Case Law[2024] ZASCA 46South Africa
Christopher Charles Hughes v Nicolas Gargassoulas and Others (1030/2022) [2024] ZASCA 46 (12 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – application for leave to appeal in terms of section 17(2)(d) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – whether the appeal would have reasonable prospect of success – agreement of sale – whether the purchaser validly waived the benefits of the suspensive condition in the agreement of sale –
Judgment
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## Christopher Charles Hughes v Nicolas Gargassoulas and Others (1030/2022) [2024] ZASCA 46 (12 April 2024)
Christopher Charles Hughes v Nicolas Gargassoulas and Others (1030/2022) [2024] ZASCA 46 (12 April 2024)
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sino date 12 April 2024
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# THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Not Reportable
Not Reportable
Case
No: 1030/2022
In
the matter between:
# CHRISTOPHER CHARLES
HUGHES
APPLICANT
CHRISTOPHER CHARLES
HUGHES
APPLICANT
And
# NICOLAS
GARGASSOULAS
FIRST RESPONDENT
NICOLAS
GARGASSOULAS
FIRST RESPONDENT
# CINDY-ANN
OOSTHUIZEN
SECOND RESPONDENT
CINDY-ANN
OOSTHUIZEN
SECOND RESPONDENT
#
# PAM GOLDING PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
PAM GOLDING PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Christopher Charles Hughes v Nicolas
Gargassoulas and Others
(1030/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 46
(12 April
2024)
Coram:
MOTHLE AND MOLEFE JJA AND COPPIN AJA
Heard:
19 February 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representatives by email, publication on the
Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down of the judgment is deemed to be 11h00 on 12 April
2024.
Summary:
Civil Procedure – application for leave to appeal in terms
of
section 17(2)(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
–
whether the appeal would have reasonable prospect of success –
agreement of sale – whether the purchaser validly
waived the
benefits of the suspensive condition in the agreement of sale –
whether agreement lapsed
due to the non-fulfilment of the suspensive condition – whether
the purchaser validly ceded his right
to claim the repayment of the
deposit.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal
from
: The Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Dolamo J sitting as court of first
instance):
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Coppin AJA (Mothle and
Molefe JJA concurring):
Coppin AJA (Mothle and
Molefe JJA concurring):
[1]
The applicant, Christopher Charles Hughes (Mr Hughes) seeks leave to
appeal
against the orders of the Western Cape Division of the High
Court, Cape Town (the high court) in terms of which it: (a) declared
a written agreement of sale between Mr Hughes and one Peter Henry
Green (Mr Green) in respect of an immovable property situated
at 9
N[…] O[…] E[…], Houtbay (the property) to have
lapsed due to the non-fulfilment of a suspensive condition;
and (b)
ordered the second respondent, Pam Golding Properties Pty Ltd (Pam
Golding) to repay the deposit of R1 million, which Mr
Green had paid
in terms of the agreement, to Nicolas Gargassoulas (first respondent)
and Cindy-Ann Oosthuizen (second respondent),
to whom Mr Green has
ceded his rights in respect of the deposit.
[2]
Leave to
appeal having been refused by the high court, the applicant
petitioned this Court for leave to appeal. It was ordered that
the
application be referred to this Court for consideration, as
contemplated in
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act,
[1
]
and that
the parties should also be prepared to address this Court on the
merits. In terms of
s 17(2)
(e)
of the
Superior Courts Act, this
Court may thus grant, or refuse leave to
appeal, and if it grants such leave, the court will proceed to
consider the merits of
the appeal.
[3]
The applicable test is stated in
s 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act.
It
is whether:
(a) (i)
the proposed appeal has a reasonable
prospect of success, or (ii) whether there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should
be heard, including whether there are
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration. Other
requisites are that the decision
sought to be appealed against must
not fall within the ambit of
s 16(2)
(a)
; and that if the
decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the issues in
the case, the appeal would lead to a just
and prompt resolution of
the real issues between the parties.
[4]
The essence of this matter is whether there is a reasonable prospect
on
appeal of finding that Mr Green had waived his rights in respect
of the suspensive condition and that the agreement had not lapsed
due
to its non-fulfilment. And following from that, whether the first and
second respondents were entitled to the deposit.
