Case Law[2023] ZASCA 137South Africa
Ba-Gat Motors CC t/a Gys Pitzer Motoring and Another v Kempster Sedgwick (Pty) Ltd (511/2022) [2023] ZASCA 137 (25 October 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
25 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Summary judgment – non-variation clause – oral agreement alleged – application of the Shifren principle and estoppel.
Judgment
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## Ba-Gat Motors CC t/a Gys Pitzer Motoring and Another v Kempster Sedgwick (Pty) Ltd (511/2022) [2023] ZASCA 137 (25 October 2023)
Ba-Gat Motors CC t/a Gys Pitzer Motoring and Another v Kempster Sedgwick (Pty) Ltd (511/2022) [2023] ZASCA 137 (25 October 2023)
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sino date 25 October 2023
# THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT
##
## Not Reportable
Not Reportable
Case
no: 511/2022
In
the matter between:
# BA-GAT
MOTORS CC T/A
BA-GAT
MOTORS CC T/A
# GYS
PITZER MOTORING
GYS
PITZER MOTORING
# FIRST
APPELLANT
FIRST
APPELLANT
#
# GYBERTUS
PITZER
GYBERTUS
PITZER
# SECOND
APPELLANT
SECOND
APPELLANT
and
# KEMPSTER
SEDGWICK (PTY) LTD
KEMPSTER
SEDGWICK (PTY) LTD
# RESPONDENT
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ba-Gat Motors CC t/a Gys
Pitzer Motoring and Another v Kempster Sedgwick (Pty) Ltd
(511/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 137
(25 October 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA,
CARELSE,
MABINDLA-BOQWANA
and
MEYER
JJA and NHLANGULELA AJA
Heard:
16 August 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal 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 11h00 on
25 October 2023.
Summary:
Summary judgment – non-variation
clause – oral agreement alleged – application of the
Shifren
principle
and estoppel.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Mabuse J, sitting as court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Mabindla-Boqwana JA
(Meyer JA and Nhlangulela AJA concurring):
Mabindla-Boqwana JA
(Meyer JA and Nhlangulela AJA concurring):
[1]
The
issue in this appeal is whether the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria (the high court) properly rejected a defence
of
estoppel relied upon by the appellants in resisting a summary
judgment application. In this regard, the high court applied the
Shifren
principle,
adopted by this Court in
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
.
[1]
In terms of this principle, if a written contract provides that any
variation of its terms must be in writing, any purported variation
by
the parties which is not in writing will be void.
[2]
[2]
The first appellant, Ba-Gat Motors CC
trading as Gys Pitzer Motoring operates
a
used-car
dealership.
The
second
appellant,
Gybertus
Pitzer
is
the
sole member of the first appellant. The
respondent, Kempster Sedgwick (Pty) Ltd operates a Volvo franchise
from leased premises.
[3]
On 21 February 2017, the respondent
concluded a written agreement to sub- lease a portion of the premises
to the first appellant
commencing on 15 March 2017 to 30 September
2020. The first appellant agreed to pay a rental amount of R100 000
plus VAT, per month
for the initial 12 months and thereafter rental
increased by 8% on the anniversary of the commencement date. Notably,
the sub-lease
agreement (the agreement) contained a non-variation
clause. Clause 13.3 of the agreement read: ‘
No
agreement varying
, adding to, deleting
from or
cancelling this Sub-Lease
(including this clause) and no waiver
of any right under this Sub-Lease shall be effective unless in
writing and signed by or on
behalf of the parties.’ (My
emphasis.)
[4]
In addition, clause 13.4 of the agreement
stated:
‘
No
relaxation by a party of any of its rights in terms of this Sub-Lease
at any time shall prejudice or be a waiver of its rights
(unless it
is a signed written waiver), and it shall be entitled to exercise its
rights thereafter as if such relaxation had not
taken place.’
