Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 80South Africa
Metcash Trading Africa (Pty) Ltd v Wehliye (22/22035) [2024] ZAGPJHC 80 (1 February 2024)
Headnotes
judgment, which application was opposed by the defendant. It now comes before me for determination.
Judgment
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## Metcash Trading Africa (Pty) Ltd v Wehliye (22/22035) [2024] ZAGPJHC 80 (1 February 2024)
Metcash Trading Africa (Pty) Ltd v Wehliye (22/22035) [2024] ZAGPJHC 80 (1 February 2024)
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sino date 1 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no:
22/22035
In
the application between:
METCASH
TRADING AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Applicant/
Plaintiff
and
SHARIF
MOHAMED WEHLIYE
Respondent/
Defendant
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
12h00 on 1 February 2024.
GOODMAN, AJ:
FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND
PROCEDURAL CHRONOLOGY
1.
During November 2022, the plaintiff,
Metcash, sued the defendant for an amount of R1 600 000.00,
which it claims is the
balance outstanding under a sale of business
agreement concluded between it and the defendant on about 20 July
2020, in respect
of a business trading as Tayo Coke Warehouse. The
sale agreement – signed by Ismail Ahmed on behalf of the
plaintiff, and
by the defendant personally – is attached to the
particulars of claim.
2.
According to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim:
2.1.
The plaintiff sold, and the defendant
purchased, the business for a purchase price of R3 450 000.00.
2.2.
In terms of the terms of the sale
agreement, the defendant was required to pay a deposit of R1 million
rand upon execution of the
agreement, and a further R50 000 by 3
August 2020. Thereafter, it was required to pay the balance in equal
monthly instalments
of R150 000 per month.
2.3.
The plaintiff fulfilled its terms of the
agreement and transferred ownership in the business to the defendant.
2.4.
The defendant paid an amount of R1 050 000
by 3 August 2020, and thereafter made irregular payments between 3
October
2020 and 15 March 2022. In total, the defendant paid an
amount of R1 850 000 – leaving a balance of
R1 600 000
outstanding. It has failed to pay that amount,
despite demand.
3.
The particulars of claim consequently seek
payment of R1 600 000, plus interest,
a
temporae morae
to date of final
payment.
4.
The defendant filed a notice of intention
to defend and – after receipt of a notice of bar – a
plea. Apart from a series
of denials, the plea positively avers that:
4.1.
The defendant entered into the written
agreement attached to the particulars of claim, but “
under
the impression it was a draft agreement and not the final agreement
as it did not reflect the intention that the parties had
”.
It further alleges that the defendant struggles to read and
understand English and that the plaintiff’s representative,
Mr.
Ismail Ahmed, “
used [this fact] to
his advantage
to
get the Defendant to sign the agreement”
;
4.2.
The plaintiff is not the owner of the
business and consequently could not transfer ownership thereof; and
4.3.
The defendant made sporadic payments –
but in respect of stock in the store, not to pay for the purchase of
the business.
5.
The defendant’s position thus
appeared to be that, despite his signature of the written agreement,
no valid contract of sale
was concluded between the parties, and no
payments were made by it in respect of the alleged sale.
6.
The plaintiff subsequently applied for
summary judgment, which application was opposed by the defendant. It
now comes before me
for determination.
THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT
APPLICATION
7.
Summary
judgment provides a mechanism for a plaintiff with an unimpeachable
claim for a liquidated amount in money, to procure a
final order in
respect thereof without undergoing a full trial.
[1]
Its aim is to prevent abuses of the court process by depriving
defendants who lack a
bona
fide
defence of the opportunity to delay payment, but allowing real,
potentially meritorious disputes to proceed to trial.
[2]
8.
A plaintiff seeking summary judgment must
put up an application in which its deponent, who can swear positively
to the facts, (
a
)
verifies the cause of action and the amount claimed, and (
b
)
confirms that, in his opinion, the defendant has no
bona
fide
defence to the action and that it
has been defended solely for the purposes of delay. Now that Rule 32
provides for summary judgment
to be sought
after
a plea has been delivered, a plaintiff is able to engage, in its
application for summary judgment, with the defences pleaded by
the
defendant.
9.
In this case, the plaintiff’s
operations manager, Mr. Ismail Ahmed, deposed to the affidavit in
support of summary judgment.
As set out above, he is also the person
who signed the sale agreement and who is identified in the
defendant’s plea as having
procured the defendant’s
signature of that agreement – facts which support his claim to
personal knowledge of the facts
in issue. He has verified the cause
of action and expressly alleged that:
9.1.
The terms of the sale of business agreement
were explained to the defendant before signature and he signed the
agreement with full
knowledge and understanding of its contents;
9.2.
