Case Law[2024] ZASCA 48South Africa
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Special leave to appeal – law of contract – enforcement of provision in loan agreement – failure to pay all rates, taxes, water and electricity charges (municipal charges) in respect of the immovable property constituting an event of default – whether the enforcement of provision in loan agreement between first applicant and respondent to accelerate payment and to execute against first applicant’s immovable property based upon its failure to pay municipal charges would be unconscionable and contrary to public policy.
Judgment
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## 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
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sino date 15 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT – Loan –
Acceleration
on default
–
Failure
to pay all rates, taxes, water and electricity charges (municipal
charges) in respect of immovable property constituting
an event of
default – Enforcement of provision in loan agreement to
accelerate payment and to execute against immovable
property based
upon failure to pay municipal charges not unconscionable or
contrary to public policy – Conduct of borrower
egregious in
for more than eight years enjoying benefit of municipal services,
collecting all rental and still failing to
pay for such services.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 1263/2022
In
the matter between:
68
WOLMARANS STREET JOHANNESBURG
(PTY)
LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
10
FIFE AVENUE BEREA (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
MARK
MORRIS FARBER
THIRD APPLICANT
and
TUFH
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
In
re:
TUFH
LIMITED
APPLICANT
and
68
WOLMARANS STREET JOHANNESBURG
(PTY)
LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
10
FIFE AVENUE BEREA (PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
MARK
MORRIS FARBER
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
68 Wolmarans Street
Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited
(1263/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 48
(15 April 2024)
Coram:
GORVEN, WEINER and KGOELE JJA and BAARTMAN
and SEEGOBIN AJJA
Heard:
12 March 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 15 April 2024.
Summary:
Special leave
to appeal – law of contract – enforcement
of provision in
loan agreement – failure to pay all rates, taxes, water and
electricity charges (municipal charges) in respect
of the immovable
property constituting an event of default – whether the
enforcement of provision in loan agreement between
first applicant
and respondent to accelerate payment and to execute against first
applicant’s immovable property based upon
its failure to pay
municipal charges would be unconscionable and contrary to public
policy.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division High Court, Johannesburg (Matojane
J Molahlehi J and Strydom J sitting as a full court):
The
application for special leave is dismissed with costs on an attorney
and client scale, such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Seegobin AJA (Gorven,
Weiner and Kgoele JJA and Baartman AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
On 5 March 2020 the respondent, Tufh Limited (Tufh), brought an
application against the applicants in
the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg, in which it sought, as its primary relief,
payment of the sum of R4 897 004.22
together with interest
and costs as well as the foreclosure of a mortgage bond executed by
the first applicant, 68 Wolmarans Street
Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd
(Wolmarans), in favour of Tufh.
[2]
The application served before Senyatsi J (the court of first
instance) who dismissed the application
with costs on 17 September
2021. Tufh applied for and was granted leave to appeal the judgment
of the court of first instance to
the full court of the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg. The full court (Matojane,
Molahlehi and Strydom JJ) upheld
the appeal, set aside the judgment
and order of the court of first instance and essentially substituted
it with an order sought
by Tufh.
[3]
On 5 December 2022, the applicants applied for special leave to this
Court in terms of s 16(1)
(b)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013 (the
Superior Courts Act) to
appeal the judgment and order of
the full court. On 5 April 2023, this Court referred the application
for special leave for oral
argument in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of
the
Superior Courts Act. The
parties were further advised that they
should be prepared to argue the merits of the appeal should they be
called upon to do so.
Relevant
background
[4]
Tufh is a public company with limited liability. It is engaged
in the business of providing its
clients with, amongst other things,
single loan facilities that would afford them access to finance which
in turn would allow them
to purchase and subsequently convert or
refurbish buildings in the inner cities of South Africa to affordable
residential units
that would be available for rental.
[5]
Wolmarans is the registered owner of an immovable property situated
at 68 Wolmarans Street, Hillbrow,
Johannesburg (the property), which
consists of a large apartment building known as Wolbane Mansions.
Wolbane Mansions comprises
over 51 residential units which are
occupied by about 200 tenants. The second applicant is 10 Fife Avenue
Berea (Pty) Ltd (Fife)
whilst the third applicant is Mr Mark Morris
Farber (Mr Farber). Mr Farber is the sole director and shareholder of
Wolmarans and
Fife.
[6]
Sometime in 2013 Mr Farber approached Tufh for a loan facility to be
granted in favour of Wolmarans
in order to assist it with the
purchase and refurbishment of Wolbane Mansions. A written loan
agreement was concluded in the period
8 August 2013 to 23 August 2013
between Tufh and Wolmarans.
