Case Law[2023] ZASCA 46South Africa
Ruth Eunice Sechoaro v Patience Kgwadi (896/2021) [2023] ZASCA 46; 2023 (5) SA 420 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 April 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal – whether respondent’s unilateral mistake in signing agreement is reasonable – under misapprehension as to its contents - agreement wholly inconsistent with prior agreement with ex-husband – mistake reasonable and excusable - proposed appeal enjoying no prospects of success.
Judgment
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## Ruth Eunice Sechoaro v Patience Kgwadi (896/2021) [2023] ZASCA 46; 2023 (5) SA 420 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
Ruth Eunice Sechoaro v Patience Kgwadi (896/2021) [2023] ZASCA 46; 2023 (5) SA 420 (SCA) (4 April 2023)
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sino date 4 April 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 896/2021
In
the matter between:
RUTH
EUNICE SECHOARO
APPLICANT
and
PATIENCE
KGWADI
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ruth
Eunice Sechoaro v Patience
Kgwadi
(896/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 46
(4 April 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA AP, SCHIPPERS and NICHOLLS JJA and
KATHREE-SETILOANE and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
1 March 2023
Delivered:
4 April 2023
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal – whether
respondent’s unilateral mistake in signing agreement is
reasonable –
under misapprehension as to its contents -
agreement wholly inconsistent with prior agreement with
ex-husband – mistake
reasonable and excusable - proposed
appeal enjoying no prospects of success.
ORDER
Application
for leave to appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Vorster AJ sitting as
court of first instance):
1
Paragraph 2 of
the order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
first respondent, Rorich Wolmarans Luderitz, is directed to pay the
applicant 50% of the proceeds of the sale of the property
held in its
trust account within 30 days of finalisation of the deceased’s
estate.’
2
Save as aforesaid, the application for leave to appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Kathree-Setiloane AJA
(Dambuza AP, Schippers and Nicholls JJA and Siwendu AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal the decision of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(the high court), in
terms of which it declared that the agreement signed by the
respondent, Ms Patience Kgwadi, and her ex-husband,
Mr Israel Kgwadi,
on 18 July 2012 (the 2012 agreement) is unenforceable. The
application was referred for oral argument in terms
of s 17(2)
(d)
of
the Superior Courts Act.
[1]
[2]
The respondent married the deceased on 14 May 1987 in community of
property. Their marriage was dissolved
on 25 October 1991. They
concluded a settlement agreement which was made an order of court on
the same day. The court order afforded
Mr Kgwadi a period of 14 days
to apply to court for variation of the settlement agreement.
[3]
At the time of their divorce, the respondent and the deceased were
joint owners of an immovable property
in Boksburg (the property).
Since the settlement agreement did not deal with the division of the
property, they verbally agreed
that each of them would be entitled to
half of the value of the property. It was specifically agreed that Mr
Kgwadi would pay the
respondent half the value of the property. He,
however, never did.
[4]
On 25 September 2010, Mr Kgwadi married the applicant,
Ms
Ruth Eunice Sechoaro
. Thereafter, on 2
October 2010, he made a will in which he, inter alia, bequeathed 50%
of his estate to his fiancée, the
applicant at the time,
provided she survived him by a period of seven days, and they were
still married at the date of his death.
Mr Kgwadi appointed
First National Bank Trust Services (Pty) Ltd (FNB)
as the executor of his estate.
[5]
On 28 March 2012, the respondent was seriously injured in a motor
vehicle accident and was admitted
to Charlotte Maxeke Hospital in
Johannesburg (the hospital). She remained in hospital until September
2012. On 18 July 2012, a
messenger from the law firm
Denoon
Sampson Ndlovu Inc, whom she assumed to be representing Mr Kgwadi,
called at the hospital to get the respondent to sign a
document,
entitled ‘variation agreement’, in terms of which she
would award the joint property solely to Mr Kgwadi,
which she did.
The applicable provisions of the agreement are these:
‘
2.
The parties have now agreed to amend the settlement agreement in so
far as it relates to the Property.
3. The parties hereby
agree that:
3.1
The Property shall be awarded solely to [Mr Kgwadi].
…
3.5
They shall cooperate with each other and shall sign all and any
necessary documents as may
be required by the conveyancers appointed
by [Mr Kgwadi] to attend to the transfer of the Property into his
name, as and when called
upon to do so.’