[5]
The second appellant bound himself jointly
and severally as surety and co- principal debtor with the first
appellant in favour of
the respondent for all or any obligations of
the first appellant arising out of or in any way connected to the
sub- lease.
[6]
The first appellant paid escalated rent up
to and including April 2019 and refused to pay any rent thereafter.
This prompted the
respondent to institute action against the
appellants in the high court, claiming payment of an amount of R938
952 for arrear rental,
for the months of May 2019 to October 2019.
[7]
The appellants delivered a plea denying any
obligation to pay rental beyond April 2019. According to the
appellants, the sub-lease
between the first appellant and the
respondent no longer subsisted. They alleged that it was cancelled in
terms of an oral agreement
concluded between the first appellant and
the respondent during or about May/June 2018. In this regard, they
alleged that ‘it
was agreed that the sub- lease would terminate
upon the [first appellant] securing an alternative premises (“the
new premises”),
from which the [first appellant] would continue
with its business activities, alternatively, the sub-lease would
terminate on a
date to be provided to the [respondent] by the [first
appellant] by notice’.
[8]
The appellants further pleaded that the
respondent ‘is estopped from denying that the sub-lease was
cancelled in terms of
the aforesaid oral agreement and/or contending
that the cancellation agreement relied upon by the [appellants] is of
no force and
effect as it [did] not comply with the requirements of
clause 13.3 of the sub-lease and/or that the [appellants] are
precluded
from relying on an oral cancellation agreement by the
provisions of clause 13.3 of the sub-lease’.
[9]
The basis for this defence is that during
or about May/June 2018, the respondent, represented by one Thomas
Reyneke (Reyneke), an
employee of the respondent’s landlord in
the main lease agreement, Steve Atkinson (Atkinson), the director of
the respondent
and one Org Robertse (Robertse), informed the second
appellant, who represented the first appellant, of a request to
vacate the
premises, as the respondent required them for a Subaru
dealership.
[10]
The second appellant informed the said
‘representatives’ that the first appellant was not
interested in vacating the
premises. In an endeavour to convince him,
they took the second appellant to view alternative premises offered
to the first appellant.
The second appellant was however not
satisfied with the alternative premises shown to him. Reyneke then
showed him an empty stand
next to a McDonald’s outlet, which he
considered as a viable option upon which to erect new premises.
Reyneke subsequently
approached him with suggestions and preliminary
plans for the new premises.
[11]
These actions persuaded him, as the
representative of the first appellant, to agree to vacate the
premises and move the first appellant’s
business to new
premises. The construction of these new premises proceeded and it was
envisaged that the first appellant would
vacate the premises and move
its business to the newly constructed one, once they were completed.
According to the second appellant,
had it not been for the request
made by the respondent’s representatives, the first appellant
would not have proceeded to
secure the new premises and incur the
expenses in regard thereto.
[12]
The appellants contend that it is against
that backdrop that the first appellant ‘entered into the oral
cancellation agreement
with the [respondent] . . . [who] assured the
first appellant that the sub-lease would be validly cancelled in
terms of the oral
agreement that was concluded during or about
May/June 2018’. The first appellant acted on the correctness of
the facts represented
by the respondent’s representatives and
proceeded with the construction of the new premises and vacated the
leased premises
to take occupation of the newly constructed premises,
according to the appellants.
[13]
The appellants further allege that, at no
point during the construction of the new premises, which happened
with the full knowledge
of the respondent’s representatives,
did the respondent inform the appellants that the first appellant
remained bound by
the agreement for the full term thereof. The first
appellant acted to its detriment, as a result of the intentional,
alternatively
negligent representations made by the respondent’s
representatives. Had the first appellant known that the respondent
intended
to invoke the provisions of clause 13.3 of the agreement
and/or insisted on written cancellation of the agreement, the first
appellant
would not have proceeded to secure the new premises and
incur costs in relation thereto.