Upon signature of the agreement, the
Defendant took beneficial ownership of the store and commenced
business thereafter. The payments
made by him were in lieu of the
deposit and purchase price for the business;
9.3.
On receipt of the summons, the defendant
“
proceeded to empty the store and
has ceased all business operations”
;
and
9.4.
In his view, the defendant lacks a
bona
fide
defence and has failed to raise a
triable issue in his plea, and opposes the matter only for the
purposes of delay.
10.
On its face, Mr. Ahmed’s affidavit
complies with the formal requirements of the Rule. Indeed,
11.
Once
a compliant application for summary judgment is brought, the
defendant must satisfy the court that he indeed has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action, by filing an affidavit which “
shall
disclose fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the material
facts relied upon therefor”
.
[3]
12.
There
is substantial case law dealing with the degree of disclosure and the
standard of proof that the defendant must meet in that
regard. It
confirms that a defendant in summary judgment proceedings need do no
more than set out facts which, if proved at trial,
would constitute
an answer to the plaintiff’s claim.
[4]
The defendant is not required exhaustively to set out the facts and
evidence available to him, or to persuade the Court on a balance
of
probabilities that he will succeed in the action.
[5]
He must, however, set out sufficient facts, and provide enough
particularity, to satisfy a Court that he defends the matter in
good
faith and on sound grounds. Bald, vague, ambiguous or contradictory
allegations may tell against him on this score.
As the Court
summarized in
Fiat
v Breytenbach
,
[6]
“
All
that is required is that the defendant’s defence be not set out
so baldly, vaguely or laconically that the court, with
due regard to
all the circumstances, receives the impression that the defendant
has, or may have dishonestly sought to avoid the
dangers inherent in
the presentation of a fuller or clearer version of the defence which
he claims to have. Where the statements
of fact are equivocal or
ambiguous or contradictory or fail to canvas matters essential to the
defence raised, then the affidavit
does not comply with the Rule. See
Arend and Another v Astra Furnishers (Pty) Ltd
1974 (1) SA 298
(C) at
304A-B.”
13.
In this instance, the defendant personally
deposed to the affidavit resisting summary judgment. For ease of
reference, I reproduce
the material sections of his affidavit.
It states:
“
2.
I am an adult male
refugee and the Respondent in the matter. I am duly authorised to
depose to this affidavit of which contents
have been properly
explained to me by my son MOHAMED SHARIF MOHAMED as I do not speak
and understand English very well. A confirmatory
affidavit of my son
is also attached hereto marked as Annexure
"SMW1".
e721a7f568b04fe28c0f1baec4979c30-4
3.
The affidavit of ISMAEL AHMED was read and explained to
me by my son. I deny that I do not have a bona fide defence
to the
Applicant/ Plaintiff's claim, and I deny that the Plea entered
constitutes a bare denial.
4.
I state that I do have various legally valid and bona
fide defences to the Applicant/Plaintiffs claim. I shall now
proceed
to set out the nature and grounds of some of those defences.
.
. .
9.
To the best of my knowledge the Plaintiff in this matter is cited
METCASH TRADING (PTY) LTD in this matter.
DEVLAND CC is the party
that I was doing business with in the past and with the business TAYO
CASH & CARRY CC of which I and
two other members held the member
interest equally.
10.
It is my submission that TAYO CASH AND CARRY CC was the owner of the
business and that DEVLAND CC did not own the business and
therefore
it is not possible to sell the business that is not owned by
yourself. No proof had been provided that the Plaintiff/Applicant
was
the owner of the business.
It
is my submission that verbal evidence should be lead at trial to
explain how the
businesses
operated.
11.
The description of the Seller and Buyer is incorrectly cited in the
agreement and the intention as well.
12.
Therefor the incorrect parties are represented before the Honourable
Court and the Plaintiff/Applicant is misleading the court
to rely on
a invalid written agreement.
13.
It is my submission that METCASH TRADING (PTY) LTD is not the lawful
owner of the business known as Tayo Chicken Depot of DEVLAND
CC and
therefor cannot concluded an agreement of sale without the relevant
locus standi. No proof of ownership has been provided
and even if
METCASH TRADING (PTY) LTD had entered the agreement as a
representative, no power of attorney or any other authority
had been
provided to prove that they had the authority to act and were indeed
acting in this instance. I also did not have the
power of attorney to
act from the other two members.
14.
I inadvertently signed the original of the document of which Annexure
"M1" is purportedly a copy as I was under the
impression
that it was a draft agreement and I signed it to acknowledge receipt.
It is my submission that the business that was
supposedly being
bought by me was not the correct and a final agreement was still to
be provided to me.
15.
