Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 32South Africa
Nhlapho v Langa (D1943/2016) [2022] ZAKZDHC 32 (9 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary of evidence
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Nhlapho v Langa (D1943/2016) [2022] ZAKZDHC 32 (9 September 2022)
Nhlapho v Langa (D1943/2016) [2022] ZAKZDHC 32 (9 September 2022)
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sino date 9 September 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL
DIVISION,
DURBAN
CASE
NO: D1943/2016
In
the matter between:
SIBUSISO
GOOD-ENOUGH
NHLAPHO
PLAINTIFF
and
THEMBA
OLIVER
LANGA
DEFENDANT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email, and released to SAFLII. The
date
for hand down is deemed to be 09 September 2022 (Friday) at 11h00.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is made:
1.
The plaintiff's claim is dismissed with
costs;
2.
The defendant's claim is upheld;
3.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the
defendant the sum of R1 000 000 being the purchase price, plus
interest thereon at the rate
applicable in law from 1 January 2011 to
date of payment.
JUDGMENT
# Mlaba
AJ
Mlaba
AJ
[1]
On or about October 2009 the parties
herein entered into an oral purchase and sale agreement in terms of
which the plaintiff sold
to the defendant the immovable property
described as No. [....] F[....] G[....], [….] E[....] Road,
P[....], KwaZulu
Natal, held under Deed of Transfer number
[....]and registered under Sectional Title Deed number [....],
situated at eThekwini
Municipality, herein referred to as the
"property". The copy of the Title Deed was submitted and
admitted into evidence
as part of the plaintiff's bundle of
documents.
[2]
It is common cause that the agreed
purchase price was a sum of R1 050 000 and
that,
as
at
end
2010,
the
defendant
had
paid
the
plaintiff
a
total
amount
of
R1 million towards the said purchase price. It was further agreed by
the parties that the oral purchase and sale agreement was
unenforceable as it was not reduced to writing in terms of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
and that the oral agreement is
therefore void ab initio.
[3]
The plaintiff avers that the defendant
owes him an amount of R554 090.86 being outstanding
rental as well as levies payable by the
defendant for the duration of his occupation
of the property. The defendant on the
other hand avers that the plaintiff owes him the return of the R1
million that he paid him
towards the purchase price, together with
interest thereon.
[4]
The parties
agree that upon cancelation of the
agreement
there
ought to have been a
set-off
however
that
was
not
done
and
therefore
the
parties
are
not
in agreement with the amounts that each
party owes to the other.
# Issues
to be decided
Issues
to be decided
[5]
The court is called upon to determine
the amounts that each party owes to the other, if any.
Summary
of evidence
Plaintiff's
Case
[6]
The plaintiff was the only witness. He
testified that he grew up in the same area as the defendant and they
were family friends.
He had decided to go and study at the University
of Cape Town and the defendant needed a place to stay as his home was
in Newcastle
but he was working in Durban. They agreed that the
defendant would stay at his property and accordingly the defendant
took occupation
of the property in November 2009. At that time there
was no mention of a sale of the property and from November 2009 to
April 2010
the defendant was in occupation of the property and was
not paying any rent.
[7]
They discussed and agreed that the
defendant would purchase the property for R1 050 000 and that payment
would be effected within
six months of the agreement where after
registration of transfer into the defendant's name would then be
undertaken. They further
agreed that the defendant would pay
occupational rent in the sum of R6 000 per month, as well as
utilities, for as long as the
full purchase price was outstanding.
The defendant however paid a total amount of R1 million in three
instalments and over a period
longer than six months and failed to
pay the balance of R50 000 as well as the rental amount. The R1
million was paid directly
into the plaintiff's bond account as the
plaintiff did not want to handle that amount of money.
[8]
The plaintiff demanded
payment of the balance
but upon realising
that same was not being paid he
suggested to the defendant that he sell the property and refund the
money that he would have owed
to the defendant at that time. The
defendant did not show that he cared considering the strain that the
situation was putting on
the plaintiff. The relationship between them
soured and the defendant still did not pay the balance of R50 000.
