Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 141South Africa
Trustees for the time being of the Hunter Family Trust v Duin-En-See (Pty) Ltd and Others (5035/2017) [2022] ZAWCHC 141; [2022] 4 All SA 260 (WCC) (26 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
26 July 2022
Headnotes
by the plaintiffs confer upon them the right to, and an interest in, the exclusive use of Erf 13009, Plettenberg Bay;
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Trustees for the time being of the Hunter Family Trust v Duin-En-See (Pty) Ltd and Others (5035/2017) [2022] ZAWCHC 141; [2022] 4 All SA 260 (WCC) (26 July 2022)
Trustees for the time being of the Hunter Family Trust v Duin-En-See (Pty) Ltd and Others (5035/2017) [2022] ZAWCHC 141; [2022] 4 All SA 260 (WCC) (26 July 2022)
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sino date 26 July 2022
#### Republic of South Africa
Republic of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Hearing:
6 June 2022
Judgment:
26 July 2022
Case
No. 5035/2017
In
the matter between:
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
HUNTER FAMILY TRUST
Plaintiffs / Respondents
and
DUIN-EN-SEE
(PTY) LTD
First Defendant / Excipient
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
ELOFF VAN HUYSSTEEN TRUST
Second Defendant
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
IYAKHULA II
TRUST
Third Defendant
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
THYS CILLIERS FAMILIETRUST
Fourth Defendant
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF THE
DIE
KOS ’N MOERSE LOT
TRUST
Fifth Defendant
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
JAN T BEUKES FAMILY TRUST
Sixth Defendant
EDUAN
VAN ZYL HAYMAN N.O.
Seventh Defendant
ANNA
HILDEGARD GAGIANO
Eighth Defendant
JACOBUS
ANDREAS JOUBERT
Ninth Defendant
HENDRIK
VAN HUYSSTEEN
Tenth Defendant
EBENHAESER
CORNELIS NEL N.O.
Eleventh Defendant
MATTHYS
KONRAD RUGTER VAN HUYSSTEEN
Twelfth Defendant
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
In their amended particulars of claim, dated January 2021, the
plaintiffs
have claimed (as ‘Claim A’) an order declaring
that -
1.
the first defendant company (Duin-en-See (Pty) Ltd)) is presumed, in
accordance
with the provisions of s 4 of the Share Block Control
Act 59 of 1980 (‘the SBC Act’), to be operating a ‘share
block scheme’ as defined in s 1 of the said Act;
2.
the company is a ‘share block company’ as defined in s 1
of
the SBC Act;
3.
the shares in the company held by the plaintiffs confer upon them the
right to,
and an interest in, the exclusive use of Erf 13009,
Plettenberg Bay;
4.
the plaintiffs are entitled to –
4.1
the exclusive right to occupy, use and benefit from Erf 13009,
Plettenberg Bay, and
4.2
refuse to consent to the transfer of Erf 13009, Plettenberg Bay;
5.
the company is not entitled to dispose of Erf 13009 without the
plaintiffs’
consent; and
6.
the company is required to comply with the provisions of the SBC Act.
In
the alternative to Claim A, they claim (as ‘Claim B’) an
order declaring that -
1.
the plaintiffs are entitled to –
1.1
the exclusive right to occupy, use and benefit from Erf 13009,
Plettenberg Bay, and
1.2
refuse to consent to the transfer of Erf 13009, Plettenberg Bay
2.
the company is not entitled to dispose of Erf 13009 without the
plaintiffs’
consent.
The
alternative claim sounds in contract.
[2]
The plaintiffs have pleaded the following facts in support of their
forementioned
claims:
1.
Duin-en-See was incorporated in or about 1958 by the company’s
original
shareholders, B. Smit, L.L. Beukes, H. Scholtz, H.G.
van Huyssteen and the Rev. P.L. Cilliers, ‘
as a vehicle
to acquire and hold
[certain immovable property then known as
Portion 75 (a portion of Môreson) of the Farm Brakkloof, later
known as Portion
58 of the Farm Brakkloof No. 443, situate adjacent
to Robberg Beach, Plettenberg Bay]
for the benefit of the original
shareholders, who would by means of such shareholding be entitled to
’
the benefit in and exclusive use of a defined portion of the land;
the said portions, collectively, comprising the entire
extent of the
aforementioned immovable property.
