Case Law[2022] ZASCA 23South Africa
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Brooklyn Edge (Pty) Ltd and Another (928/2020) [2022] ZASCA 23; [2022] 2 All SA 334 (SCA) (1 March 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – sale by municipality of immovable properties – challenge by municipality of order enforcing sale agreement – suggested tacit condition – not necessary for business efficacy of contract – bystander test not satisfied – purchase price not undetermined or undeterminable – compliance by municipality with s 79(18) of Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 – s 14 of Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 – no retrospective effect and not applicable – no interest in arrears – in duplum rule not applicable – order varied only in respect of interest.
Judgment
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## City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Brooklyn Edge (Pty) Ltd and Another (928/2020) [2022] ZASCA 23; [2022] 2 All SA 334 (SCA) (1 March 2022)
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Brooklyn Edge (Pty) Ltd and Another (928/2020) [2022] ZASCA 23; [2022] 2 All SA 334 (SCA) (1 March 2022)
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sino date 1 March 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 928/2020
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
BROOKLYN EDGE (PTY)
LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
PIVOT PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT
(PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality v Brooklyn Edge (Pty) Ltd and Another
(Case
no 928/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 23
(1 March 2022)
Coram:
MATHOPO, VAN DER MERWE, NICHOLLS and MBATHA JJA
and SMITH AJA
Heard
:
29 November 2021
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. It has been published on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII.
The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 09h45 on 1 March 2022.
Summary:
Contract – sale by municipality of
immovable properties – challenge by municipality of order enforcing
sale agreement – suggested
tacit condition – not necessary for
business efficacy of contract – bystander test not satisfied –
purchase price not undetermined
or undeterminable – compliance by
municipality with s 79(18) of Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 –
s 14 of
Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003
– no retrospective effect and not applicable – no interest in
arrears –
in duplum
rule
not applicable – order varied only in respect of interest.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
North Gauteng Division of
the High Court, Pretoria (Strijdom AJ sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal succeeds only to the extent reflected in para 3 below.
2
The appellant is directed to pay 80% of the first respondent’s
costs of appeal.
3
Paragraph 6.2 of the order of the court a quo is deleted and
substituted with the following:
‘
6.2
The first plaintiff shall pay the defendant an amount of R8 550 000
plus interest thereon at the bond interest levied
by the defendant’s
approved banker, calculated from 1 February 2005 to date of payment,
in respect of which payment the plaintiff
shall provide RVK or its
successors with a guarantee, acceptable to RVK or their successors,
from a bank or financial institution.’
JUDGMENT
Van der Merwe JA (Mathopo,
Nicholls and Mbatha JJA and Smith AJA concurring)
[1]
On 31 July 2003, the appellant, the City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality (the City)
and the first respondent, Brooklyn Edge (Pty)
Ltd (Brooklyn Edge), then known as Nieuw Pivot Investments (Pty) Ltd,
entered into
a deed of sale. In terms thereof the City sold the
immovable properties that I shall describe shortly, to Brooklyn Edge.
The deed
of sale provided that the properties may be transferred into
the name of a nominee of the purchaser. Alleging that Brooklyn Edge
had so nominated it, the second respondent, Pivot Property
Development (Pty) Ltd, instituted an action in the North Gauteng
Division
of the High Court, Pretoria in which it essentially claimed
enforcement of the deed of sale. As a co-plaintiff, Brooklyn Edge
claimed
the same relief in the alternative. The court a quo (Strijdom
AJ) held that the second respondent had not accepted the purported
nomination, but gave judgment in favour of Brooklyn Edge. It refused
the City’s application for leave to appeal, which was subsequently
granted by this Court. The second respondent did not file a cross
appeal. The broad issue in the appeal is whether the court a quo
correctly ordered specific performance of the deed of sale.