[14]
The respondent applied for summary
judgment, which was resisted by the appellants. In considering the
application, the high court
found as follows:
‘
A
contract with a non variation clause cannot be amended orally.
. . .
I am satisfied that on
the basis of the authorities that I have cited, such a cancellation
is [in]valid, because it is not in keeping
with the non variation
clause. Therefore, if a party raises an oral cancellation or
variation of an agreement, such defence is
invalid and such a party
can be regarded as having raised no defence at all.
. . .
There is, however,
another aspect that this Court should turn its mind to, and that is
the date of termination of the agreement.
It will be recalled that in
this matter, even after the purported oral cancellation of the
agreement, the [appellants] retained
the keys to the building. In
terms of the law, even if the [appellants] did not occupy the
premises concerned, the mere fact that
they had in their possession
the keys to the premises, it means that the agreement only terminated
[when] the [appellants] returned
the keys to the [respondent].’
[15]
The high court did not consider it
necessary to deal with estoppel considering its findings on the
purported oral cancellation of
the agreement. The appeal is before us
with the leave of this Court.
[16]
In
Brisley
v Drosky
,
[3]
this Court endorsed the
Shifren
decision
as representing ‘a doctrinal and policy choice which, on
balance, was sound’.
[4]
It, however, recognised that ‘in addition to the fraud
exception, there may be circumstances in which an agreement,
unobjectionable
in itself, will not be enforced because the object it
seeks to achieve is contrary to public policy’.
[5]
[17]
The appellants do not rely on the defence
that the agreement or clause 13.3 (the non-variation clause) offends
public policy. Nor
do they allege fraud or deceit. They contend for
estoppel by representation. Apart from the fact that the alleged
representation
is obscurely pleaded, it seems to be this: the
respondent’s representatives represented to the second
appellant that the
agreement would be cancelled upon the first
appellant securing alternative premises and the second appellant was
led to believe
that the non-variation clause would not be enforced.
[18]
The appellants specifically stated that
they do not rely on the respondent’s waiver of its rights to
enforce the non-variation
clause. The oral agreement, therefore, is
not pleaded as a
pactum de non petendo
in anticipando
(agreement not to sue)
that may stand alongside the non-variation clause. It is not denied
that the alleged oral cancellation amounts
to a variation, deletion
or cancellation of the agreement,
as
contemplated
in
the
non-variation
clause,
which
clause
13.3
is designed to guard against. What is
raised is that the respondent is estopped from relying on the
non-variation clause.
[19]
This
Court in
Aris
Enterprises (Finance) (Pty) Ltd v Protea Assurance Co Ltd
,
[6]
defined estoppel as:
‘
The
essence of the doctrine of estoppel by representation is that a
person is precluded, ie estopped, from denying the truth of
a
representation previously made by him to another person if the
latter, believing in the truth of the representation, acted thereon
to his prejudice (see Joubert
The Law of
South Africa
vol 9 para 367 and the
authorities there cited). The representation may be made in words, ie
expressly, or it may be made by conduct,
including silence or
inaction, ie tacitly (
ibid
para
371); and in general it must relate to an existing fact (
ibid
para 372).’
[20]
It
follows that if a party reasonably believes in a misrepresentation
made by another and relies on it to its own detriment, such
a party
may hold the latter to the misrepresentation and prevent the
representor from relying on the true state of affairs.
[7]
‘[A] party may only rely on estoppel if the reasonable person
on the street would also have been misled by the conduct on
which the
estoppel is founded’.
[8]
[21]
However, before one gets to whether the
pleaded facts reveal conduct on the part of the respondent’s
alleged representatives,
that would have led a reasonable person in
the position of the appellants to believe that the respondent would
not rely on the
non-variation clause, an antecedent question is
whether the appellants’ reliance on the defence of estoppel as
pleaded is
sustainable in law.