2.
The share capital of the company has at all times comprised of 500
ordinary shares,
allotted to the original shareholders as follows:
2.1
B. Smit – 100 shares
2.2
L.L. Beukes 100 shares
2.3
H. Scholtz 50 shares
2.4
H.G. van Huyssteen 150 shares
2.5
Rev. P.L. Cilliers 100 shares.
The current shareholders
are the successors in title to the shares ‘
and related
rights and obligations of the original shareholders
’.
3.
Contemporaneously with the incorporation of the company, the original
shareholders
entered into an agreement in the following terms:
3.1
they would register and/or acquire the company as a vehicle to
acquire and hold for their benefit
the parcels (which collectively
constituted the property) and their rights in respect thereof, which
are described below;
3.2
they would each subscribe for and be issued the shareholding in the
company described in paragraph
2.2 above;
3.3
the subscription price paid by the shareholders would be used by the
company to acquire the property;
3.4
each shareholding would be allocated a particular parcel (an
‘
allocated parcel
’), over which each original
shareholder and his or her successors in title would enjoy the
following rights and benefits
(the “
usage rights
”),
which attached to the associated shareholding:
3.4.1 the right to
the exclusive use, possession and occupation of the allocated parcel;
3.4.2 the right to
let out the allocated parcel (or any portion thereof);
3.4.3 the exclusive
right to the rental and other fruits derived from the allocated
parcel, without having to account therefor
to the company or to any
other shareholder;
3.4.4 the right to
erect dwellings and other associated structures on the allocated
parcel;
3.4.5 a right of
way to traverse over the other parcels, if reasonably required;
3.5
the parcels allocated to each of the original shareholders (the
“
original parcels
”) would be as follows:
[the “original
parcels” were then described with reference to a plan attached
as annexure POC1 to the pleading]
3.6
Each shareholder would bear any and all:
3.6.1 Costs,
expenses, levies, services and other charges or imposts (“
payables
”)
pertaining to his or her allocated parcel(s) (or, should any such
payables not pertain to a particular allocated parcel
or parcels but
to the property as a whole, an aliquot share of such payables
proportionate to that shareholder’s shareholding);
3.6.2 Costs and
charges incurred by the company in relation to (a) his or her
allocated parcel and (b) safeguarding
of shareholders’
interests;
3.6.3 costs and
charges incurred by the company in relation to its costs of
administration in proportion to that shareholder’s
shareholding;
3.7
each shareholder would afford rights of way over his or her parcel to
the occupiers for the time
being of the other parcels, where
reasonably required;
3.8
each shareholder would be entitled to bequeath or dispose of his or
her shareholding and the usage
rights associated with the allocated
parcel, subject to the following conditions:
3.8.1 a bequest or
disposal to a shareholder’s spouse or children would not
require the consent of the company or any
other shareholder;
3.8.2 a bequest or
disposal to any other person would be subject to the provisions of
the company’s memorandum and articles
of association;
3.9
each shareholder would be entitled to divide his or her shareholding
and the parcel allocated
to that shareholding to the extent permitted
by the company's memorandum and articles of association;
3.10 no
shareholder would be required or compelled to dispose of his or her
shareholding and/or rights to the relevant
allocated parcel without
his or her consent;
3.11 upon the
bequest or disposal by a shareholder of his or her shares, whether by
way of a sale, transfer, upon death
or otherwise, the transferee
would acquire the rights of the disposing shareholder to the
allocated parcel associated with his
or her shareholding and would
become bound by the obligations of that shareholder as set out in
[3.6 and 3.7 above]; and
3.12 the
company would be party to the agreement.
4.
The company and the original shareholders implemented the agreement.
5.
Each of the successors in title to the original shareholders took
transfer of
their respective shares in the company with full
knowledge of the terms of the agreement and, by taking transfer of
the shares,
assented to the terms of the agreement and became bound
thereby.
6.
From time to time between 1958 and the present certain of the
original shareholders
disposed of and divided their shareholdings and
related original allocated parcels. Consequently, there are currently
12 shareholders,
of which the plaintiffs, collectively, in their
capacity as the trustees for the time being of the Hunter Family
Trust are one.
