Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 157South Africa
Bartie N.O. and Others v Fraaikem Pharmacy (Pty) Ltd (A236/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 157 (17 August 2022)
Headnotes
the Trust, by its conduct, tacitly and impliedly waived its right to rely on the late renewal of the lease concluded with
Judgment
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## Bartie N.O. and Others v Fraaikem Pharmacy (Pty) Ltd (A236/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 157 (17 August 2022)
Bartie N.O. and Others v Fraaikem Pharmacy (Pty) Ltd (A236/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 157 (17 August 2022)
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sino date 17 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.:A236/2021
In
the matter between:
EDWARD
EDWIN BARTIE
N.O.
First Appellant
SUZAAN
MEYER
N.O.
Second Appellant
EDUARD
DAVID RAS
N.O.
Third Appellant
(in
their capacities as Trustees of
Edza
Claud Trust IT T. 469(K)
and
FRAAIKEM
PHARMACY (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 17 AUGUST 2022
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an
appeal, with leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), against the
judgment of Papier, J in which he dismissed the appellants’
(“
the Trust”
)
application for eviction of the respondent (“
Fraaikem”
)
from the Trust’s business premises.
[2]
The Trust had entered into a lease
agreement with an entity called Fraaiuitsig Medies CC (“
Fraaiuitsig”
)
for the latter to conduct a pharmaceutical business in its business
premises. The lease agreement was effective from 1 June 2014
to 31
May 2019, after which Fraaiuitsig would have the right to renew the
lease for a further five years after giving six months’
written
notice.
[3]
It is
common cause that sometime in 2017
Fraaiuitsig
informed
the Trust of its intention to sell the pharmacy as a going concern to
one Erika Bossert, although the full details of that
communication
were not part of the
court
a quo
’s
proceedings. The written response of the Trust, dated on 25 August
2017, was as follows:
“
Ons
neem kennis van u skrywe van 26 Julie 2017. One verwys u na paragraaf
6 van die kontrak. Ons gee toestemming dat u die besigheid
mag
verkoop aan Erika Bossert. Die kontrak bly egter van krag tot 31 Mei
2019, waarna u onthef sal word van u kontraktuele verpligtinge.
Vir
die tydperk tot 31 Mei 2019 kan u die besigheid onderverhuur aan
gemelde Erika Bossert.”
[4]
Clause 6
of the lease agreement provided as follows:
“
SUB-LETTING,
CESSION AND CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP/ MEMBERSHIP/ SHAREHOLDING/
DIRECTORSHIP
6.1
The lessee shall not:
6.1.1
cede, assign, mortgage, pledge or in any manner deal or purport to
deal with any of its rights or obligations under this Lease;
6.1.2
sub-let the premises or any portion thereof; or
6.1.3
place anyone else, whether as licensee, agent, occupier, custodia
(sic) or otherwise in occupation of the premises or any
part thereof
on any terms whatsoever for any reason whatsoever without the
Lessor’s prior written consent.
6.2
No
change in the ownership, membership, shareholding or directorship of
the Lessee shall take place without the written consent
of the
Lessor, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld.”
[5]
The
business of Fraaiuitsig was sold with effect from 1 August 2017, not
to Erika Bossert, but to an unnamed “
company
to be established”
,
which, in the end was Fraaikem. Fraaikem was incorporated on 15
August 2017, and Erika Bossert was one of its directors. After
the
business sale, the Trust sent the monthly rental invoices directly to
Fraaikem, and received rental payment directly from Fraaikem.
[6]
On 3
December 2018 Fraaikem sent e-mail correspondence to the Trust
informing it of its intention to renew the lease agreement,
and
requesting that the renewed lease should be between it (Fraaikem) and
the Trust.
[7]
The Trust
responded on 23 May 2019, per its financial assistant Ms Marissa
Botha, stating: “
Ek
wil graag die nuwe huurkontrak opstel. Kan ek asb vra vir afskrifte
jul company registrasie papiere en ID’s van direkteure?”
After the requested details were provided by Fraaikem, Ms Botha
forwarded an email on 27 May 2019
attaching
what
she referred to as a “
hernuwingskontrak”
for Fraaikem’s “
aandag
en ondertekening”
.
