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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 354
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## Samwol Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another v Nicole Sinovich Attorneys INC and Others (029047/25)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 354 (20 March 2025)
Samwol Properties (Pty) Ltd and Another v Nicole Sinovich Attorneys INC and Others (029047/25)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 354 (20 March 2025)
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sino date 20 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
Number:
029047/25
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED: No
In
the matter between:
SAMWOL
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
(In
Business
Rescue)
First Applicant
JERIFANOS
MASHAMBA N.O.
Second Applicant
(In
his capacity as the duly appointed business
rescue
practitioner of the First Applicant)
and
NICOLE
SINOVICH ATTORNEYS INC
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
NORTH
Second Respondent
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS OF
SAMWOL
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
In
re:
SAMWOL
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
(In
Business
Rescue)
First Applicant
JERIFANOS
MASHAMBA N.O.
Second Applicant
(In
his capacity as the duly appointed business
rescue
practitioner of the First Applicant)
and
NICOLE
SINOVICH ATTORNEYS INC
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
NORTH
Second Respondent
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS OF
SAMWOL
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
ROBERT
J OSHODIN (SENIOR)
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM, J
1.
This case concerns a property transaction that has gone sour. The
property is an upmarket home in the suburb of Bryanston
in
Johannesburg, situated at 12A Mount Street ( the property) .The
seller, which is also the first applicant, Samwol Property
(Pty) Ltd ( in business rescue)(Samwol) is, as its designation
suggests, a company currently in business rescue, represented
in these proceedings by the second applicant, Jerifanos Mashamba, its
business rescue practitioner (the BRP).
2.
The first respondent, Nicole Sinovich Incorporated, is the firm of
attorneys appointed as the conveyancers to do the transfer
in respect
of the sale. I shall refer to them from now on as the conveyancers.
3.
The second respondent is the Sherrif. At one stage his services were
required to perform an attachment but as I later explain
this
necessity has fallen away.
4.
The third respondent is described by the applicant as the affected
persons of Samwol. The deponent says in this category
are all persons
who are affected persons in terms of
section 128(1)(a)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
5.
This is a technically correct definition. Affected persons in terms
of the Act comprise creditors, shareholders, trade
unions and
employees. But although the first applicant is a company it is not
clear what its business is. It owns two properties
– the
property that is the subject of this application and a flat. Since
the company has no employees only the first two
categories of persons
are relevant here as affected persons. The creditor is Nedbank which
is the only major creditor of the company.
Nedbank holds a mortgage
over the property. The shareholder is Samantha Pillay also the sole
director of the company. But missing
from the founding affidavit is
any mention of the fact that Pillay and her family presently occupy
the property. That fact is central
to this dispute.
6.
The purchaser is the fourth respondent. He is Robert J Oshdon Snr
(Oshdon) an American citizen ordinarily resident in Los
Angeles. It
is common cause that for the purpose of these proceedings he is to be
regarded as a
peregrinus.
7.
What then is the basis of the dispute? In August 2017 Nedbank
obtained an order for special execution against the property.
The
respondents were Samwol, and Samantha Pillay and her husband Asogren.
The record does not show what happened after Nedbank
obtained this
order.
8.
But in February 2023 Samwol voluntarily placed itself in business
rescue. Mashamba was appointed as the business rescue
practitioner.
In December that year a business rescue plan was adopted. One of the
provisions of the plan was that the property
was to be sold. It was
initially put up for auction on 29 January 2024 by auctioneers. The
best price they could get was R8 858 900.00.
This was not
acceptable to Nedbank. Thereafter the property was marketed and the
BRP received an offer to purchase from Oshdon.
This offer was for R
12 162 000 thus substantially more than that achieved on
auction.
9.
The offer to purchase (OTP) was accepted by the BRP on 22 August
2024. But then came the dispute. On 24 February 2025,
the
conveyancer, acting on the instructions of Oshdon, gave notice of
breach to the applicants alleging that the property was not
vacant
despite an undertaking that it would be vacant by the 21 February
2025. The applicants were given 7 days to ensure the property
was
vacant failing which Oshdon would cancel the contract and seek
reimbursement of the money held in trust with Sinovich. The
BRP’s
attorneys wrote back on 27 February to state that there was nothing
in the agreement to state that the property would
be vacant on date
of transfer. Moreover, the attorneys stated that it was ‘common
cause that the property was occupied as
at the date of the
agreement.”