[7]
In terms of the loan agreement it was agreed,
inter alia
, that
Tufh would advance to Wolmarans a facility amount in the sum of
R5 771 166.00 (the facility amount) for drawdown
by
Wolmarans.
[8]
At the heart of the dispute between the parties lie clauses 17 and 18
of the loan agreement. Clause
17 specifically records the following:
‘
17
RATES AND TAXES AND MUNICIPAL SERVICE CHARGES
The
Borrower shall –
17.1
pay promptly on due date for payment, all rates, taxes, water and
electricity charges (whether levied
as basic charges or in respect of
actual consumption), sanitation charges (in respect of refuse removal
and sewerage) and other
like imposts that may be payable in respect
of the Property to any governmental, provisional, divisional council,
municipal or
other like authority;
17.2
provide proof of the aforesaid payments to the Lender whenever
requested to do so, and the Lender have
the right, but not the
obligation, to make all such payments on behalf of the Borrower and
any moneys so disbursed shall be immediately
refundable by the
Borrower to the Lender; and
17.3
provide the Lender on a monthly basis certified copies of all
statements for the amounts payable in
terms of 17.1.’
[9]
Clause 18 specifies a number of ‘events of default’
which, when triggered, would entitle
Tufh to accelerate and declare
the entire principal amount outstanding, immediately due and payable.
Given the nature of the dispute
between the parties it is necessary
to set out only those aspects of the clause that are relevant. They
are the following:
‘
18
EVENTS OF DEFAULT
18.1
Each of the following events shall constitute an Event of Default
under the Loan Facility
18.1.1
the Borrower fails to pay any amount(s) due by it in terms of this
Agreement on the due date for payment thereof or
breaches any other
provision of this Agreement and fails to remedy any such breach
within any applicable cure period;
.
. .
18.1.20
the Borrower fails to comply with all and any municipal by-laws;
.
. .
18.2
Forthwith upon the occurrence of an Event of Default and at any time
thereafter, if such event continues,
the Lender shall in his sole and
absolute discretion be entitled (but not obliged), without prejudice
to any other rights which
the Lender may have, by notice issued by
the Lender to the Borrower to –
.
. .
18.2.3
accelerate and declare all amounts owing in terms of this Agreement
immediately due and payable, notwithstanding that
such amounts may
not otherwise have been due and payable, whereupon the same shall
become immediately due and payable, including
any fees, penalties,
costs and charges . . . .’
[10]
On 8 August 2013 and as security for the facility amount, Fife and Mr
Farber concluded written unlimited suretyship
agreements in favour of
Tufh. As backing security for the facility amount, Wolmarans
registered a mortgage bond over the property
for an amount of
R8 656 749.00 together with an additional 30% provision for
contingent costs.
[11]
Clause 3 of the mortgage bond deals with rates and taxes and provides
as follows:
‘
3
RATES AND TAXES
The
Mortgagor shall –
3.1
pay promptly on due date for payment all rates, taxes and other like
imposts that may be
payable in respect of the property to any
Governmental, Provisional, Divisional Council, Municipal or other
like authority; and
3.2
exhibit proof of such payments to the Mortgagee or its assigns
whenever requested to do
so, and the Mortgagee may in its own
discretion make all such payments on behalf of the Mortgagor and
recover the relative amounts
from the Mortgagor.’
[12]
In terms of clause 4 of the mortgage bond, and as further collateral
security in the event of a default, Wolmarans
ceded its rights to
rental income and Tufh was entitled to recover and receive all rent,
income and fruits from the immovable property.
[13]
Pursuant to the granting of the facility amount in March 2014,
Wolmarans drew down on the amount for payment of
the purchase price
and for refurbishment. As the landlord of Wolbane Mansions, Wolmarans
and its agent duly collected all rental
from its tenants on the
property.
[14]
Whilst Wolmarans paid its monthly instalments towards the facility
amount in terms of the loan agreement, it breached
the specific terms
of the loan agreement and the mortgage bond referred to above by
failing to: (a) pay the City of Johannesburg
(CoJ) promptly, or at
all, its account in respect of municipal service charges (rates,
water, sanitation, refuse and electricity)
provided to the
property;
[1]
(b) provide Tufh
with proof of such payments following Tufh’s demand for
same;
[2]
and (c) provide Tufh
with certified copies of the municipal statements.
[3]
[15]
The last payment to the CoJ for municipal services consumed at the
property by Wolmarans’ tenants was the
amount of R25 000.
This payment was made on 30 October 2015. No further payments were
made. Four years later and as at 12
November 2019 Wolmarans’
municipal account in respect of rates, water, electricity, sanitation
and refuse stood at R3 288 156.08.
