Case Law[2024] ZASCA 94South Africa
Pitso and Others v Chabeli Molatoli Attorneys Incorporated (420/2023) [2024] ZASCA 94 (12 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Agency and representation – at common law a mandate is in general terminable at the will of the principal – requirements of final interdict not met.
Judgment
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## Pitso and Others v Chabeli Molatoli Attorneys Incorporated (420/2023) [2024] ZASCA 94 (12 June 2024)
Pitso and Others v Chabeli Molatoli Attorneys Incorporated (420/2023) [2024] ZASCA 94 (12 June 2024)
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sino date 12 June 2024
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 420/2023
In the matter between:
Polo
susan pitso no
FIRST APPELLANT
POLO SUSAN
PITSO
SECOND APPELLANT
LIPALESA
PITSO
THIRD APPELLANT
TLOTLISO
PITSO
FOURTH APPELLANT
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA FIFTH APPELLANT
SELEKA
ATTORNEYS
SIXTH
APPELLANT
and
CHABELI MOLATOLI
ATTORNEYS
INCORPORATED RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Pitso and Others v
Chabeli Molatoli Attorneys Incorporated
(Case
no 420/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 94
(12 June 2024)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, MOKGOHLOA and MABINDLA-
BOQWANA JJA and DAWOOD and SEEGOBIN AJJA
Heard
:
This appeal was, by consent of the parties, disposed of
without an oral hearing in terms of s 19(
a
) of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered
:
The 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 is deemed to be 12 June 2024 at 11h00.
Summary:
Agency and
representation – at common law a mandate is in general
terminable at the will of the principal – requirements
of
final interdict not met.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Ndlokovane
AJ, sitting as court of
first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside
and substituted with the following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
3
The cross-appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa JA
(Schippers and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Dawood and Seegobin
AJJA concurring):
[1]
The
central issue in this appeal is whether the
first appellant, Mrs Polo Susan Pitso (Mrs Pitso), the widow and
executrix in the estate
of the late Mr Likano John Pitso (the
deceased), was entitled to terminate the mandate of the respondent, a
firm of attorneys,
Chabeli Molatoli Attorneys Incorporated, who was
responsible for the administration of the deceased’s estate.
The appeal
is with leave of the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the high court)
.
[2]
The high court also granted the respondent leave to cross-appeal to
this Court, despite making no adverse
order against it. This error is
compounded by the respondent’s notice of appeal, in terms of
which it seeks an order, inter
alia, that the cross-appeal be upheld
and that the ‘termination of the applicant’s mandate by
the second respondent
is declared unlawful’. That is the order
on appeal before us. It follows that the cross-appeal is fatally
defective.
[3]
Prior to the hearing of this appeal, the parties requested that it be
disposed of without hearing oral
argument in terms of
s 19
(a)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. This Court granted that request.
[4]
The issue must be considered against the following factual
background. Mr Chabedi Molatoli (Mr Molatoli)
is an attorney and the
director of the respondent. The Molatoli and the deceased’s
family became close friends when the latter
moved into the same
residential estate where Mr Molatoli lives. Mr Molatoli gave legal
advice to the deceased and assisted him
in matters which involved the
deceased and members of his family.
[5]
The deceased died intestate on 15 November 2021. Mr Molatoli assisted
Mrs Pitso to report the estate
to the fifth appellant, the Master of
the High Court, Pretoria (the Master). On 18 November 2021, the
respondent and Mrs Pitso
concluded a written mandate and fee
agreement (the agreement), in terms of which Mrs Pitso agreed to
appoint the respondent as
her agent should she be appointed as
executrix of the deceased’s estate (the estate). In terms of
the agreement the respondent
would be responsible for the
administration of the estate and the drafting of the liquidation and
distribution account, and would
be entitled to charge a fee of 3.5%
of the estate. The agreement reads:
‘
Should
this mandate be terminated without any valid reason by the executrix
which warrants such termination, [the] full agent fee
shall be
payable to Chabedi Molatoli Attorneys Inc. within seven (7) working
days. Any legal costs shall be payable on [an] attorney
and client
scale by [the] defaulting party.’
On
30 December 2021, the Master issued a letter of executorship
appointing Mrs Pitso as the executrix in the estate of the deceased.