[6]
Mr Kgwadi passed away on 29 September 2014. The Master of the High
Court, Johannesburg (the Master)
appointed Ms Prishania Naidoo, FNB’s
nominee, as the executor of the estate. On 31 May 2017, the
respondent as a seller,
and Ms Naidoo, on behalf of FNB, signed an
offer to purchase the property by a third party in the sum of
R550 000. On 22 January
2018, Rorich Wolmarans Luderitz Inc, the
attorneys attending to the transfer of the property, informed the
respondent by email
that she was not entitled to 50% of the proceeds
of the sale of the property, because the variation agreement stated
that the property
was awarded solely to the deceased.
[7]
On 19 February 2018, the respondent launched an application in the
high court challenging the enforceability
of the 2012 agreement on
two grounds.
The first was that it was
entered into more than 20 years after the settlement agreement had
been made an order of court and not
within the 14-day period
stipulated in the order, and that Mr Kwgadi did not apply to court
for an order varying the settlement
agreement. The second ground was
that she signed
the
agreement without any intention to be bound by its terms. She alleged
that she had been injured in a serious motor vehicle accident
and was
admitted to hospital, where she spent six months. She was diagnosed
with an acetabulum hip fracture dislocation and had
to undergo a skin
traction and surgery to her hip. She was ‘constantly in extreme
pain’ and ‘was normally sedated
to minimise the pain’
she experienced. She signed the agreement without reading it, as she
did not have the strength to do
so in the state that she was in. She
assumed that the agreement dealt with what she and the deceased had
agreed upon, ie, that
he would pay her 50% of the value of property.
[8]
The respondent furthermore alleged that the attorneys’
messenger did not inform her of the nature
and contents of the
agreement, save to tell her that the agreement dealt with the
property which she and the deceased jointly owned.
She accepted that
the messenger was not bound to inform her of the terms of the
agreement before she signed it. She, however, contended
that given
her condition at the time, he should at least have explained them to
her. The reason being that there were terms she
‘could not have
reasonably expected in the agreement, specifically the term that
[she] was giving [her] 50% share in the
property to the [Mr Kgwadi]
without any payment of the value of [her] half share in the
property’. In the circumstances,
she
contended that her mistake in signing the agreement without reading
it was reasonable and that she should not be bound by it.
[9]
The applicant disputed these allegations in her answering affidavit
on the basis that the respondent
suffered a hip fracture dislocation,
which did not affect her mental functioning. She contended that the
respondent was of ‘sound
and sober senses’ when she
signed the variation agreement and was neither under duress nor
unconscious.
[10]
The high court found that the ‘factual dispute whether the
[respondent] knew and intended to forfeit the
undivided share in the
immovable property by the signature of the amendment agreement…
is not a real dispute’, and
‘can be resolved without oral
evidence, looking purely at the evidence as a whole’.
The high court held that ‘[t]aking into
account the surrounding common cause facts’, the inference that
the respondent
signed the agreement with the intention to be bound
did not pass the probability test as:
(a) The document was
presented for signature to the respondent 20 years after their
divorce;
(b) There was no evidence
that the nature and importance of the document, which was a binding
agreement in terms of which she forfeited
her 50% undivided share in
the property, was explained to the respondent or ever discussed with
her;
(c) Had the nature and
importance of the document been explained to the respondent, then it
would have been a simple matter for
the applicant to have adduced
that evidence;
(d) Had she been told of
the import and effect of the document, the respondent would not have
signed it;
(e) On the crucial aspect
of whether she knew what she was signing, there is no evidence apart
from the respondent’s evidence
that she was unaware of it; and
(f) It was improbable
that the respondent would have disposed of her 50% undivided share in
the property without any apparent reason
for doing so.
[11] The high
court consequently found that the application must succeed and made
the following order:
‘
1.
That the Agreement signed by the
[respondent] and her deceased husband [Mr Kgwadi] on the 18
th
of July 2012 is not enforceable against the [respondent] and also not
enforceable against the deceased estate of [Mr Kgwadi].
2.
That the First Respondent Rorich Wolmarans Luderitz Inc be
compelled to pay to the [respondent] 50% [
of
the proceeds of the sale of the property held in its trust account
within 30 days of finalisation of the deceased’s estate]
.
