Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 43South Africa
Albaraka Bank v New Turn Investments (Pty) Ltd (D3715/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 43 (18 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
18 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Albaraka Bank v New Turn Investments (Pty) Ltd (D3715/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 43 (18 July 2023)
Albaraka Bank v New Turn Investments (Pty) Ltd (D3715/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 43 (18 July 2023)
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sino date 18 July 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D3715/2021
In
the matter between:
ALBARAKA
BANK
APPLICANT
and
NEW
TURN INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD RESPONDENT
Coram: Mossop
J
Heard: 18
July 2023
Delivered: 18
July 2023
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
There
will be an order in terms of paragraphs 1 to 7 of the notice of
motion, save that there shall be no order in terms of sub-paragraph
3.3 thereof.
JUDGMENT
Mossop
J
:
[1]
This is an ex
tempore judgment.
[2]
The applicant
is a company that carries on business as an authorised financial
services provider in terms of the banking laws of
this country. In
conducting its business activities, the applicant, inter alia,
observes Sharia law and the principles attached
thereto. The
respondent is also a company, duly incorporated in terms of the
company laws of this country. Its guiding mind, being
the deponent to
its answering affidavit, Ms Fahima Khan (Ms Khan), is an adherent to
the Islamic faith.
[3]
The applicant
and the respondent concluded a series of agreements to permit the
applicant to advance a loan to the respondent to
allow it to purchase
an immovable property. Because both parties to the agreements follow
the prescripts of the Islamic faith,
the agreement had to be
structured in a fashion that kept it within the parameters of the
principles of that faith. The structure
of the agreements will be
considered shortly. The applicant alleges that the respondent has
breached the agreements that were concluded
and seeks to terminate
its relationship with the respondent and claim the amounts that it is
alleged are due to it. This appears
to be opposed by the respondent
which, essentially, denies that it is presently in breach of the
agreements concluded with the
applicant.
[4]
This morning
the applicant was represented by Ms Miranda. Mr Tucker appeared for
the respondent. Both counsel are thanked for their
interesting and
helpful arguments.
[5]
Before
considering the nature of the relief claimed by the applicant in its
notice of motion, it is necessary to describe the structure
of the
agreements. Only with this understanding is the relief claimed
understandable.
[6]
The
applicant offers its customers specialised services and products
compliant with Sharia law which cater, inter alia, for Islam’s
prohibition on the charging of interest. Indeed, it appears that
the entire scheme utilised in this matter was designed to
permit the
applicant to derive a profit from the transaction that it agreed to
with the respondent without breaching the injunction
against interest
being charged. Simply put, the respondent required a loan from the
applicant to purchase an immovable property
and the applicant was
prepared to grant it the loan. The parties agreed that the method of
advancing the loan should be the creation
of a property partnership
agreement. Accordingly, on 29 May 2018, the parties concluded three
interrelated agreements:
(a)
A musharaka
agreement, which is described as an agreement to purchase equity. It
required the applicant to purchase undivided shares
in the immovable
property to be acquired. This agreement determined that the quantum
of the loan amount would be R1 650 000.
The applicant would
purchase 90% of the undivided shares in the immovable property for
the sum of R1 485 000 and the
respondent would take up the
other 10% of the undivided shares for the sum of R165 000. The
parties agreed to share profits and
losses. As security for the loan
to be advanced to it, the respondent would register a mortgage bond
over the immovable property
to be acquired. In the event of a breach
of the musharaka agreement by the respondent, the applicant would be
entitled to terminate
it by giving the respondent one calendar
month’s written notice of its intention to terminate it. The
concept of a musharaka
agreement is recognised in our law and is
defined in section 24JA(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1962;
(b)
A unilateral
promise agreement, in terms of which the respondent undertook to
purchase the applicant’s undivided share in
the immovable
property to be acquired. This would be acquired over a period of 240
months in successive annual acquisitions. In
the event of the
respondent breaching the promise, the applicant would be entitled to
terminate the agreement and recover its damages
from the respondent.