[9]
Accordingly,
the
plaintiff
cancelled
the
purchase
and
sale
agreement
and instituted eviction proceedings
leading to the eviction of the defendant from the property. At the
time that the eviction order
was granted the defendant was no longer
residing at the property and had gone back to Newcastle but had
sub-let the property to
a certain Dr Masuku, without the knowledge
and approval of the plaintiff.
[10]
The plaintiff testified further that the defendant occupied the
property for three
years without paying rental which they had agreed
would be R6 000 per month, and further that he failed to pay levies
while he
was in occupation of the property. He therefore was indebted
to the plaintiff in the amount of R554 090.86.
[11]
He further submitted that the amount
owed to the defendant
ought
not to include interest as there was no requirement that it be
deposited in an interest-bearing account, and was paid into
the
plaintiff's bond account which was in terms of their agreement. He
submitted that if interest were to be paid it would be mora
interest
calculated from the date on which demand was communicated to the
plaintiff, being 20 June 2016.
[12]
The plaintiff further submitted that he
had eventually sold the property three years ago for
an
amount
above
R1
million
(he
could
not
recall
the
exact
amount)
however he had to re-paint the house prior to selling it as the state
that it was in was bad and filthy.
[13]
The plaintiff submitted, in closing,
that the defendant failed to pay the full purchase price within the
agreed period and that
he failed to pay the occupational rent as well
as levies. The defendant could not reasonably be allowed to stay for
free in the
plaintiff's property for a period of three years.
Accordingly, the plaintiff sought payment of the claim amount being
R554 090,
86.
Defendant's
Case
[14]
The
defendant
was
the
only
witness
and
his
evidence
is
summarised hereunder: He testified that
he was friends with the plaintiff and sometime in October 2009 while
both of them were in
Cape Town, the plaintiff expressed to him that
he was under financial strain as he had decided to continue with his
studies in
Cape Town and could not service his bond because the
tenants in his apartment were not paying accordingly.
[15]
The defendant had previously
visited the plaintiff in P[....] at this
apartment and he liked the place. He informed the plaintiff that he
had approximately R2.9
million that he had recently been paid by the
department of education. He stated that he could purchase
the
apartment
if
the
plaintiff agreed
so
that he
could
have money
to
ease
his financial
strain.
They
both
agreed
on
the
purchase
price
and
that
an
amount
of
R1 000 000 would be paid and then the balance of R50 000 would be
paid as soon as the
plaintiff
completed
his
studies,
and
also
that
registration
of
transfer
into
the
defendant's name would be done after the payment of R50 000. The
agreement was oral.
[16]
Accordingly, on the following day they
both proceeded to Standard Bank, in Cape Town, to arrange for the
withdrawal and payment
of the money to the plaintiff. They had agreed
that the defendant would withdraw R500 000 and pay R400 000 into the
plaintiff's
personal account and R1 million directly into the bond
account. Unfortunately, the bank advised that it needed to clear the
money
first before paying it over to the defendant therefore the
transactions could not be effected on the Saturday.
[17]
The defendant returned to Durban and on
the following Monday, 19 October 2009, he went to the bank and
managed to pay the plaintiff
according to their agreement. The
plaintiff gave the tenants two weeks' notice to vacate the property
and the defendant thereafter
took occupation on 1 November 2009.
After approximately two months the plaintiff requested the defendant
to pay R200 000 and he
did. He again paid another R200 000 two months
from then and the last payment of R100 000 was made sometime before
the end of 2010.
The total amount of R1 million was paid to the
plaintiff by the end of 2010.
[18]
The defendant
stated that they had agreed that the
plaintiff
would
continue to pay the levies as the property was still under his name
but that the defendant would pay for the utilities. There
was no
mention of rental to be paid by the defendant as he had already paid
the plaintiff R500 000 towards the purchase price when
he took
occupation and the balance was to be paid whenever the plaintiff
called for it and the balance of R50 000 to be paid upon
the
completion
of
his studies.
[19]
The defendant further testified that
when he took occupation the electricity and water supply had been cut
off from the property
as there was a debt owing to the municipality.
He
paid
the
outstanding
amount
after
informing
the
plaintiff.
He
also
spent
a
total of R10 000 on improvements on the property in that he installed
automated garage doors and also painted the property.
