Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 171South Africa
Steer Property Services CC t/a Steer & Co v Bruch N.O. and Others (18384/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 171 (5 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
5 September 2022
Headnotes
with costs, and the defendants are afforded 15 days within which to amend the annexure to the third party notice if so advised.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Steer Property Services CC t/a Steer & Co v Bruch N.O. and Others (18384/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 171 (5 September 2022)
Steer Property Services CC t/a Steer & Co v Bruch N.O. and Others (18384/2019) [2022] ZAWCHC 171 (5 September 2022)
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sino date 5 September 2022
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 18384/2019
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of hearing: 1 September 2022
Date
of judgment: 5 September 2022
In
the matter between:
STEER
PROPERTY SERVICES CC t/a STEER & CO
Plaintiff/ Fifth Respondent
and
RENE
BRUCH N.O.
First Defendant / Respondent
RALPH
BRUCH N.O.
Second Defendant
/
Respondent
RENE
BRUCH
RALPH
BRUCH
and
CAPRINKLES
PROPERTY GROUP (PTY) LTD
Third Party / Excipient
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
This judgment pertains to the third party’s exception to the
annexure
to the defendants’ third party notice.
[2]
In the action, the plaintiff, which is an estate agency, has sued the
trustees of the Walter Bruch Testamentary Trust (cited as the first
and second defendants) in their capacity as such and also in
their
personal capacities (in which they are cited as the third and fourth
defendants) for payment of R2 012 500 in respect of
commission
allegedly due to it by the Trust upon the sale of the Trust’s
immovable property in Victoria Road, Camps Bay.
It is common ground
between the plaintiff and the defendants on the pleadings that the
plaintiff had been the Trust’s letting
agent in respect of the
lease of the property by the Trust to Café Caprice CC.
[3]
Clause 17 of the deed of lease provided:
‘
SALE OF
PROPERTY
Should the property
hereby be sold to the Lessee, any company, trust or close corporation
in which the lessee, the lessee’s
spouse, child or any other
member of the lessee’s family have a beneficial interest,
during the currency of this lease, any
continuation thereof or
renewal thereof or within six (6) months of the vacation of the
property by Lessee, STEER PROPERTY SERVICES
CC, shall be entitled to
commission calculated at 5% plus VAT, such commission shall be
payable by the Lessor.’
[4]
It is also common ground between the plaintiffs and the defendants
that
the property was sold by the Trust during the currency of the
lease to the third party, Caprinkles Property Group (Pty) Ltd,
represented
by Brandon Kerzner and David Raad, for R35 million.
[5]
The plaintiff alleged in its particulars of claim that the third
party
was a purchaser within the meaning of clause 17 of the lease
agreement. It also alleged that it was a tacit term of the lease
agreement
‘
that should the property be sold to any company,
trust or close cooperation in which a member or the members of Café
Caprice
has or have a beneficial interest, during the currency of the
lease agreement, any continuation thereof or renewal thereof or
within
six months of the vacation of the property by Café
Caprice, the plaintiff would be entitled to commission
’
calculated as aforesaid. In support of those allegations, it pleaded
that Kerzner and Raad count amongst the members of
Café
Caprice CC and are also the shareholders and directors of Caprinkles.
[6]
The plaintiff also pleaded that the third and fourth defendants were
joined
in their personal capacities because the Trust had been
‘dissolved’ and the third and fourth respondents, as the
erstwhile
trustees, had accepted personal liability for the debt, if
any, of the Trust to the plaintiff. Those allegations are admitted in
the plea (which begs the question why the action was instituted
against the erstwhile trustees in their capacities as such, but
that
is by the by for present purposes).
[7]
It follows from the pleaded allegations described above that the
Trust
is no longer in existence and that the plaintiff’s claim,
assuming that it is valid (which is contested by the defendants),
lies against the third and fourth defendants by reason of their
agreement with the plaintiff to assume the Trust’s obligations.
What the plaintiff has pleaded, and the defendants have admitted, is
a classic example of a delegation of debt agreement. Delegation
is a
species of novation. Its effect is that the old debt is extinguished,
and a new debt is created in lieu thereof; see LAWSA
Vol 3 (Third
Edition), s.v.
Cession
, at para 143.
[8]
It appears on the pleadings that clause 15 of the deed of sale in
terms
of which the third party, Caprinkles, purchased the property
from the Trust provided as follows:
‘
COMMISSION
It is recorded that there
is no brokerage payable to any agent in connection with this
transaction. The Purchaser warrants in favour
of the Seller that he
was not introduced to the Seller or to the property by any agent or
broker entitled to claim commission and
hereby indemnifies the Seller
against any claim by any agent or broker for commission made on the
basis that such agent or broker
was the effective cause of the sale
or introduced the Purchaser to the Seller and/or to the property.’
[9]
In the annexure to the third party notice, all four of the cited
defendants
claim an entitlement from the third party to be
indemnified against liability for the plaintiff’s claim in the
event of the
plaintiff’s action succeeding. The pleaded basis
for such entitlement is clause 15 of the deed of sale, quoted above.
[10]
The nub of the third party’s exception to the defendants’
third party notice
is contained in para 3, 9, 10 and 11 thereof,
which read as follows:
‘
3.
The third party notice notifies the third party that “
each
of the abovenamed Defendants claim
” an indemnity on the
grounds set forth in the annexure thereto.
...
9.
The plaintiff’s claim against the third and fourth defendants
eo
nomine
(sic)
[1]
is solely asserted on the basis of the pleaded (and admitted)
assumption of liability for the debt of the Trust (if any).
10. The
third party notice is, accordingly, excipiable in that no allegation
is made supporting a legal conclusion
that the third party has an
obligation to indemnify the third and fourth defendants
eo nomine
(sic) in respect of an assumption by them of personal liability for
the deaths of the Trust to the plaintiff.
11. In
the circumstances the third party notice fails to make allegations
necessary to found a claim for an indemnity
in favour of the third
and fourth defendants
eo nomine
(sic) against the third
party.’
[11]
Put simply, the objection is that on its face the pleaded indemnity
operates only as between
the third party and the Trust, and the
defendants have not pleaded any basis for a contingent liability by
the third party to the
third and fourth defendants because of the
latter’s assumption of liability to the plaintiff for the
Trust’s debt.
The contention is that the annexure to the third
party notice fails to plead a contractual (or indeed any) basis for
the contingent
claim advanced by the third and fourth defendants
against the third party.
[12]
In my judgment, the objection is well taken. Clause 15 of the deed of
sale created a contingent
obligation by the third party in favour of
the Trust
. The third and fourth defendants could not by means
of the delegation of debt agreement they concluded with the plaintiff
and the
Trust - to which the third party was a stranger - thereby
create an obligation to them by the third party.
[13]
In the result, the exception to the third party notice claim by the
third and fourth defendants
is upheld with costs, and the defendants
are afforded 15 days within which to amend the annexure to the third
party notice if so
advised.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Excipient’s
counsel:
T. Crookes
Excipient’s
attorneys:
Pepler O’Kennedy
Tyger Valley
Randall Titus &
Associates
Cape Town
Respondents’
/ Defendants’ counsel:
N.C. Lawrenson
Respondents’
/ Defendants’ attorneys:
Law Practice of Brian L. Segal
Cape Town
[1]
‘
Eis
nominibus
’
is,
I think, the expression that should have been used if Latinisms were
required.
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