[22]
This
Court in
HNR
Properties CC and Another v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
[9]
had occasion to deal with whether a debtor was released from a
suretyship agreement by waiver or estoppel when a suretyship
agreement
required the release by a creditor in writing. The
appellants therein had relied on waiver and estoppel, amongst other
grounds,
to advance a defence that they were released from the
suretyship agreements, which contained a no-cancellation or
non-variation
clause like the one in this case.
[10]
This Court had this to say:
‘
Courts
have in the past, often on dubious grounds, attempted to avoid the
Shifren
principle
where its application would result in what has been perceived to be a
harsh result. Typically, reliance has been placed
on waiver and
estoppel.
No doubt in particular
circumstances a waiver of rights under a contract containing a
non-variation clause may not involve a violation
of the Shifren
principle,
eg where it amounts to a
pactum de non petendo
or
an indulgence in relation to previous imperfect performance. (For an
interesting discussion on the topic, see Dale Hutchison
Non-variation
Clauses in Contract: Any Escape from the Shifren Straitjacket
(2001)
118
SALJ
720.)
But nothing like that arises in the present case.
The appellants contend
that they were released as sureties
by virtue of the conduct of
the bank,
coupled with a consensual waiver of the provisions of
clause 15. In my view, a factual basis for such a contention was not
established
on the evidence.
But even if it had been, it would
have amounted, in the circumstances of the present case, to no more
than a variation of clause
15 which was not in writing. This is
precluded by clause 16. To hold otherwise, would be to render the
principle in Shifren wholly
ineffective.
The
same applies to the appellants’ reliance on estoppel.
In
their plea, the appellants alleged that Linnell had represented to
Berthold that the appellants were released from their suretyship
obligations and that, relying on such a representation, the
appellants had acted to their prejudice. The representation was
clearly
not established and in argument counsel sought to rely on a
representation based more generally on the bank’s conduct
together
with the letter dated 20 April 1998.
But
even if there had been such a representation, it would not assist the
appellants. Where
a
release is required to be in writing, as in the present case, it may
perhaps be possible, in limited circumstances, to frame an
estoppel
in such a way as not to violate the Shifren principle. It is
unnecessary to consider what those circumstances would have
to be.
What is clear is that an estoppel cannot be upheld when the effect
would be to sanction a non-compliance with provisions
in a suretyship
agreement of the kind contained in clauses 15 and 16.
It
follows that the appellants' reliance on waiver and estoppel must
similarly fail.’
[11]
(My
emphasis.)
[23]
Considering these principles, the question
is, were the plea of estoppel by the appellants to be upheld, will it
not have the effect
of sanctioning non-compliance with the provisions
of the agreement of the kind contained in clause 13.3? Given that
prevailing
position, it is difficult to see how the defence of
estoppel would work out in this kind of situation. To uphold an
estoppel in
such circumstances would negate the very purpose and
effect of the non-variation clause. Estoppel may only be framed on
limited
grounds. Although the Court in
HNR
Properties CC
did not say what those
could be, it did stress that such reliance must not violate the
Shifren
principle.
[24]
In my opinion, upholding the defence of
estoppel in the present matter would be to do so on dubious grounds
and only because the
rejection of such would appear harsh to the
appellants, something the Court in
HNR
Properties CC
cautioned against. To
find otherwise would violate the
Shifren
principle. Further, it would render
clause 13.3 of the agreement nugatory; this could not have been the
intention of the parties
when they concluded the agreement.
[25]
I
have considered the decision of this Court in
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty)
Ltd
v
Tabata
,
[12]
which
also
dealt
with
suretyship
and
in
which
estoppel
was
raised as a defence. In that case, BMW claimed some R9.5 million from
three individuals, including Mr Tabata, the respondent
in that case,
and two companies in terms of suretyship agreements. Mr Tabata held
shares in a company called Vuwa Motor Group (Pty)
Ltd (VMG). He sold
his shares in VMG. The sale of shares agreement had a clause that
read:
‘
[T]he
Purchasers undertake in favour of the Sellers to procure the written
release of Vuwa and/or Tabata from all guarantees/deeds
of suretyship
contemplated above and to deliver such written releases to the
attorneys by the date and in the manner contemplated
in clause 7.2.3
of this contract.’