7.
Prior to 1995, the shareholding originally held by H. Scholtz was
divided into
two shareholdings, each with an allocated parcel being
portion of “original parcel” allocated to Schlotz in the
1958
agreement.
8.
The plaintiffs, who hold 25 shares in the company, are the successors
in title
of Scholtz in respect of one of the products of that
division.
9.
The plaintiffs came to hold their shares consequent upon the
following transactions:
9.1
With the knowledge and approval of the company and all the other
shareholders, H. Scholtz sold
25 of his shares, together with the
usage rights in respect of part of the parcel of land originally
allocated in respect of his
50 shares to Mrs H Hunter ‘
during
or about 1961, who thereupon became party to
[the aforementioned
agreement between the original shareholders and the company]’.
9.2
The sale agreement between Scholtz and Mrs Hunter was duly
implemented, and Mrs Hunter thereby
acquired the shares currently
held by the plaintiffs ‘
together with the rights and
obligations of Mr H Scholtz under the agreement and attaching to the
shares transferred
’.
9.3
With the knowledge and approval of all the shareholders of the
company and the company itself,
Mrs Hunter transferred what would
become the plaintiffs’ shares and rights and obligations in
respect of the plaintiffs’
parcel to the trustees of the Hunter
Family Trust on or about 17 April 1995, who thereupon became party to
[the aforementioned
agreement, according to its terms].
9.4
From 17
April 1995 the trustees have exercised, and continue to exercise,
their rights in respect of the Trust’s parcel in
accordance
with the agreement,
[1]
and have
done so with the knowledge, agreement and approval of the company and
the company’s other shareholders.
10.
The plaintiffs and their predecessors effected improvements to the
parcel associated with the
Trust’s shareholding, including the
erection of dwelling houses and other structures.
11.
The immovable property owned by the company was incorporated into
what is now the Bitou Municipality
in 1983, and thereupon ceased to
be subject to the Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act 70 of 1970,
but was zoned for agricultural
use.
12.
During 2012, the Bitou Municipality notified the company that that
the use of the property for
residential purposes was incompatible
with the land uses permitted by its zoning for agricultural purposes.
13.
The company applied for the rezoning of the immovable property from
agricultural use to residential
use in 2015, whereupon the land was
redesignated as Erf 13003.
14.
The company thereafter procured the subdivision of Erf 13003 into
Erven 13004 to 13019.
15.
The shareholders assented to the aforesaid application for
subdivision on the basis that:
15.1 the
subdivision of the property would not, subject to what is it out in
[15.2 and 15.3] below, prejudice the shareholders’
rights under
the agreement and/or attaching to their shares;
15.2
subdivided erven would be created around the existing dwellings
erected on the allocated parcels, thereby preserving
shareholders’
rights to the dwellings erected upon the respective allocated
parcels;
15.3 the
company would be entitled to deal with and dispose of the erven
created by the subdivision other than those
created around the
existing dwellings on the allocated parcels.
16.
Erf 13009 is an erf created on the land constituting the plaintiffs’
parcel and is the portion
of land on which the plaintiffs’
dwelling was erected, and to which the plaintiffs accordingly
continued to enjoy their shareholders’
rights after the
subdivision.
[3]
The plaintiffs seek the declaratory relief described in paragraph [1]
above because, so they plead, the company intends to dispose of Erf
13009 without the plaintiffs’consent, thereby also depriving
them of the right to occupy, use and benefit from the erf.
[4]
The first defendant noted an exception to the particulars of claim on
three grounds, only two of which have been persisted in.
The
first ground of exception
[5]
The first ground of exception in which the defendant persists is that
the allegations pleaded in support of the declaratory relief sought
in Claim A of the particulars of claim ‘
are insufficient to
trigger the presumption in section 4 of the
[SBC Act]
and/or
to satisfy the definition of ‘share block scheme’ in
section 1 of the Act because –
1.
for both it is necessary for the relevant right or interest in
the use of the immovable property to be provided for in the
definition
of the relevant class of shares in the company’s
memorandum of incorporation; and
2.
the plaintiffs do not aver that this is the case
’.