Background
[2]
Erven 162, 163, 164, 165, 193, 194 and portions 1 and 2 of the
remainder of erf 195,
Muckleneuk (the properties) constituted a
public open space within the area of jurisdiction of the City. On 20
June 2003, the council
of the City accepted the recommendations of
its relevant departments and resolved that the public open space be
closed permanently
(the closure) and that the properties be sold to
Brooklyn Edge at the recommended price. As I have said, the deed of
sale was signed
on 31 July 2003. It set the combined purchase price
of the properties at R9,5 million. A 10% deposit was payable
simultaneously with
the signing of the deed of sale. Before us, the
City does not challenge the finding of the court a quo that the
deposit was duly
paid.
[3]
The provisions of the deed of sale in respect of the payment of the
balance of the purchase
price play a central part in the appeal. They
state:
‘
1.2.2
The balance namely R8 550 000,00 (Eight Million Five
Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand) plus interest thereon at the
bond
interest levied by the Seller’s approved Banker, against
registration of transfer of the Property in the name of the
Purchaser.
Provided that no interest shall be payable until the
closure and rezoning referred to in clauses 7.1 and 7.3, have been
completed
or for a period of 18 (eighteen) months from the date of
signing of the Deed of Sale, whichever period expires first. Provided
further
that, should the closure and rezoning not be finalised
successfully, this transaction shall be deemed to have been mutually
cancelled
by the parties, in which instance the Seller will refund
the Purchaser all payments made by him in terms of this Deed of Sale,
excluding
those in respect of assessment rates and service charges,
if any, plus interest at the rate referred to above.
1.2.3
The Purchaser must provide the Seller with a guarantee from a bank or
financial institution for the balance of the purchase
price plus
interest payable against registration of transfer of the Properties
in his name within 30 (thirty) days after being requested
thereto by
the Seller’s attorney which request however shall not be made
before finalisation of the closure and rezoning referred
to in clause
7.1 and 7.3 herein.’
[4]
Clauses 7.1 to 7.3, in turn, provide as follows:
‘
7.1
The Seller shall in terms of the provisions of section 67 of the
Local Government Ordinance, 1939 (Ordinance 17 of 1939) close
the
property as a public open space.
7.2
The Property will only be transferred after the publication of the
amendment scheme contemplated in clause 7.3 below.
7.3
The Purchaser shall at his own cost and risk, apply in terms of the
appropriate provisions of the Town-planning and Townships
Ordinance,
1986 (Ordinance 15 of 1986) and take appropriate steps in terms of
other applicable legislation to amend the Pretoria
Town-planning
Scheme, 1974, by rezoning the Property essentially in accordance with
the Annexure B conditions, attached hereto as
Annexure C, which
conditions however may on request of the Purchaser be amended in the
sole discretion of the Seller.’
Clause
7.3 envisages the rezoning of the properties in terms of the City’s
town planning scheme to ‘special use’ as well as
the removal of
restrictive conditions from their title deeds (the rezoning).
[5]
In terms of clause 10.1, Brooklyn Edge is obliged ‘prior to or
simultaneous with any
development’ of the properties, to at its
cost relocate the existing sport and recreational facilities on the
properties (two clubhouses
and six tennis courts) to a property
identified by the City within 30 days from the date of the deed of
sale. There is no dispute
about the identification of this property.
Clause 10.1.5 provides:
‘
Owing
to the fairly poor condition of the existing tennis courts and
clubhouse, 50% (fifty percent) of the replacement cost shall
be set
off against the selling price of the property.’
[6]
Section 68 of the Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 (the 1939
Ordinance) clothes
the City with the power to effect the closure,
subject to compliance with the procedure set out in s 67. The City
commenced the implementation
of this procedure. The objections that
had been received in response to the public notice of the intention
to close the public open
space, were subsequently withdrawn. Section
67(9)
(a)
required the City to give effect to the closure by
giving notice thereof to the Surveyor-General and the Registrar of
Deeds. This
formal notification is colloquially referred to as a
‘closure certificate’. The City failed to comply with this
requirement.
The relief claimed in the action included an order
directing the City to submit a closure certificate in respect of the
properties
to the Surveyor-general and the Registrar of Deeds.