10.
Oshdon however claims that his local representative was told by the
BRP that the occupiers would leave before registration
was effected.
This is now the nub of the dispute. Oshdon contends this was a
representation made to him via his local business
partner. This fact
is not denied by the applicants. In the founding affidavit the rather
extraordinary remark is made that if the
applicants gave any
unilateral undertakings “
they hereby withdraw same
.”
Instead, the applicants focus on the allegation that whatever else
may have happened the contract contains the sole memorial
of the
agreement and makes no mention of the requirement that the property
be vacant.
11.
The OTP is, like most property sale agreements, a standard form
document with information either filled in or deleted.
In the
relevant clause headed ‘occupation’ the standard form
gives two options and requires the inapplicable option
to be deleted.
The one option states that occupation will be given to the purchaser
on registration. The other option states that
the purchaser
acknowledges that he has been informed that the property is let to
tenants, and that the purchase is subject to the
tenants’
rights. But this option has been deleted.
12.
In the founding affidavit the applicants do not explain who the
occupiers are and if they are still there, why this clause
was
deleted. It is only on reading the answering affidavit that one knows
what is now common cause - that the occupiers are Ms
Pillay and her
family, and that she has been resisting efforts to have her vacate
the property. It is not clear when Oshdon learned
of the presence of
Pillay and more importantly when he became aware that she was
reluctant to vacate once the transfer had gone
through. Oshdon had
done most of the dealings through his local business partner whom he
refers to as Prof. It is possible that
Prof was aware the property
was occupied but under the impression it was going to be vacated.
Oshdon says Prof was told by the
conveyancer that the property was
occupied by a staff member of Nedbank who would vacate on transfer.
13.
When he got wind that the property was not going to be transferred to
him vacant, Oshdon wrote to the conveyancer giving
notice of breach
to the seller and in terms of the OTP giving the seller seven days to
rectify the breach. In this case rectifying,
on Oshdon’s
version, meant ensuring the property would be vacant on transfer. The
applicants’ attorney wrote back to
state the OTP did not
require that the property had to be vacant on transfer.
14.
The conveyancer then found herself in the centre of the dispute
between the seller and purchaser. This culminated in a
letter she
wrote to the BRP on 27 February 2025. At this stage, the transfer
documents had been lodged with the Deeds Office.
15.
In it she expressed the dilemma of being the conveyancer as she was
neither the agent of buyer nor the seller. She notes
that the BRP had
told her that the occupants would have moved out by the time the
transfer was ready to be registered. But she
says adopting her
neutral stance, that she could not express an opinion on the
undertaking. But she goes on to state that unless
the applicants
could ensure vacant possession by 13 March 2025, she would have no
alternative but to regard the agreement as cancelled
and to refund
Oshdon the money held in trust. The applicants reject this purported
cancellation as invalid and assert that Oshdon
has attempted to
repudiate the agreement.
16.
This letter then became the trigger for the applicant to bring the
present application. The applicants seek an order on
the following
terms:
a. Interdicting
Sinovich from disbursing any funds it holds in trust for Oshdon to
any person;
b. That this
interdict operates as an interim order pending finalisation of legal
proceedings to be brought by the applicants
by no later than 31 March
2025 in which the applicants would claim specific performance of the
transfer of the property.
c. The Sherrif, who
is the second respondent, is authorised to attach the funds.
d. The remaining
prayers authorise the attachment of the funds to confirm the
jurisdiction of the court over Oshdon.
17.
However, in the answering affidavit Oshdon agreed to submit to the
jurisdiction of the court and appointed his present
attorneys as his
address for service in South Africa. The applicants have accepted
this service as constituting submission to the
jurisdiction of this
court, and so the only remaining prayer they seek (apart from those
relating to urgency and costs) is the
one to interdict the
conveyancer from disbursing the funds it holds in trust for Oshdon to
any person.
The
applicant’s grounds for an interim interdict
18.
