Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 97South Africa
Widside Investments CC v Mbayi and Others (D5570/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 97 (29 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
29 October 2024
Headnotes
the seller's right to cancel the agreement when the buyer did not comply with the key terms, thereby underscoring the importance of fulfilling contractual obligations. COOPER AND ANOTHER NNO v CURRO HEIGHTS PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD[6] the court came to a conclusion that "…the declarator that the agreement is of no force or effect for noncompliance with s 2(1) of the Act. The section reads thus:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Widside Investments CC v Mbayi and Others (D5570/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 97 (29 October 2024)
Widside Investments CC v Mbayi and Others (D5570/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 97 (29 October 2024)
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sino date 29 October 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D5570/2024
In
the matter between:
WIDSIDE
INVESTMENTS CC
APPLICANT
and
SITHULILE
SAVIOUR MBAYI
FIRST RESPONDENT
MATTHEW
ADAM FAIRFOOT
SECOND RESPONDENT
DEEDS
REGISTRY OFFICE
THIRD RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The relief set out in para 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3 of the notice of motion
are granted
.
2.
Costs are awarded against the second respondent on scale B
JUDGMENT
GWAGWA
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is Wildside Investments CC, a close corporation
registered and incorporated
in accordance with the laws of the
Republic of South African, with its registered business address at
Number […] B[…]
Road, Port Shepstone, KwaZulu-Natal
Province.
[2]
The first respondent is Sithulile Saviour Mbayi an adult female who
resides at number
1[…] M[…], Cnr L[…] and F[…]
Drive, Lonehille Ext.42, Sandton, Gauteng Province, who entered into
a
sale agreement with the applicant (hereinafter referred to as
purchaser).
[3]
The second respondent is Matthew Adam Fairfoot, a practicing attorney
and admitted
conveyancer, whose place of employment is at 7[…]
C[…] Drive, Durban North, KwaZulu-Natal Province.
[4]
The third respondent is the Chief Registrar of Deeds, appointed in
terms of s 2(1)(a)
of the Deeds Registries Act
[1]
whose principal place of business is at 3[…] P[…]
Street, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal Province.
Nature
of the case
[5]
The applicant and the second respondent entered into a sale agreement
on 22 January
2024 which was only signed by the seller. The applicant
sold its property described as Portion-Erf 9[…] Umtentweni,
KwaZulu-Natal.
[6]
However, the second respondent signed the sale agreement
electronically on the 8 June
2024 and her signature appeared as
dubious. The applicant was advised that in order for the sale
agreement to be valid, it must
comply with section 2 of the
Alienation of Land Act
[2]
('the
ALA'). The ALA requires that an agreement for alienation of immovable
property must be in writing and signed by the parties
or their duly
appointed representatives.
[7]
The applicant was further advised that in terms of s 4(4) of the
Electronic Communications
and Transactions Act
[3]
('the ECTA') certain agreements may not be concluded electronically.
These include:
1.
An agreement for alienation of immovable property as provided for in
the Alienation
of Land Act, 1981 (
Act 68 of 1981
).
2.
An agreement for the long-term lease of immovable property in excess
of 20 years
as provided for in the Alienation of Land Act, 1981 (
Act
68 of 1981
).
3.
The execution, retention and presentation of a will or codicil as
defined in
the Wills Act, 1953 (
Act 7 of 1953
).
4.
The execution of a bill of exchange as defined in the Bills of
Exchange Act,
1964 (
Act 34 of 1964
).
[8]
The applicant was further advised that s 2(1) of the ALA provides
that there will
be no valid sale of land unless contained in a
written deed of alienation signed by both parties.
[9]
The applicant subsequently instructed Qwabe Attorneys to cancel the
sale agreement.
Consequently, a letter was drafted to Fairfoot
Attorneys advising them of such cancellation.
[10]
The applicant was forced to make an urgent application for purposes
of interdicting the transfer
of the property. The rule
nisi
was issued in court on 24 May 2024 before Harrison AJ. The order was
granted as follows:
'1. The rules relating to
forms, service and time periods, as prescribed by the Uniform Rule of
court are dispensed with and this
matter is heard as an urgent
application.
2
A Rule nisi is issued calling on the Respondent to show cause on the
20
th
day of June 2024 at 09:30 or so soon thereafter as
the matter may be heard, why an order in the following terms should
not be made.
2.1
The 3
rd
Respondent is hereby interdicted and restrained
from effecting transfer of the property described as Ptn 8 Erf 9[…]
Umtentweni,
Hibiscus Coast, KwaZulu-Natal, to the 1
st
Respondent.
2.2
The Agreement of sale entered by the applicant and 1
st
Respondent on 22
nd
January 2024 and 8
th
June
2023 is hereby declare null and void.