[26]
The deeds of suretyship were given in
favour of various creditors, including BMW. An attorney, Mr Dixon,
entrusted to secure Mr
Tabata and Vuwa’s release from the deeds
of suretyship, wrote a letter to various creditors, including BMW,
addressed to
Mr Steyn, stating that their consent was a precondition
to the release of Mr Tabata and Vuwa and that those creditors will be
required
to advise of their ‘requirements with a view to
securing the necessary releases by [the] . . . deadline’. Mr
Dixon
called Mr Steyn to inquire about the process to be followed for
the release, but Mr Steyn told him that BMW held no suretyships
from
Vuwa or Mr Tabata. Mr Steyn conveyed this representation to Mr Tabata
and Vuwa, who accepted such to be the position and acted
according to
this representation.
[27]
The distinction between
BMW
Financial Services (SA)
and the present
matter is manifest: there, the representation did not concern the
non-variation clause. In other words, BMW’s
case was not that,
for the release to have been effective, it had to be reduced to
writing. The dispute turned on the telephonic
conversation between Mr
Dixon and Mr Steyn and its contents. On appeal, this Court accepted
that the telephone
conversation
occurred.
Accordingly,
the
representation
there
was
that there
were
no
suretyships.
A
non-variation
clause
or
its
violation
by
the
alleged representation, was not in issue in
that case.
[28]
The appellants’ pleaded case also
fails at another level. The conclusion of the alleged oral agreement
is based on the following
facts: (a) the respondent’s
representatives approached the second appellant to vacate the
premises and take alternative premises,
which were not to his liking;
(b) the representatives showed him vacant land where new premises
could be constructed; (c) the second
appellant, on behalf of the
first appellant, went ahead to construct these new premises; (d)
while all this was taking place the
respondent was silent and never
advised that the non- variation clause would be relied upon.
[29]
These facts, in my opinion, are a far cry
from demonstrating the conclusion of an agreement to the effect that
the agreement was
cancelled. I do not see how a reasonable person in
the position of the second appellant would, having knowledge of the
true facts,
believe that the first appellant would be released from
the agreement to occupy premises where the respondent would no longer
receive
any rental income. We however do not need to traverse this
point any further.
[30]
In the circumstances, oral evidence will
not assist the appellants. I am impelled, therefore, to find that the
defence raised falls
short of a
bona
fide
defence that is good in law.
Accordingly, the high court’s order granting summary judgment
in favour of the respondent must
stand.
[31]
For these reasons, the appeal is dismissed
with costs.
N
P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
## Dambuza JA (Carelse JA
concurring):
Dambuza JA (Carelse JA
concurring):
##
[32]
I have had the benefit of reading the
judgment prepared by my colleague Mabindla-Boqwana JA. Regrettably, I
am unable to agree with
the outcome reached therein. At summary
judgment stage the inquiry in the high court was, in the main,
whether the appellants had
raised a
bona
fide
defence or a defence good in law,
to the respondent’s claim. Importantly, the respondent had
admitted having initiated the
proposal that the first appellant
vacate the leased premises. There were several disputes of fact,
including the veracity of the
authority of one of the respondent’s
alleged representatives at the discussions that resulted in the first
appellant vacating
the leased premises. These disputes would
ordinarily be determined at trial.
[33]
Assuming
that the appellants’ version was proven to be true, was the
defence raised good in law? As set out in the main judgment,
this
Court accepted in
HNR
Properties
[13]
that there is room, though small, for the defence of estoppel to
claims founded on non-variation clauses. The nature or extent
of that
narrow window has not been defined by our courts, save to say that
Shifren
must
not be violated. But in the past this Court has, in similar cases,
considered the plea of estoppel within the context of the
evidence
tendered. It did so in both
HNR
Properties
and
in
Tabata
.