I deny that I am liable to pay the amount of R1 600 000.00 or any
other amount to the Applicant/ Plaintiff on its claim as is
set out
under its Particulars of Claim. It is denied that the amount claimed
is a liquidated amount and no particulars are set
out to indicate how
the amount is computed.
16.
The document attached to the Particulars of Claim as Annexure "M1"
does not constitute a valid purchase and sale agreement
of a
business.
17.
The said document is not signed by the real owner of the business or
a representative of the of the owner at the space indicated
on the
said document for the Seller's signature. My signature appears at the
spaces indicated for the signature of the Buyer. I
did not have the
intention to bind myself in my personal capacity to an agreement that
was not yet the final draft and merely signed
as acknowledgement of
receipt of the document. The agreement was to be concluded
between the two business entities and not
myself. I therefore also
did not have authority to act on behalf of the business.
18.
The document is thus not signed by the correct owner as seller and
the correct owner as buyer and therefore cannot constitute
a valid
written agreement.
19.
I signed the said document without properly perusing it and without
it being properly explained to me as I struggle to understand
and
read English and the certain Mr Ismael Ahmed pressurised me to sign
the document. The said document does not reflect the true
intention
and the agreement that was to be concluded between the parties.
20.
Where any payment was made, it was sporadic payments that were paid
in lieu of stock that was already in the premises where
I was trading
and were not payments and/or installments as listed in the written
agreement on which the Plaintiff's/Applicant's
claim is based.
21.
I state that no binding agreement, as alleged, came into being
through Annexure "M 1" and deny that I am indebted
to the
Applicant / Plaintiff as alleged nor am I indebted to the
Plaintiff/Applicant for any other amount. I also did not have
the
relevant authority to act.
22.
In the Alternative, should the Court find that a valid written
agreement came into being, which is denied, I submit that the
agreement does not reflect the true intentions of the actual parties
and it should be rectified to reflect the correct parties
and the
true agreement between the parties.”
23.
FURTHERMORE, I deny that I am liable as surety to pay the amount of
R1 600 000.00 or any other amount to the Applicant/ Plaintiff
on its
claim as is set out under the Particulars of Claim on the grounds,
inter alia, as set out hereunder.”
14.
Mr. Alli for the plaintiff criticized the
affidavit resisting summary judgment as vague in the extreme,
internally contradictory
and void of facts which disclose a triable
issue or a competent,
bona fide
defence. He highlighted three separate issues:
14.1.
First, the plea states, and the defendant
avers in his affidavit, that the plaintiff did not own the business
at issue and consequently
could not competently sell it. He alleges,
in paragraph 10 of the affidavit, that the business was in fact owned
by Tayo Cash and
Carry CC, a close corporation in which the defendant
claims to have held the interests equally with two other members. No
evidence
is proffered in support of that claim. The names of those
members are not disclosed nor have confirmatory affidavits been put
up
on their behalf. Mr. Alli submitted that this rendered the
defendant’s version so vague and laconic as to give rise to an
inference that the defendant cannot “
play
open cards
” with the Court, and
falls short of the requirements for resisting summary judgment.
14.2.
Second, the defendant also claims to have
lacked the competence and intention to have concluded a valid
contract. Mr. Alli argued
that the grounds of which he makes those
claims are far-fetched and, in any event, mutually exclusive:
14.2.1.
On the one hand, the defendant says, in
paragraphs 14 and 17 of his affidavit, that he signed the sale
agreement in error, operating
under the mistaken understanding that
it was merely a working draft and that he was signing for receipt of
it. Mr. Alli submitted
that it was inherently implausible that a
person would acknowledge receipt of a document by signing on the very
space allocated
for signature by the buyer to confirm his
acquiescence to its terms.
14.2.2.
The defendant claims in paragraphs 13 and
17 that “
the agreement was to be
concluded between the two business entities”
,
that he did not intend to bind himself in his personal capacity, and
that he lacked authority to “
act
on behalf of the business”
. Mr.
Alli points out that not only are the relevant juristic persons
unnamed in the affidavit, but the claim is also at odds with
the
plea, in which the defendant admits that he entered into the written
agreement and does not raise any issue with his authority
to do so.
14.2.3.
Moreover, paragraph 19 of the affidavit
states that
“
Mr
Ismael Ahmed pressurised me [the defendant] to sign the document”.
Mr Alli
argued that a claim that the defendant signed the agreement pursuant
to undue pressure is at odds with his claim that he
signed it on the
mistaken belief that he was merely acknowledging receipt, and did not
understand himself to be signing a binding
agreement at all.
14.3.