The
defendant’s notice of exception proceeded further in respect of
this ground as follows:
‘
Further and in
any event:
1.
Section 7(2) of the
[SBC Act]
provides that “
the
articles of a share block company shall provide that a member shall
be entitled to the use of a specified part of the immovable
property
in respect of which the company operates the share block scheme, on
the terms and conditions contained in a use agreement
entered into
between the company and such member”
.
2.
The amended particulars do not aver that there was compliance
with section 7(2) of the
[SBC Act]
.
3.
The amended particulars also do not aver that there was a
signed use agreement as required by sections 7(3) and 7(5) of the
[SBC Act]
.
4.
In the premises, the amended particulars lack averments necessary
to sustain the allegation ... that the company is
“
presumed
to operate a share block scheme, in terms of section 4 of the
[SBC Act]
and the allegation that “the company is a share
block company as defined in section 1 of the
[SBC Act]”.
5.
As such, the amended particulars lack averments which are
necessary to sustain Claim A.
’
The merits of the
first ground of exception
[6]
Section 4 of the SBC Act provides:
‘
For the
purposes of this Act a company shall be presumed to operate a share
block scheme if any share of the company confers a right
to or an
interest in the use of immovable property or any part of immovable
property
’.
[7]
A ‘
share
block scheme
’
is defined in s 1 of the SBC Act to mean ‘
any
scheme in terms of which a share, in any manner whatsoever, confers a
right to or an interest in the use of immovable property
’.
The word ‘
scheme
’
is not specially defined, and accordingly bears its ordinary
dictionary meaning, which - having regard to its contextual
employment - is ‘
a
plan or arrangement for attaining a particular object or putting a
particular idea into effect
’.
[2]
The use in the definition of the expressions ‘
any
scheme
’
and ‘
in
any manner whatsoever
’
express an intention by the legislative draftsperson to cast the net
widely for the purposes of the Act, the object of which
is reflected
unambiguously in its long title, viz. ‘(t)
o
control the operation of share block schemes; and to provide for
matters connected therewith
’.
[8]
The evident legislative intention to give the SBC Act a wide embrace
for
determining whether an undertaking qualified as a share block
scheme is underscored by the breadth of the Act’s special
definition
of ‘
share
’, which is defined in s 1
as follows:
‘“
share”
–
(a)
means a share as defined in section 1(1) of the Companies Act
in relation to a company, and includes a debenture of a company and
a
right to or an interest in any such share or debenture;
(b)
includes any other interest in a company;
(c)
does not include a right to or interest in the assets of a company
derived from a lease in respect of such assets
’.
The
definition of ‘
Companies
Act
’
in s 1 of the SBC Act was substituted by s 224(2) of Act 71
of 2008 to mean ‘
the
Companies Act, 2008
’,
but it is nevertheless evident that many of the references to ‘the
Companies Act’ in
the SBC Act are to the 1973
Companies Act,
rather
than its 2008 replacement.
[3]
[9]
‘
Share
’ was defined in s 1(1) of the 1973
Companies Act to
mean ‘
in relation to a company, … a
share in the share capital of that company and includes stock; and in
relation to an offer
of shares for subscription or sale, includes a
share and a debenture of a company, whether a company within the
meaning of this
Act or not, and any rights or interests (by whatever
name called) in a company or in or to any such share or debenture
’.
The term is defined in s 1(1) of the 2008
Companies Act to
mean
‘
one of the units into which the proprietary interest in a
profit company is divided
’. It appears to be immaterial for
present purposes which of the two definitions in the respective
Companies Act applies
in paragraph (a) of the definition of ‘
share
’
in s 1 of the SBC Act. It is clear the defined meaning of the
term in the SBC Act is wider than that in either of the
Companies
Acts.