2.3
The sale agreement of the immovable property entered into by the
applicant and the 1
st
Respondent on 22
nd
January 2024 and 8
th
June 2023 is declared validly
cancelled.
2.4
The 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondent are ordered to pay
the cost to this application only on unsuccessful opposition.
3
That para 2.1 above shall operates as an interim order with immediate
effect
4
The Applicant is ordered and directed to deliver replying affidavit,
if
any, on or before 31
st
May 2024.
5
The parties are directed to file Heads of Argument and practice by 10
June
2024.'
Issue
to be decided
[11]
The issue that must be decided by this court is whether the applicant
has validly cancelled the
sale agreement for want of the purchaser's
signature, with the purchaser having electronically signed the
agreement, taking into
consideration the requirements of s 2(2) of
the ALA.
The
law
[12]
In
POTGIETER
V VILLAGE SFW AND OTHERS
,
[4]
the court emphasised that:
'As can be seen from
section 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act, quoted
above when acting through an agent, as both applicant and first
respondent were acting through their respective attorneys, there
would have to be written authority for both attorneys to bind their
respective principals to a valid agreement to sell land.'
[13]
The case of
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY AND ANOTHER V PITSE NO AND
OTHERS
[5]
involved a purchaser failing to meet specific obligations under the
sale agreement. The court upheld the seller's right to cancel
the
agreement when the buyer did not comply with the key terms, thereby
underscoring the importance of fulfilling contractual obligations.
COOPER
AND ANOTHER NNO v CURRO HEIGHTS PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
[6]
the court came to a conclusion that
"…the
declarator that the agreement is of no force or effect for
noncompliance with s 2(1) of the Act. The section reads
thus:
'No alienation of land
after the commencement of this section shall, subject to the
provisions of section 28, 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.'
The result of
noncompliance with s 2(1) is 'that the agreement concerned is of no
force or effect. This means that it is void ab
initio and cannot
confer a right of action.'
[14]
Advocate
Nako
for the applicant argued for the nullification
of the sale agreement. She argued that the applicant made an urgent
application
for an interdict to stop the Registrar of Deeds from
registering the property at the Deeds Office.
[15]
She argued that such sale agreement must be declared null and void
from the inception. She stated
that the first respondent did not
oppose the application to declare the agreement null and void.
Furthermore the second respondent
should not have opposed the
application to declare the agreement null and void.
[16]
The main bone of contention was the electronic signing of the sale
agreement, by the first respondent
Ms
Nako
argued that s 4(4)
of the ECTA does not provide for the electronic signing of the sale
agreement, furthermore, there was no consensus
between the applicant
and the respondents regarding the signing of the agreement.
[17]
The first respondent failed to comply with some of the terms and
conditions of the sale agreement.
Advocate
Nako
referred to
annexure" FAAA2" which is the clause dated 1 February 2024
where the first respondent failed to comply with
the sale agreement
where it stated that the offer was subjected to all purchasers
requirements to be met by 1 february 2024 . Furthermore
annexure
"FA3" which is a letter written by Nelson Borman and
Partners on behalf of the applicant which was addressed
to second
respondent ,thus advising the second respondent that the signature of
the first respondent appears to have been signed
electronically . She
further referred to the correspondence dated 18 April 2024, again
showing the first respondent's failure to
comply with the terms and
conditions of the agreement. The aforesaid correspondence was written
by Subhash Maikoo @ associates
on behalf of the applicant, it was
addressed to the second respondent thus cancelling the sale agreement
. The main cause of cancellation
emanated from the issue of
encroachment of Portion 8 to Portion 9 , it appears that there was a
need for consolidation of Portion
8 and 9 respectively, which was not
incorporated in the sale agreement, therefore the sale agreement had
to be cancelled pending
the registration of the two mentioned
Portions . The sale agreement couldn't be enforceable due to such
non- compliance as mentioned
above .
[18]
Furthermore, Advocate
Nako
referred the court to page 110 of
the applicants replying affidavit, which refers to the acknowledgment
of cancellation of the
sale agreement by the first respondent , where
first respondent confirmed cancellation subject to the applicant
bearing the costs
. She argued for the relief sought and an order as
per the notice of motion in particular para 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3
respectively
and costs order to be awarded against the second
respondent
[19]
In contrast, counsel for the second respondent advocate Lennard
argued that the applicant has
failed to cite Standard Bank as one of
the interested parties. Standard Bank was in the process of
foreclosing the applicant's
immovable property. Advocate Lennard
disputed the clause in the sale agreement dated 1 February 2024 that
it constituted a breach
of the sale agreement. She argued that, there
was no cancellation of the agreement that exists from the
applicant's papers.
Counsel for the respondent advocate Lennard
further argued that the applicant has failed to cancel the existing
sale agreement,
however if the applicant so wishes to do so, she was
entitled to cancel it at any point in time and also bear the costs of
such
cancellation thereof.