[20]
The defendant contacted the plaintiff
after learning that he had completed his studies with the aim of
paying the balance of R50
000 so that the property could be
registered in his name. The plaintiff however ducked and dived, he
would not answer his calls.
The defendant then was served with
summons, the plaintiff was claiming arrear rental and levies. This
was a surprise to him as
there had been no mention of rental at all
between him and the plaintiff. He was further evicted by the
plaintiff. He believes
that the plaintiff instituted action against
him because he did not want to transfer the property into his name
even thought he
had accepted almost the whole amount of the purchase
price.
[21]
The defendant was not at the property
when the eviction was effected as he had been transferred to
Newcastle and he had informed
the plaintiff that he would be going
back to Newcastle but would get Dr Masuku to stay at the property.
The plaintiff did not inform
the defendant that he was not happy with
the arrangement. To him the defendant regarded the property as his
own as he had paid
the bulk of the purchase price and was just
waiting for the plaintiff to indicate that he had completed his
studies and would then
accept the R50 000 for the registration of
property to be transferred to his name.
[22]
The defendant submitted that it would
not make sense and he would not have agreed to pay occupational rent
for the property as he
had already paid the plaintiff a million rand
towards the purchase price. He further submitted that at no stage did
the plaintiff
demand payment of R50 000 from him, the plaintiff was
supposed to have indicated to the defendant that he had completed his
studies
and then call for the R50 000 to be paid. He stated that he
would not risk cancellation of the sale for a mere R50 000. The
defendant
vehemently denied that he had failed to pay R50 000 when he
was called upon to do so, instead the plaintiff evicted him and sold
the property to someone else thereby gaining financially at the
defendant's expense.
[23]
The
defendant
further
denied
that
any
rental
and
levies
are
due
to
the
plaintiff, and if at all they were due,
that claim had accordingly prescribed. The defendant claimed payment
of the purchase price
together with interest. The defendant
submitted that the plaintiff had been
unjustly enriched for selling the property twice.
[24]
In
conclusion, the defendant
submitted
that the plaintiff's
claim
be
dismissed and the
plaintiff
be
ordered
to
pay
him
his
purchase
price
with
interest
from
1
November 2009 to date of this judgement.
# Analysis
of evidence
Analysis
of evidence
[25]
The parties both had the onus to prove
their claims against each other.
[26]
The
plaintiff
claims
outstanding
rental
and
levies
from
the
defendant.
The plaintiff submits that in terms of
the agreement the defendant was to pay occupational rent of R6 000
per month for as long
as the purchase was not paid in full.
[27]
There is no proof that there was ever a
single payment of R6 000 rental by the defendant. There is no proof
that the plaintiff once
demanded the payment for rental from November
2009 to the date of the issue of summons.
[28]
The plaintiff's version is that the
defendant was to pay the full purchase price within six months from
May 2010 however the defendant
took longer than six months to pay and
payment was made in three instalments.
[29]
It
is
strange
and
highly
improbable
that
any
party
would
agree
to
pay
the
purchase price of R1 050 000 within six months and still pay rental
monthly. It makes no sense at all if the agreement is for
the
purchase of the property. Occupational rent would be expected if no
purchase price is paid.
[30]
The defendant denied the plaintiff's
version during cross examination that why would he agree to pay
rental when he had already
paid half of the purchase price to the
plaintiff. Even if the plaintiff's version is accepted regarding
payment of the purchase
price within six months, it would still not
make sense for someone to agree to
pay
both
the
rent
and
the
purchase
price.
[31]
During the period from November 2009 and
the date of the issue of summons, not
once did the
plaintiff claim or
receive the rental of
R6 000.
His
evidence is
that
they were still on good terms as friends
however even if that is so, nothing prevented the plaintiff from
reminding his friend to
pay rental if that had been part of the
agreement.
[32]
The
plaintiff's version in this regard is
highly improbable.
[33]
For the plaintiff to have evicted the
defendant and sell the property to someone else when he had already
accepted R1 million from
the defendant and when the only outstanding
amount was R50 000, his intentions are highly suspicious. His version
is highly improbable.
It is improbable that someone who had paid the
plaintiff R1 million would refuse or fail to pay R50 000
in order to gain transfer of the
property.
