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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 9
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## Gerber and Others v Maluleke and Others (2023/078290)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 9 (15 January 2025)
Gerber and Others v Maluleke and Others (2023/078290)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 9 (15 January 2025)
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sino date 15 January 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED. NO
…………
..………….............
SIGNATURE
DATE
15 January 2025
CASE
NO: 2023/078290
In the matter between:
NICOLAAS
MATHEUS GERBER N.O
First
Applicant
MARIETTE
PRITCHARD N.O
Second
Applicant
NICOLAAS
MATHEUS GERBER N.O
Third
Applicant
CHARISSA
VAN STRATEN N.O
Fourth
Applicant
JACQUES
PIETER THERON N.O
Fifth
Applicant
DIRK
JACOBS WINTERBACH N.O
Sixth
Applicant
and
MAHUNISI
ISAAC MALULEKA
First
Respondent
ZELDA
MALULEKA
Second
Respondent
ANY
OTHER UNLAWFUL OCCUPANTS
OF
PORTION 17 OF ERF 1[…], 9[…] L[…] ROAD, M[…]
Third
Respondent
CITY
OF EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 15 January 2025.
MAHON
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against the judgment
delivered by me in the main application for the eviction
of the
respondents from the property situated at Portion 17 of Erf 1[…],
9[…] L[…] Road, M[…]. The
applicants were the
trustees of the Gerber Family Trust, and the respondents included the
purchasers, Mahunisi Isaac Maluleka and
Zelda Maluleka.
[2]
The respondents (purchasers) have now applied for leave to appeal
against my judgment granting the eviction order. In
their application
for leave to appeal, the purchasers have raised several grounds of
appeal, which require careful consideration.
[3]
Notably, counsel for the purchasers confirmed that the non-joinder
point raised in the application for leave to
appeal was not
persisted with during the hearing of the application for leave to
appeal. The remaining grounds of appeal relied
upon by the purchasers
primarily turn on two broad issues:
[3.1] the "
vexed
question
" (as it was described by the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Royal Anthem Investments 129 (Pty) Ltd v Lau and Another
2014 (3) SA 626
(SCA)
) of whether payment to the transferring
attorney constitutes payment to the sellers in partial discharge of
the purchasers’
obligation to pay the purchase price; and
[3.2] the issue
concerning the fulfilment or non-fulfilment of the suspensive
condition in the sale agreement.
Grounds
of Appeal
[4]
The purchasers contend that I erred in my findings. The gravamen of
their complaint is that:
[4.1]
the court failed to appreciate that payment of the deposit to the
transferring attorney constituted part payment
of the purchase price
to the sellers, and therefore discharged the purchasers’
obligation in this regard;
[4.2]
the court misdirected itself by concluding that the issue of the
suspensive condition had been properly raised
in the founding
affidavit of the applicants; and
[4.3]
the court did not give due regard to the facts from which it could be
inferred that the sellers’ right to
rely on the non-fulfilment
of the suspensive condition had been waived through their conduct.
The
Issue Relating to the Deposit
[5]
The first issue relates to the role of the transferring attorney in
the transaction. The purchasers argue that payment
to the
transferring attorney constituted payment to the sellers, thereby
fulfilling their obligation to pay the deposit. The sellers,
on the
other hand, maintained that the transferring attorney acted as a mere
stakeholder and that payment to the attorney did not
amount to
payment to the sellers, such payment only taking place when the
deposit was released to the sellers upon transfer of
the property.
[6]
In
Royal Anthem Investments 129 (Pty) Ltd v Lau and Another
2014
(3) SA 626
(SCA)
, the following was said of this issue:
"[17] The appellant sought to
meet this by arguing that the first defendant had received the
deposit as the appellant's agent,
so that the payment to the first
defendant was thus, effectively, a payment to it. This raises the
somewhat vexed question as to
whether a conveyancing attorney in
circumstances such as the present, entrusted to hold a portion or the
whole of the purchase
price until registration of transfer, receives
the sum as agent of the seller, or of the buyer, or of both, or as
'trustee for
both to await the event' — see in this
regard the conflicting judgments in Minister of Agriculture and Land
Affairs
and Another v De Klerk and Others
2014 (1) SA 212
(SCA). This
is an issue unnecessary to decide as even if the payment to the first
defendant is to be regarded as a payment to the
appellant, as to
which I refrain from expressing an opinion, the deposit had to be
repaid unless it can be construed as falling
within the category of
'any other amounts payable' referred to in clause 6."
[7]
This issue has thus been described as a "
vexed question
"
because of conflicting judicial pronouncements on the matter. The
purchasers argue that the conflicting judgments provide
a compelling
basis for granting leave to appeal, enabling the Supreme Court of
Appeal to definitively resolve this contentious
issue once and for
all.