Analysis
[20]
The real bone of contention is whether the applicant has validly
cancelled the sale agreement
pursuant to the first respondent's
non-compliance with the terms and conditions of the agreement.
Counsel for the applicant advocate
Nako has argued that such
agreement was cancelled owing to non-compliance of the sale
agreement.
[21]
Advocate
Nako
argued that the sale agreement was signed
electronically, which rendered such sale agreement null and void. It
must be noted that
the applicant instructed various attorneys
mentioned above , which included Qwabe Attorneys who was instructed
to interdict the
third respondent from registering the applicant's
immovable property into the name of the first respondent . It was on
the verge
of being registered, fortunately the applicant applied for
the interdict against the third respondent which was granted by the
Court (see Court order in para 10 above) it was granted by AJ
Harrison on the 24 May 2024. It is also noteworthy to mention that,
Qwabe attorneys also wrote a letter to the second respondent advising
them that the sale agreement remained cancelled . It appears
that all
efforts to cancel the sale agreement were ignored by the second
respondent , hence the applicant applied for an interdict
which was
granted on the 24 May 2024 . the second respondent was hell-bent to
register the applicants property was it not for the
interdict ,
surely it could have been registered against the will of the seller.
[22]
It is further noted that, the first respondent signed the sale
agreement, electronically which
in itself is contrary to s 4(4) of
the ECTA. The ECTA states that electronic signatures cannot be used
for agreements dealing with
the sale of immovable property. This is
clearly set out in s 4(4) in reference to schedule 2 which
specifically mentions agreements
entered into in terms of the ALA as
being excluded. If that is the case, the applicant has raised the
issue of signing the sale
agreement electronically by the first
respondent. Such exercise is also contrary to s 4(4) of the ECTA,
thus making such sale agreement
null and void. Counsel for the
applicant has argued that the agreement was cancelled, thus referring
to the letter dated 18 April
2024, which counsel for the second
respondent advocate Lennard ,disputes that such letter cannot be
referred as a cancellation
letter . In essence, it is no longer the
desire of the applicant to proceed with the sale agreement.
[23]
Counsel for the respondent Advocate Lennard argued that the applicant
failed to cancel the sale
agreement. Furthermore, she also argued
that there is no cancellation of the sale agreement that appeared in
the applicants founding
affidavit. However, the correspondence
drafted by Qwabe Attorneys and other attorneys mentioned in
paragragh17 , bear testimony
or glaringly shaw clear evidence that
the sale agreement was cancelled. Therefore, the argument that the
applicant has failed to
cancel the sale agreement is ludicrous.
[24]
It must be noted that the first respondent did not oppose the
application for the cancellation
of the sale agreement or to declare
the sale agreement null and void ab initio, but the second respondent
did, who are the parties
to such sale agreement? Does it involve the
second respondent? , who gave the mandate to the second respondent to
oppose the cancellation
of the sale agreement? The first respondent
only signed the confirmatory affidavit not answering affidavit. Can
the court deprive
the right of the applicant to cancel the sale
agreement ? The court agrees with the decision taken in the case of
City of
Johannesburg and Pitse ,also in the case of cooper and anothe
r
mentioned in paragragh 13 supra .the non -compliance with certain
requirement of the sale agreement rendered such agreement null
and
void and unenforceable .
[7]
Therefore , the sale agreement was null and void from its inception .
The court also agrees with the submission of advocate Nako
that
,there was no meeting of minds between the applicant and the first
respondent , therefore the sale agreement cannot be enforceable
,
which is in line with case of
Cooper
and another NN v Curro Heights properties (PTY)
, case appears in para 13 above .
[25]
In view of the above, the sale agreement was validly cancelled
by the applicant. Accordingly,
the transfer cannot proceed at the
deeds office.
Order
[26]
I therefore make the following order·
1.
The orders in para 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3 of the notice of motion are
granted
2.
The costs are awarded against second respondent on scale B.
GWAGWA
AJ
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING: 22
AUGUST 2024
DATE
OF DELIVERY: 29 OTOBER
2024
FOR
THE APPLICANT - ADV N NAKO INSTRUCTED BY W.A MPANZA INCORPORATED
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS - ADV U. LENNARD INSTRUCTED BY FAIRFOOT ATTORNEYS INC
[1]
Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937
.
[2]
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
.
[3]
Electronic Communications and Transactions Act 25 of 2002
.
[4]
Potgieter
v Village SFW and Others
[2022] ZANCHC 1.
[5]
City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Pitse NO and
Others
[2022] ZAGPJHC 682.
[6]
2023 (5) SA 402 (SCA)
[7]
See
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipa
lity
fn 5 above;
Canton
fn 6 above.
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