The lease agreement attached to Ms Botha’s e-mail of 27 May
2019 stated that it was between the Trust and Fraaikem, and
was to
commence on 1 June 2019.
[8]
On 28
June 2019 the Trust
addressed
a letter to Fraaiuitsig and
Fraaikem,
giving
Fraaikem notice to vacate the premises by 31 July 2019 on the basis
that
the
option to renew the lease agreement was not exercised by Fraaiuitsig
as required by the original lease, and that
Fraaikem
was
occupying the premises without any lease agreement. On that same
date, Fraaikem attempted to deliver a signed copy of the lease
agreement of 27 May 2019, which the Trust refused to accept.
[9]
Thereafter,
the parties engaged in correspondence, some of which involved
unsuccessful negotiations of a 12-month lease agreement,
after which
the Trust approached the court
a
quo
for the eviction relief.
B.
PROCEEDINGS
IN THE
COURT
A QUO
[10]
In
essence, the Trust’s argument in the court
a
quo
and on appeal, is that its lease agreement with Fraaiuitsig could not
in law have been renewed by Fraaikem because Fraaikem was
not a party
to the original lease agreement. In any event, says the Trust, there
was no timeous notice given for the renewal of
the lease agreement
since the purported renewal by Fraaikem was out of time by some 3
days, which is common cause.
[11]
On the
other hand, Fraaikem argued, and continues to argue on appeal that
the original lease agreement was ceded, assigned and/or
delegated to
it by Fraaiuitsig, and that the Trust impliedly or tacitly consented
to this through its conduct. In this regard Fraaikem
relies firstly
on the fact that after the business sale of Fraaiuitsig, all future
rental invoices were sent by the Trust to Fraaikem
and not to
Fraaiuitsig; secondly, that all rental payments were made directly to
the Trust by Fraaikem, which payments the Trust
accepted; and
thirdly, it relies on the ‘
hernuwingskontrak’
provided by the Trust on 27 May 2019. In addition, Fraaikem argues
that the original lease agreement was renewed by it and the
Trust;
alternatively, that Fraaikem and the Trust entered into a new lease
agreement on 27 May 2019.
[12]
The court
a
quo
held
that the Trust, by its conduct, tacitly and impliedly waived its
right to rely on the late renewal of the lease concluded with
Fraaiuitsig, by accepting Fraaikem’s late exercise of the
option to renew the original lease agreement, and by sending the
renewal contract to Fraaikem for signature.
[13]
The court
a
quo
held further that,
when the
Trust sent the renewal contract to Fraaikem for signature in May
2019, it accepted Fraaikem’s counter-offer; the
lease agreement
was assigned to Fraaikem; Fraaikem substituted Fraaiuitsig as lessee;
and a valid lease agreement was extended
with Fraaikem.
C.
THE
APPEAL
[14]
As I have
already indicated, the appellant’s case on appeal is the same
as its case before the court
a
quo
.
In fact, apart from a general refrain that the learned judge
misdirected himself in making his findings in the court
a
quo
,
no ground for appeal is disclosed.
[15]
The
main basis for the court
a
quo
’s
decision is the Appellate Division case of
South
African Railways & Harbours (SAR & H) v National
Bank of SA Ltd
[1]
which
held as follows:
“
The law does
not concern itself with the working of the minds of parties to a
contract, but with the external manifestation of their
minds. Even
therefore if from a philosophical standpoint the minds of the parties
do not meet, yet, if by their acts their minds
seem to have met, the
law will, where fraud is not alleged, look to their acts and assume
that their minds did meet and that they
contracted in accordance with
what the parties purport to accept as a record of their agreement.
This is the only practical way
in which Courts of law can determine
the terms of a contract.”
[2]
[16]
The court
a
quo
applied this
dictum
to interpret the Trust’s conduct of sending the
hernuwingskontrak to Fraaikem on 27 May 2019 as waiver of its right
to rely
on late renewal of the lease, and acceptance of Fraaikem’s
late exercise of an option to renew.
[17]
What
is stated in
SAR&H
v National Bank
remains good law, and has over the years become a helpful guide in
resolving conflicts on the existence or otherwise of a contract.
