Case Law[2023] ZASCA 127South Africa
Stemmet and Another v Mokhethi and Another (681/2022) [2023] ZASCA 127 (4 October 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – Prescription Act 68 of 1969 – knowledge of minimum facts required for prescription to start running.
Judgment
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## Stemmet and Another v Mokhethi and Another (681/2022) [2023] ZASCA 127 (4 October 2023)
Stemmet and Another v Mokhethi and Another (681/2022) [2023] ZASCA 127 (4 October 2023)
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sino date 4 October 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case no: 681/2022
In the matter between:
GIDEON JAKOBUS PETRUS
STEMMET
FIRST APPELLANT
ELAINE
STEMMET
SECOND APPELLANT
and
TSELISO JAMES MOKHETHI
FIRST RESPONDENT
MMAKWELENG NAOMI
MOKHETHI
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Stemmet and Another
v Mokhethi and Another
(681/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 127(04 October 2023)
Coram:
MAKGOKA, MATOJANE, WEINER and MOLEFE
JJA and MALI AJA
Heard:
25 August 2023
Delivered:
04 October 2023
Summary:
Civil procedure –
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
– knowledge of minimum facts required for
prescription to start running.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free
State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein (Matshaya AJ with
Mbhele AJP concurring and Daffue J dissenting,
sitting as a court of
appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the magistrate’s court is
set aside and replaced with the following:
“
The
defendants’ special plea of prescription is upheld and the
plaintiffs’ claim is dismissed with costs”.’
JUDGMENT
Weiner JA (Makgoka,
Matojane and Molefe JJA and Mali AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and
order of the majority of the full court of the Free State Division of
the High Court,
Bloemfontein (the full court). The appeal is with the
special leave of this Court. The matter concerned the prescription of
a claim
which Mr and Mrs Mokhethi (the respondents) had instituted
against Mr and Mrs Stemmet (the appellants). The claim involved
latent
and undisclosed defects (the defects) which the respondents
discovered some time after they had purchased the appellants’
property situated in Fichardt Park, Bloemfontein (the property). The
respondents had viewed the property on two separate occasions.
They
were impressed with the condition of the property and an agreement of
sale was concluded on 24 May 2013. The purchase price
was R1 290 000.
A mortgage bond over the property was registered in favour of Absa
Bank (Absa) for the purchase price.
[2]
After payment of the purchase price by the
respondents, the property was transferred to the respondents on 22
July 2013, on which
day the respondents took occupation of the
property. Several months after taking occupation, but prior to 24
June 2014,
[3]
the respondents noticed the following
defects on the property:
(a)
structural cracks:
(i)
in the main, second and third bedrooms,
(ii)
along the rafters in the northern gable
wall,
(iii)
in the bathroom and kitchen,
(iv)
in the ceiling in the passage, and
(v)
in the outside walls of the living room,
garage and dining-room; and
(b) windows and
cornices detaching from the walls.
[4]
On 24 June 2014, the respondents lodged a
claim with Absa, which, as part of its financing of the purchase
price of the property,
had insurance cover over the property. On 12
August 2014, Absa declined the claim on the basis that ‘the
defects were old
and gradual, had been previously patched and were
caused by the expansion and retraction of the clay upon which the
property was
built’.
[5]
On 19 July 2017, the respondents issued
summons against the appellants in the magistrate’s court for
damages. They alleged,
in their amended particulars of claim, that,
at the time of the purchase: the appellants knew of the defects and
failed to disclose
them and/or concealed them; the appellants knew or
ought to have known that the property was built upon clay, which
expanded and
retracted during wet and dry conditions; and that the
foundation was not adequately underpinned and supported. These
problems caused
structural cracks to manifest. The appellants,
alleged the respondents, had a duty to inform them of the latent
defects and they
failed to do so. The respondents relied on delict in
the form of fraudulent non-disclosure of the defects and/or the
fraudulent
concealment of the defects, which induced them to purchase
the property, which they would not have done had they been aware of
the defects.
[6]
In anticipation of a possible special plea
of prescription, the respondents averred that they obtained
‘knowledge of the cause
of and the existence of the defects
and/or latent defects’ on 12 August 2014, when they were
informed by Absa that the said
defects were ‘old and gradual,
had been previously patched and were caused by . . . [active] clay’.
The respondents
claimed a sum of R128 423.26, being, inter alia,
the cost of repairs to the property. The summons was served on the
appellants
on 27 July 2017.
[7]
Together with their amended plea, the
appellants raised a special plea of prescription. They averred that
the respondents were aware
of the defects by June 2014, by which
time, the running of prescription had already commenced. As summons
was only served on 27
July 2017, the claim had prescribed. In their
replication to the appellants’ special plea, the respondents
did not join issue
with the appellants’ special plea of
prescription.