[34]
When comparing the two versions, the
defendant's version is logical and more probable than that of the
plaintiff. The defendant's
version however with regards to the
improvements is not supported by any proof and therefore is rejected.
[35]
The defendant's
version, however, with regards to the
terms of the agreement is accepted for the following reasons:
(a)
It would be unreasonable and improbable
for one to agree to pay occupational rental when one has already paid
the purchase price
or at least half thereof;
(b)
It is acceptable and logical that one
would not pay levies if the property is still under another person's
name;
(c)
It would be reasonable and acceptable
for one to pay for utilities as they would be benefiting therefrom
whilst in occupation of
any property;
(d)
Having paid R1 million towards the
purchase price, it would not make sense not to pay the balance of R50
000 especially when one
has an amount in the region of R2.9 million;
one would not risk losing R1 million over R50 000;
(e)
Not
once
did
the
defendant
pay
the
R6
000
rental,
which
is
in
line
with
his
version that payment of occupational rent was not a part of the
agreement;
(f)
The plaintiff is the one that gained
over R2 million for selling the same property
to
two different people, having received the purchase price from two
different sources;
(g)
There was no reason for registration of
transfer not to be passed over to the defendant at end 2010 when he
had paid a total of
R1 million, almost the whole purchase price, even
back then the plaintiff seems not to have had
the intention
of transferring the property to the
defendant, it seems as if all he wanted was money to service his bond
and take care of his financial
needs while he was studying;
(h)
The plaintiff failed to produce bank
statements to show the money was paid into his bond account, even
though the defendant could
have shown the accounts to which payments
were made, however irrespective of the above, there is no doubt that
the plaintiff benefited
from the R1 million paid to him by the
defendant, even though he denied that he benefited from the
defendant's R1 million;
(i)
The defendant on the other hand did not
benefit because he had intended to purchase the property with the aim
of owning same, he
paid R1 million to the plaintiff and paid for the
utilities to the municipality including arrears (this was not
disputed by the
plaintiff) but at the end he was evicted from the
property that he paid R1 million rand for and is currently without
ownership
thereof;
(j)
The defendant also paid arrears in utilities for the in respect of
the plaintiff's property and the plaintiff benefited
therefrom.
(k)
The plaintiff argued that the defendant
stayed in property for free. I do not see how this is true, in fact
the defendant paid R1
million for staying in someone's property for
three years when he could have purchased the property and gained
ownership of that
property for that amount;
(I)
The plaintiff sold the property again
three years ago for an undisclosed amount which he submitted is over
a million rand, after
having accepted a million rand from the
defendant;
(m)
The plaintiff, at the time of the
subsequent sale, ought to have refunded to the defendant the amount
that he had accepted as the
purchase price, he admitted that he ought
to have done so, however, to date he has failed to do so;
(n)
The defendant, according to his version,
intended to invest the money in the property and, but for the
agreement between him and
the plaintiff, he would and could have
invested in any other property and would
have gained benefit from the
purchase;
(o)
For the above reasons, the plaintiff's
conduct appears to have been disingenuous
and his version is rejected.
[36]
In the circumstances, I find that the
defendant's version is more probable than that of the plaintiff. I
further find that the plaintiff
failed to discharge his onus and the
defendant succeeded.
Order
[37]
In the result, the following order is
made:
1.
The plaintiff's claim is dismissed with
costs;
2.
The defendant's claim is upheld;
3.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the
defendant the sum of R1 000 000 being the purchase price, plus
interest thereon at the rate
applicable in law from 1 January 2011 to
date of payment.
MLABA
AJ
Appearances
For
the Plaintiff: Ms
S Lushaba
Instructed
by: Zungu
Incorporated
Address:
66
Adelaide Tambo Dr (Kensington)
1st
Floor, Suite 04
Broadway,
Durban North
Tel:
031
535 2244
Ref: K1224/22
Email:
info@zunguincorporated.co.za
For
the Defendant
Mr
W Matthews
Instructed
by:
Narain Naidoo
and Associates
Address:
307
Prince Alfred Street
Pietermaritzburg
Tel: 033
345 8146
Ref: N.NAIDOO/Kevin/L2
Email:
reception@narainaidoo-assoc.co.za
Date
of Judgment reserved:
29 August 2022
Date
of Judgment: 09
September 2022
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