[7]
The City also obstructed the finalisation of the rezoning. It
accepted Brooklyn Edge’s
application and processed it, but
unreasonably delayed its determination. As a result, Brooklyn Edge
appealed to the member of the
Executive Council for Development and
Planning (the MEC), in terms of s 7 of the Gauteng Removal of
Restrictions Act 3 of 1996. The
appeal was successful and the MEC
approved the rezoning. The City was finally notified hereof by letter
dated 21 November 2011. In
terms of s 7(16) of the Gauteng Removal of
Restrictions Act, the Registrar (defined as a designated provincial
official) has to give
notice of the decision of the MEC without
delay, by publication in the provincial gazette, but has not yet done
so. By way of the
joint minute of town planning experts, the parties
agreed that the publication of the required notice would bring the
rezoning into
effect. According to the evidence, the notice must make
reference to an amendment scheme map and schedule thereto. These must
be
prepared by the City. The publication of the notice is in
terms to town planning parlance referred to as the publication of
the
amendment scheme.
[8]
After hearing evidence, the court a quo made the following order:
‘
1.
The defendant is directed, within 7 (seven) days of this Order, to
submit to the Surveyor-General and to the Registrar of Deeds,
Pretoria a closure certificate confirming the closure of Erven 162,
163, 164, 165, 193 and 194 and Portions 1 and 2 and the Remainder
of
Erf 195 Muckleneuk Township (“the properties”) as public open
space in terms of the provisions of Section 67(9)(a) of the
1939
Ordinance (the “submission”), read with Section 68 thereof;
2.
The defendant is directed, within 7 (seven) days of this Order, to
render such assistance to the Registrar as to enable the publication
of the amendment scheme by the Registrar in terms of Section 7(16) of
the Gauteng Removal of Restrictions Act, 1996 in order to give
effect
to the rezoning of the properties as granted by the MEC;
3.
It is declared that the provisions of section 14(2) of the MFMA do
not apply to the transfer of ownership of the property in terms
of
the deed of sale;
4.
The Defendant shall, within 7 (seven) days of submission of the
Closure Certificate and publication referred to above, instruct
Roestoff, Venter and Kruse Attorneys (“RVK”) or their successors,
immediately and without delay, to proceed with the transfer
of Erven
162, 163, 164, 165, 193 and 194 Muckleneuk Township into the name of
the firs plaintiff and Portions 1 and 2 and the Remainder
of Erf 195
Muckleneuk Township into the name of the first plaintiff, and to sign
all transfer documents and to take all steps necessary
or required in
order to pass transfer;
5.
In the event of the defendant failing to instruct RVK or their
successors as aforesaid or failing to sign all transfer documents
and
to take all reasonable steps necessary to pass transfer of the
aforesaid erven to the first and second plaintiff respectively
within
7 (seven) days and not remedying such failure within 10 (ten) days of
being given notice to do so, the plaintiffs shall, at
their election:
5.1
Request the Sheriff, who is hereby authorized, to instruct RVK or
their successors to sign all documentation necessary for purposes
of
giving effect to the aforesaid transfer of immovable property and to
take all reasonable steps in regard thereto; or
5.2
Cancel the deed of sale and claim damages;
6.
Against transfer:
6.1
The defendant shall be entitled to the deposit of R950 000.00
paid to RVK on 3 August 2003, and all interest accrued thereon;
6.2
The first plaintiff shall pay the defendant and amount of
R17 100 000.00, being the balance of the purchase price
plus
interest thereon up to the maximum amount of the capital debt by
application of the common law
in duplum
rule, in respect of
which payment the plaintiff shall provide RVK or their successors
with a guarantee, acceptable to RVK or their
successors, from a bank
or financial institution;
7.