## Common cause background
facts
Common cause background
facts
[5]
Mr Green sought to buy a residential property for his daughter, the
second
respondent, whose partner is the first respondent, and he had
enlisted the services of an estate agent, Ms Karen Williamson (and
Ms
Cindy Gilio) of Signature Real Estate to assist him in that regard.
Mr Hughes is a chartered accountant living in the United
Kingdom. The
property was being marketed by another estate agent, Ms Monique
Dollenberg of Pam Golding on Mr Hughes’ behalf.
[6]
The agreement for the sale of the property was concluded between Mr
Green
and Mr Hughes on 12 February 2020. The agreed purchase price
was R4 950 000. In terms of the agreement Mr Green was to pay a
deposit
of R1 million into the trust account of Pam Golding within
seven business days after the date of signature of the agreement and
pay the balance of the purchase price (ie R3 950 000) to the
conveyancing attorneys appointed by the seller (Mr Hughes) against
registration of transfer of the property.
[7]
Clause 6.1 of the agreement provided that the agreement shall be
subject
to the suspensive condition that the purchaser (Mr Green)
obtains approval for a mortgage loan to finance the balance of the
purchase
price by no later than 13 March 2020. Of further
significance, clause 6.2 provided that the suspensive condition has
been inserted
for the benefit of the purchaser who may waive it ‘by
giving notice in writing to the seller at any time prior to the date
for fulfilment or waiver’. Clause 6.5 provided that ‘[i]f
the suspensive condition is not fulfilled or waived by the
due date,
therefore then this Agreement shall become null and void and that the
Deposit and any interest accrued thereon, shall
be repaid in full to
the purchaser within 5 (five) business days after such date’.
[8]
The agreement also contained,
inter alia
, standard clauses to
the effect that all additions and variations to the agreement had to
be in writing and signed by the parties
(clause 19.4). Further, that
no waiver of any rights by any party arising out of or in connection
with the agreement or any part
thereof shall be ‘of any force
or effect unless in writing and signed by the parties. (Clause 19.5).
It is common cause that
Mr Green duly paid the deposit as per their
agreement and applied for mortgage financing in respect of the
balance of the purchase
price.
[9]
The agreement reflects that H J Joubert attorneys were the appointed
conveyancers
(the conveyancers). There is a dispute about whether the
conveyancers were appointed at the instance of Mr Green, or Mr
Hughes,
but it is common cause that their mandate was to effect
transfer of the ownership of the property from Mr Hughes to Mr Green.
It
is further common cause that the due date for the fulfilment of
the suspensive condition was 2 April 2020, because if it was not
fulfilled by 13 March 2020, as stipulated in clause 6.1.1.1, it was
to be automatically extended for a further 14 days as contemplated
in
clause 6.1.4 of the agreement. The envisaged date for the transfer of
the property was 30 April 2020.
[10]
It is common cause that Mr Green did not obtain approval for, or a
mortgage loan before
or by the due date. But that on 10 March 2020,
Ms Tania Liebenberg, a conveyancing secretary employed by the
conveyancers, sent
the following email (which is at the heart of this
matter) concerning the transfer of the property to the first
respondent, Ms
Karen Williamson and Cindy Gilio, and also copied it
to Mr Green:
‘
Good
day
We
refer to the above-mentioned matter and confirm that we have spoken
to the purchaser and the purchaser advised that he will make
payment
of the full purchase price.
He
will be buying the property cash.
We
will confirm as soon as the balance of the purchase price is paid.
Kind
regards
Tania
Liebenberg…’
[11]
It is further common cause that Ms Karen Williamson, subsequently
forwarded this email
to Ms Dollenberg of Pam Golding, who, in turn,
forwarded it to Mr Hughes. There was no immediate response from any
of the addressees
to this email and the national Covid-19 lockdown
soon came into effect.