[2]
3. That the [Master] be
interdicted from approving and confirming the amendment of the
Liquidation and Distribution Account under
Estate Number 034807/2014
to the effect that it should be in accordance with the last will and
testament of [Mr Kgwadi].
4.
That, alternatively in the event that the [Master] has already
amended the Liquidation and Distribution Account to effect the
contents of the last Will and Testament, an Order interdicting
[
Rorich Wolmarans Luderitz Inc
]
from finalising the Estate of [Mr Kgwadi] in accordance with the
contents of the last Will and Testament of [Mr Kgwadi];
5. The [applicant] is
ordered to pay the [respondent’s] costs of suit.’
[12] The
applicant, who is the deceased’s surviving spouse, applied to
the high court for leave to appeal, which
was dismissed. She
subsequently applied to this Court for leave to appeal.
[13]
It is essential to deal with nature of the 2012 agreement. This is
because the parties adopt the erroneous view
that it is a variation
agreement, which varied the settlement agreement that was made an
order of court on the date of the divorce
of the respondent and Mr
Kgwadi. Despite its title,
the 2012
agreement is not a variation agreement as it does not vary the
settlement agreement. The settlement agreement did not deal
with the
division of the joint property of the respondent and Mr Kgwadi. As is
apparent from its terms, the 2012 agreement is simply
one in terms of
which the respondent purportedly disposed of her half share in the
property to Mr Kgwadi, for no value.
[14]
The applicant’s primary ground in support of its application
for leave to appeal against the judgment and
order of the high court,
is that it failed to have regard to the dispute of fact. The
applicant contended, in this regard, that
when the respondent signed
the 2012 agreement there was nothing wrong with her psychologically,
hence she was aware of, and intended
to be bound by its terms. As
correctly held by the high court
, the
dispute concerning whether the applicant knew and intended to forfeit
the undivided share in the movable property by signing
the 2012
agreement, is not a real dispute of fact as it could be resolved on
the
common cause facts on the papers. It is
significant, in this regard, that the applicant did not challenge
the
respondent’s version that she signed the 2012 agreement because
it was reasonable to expect that it would not contain
a term that
would require her to give up her 50% share in the property to Mr
Kgwadi for no value.
[15] The
applicant merely contended, in her answering affidavit, that the
injuries sustained by the respondent were
not psychologically related
and that she did not sign the 2012 agreement under duress. The
applicant’s contentions are unsurprising
as she has no personal
knowledge of the circumstances under which the agreement was signed
by the respondent. On this crucial aspect,
there is no other evidence
apart from the respondent’s that she signed the 2012 agreement
because she could not have reasonably
expected it to contain a term
whereby, she would forfeit her 50% share in the joint property.
Besides, this is entirely consistent
with her allegation of a verbal
agreement between her and the deceased that each of them would be
entitled to half of the value
of the property, which remains
unchallenged.
[16]
The only question remaining is whether, on the objective facts, by
signing the 2012 agreement the respondent had
bound herself to
parting with her 50% share in the property to Mr Kgwadi, for no
value. Put differently, was her unilateral mistake
(
error
)
in signing the agreement without reading it reasonable (
justus
)?
In
George
v Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
,
[3]
this Court held that:
‘
When
can an
error
be said to be
justus
for the purpose of entitling a man to repudiate his apparent assent
to a contractual term? As I read the decisions, our Courts,
in
applying the test, have taken into account the fact that there is
another party involved and have considered his position. They
have,
in effect, said: Has the first party – the one who is trying to
resile – been to blame in the sense that by his
conduct he has
led the other party, as a reasonable man, to believe that he was
binding himself? … If his mistake is due
to a
misrepresentation, whether innocent or fraudulent, by the other
party, then, of course, it is the second party who is to blame
and
the first party is not bound.’
[4]
[17] In
National and Overseas Distributors Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato
Board
, Schreiner JA stated the position thus:
‘
Our
law allows a party to set up his own mistake in certain circumstances
in order to escape liability under a contract into which
he has
entered. But where the other party has not made any misrepresentation
and has not appreciated at the time of acceptance
that his offer was
being accepted under a misapprehension, the scope for a defence of
unilateral mistake is very narrow, if it
exists at all. At least the
mistake (
error
)
would have to be reasonable (
justus
),
and it would have to be pleaded.’