[3]
In
terms of the doctrine of quasi-mutual assent, a party cannot escape
from an apparent agreement merely because his or her subjective
intention differed from the apparent agreement, and an objective
approach is adopted to determine whether there was consensus between
parties.
[4]
[18]
In
applying the doctrine to the facts of this case, the decisive
question is this: Did the Trust lead Fraaikem, as a reasonable
party,
to believe that its declared intention, as embodied in the
hernuwingskontrak, represented its actual intention?
[5]
To answer this question, a three-fold enquiry is necessary
[6]
,
namely, firstly, was there a misrepresentation as to the Trust’s
intention; secondly, who made that representation; and
thirdly, was
Fraaikem misled thereby? The last question postulates two
possibilities: Was Fraaikem actually misled and would a
reasonable
person have been misled?
[19]
As to the first question in the enquiry,
the Trust has provided no explanation for the circumstances
surrounding the forwarding
of the hernuwingskontrak to Fraaikem, and
no case
is
made that the email of 27 May 2019 constituted a
misrepresentation of any sort. In fact, no mention whatsoever of its
correspondence
of May 2019 was made in the founding papers. Only in
the replying affidavit, once Fraaikem raised the hernuwingskontrak
and placed
reliance on it, was the Trust constrained to admit its
existence and that it was indeed sent by
its
duly authorized employee tasked with administrative duties, including
the administration of various contracts held by it.
[20]
By
all accounts, the email sent by Ms Botha to Fraaikem on 27 May 2019
evinced an intention to be bound by an agreement with Fraaikem
in the
same terms suggested in Fraaikem’s email of 3 December 2018.
The context for Fraaikem’s email of 3 December
2018 was clause
3.2 of the original lease which provides as follows:
“
The
lessee shall have the right to renew this lease for the renewal
period set out in item 6.2 of the Schedule
[7]
by
written notice to the Landlord 6 (six) clear calendar months prior to
the renewal period upon the same terms and conditions as
contained
herein, save as to rental and the rate of annual rental escalation
for the renewal period and save that there shall be
no further right
of renewal
.”
At
clause 3.3 of the original lease the rate of rental in the renewal
agreement was stated as the “
then
current market rental”
,
and
the rate of escalation of the annual rental during the renewal period
was also set out. Further, it was stated that if the parties
failed
to reach agreement on either rate, the matter was to be referred to
an independent valuer.
Thus,
the renewal provisions in the original lease constituted an offer.
They contained all the
essentialia
of a lease agreement -
an
ascertained thing and a fixed or determinable rental
[8]
at
which the lessee was to have use and enjoyment of the thing.
[9]
[21]
Fraaikem’s
email of 3 December 2018 constituted a counter-offer to the renewal
provisions of the original lease, because it
sought to introduce
new
parties to the lease
.
On that construction, Ms Botha’s email of 27 May 2019
constituted acceptance of Fraaikem’s counter-offer. And the
acceptance was clear and unambiguous,
[10]
giving
effect to all the requests made by Fraaikem in the email of 3
December 2018. There is no suggestion in the papers that this
was not
the intention of the Trust.
[22]
As regards the next part of the enquiry -
whether it was reasonable of Fraaikem to rely on the presentation of
the hernuwingskontrak
by Ms Botha - the answer is similarly in favour
of Fraaikem. The contract was not sent in vacuum. It was a response
to Fraaikem’s
email of 3 December 2018 which
expressly
referred to item 6.2 of the Schedule to the lease agreement, the
provision setting out the five-year renewal period
.
[23]
Furthermore, the
proximity
of the date of receipt of the hernuwingskontrak to the expiry date of
the original lease agreement was significant to
both parties. Ms
Marissa Botha and, by extension, the Trust will no doubt have been
aware that the expiry of the original lease
agreement was looming.
In
the context of a five-year commercial lease, this was the eleventh
hour.
The
Trust had had since 3 December 2018 to consider its position. One
must therefore infer that, for whatever reason, the Trust
had reached
a carefully considered decision to finally accept Fraaikem’s
counter-offer of renewal of a contract with it.