Its damages would cover the difference between the fair market value
of the applicant’s undivided share
in the immovable property to
be acquired, calculated at the date of the breach of the promise, and
the lower amount representing
the net proceeds of the sale of the
applicant’s undivided share realised by the sale of the
immovable property by public
auction or by a bona fide private sale;
and
(c)
An overriding
agreement, in terms of which it was also agreed that the length of
the musharaka agreement would be 240 months. It
was furthermore
agreed that the respondent would purchase the applicant’s
undivided share in the immovable property in monthly
instalments of
R14 825.94 over that period. In the event of a breach of that
agreement by the respondent, the applicant was
required to give it
seven days’ written notice to remedy that breach, failing which
the applicant would be entitled to cancel
the agreement. Upon breach,
the applicant would be entitled to claim all amounts under the
agreement forthwith and the respondent
agreed to pay the applicants
costs on an attorney and own client scale.
[7]
Thus, over the
duration of the three agreements the respondent would acquire the
applicants undivided share in the immovable property
to be acquired
so that at the end of the agreement period it would have acquired the
entirety of the applicant’s interest
in the immovable property.
It appears that because the respondent was required to repay the
applicant in fixed instalments in respect
of which no mention is made
of interest, this arrangement complied with Sharia law. The applicant
still, however, would make a
profit from the transaction. As the
respondent itself states:
‘
Instead
of interest being charged on a monthly basis, it is already amortised
upfront and incorporated into the value of the property
and in the
yearly sales of equity, so bought back.’
The
immovable property to be acquired would be registered in the name of
the respondent, who would hold it on behalf of the partnership.
The
loan amount was advanced and the immovable property acquired.
[8]
The applicant
alleges that the respondent failed to pay its monthly instalments
regularly. In July 2020 it breached the agreements.
As of 7 July
2020, it was in arrears in the amount of R23 985.06. The arrears
were not made good, and on 18 November 2021,
the applicant elected to
terminate the agreements, having given the prescribed one month’s
written notice. While this amount
appears to be relatively small,
this was a repeated failure of the respondent to pay in accordance
with its obligations and is
the straw that broke the camel’s
back.
[9]
That
background hopefully helps in providing a clearer understanding of
the relief claimed by the applicant in its notice of motion.
It seeks
an order declaring the partnership in respect of the immovable
property that is the subject of the three agreements, and
which has
the formal description of Portion 1 of Erf 13, Chiltern Hills, to be
terminated.
[1]
To achieve the
winding up of the partnership property, it seeks the appointment of a
liquidator with certain defined powers. Those
powers appear to
extend beyond the powers ordinarily afforded liquidators in this
division: ordinarily the powers identified in
Muhlmann
v Muhlmann
[2]
are granted to liquidators. I asked Ms Miranda to address me on this
aspect and in particular the power to interrogate claimed
in
paragraph 3.3 of the notice of motion. Ms Miranda appeared to accept
that if there was some reason why the powers sought in
the notice of
motion could not be granted then they ought not to be granted but she
needed to take instructions in that regard.
She later confirmed this
to be her instructions.
[10]
In
my view, the proposed liquidator cannot be afforded the power of
interrogation. A similar power was sought in
Morar
NO v Akoo and Another
[3]
but
was refused. On appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, Wallis JA
stated that:
‘
The
power to order an interrogation is an exceptional power and I can
find no basis upon which it is one that courts can confer
upon
liquidators of partnerships. If that is a shortcoming the remedy must
lie in legislation.’ (footnotes omitted)
[11]
Every
co-owner is, in principle, entitled to have that joint-ownership
terminated.
A
co-owner is not obliged to remain a co-owner against his or her
will.
[4]
It therefore follows
that not many defences can be raised against the claim of a co-owner
to have a joint ownership arrangement
terminated.
[5]
It appears to be common cause in this matter that the
actio
communi dividundo
applies to this matter and I shall approach it on that understanding.
[12]
The applicant
having unequivocally indicated that it seeks to undo the property
partnership agreement, the respondent offers up
two defences on the
merits. The first is that any arrears owing by the respondent to the
applicant have been made good. The respondent
states that the default
in making payments of which the applicant complains has been
rectified and the respondent cannot therefore
understand why the
applicant persists in seeking the relief that it seeks. Ms Khan
addresses the issue as follows:
‘
While
there was a time where the Respondent had fallen in arrears with such
payments, these payments were brought up to date in
full on 19 July
2022 when an amount of R142 651.19 was paid.’