[8]
Section 12 of the Prescription Act 68 of
1969 (the Act) provides:
‘
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsections
(2), (3), and (4), prescription shall commence to run as soon
as the
debt is due.
(2)
If the debtor wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of
the existence of the debt,
prescription shall not commence to run
until the creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the
debtor and of the facts from which the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could
have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.’
[9]
In due course the matter came before the
magistrate’s court for trial. The first respondent testified on
behalf of the respondents.
With regard to prescription, his evidence
can be summed up as follows. Several cracks began appearing on the
walls of the property
some time before 24 June 2014, and he concluded
that the property was ‘falling apart’ and not fit for
habitation. This
resulted in the respondents lodging a claim with
Absa, their insurer on that date. On 12 August 2014, Absa repudiated
the claim,
as mentioned.
[10]
In explaining when he first noticed the
defects, the first respondent made several statements in his
testimony, which bear repeating:
(a)
He was a qualified engineer, although he
hadn’t practised as such for many years.
(b)
He purchased the property because of the
excellent condition it was in.
(c)
Prior to June 2014, when he submitted the
claim to Absa, there were problems with doors jamming, after which
cracks began appearing
above these doors, which cracks grew bigger
and bigger.
(d)
About a month or two before June 2014, he
realised that the cracks were growing bigger and were structural.
(e)
He took photographs of the defects and made
inscriptions on them, before he submitted the claim to Absa. The
photographs were taken
at different times. The inscriptions refer to
large structural cracks, which were either horizontal, vertical or
diagonal. The
cracks were detected both inside and outside, with one
in the main bedroom going ‘through the 200m wall from the
inside to
the outside of the property’.
(f)
The patchwork became visible – it was
clear that cracks had been covered up.
(g)
He had knowledge, because of his
profession, of what structural cracks were and that they were
different to plaster cracks. He described
a structural crack as, ‘.
. . it goes through the wall, it goes through the structure. . . They
will say it’s a structural
crack, because the structure is
cracking and not the plaster is cracking’. They were not
hairline cracks.
(h)
On the diagram of the property, forming
part of the bundle of photographs, he had indicated that the cracks
were ‘literally
everywhere’ and ‘developing every
day’. As the cracks were growing bigger every day, he reported
the matter to
Absa.
(i)
He took the photographs ‘[b]asically
to make a case . . . in terms of the structure falling apart’.
(j)
All of the instances above were known to
him before he submitted the claim to Absa on 24 June 2014. He did
not, however, according
to him, know the cause of the cracks.
[11]
In its judgment, the magistrate’s
court reasoned that the respondents could only have acquired the
minimum facts to interrupt
prescription on 12 August 2014. This was
the date on which Absa declined their claim and provided the reason
for its decision.
It accordingly dismissed the special plea of
prescription and went on to consider the merits of the respondents’
claim. It
granted judgment against the appellants on the merits.
[12]
The
appellants appealed to the high court. They did not appeal the
finding on the merits of the claim. The parties thereafter settled
the quantum at R128 423.26.
[1]
The only issue before that court was whether the special plea of
prescription had been correctly dismissed by the magistrate’s
court. The appeal initially served before two Judges. They did not
agree on the outcome of the appeal. As a result, a third Judge
was
called in. This is how the matter came to be heard by the full court.
[13]
The
full court was not unanimous. The majority dismissed the appeal,
while the minority would have upheld the appeal, having found
that
the respondents’ claim had prescribed. The majority relied upon
several authorities dealing with prescription.
[2]
It is trite that the debt becomes due (and prescription begins to
run) when the creditor has the minimum facts necessary to institute
action. In
Minister
of Finance v Gore
,
this Court held that ‘[t]he running of prescription is not
postponed until a creditor becomes aware of the full extent of
its
legal rights, nor until the creditor has evidence that would enable
it to prove a case “comfortably”’.
[3]
However, the majority and minority differed on what constituted the
minimum facts in the present case for prescription to have
started
running.
[14]
The majority agreed with the magistrate’s
court. They concluded that the respondents only acquired knowledge of
the basis
of their cause of action, for the purposes of prescription,
when the respondents received the letter from Absa on 12 August 2014.
It was only in such letter that they were informed that the cracks
were due to ‘active clay and it was previously patched,
the
damage was deemed old and gradual’. Alternatively, they only
acquired such knowledge when their experts informed them
of their
opinion on the cause of the damage to the property on 30 September
2014.
