Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 738South Africa
Glenhazel Investment (Pty) Ltd v Barbaglia N.O and Others (2023/055003) [2025] ZAGPJHC 738 (25 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 July 2025
Headnotes
“Joint action requirement entails that trustees must act together.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Glenhazel Investment (Pty) Ltd v Barbaglia N.O and Others (2023/055003) [2025] ZAGPJHC 738 (25 July 2025)
Glenhazel Investment (Pty) Ltd v Barbaglia N.O and Others (2023/055003) [2025] ZAGPJHC 738 (25 July 2025)
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sino date 25 July 2025
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023-055003
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3)
REVISED
In
the matter between:
GLENHAZEL
INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
GREGORY MASSIMO
BARBAGLIA NO
1
st
Respondent
DOMENICO SATURININE
MAZZA NO
2
nd
Respondent
CARLOS FERNANDO PIRES
PEDREGAL NO
3
rd
Respondent
LLG CENTURION (PTY)
INVESTMENT CC
4
th
Respondent
TOTAL ENERGIES
MARKETING SA (PTY) LTD
5
th
Respondent
YA CHESA SERVICE
STATION (PTY) LTD
6
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOTHA
J
Introduction
1)
Following the applicant’s sale of the
Eersterust Property on 15 August 2024, the application for specific
performance became
moot; what remains before this court is the
adjudication of the counter-application for the return of the deposit
in the sum of
R1000 000.00, paid on 1 October 2021. On 10 April 2025,
the applicant threw a spanner in the works by launching an action for
damages.
The parties
2)
The applicant is GLENHAZEL INVESTMENTS
PROPRIETARY LIMITED, a company duly incorporated in accordance with
the company laws of South
Africa.
3)
The first respondent is GREG MASSIMO
BARBAGLIA N.O., a businessman who acts in his capacity as a trustee
of the Novaprop Eight Trust
(trust number: IT4237/2008).
4)
The second respondent is DOMENICO SATURNINE
MAZZA N.O., a businessman, who acts in his capacity as a trustee of
the Novaprop Eight
Trust (trust number: IT4237/2008).
5)
The third respondent is CARLOS FERNANDO
PIRES PEDREGAL N.O., a businessman who acts in his capacity as a
trustee of the Novaprop
Eight Trust (trust number: IT4237/2008).
6)
The fourth respondent is LLG CENTURION
PROPERTY INVESTMENTS CC, a close corporation duly incorporated in
accordance with the laws
of South Africa.
7)
The fifth respondent is TOTALENERGIES
MARKETING SOUTH AFRICA PROPRIETARY LIMITED, a private company duly
incorporated in accordance
with the laws of South Africa.
8)
The sixth respondent is YA CHESA SERVICES
PROPRIETARY LIMITED, a private company duly incorporated in
accordance with the laws of
South Africa.
Facts in brief
9)
The applicant is the owner of Portion 0 of
Erf 2[…], in the township of Eesterust Ext 2, City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality,
Gauteng, situated at 5[…] D[…]
D[…] Avenue, Eesterust ("Property").
The
applicant leased the Property to
a
well-known seller of petroleum products, the fifth and sixth
respondents jointly.
10)
On 24 August 2021, the Trust, represented
by Mr. Greg Barbaglia, made a written offer to purchase the Property
from the applicant,
and the offer was accepted by the applicant’s
representative, Mr. Wolpe, on 25 August 2021.
Accordingly,
the applicant, represented by Mr. Wolpe, and the Trust, represented
by Mr. Greg Barbaglia, concluded a written commercial
immovable
property sale agreement ("Agreement").
11)
In terms of the agreement, the purchase
price of the Property was the sum of R47 840 000.00
(forty-seven million, eight
hundred and forty thousand Rand)
exclusive of VAT ("Purchase Price" ).
12)
An amount of R1 000 000.00 (one
million Rand) was the deposit ("Deposit”). The Deposit was
payable within 7 (seven)
days after the successful conclusion of the
due diligence. On 1 October 2021,
Mr
Barbaglia paid the deposit of R1000 000.00 into the trust account of
Millers Attorneys, the applicant’s Attorneys.