[12]
A series of emails, which are referred to by the applicant, were
exchanged between Mr Henning
Joubert of the conveyancers and Mr
Hughes regarding the progress of the transaction. On 24 April 2020 Mr
Joubert wrote to Mr Hughes
informing him,
inter alia
, as
follows:
‘
I
trust that you are well during these difficult times while there is a
lockdown worldwide. The reason for my e-mail, being that
I was
contacted by the buyer due to the delay in all conveyancing matters
in South Africa. Due to the lockdown, the deeds office
and all
related services are closed, causing all property transfers to be
delayed…
We
will do our utmost best to expedite the registration of your property
as soon as all services are available again. At this stage
we are
only awaiting the rates clearance figures, levy figures and
electrical compliance certificate. On payment of the figures
and
receipt of the relevant certificates we will proceed to launch in the
deeds office. I trust that registration will happen during
the month
of June 2020.…’
[13]
In an email dated 5 May 2020 Mr Hughes responded to an email of Mr
Joubert dated 28 April
2020 in which Mr Joubert,
inter-alia
,
informed him that he was not sure when the deeds office will reopen.
Mr Hughes’ response stated that he understands that
the number
of matters needed to be addressed and states, inter-alia, that he
understands ‘that the purchaser is now applying
for a bond but
that it was agreed that either the remainder of the purchase price
would be transferred or guarantees for this would
be delivered’.
And enquired ‘What is the status’?
[14]
In an email dated 14 May 2020 from Mr Joubert to Mr Hughes, he
updates Mr Hughes on progress
(or the status) of the transaction at
that stage. Mr Joubert,
inter-alia
, states:
‘…
The
buyer wanted to buy cash for the property, but due to the lockdown
his cash flow has been compromised. He paid R 2 500 000-00
deposit
and already started with the process to apply for a bond. I trust
that this will be finalised within the next two weeks.
(I know the
buyer for many years and all his properties he bought cash. This
lockdown has affected everybody and he is not very
happy to have debt
on his name, but circumstances are dictating differently.).’
[15]
It is common cause that at that stage Mr Green’s daughter, the
second respondent,
was already keen on moving into the property, but
was hampered, inter-alia, by the lockdown. In his aforementioned
email Mr Joubert
wanted to know from Mr Hughes what his attitude was
to the possibility of her taking early occupation.
[16]
Further correspondence was exchanged between Mr Joubert and Mr Hughes
regarding documentation
that required signature and regarding early
occupation of the property by the second respondent. In an email
dated 25 May 2020
Mr Joubert informs Mr Hughes,
inter-alia
, as
follows: ‘…we are now awaiting on your documentation,
then the rates figures and the final grant from the bank
whereafter
we can proceed with the registration…’.
[17]
In another email of the same date Mr Joubert informed Mr Hughes,
inter- alia
, as follows:
‘…
I spoke to the bond
originator and he says that because the buyer is earning a good
income and is a director of a big company, it
does not foresee any
problems. The bank just requested the 2020 financials which [he has]
given to them this week.
The
buyer is buying the property for his daughter, Cindy and her life
partner, Nic. She isn’t married to him, but they have
a family
together and live together. They are the ones will be staying in the
house and who needs to take occupation as soon as
possible. I think
that is why he tried to contact you…’
[18]
On 2 June 2020 Mr Joubert informed Mr Hughes by email, inter-alia, as
follows: ‘…
Some good news. The bank granted the bond in
principle this morning, but now just have to do a valuation on the
property to find
value.
This
is purely an administrative procedure as the property is definitely
worth more than the 3 million rand bond’. And in
the same email
Mr Joubert enquired from Mr Hughes whether the buyers may take
occupation once the bank gives its final approval
for the mortgage
bond, and he also enquired about the occupational rent payable, if at
all.
[19]
In an email from Mr Joubert to Mr Hughes dated 5 June 2020 he informs
Mr Hughes,
inter-alia
, that the bank’s assessor did the
valuation on that day and that the registration process would likely
proceed the next week.
Mr Joubert also states,
inter-alia
, in
the email: ‘At this point the deal cannot be cancelled and I
trust that all will run smoothly’. He further informs
Mr Hughes
that the buyers wanted to get quotations for certain work to be done
to the property and that they needed access for
an inspector for that
purpose. It seems that the agent of Pam Golding was not very
cooperative towards the buyers.
[20]
By 10 June 2020 this access had not been obtained. In an email of
that date Mr Joubert
requested that Mr Hughes give access to the
property and attached an email from Karen Williamson addressed to him
informing him
that her clients, ie the buyers, are ‘desperate
to start some repair, maintenance and landscaping at their new home’.