What then is the prima facie right the applicants rely on for this
relief? The applicants claim that having not breached
the OTP they
have a prima facie right to specific performance which means getting
transfer of the property concluded and hence
payment to them of the
purchase price. This is why they seek the order on the conveyancer
not to disburse the funds.
19.
As to irreparable harm they allege that if the sale falls through
Nedbank will withdraw from the Business Rescue process
and will
proceed to liquidate Samwol. Attached to the founding affidavit is an
affidavit from a Nedbank official where she says
this. The applicants
go on to say if the sale falls through, they will lose out on the
purchase price obtained. (It was also stated
as justification for
this form of relief that the attachment was necessary to have
jurisdiction over Oshdon since he is a peregrinus
and has not
submitted to the court’s jurisdiction, but this concern has
since been overtaken by their acceptance of his undertaking
during
the hearing of this application)
20.
In it written heads of argument the point is made by the applicants’
counsel, that Oshdon was not entitled to a
warranty that the property
was free of occupants but that nevertheless it will be vacant once
transfer takes place. It’s
not clear where this comes from
since none was offered to the conveyancer after the breach letter was
sent. Instead during the
breach period, the attorney for the
applicants advised that there was no breach to remedy because Oshdon
was not entitled to transfer
of a vacant property because the OTP did
not provide for this.
21.
Oshdon makes much of what he considers a fraud perpetrated on him by
the BRP and Pillay referring to their actions as
being in breach of
the doctrine of clean hands and instead as ‘
dripping with
blood.’
But his poetic hyperbole aside, it is difficult to
account for the behaviour of the applicants. Why was an undertaking
not given
when the occupier was not a third party but the sole
director of the Samwol. Why is this mystery over the occupant
perpetuated
in the application such that the Pillay family is never
revealed as being the occupiers?
22.
What does emerge from an annexure to Oshdon’s answering
affidavit is a curious letter from Pillay to the BRP dated
25
February 2025, in which she castigates him from selling the property
and insists on her family’s rights to be afforded
their rights
in terms of PIE.
23.
This letter says Ogdon was given to him by the estate agent. Little
wonder then he became anxious of the prospects of
him getting vacant
occupation any time soon. No mention is made of this in the replying
affidavit.
24.
In its heads of argument, the then counsel for the applicants
contended that Oshdon was not a party to the litigation
as he did not
have a legal interest in the outcome of the application. This point
was not pursued by counsel who appeared in the
hearing, correctly so,
and I therefore do not need to consider it further.
25.
So why do the applicants want the interim interdict? They say this
interdict is required pending an action or application
they intend to
seek against Oshdon for specific performance. They say they need to
preserve the purchase payment, which is held
in the conveyancer’s
trust account, so that if they succeed in their claim for specific
performance, they can have the transfer
effected. They claim they
acted expeditiously once the conveyancer had written the letter on 27
February 2025 (they launched this
application on 3 March 2025).
Furthermore, to deal with the other leg of urgent applications they
claim they will not get redress
in due course because Oshdon is a
peregrinus. If he is repaid Nedbank will run out of patience and
apply for the liquidation of
Samwol. An affidavit from Nedbank to
this effect is attached.
The
applicant’s basis for meeting the requirements for an interim
interdict.
26.
The applicants maintain that they have a prima facie right to the
funds. Oshdon is only entitled to occupation on transfer.
On that
date he is entitled to transfer. However, since the OTP does not
warrant him vacant occupation the fact that the Pillays
may still
occupy the property after date of transfer, does not mean the
applicants are in breach of the OTP, and they are therefore
entitled
to enforce it.
27.
The irreparable harm apprehended is not any behaviour of Oshdon. It
is that Nedbank will withdraw their support for the
business rescue
and proceed to liquidate Samwol.
28.
The balance of convenience and lack of any other remedy are dependent
on the same facts from the applicant’s point
of view. If they
succeed in getting an order of specific performance, they will
presumably have to sue in the United States to
recover the purchase
price. Similarly, they argue, this would be the position for any
claim for damages. The only security for
them is to interdict the
conveyancer from transferring the funds back to Oshdon.
29.