[10]
In my judgment, there is no merit in the first defendant’s
contention that the relevant
right or interest in the use of the
immovable property had to be provided for in the definition of the
relevant class of shares
in the company’s memorandum of
incorporation. The SBC Act was brought into being to regulate a state
of affairs that had
obtained since at least the 1950’s whereby,
prior to the inception of sectional title ownership of immovable
property, persons
sought to obtain something akin to separate
ownership of parts of buildings. To achieve that object, it was
necessary to devise
a means of getting around the common law doctrine
of
superficies solo cedit
. A commonly adopted means of doing
so was to use a company as the property owner, with the shares issued
in it confering exclusive
use and benefit rights for the holders
thereof in respect of identified sections of the property; cf
Rosslare (Pty) Ltd and Another v Registrar of Companies
1972
(2) SA 524
(D) at 525
fin
-526A.
[11]
The
attendant rights and interests of the shareholders vis-à-vis
the property-owning company were frequently recorded in
the company’s
articles of association. But that was not the only manner in which
they were provided for.
[4]
Indeed, it was in recognition of that fact that the legislature
determined in s 7(2) of the SBC that a uniform method be
adopted. It did so by providing that ‘(t)
he
articles of a share block company shall provide that a member shall
be entitled to the use of a specified part of the immovable
property
in respect of which the company operates the share block scheme, on
the terms and conditions contained in a use agreement
entered into
between the company and such member
’.
Recognition by the legislature that some companies that were
operating share block schemes at the commencement of the Act,
on 1
January 1981, might require to amend their articles of association to
comply with the introduction of a uniform method is
evident in s 2
of the SBC Act, which in material part provides:
‘
(1)
The Registrar may on application, ..., by a company which at the
commencement of this Act operates a share
block scheme, exempt ....,
such company from any provision of this Act for such period and on
such conditions as the Registrar
may deem fit.
(2)
If a company alters its memorandum or articles to comply with any
provision of this Act, no fees shall
be payable to the Registrar in
respect of such alteration.
’
[12]
In the
current matter, the plaintiffs have alleged that the relevant rights
and interests and their integral connection to the originally
subscribed for blocks of shares were provided for in an agreement
concluded between the original shareholders
inter
se
, and
to which the company became privy. The juristic effect of an
agreement of the sort alleged and the import of a company’s
articles of association is indistinguishable. Thus, in
Gohlke
and Schneider and Another v Westies Minerale (Edms) Bpk and Another
1970 (2) SA 685
(A) at 692F-G, Trollip JA observed ‘
The
articles ... merely have the same force as a contract between the
company and each and every member as such to observe their
provisions
(see
Hickman
v Kent or Romney Marsh Sheepbreeders’ Association
(1915) 1 Ch.D. 881
, the locus classicus on the point and
De
Villiers v Jacobsdal Saltworks (Michaelis and de Villiers) (Pty) Ltd
1959 (3) SA 873
(O) at pp. 876-7)
.’
[5]
The essence of the learned judge’s observation was reflected in
s 65(2) of the subsequently enacted 1973
Companies Act. Under
the 2008
Companies Act, the
matter is regulated by
s 15(7).
An
agreement of that sort made before the commencement of the 2008 Act
remains effective as if it had been made in terms of s 15(7)
of
the currently applicable statute; see para 3 of Schedule 5 to
the 2008
Companies Act.
[13
]
It follows clearly, in my view, that the agreement pleaded by the
plaintiffs would, if established
at trial, constitute a manner by
which the holding of the respective blocks of shares referred to
therein conferred a right to
or an interest in the use of identified
parts or parcels of the company’s immovable property. It would
not be necessary for
the relevant right or interest in the use of the
immovable property to be provided for in the definition of the
relevant class
of shares in the company’s memorandum of
incorporation in order for the alleged agreement to be effective.
[14]
The objects
of the SBC Act would be substantially undermined were its provisions
construed in the manner suggested by the first
defendant’s
first ground of exception. The clear intention of the enactment is to
draw under the aegis of the legislation
all companies that operate
share block schemes as defined. As already mentioned, the extremely
wide definition of the term ‘share
block scheme’
expressly acknowledges that such schemes might be devised in various
ways. The essential requirement is some
connection between the
holding of shares in the company and the holders’ entitlement
by virtue thereof to a right or interest
in the use of the company’s
immovable property. As Grosskopf JA noted in
Van
Staden v Fourie
1989 (3) SA 200
(A) at 211B ‘
...
het die Wet te doen met met skemas waarkragtens die houers van
aandele in ’n maatskappy ’n reg of belang in die
gebruik
van vaste eiendom het uit hoofde van hul aandeelhouding, en met
maatskappye wat sulke skemas bedryf
’.
