allegedly unlawful conduct in failing to fulfill
the suspensive
conditions i.e. by failing to procure the subdivision and rezoning of
the property timeously, or at all, and subsequently
concluding a new
agreement of sale with the Trust, ostensibly to the exclusion of
Oberholzer.
46.
In
Academy of
Learning
Brand J, with reference to
certain passages in the third edition of Christie, suggested the
following approach –
“
[33]
As I see the legal position… a debtor can rely on the
creditor’s wrongful conduct as an excuse for his/her failure
to
perform if the facts of the case fall within the ambit of one or more
of the following broad categories:
(a)
Where the wrongful conduct of the creditor
made performance by the debtor impossible (see, for example,
National
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Leon Levson Studios Ltd
1913
AD 213
; De Wet and Yeats
Kontrakte en
Handelsreg
5
th
ed at 175). I believe, however, that this situation constitutes the
defence of supervening of impossibility. In order to succeed
with
this defence, the debtor must prove that his/her performance became
objectively, and not merely subjectively, impossible.
(See, for
example,
Hersman v Shapiro & Co
1926
TPD 367
;
Yodaiken v Angehrn and Piel
1914 TPD 254
and Lubbe and Murray
Farlam and Hathaway Contracts: Cases,
Materials and Commentary
3
rd
ed T 770.)
(b)
Where the creditor’s wrongful conduct
can be ascribed to a
deliberate
intention
on his/her part to prevent
performance by the debtor. This is the type of situation which is
analogous to fictional fulfilment
of a condition. (See, for example,
Koenig v Johnson & Co Ltd
1935
AD 262
at 273;
Scott and Another v
Poupard and Another
1971 (2) SA 373
(A);
Design and Planning Service v
Kruger
1974 (1) SA 689
(T) at 699-700.)
(c)
Where the creditor’s conduct
complained of by the debtor in itself constituted a breach of an
express or implied term of the
agreement. This is the type of
situation where the creditor expressly or impliedly bound him/herself
‘to carry out the necessary
preliminaries which rest upon him’
(
Christie (op cit
at
550); see also, for example,
Design and
Planning Services
(
supra
at 695C-E)) or to ‘do nothing of his own motion to put an end
to that state of circumstances under which alone the arrangement
can
be operative’. (
Christie
(
op
cit
at 550).) The latter example given
by the learned author
Christie
must, however, be understood in the context of the quotation where it
comes from, namely from the
dictum
by
Cockburn CJ in the case of
William
Stirling the Younger v Boyd & Maitland
5
Best & Smith 840, which was referred to with approval by Searle
JP in the case relied upon by Christie, namely
Truter
v Hancke
1923 CPD 43
at 50. This
dictum
by Cockburn CJ reads as follows:
‘
If
a party enters into an arrangement which can only take effect by the
continuance of a certain existing state of circumstances,
there is an
implied engagement on his part that he should do nothing of his own
motion to put an end to that state of circumstances
under which
learning the arrangement can be operative.’ “
47.
The reference by Brand J to
Design
and Planning
concerned a case in which
Botha J discussed (at 695C – F) the import of so-called
suspensive conditions in a contract and
contrasted them with the
ordinary terms therein. On the strength of that analysis it seems to
me that we are dealing here with
a suspensive condition properly
so-called: the operation of the contract for the transfer of the
property was held in abeyance
pending the subdivision and rezoning
thereof. And, if I am wrong in that regard, I shall assume for
present purposes that we are
indeed dealing with a condition in a
contract the operation whereof is suspended pending the outcome of a
defined event within
a stipulated time.
48.
Botha J goes on to consider the doctrine of
fictional fulfillment and says the following at 699H –
“
A
perusal of the well-known cases dealing with the fictional fulfilment
of a condition reveals that the mere intentional frustration
of the
fulfilment of the condition, per se, does not bring into operation
the doctrine of fictional fulfilment;
something
more is required
. The additional
requirement has not always been expressed in the same terms. In some
judgments the element of
dolus
in the wide sense has been stressed; in others, the emphasis has been
placed on the element of the lack of good faith; and in some
cases
the breach of a duty on the part of the party sought to be bound has
been placed in the forefront… For purposes of
the present
case, however, it is not necessary to discuss the differences in
phraseology or of emphasis, appearing in the authorities…
After
all, the doctrine of the fictional fulfilment of a condition is an
equitable doctrine, based on the fundamental rule that
a party cannot
take advantage of his own default, to the loss or injury of another.”