Whilst acknowledging that Oshdon will not have access to his funds
whilst the litigation is pursued, the applicants argue
that since he
is earning interest on his money and he is a wealthy man, the
prejudice to him is outweighed by the prejudice to
them if they
cannot recover the money.
30.
Oshdon opposes the application both on the grounds of urgency and the
merits.
Analysis
Urgency
31.
The applicants argue that the letter from the conveyancer dated 27
February 2025 was the trigger for urgency in this matter.
In that
letter the conveyancer indicated that unless Oshdon and the
applicants reached some agreement, or she received a court
order, she
would regard the agreement as having been cancelled, and refund
Oshdon. Counsel for Oshdon suggested that the applicants
could have
acted sooner. I do not agree. This was the final moment when it
became apparent that the funds would be returned. It
was the correct
time for the applicants to bring the application. Nor did they waste
any time. The application was brought six
days later on 3 March 2025.
32.
More controversial is the second aspect of urgency as required by
Rule 6(12)(b)
of why they could not get relief in due course. The
applicants argue that they cannot if the money is repaid to a
purchaser who
is a peregrinus. Since this issue is factually similar
to whether they have no alternative remedy, I discuss this later when
I
discuss the merits.
a.
Merits
33.
The applicants argue that the terms of the OTP clearly from its text
give them a prima facie right. But the occupation
paragraph in the
OTP has been carelessly completed. There are two option clauses in
the standard form contract one of which has
been deleted.
34.
The clause that has been retained states that occupation will be
given on date of transfer. It then has a further sentence
which
states that should the registration date not coincide with the
occupation date, then the party enjoying such occupation,
shall pay
to the party having registration, occupational rental. There is then
a blank space on the form left to insert what this
amount is. But on
this OTP no amount is inserted here; instead, the letters N/A have
been inserted in manuscript. The applicants
argue that this simply
means that whoever was in occupation after transfer date did not have
to pay occupational rental.
35.
In the printed form beneath this occupational rental clause, is the
second clause, which takes the form of an acknowledgment
by the
Purchaser that he has been informed that the property has been let to
tenants. But this paragraph has been deleted. What
then is the
combined effect of the insertion of the letters N/A in the
occupational rental clause, and the deletion of the tenant
clause?
36.
It is an equally fair reading of the OTP thus amended, that the
parties understood that the purchaser would get vacant
possession on
transfer and hence the clause about occupational rental as a whole
was rendered not applicable by the insertion of
the N/A, as opposed
to this simply meaning an agreement that no amount had been set for
occupational rental. But when combined
with the deleted provision
concerning an acknowledgement about the tenant, this favours the
interpretation of Oshdon, that the
property would be vacant on date
of occupation which coincided with the date of registration.
37.
Nevertheless,
I agree with counsel for the applicants, that in terms of modern
contractual interpretation, the text enjoys no priority
over context
and purpose with the latter two not before me in application
proceedings.
[1]
I am therefore
willing to allow for the applicants that textually they have
established a prima facie right. But given the textual
ambiguities,
it is a weak one. Consequently, as the case law suggests the other
elements required for an interim interdict need
to be strong. This is
best summarised by Van Der Linde J in Resilient when he stated:
"The approach
approved then by these authorities is that 'a prima facie right,
though open to some doubt' conveys that the
strength of the right is
allowed to fluctuate from strong to weak: if it is strong, the other
requirements for an interim interdict
may be weak; if it is weak, the
other requirements for an interim interdict may be strong.”
[2]
38.
The problem for the applicants is that having a weak prima facie
right they are not strong on the other requirements.
Take the next
issue of irreparable harm. It needs to be understood what is at stake
here. The applicants are not about to lose
the property. What they
apprehend is that Nedbank will act on its threat and force the
company into liquidation. But even if they
do so, what is lost at
worst is the difference between the price that Oshdon paid for the
property and what might be achieved if
it is sold at auction. On the
assumption that this price might be lower, which is a possibility
rather than a certainty, the loss
is that of Nedbank. It can choose
to continue the business rescue or induce the process of liquidation.
But doubtless Nedbank will
do its sums and decide the best way
forward. A huge loss or even a loss at all is not inevitable as the
company still owns the
property.