And significantly, that it was her understanding that the buyers
‘would be allowed access once the full and final bond was
approved, thus making the sale non-suspensive and unconditional’.
[21]
The mortgage bond for the purchase of the property was finally
granted to Mr Green by the
bank on 10 June 2020. Mr Joubert informed
Mr Hughes of the fact in an email dated 17 June 2020 and, in an
email, dated 18 June
2020 Mr Joubert was still seeking permission
from Mr Hughes for the buyers to obtain access to the property. On 18
June 2020, Mr
Hughes allowed early occupation of the property by the
first and second respondents. On 19 June Mr Joubert again,
inter-alia
, assures Mr Hughes that ‘at this point the
transaction cannot be cancelled as all suspensive conditions have
been met and
we are now proceeding towards registration’.
[22]
In response, Mr Hughes, seemed enthusiastic for the deal to be
‘wrapped up’.
However, by 22 August 2020 the transfer had
still not taken place. There was also an issue with the payment of
occupational rental
although the first and second respondents were in
occupation of the property and had effected renovations to the
property. And
it appears that shortly thereafter the deal finally
collapsed after the buyers had engaged an architect to draw up plans
for their
intended alterations to the property and discovered that
there were no plans (approved or otherwise) for certain parts of the
building
on the property and that it was thus illegal.
[23]
By 7 September 2020 Mr Green’s daughter and her partner had
vacated the property
and had handed the keys to the caretaker. An
attorney acting on behalf of Mr Hughes, Mr Stefan Le Roux of Glen
Marais Incorporated,
in a letter dated 14 September 2020 to Mr Green
states,
inter-alia
, the following:
‘…
1.
Our letter 9 September 2020 refers.
2.
On 7 September 2020, the estate agent advised that the property has
been vacated and the keys handed to the caretaker.
This constitutes a
repudiation on your part.
3.
You are hereby advised that the seller accepts your repudiation,
which will entitle the seller to re-market the property
and claim
damages in full.
4.
Please take notice that the full deposit shall be retained in lieu of
damages.
5.
Our client’s rights are hereby expressly reserved…’
[24]
The letter of 9 September 2020 referred to in the aforementioned
letter was a detailed
one in which the attorneys stated the following
insofar as it is relevant for this matter:
‘…
3.
On 10 March 2020, the offices of HJ Joubert (the “conveyancers”)
emailed on your instructions, the estate agents,
Mr Nic Gargassoulas
and copied Mr Henna Green stating that “
the purchaser
advised that he will make full payment of the purchase price. He will
be buying the property cash. We will confirm
as soon the balance of
the purchase price is paid.”
4.
The upshot of this email constitutes a waiver of the benefit of the
suspensive condition and consequently the transaction became
a cash
sale. It is therefore a matter of complete indifference whether the
purchaser, subsequent to this instruction, decided to
proceed with
the Absa bank mortgage bond or not…’ (Emphasis added.)
[25]
It is further not disputed that subsequently Mr Hughes went on to
sell the property to
someone else. Mr Hughes contended he was
entitled to retain the deposit of R1 million as damages for Mr
Green’s repudiation
of the agreement.
[26]
In response to Mr Hughes’ attorneys, Mr Green’s
attorneys, in a letter dated
14 September 2021, contended the
following concerning the claim of waiver:
‘…
2.
Kindly note that an email sent amending any original terms of an/the
offer to purchase (OTP) in itself does not constitute a
waiver unless
the seller and the purchaser has entered into a separate written
addendum specifically setting out the amendment
and signed by both
parties.
3.
In the absence of such a written addendum the suspensive condition
remains alive hence the transaction does not become
a cash sale.
4.
Clause 6.1.1.1 of the OTP contains a suspensive condition, that
stipulates loan approval by no later than 13 March 2020.
5.
Clause 6.1.1.4 further states… [That] the period for
fulfilment of this condition shall be extended automatically
for a
further (14) days…
10
It is common knowledge that by 30 March 2020 there was no loan
approval and neither was the loan approval by 02 April 2020…
12
Midnight of 2 April 2020 the OTP became null and void.