The defendant shall consider and, if acceptable, approve
architectural drawings and plans submitted or to be submitted by the
first
plaintiff in respect of the relocation of sport and recreation
facilities, consisting of 2 (two) club houses and 6 (six) tennis
courts
to either the same existing standards and sizes or such
standards and sizes as may otherwise be agreed upon between the
parties,
and shall confirm the substituting properties to which such
facilities must be relocated;
8.
The first plaintiff shall, pursuant to the approval by the defendant
of architectural drawings in respect of the sport and recreation
facilities and compliance with all statutory requirements, at its
cost and to the reasonable satisfaction of the defendant’s City
Planning Division and General Manager: Land and Environmental
Planning, relocate the existing sport and recreational facilities to,
or construct sport and recreational facilities on, the substituting
property identified by the defendant;
9.
The first plaintiff shall be entitled to recoup from the defendant
50% of the reasonable relocation and construction costs;
10.
The defendants shall pay the plaintiffs’ costs on the party and
party scale, including the costs attendant on the employment
of
senior and junior counsel.’
[9]
Both parties do not persist with several of the contentions that they
advanced in the
court a quo. On appeal, the City challenges the order
only on the following grounds, which I shall consider in turn:
(a)
that the deed of sale is unenforceable because a tacit suspensive or
resolutive condition was not fulfilled or failed;
(b)
that the deed of sale is void for vagueness because the purchase
price is not determined or determinable;
(c)
that the deed of sale is void
ab initio
because of failure to
comply with s 79(18) of the 1939 Ordinance;
(d)
that the deed of sale is invalid for non-compliance with s 14(2) of
the Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56
of 2003
(the MFMA);
(e)
that the claim for the transfer of the properties is premature;
(f)
alternatively, that Brooklyn Edge’s claims have prescribed; and
(g)
further alternatively, that the
in duplum
rule is
inapplicable.
Tacit
condition
[10]
The City’s argument proceeds along the following lines. It is a
tacit suspensive or resolutive condition
of the deed of sale that the
closure and the rezoning have to be successfully finalised within a
reasonable time after 31 July 2003.
The tacit condition is to be
found in the second proviso to clause 1.2.2. A period of 18 months,
or, at best for Brooklyn Edge, 36
months, constitutes a reasonable
period of time in the circumstances. The action has to fail because
the closure and the rezoning
have to date not been successfully
finalised.
[11]
At the outset it is necessary to refer to the City’s reliance on
evidence as to what transpired between
the parties prior to the
signing of the deed of sale. The evidence was the following. After
the resolution of the council of the
City of 20 June 2003 (the
council resolution), the attorney that facilitated the transaction
furnished a draft deed of sale to the
internal legal adviser of the
City. This took place on 14 July 2003. In terms of clause 2 of the
draft, the sale would be subject
to various proposed conditions
precedent. These included that the seller successfully executes the
closure within three months and
that the purchaser successfully
rezones the properties within 18 months from the date of the sale. If
any of these do not take place
within the stipulated time period or
any agreed extension thereof, according to the draft, the agreement
would lapse and be of no
further force and effect.
[12]
The legal adviser responded in writing on 16 July 2003. She stated,
inter alia, that the whole of the
proposed clause 2 had to be deleted
and that the draft had to be reformulated to comply with the council
resolution. It specified
the essential terms of the intended sale and
did not contain any condition precedent. To all intents and purposes
clause 1.2.2 of
the deed of sale is the same as para 2.1.2 of the
council resolution.
[13]
Clause 5 of the deed of sale provides that it contains the total
agreement between the parties and that
no addition, amendment or
suspension of any provision thereof shall be effective unless reduced
to writing and signed by both parties.
The deed of sale was therefore
intended to be the sole memorial of the agreement between the
parties. The
City relies on direct evidence of preceding negotiations that could
hardly be said to be part of the contextual setting of the deed
of
sale. It therefore appears to offend against the integration rule and
I very much doubt whether it is admissible. See
Van Aardt v Galway
[2011] ZASCA 201
;
[2012] 2 All SA 78
(SCA);
2012 (2) SA 312
(SCA)
para 9 and
Capitec Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral
Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021] ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA);
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA) para 48. But even if
it is admissible, the evidence does not assist the City. As I have
demonstrated, it makes clear that no
suspensive condition was agreed
upon during the negotiations.