[15]
The majority found that, in June 2014, the
respondents could not have known whether their debtor was the
appellants, the insurer
or a builder. Conversely, the minority found
that there could not have been a doubt that the appellants were
liable either in contract
or delict. In addition, having noticed the
structural cracks, and informing Absa that the property was ‘falling
apart’,
in June 2014, they were in possession of the minimum
facts necessary to institute action. The existence of the clay
conditions
and unstable foundations, which the experts testified
about, was a matter for evidence and the respondents were not
required to
have this knowledge to institute the action.
[16]
The question that arises is: when did the
respondents become aware of the existence of the defects and the
damages arising therefrom
to satisfy section 12(2) of the Act and did
they, at that stage, know the identity of the person responsible for
their damage,
to satisfy the requirement in section 12(3) of the Act?
[17]
It is convenient to first dispose of the
second requirement of s 12(3), ie knowledge of the identity of the
debtor. In this regard,
the respondents could not have had any doubt
that it was the appellants. It is from the appellants that they had
purchased the
property, in seemingly perfect condition, newly painted
and neat. Within a few months, the doors began jamming, cracks began
appearing
and continued to emerge and worsen as time went on until it
reached the point that the property was ‘falling apart’.
Who else, it can be asked, under these circumstances, could the
respondents look to for their damage, other than the appellants?
At
that stage, it would not matter to the respondents what the cause of
the defects was. The cause of the defects as later determined
in the
opinions of experts, was not required at that stage to complete the
cause of action. That was a matter for evidence.
[18]
I
turn to the first requirement. The onus is on the appellants to show
that the respondents were, three years prior to 27 July 2017,
in
possession of sufficient facts to cause them, on reasonable grounds,
to believe that they had a claim against the appellants
and that the
appellants were aware of the defects, but failed to disclose them
and/or that such defects were concealed by the appellants.
[4]
Thus, it must be determined as to precisely when the respondents had
acquired the minimum knowledge necessary to institute action
against
the appellants. This is a factual enquiry. It is to that aspect that
I turn.
[19]
The respondents contended that they only
became aware of the cause of the latent defects, which would form the
basis of their cause
of action, on receipt of Absa’s letter on
12 August 2014. Thus, by the time the summons was served upon the
appellants on
27 July 2017, the claim had not prescribed. The
respondents also relied upon expert reports which they received on 30
September
2014, to allege, in the alternative, that the claim only
prescribed three years after 30 September 2014.
[20]
It is common cause that the defects started
to manifest some time before 24 June 2014, when the respondents
lodged the claim
with Absa. Thus, at that stage, the respondents were
aware that there were structural problems with the property. What
they did
not know, was the cause thereof. The question is whether
they needed to know the cause of the defects, to complete the minimum
facts necessary for prescription to run. The majority answered that
in the affirmative. It concluded that, until the respondents
knew
what the cause of the defects was, prescription could not begin to
run. The issue on appeal is whether that conclusion was
correct.
[21]
In
Truter
and Another v Deysel
,
[5]
this
Court stated that in a delictual claim, the requirements of fault and
unlawfulness do not constitute the factual ingredients
of the cause
of action, but are legal conclusions to be drawn from the facts. The
facts in that case are significant and apposite
in the present case.
The plaintiff had a surgical procedure in 1993, but only received a
medical report of negligence in 2000.
The high court had held that it
was only when the plaintiff received the medical report that
prescription began to run. This Court
upheld the appeal on the basis
that the facts which the plaintiff requires are those which he can
prove and which support his right
to judgment. ‘
It
does not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove
each fact
’.
[6]
(Emphasis added.) It was held further that:
‘
In
a delictual claim, the requirements of fault and unlawfulness do not
constitute
factual
ingredients of the cause of action, but are
legal
conclusions to be drawn from the facts:
“
A
cause of action means the combination of
facts
that are material for the plaintiff to prove in order to succeed with
his action. Such facts must enable a court to arrive at certain
legal
conclusions regarding unlawfulness and fault
,
the
constituent elements of a delictual cause of action being a
combination of factual and legal conclusions
,
namely a causative act, harm, unlawfulness and culpability or
fault”.’
[7]
(
Original
emphasis.)
[22]
This Court in
Macleod
v Kweyiya
, in dealing with this issue
stated:
‘
In
order to successfully invoke
s 12(3)
of the
Prescription
Act, either
actual or constructive knowledge must be
proved.
Actual
knowledge is established if it can be shown that the creditor
actually knew the facts and the identity of the debtor. The
appellant
places no reliance on actual knowledge but on constructive knowledge.