(Emphasis added)
49.
Since
the judgment in
Design
and Planning
our law of contract has evolved significantly within the
constitutional era. In
Barkhuizen
[31]
Ngcobo J articulated the approach thus.
“
[35]
Under our legal order all law derives its force from the Constitution
and is thus subject to constitutional control. Any law
that is
inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid. No law is immune from
constitutional control. The common law of contract
is no exception.
And courts have a constitutional obligation to develop the common
law, including the principles of the law of
contract, so as to bring
it in line with the values that underlie our Constitution. When
developing the common law of contract,
courts are required to do so
in a manner that ‘promotes the spirit, purport and objects of
the Bill of Rights’. (Internal
references omitted)
50.
So, as
Barkhuizen
demonstrates, the determination of, for example, public policy
considerations in the law of contract will be rooted in the
Constitution.
“
[29]
What public policy is and whether a term in a contract is contrary to
public policy must now be determined by reference to
the values that
underlie our constitutional democracy as given expression by the
provisions of the Bill of Rights. Thus a term
in a contract that is
inimical to the values enshrined in our Constitution is contrary to
public policy and is, therefore, unenforceable.”
51.
And,
as the majority judgment in
Brisley
[32]
demonstrates, the ‘
element
of the lack of good faith
’
referred to by Botha J as a consideration in the application of the
doctrine of fictional fulfilment has been developed
at least in
accordance with the approach advocated by Prof. Hutchison in an
article in the South African Law Journal and cited
with approval by
the majority of the court in
Brisley
[33]
.
“
What
emerges quite clearly from recent academic writing and from some of
the leading cases, is that good faith may be regarded as
an ethical
value or controlling principle based on community standards of
decency and fairness that underlies and informs the substantive
law
of contract. It finds expression in various technical rules and
doctrines, defines their form, content and field of application
and
provides them with a moral and theoretical foundation. Good faith
thus has a creative, a controlling and a legitimating or
explanatory
function. It is not, however, the only value or principle that
underlies the law of contract; nor, perhaps, even the
most important
one.”
No
doubt the ‘community standards of decency and fairness’
referred to by the learned professor will also be determined
with
reference to the Bill of Rights.
EVALUATING
THE RELEVANT ALLEGATIONS IN THE PLEA AND CLAIM IN RECONVENTION
52.
In support of the application of the
doctrine of fictional fulfilment, Oberholzer has, inter alia, pleaded
in para 6.1.7.2 of his
plea that AFGRI intentionally prevented the
fulfilment of the suspensive condition in the sale agreement but has
not averred
dolus
on
the part of AFGRI. As
Design and
Planning
holds, while it obviously may
do so, it is not necessary for a party claiming fictional fulfilment
to go so far as establishing
dolus
on the part of the other party to succeed in its claim. It may, for
instance, succeed by demonstrating a lack of good faith on
the part
of the counter-party as constituting “something more”.
53.
The
complaint in the notice of exception that Oberholzer’s failure
to plead “
an
intentional and deliberate failure
”
is fatal to his case does not, in my view, withstand scrutiny.
Firstly, the phrase is manifestly tautologous.
[34]
But, in any event, Oberholzer has buttressed his claim of intentional
conduct on the part of AFGRI with reference to facts which
he says
are sufficient to permit the operation of the doctrine. So, for
instance, he alleges a breach of the alleged implied terms
in the
commission agreement in paras 6.1.3.1 – 6.1.3.3 of his plea,
thus bringing the claim within the ambit of the doctrine
as discussed
in by Brand J in
Academy
of Learning
at [33](c). Further, in para 6.1.7 of his plea, Oberholzer refers to
facts which he alleges demonstrate the requisite intention
on the
part of AFGRI, so as to sustain reliance of the doctrine of fictional
fulfilment. These allegations (pithy as they might
be) suggest an
intention to present evidence in support of application of the
doctrine.
CONCLUSION
54.
In the circumstances, and applying the
generous approach to the reading of the pleadings and the alleged
facts that I am obliged
to, I am driven to conclude that Oberholzer’s
case is not bad in law and that the necessary allegations to sustain
his plea
and claim in reconvention have been made. The exception must
thus fail.