[14]
The provision that commences with the second ‘Provided’ in clause
1.2.2 (the deemed cancellation
clause), is not a true proviso. Unlike
the proviso that temporarily suspends the accrual of interest, the
deemed cancellation clause
does not qualify or limit a principal
matter to which it stands as a proviso, but is an independent
provision. See
Mphosi v Central Board for Co-operative Insurance Ltd
1974 (4)
SA 633
(A);
[1974] 4 All SA 536
(A) at 645 and
Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 6. It is certainly not a suspensive condition. It is trite
that a suspensive condition suspends the operation of the obligations
to which it relates until the occurrence of a future uncertain event.
The
deed of sale does not in any way provide that the finalisation of the
closure and the rezoning are conditions precedent to the operation
of
any obligations thereunder. On the contrary, its import is that the
closure and the rezoning have to be effected forthwith and
should
they not be finalised successfully, there shall be a deemed mutual
cancellation of the contract. For this reason, the decision
in
Hanuscke Beleggings CC v Kungwini Local Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 112
; 2012 JDR 1654 (SCA) is of no relevance. There it was
common cause that the sale was subject to three suspensive conditions
and that
a reasonable time for their fulfilment had already lapsed by
the time summons was issued (paras 2 and 14).
[15]
Pending the fulfilment of a resolutive condition, the contract is
fully operative and the parties must
perform their obligations in
terms thereof. A resolutive condition generally terminates the
obligations flowing from the contract
upon the occurrence of a future
uncertain event. I am prepared to accept, without deciding, that the
deemed cancellation clause could
be described as a resolutive
condition. However, the real question raised by the City’s argument
is whether the deemed cancellation
clause is tacitly subjected
thereto that the closure and the rezoning have to take place within a
reasonable period of time. That
is the issue that I now turn to.
[16]
A tacit term is an unexpressed provision of a contract. It is
inferred primarily from the express terms
and the admissible context
of the contract. A court will not readily infer a tacit term, because
it may not make a contract for the
parties. The inference must be a
necessary one, namely that the parties necessarily must have or would
have agreed to the suggested
term. A relevant factor in this regard
is whether the contract is efficacious and complete or whether, on
the other hand, the proposed
tacit term is essential to lend business
efficacy to the contract. The ‘celebrated’ bystander test
constitutes a practical tool
for the determination of a tacit term.
To satisfy the test the inference must be that each of the parties
would inevitably have provided
the same unequivocal answer to the
bystander’s hypothetical question. Even if the inference is that
one of the parties might have
required time to consider the matter,
the tacit term would not be established. See
Alfred McAlpine &
Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration
1974 (3) SA
506
(A) at 531H-532A and 532G-533B;
Wilkins NO v Voges
[1994]
ZASCA 53
; [1994] 2 All SA 349 (A)
[1994] ZASCA 53
; ;
1994 (3) SA
130
(A) at 136H-137C and 142C-I and
City of Cape Town (CMC
Administration) v Bourbon-Leftley and Another NNO
[2005]
ZASCA 75
; [2006]
1
All SA 561
(SCA);
2006 (3) SA 488
(SCA) paras 19 and 20.
[17]
In my view the proposed tacit term is not by necessary implication
required to give business efficacy
to the deed of sale. It clearly
sets out the obligations of each party in respect of the closure and
the rezoning. It is a notorious
fact that these processes are often
beset with difficulties and delays. In this regard it is significant
that clause 1.2.2 envisages
that the deed of sale would remain extant
after the expiry of the period of 18 months during which the accrual
of interest is suspended,
but sets no further time limit. I
agree with Brooklyn Edge that this counts against an intention that
the deed
of sale would lapse if the closure or the rezoning are not
achieved within a specified period of time.