13)
Pursuant to the respondents’ failure
to pay the balance of the purchase price, the applicant instituted an
application for
specific performance, and the respondents responded
by launching a counter-application for the deposit. On 24 August
2024, the
applicant sold the property at an auction for
R30 000 000.00. Hence, the application for specific
performance has become
moot.
The issues
14)
In developing the counter-application for
the return of the deposit, the respondents submitted that Mr
Barbaglia's purported conclusion
of the Eersterust Sale Agreement on
behalf of the Trust fell foul of clause 9.6 of the Trust Deed, which
reads:
“
9.6
The unanimous agreement of all trustees must be obtained before any
significant transaction affecting the trust should be valid
and
binding upon the trust."
15)
The submission is that Mr. Barbaglia did
not have the authority to bind the Trust. Under oath and confirmed by
his fellow trustees
by way of confirmatory affidavits, he stated
that:
“…
it
was only during the course of the preparation of the first to fourth
respondents' answering affidavit to the main application,
which Mr
Barbaglia signed on 13 July 2023, that Mr Barbaglia became aware, for
the first time, and by way of the advice given to
him by Bowmans,
that the unanimous consent of all trustees was required under the
trust deed to bind the Trust.”
[1]
16)
The applicant submitted that there is a
material dispute of fact on the assertion that:
“
It
was therefore only nearly two years after the deposit had been paid
that Mr Barbaglia became aware that he had not been authorised
to
conclude the Eersterust Sale Agreement or to pay the deposit...”
[2]
17)
Having rejected that version, the applicant
argued that it did not accept that the two trustees were not aware of
Mr. Barbaglia’s
conduct, and maintained:
“
If
it is true, as Mr Barbaglia claims, that he paid R1 million of the
Trust's money to the applicant when he was not authorised
to do so
and without the knowledge of the two other trustees, then clearly he
is guilty of the theft of the Trust's money. Yet,
there is no
indication of any sort that the two other trustees took any action
against Mr Barbaglia. It must therefore mean that
they have no
reservations about keeping a thief of the Trust's money in his
position as a trustee, apparently without consequence.
It will be
argued on behalf of the applicant that, in so doing, the two other
trustees are guilty of an egregious failure in their
duties to act in
the best interests of the Trust.”
[3]
18)
Against
this background of incredulity, the applicants asseverated that: “It
is for these reasons and others that the applicant
seeks a referral
of the application to trial, so that the applicant can cross-examine
Mr Barbaglia on his version and also the
two other trustees on why,
if it is true that Mr Barbaglia was on a frolic of his own, that they
forsook their fiduciary duties
to the Trust by failing to take any
action against Mr Barbaglia.”
[4]
The law
19)
Dealing
with Trusts, the court in
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Parker and Others
[5]
held
:
“
Joint
action requirement entails that trustees must act together.
[15]
For the Parkers to purport to bind the trust estate after the son’s
appointment, without (according to his evidence)
consulting him,
constituted a further usurpation and a further breach of their
obligations under the trust deed. It is a fundamental
rule of trust
law, which this Court recently restated in Nieuwoudt NO v Vrystaat
Mielies (Edms) Bpk, that in the absence of contrary
provision in the
trust deed the trustees must act jointly if the trust estate is to be
bound by their acts. The rule derives from
the nature of the
trustees’ joint ownership of the trust property. Since
co-owners must act jointly, trustees must also act
jointly. Professor
Tony Honoré’s authoritative historical exposition has
shown that the joint action requirement was
already being enforced as
early as 1848. It has thus formed the basis of trust law in this
country for well over a century and
half.”
[6]
Submissions
20)
In brief, counsel for the respondents
contended that there were two unanswerable bases upon which they
maintained that the agreement
was void. First, Mr Barbarglia had no
authority to represent the Trust; hence, there was no cognizable
legal basis for the applicant
to retain the deposit, which was paid
under a void agreement. The Trust was entitled to its return under
condictio indebiti
or
condictio sine causa,
and more so now that the property had been sold, the argument went.
He, furthermore, submitted that the action for damages was
a ruse to
hold on to the deposit.