ORDER
OF COURT
Accordingly,
it is ordered that the plaintiff’s exception be dismissed with
costs.
GAMBLE,
J
APPEARANCES
For
the plaintiff:
Ms. M.
van der Westhuizen
Instructed
by Gildenhuys Malatji Inc.
Pretoria
c/o
Bisset
Boehmke Mc Blain
Cape
Town.
For
the first defendant: Mr. W. Pretorius,
with
Ms. A
Oosthuizen
Instructed
by
Hannes
Pretorius, Bock and Bryant
Somerset
West
c/o
MacGregor Stanford Kruger
Cape
Town.
[1]
Voget
and others v Kleynhans
2003
(2) SA 148
(C) at 151H
[2]
Lewis v
Oneanate (Pty) Ltd and another
[1992] ZASCA 174
;
1992 (4) SA 811
(A) at 817 F
[3]
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Children’s Resource Centre Trust and
others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and others
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA) at [36]
[4]
Alphina
Investments Ltd v Blacher
2008 (5) SA 479
(C) at 483D
[5]
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v Thompson
1989 (1) SA 547
(A) at 553F - I
[6]
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-Operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23.
[7]
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd
2001 (3) SA 986
(SCA) at 997B.
[8]
“
8.
OPSKORTENDE
VOORWAARDES
Hierdie koop is
onderhewig aan die volgende opskortende voorwaardes:
8.1 Dat die
Eiendom soos vermeld in klousule 1 hiervan, suksesvol onderverdeel
word;
8.2 Dat die
Eiendom suksesvol gehersoneer word na Besigheidsone 3.
Indien daar nie
aan bogenoemde opskortende voorwaardes voldoen kan word binne ‘n
tydperk van 9 maande na ondertekening van
hierdie ooreenkoms nie,
sal die koop as gekansellerd beskou word en van nul en gener waarde
wees. In so ‘n geval sal die
Verkoper onverwyld die bedrae wat
die Koper in terme van klousule 2 betaal het terugbetaal aan die
Koper, tesame met enige rente.”
[9]
“
9.
ADDISIONELE
KOSTES & OOREENKOMS
9.1 Die Verkoper
is verantwoordelik vir alle landemeter- en verwante kostes van die
onderverdeling van die eiendom, asook alle
kostes verbonde aan die
hersoneering daarvan, kragvoorsiening, wateraansluitings en sanitere
aansluiting.
9.2 Die
partye kom ooreen om ‘n alternatiewe koopkontrak met dieslefde
wesentlike voorwaardes met mekaar aan te gaan nadat
onderverdeling
van die Eiendom goedgekeur is, sou dit deur die Akteskantoor vereis
word
.”
[10]
“
7.
HELE
OOREENKOMS
Die
partye erken hiermee dat behalwe soos hierin bepaal, geen
verklarings en/of voorstellings onderskeidelik deur of namens hulle
te beweeg om die terme hiervan te onderskryf nie en dat die terme
wat hierin vervat word die hele ooreenkoms tussen hulle uitmaak
.”
[11]
“
Aangesien
die AGENT vir AFGRI aan die bogemelde eiendom voorgestel het en die
uitsluitlike
effektiewe
oorsaak is van die verkoop van die eiendom aan AFGRI kom AFGRI en
die AGENT soos volg ooreen:
1. R500 000
sal betaalbaar wees op datum van ondertekening van die
koopooreenkoms tussen AFGRI en die Verkoper; en
2. die balans van
R500 000 sal betaalbaar wees sodra daar aan al die opskortende
voorwaardes voldoen is in terme van klousule
8 van die
koopooreenkoms.
Indien daar nie
aan al die opskortende voorwaardes in terme van klousule 8 van die
koopooreenkoms voldoen word nie, sal die AGENT
onmiddelik verplig
wees om die R500 000 wat op ondertekening van die
koopooreenkoms aan die AGENT betaal was aan AFGRI terug
te betaal en
sal die AGENT verder nie geregtig wees op die balans van R500 000
nie.
Hierdie
ooreenkoms sal verder onderhewig wees aan die terme en voorwaardes
soos vervat in die koopooreenkoms
.” (Emphasis added)
[12]
The
date should read November 2016.