I am fortified in
that view by the fact that the hernuwingskontrak was preceded by an
email, a few days earlier, headed ‘
hernuwing
– huurkontrak’
,
announcing that a new contract was to be prepared, and requesting
information of the Fraaikem entity, including the details of
its
directors. This confirms that the lease agreement sent on 27 May 2019
was not an afterthought or offered on the spur of the
moment.
[24]
For all these reasons, I am persuaded that
it was reasonable of Fraaikem to rely on Ms Botha’s
presentation of the hernuwingskontrak,
as an indication by the Trust
of an intention to be bound to an agreement with it.
The
hernuwingskontrak of 27 May 2019 constituted acceptance of Fraaikem’s
counter-offer, thus giving rise to an enforceable
contract between
the parties
.
[25]
As to the
meaning to be given to the hernuwingskontrak - whether it was a
renewal or a new contract - that is also to be inferred
from the
outward manifestation of the parties’ conduct. The request of 3
December 2018 by Fraaikem was for renewal of a contract,
for a
five-year duration, and for the insertion of its name as a party to
the renewal agreement. This is what it obtained from
the Trust. There
was no complaint received from the Trust that the email of 3 December
2018 was out of time, or that Fraaikem was
not an original party to
the original agreement and was, as a result, precluded from
exercising an option to renew the lease.
[26]
I
therefore agree with the court
a
quo
that, by its conduct of sending the hernuwingskontrak, the Trust
assigned the lease agreement to Fraaikem and substituted Fraaaiuitsig
with Fraaikem, accepted Fraaikem’s late exercise of an option
to renew, and at the same time waived its right to rely on
late
renewal of the lease. Assignment of the original lease could only be
effected in terms of clause 6 of the original lease agreement
which
required the consent of the Trust. That provision was for the
exclusive benefit of the Trust as the owner of the premises
- to
ensure that it was at all times aware of the occupants of its
premises. As a result, the requirement for written consent could
be
waived by the Trust.
[11]
[27]
The
same applies to the acceptance of the late renewal of the lease and
the application of the non-variation clause of the lease
agreement.
They were similarly for the benefit of the Trust, and could, as a
result be waived by it.
[12]
And it did waive these clauses through its conduct of sending the
hernuwingskontrak in the circumstances discussed above. In this
regard it is also relevant that the clear terms of the written
consent of the Trust, dated 25 August 2017, were that Fraaiuitsig,
the other party to the original lease agreement, was to be discharged
from any obligations in terms of the original lease from
31 May 2019.
The reason was that Fraaiuitsig had sold the pharmaceutical business
to Fraaikem as a going concern.
There
was no expectation that Fraaiuitsig was to be involved in the further
conduct of the business, or in the lease agreement beyond
31 May
2019. Accordingly, no purpose or business sense could be served by
engaging Fraaiuitsig, if it still existed, regarding
renewal or
assignment of the original lease. In this respect, the argument made
on behalf of the Trust, that the prior consent
of Fraaiuitsig was
necessary before Fraaikem’s counter-offer could be accepted, is
contrived. As I have said, these provisions
were for all practical
purposes for the benefit of the Trust and could be waived by it.
[28]
The
next question is whether Fraaikem’s failure to furnish the
Trust with a signed copy of the renewed contract before the
commencement date of 1 June 2019, or before the Trust had sent its
notice of eviction, invalidated the contract. To determine this
issue
one must have regard to the terms of the agreement. On its terms, the
operation of the hernuwingskontrak was not conditional
upon any
particular manner of acceptance. It did not contain a provision that
signatures - whether by Fraaikem or the trustees
of the Trust - were
necessary in order to bring the new lease agreement into effect. It
simply stated that the commencement date
was to be 1 June 2019. As a
result, the fact that the lease did not contain signatures cannot
serve to invalidate the lease.
[13]
[29]
The Trust
furthermore did not withdraw the hernuwingskontrak before the
commencement date. In any event, given the short time period
between
the furnishing of the hernuwingskontrak and the commencement date of
the new lease period, it would be unfair and against
public policy,
to discharge the Trust from its obligations in terms of the
hernuwingskontrak on the basis that Fraaikem failed
to sign the lease
before 1 June 2019, in circumstances where there was no such
requirement in the lease agreement. More so given
that, by contrast,
the Trust had been afforded some six months to consider its position.