[6]
[15]
It may be, now that the
Companies Act of 2008
does not provide for
companies to have articles of association, that the effect of s 7(2)
of the SBC Act is that it is now
obligatory for a share block company
to provide in its memorandum of incorporation what remains in the
express provisions of the
subsection required to be provided for in
such a company’s ‘articles of association’.
Assuming that to be the
case would, however, not derogate from the
validity and effectiveness of the agreement pleaded by the
plaintiffs. The company’s
failure to comply with s 7(2)
would not imply that that it was not a share block company. The
qualification for being a share
block company is the conduct by the
company of a share block scheme.
[16]
Non-compliance with the provisions of s 7 of the SBC Act by a
company that conducts
a share block scheme could render the company
and its directors liable to criminal sanction in terms of s 21
of the Act. Non-compliance
does not, however, imply that the
non-compliant company escapes the regulatory net of the SBC Act; it
remains a share block company
within the meaning of the Act; cf.
Van
Staden v Fourie
supra, at 212H-213I.
[17]
To the extent that the agreement alleged in the particulars of claim
does not comply with
the provisions pertaining to use agreements in
the SBC Act in sub-secs 7(3) and (5), similar considerations
apply as those
discussed in the preceding paragraph.
[18]
For these reasons the exception on the first ground falls to be
dismissed.
The second ground of
exception
[19]
The second
ground of exception
[7]
is
directed at both Claim A and Claim B. It was couched as follows in
the first defendant’s notice of exception:
‘
9.
Both Claim A and Claim B depend on –
9.1
the conclusion of what is defined as “
the agreement
”
“
at or about
” 1958, binding the company and
conferring the rights and imposing the obligations set out at
paragraphs 19.4 to 19.4.5 upon
the company's original shareholders;
and
9.2
the valid transfer of those rights and obligations over what is
defined as “
the plaintiffs parcel [of land] (“the
alleged rights and obligations
”) from Mr H Scholtz to Mrs H
Hunter during or about 1961 (“
the 1961 transfer
”);
and
9.3
the valid transfer of the alleged rights and obligations from Mrs
Hunter to the plaintiffs on or about
17 April 1995 (“
the
1995 transfer
”).
10.
Under section 1(1) of the General Law Amendment Act 68 of 1957 (in
force at the time of the 1961 transfer),
no contract of sale or
cession in respect of land or any interest in land would be of any
force or effect unless it was reduced
to writing and signed by the
parties thereto or by their agents acting on their written authority.
11.
The plaintiffs do not allege that the 1961 transfer complied with
these requirements. As such, the amended
particulars lack averments
necessary to sustain Claims A and B.
12.
Similarly, under section 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act 68 of
1981 (in force at the time of the 1995 transfer)
no alienation of
land (defined to include “
any interest in land
”)
shall be of any force or effect unless it is contained in a deed of
alienation signed by the parties thereto or by their
agents acting on
their written authority.
13.
The plaintiffs do not allege that the 1995 transfer complied with
these requirements. As such, the amended
particulars lack averments
necessary to sustain Claims A and B.
’
[20]
Section 1(1) of the General Law Amendment Act provided:
‘
No contract of
sale or cession in respect of land or any interest in land (other
than a lease, mynpacht or mining claim or stand)
shall be of any
force or effect if concluded after the commencement of this section
unless it is reduced to writing and signed
by the parties thereto or
by their agents acting on their written authority
’.
In
the context of a discussion of its import, the subsection was
referred to by Watermeyer J in
Brink
v Stadler
1963 (2) SA 427
(C) as ‘
this
difficult section
’.
[8]
In
Bonnet
en Andere v Snaar Dorpontwikkelaars (Edms) Bpk en Andere
1978 (4) SA 212
(D), Howard J referred to the question whether the
occupation rights of a purchaser of shares in a company operating a
share block
scheme constituted an ‘interest in land’ for
the purposes of Formalities in in respect of Contracts of Sale of
Land
Act 71 of 1969 (which was the governing legislation in the
period between the currency of the relevant provisions of the General
Law Amendment Act and those of the
Alienation of Land Act) as
‘
one
to which the answer was by no means clear
’.