[16]
On 20 December 2019 Tufh’s attorneys sent a letter of demand to
the applicants placing them on terms to comply
with their obligations
in terms of the loan agreement and mortgage bond. The letter of
demand,
inter alia
, informed the applicants that should they
fail to remedy their breaches immediately, Tufh would institute legal
proceedings to
enforce its rights.
[17]
The applicants’ attorneys responded on 13 January 2020. They
recorded that there was an ongoing dispute between
Wolmarans and the
CoJ with regard to the manner in which the CoJ was billing Wolmarans
for the municipal services rendered. They
indicated that the accounts
received from the CoJ contained patent errors which despite demand
and continuing negotiations, were
not rectified.
[18]
The essence of Wolmarans’ complaint was that the CoJ had
incorrectly debited its account utilising incorrect
readings from a
different electricity meter which was not on the property. The CoJ
resorted to disconnecting the electricity supply
to the property in
about April 2016. This resulted in Wolmarans obtaining an order from
the Johannesburg High Court on 5 May 2016
(the 2016 court order)
interdicting the disconnection of electricity to the property and
compelling the CoJ to provide it with
a proper statement of account
and for a debatement thereof. The CoJ was further ordered to credit
Wolmarans’ account with
charges that had been incorrectly
levied.
[19]
In responding to the above letter on 17 January 2020, Tufh’s
attorneys pointed out that it was evident from
the court order of 5
May 2016 that the dispute between Wolmarans and the CoJ had to do
with a billing query relating to water and
electricity supplied to
the property. There appeared to be no dispute about the rates,
refuse, sanitation and other charges being
levied by the CoJ to the
property. Tufh’s attorneys emphasized that notwithstanding
Wolmarans’ billing query, it was
obliged to pay on the due date
all other current charges levied subsequent to the 2016 court order.
Wolmarans was informed that
it remained in breach of the loan
agreement and that as at 13 January 2020 the municipal account in
respect of rates, water, electricity,
sanitation and refuse was in
arrears in the sum of R3 462 722.01.
[20]
On 14 February 2020, a letter was received from Wolmarans’
attorneys informing Tufh that the relevant CoJ
account was being
investigated by Mr Hugo Venter of Municipal Account Rectifiers (MAR)
and that Mr Venter had advised Wolmarans
not to make any payments to
the CoJ whilst the dispute continued.
[21]
On 24 February 2020, Tufh’s attorneys sent a response which
recorded,
inter alia
, that no explanation was provided as to
why, for almost 5 years since the 2016 court order, Wolmarans had
simply failed to pay
any amount whatsoever for services provided to
the property. They further recorded that MAR’s advice that no
payments be
made whilst the dispute existed was clearly in conflict
with the express terms of the loan agreement and in contravention of
the
CoJ’s by-laws, which in itself amounted to a breach of the
loan agreement. Wolmarans was informed that its conduct was placing
Tufh’s security in and to the property at risk and it was for
this reason that Tufh was entitled in terms of the loan agreement,
to
accelerate and declare all amounts due owing and payable. The total
debt outstanding as at 21 February 2020 stood at R4 897 004.22.
Proceedings
in the courts below
The
court of first instance
[22]
Tufh’s founding affidavit drew attention to the fact that a
vital component of its business model was its
right to protect the
immovable property for which it had provided a loan facility and to
ensure that the value of the property
does not deteriorate. Tufh
pointed to typical examples of events that could have a material
impact on the value of the immovable
property. One such event was the
failure on the part of the borrower to pay the municipal accounts
rendered in respect of the property
and these could and did run into
millions of rands.
[23]
In opposing the application Wolmarans persisted with its denial that
it was in breach of the loan agreement. It
denied that there were any
municipal charges due and payable to the CoJ at the time that Tufh
had placed it on terms to remedy
any breaches. It blamed the CoJ for
its failure to render proper statements of account. It averred that
the CoJ was experiencing
a billing crisis. It further averred that
there was an ongoing dispute between it and the CoJ regarding its
accounts. It maintained,
however, that there was no obligation on it
to make payment to the CoJ of undisputed amounts, even under protest,
given the billing
dispute as the CoJ itself had not called upon it to
pay.
[24]
The court of first instance found that since there was a historical
dispute between Wolmarans and the CoJ which
resulted in the 2016
court order for a statement and debatement, and since the CoJ had
itself not asserted any rights to payment
since then, it would be
unconscionable for Tufh to claim that Wolmarans was in breach of the
loan agreement and to foreclose on
the mortgage bond.
[25]
In dismissing the application the court of first instance ultimately
found that:
‘
.