[6]
On 1 April 2022, the respondent sent an interim invoice for services
rendered to Mrs Pitso. She replied
in an email sent on 3 April 2022
in which she stated that the respondent’s first interim invoice
was for more than 60% of
the total funds available to finance the
debts against the estate. She requested the respondent to provide a
schedule of ‘the
amounts to be claimed pertaining to the entire
process until closure of the estate account’. She also stated
that, when she
signed the agreement she was not in her right state of
mind, and would not have done so had she known that the respondent
would
claim payment of the amounts stated in the invoice.
[7]
The respondent claimed to have replied to Mrs Pitso’s email of
3 April 2022 through a letter explaining
how the agreement had been
entered into. However, that letter was not annexed to the founding
affidavit. Nothing however turns
on this.
[8]
On 28 April 2022, Mrs Pitso signed a document titled ‘TERMINATION
OF MANDATE’, in terms
of which she terminated the respondent’s
mandate and appointed Seleka Attorneys Incorporated (Seleka
Attorneys), the sixth
appellant, to administer the estate. On the
same day, Seleka Attorneys sent the termination of mandate to the
respondent. They
informed the respondent that they would approach the
Master to request that they be substituted in the place of the
respondent.
They requested the respondent to furnish them with its
final account and enquired as to when Mrs Pitso’s file could be
collected.
[9]
On 10 May 2022, the respondent launched an urgent application in the
high court seeking an order:
(a)
declaring the termination of its mandate invalid;
(b)
that Mrs Pitso ‘be interdicted from terminating the
[respondent’s] mandate, unless with the leave of the court on
reasonable grounds’;
(c)
that the Master ‘be ordered not to recognize the purported
termination and appointment of Seleka Attorneys as agents of
[Mrs
Pitso]’; and
(c)
that Mrs Pitso be removed as executrix of the estate and she be
ordered to return the letters of executorship to the Master.
[10]
The application came before Makhoba J, who struck it from the roll
for lack of urgency. It subsequently came before
Ndlokovane AJ.
Despite referring to this Court’s decision in
Liberty
Life Group Ltd and Others v Mall Space Management CC t/a Mall Space
Management
(
Liberty
Group
),
[1]
in which it was held that it is against public policy to force the
principal to retain an agent against her will, the court made
an
order declaring the termination of the respondent’s mandate
unlawful. The court ordered the first to the fourth appellants
to pay
the respondent’s costs.
[11]
The application was misconceived. An applicant for a final interdict
must show a clear right; an injury actually
committed or reasonably
apprehended; and the absence of similar protection by any other
remedy.
[2]
The respondent simply
failed to make out a case for the relief sought. It did not establish
the requisites for the grant of a final
interdict, more specifically
a clear right and the absence of an adequate alternative remedy. A
final interdict is extraordinary
robust relief. It is therefore
important that the applicant establish all the requisites for such an
interdict.
[12]
It is trite that a principal is entitled to revoke a mandate of
agency in these circumstances. As this Court stated
in
Liberty
Group
:
[3]
‘
It
would be against public policy, to coerce a principal into retaining
an individual as his agent, when he no longer wishes to
retain him as
such. If the termination of the mandate has prejudiced the agent his
remedy lies in a claim for damages and not in
an order compelling the
principal to retain him as his agent in the future.’
[13]
The respondent is not without a remedy. If Mrs Pitso’s
termination of the mandate prejudiced the respondent,
its remedy lies
in a claim for damages. After all, its claim is nothing more than one
for payment of its fees. One can just imagine
the chaos that would
result if every attorney whose mandate is terminated were to approach
court for an order that his or her services
be retained.
[14]
The high court did not make an order for the removal of Mrs Pitso as
an executrix of the estate. In any event,
the allegations in the
founding affidavit that Mrs Pitso ‘acted in her own interest
and not in the interests of the creditors
of the estate’ is not
supported by any facts. No more need be said about this relief.
[15]
For the above reasons, I make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
The application is
dismissed with costs.’
3
The cross-appeal is dismissed with costs.
_______________
F E MOKGOHLOA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Written submissions:
For
the appellants: RM
Mahlatsi with O Tommy
Instructed
by:
Ketwa Incorporated,
Pretoria
Wesi Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: C Molatoli
Instructed
by:
Nwandzule Attorneys
Inc
Cooper Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Liberty
Life Group Ltd and Others v Mall Space Management
CC t/a
Mall Space Management
[2019] ZASCA 142; 2020 (1) SA 30 (SCA).
[2]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227;
Olympic
Passenger Services (Pty) Ltd v Ramlagan
1957 (2) 382 (D).
[3]
Op cit fn 1 para 36.
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