21)
The second string to the respondents’
bow was
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act no 68 of 1981
, which
reads:
“
No
alienation of land after the commencement of this section shall,
subject to the provisions of
section 28
, be of any force or effect
unless it is contained in a deed of alienation signed by the parties
thereto or by their agents acting
on their written authority.”
22)
Referring
to the matter of
Goldex
16 (Pty) Ltd v Capper NO and Others,
[7]
counsel
submitted that the correct legal position is:
“
Where
a trust has more than one trustee, any alienation of land entered
into by that trust would require the signature of all the
trustees.
In the absence of authority in the trust deed, in respect of a trust
with more than one trustee, a trustee is regarded
as an agent as
intended in
section 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act, and
would
require the written authority of the other trustees to conclude a
deed of alienation on behalf of the trust. In the
absence of
written authorisation a deed of alienation concluded by such a
trustee would not be in accordance with the provisions
of
section
2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act and
would be of no force and
effect.”
[8]
23)
When asked about the other defences,
counsel submitted that without making any concessions, they relied on
the authority point.
24)
Counsel for the applicant submitted that
this court could not divorce its pronouncement on the deposit from
the action for damages.
Without having been subjected to
cross-examination, counsel submitted that Mr. Barbaglia should not be
believed when he stated
that he did not have the necessary authority
from the two other trustees. On the question of
s 2(1)
, he contended
that even if the court concluded that the Trust did not authorize Mr.
Barbarglia to act on its behalf, he had an
ace up his sleeve. The
fourth respondent, LLG Centurion Properties Investment, was nominated
to replace the Trust as the purchaser.
Accordingly, a valid contract
had been entered into, and the deposit ought not to be released to
the respondents.
analysis
25)
On 22 April 2022, the applicant dispatched
a letter of demand for the balance of the purchase price. That
precipitated a response
from the respondents’ lawyers,
through a letter which placed in dispute the fulfilment of the
suspensive conditions
under clauses 3 and 6 of the agreement. At
paragraph 5 of the letter, the attorneys said: “Pursuant to the
sale agreement
our client(s) paid a deposit of R1m which is repayable
together with appropriate interest. Your client is called upon to
forthwith
return the deposit, with interest, to our clients.”
26)
At this juncture, it was apparent that the
bone of contention between the parties was that the suspensive
conditions had not been
fulfilled, and, therefore, the agreement was
of no force and effect. Of course, the applicant rejected that
version of events and
contended that this amounted to a repudiation
of the agreement, which it did not accept.
27)
In March 2023, the applicant launched the
application for specific performance, contending that the suspensive
conditions had been
fulfilled. That Mr. Gregory Massimo Barbaglia did
not have the authority to enter into the agreement on behalf of the
Trust was
mentioned for the first time in the answering affidavit.
Indeed, the respondents’ counter-application hinges on the
absence
of authority, especially when read with clause 9.6 of the
Trust Deed.
28)
Mr.
Barbaglia stated in no uncertain terms that: “ Although I was
required to obtain my fellow trustees' unanimous consent
to enter
into the Agreement on behalf of the Trust, I did not do
so.”
[9]
Furthermore, he
asserted that: “I am advised that since the unanimous consent
of the trustees under the Trust Deed was not
obtained, I was
accordingly not authorised to enter into either the Agreement or the
Ruimsig Sale Agreement on behalf of the Trust.”
[10]
29)
The thrust of the Trust’s argument is
that the applicant would be unjustly enriched if they were to retain
the deposit, because
the agreement was pursuant to a void contract.
30)
For the doctrine of unjust enrichment to
succeed, the Trust must prove that Mr Barbaglia did not have the
authority to act on behalf
of the Trust. There is a patent and
pertinent material dispute of fact on this issue of consent. It is
rather curious, to say the
least, that the authority issue emerged in
the answering affidavit. It begs the question, because the
respondents instructed the
same lawyers from the commencement of the
proceedings. Certainly, it required no legal advice for the two
trustees to simply state,
right from the beginning, that they were
not consulted. Instead, the issue at stake was the non-fulfillment of
the suspensive clauses.