13
By midnight on 2 April 2020 the suspensive condition was not
fulfilled and the email advising that the sale had been a cash sale,
which was not placed in a written addendum, signed by both parties,
which did not constitute a valid waiver effectively rendered
the OTP
null and void…’
[27]
This culminated in the first and second respondent bringing the claim
for the declarator
and for the repayment of the deposit paid, which
was held in trust by Pam Golding. They aver that Mr Green had ceded
his rights
to the deposit to them. This is confirmed in (a) a letter
dated 27 November 2020 by attorneys, Lucas Dyssel Crouse Inc. to Glyn
Marais attorneys, in which they
inter-alia
, confirm that they
act on behalf of Mr Green and that Mr Green will be ceding all his
rights, entitlements and obligations in respect
of the agreement to
the first and second respondents, and (b) a confirmatory affidavit
signed by Mr Green that is attached to the
replying affidavit of the
second respondents in the proceedings in the high court.
[28]
The contents of the letters of the attorneys of the parties quoted
above foreshadowed the
arguments that were advanced in the high court
by the respective sides in their papers. The central issue in this
matter was therefore,
whether Mr Green had waived the suspensive
condition in the agreement.
[29]
The high court found that Mr Green did not. It held that Mr Green’s
conduct subsequent
to the email had to be taken into account; that it
must be proved that Mr Green knew what the rights were that he was
allegedly
waving; and that if it is alleged that an agent waived
those rights, it must be proved that the agent knew all the relevant
facts
as well as the principal’s legal rights and that he
intended to waive those rights and further, that the agent was
authorised
to waive the principal’s rights.
[30]
The high
court came to these conclusions on the authority of what was held in
Pretorius
v Greyling.
[2]
There Price
J stated:
‘…
It seems to me, however,
that in the matter of waiver it cannot be said that the knowledge of
the principal is that of the agent
or that the knowledge of the agent
is that of the principal, because before there is a waiver there must
be an unequivocal act
done with full knowledge of all the relevant
facts as well as of the rights which it is argued have been waived.
This knowledge,
to be effective in the case of waiver, must be the
knowledge of a single person, not partly of one party of another,
because no
intention to waive can be inferred unless the particular
person himself who commits the act which is said to constitute waiver
knew of the relevant facts and intended to waive the rights of which
he was fully aware.
If
in this case it is the agent who waived the rights then it must be
proved that he himself knew all the relevant facts as well
as his
principal’s legal rights and intended to waive those rights,
and it must also be proved that he was authorised to
waive his
principal’s rights. Nothing of this has been proved.’
[31]
That
passage is quoted with approval in
Christie’s
The Law of Contract in South Africa,
[3]
where the
author in discussing the requirements for waiver, states correctly,
the following:
‘
Having
gone to all the trouble to acquire contractual rights people are, in
general, unlikely to
give
them
up.
There
is
therefore
a
factual
presumption,
even
in
some
cases
a
strong one,
against waiver. That means not only that the onus is on the party
asserting waiver to prove it, but that although, as
in all seven
cases, the onus may be discharged on a balance of probability, it is
not easily discharged.’
[4]
[32]
The high court held that the email of 10 March 2020 emanated from Mr
Joubert’s conveyancing
secretary, or from an estate agent and
not from Mr Joubert, himself, who is alleged to be Mr Green’s
agent. It was not clear
from the email whether Mr Joubert had full
knowledge of the right(s) allegedly waived by Mr Green; that there
was no proof that
Mr Joubert was authorised to waive Mr Green’s
right to the suspensive condition and that Mr Green’s conduct
and the
email of 10 March 2020 does not conclusively prove an
unequivocal intention on Mr Green’s part to waive his rights
enshrined
in clause 6.1.1. of the agreement.
[33]
Regarding the appellant’s contention that Mr Joubert acted as
Mr Green’s agent
or had ostensible authority to do so, the high
court held that this could not have been in respect of the alleged
waiver, because
Mr Joubert’s authority was limited to the
transfer of the property and there was no proof that it extended to
the waiver
of Mr Green’s rights. Mr Joubert required a special
mandate for such waiver and it was not proved that he had such a
mandate.
[34]
The high court held that, in any event, the letter of 8 October 2020
‘clearly demonstrated
that [Mr Joubert] had no grasp of which
right was to be waived as he regarded the approval of Mr Green’s
bond as a fulfilment
of the suspensive condition’ and that Mr
Joubert ‘did not understand what the suspensive condition
entailed.’