[13]
“
4.
Die Eiendom is intussen oorgedra vanaf die Verkoper aan die Trust.
Die Koper stem hiermee toe tot die oordrag van die Eiendom
in die
naam van die Trust onderhewig daaraan dat die Koopooreenkoms vanaf
die Verkoper na die Trust sedeer sal word.”
[14]
“
6.
Die volgende klousule word ingesluit effektief vanaf die datum
waarop die Eiendom oorgedra is in die naam van die Trust, en
wel op
die volgende manier:
SESSIE VAN
KOOPOOREENKOMS
Die Verkoper en
die Trust, met die ondertekening van hierdie Addendum, kom ooreen en
stem toe tot die sessie van die en delegasie
van die Koopooreenkoms
vanaf die Verkoper na die Trust.
Die Koper stem toe
tot die sessie van die Koopooreenkoms in die naam van die Trust.
Die Trust word in
die posisie van die Verkoper geplaas asof die Trust self die
Koopooreenkoms met die Koper gesluit het.”
[15]
“
Die
Verkoper en Trust sal voortgaan met die nodige stappe vir die
suksesvolle onderverdeling en hersonering van die Eiendom. Die
oordrag van die eiendom (sic) in die naam van die Koper sal so
spoedig as moontlik plaasvind na die suksesvolle onderverdeling
en
hersoneering van die Eiendom. Die Koper sal geregtig wees om namens
die Verkoper en Trust die nodige stappe te neem indien
die Koper van
mening is dat die Verkoper of Trust nie in goeder trou optree nie
en/of nie die nodige stappe neem vir die onderverdeling
en
hersonering van die Eiendom nie.”
[16]
“
Die
partye bevestig dat hulle die bepalings en voorwaardes van hierdie
Addendum gelees het en verstaan en dat beide partye aanvaar
dat
hulle daardeur gebind word. Die Koper, Verkoper en Trust kom hiermee
ooreen dat hierdie ooreenkoms aan relevante derde partye,
voor
ondertekening hiervan, openbaar mag word.”
[17]
The exception references by way of a footnote the Afrikaans text of
cl 7 of the commission agreement as set out in footnote 10
above.
[18]
The
pleading similarly references clause 9.1 of the commission agreement
as set out in footnote 10 above.
[19]
The pleading references the last paragraph of the commission
agreement as set out in footnote 11 above.
[20]
Van Zyl
en Seuns (Edms.) Bpk. v Nel
1975 (3) SA 983
(N) at 985E
[21]
Johnston
v Leal
1980 (3) SA 927
(A) at 943B
[22]
Affirmative
Portfolios CC v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2008] ZASCA 127
;
2009 (1) SA 196
(SCA) at
[13]
[23]
See the last sentence thereof reproduced in footnote 11 above.
[24]
See footnote 10 above.
[25]
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd and another
2009 (4) SA 399
(SCA) at [39];
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18]
[26]
Betterbridge
(Pty) Ltd v Masilo and others NNO
2015 (2) SA 396
(GP) at [8]
[27]
Sentinel
Mining Industry Retirement Fund v WAZ Props (Pty) Ltd
at [10]
[28]
Theunissen
en andere v Transvaalse Lewendehawe Koop Bpk
1988 (2) SA 493
(A) at 500E-F;
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and others
2001 (3) SA 960
(SCA) at [6]; [36].
[29]
Van der
Merwe et al
Contract General Principles, (“Van der Merwe”) 4
th
edition at 251
et
seq
,
GB
Bradfield
Christie’s Law of Contract in South Africa (“Christie”)
7
th
ed at 173
et
seq
and
AJ
Kerr
The Principles of the Law of Contract, (“Kerr”) 6
th
edition at 450.
[30]
Academy
of Learning (Pty) Ltd v Hancock and others
2001 (1) SA 941
(C)
[31]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC)
[32]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA) at [22]
[33]
Dale
Hutchison
“Non-variation Clauses in Contract: Any Escape from the
Shifren
Straightjacket?”
(2001) 118 SALJ 720
at 743-4
[34]
The
Concise Oxford English Dictionary defines “
deliberate
”
as “
done
consciously and intentionally
”
and “
intentional
”
as “
deliberate
.”
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