31)
This court endorses the submission made by
the applicant’s counsel that it cannot finalise the
counter-application for the
deposit without making a ruling on the
validity of the agreement, which would,
ipso
facto
, have a direct impact on the
action for damages. Consequently, this court disagrees with the
respondents’ counsel that the
action for damages is simply a
ruse to retain the deposit.
It would be a
height of folly to turn a blind eye to the existence of the action
for damages; the two are joined at the hip. Thus,
this is one of
those matters that cannot be decided on affidavits. For justice to be
done, the cross-examination of Mr. Barbaglia
and the two trustees is
indispensable.
32)
In instances such as these, what occupies
the front and centre of the proceedings is Rule 6(5)(g) of the
Uniform Rules of Court,
which reads:
“
When
an application cannot properly be decided on an affidavit the court
may dismiss the application or make such an order as it
deems fit
with a view to ensuring a just and expeditious decision. In
particular, but without affecting specified issues with a
view to
resolving any dispute of and to the end may order any deponent to
appear personally or grant leave for such department
or any person to
be subpoenaed to appear and be examined and cross examined as a
witness or it may refer the matter to trial with
appropriate
directions as to the pleadings and definitions of issues or
otherwise.”
33)
At the launch of these proceedings, the
applicant could not have anticipated the existence of a material
dispute of fact, since,
under oath, Mr Barbaglia stated he only
became aware of the requirement to inform his fellow trustees when he
filed his answering
affidavit.
34)
I am of the considered view that this
matter should be referred to trial, and the parties should use their
best endeavors to consolidate
this case and the action for damages,
if possible.
Costs
35)
Despite the cancellation of the agreement,
in September 2024, the applicant failed to withdraw the matter.
The submission of c
ounsel for the applicant that
its client could not have withdrawn the matter without the
respondents’ consent, and when it
sought consent, it was not
forthcoming, or the respondents sought costs, is without merit. I can
not conceive of any reason why
the applicant should not be ordered to
pay the costs of one counsel on scale B. The costs of the
counter-application are to be
costs in the cause.
Order
1.
The main application is dismissed with
costs on scale B.
2.
The counter-application is referred to
trial, the notice of counter-application stands as simple summons,
the founding affidavit
to counter-application as a declaration, the
answering affidavit to the counter-application as a plea, the
reply and supplementary
affidavit as a replication, and the reply to
the supplementary affidavit as a rejoinder.
3.
The costs of the counter-application are to
be costs in the cause.
4.
Any further exchange of pleadings, request
for further particulars, amendments, discovery, and the holding of a
pre-trial conference
shall follow the usual process as regulated by
the Uniform Rules of Court.
5.
Pending the finalization of the trial, the
deposit of R1000 000.00 is to be retained in an interest-bearing
Trust account of Miller
Attorneys.
6.
In case of any unreasonable delay in
prosecuting the action or any deliberate and unreasonable
non-compliance with the Uniform Rules
of Court, this order shall
lapse and the affected party shall approach the court for relief, on
supplemented papers.
MP MOTHA
JUDGE OF THE COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
Date
of Hearing:
29 April 2025
Date
of Judgment:
25 July 2025
For
Applicant:
ADV C CREMEN
Instructed by
YAIR MILLER ATTORNEYS
For 1
st
to 4
th
Respondents: ADV A.E. FRANKLIN SC
with
ADV F.R. McADAM
Instructed
by:
BOWMAN GILFILLAN INC
[1]
Para 18 of the respondents’
Heads
of argument.
[2]
Supra
para 19.
[3]
ANSWERING AFFIDAVIT IN COUNTER APPLICATION AND IN THE replying
affidavit in the MAIN APPLICATION, para 13.6
[4]
Supra
para 13.7
[5]
(186/2003)
[2004] ZASCA 56
;
[2004] 4 All SA 261
(SCA);
2005 (2) SA 77
(SCA) (23
September 2004).
[6]
Supra
para 15.
[7]
(24218/2013) [2017] ZAGPJHC 305 (18 October 2017)
[8]
Supra
para14.
[9]
FIRST TO FOURTH RESPONDENTS'NSWERING AFFIDAVIT para 12.
[10]
Supra
para 20.
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