[18]
I am also by no means satisfied that if an innocent bystander posed
this question to the parties at the
time of entering into the deed of
sale, both would necessarily have agreed that the closure and the
rezoning had to take place within
a reasonable time thereafter. At
least one of the parties might very well have said that such a term
could create uncertainty and
lead to disputes, because these
processes might be held up by unexpected events. In my view the
proper interpretation of the deemed
cancellation clause in its
context is that the parties agreed that each party would undertake
all efforts to procure the closure
and the rezoning, irrespective of
how long they take. Only if that objectively proves to be
unachievable, would there be a deemed
cancellation. In the result I
find that the deed of sale does not contain the alleged tacit
condition. It follows that it is unnecessary
to consider what a
reasonable time would have been.
Purchase
price
[19]
The purchase price of the properties as such is clearly determined in
the deed of sale. In terms of clause
1.1 the purchase price is R9,5
million, being R716 000 for portions 1 and 2 of erf 195 and
R8 784 000 for the remainder
of the erven. The City’s
argument is that clause 10.1.5 renders the purchase price
indeterminable. It will be recalled that it
provides that 50% of the
replacement costs of the clubhouses and tennis courts ‘shall be set
off against the selling price’.
[20]
The validity of the contention is in the first place dependent on the
proposition that the deed of sale
provides that the replacement has
to take place prior to or simultaneously with the transfer of the
properties. If not, paras 7,
8 and 9 of the order of the court a quo
could not be faulted. For the reasons that follow, I am of the view
that despite the reference
to setoff, the deed of sale allows the
relocation of the sports facilities and the accounting in respect of
half the costs thereof,
to take place after the transfer of the
properties to Brooklyn Edge.
[21]
First, clause 2 provides that the transfer shall take place ‘after
all moneys payable in accordance
with this agreement have been paid
or duly guaranteed’. Neither clause 2 nor clause 1.2.3 subjects the
transfer to an adjustment
of the purchase price in respect of the
replacement costs. Secondly, in terms of clause 3, occupation of the
property shall be given
from the date of transfer, subject to the
provisions of clause 10.1.4. It reads:
‘
The
Seller shall only for purposes of such relocation and sport and
recreation facilities allow occupation of the property and the
substituting property by the Purchaser prior to the date of transfer
for purposes of demolishment and erection of such facilities
which
activities if any shall be executed at the Purchaser’s exclusive
risk and cost.’
Clause
10.1.4 is clearly a permissive provision that places no obligation on
the purchaser. Finally, as I have said, clause 10.1 obliges
the
purchaser to relocate the facilities ‘prior to or simultaneous with
any development of the property’. The development of
the properties
could clearly only take place after the transfer thereof to Brooklyn
Edge.
[22]
Thus, Brooklyn Edge is entitled to effect the relocation
simultaneously with the development of the properties
after it took
transfer thereof. The deed of sale is not void for vagueness as
alleged. Therefore it is unnecessary and premature
to consider
whether the relocation costs are objectively determinable in terms of
the deed of sale.
Section
79(18) of the 1939 Ordinance
[23]
Here the City’s argument is based on alleged non-compliance with
its own obligations, in two respects.
The first is that the
advertisement of the intended sale that it published on 16 July 2003,
did not comply with s 79(18)
(b)
. The publication took place
after the council resolution and before the deed of sale, as
required. See
Emalahleni Local Municipality and Another v Propark
Association and Another
[2012] ZASCA 177
;
[2013] 1 All SA 277
(SCA) para 26. The second is that the City did not cause a valuer to
evaluate the properties in terms of s 79(18)
(d)
(ii).
[24]
The first contention is baseless. The City simply did not identify
any respect in which the advertisement
was allegedly non-compliant.