[9]
[21]
Section 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
, which has been
applicable since 19 October 1982, is to essentially the same effect
as
s 1(1)
of the forementioned General Law Amendment Act.
[22]
In my view,
it is clear from the particulars of claim that the contract that the
plaintiffs rely upon for the purposes of both claim
A and claim B is
one between themselves, qua shareholders, and the company – a
so-called ‘shareholders’ agreement’.
The action was
instituted for the enforcement of the rights that they allege attach
to the shares the Hunter Family Trust holds
in the company. The
antecedent transactions in 1961 and 1995 that culminated in the
Trust’s acquisition of the shares were
not contracts in respect
of the sale of land or for the cession of rights in land. They were
sale of share agreements.
[10]
The company did not cede any rights in its property under those
transactions and, when the sale of shares agreements were
implemented,
the sellers, when they transferred their shares to their
respective successors in title, as an integral part of the
transaction
ceded their rights in the shares,
not
in the company’s property.
[23]
The shareholders’ agreement alleged in the particulars of claim
was one that obliged
the company to conduct its business in respect
of the ownership of its land in the stipulated manner. It determined
that the company
was to operate a share block scheme and how it was
to do that. It did not
alienate
any of the company’s
rights in the land. The shareholders’ rights were personal to
them and fell to be exercised by
them, qua shareholders, against the
company. It did not give them any interest in the company’s
immovable property other
than through the company. So, if the company
were wound up, the shareholders’ agreement would not inhibit
the ability of
the liquidators’ to dispose of the property free
of encumbrance or (otherwise than in the case of a lessee) afford to
the
shareholders any rights in the company’s property that they
could exercise against its successor in title to the property.
[24]
The manner in which the first defendant’s second ground of
exception was framed acknowledges
that there is nothing to
distinguish the alleged contracts for purposes of the plaintiffs’
claims, whether under Claim A
or Claim B. The alleged contracts are
very recognisably a composite of the two types of agreement referred
to in s 16 of the
SBC Act (viz. (i) a contract for the
acquisition of a share and (ii) a use agreement). It is noteworthy
that the legislature,
which must be presumed to have been aware of
the formalities in respect of the sale of land legislation already in
force when the
SBC Act was enacted, provided in s 16 that a
‘
contract for the acquisition of a share and a use agreement
...
entered into after the commencement of this Act
,
shall be reduced to writing ...
’. That seems to imply an
understanding by the legislature that prior to the commencement of
the SBC Act such agreements were
not required to be in writing.
Indeed, were the position otherwise, s 16 of the SBC Act would
be superfluous. And had the
legislature considered that there was any
relevant basis for distinguishing the effect of s 1(1) of the
General Law Amendment
Act and its successor in the Formalities in in
respect of Contracts of Sale of Land Act 71 of 1969 in this regard,
one would have
expected it to have addressed any such distinction
expressly when framing s 16 of the SBC Act.
[25]
Accordingly, the first defendant has failed to persuade me that the
alleged agreements
in terms of which the Hunter Family Trust acquired
and holds the shares were subject to the formalities prescribed in
either the
General Law Amendment Act or the
Alienation of Land Act.
[26
]
The alleged 1995 transaction, in terms of which 25 shares then held
by Mrs Hunter were acquired
by the Hunter Family Trust, was, however,
not effected in a manner compliant with ss 16 and 17 of the SBC
Act. The non-compliance
was not a ground of exception by the first
defendant, but the applicable provisions were touched on in the
course of argument.
The plaintiffs’ counsel argued correctly in
my judgment, that the situation was addressed by s 18(2) of the
SBC Act,
which provides in material part as follows:
‘
...., and a
contract for the acquisition of a share which does not comply with
the provisions of section 16 or 17, whether or not
in a substantial
respect, shall not be effected by such defect if the purchaser has
discharged his obligations in terms of the
contract and the seller
has transferred the relevant share to the purchaser, and shall n such
case be deemed from the conclusion
thereof not to be affected by the
defect.