. . In my respectful view, allowing the applicant to rely on
non-payment of such services, electricity, rates and taxes as a
ground to allege a breach of the loan agreement entitling it to the
cancellation, accelerated payment, and cession of rental revenue
generated by the first respondent would be prejudicial to the first
respondent. Allowing the applicant to take such draconian steps
when
the first respondent is in fact up to date with its loan repayments
will be an injustice of great proportion.’
The
full court
[26]
The central issue identified by the full court for determination was
whether, despite Wolmarans keeping up with
its monthly instalment in
terms of the loan agreement, Tufh was entitled to accelerate payment
and claim the full amount outstanding
in circumstances where
Wolmarans had failed to pay the CoJ for municipal services rendered.
[27]
The full court considered that Wolmarans had admitted that since 6
March 2014 it was charged for water and electricity
and that such
services continued to be supplied to the property. It also admitted
that it had been levied for property rates and
taxes and that save
for the sum of R25 000 which it paid in respect of water and
electricity on 30 October 2015, no other
payments were made. The full
court considered that Wolmarans had fallen into significant arrears
as evidenced by the amounts referred
to above.
[28]
Placing reliance on the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
, the
full court found that ‘generally, contracting parties have
considerable freedom in choosing how they structure their
agreements,
and it is not the function of the court to protect consenting adults
from bad bargains. Legal certainty and the notion
of
pacta sunt
servanda
are central values of the law of contract, which must be
honoured and enforced by the courts’.
[29]
It found that Wolmarans had failed to explain why it failed to pay
its undisputed indebtedness to the CoJ on the
due date. In line with
the legal principles set out by the Constitutional Court in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v
Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust and Others
,
[4]
the full court reasoned that the harsh consequences of Wolmarans’
failure to comply with the terms of the loan agreement
could not by
itself constitute a sufficient basis for the conclusion that
enforcement of the strict terms of the contract would
be
unconscionable.
[30]
In upholding the appeal, the full court held that:
‘
The
failure by the first respondent to perform its contractual
obligations has destroyed the commercial purpose of the contract
as
the significant municipal arrears impair the appellant’s
security it required in order to advance the loan facility as
a
charge in favour of the municipality imposed by s 118(3) of the
Systems Act enjoys preference over any mortgage bond registered
against the applicable immovable property.’
Application
for special leave
[31]
For the applicants to succeed in their application for special leave
to appeal the judgment of the full court,
they are required to show
something more than the existence of reasonable prospects of success
on appeal.
[5]
In
Cook
v Morrison and Another
[6]
this Court held:
‘
The
existence of reasonable prospects of success is a necessary but
insufficient precondition for the granting of special leave.
Something more, by way of special circumstances, is needed. These may
include that the appeal raises a substantial point of law;
or that
the prospects of success are so strong that a refusal of leave would
result in a manifest denial of justice; or that the
matter is of very
great importance to the parties or to the public. This is not a
closed list . . . ’
[32]
The test of what constitutes a reasonable prospect of success is well
established. The applicants are required
to demonstrate that ‘there
is a sound rational basis to conclude that there is a reasonable
prospect of success on appeal’.
[7]
They are further required to show that ‘something more by way
of special circumstances, is needed’.
[8]
Grounds
for special leave
[33]
It must be pointed out that the applicants’ application for
special leave is not a model of clarity. However,
in summary, the
grounds advanced appear to be the following. The applicants aver that
there may well be other loan agreements which
contain similar clauses
such as Clauses 17 and 18 as in the present case. Borrowers in such
cases may face a similar situation
such as Wolmarans herein where
they notionally breach the loan agreement by not paying any rates,
taxes and other municipal charges
thus entitling the lender to
declare all amounts immediately due and payable and to seek execution
against the borrower’s
immovable property.
[34]
They further aver that the judgment of the full court has
far-reaching consequences ‘beyond the immediate
impact on the
applicants and Tufh. The judgment potentially impacts upon many other
borrowers facing the same circumstances’.
They contend that
while this Court as well as the Constitutional Court have dealt on a
number of occasions with contracts that
should not be enforced on
grounds of public policy, the unique circumstances faced by the
applicants herein have not been dealt
with by this court. They assert
that not only are there reasonable prospects of success but that the
appeal also raises substantial
legal issues of public importance and
the interests of justice warrant that leave be granted.
In
this Court
[35]
At the outset of the hearing in this Court Mr Hollander for the
applicants conceded that there was a breach of
the loan agreement by
Wolmarans. He submitted, however, that there were reasonable
prospects of success in the appeal and that
leave should be granted.
On the issue of ‘special circumstances’ which embodies
the test for special leave as set out
in para 31 above, Mr Hollander
indicated that he intended addressing three aspects only which also
went to the merits of the matter.
