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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gumede and Others v Nyama and Chips CC and Another (2017/15168)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 26 (16 January 2025)
Gumede and Others v Nyama and Chips CC and Another (2017/15168)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 26 (16 January 2025)
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sino date 16 January 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: 2017/15168
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the matter between:
NYANGENI
SAUL GUMEDE N.O.
First
excipient
RIDWAAN
ASMAL N.O.
Second
excipient
IZAK
SMOLL PETERSEN N.O.
Third
excipient
BRIAN
HILTON AZIZOLLAHOFF N.O.
Fourth
excipient
and
NYAMA
AND CHIPS CC
First
respondent
MARIOS
ANDREOU
Second
respondent
This
judgment was delivered by uploading it to the court online digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South
Africa,
Johannesburg, and by email to the attorneys of record of the parties
on 16 January 2025.
JUDGMENT
VAN
DER WALT AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is a judgment about exceptions taken to a plea and
counterclaim. The excipients are the trustees of the Mergence Africa
Property
Investment Trust. Mergence issued summons in May of 2017
against Nyama and Chips CC, and Mr Andreou. The disputes between the
parties
relate to a lease agreement concluded between Mergence and
Nyama in 2015. Mergence is the lessor, Nyama the lessee and Mr
Andreou
the surety for Nyama’s obligations in terms of the
lease. The leased property is a store in a shopping centre in Protea
Point,
Soweto.
The pleadings
[2]
The particulars of claim allege that Nyama
breached the lease agreement by
failing
to
pay rental and sundry charges.
Mergence sought to cancel the
agreement in its particulars of claim.
It claims
the arrears rental and damages it alleges to have suffered because of
the early cancellation of the lease.
[3]
Nyama pleads that two other lease
agreements were also concluded between it and Mergence in respect of
similar commercial properties.
They are in Tsakane and Pimville.
According to Nyama, the three lease agreements would be administered
together. Mergence’s
managing agents in respect of all three
agreements were to be the Broll Property Group. Nyama denies that it
was in arrears in
terms of the lease agreement and pleads that
insofar as any rental amount was not paid, it was because it
rightfully withheld payment.
Nyama’s case is that “prior
to” and during the month of April 2017, Mergence repudiated the
lease agreement by
preventing Nyama’s employees from entering
the leased premises. By way of a letter dated 18 April 2017, Nyama
notified the
Trust of its election to accept the repudiation and
terminate the three lease agreements. Nyama attaches to its plea the
termination
notice. It is said to have been delivered to Mergence and
Broll.
[4]
According to the termination notice, on 7
April 2017 Nyama’s site manager and fourteen of its employees
attended at the Tsakane
store, among other things, to move and remove
equipment. While doing so, a person who apparently acted on Broll’s
behalf
made clear that he had been instructed to deny Nyama’s
employees entry to the store. He was accompanied by shopping centre
security and a group of people from the local community. Nyama’s
staff were assaulted and forcibly removed from the premises.
They
were not allowed into any of the three stores covered by the three
lease agreements after the events at the Tsakane store.
[5]
Nyama brought also two counterclaims. The first is for the
repayment of a deposit. The second is for damages. The claim for
damages
is based on Mergence’s repudiation, the profit Nyama
earned while in occupation, the fact that the sole purpose of
operating
the business was to realise a profit, and that it would
have extended the lease agreement until well into 2021.
[6]
Mergence excepts to Nyama’s plea and
counterclaims on four grounds. I deal with each in turn.
The first exception
[7]
The nub of the complaint underlying the
first exception is that Nyama relies on events that occurred at the
Tsakane store (not the
one at Protea Point) as a basis for the
pleaded repudiation. Mergence also asserts that the refusal to allow
access Tsakane was
not done at its instruction.
[8]
The exception is in part based on a
misreading of the plea and the cancellation notice. The plea and the
cancellation notice address
not only events at the Tsakane store.
They are also about Mergence’s conduct at Protea Point,
including the fact that Nyama’s
employees were denied access to
that premises. Secondly, in as far as the conduct of the alleged
agent of Broll (and Mergence)
at Tsakane is concerned, it is not on
the pleadings that Mergence denies that he was acting on its (or
Broll’s) behalf. This
is therefore entirely irrelevant to a
consideration of the exception.
[9]
I do, however, agree with Mergence’s
counsel that it is not at first blush apparent what role the
averments about the events
at the Tsakane Store, and for that matter
the fact that the three lease agreements are to be seen as one or
linked, play in Nyama’s
pleaded case. As the plea stands, Nyama
does not rely on the events at Tsakane for its termination of the
Protea Point lease. For
instance, the Tsakane and Pimville lease
agreements are not even attached to the plea. The plea itself does
not set out the express
provisions in any of the lease agreements
that would connect them to each other, so that a breach or
repudiation of one could (possibly)
affect the other. It also does
not place reliance on any implied terms. It for instance does not
rely on an implied term prohibiting
criminal self-help by Mergence at
one property, the breach of which could arguably give rise to the
reasonable perception that
it would perpetrate the same conduct at
another.