[14]
[34]
Estoppel essentially operates to prevent a
party that has made a representation from denying the truth thereof
where the representee
has acted thereon to his detriment. The
objective is to prevent litigants from seeking to escape, for
opportunistic reasons, agreements
which they concluded.
[35]
In
my view the reliance on representation in this case is comparable to
that which was pleaded in
Tabata
and
in
HNP
Properties
.
The clauses of the suretyship that were under consideration in
Tabata
appear
in
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Finlay and Others
[15]
(
Finlay
,
the court
a
quo
in
Tabata
)
as follows:
‘
3.6
This suretyship is a continuing suretyship
that shall remain of full force and effect, notwithstanding the
fluctuation in, or temporary
extinction of, the Customer's
obligations to BMW Financial Services. This suretyship may not be
withdrawn, revoked or cancelled
without BMW Financial Services prior
written consent.
3.12
This
document was fully completed prior to signature by the Surety. The
suretyship may only be amended or cancelled where such amendment
or
cancellation is reduced to writing and signed by the Surety and BMW
Financial Services. BMW Financial Services shall not be
bound by any
undertakings, representations or warranties not expressly recorded in
this document.’
[16]
[36]
In
that case, BMW had contended that these clauses precluded reliance on
oral cancellation, revocation or withdrawal from the suretyship
and
that the representation relied on by Mr Tabata was no proper defence
as it had been made orally’.
[17]
This Court upheld the high court’s dismissal of BMW’s
claim against Mr Tabata. Essentially, it upheld the plea of estoppel.
It might be that there are pertinent features that distinguish this
case from
Tabata
.
However, they are not immediately apparent to me at this stage.
[37]
Consequently, I do not agree that the plea
tendered by the appellants in this case is a sham or not good in law.
To deprive the
appellants of the right to have their case determined
in the ordinary course of events, by granting the stringent remedy of
summary
judgment, in these circumstances would be unjust.
Accordingly, I would have upheld the appeal.
N
DAMBUZA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
D
Prinsloo
Instructed
by:
Morné
Mostert Attorneys, Pretoria
Pieter
Skein Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
C D
Pienaar
Instructed
by:
Pearce,
Du Toit & Moodie, Durban
Hendre
Conradie Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
SA
Sentrale Ko-op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
[1964]
4 All SA 520
(A);
1964 (4) SA 760
(A) at
765C.
[2]
9
Lawsa
3
ed para 345. This Court has reaffirmed the
Shifren
principle
in
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002
(12) BCLR 1229
(SCA);
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA) paras 10-12.
[3]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002
(12) BCLR 1229 (SCA); 2002 (4) SA 1 (SCA).
[4]
Ibid
para 90.
[5]
Ibid
para 91.
[6]
Aris
Enterprises (Finance) (Pty) Ltd v Protea Assurance Co Ltd
[1981]
4 All SA 238
(A);
1981
(3) SA 274
(
A)
at 291D-E.
[7]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021]
ZACC 13
;
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) para 118.
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
HNR
Properties CC and Another v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
[2003]
ZASCA 135; [2004] All SA 486 (SCA).
[10]
The
clause read as follows:
‘No
cancellation or variation of this suretyship shall be of any force
or effect whatsoever unless and until it is recorded
in writing
signed by or on behalf of the Bank and the surety’. (Ibid para
20.)
[11]
Ibid
paras 20-22.
[12]
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Tabata
2018
JDR 1286 (SCA).
[13]
See
HNR
Properties
fn
9 in the main judgment.
[14]
See
Tabata
fn
12 in the main judgment.
[15]
See
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Finlay and Others
[2017]
ZAGPPHC 181 (GP).
[16]
Ibid
para 26.
[17]
Ibid
para 25.
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