The first was that Wolmarans was
engaged in a
bona fide
dispute with the CoJ with regard to the
municipal charges levied against the property. The second was that
Tufh’s security
was not in any way at risk as it still held
suretyships by Mr Farber and Fife. The third was that any risk to
Tufh’s security
was caused by Tufh itself when it elected to
accelerate and declare all amounts owing in terms of the loan
agreement immediately
due and payable. Mr Hollander’s further
submission in this regard was that whilst Wolmarans was not attacking
any of the
relevant clauses in the loan agreement or the agreement
per se
as being unconscionable and contrary to public policy,
the implementation thereof certainly was.
Issues
raised
(a)
Did Wolmarans have a bona fide dispute with the CoJ in respect of
municipal services rendered to the
property?
[36]
It is common cause on the papers that, although Wolmarans’
dispute with the CoJ related only to water and
electricity, it failed
to make any payments for other municipal charges relating to property
rates and taxes and wastewater services,
since 30 October 2015. The
dispute in question arose out of billing accounts rendered by the CoJ
which, according to the applicants,
contained certain patent
errors.
[9]
[37]
Apart from the specific provisions of the loan agreement
[10]
that impose an obligation on Wolmarans to pay for all municipal
services rendered to the property, such obligations also flow from
the provisions of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act No 32
of 2000 (the Systems Act) and the CoJ’s Credit Control
and Debt
Collection By-laws published on 23 May 2005
[11]
(the Collection By-laws).
[38]
Whilst municipalities are obliged to provide water and electricity to
the residents in their area as a matter of
public duty, they are
further required to ensure the provision of services to communities
in a sustainable manner.
[39]
Section 96
(a)
of the Systems Act
obliges municipalities like the CoJ to collect all money that is due
and payable to it. In
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[12]
the Constitutional Court recognised that ‘it was therefore
important that the possibility that municipal debt remains unpaid
be
reduced by all legitimate means’
[13]
and that ‘the municipality must comply with its duty and take
reasonable steps to collect amounts that are due’.
[14]
[40]
The applicants’ argument that it had a
bona fide
dispute
with CoJ over the outstanding municipal charges is clearly not
sustainable especially in light of CoJ’s Collection
by-laws. In
terms of s 1, ‘account’ means a notification by means of
a statement of account to a person liable for
payment of any amount
for which he or she is liable to pay the Council in respect of the
following:
‘
(a)
electricity consumption based on a meter reading or estimated
consumption or availability
fees;
(b)
water consumption based on a meter reading or estimated consumption
or availability
fees;
(c)
refuse removal and disposal;
(d)
sewerage services and sewer availability fees;
(e)
rates;
(f)
interest; and
(g)
miscellaneous and sundry fees and collection charges.’
[41]
The following further sections of the Collection By-laws are relevant
insofar as they have some bearing on Wolmarans’
conduct herein:
(a)
Section 5 provides that the CoJ may estimate the consumption of water
and electricity for any relevant
period in the absence of a meter
reading;
(b)
In terms of section 8(2) the CoJ may in accordance with the
provisions of
s
102 of the Systems Act consolidate any separate accounts of a
customer liable for payment, credit any payment by such customer,
and
implement any of the debt collection measures provided for in the
Collection By-laws;
(c)
Section 8(3) provides that the amount due and payable by a customer
constitutes a consolidated
debt and any payment made by a customer
less than the total amount due will be allocated in reduction of the
consolidated debt
in the order prescribed; and
(d)
Section 11(3) provides that before or after the due date for payment
specified in the CoJ account, notwithstanding
its dispute with the
CoJ, the customer must pay the full amount of any account insofar as
it relates to amounts for rates, or the
municipal services concerned,
and which are not in dispute.
[42]
On a reasonable and proper interpretation of s 11(3) of the
Collection By-laws, it would seem that it is aimed
at stopping
unscrupulous property owners from declaring a dispute with the
municipality and then withholding payment for years.
The purpose of
the By-laws is therefore to avoid an alleged billing dispute from
persisting for years on end while the property
owner continues to
consume services it does not pay for.
[43]
Section 102 of the Systems Act deals with ‘accounts’. In
relevant part it provides as follows:
‘
102
Accounts
(1)
A municipality may -
(a)
consolidate any separate accounts of persons liable for payments to
the municipality;
(b)
credit a payment by such a person against any account of that person;
and
(c)
implement any of the debt collection and credit control measures
provided for in this
chapter in relation to any arrears on any of the
accounts of such a person.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply where there is a dispute between the
municipality and
a person referred to in that subsection
concerning
any specific amount
claimed by the municipality form that person.