’
[27]
The forementioned provisions of s 18(2) of the SBC Act are, in
the respect relevant,
equivalent to those in
s 28(2)
of the
Alienation of Land Act, which
provides:
‘
Any alienation
which does not comply with the provisions of
section 2(1)
shall in
all respects be valid ab initio if the alienee had performed in full
in terms of the deed of alienation or contract and
the land in
question has been transferred to the alienee
.’
Thus,
even were the alleged 1995 transaction subject to the
Alienation of
Land Act, as
contended by the first defendant, it would not be bereft
of force and effect once the parties to it had fully implemented
their
contract, as alleged in the amended particulars of claim.
[28]
The provisions of
s 28
of the
Alienation of Land Act and
s 18(2)
of the SBC Act appear to me to be consistent with the common law. An
executory oral agreement in respect of the alienation
of land is
unenforceable by virtue of its non-compliance with the prescribed
formalities, but such an agreement does nonetheless
give rise to
natural obligations, which, if discharged, give rise to legally
cognisable results; cf.
Wilken v Kohler
1913 AD 135
at 144,
Kriel v Terblanche NO en Andere
2002 (6) SA 132
(NC) and
Legator Mckenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2010 (1) SA
35
(SCA). The same considerations would apply in respect of the
performance of an alienation of land or any right or interest therein
that was subject to the General Law Amendment Act.
[29]
In the result, the first defendant’s exceptions are dismissed
with costs, including
the fees of two counsel.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
First
defendant / excipient’s counsel:
Alfred Cockrell
SC
Piet Olivier
First
defendant / excipient’s attorneys:
Hayes Incorporated
Cape Town
Plaintiffs
/ respondents’ counsel:
D. Irish SC
G. Quixley
Plaintiffs
/ respondents’ attorneys:
Corporate Law Alliance
c/o Freddie Human
Attorney
Claremont
MacGregor Erasmus
Attorneys
Cape Town
[1]
It
is alleged in the amended particulars of claim that the agreement
was amended in or about 1987 in respect of the arrangements
concerning the division between the shareholders of liability for
certain expenses attendant on the company’s ownership
of the
immovable property. The details in this regard do not bear on the
determination of the exceptions.
[2]
Oxford
Dictionary of the English Language
Version
2.3.0 (239.5), Copyright © 2005–2019 Apple Inc.. The
signed text is in Afrikaans, in which the word ‘
skema
’
is used. ‘
Skema
’
is defined in HAT (6de uitgawe) in its applicable sense as
‘
(taamlik)
uitgewerkte plan vir ’n ondernemin
g’.
[3]
See,
for example, ss 7(3), 7(4), 8(1)(d)(ii), 12(2) and 15(5).
[4]
Sonnekus
& Butler,
Sectional
Titles, Share Blocks and Time-sharing
at
4-10 [Issue 14] states that before the commencement of the SBC Act
share block scheme use rights were ‘
usually
not conferred in the articles but directly by means of a use
agreement between the member and the company
’.
[5]
See
also
De
Lange v Presiding Bishop for the time being of the Methodist Church
of Southern Africa and another
[2014] ZASCA 151
(29 September
2014); 2015 (1) SA 106
(SCA);
[2015]
1 All SA 121
(SCA) at para 52 and fn. 17, and
Itzikowitz
v Absa Bank Ltd
2016 (4) SA 432
(SCA) at para 9.
[6]
‘
...
the
Act deals with schemes in terms of which the holders of shares in a
company have a right or interest in the use of immovable
property by
virtue of their shareholding, and with companies that operate such
schemes
.’
(My translation.)
[7]
The
second ground of exception described in this judgment was actually
the third ground of exception pleaded in the first defendant’s
notice of exception, but the defendant did not persist in its heads
of argument or at the hearing with the second of its three
pleaded
grounds of exception.
[8]
At
428
in
fine
.
[9]
The
learned Judge expressed himself in these words (at p. 216F) ‘
Die
antwoord op hierdie vraag is glad nie voor die hand liggend nie
’.
[10]
The
character of the transaction in terms of which Mrs Hunter
transferred her shares to the Hunter Family Trust is not clear on
the pleading, but I am prepared to assume in favour of the excipient
first defendant that it was a sale or donation.
sino noindex
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