As to the second contention, the City rightly accepts that it had to
prove that the properties had not
been evaluated in terms of s
79(18)
(d)
(ii). The City did no such thing. However, Brooklyn
Edge adduced the evidence of Mr Espagh, who had been a specialist
valuer in the
employment of the City at the time. He said that in
terms of the standard procedure of the City, the legal services
division would
request a valuation of a property that the City
considered selling. The
market value of the property would then be determined by a valuer
employed by the City. The acceptability of the valuation would
thereafter be considered by the Properties Committee of the City. It
consisted of senior valuers. The witness was a member of this
committee. The witness confirmed that the legal services division had
requested a valuation of the properties. He testified that
the
Properties Committee had considered the market value of the
properties and was satisfied with the proposed purchase price.
That
in itself amounted to
compliance with s 79(18)
(d)
(ii). In any event, the witness
convincingly explained that although he could not remember the detail
because of the passage of time,
a valuation of the properties must
have been done in terms of the standard procedure. On this evidence
it was at least more probable
than not that the market value of the
properties had been determined prior to the deed of sale.
[25]
As I have demonstrated, these contentions of the City are devoid of a
factual basis. It follows that
it is unnecessary to consider whether
the City could in law be permitted to rely on its own non-compliance
with these statutory provisions,
without seeking the review and
setting aside of the council resolution.
Section
14(2) of the MFMA
[26]
Sections 14(1) and (2) of the MFMA read:
‘
14.
(1) A municipality may not transfer ownership as a result of a sale
or other transaction or otherwise permanently dispose of a
capital
asset needed to provide the minimum level of basic municipal
services.
(2)
A municipality may transfer ownership or otherwise dispose of a
capital asset other than one contemplated in subsection (1), but
only
after the municipal council, in a meeting open to the public–
(a)
has decided
on reasonable grounds that the asset is not needed to provide the
minimum level of basic municipal services; and
(b)
has
considered the fair market value of the asset and the economic and
community value to be received in exchange for the asset.’
[27]
The council resolution and the deed of sale were validly completed
juristic acts under the 1939 Ordinance.
They gave rise to enforceable
rights. The date of commencement of the MFMA is 1 July 2004. Should s
14(2) be applicable to the transaction,
it would retrospectively
interfere with vested rights. There is a strong presumption that new
legislation is not intended to be retroactive.
There is also a
presumption against the reading of legislation as being retrospective
in the sense that, while it takes effect only
from its date of
commencement, it impairs existing rights and obligations by, for
instance, invalidating existing agreements. A statute
will only have
retroactive operation if that is clearly indicated by the
legislature. See
Kaknis v Absa Bank Limited and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 206
;
[2017] 2 All SA 1
(SCA);
2017 (4) SA 17
(SCA) paras 37 and
38. No such meaning was pointed out or could be detected in s 14 of
the MFMA or its context. It follows that s
14(2) is not applicable to
the deed of sale. The City’s challenge based on s 14(2) must also
fail.
Premature
claim
[28]
The contention that Brooklyn Edge prematurely claims transfer of the
properties, can be briefly disposed
of. It is based on a
misconception of the relief claimed and the import of the order
granted. In terms thereof, the City is directed
to formally finalise
the closure by the submission of a closure certificate and to render
the assistance necessary to enable the
publication of the amendment
scheme.
[29]
This is in accordance with the City’s obligations under the deed of
sale. The City is obliged in terms
of clause 7.1 to follow the
closure procedure and to successfully finalise it if it is
objectively possible, as is the case. There
can be no doubt that the
City is also contractually obliged to assist in procuring the
successful finalisation of the rezoning by
providing the amendment
scheme map and schedule thereto to the Registrar.
Only
thereafter will Brooklyn Edge be entitled to transfer, against
payment of the balance purchase price and interest thereon.
Prescription
[30]
This alternative defence is that the rights to seek the closure and
the rezoning of the properties have
prescribed. But neither of these
are debts within the meaning of the
Prescription Act 69 of 1969
. It
has repeatedly been decided that a debt in this context is an
obligation to make payment, deliver goods or render services. See
Brompton Court Body Corporate v Khumalo
[2018] ZASCA 27
;
2018
(3) SA 347
(SCA) para 11 and the authorities cited there. Only the
claim for transfer of the properties (delivery of goods) would
qualify as
a debt, but as I have demonstrated, it is not yet due.