[35]
The
applicant bore the onus of proving that Mr Green had waived his
rights to the suspensive condition
[5]
.
This entailed putting up clear proof: (a) if it is alleged that he
did waive his rights, that he was aware of those rights,
intended to
waive them and did do so, and (b) if it is alleged that Mr Joubert
did so on his behalf, that Mr Joubert was duly authorised
to waive
those rights, of which Mr Green was fully aware, and that Mr Joubert
knew all the relevant facts, was
aware of
those rights
and
intended to waive them
[6]
. That
is lacking here.
[36]
Judged from
the perspective of a reasonable person by its outward
manifestations
[7]
the
appellant had not proved that Mr Green had waived reliance on the
suspensive condition as contemplated in the agreement. Not
only does
the subsequent conduct in going ahead with the application for a
mortgage bond after the email of 10 March 2020, serve
to underscore
that conclusion, but there was no compliance with the formalities as
stipulated in clauses 6.2 and 19.5 of the agreement
for such a
waiver. The latter clause specifically requires that any waiver of
any right arising from or in connection to the agreement
be in
writing and signed by the party to the agreement.
[37]
It is apparent from his email of 5 May 2020 to Mr Joubert that Mr
Hughes did not maintain
that there had been a waiver, although he was
not certain of the status of the matter. In fact, Mr Hughes never
questioned the
fact that Mr Joubert still seemed to be under the
impression that the suspensive condition was still in place and that
the condition
would only be fulfilled if Mr Green obtains final
approval for a loan from the bank but seems to have accepted that as
a fact.
The issue of waiver was only raised, (for the first time)
after the property had been vacated by the first and second
respondents,
in Mr Hughes’ attorney’s letter of 14
September 2020.
[38]
Mr Green’s own version was that before the due date, after he
had been pressurised
by the agents to expedite the application for a
bond, he had a conversation with Mr Joubert about the possibility of
paying the
balance in cash. He had not made a firm decision in that
regard, and that two days later, after his auditor had advised him
against
that option, he had informed Mr Joubert accordingly. His
version is borne out by the fact that he never withdrew his
application
for a bond and persisted therewith. He never authorised
Mr Joubert to waive his rights to rely on the suspensive condition,
and
both he and Mr Joubert seemed to proceed on the (erroneous) basis
that the contract was still valid, subject to the condition that
he
obtain a mortgage loan for the balance of the purchase price.
[39]
Since the suspensive condition had not been fulfilled by midnight on
2 April 2020, which
is the extended date for fulfilment of the
condition, and since there had been no valid and unequivocal waiver
of the suspensive
condition, the agreement lapsed and became null and
void as contemplated in clause 6.5 thereof. There was no subsequent
valid variation
of the agreement that could validly and effectively
alter that situation. In those circumstances Mr Green was entitled to
the return
of his deposit as contemplated in the agreement and he was
also entitled to cede his rights for the repayment of his deposit to
the first and second respondents. The high court found that, in those
circumstances ‘the challenge to the
locus standi
[of the
first and second respondents]
ipso facto
falls away.’
[40]
The high court’s reasoning and conclusion cannot be faulted. An
appeal has no reasonable
prospect of success, and there is no other
compelling reason why an appeal should be allowed. Accordingly, the
application for
leave to appeal cannot succeed.
[41]
In the result, the application for leave to appeal is dismissed with
costs.
COPPIN
AJA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant: FSG Sievers SC
Instructed
by: Cato Neethling Wiid Inc.
Cape
Town Webbers Bloemfontein
For
1st and 2nd Respondents: P de b Vivier SC
Instructed
by: Van Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys Paarl
Heyns
and Partners Inc. Cape Town Honey Attorneys Bloemfontein
[1]
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[2]
Pretorius v Greyling
1947 (1) SA 171
(W) at 177.
[3]
G B Bradfield and R H Christie
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
8
ed (2022) at 535.
[4]
Ibid at 533-534.
[5]
See
Borstlap
v Spangenberg
en
Andere
1974 (3) SA 695
(A) at 704.
[6]
See
Pretorius
v Greyling
at
177.
[7]
See
Road
Accident Fund v Mothupi
2000
(4) SA 38
(A) paras 16-17.
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