Constructive knowledge is established if the creditor
could
reasonably have acquired knowledge of the identity of the debtor and
the facts on which the debt arises by exercising reasonable
care. The
test is what a reasonable person in his position would have
done,
meaning
that there is an expectation to act reasonably and with the diligence
of a reasonable person. A creditor cannot simply sit
back and “by
supine inaction arbitrarily and at will postpone the commencement of
prescription”. What is required is
merely the knowledge of the
minimum
facts
that are necessary to institute action
and
not all the evidence
that would ensure the ability of the creditor to prove its case
comfortably.’
[8]
(Emphasis
added.)
[23]
The
Constitutional Court’s conclusion in
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[9]
sets out clearly the requisites relating to when a claim arises, and
prescription begins to run:
‘
Furthermore,
to say that the meaning of the phrase “
the
knowledge of . . . the facts from which the debt arises
”
includes knowledge that the conduct of the debtor giving rise to the
debt is wrongful and actionable in law would render
our law of
prescription so ineffective that it may as well be abolished. I say
this because prescription would, for all intents
and purposes, not
run against people who have no legal training at all. That includes
not only people who are not formally educated
but also those who are
professionals in non-legal professions. However, it would also not
run against trained lawyers if the field
concerned happens to be a
branch of law with which they are not familiar. The percentage of
people in the South African population
against whom prescription
would not run when they have claims to pursue in the courts would be
unacceptably high. In this regard,
it needs to be emphasised that the
meaning that we are urged to say is included in
section 12(3)
is
not that a creditor must have a suspicion (even a reasonable
suspicion at that) that the conduct of the debtor giving rise to
the
debt is wrongful and actionable but we are urged to say that a
creditor must have knowledge that such conduct is wrongful and
actionable in law. If we were asked to say a creditor needs to have a
reasonable suspicion that the conduct is or may be wrongful
and
actionable in law, that would have required something less than
knowledge that it is so and would not exclude too significant
a
percentage of society.’
[10]
[24]
From
the common cause facts, it is clear that, as early as June 2014, the
respondents were in possession of sufficient facts to
cause them, on
reasonable grounds, to believe that there had been attempts by the
appellants to cover up latent defects in the
property. In this
regard, it is important to bear in mind that, according to the first
respondent’s evidence, and from the
photos submitted in
evidence, the patchwork on the cracks was evident before the
respondents lodged the claim with Absa on 24 June
2014. The attempt
to patch up the cracks would have immediately led to a reasonable
belief that the respondents had fraudulently
misrepresented the facts
to them. That apprehension was sufficient to complete their cause of
action against the appellants. They
thus had knowledge of sufficient
facts which would have led them to believe that the defects existed
when they purchased the property
from the appellants, and that they
were fraudulently concealed by the appellants.
[11]
[25]
It follows that the conclusion of the
majority that the respondents only had the necessary knowledge of the
minimum facts, on becoming
aware of the cause of the defects, is at
odds with established applicable legal principles referred to above.
It also did not take
account of the material facts, including the
first respondent’s evidence, set out above.
[26]
The appeal must
succeed. Costs should follow the result.
[27]
The following order
is granted:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the full court is
set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the magistrate’s court is
set aside and replaced with the following:
“
The
defendants’ special plea of prescription is upheld and the
plaintiffs’ claim is dismissed with costs”.’
____________________
S E WEINER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
J Ferreira
Instructed
by:
Stander and Associates, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
J J Buys
Instructed
by:
Willie J Botha Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
This
amount included the fees of the respondents’ experts for the
inspection of the property and the compilation of the
reports.
[2]
Truter
and Another v Deysel
[2006]
ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) (
Truter
);
Anglorand
Securities Ltd v Mudau and Another
[2011] ZASCA 76
(SCA);
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (2) SA 814
(A);
Minister
of Finance and Others v Gore NO
[2006]
ZASCA 98
;
[2007] 1 All SA 309
(SCA);
2007 (1) SA 111
(SCA)
;
Macleod
v Kweyiya
[2013] ZASCA 28
;
2013 (6) SA 1
(SCA);
Links
v MEC, Department of Health, Northern Cape
[2016] ZACC 10
;
2016 (5) BCLR 656
(CC);
2016 (4) SA 414
(CC)
(
Links
).
[3]
Gore
supra para 17.
[4]
Links
supra
para 42.
[5]
Truter
supra
para 19
[6]
Truter
supra
para 19.
[7]
Trute
r
supra para 17.
[8]
Macleod
supra
para 9.
[9]
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[2017]
ZACC 33; 2017 (11) BCLR 1443 (CC); 2018 (2) SA 22 (CC).
[10]
Ibid
para 63.
[11]
Links
supra
para 42.
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