[13]
The second
defence is that whilst the immovable property is registered in the
name of a juristic entity, it is a domestic residence
with warm
bodied persons who reside there. Those persons, according to the
respondent, are entitled to the protection of section
26 of the
Constitution and Uniform Rules 46 and 46A respectively.
[14]
Inherent in
the first defence is an admission by the respondent that it failed to
maintain its agreed payments to the applicant.
For arrears to be made
good, there must, a fortiori, be arrears. And for arrears to exist,
there must generally be a failure to
comply with a payment
obligation. The respondent, however, denies that the applicant sent
it a breach letter followed by the cancellation
letter and it
therefore denies that the applicant consequently cancelled the
agreements on 18 November 2021.
[15]
These appear
to me to be unmeritorious denials. The breach letter was addressed to
the respondent’s guiding mind, Ms Khan,
at an email address and
to a Mr Khan, also at an email address. There is no denial by either
of them that the email addresses are
not theirs. The breach letter
physically exists and is appended to the founding affidavit. The
cancellation letter also physically
exists and is likewise appended
to the founding affidavit as an annexure. It is addressed to Ms Khan
by way of an email address
and it was also sent by registered mail.
There is no indication that it was not received by Ms Khan. Both
letters were drafted
by the applicant’s attorneys. The
cancellation letter, dated 18 November 2021, comprises three pages
and is exquisitely detailed:
it sets out the entire history of the
relationship of the parties and at paragraph 16 thereof the following
appears:
‘
As
a result, and duly instructed by our client, we hereby give you
NOTICE of our client’s TERMINATION of the MUSHARAKA FINANCE
AGREEMENT in respect of the property with immediate effect.’
[16]
Mr Tucker very
fairly conceded that the respondent had not acted in terms of the
demand made of it to rectify its conduct. Despite
the respondent’s
denial on the papers, I must therefore find that due and proper
notice was given and the musharaka agreement
has been cancelled.
[17]
Mr
Tucker also submitted that the cancellation of the musharaka
agreement did not necessarily lead to the cancellation of the other
agreements concluded. However, both the unilateral promise agreement
and the overriding agreement reference the musharaka agreement.
The
three agreements are clearly to be construed as being inextricably
linked the one to the other and the cancellation of the
musharaka
agreement brings the entire scheme to an end.
[18]
The respondent
alleges that its admitted arrears have been expunged because of a
payment of the amount of R142 651.19 made by it
to the applicant on
19 July 2022. That payment was undoubtedly made. But it was made more
than a year after the agreements had
been cancelled, on 18 November
2021. Rather than resurrect the now cancelled agreements, the payment
simply served to reduce the
respondent’s overall indebtedness
to the applicant. Its payment therefore provides no rebuttal to the
relief claimed by the
applicant.
[19]
The argument
was taken further by Mr Tucker when he submitted that what had
actually been compromised was the applicant’s
ability to bring
this application. This arose out of a letter, dated 24 June 2022, in
which the applicant’s representative
wrote to the respondent
and stated, inter alia:
‘
We
request that your client attends to payment of the arrears in the
amount of R99 041.05, failing which, our instructions are to
proceed
with the application which is set down for hearing on 20 July 2022.’
The
letter makes it plain that the applicant still regards the agreements
as having been cancelled as it refers to the termination
of the
musharaka agreement. No payment was immediately forthcoming from the
respondent, it only being made, as previously stated,
on 19 July
2022, the day before the matter was in court. There is in my view,
much force in Ms Miranda’s argument that the
invitation to pay
the arrears had lapsed. I cannot in the circumstances find that the
applicant has compromised its entitlement
to proceed.
[20]
The respondent
further alleges that it is unfair, or even unconstitutional, that the
applicant is able through the order that it
seeks to circumvent:
‘…
certain
rights that would be afforded to me in any situation where ordinarily
a bank would go after an immovable property (such
as section 26 of
the Constitution as well as the processes of Rule 46 and 46A of the
Uniform Rules of Court) in its achieving the
same result.’
[21]
There are
several difficulties that I have with this proposition. Firstly, the
deponent, a natural human being, is not to be equated
with the
respondent, a juristic entity. Whether the deponent would be afforded
certain rights is not the issue as she is not a
party to the
agreements with the applicant. She agreed to the structuring of the
transaction and now cannot claim that she is somehow
prejudiced
because of the structure. Secondly, the applicant does not seek an
order of executability against the immovable property.