Interest
in duplum
[31]
The common law
in duplum
rule essentially provides that
interest stops running when the unpaid interest equals the amount of
the outstanding capital. The
rule is based on public policy and
cannot be waived. Its overarching purpose is to protect debtors from
being exploited by creditors.
See
Standard
Bank
of South Africa Ltd v
Oneanate Investments (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
[1997] ZASCA 94
; [1998] 1 All SA 413
(A)
[1997] ZASCA 94
; ;
1998 (1) SA 811
(SCA) at 827H-828E. This was
confirmed in all three judgments of the Constitutional Court in
Paulsen and Another v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Limited
[2015] ZACC 5
;
2015 (3) SA 479
(CC);
2015 (5) BCLR 509
(CC). (The majority of the Constitutional Court
overruled
Oneanate
only to the extent that it held that the
in
duplum
rule is suspended
pendente lite
).
[32]
The City contends that the
in duplum
rule applies only to
arrear interest and that in terms of the deed of sale there is no
arrear interest. I agree with the City in
both respects. Our courts
have repeatedly made clear that the
in duplum
rule limits
arrear interest to the outstanding capital sum. See the full court
judgment in
Van Coppenhagen v Van Coppenhagen
1947 (1) SA 576
(T);
[1947] 1 All SA 266
(T) at 581,
LTA Construction Bpk v
Administrateur, Transvaal
[1991] ZASCA
147
; [1992] 3 All SA 1007 (A)
[1991] ZASCA 147
; ;
1992 (1) SA 473
(A) at 480F, 481I-J and 482B,
Ethekwini Municipality v Verulam
Medicentre (Pty) Ltd
[2005] ZASCA 98
;
[2006] 3 All SA 325
(SCA)
paras 10 and 18 and
Paulsen v Slip Knot Investments supra
paras 42, 107 and 122. This accords with the purpose of the rule. The
agreed accrual of interest on a capital sum, the payment of
which has
been postponed, can hardly amount to the exploitation of a debtor.
[33]
The relevant provisions of the deed of sale constitute an agreed
formula for the adjustment of the purchase
price to be paid in the
future, to account for the passage of time. At no time was interest
in arrears. It follows that Brooklyn
Edge is in terms of clause 1.2
obliged to pay interest on the outstanding balance of the purchase
price at the bond interest levied
by the City’s approved banker,
for the period commencing 18 months after the signing of the deed of
sale until date of payment.
Paragraph 6.2 of the order of the court a
quo should be amended accordingly.
Costs
[34]
It remains to consider the costs of the appeal. As the City has some
success on appeal, it should not
be directed to pay all the costs of
appeal of Brooklyn Edge. In the exercise of our wide discretion in
respect of costs, I believe
that it is fair and just that the City
pay 80% of Brooklyn Edge’s costs of appeal.
[35]
For these reasons the following order is issued:
1
The appeal succeeds only to the extent reflected in para 3 below.
2
The appellant is directed to pay 80% of the first respondent’s
costs of appeal.
3
Paragraph 6.2 of the order of the court a quo is deleted and
substituted with the following:
‘
6.2
The first plaintiff shall pay the defendant an amount of R8 550 000
plus interest thereon at the bond interest levied
by the defendant’s
approved banker, calculated from 1 February 2005 to date of payment,
in respect of which payment the plaintiff
shall provide RVK or its
successors with a guarantee, acceptable to RVK or their successors,
from a bank or financial institution.’
_______________________
C H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
T Strydom SC (with him T
Mkhwanazi)
Instructed
by:
Mpoyana Ledwaba Incorporated,
Pretoria
Honey
& Partners Incorporated, Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
E C Labuschagne SC (with him H P Pretorius)
Instructed
by:
Adams & Adams Attorneys, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
sino noindex
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