Applicable
Legal Standard
[8]
The test for leave to appeal is set out in
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
, which provides that leave to appeal
may only be granted where the judge is of the opinion that:
[8.1] the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success; or
[8.2] there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the issue
under consideration.
[9]
In
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen 2014 JDR 2325 (LCC)
, it
was held that the threshold for granting leave to appeal is now
higher under the
Superior Courts Act than
it was under the previous
regime. A mere possibility of success is not sufficient; a reasonable
prospect must exist that another
court would come to a different
conclusion.
[10]
In my view, although the facts of the matter support the conclusion
that payment to the transferring attorney is merely
security (for the
reasons identified in my judgment in the main application), the
existence of conflicting judgments and the recognition
by higher
courts that this is a complex and contentious issue suggest that
there is a reasonable prospect that another court might
come to a
different conclusion.
[11]
Nevertheless, for leave to appeal to be granted, the purchasers must
prevail on both issues raised in this application—the
"
vexed
question
" and the issue concerning the suspensive
condition—as success on only one issue would not alter the
outcome on appeal.
Counsel for the purchasers, quite properly,
accepted this proposition. Accordingly, I now turn to the matter of
the suspensive
condition.
The
Suspensive Condition
[12]
The second broad ground of appeal concerns the alleged non-fulfilment
of the suspensive condition in the sale agreement.
In my view, the
relevant paragraphs of the applicants’ founding affidavit,
specifically paragraphs 20 to 23, raise a clear
query regarding
whether the suspensive condition had been fulfilled.
[13]
The sellers indicated that they had enquired into the fulfilment of
the condition and asserted that if the condition
had not been
fulfilled, the sale agreement will have lapsed. This, in my view, was
sufficient to put the purchasers on notice that
the point would be
taken and to require them to demonstrate that the suspensive
condition had been fulfilled.
[14]
Indeed, the purchasers belatedly attempted to meet the point. The
purchasers attempted to introduce documents at a late
stage to show
fulfilment of the condition. Notably, the purchasers’
unsuccessful attempt to demonstrate the fulfilment
of the
condition also somewhat undermined their concurrent assertion
that the sellers had waived the condition or the right
to rely on its
non-fulfilment. Nevertheless, as I noted in my judgment, these
documents suggested that the suspensive condition
had, in fact,
not
been fulfilled timeously.
[15]
However, counsel for the purchasers argued that waiver of the right
to rely on such non-fulfilment had been properly
raised by
implication, citing the sellers’ conduct and the addendum to
the agreement, both of which are to be viewed in the
context of the
significant lapse of time before any enquiry into the fulfilment of
the condition had been made.
[16]
In my view, whilst those facts might support an argument for waiver
or estoppel, it was incumbent upon the purchasers
to explicitly
articulate their reliance on those doctrines.
[17]
As an aside, it is pertinent to note that the parties brought to my
attention an affidavit uploaded by the purchasers
on the eve of the
hearing of this application for leave to appeal. This affidavit
annexed certain documents purportedly intended
to demonstrate that
the suspensive condition had, in fact, been timeously fulfilled.
However, as rightly conceded by the purchasers'
counsel, I am
precluded from considering this new evidence, as my deliberation must
be confined to the papers that were before
me during the hearing of
the main application. The only inference to be drawn from this
development is that the purchasers appear
to intend seeking leave to
adduce further evidence on appeal to establish compliance with the
suspensive condition. While this
may potentially alter the factual
complexion of the matter, it falls outside the scope of the present
inquiry, and nothing further
need be said on this point as I am
precluded from considering it for purposes of this judgment.
Reasonable
Prospect of a Different Conclusion
[18]
Despite my findings on the suspensive condition issue, I acknowledge
that there is a reasonable prospect that another
court will take a
different view on whether the issue of the suspensive condition was
properly raised by the sellers in their founding
affidavit and
whether the purchasers had sufficiently articulated a basis to
overcome the non-fulfilment of the suspensive condition
in their
answering papers.
Conclusion
[19]
Given the conflicting judgments on the "
vexed question
"
and the possibility of a different conclusion on the suspensive
condition, I am persuaded that leave to appeal should be
granted.
[20]
Counsel for the purchasers submitted that it would be appropriate for
the appeal to be heard by the Supreme Court of
Appeal, given the
importance of resolving the "
vexed question
"
definitively. I agree with this submission.
Order
[21]
In the result, leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal is
granted. The costs of this application shall be costs
in the appeal.
D MAHON
Acting Judge of the High Court
Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
7
January 2025
Date
of judgment:
15
January 2025
APPEARANCES
:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv
C Gibson
Senekal
Simmonds Inc
For
the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Adv
J'O Williams SC
Adv
JBW Mouton
Maluleke
Msimang & Associates
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