[5]
[18] The
respondent’s unchallenged evidence is that the settlement
agreement which was concluded in 1991 and made
an order of court, did
not deal with the division of the property, because both she and Mr
Kgwadi were under the impression, consequent
upon their marital
regime, that each of them would be entitled to half of the value of
the property. They agreed that Mr Kgwadi
would pay the respondent the
value of her share in the property. He, however, never did so.
[19]
More than two decades later, knowing full well that the respondent
was in hospital recovering from serious injuries,
Mr Kgwadi caused
his attorney to present the 2012 agreement, containing entirely
different terms to those they had agreed upon
over 20 years earlier,
to the respondent for her signature. It is clear on the objective
facts that Mr Kgwadi did so deliberately,
and with intent to deceive
the respondent into forfeiting her half share in the joint property.
This explains why the applicant
chose to adduce no evidence on how it
came about that the respondent and Mr Kgwadi decided to amend their
prior agreement. These
facts were peculiarly within the knowledge of
Mr Kgwadi and the applicant, who married him shortly thereafter, and
stood to inherit
50% of his estate on his death.
Bearing
in mind that
the respondent already had an
agreement with Mr Kgwadi concerning her share of the property, she
had no reason to expect that she
would be asked to sign an agreement
containing terms to the contrary.
[20]
Mr
Kgwadi knew, or must have known, contrary to what is stated in the
agreement presented to the respondent for signature, that
she had not
consented to amend their prior agreement that he would pay her 50% of
the value of the property; that he was not entitled
to sole ownership
of the property; and that there was no basis for depriving the
respondent of her share of the property.
Consequently,
when he received the agreement after the respondent had signed it, Mr
Kgwadi knew of her mistake as he was the cause
of it.
[6]
In these circumstances, it cannot be suggested that by signing the
agreement, the respondent misled Mr Kgwadi, as a reasonable
person,
to believe that she was binding herself to its terms and that he was
solely entitled to the property, for no value.
[7]
[21]
It is important to keep in mind that the respondent acted
consistently with her belief that the agreement did not
contain a
term to the effect that she gave up her 50% share in the property to
Mr Kgwadi for no value. In May 2017, in her capacity
as a seller, she
signed an offer by a third party to purchase the property for
R550 000. On enquiring with the transferring
attorneys about
payment of her 50% share of the proceeds of the sale, they informed
her that she was not entitled to any proceeds
as the ‘variation
agreement’ stated that Mr Kgwadi was the sole owner of the
property. Shortly thereafter, she instituted
the application in the
high court claiming payment of 50% of the proceeds of the sale of the
property
.
[22]
In the circumstances, I consider the
respondent’s unilateral mistake to be reasonable and excusable.
Accordingly, the proposed
appeal has no reasonable prospects of
success. The application for leave to appeal must, therefore, be
dismissed with costs. Paragraph
2 of the high court’s order is
incomplete and must be corrected.
[23] The
following order is made:
1
Paragraph 2 of the order of the high court
is set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
The
first respondent, Rorich Wolmarans Luderitz, is directed to pay the
applicant 50% of the proceeds of the sale of the property
held in its
trust account within 30 days of finalisation of the deceased’s
estate.’
2
Save as aforesaid, the application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
________________________
F
KATHREE-SETILOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicant:
D
Z Kela
Instructed
by:
Ndumiso
Voyi Inc, Midrand
Webber
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
W
Smit
Instructed
by:
Schoeman
Sejwane Grobler Inc, Roodepoort
Lovius
Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
10
of 2013.
[2]
Paragraph 2 of the high court’s order is incomplete.
[3]
George
v Fairmead (Pty) Ltd
[1958] 3 All SA 1
(A);
1958 (2) SA 465
(A) at 471B-C; See also
Brink
v Humphries & Jewell
(Pty)
Ltd
2005 (2) SA 419
(SCA);
[2005] 2 All SA 343
(SCA).
[4]
Ibid.
[5]
National
and Overseas Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Potato Board
[1958] 3 All SA 13
(A);
1958 (2) SA 473
(A) at 479G-H.
[6]
GB Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
8 ed (2022) at 385.
[7]
George
v Fairmead
fn 1 at 471B-C.
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