[10]
In the final analysis, and on a closer
reading of the plea, it is clear to me that the allegations about
what transpired at the
Tsakane Store are irrelevant to Nyama’s
case. They may fall to be struck out on that basis, but they do not
detract from
the defence clearly pleaded: that Nyama’s
employees were denied access to the Protea Point property, that, that
amounted
to a repudiation of the lease in respect of the Protea
Point, that Nyama accepted the repudiation and that it accordingly
cancelled
the Protea Point lease.
The second exception
[11]
The second exception takes issue with the
fact that Nyama pleads both that it had complied with all its
obligations in terms of
the Protea Point lease and that it was
entitled to withhold payments because of Mergence’s repudiation
of it. As such, says
Mergence, Nyama’s defence purports to be
that the obligation to pay rental follows upon and is reciprocal to
Mergence’s
obligation to provide access to the premises. Where
rental is payable monthly in advance, the argument proceeds, the
payment of
rent is not contingent upon prior performance by Mergence
and, therefore, Nyama would not be entitled to withhold payment.
According
to Mergence, Nyama’s allegations are therefore
mutually destructive.
[12]
When
the plea is viewed in the context of the particulars of claim,
Mergence is correct in as far as it asserts that Nyama’s
case
as pleaded necessarily depends on an entitlement to withhold the full
rent for some of the months during which the contract
was in force.
However, no doubt because the rental agreement requires payment of
rental on the first day of each month and the
its apparent exclusion
of any right Nyama may have to reduce its rent, Nyama has not sought
to rely on the exceptio non adimpleti
contractus (which requires
reciprocity of the relevant obligations) or the distinct common law
remedy for a remission of rent.
What it has done, is to rely in its
plea on a right to suspend performance because of Mergence’s
repudiation which had occurred
before the relevant rental payments
became due. This is something, in law, open to Nyama to do.
[1]
The exception is bad.
The third exception
[13]
Mergence argues that Nyama failed to plead
the fulfilment of the contractual preconditions to reclaiming the
deposit. On the face
of the lease agreement, these requirements are
that Nyama discharge all its obligations to Mergence and that it
vacates the leased
premises. The exception is again based on, at
best, a misreading of the counterclaim. Nyama has indeed pleaded that
it fulfilled
these requirements. It therefore properly pleaded a
cause of action for the repayment of its deposit. The exception is
bad.
The fourth exception
[14]
The fourth exception is taken against
Nyama’s claim for damages. Firstly, Mergence argues that the
counterclaim is in effect
for loss of profits in or at the leased
premises, a claim the lease agreement excludes. Secondly, the
exception seems to suggest
that Nyama has failed to plead a cause of
action in that the counterclaim fails to show that the damages flow
naturally from the
pleaded breach of the lease agreement or that
liability for such damages was within the contemplation of the
parties when the lease
agreement had been entered into.
[15]
Mergence
relies on clause 29 of the lease agreement which excludes its
liability for any damages incurred by Nyama “on or
about the
property”. It argues that loss of profits is necessarily loss
suffered “on or about the property”.
I, however, remain
unconvinced that, that phrase necessarily excludes a claim by Nyama
for loss of profits. The clause is reasonably
open to an
interpretation that it does not exclude Nyama’s claim. I am
also of the view that the claim for a loss of profits
could qualify
as general damages in the circumstances of this case,
[2]
evident from the plea, wherein the breach alleged consists of a
lessor preventing a profit-driven lessee access to a commercial
property, used for commercial purposes. The exception is bad.
[16]
In the event, I make
the
following
order:
The exceptions are
dismissed with costs on scale C.
Nico
van der Walt
Acting
Judge, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
Heard:
24 April 2024
Judgment:
16 January 2025
Appearances:
For
the excipients
Mr
J.G. Dobie
Instructed
by Reaan Swanepoel Attorneys
For
the respondents
Mr
S. Tshikila
Instructed
by Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
[1]
Erasmus
v Pienaar
1984 (4) SA 9
(T) 29I – 30A and
Dawnford
Investments CC v Schuurman
1994 (2) SA 412
(N). Also see T Naudé, “The principle
of reciprocity in continuous contracts like lease: What is and
should be the
role of the exception non adimpleti contractus
(defence of the unfulfilled contract)?” 2016
Stell
LR
323 346 – 350.
[2]
Cf.
Gloria’s
Caterers (Pty) Ltd t/a Connoisseur Hotel v Friedman
1983 (3) SA 390
(W).
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