(3)
. . . .’ (Emphasis added.)
[44]
In
Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v Ethekwini Municipality
,
[15]
this Court held that:
‘
It
is, in my view, of importance that subsec 102(2) of the Systems Act
requires that the dispute must relate to a ‘specific
amount’
claimed by the municipality. Quite obviously, its objective must be
to prevent a ratepayer from delaying payment
of an account by raising
a dispute in general terms. The ratepayer is required to furnish
facts that would adequately enable the
municipality to ascertain or
identify the disputed item or items and the basis for the ratepayer’s
objection thereto. If
an item is properly identified and a dispute
properly raised, debt collection and credit control measures could
not be implemented
in regard to that item because of the provisions
of the subsection.
But
the measures could be implemented in regard to the balance in
arrears; and they could be implemented in respect of the entire
amount if an item is not properly identified and a dispute in
relation thereto is not properly raised.
Whether
a dispute has been properly raised must be a factual enquiry
requiring determination on a case-by-case basis. It is clear
from
clause 22.3 of the Policy referred to above that the dispute must be
raised before the municipality has implemented the enforcement
measures at its disposal.’ (Emphasis added.)
[45]
While Wolmarans admits that its dispute with the CoJ is limited to
electricity and water charges it nonetheless
unreasonably, unlawfully
and inexplicably withholds payments for all municipal services and
charges, namely, electricity, water,
sanitation (sewer), property
rates and taxes and refuse. This it has been ongoing since 30 October
2015. The billing crisis which
plagued the CoJ at the time has
clearly afforded Wolmarans with an ideal opportunity to exploit the
situation by withholding all
payments. In the result it cannot be
found that Wolmarans’ dispute with the CoJ is
bona fide
.
The full court correctly found that there was no merit in the
submission that no amounts were due to the CoJ.
(b)
Was Tufh’s security in the property at risk given that it held
suretyships from the second and
third respondents?
[46]
The validity of Fife’s suretyship was challenged by it in 2020
in previous proceedings as alluded to already.
Tufh’s request
for other security from Fife was refused. This refusal constituted a
further breach of the loan agreement
which prompted Tufh to institute
a further application in the Johannesburg High Court. The only
existing suretyship is that of
Mr Farber. In the circumstances,
Wolmarans’ contention that Tufh has sufficient security in the
form of the two suretyships
is without merit.
(c)
Was Tufh’s security put to any risk by its own conduct when it
accelerated and declared
all amounts owing in terms of the loan
agreement due and payable thereby making the implementation of the
loan agreement unconscionable
and contrary to public policy?
[47]
Before addressing this issue pertinently it is necessary to set out
the legal principles that are generally applied
by our courts in
order to determine whether a contract is inimical to a constitutional
value or principle or is otherwise contrary
to public policy and
should be invalidated. In
A
B and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
[16]
this Court set out what it viewed as the ‘most important
principles’ governing the judicial control of contracts through
the instrument of public policy. The following principles were
outlined:
‘
(i)
Public policy demands that contracts freely and consciously entered
into must be honoured;
(ii)
A court will declare invalid a contract that is prima facie inimical
to a constitutional
value or principle, or otherwise contrary to
public policy;
(iii)
Where a contract is not prima facie contrary to public policy, but
its enforcement in
particular circumstances is, a court will not
enforce it;
(iv)
The party who attacks the contract or its enforcement bears the onus
to establish the facts;
(v)
A court will use the power to invalidate a contract or not to enforce
it, sparingly,
and only in the clearest of cases in which harm to the
public is substantially incontestable and does not depend on the
idiosyncratic
inferences of a few judicial minds;
(vi)
A court will decline to use this power where a party relies directly
on abstract values
of fairness and reasonableness to escape the
consequences of a contract because they are not substantive rules
that may be used
for this purpose.’
[17]
## [48]
InBarkhuizen
v Napier,[18]the Constitutional Court rejected notions of good faith, fairness and
reasonableness as independent grounds for refusing to enforce
contractual terms. It did, however, hold that public policy as
informed by the Constitution imports ‘notions of fairness,
justice and reasonableness’; it takes account of the need to do
‘simple justice between individuals’; and is
informed by
the concept ofUbuntu.[19]It also recognised that public policy requires parties to honour
their contractual obligations undertaken freely and voluntarily
as
encapsulated in the Latinmaxim
pactum sunt servanda,
because this is a ‘profoundly moral principle, on which the
coherence of any society relies’;[20]and it ‘gives effect to the central constitutional values of
freedom and dignity’.[21]
[48]
In
Barkhuizen
v Napier
,
[18]
the Constitutional Court rejected notions of good faith, fairness and
reasonableness as independent grounds for refusing to enforce
contractual terms. It did, however, hold that public policy as
informed by the Constitution imports ‘notions of fairness,
justice and reasonableness’; it takes account of the need to do
‘simple justice between individuals’; and is
informed by
the concept of
Ubuntu
.