[30]
Moreover,
nothing further was heard from the Trust until the correspondence of
28 June
2019, when it
gave
Fraaikem (and Fraaiuitsig) notice to vacate the premises by 31 July
2019 on, amongst other bases, an allegation that
the
option to renew the lease agreement was not exercised by Fraaiuitsig
as required by the lease. This, despite its hernuwingskontrak
of 27
May 2019, and without reference thereto. The attitude displayed by
the Trust in its letter of 28 June 2019 and in these proceedings
evinces an intention to renege from the agreement that it had bound
itself by only a month earlier. However, as the evidence shows,
by
then, Fraaikem had incurred costs and entered into arrangements to
further their business at the premises for a further five
years, on
the basis of the hernuwingskontrak.
[31]
In the
circumstances, I propose to make the following order:
a.
The
appeal is dismissed, with costs.
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree and it is so ordered.
J
M HLOPHE
Judge
President of the High Court
I
agree.
M
SAMELA
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES:
For
the appellant
: Adv T Lotz
Instructed
by
:
Mr D Goussard
Goussard
Attorneys
For
the respondent :
Adv P MacKenzie
Instructed
by
:
V Steyn
Rauch
Gertenbach Inc.
[1]
South
African Railways & Harbours (SAR & H) v National
Bank of SA Ltd
1924
AD 704
at 715 –6.
[2]
The
origins of the principle of quasi-mutual assent were stated as
follows in
Smith
v Hughes
(1871)
LR 6 QB 597
607
:
“
If,
whatever a [person's] real intention may be, [s]he so conducts him
[or herself] that a reasonable [person] would believe that
[s]he was
assenting to the terms proposed by the other party, and that other
party upon that belief enters into the contract
with him [or her],
the person thus conducting him [or herself] would be equally bound
as if (s)he had intended to agree to the
other party's terms.”
[3]
See
Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
7ed
31 and authorities cited at ft 23.
[4]
See
Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Pappadogianis
1992
(3) SA 324
(A) at 239F-240B and cases referred to.
See
also Pillay & Another v Shaik & Others
2009
(4) SA 74
(SCA) paras 55-60; and see Christie
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
6
th
Ed at 10-12; 24-30.
[5]
Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Pappadogianis
at 239I-240B. The origins of the principle of quasi-mutual assent
were stated as follows in
Smith
v Hughes
(1871)
LR 6 QB 597
607
:
“
If,
whatever a [person's] real intention may be, [s]he so conducts him
[or herself] that a reasonable [person] would believe that
[s]he was
assenting to the terms proposed by the other party, and that other
party upon that belief enters into the contract
with him [or her],
the person thus conducting him [or herself] would be equally bound
as if (s)he had intended to agree to the
other party's terms.”
[6]
Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Pappadogianis
at 239I-240B.
See also
Vincorp
(Pty) Ltd v Trust Hungary ZRT
(061/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 35
(27 March 2018) paras 7 - 8.
[7]
Item
6.2
of the Schedule provides for the duration of the renewal period,
namely five years.
[8]
Letaba
Sawmills (Edms) Bpk v Majovi (Edms) Bp
k
[1992]
ZASCA 195
;
1993
(1) SA 768
(A);
Southernport
Developments (Pty) Ltd v Transnet Ltd
(440/03)
[2004] ZASCA 94
;
[2005] 2 All SA 16
(SCA) (29 September 2004) para
8. See also
Borne
v Harris
.
[9]
Kessler
v Krogmann
1908
TS 290
at 297; W E Cooper
Landlord
and Tenant
2ed (94) at 3.
[10]
Boerne
v Harris
1949
(1) SA 793
(A)
799-800.
[11]
RAF
v Mothupi
2000
3 All SA 181
(A) paras 15 - 17.
[12]
Manna
v Lotter
2007
3 All SA 50
(C) para 26.
[13]
Goldblatt
v Freemantle
1920
AD 123
at 128-129.
sino noindex
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