39.
Nor should one have any sympathy with the BRP who has failed to
disclose important facts concerning the continuing occupation
of Ms
Pillay and her family; facts that only emerged in the answering
affidavit. The BRP did not play open cards with the court.
Nor if any
of the residue of the company is due to Ms Pillay, should one have
any sympathy for her. Her failure to move out of
the property is the
reason the transaction has fallen into jeopardy. She is still clearly
unwilling to move as an angry letter
from her to the BRP dated 18
February 2025 reveals. This letter was not disclosed by the BRP but
by Oshdon who had received it
from the estate agent. In it Pillay
threatens that if she is evicted, she will bring a spoliation action
as well as “associated
criminal complaints.” But it is
Pillay who initiated the Business rescue process clearly calculated
to ensure that it was
the BRP, not Nedbank, who would then take
charge of the sale of the house. But then when a buyer was found she
actively sabotaged
a successful transfer by refusing to vacate.
40.
Nor does the property represent a business despite being owned by a
business in business rescue. This is clear from none
other than
Pillay herself its sole director who in the same letter to the BRP
states:
“
This, further,
records for court and legal purposes that although the property is
owned by Samwol Properties (Pty) Ltd (hereinafter
referred to as the
company), the company is a holding mechanism since the property
houses a family and serves no other purposes.”
41.
Thus, the representation that the BRP had made that the property
would be vacated by the 21 February was one he must have
known at the
time was impossible, given Pillay’s recalcitrance.
42.
Relying on these facts Oshdon’s counsel suggested that there
had been an abuse of process and on that consideration
alone, the
interdict should be dismissed. I do not need to go as far as this,
but I am unconvinced by the case made out on irreparable
harm or the
balance of convenience.
43.
On the latter, the fact that Oshdon is a man of means should not be
held against him. If the interim relief is granted,
he will be in a
situation where he will neither have access to the property nor a
large sum of money, for some time. Given these
considerations the
balance of convenience is about even.
44.
Finally,
the applicants still have the remedy of a damages claim. If the
property has to be sold again the damages will be the differences
between what they sold it for and what they could have got from
Oshdon; assuming of course that this amount is lower. If it is,
the
amount would be readily determinable, and this distinguishes this
case from those where damages are not easily determinable.
[3]
Granted recovery may be expensive to pursue but it is not impossible.
Oshdon does state he has other investments in South Africa,
and he
has submitted to the court’s jurisdiction. The case was
originally premised on the assumption that attachment was
needed to
confirm jurisdiction. Whilst not the only reason for the interdict,
it has now fallen away as part of the justification.
45.
In conclusion then whilst I find that the applicants have made out a
prima facie right, it is a weak one. Had the applicants
made out a
strong case on the other elements, irreparable harm, the balance of
convenience and no other remedy they might have
succeeded. But they
have not. The case is weak on all the other elements as I have
discussed. The application is for this reason
dismissed.
46.
As for costs both counsels consider that the case merits costs of
counsel on scale C. I would agree. Oshdon was represented
by both
senior and junior counsel. However, I do not consider that the case
warranted either senior counsel or two counsel. It
was however
sufficiently complex to justify counsel’s costs on scale C,
which is what I have allowed.
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants jointly and severally are liable for the costs of the
fourth respondent on a party and party scale with
cost of one counsel
on scale C.
MANOIM J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant: A
dv L Hollander instructed by Michael Marshall
Attorneys
(with heads of argument prepared by Adv. L. Acker).
For
the Fourth Respondent: Adv D.C Mpofu and
Adv M. Seti-Baza
instructed by
KMNS
Inc.
Date of
hearing:
14 March 2025
Date of
Judgement: 20 March
2025
[1]
See for instance the well-known cases of
Natal
Joint Pension Fund v
Endumeni
Muncipality
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) paragraph 18,
and
Capitec
Bank
Holdings Ltd v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2002 (1) SA 100
(SCA) at paragraph 25.
[2]
Resilient
Prop (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
2019 (2) SA 577
(GJ) at [52].
[3]
See
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of Appeal
(Fifth Edition) Jutas, page 1469, footnote 100 and the cases
referred to there.
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