[19]
It also recognised that public policy requires parties to honour
their contractual obligations undertaken freely and voluntarily
as
encapsulated in the Latin
maxim
pactum sunt servanda
,
because this is a ‘profoundly moral principle, on which the
coherence of any society relies’;
[20]
and it ‘gives effect to the central constitutional values of
freedom and dignity’.
[21]
[49]
In
Bredenkamp
and Others v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
,
[22]
this Court rejected an argument that the Constitutional Court in
Barkhuizen
had
established fairness as a free-standing requirement for enforcement
of contractual provisions. It held that it was only if a
public
policy consideration, either in the Constitution or elsewhere that
militated against enforcement of the terms, that such
enforcement
would be refused. This Court went on to hold that it was only if a
constitutional value was limited by a contractual
term or its
enforcement that a court would have to determine whether that
limitation was fair and reasonable.
## [50]
InBeadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others,[23]the Constitutional Court reaffirmed its position thatBarkhuizenremained
the leading authority in our law on the role of equity in contract,
as part of public policy considerations. It recognised
that good
faith was ‘not a self-standing rule but an underlying value
that was given expression through existing rules of
law’.[24]
[50]
In
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
,
[23]
the Constitutional Court reaffirmed its position that
Barkhuizen
remained
the leading authority in our law on the role of equity in contract,
as part of public policy considerations. It recognised
that good
faith was ‘not a self-standing rule but an underlying value
that was given expression through existing rules of
law’.
[24]
[51]
The court went on to say the following in para 72:
‘
It
is clear that
public
policy
imports values of fairness, reasonableness and justice.
Ubuntu,
which encompasses these values, is now also recognised as a
constitutional value, inspiring our constitutional compact,
which in
turn informs public policy.
These
values form important considerations in the balancing exercise
required to determine whether a contractual term, or its enforcement,
is contrary to public policy.’
[52]
The court found it necessary to provide clarity with regard to two
principles derived from the case law. The first
was
pacta
sunt servanda
and
the second was ‘perceptive restraint’. It held that the
former was not a relic of our pre-constitutional past and
that in
general public policy required contracting parties to honour
obligations that have been freely and voluntarily undertaken.
As for
the second, it held that while ‘perceptive restraint’ was
a sound approach, courts should not rely on it to
shrink from their
constitutional duty to infuse public policy with contractual values,
nor may it be used to shear public policy
of the complexity of the
value system created by the Constitution. Furthermore, the notion
that there must be substantial and incontestable
harm to the public
before a court may decline to enforce a contract on public policy
grounds, was alien to our law of contract.
[25]
[53]
Applying the above principles to the facts of this case, the question
is whether the applicants have discharged
the onus of demonstrating
that the enforcement, or implementation as Mr Hollander put it, of
the loan agreement would be contrary
to public policy in the
particular circumstances of this case. As
Barkhuizen
decided,
a party seeking to avoid the enforcement of a contractual term is
required to demonstrate good reason for failing to comply
with the
term. In the present matter the applicants were unable to show how
the implementation of the loan agreement would be unconscionable
and
contrary to public policy. After all, this was an agreement that was
freely and voluntarily entered into. There was no suggestion
whatsoever that clauses 17 and 18 were anything out of the ordinary
or that they imposed any undue hardship on the applicants.
It was
correctly pointed out by Tufh’s counsel that this was not an
issue that was raised properly by the applicants in their
papers in
the courts below. The issue was raised rather opportunistically and
that too only in heads of argument leaving no option
for Tufh or the
court to address the issue fully.
[54]
Wolmarans’ contention that it is Tufh’s own conduct that
has put its security at risk is fallacious.
After all, Tufh was
merely implementing the terms of the loan agreement so as to ensure
that its security in and to the property
was not jeopardised in any
way.
[55]
As the facts show, the last payment made by Wolmarans to the CoJ was
on 30 October 2015. Wolmarans asserts that
it was advised by its
forensic investigator not to effect any further payments until its
dispute with the CoJ was resolved. What
this ignores is that the
dispute is related only to charges for water and electricity.
Municipal charges for all other services
rendered remained due, owing
and payable.