The relief
that it claims is the termination of a partnership relationship
relating to the immovable property. In this regard,
paragraphs 3.6
and 3.7 of the notice of motion provide as follows:
‘
3.6
save to the extent necessary to discharge any liabilities of the
partnership to third parties, and all the liquidator’s
fees and
disbursements, and to ensure an equitable distribution in accordance
with any agreement relating to the partnership, the
liquidator shall
not realise any assets of the partnership;
3.7
to the extent that it is necessary for the assets of the partnership
to be realised, to invite the parties to offer
to purchase the
partnership property and/or other partnership assets that may come to
light, which offer musty be made to the liquidator
within five (5)
business days of the liquidator calling for such offer, and at a
price in excess of the appraised value of such
property;’
[22]
It
is accordingly possible that the immovable property may in the future
be acquired by the respondent, in which event no discernible
prejudice will accrue to the persons residing within the immovable
property. The consequences of the relief sought by the applicant
are
matters for another day as there is no counter application delivered
by the respondent in which any such relief pertaining
to the sale of
the immovable property is sought. A similar argument was raised in
Britz
v Sequeira
,
[6]
and at paragraph 18 of the judgment in that matter, the following is
stated:
‘
Mr
Van der Merwe relied upon rule 46A of the Uniform Rules of Court
which sets out the circumstances to be considered when immovable
property is to be declared specially executable. In this regard
he referred to the fact that the property is occupied by the
respondent, his spouse, as well as his mentally disabled sister.
He extensively quoted from
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Folscher & another and similar matters
and
Absa Bank Ltd v Ntsane.
The issue was also more recently dealt with by the full bench in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Mokebe and related cases.
However, and notwithstanding the importance attached to a debtor’s
right to a roof over his/her head, I am not persuaded
that this
defence holds any water
in casu
.
If the property is sold, and bearing in mind respondent’s
entitlement to payment for his member’s interests
in the close
corporations, he would have sufficient money to buy a decent dwelling
house to ensure a roof over his and his next-of-kin’s
heads.’
In
this matter, there is a prospect that the respondent may again
acquire the immovable property or with its share of the proceeds
of
the sale of the immovable property it will be able to afford to
either acquire, or rent, another property.
[23]
In his heads
of argument, Mr Tucker submits that:
‘
While
there is obviously nothing offensive about this structure, the
implementation of Musharaka agreement in the dissolution of
the
partnership cannot be done in a manner that ignores a Defendant’s
rights to housing, the protections of Rule 46A in respect
of
residential property, and the Court’s oversight function in
such matter.’ (footnotes omitted)
[24]
The respondent
is a juristic entity, not the deponent to the respondent’s
answering affidavit. I am unconvinced that a juristic
entity has a
right to housing.
[25]
I can conceive
of no reason that would make the dissolution of a partnership
agreement unconstitutional, for sight must not be lost
of the fact
that this is what this application is all about. In the
circumstances, I grant the following order:
There
shall be an order in terms of paragraph 1 to 7 of the notice of
motion, save that there shall be no order in terms of sub-paragraph
3.3 thereof.
MOSSOP
J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants: Ms
J L Miranda
Instructed
by: Eversheds
Sutherland (KZN) Incorporated
1
st
Floor
29
Richefond Circle
Ridgeside
Umhlanga
Counsel
for the respondent: Mr
M C Tucker
Instructed
by: Abdool,
Gaffoor, Parasram and Associates
13
Bishop Road
Windermere
Durban
Date
of argument: 18
July 2023
Date
of Judgment : 18 July
2023
[1]
The
immovable property has a street address of 33 Chearsley Road,
Chiltern Hills, Dawncrest, Westville.
[2]
Muhlmann
v Muhlmann
1984
(3) SA 102 (AD) 103.
[3]
Morar
NO v Akoo and Another
2011 (6) SA 311
(SCA) para 25.
[4]
Robson
v Theron
1978
(1) SA 841
(A)
at 856H.
[5]
Britz
v Sequeira
[2020] 2 All SA 415
(FB) para 16.
[6]
Britz
v Sequeira
[2020] 2 All SA 415
(FB).
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