[56]
The fact that the CoJ, for whatever reason, has adopted a supine
approach in the collection of all outstanding
amounts from Wolmarans,
is irrelevant. The CoJ is no doubt aware that it is preferentially
secured for the recovery of its debt
in terms of s 118(3) of the
Systems Act. In
BOE
Bank Ltd v Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others
,
[26]
this Court confirmed that a charge in favour of the municipality
imposed by s 118(3) of the Systems Act enjoyed preference over
any
mortgage bond registered against the applicable immovable property.
In the circumstances, the provisions of s 118(3) of the
Systems Act
jeopardises, prejudices and impairs Tufh’s mortgage bond which
is the security it bargained for with Wolmarans
at the outset.
[57]
While the applicants’ are quick to now blame the CoJ for the
position in which Wolmarans finds itself, the
latter’s conduct
is particularly egregious and unconscionable in that it has for more
than eight years enjoyed the benefit
of all municipal services at
Wolbane Mansions, collected all rental from its tenants and still
fails to pay for such services.
It cannot therefore, be said that the
full court was incorrect when it found that Wolmarans failed to
discharge the onus to show
that the enforcement of the relevant
clauses would be unconscionable and contrary to public policy.
[58]
In the circumstances, I find that there are no reasonable prospects
in any appeal challenging the findings of the
full court. Still less,
are there special circumstances that would justify granting special
leave to appeal herein. It follows
that the application for special
leave must fail.
[59]
As to costs, there was no issue that costs should follow the result
and that such costs should include the costs
of two counsel. That
such costs should be paid on an attorney and client scale is provided
for by the loan agreement itself.
Order
[60]
The following order is made:
The
application for special leave is dismissed with costs on an attorney
and client scale, such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
__________________________
R
SEEGOBIN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicants: L Hollander
Instructed
by: Swartz Weil Van Der Merwe Greenberg Inc. Attorneys, Parkview
Bezuidenhout
Inc., Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: A C Botha SC (with him E Eksteen)
Instructed
by: Schindlers Attorneys, Johannesburg
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
This failure was in breach of clause 17.1.
[2]
This failure was in breach of clause 17.2.
[3]
This failure was in breach of clause 17.3.
## [4]Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others[2020]
ZACC 13; 2020 (5) SA 247 (CC); 2020 (9) BCLR 1098 (CC) para 14.
[4]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020]
ZACC 13; 2020 (5) SA 247 (CC); 2020 (9) BCLR 1098 (CC) para 14.
[5]
P A F v
S C F
[2022]
ZASCA 101
;
2022 (6) SA 162
(SCA) para 24.
[6]
Cook v
Morrison
[2019]
ZASCA 8
;
[2019] 3 All SA 673
(SCA);
2019 (5) SA 51
(SCA) para 8.
[7]
MEC for
Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 176
paras 16-17.
[8]
Cook v
Morrison
op
cit, para 8.
[9]
Clause 17 of the loan agreement.
[10]
Clause 17 of the loan agreement.
[11]
Provincial Gazette Extraordinary, 23 May 2005, Notice 1857 of 2005.
[12]
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[2004]
ZACC 9
;
2005 (1) SA 530
(CC);
2005 (2) BCLR 150
(CC).
[13]
Ibid para 38.
[14]
Ibid para 49.
## [15]Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v Ethekwini Municipality[2011]
ZASCA 188; [2012] 1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 169 (SCA) paras 22
and 23.
[15]
Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v Ethekwini Municipality
[2011]
ZASCA 188; [2012] 1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 169 (SCA) paras 22
and 23.
[16]
A B and
Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
[2018] ZASCA 150; [2019]
1 All SA 1 (SCA); 2019 (1) SA 327 (SCA); 2019 (8) BCLR 1006 (SCA).
[17]
Ibid para 27; See also
Sasfin
(Pty) Ltd v Beukes
1989
(1) SA 1
(A) at 9A-C.
[18]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC) para 82.
[19]
Ibid para 51.
[20]
Ibid para 87. See also R H Christie and G B Bradfield
Christie’s
The Law of Contract in South Africa
8
ed (2022) at 25 (Christie).
[21]
Ibid para 57.
[22]
Bredenkamp
and Others v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
[2010]
ZASCA 75
;
2010 (4) SA 468
(SCA);
2010 (9) BCLR 892
(SCA);
[2010] 4
All SA 113
(SCA) para 1.
[23]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees for the time being of the Oregon Trust
and Others
[2020]
ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC) para 58.
[24]
Ibid para 38. See also Christie 8 ed (2022) at 428.
[25]
Ibid paras 83-85, 87, 89 and 90.
## [26]BOE
Bank Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality[2005]
ZASCA 21; 2005 (4) SA 336 (SCA) para 5.
[26]
BOE
Bank Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
[2005]
ZASCA 21; 2005 (4) SA 336 (SCA) para 5.
sino noindex
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