Third, Mr. Alli criticized the defendant’s
failure to provide any facts or particularity regarding the payments
made, allegedly
in respect of stock. To show that the version
proffered is
bona fide
,
he submitted, the defendant ought at least to have disclosed who
payments were made to, when and for what purpose.
15.
He consequently submitted that, at best,
the defendant had failed to put up sufficient facts to disclose a
bona fide
defence and, at worst, had been evasive and dishonest with the
Court.
16.
Mr. Smith for the defendant chose not to
deal with these criticisms or their implications (despite my query in
this regard). On
the contrary, he accepted that the affidavit
resisting summary judgment was internally inconsistent. In
particular, he stated that
the facts put up in paragraphs 9 and 10
contradicted one another.
17.
He
argued that the defendant had nevertheless disclosed a defence in the
plea by denying the plaintiff’s ownership of the
business sold.
That entitled the defendant, in the summary judgment application,
also to impugn the plaintiff’s standing
to bring the claim, as
well as Mr. Ahmed’s ability to verify its cause of action
(since Mr. Ahmed cannot verify a cause of
action for the plaintiff if
the plaintiff does not in fact have a claim). He submitted, relying
on the authority of
Pillay
v Krishna
,
[7]
that since the plaintiff bore the onus to show that it is the owner
of the business at issue, the defendant was required to do
not more
than deny ownership to place that matter in dispute. In turn, that
obliged the plaintiff to put up some evidence of ownership
in its
application for summary judgment and, similarly, required the
plaintiff to prove ownership at trial. Until it has done so,
he
argued, there is a triable issue and a potential defence to the
plaintiff’s claim.
18.
In
further elaboration of that argument, Mr. Smith referred to the
following aspects of the sale agreement, and to the defendant’s
affidavit resisting summary judgment:
[8]
18.1.
He pointed out that the sale agreement
defines the seller as “
Metcash
Trading (Pty) Ltd (doing business as tayo coke depot) of Devland CC
”,
and that clause 6(b) records that, as a condition to the agreement,
the buyer must relinquish “
any
previous interest and/or shareholding in the entire business viz.
Tayo cash and carry at 8 carriage close, crown mines to DEVLAND
cash
and carry
”. Clause 6(d) also
records that “
the buyer, on
signing this agreement, shall have no claims whatsoever against
Devland or its representative company Metcash trading
africa
”.
18.2.
Clause 1(a) provided for the deposit to be
paid to Devland Cash and Carry, account number 1089887809.
18.3.
Consistent with that, in paragraph 9
of the affidavit resisting summary judgment, the defendant stated
that “
DEVLAND
CC is the party that I was doing business with in the past and with
the business TAYO CASH & CARRY CC of which I and
two other
members held the member interest equally”
.
Paragraph 13 expressly denied that the plaintiff is the owner of the
business, records that no proof of ownership has been
provided, and
consequently denies that the plaintiff has the necessary
locus
standi
to
pursue the claim.
19.
Mr Smith
submitted that, taken together, these provisions
created
uncertainty as to whether the true owner of the business was the
plaintiff or Devland CC (with the plaintiff merely operating
as
Devland’s representative). The plaintiff was obliged in those
circumstances, but had failed, to put up evidence to establish
its
ownership of the business.
20.
Mr. Smith consequently submitted
that the defendant had done enough to disclose a triable issue that,
if determined in the defendant’s
favour, disclosed a
bona
fide
defence – i.e., a real
dispute as to the ownership of the business.
21.
I
accept that the defendant denied, in his plea, that the plaintiff was
the owner of the business, and put the plaintiff to the
proof thereof
at trial. If he had claimed ignorance as to who the true owner of the
business was, that could conceivably have entitled
him to invoke
reliance on the dictum in
Pillay
.
But, as Mr Alli correctly pointed out, the defendant did not do so.
Instead, he positively averred that Tayo Cash and Carry CC
was the
owner of the business and that he, together with two others, was a
member in that CC. In other words, his version is that
neither the
plaintiff nor Devland CC could be the owner of the business because
his closed corporation is. I cannot, as Mr Smith
suggested, simply
disregard those averments and look to the underlying dispute.
As this Court held in
Pansera
Builders Suppliers (Pty) Ltd v Van der Merwe t/a Van der Merwe’s
Transport
:
[9]
“
The
Court must guard against speculation and conjecture and be astute not
to substitute these for the actual information which has
been placed
before it.”
22.
Once the
defendant had pleaded this positive version, he was required to put
up facts and particularity to support that claim. He
failed to do so.
His allegations are vague and unsubstantiated – not only in
relation to the ownership issue, but also as
regards the
circumstances in which he signed the sale agreement, and in which he
made payment of certain amounts (including, significantly,
of an
amount equalling the deposit provided for in the sale agreement, by
the very date on which the deposit was due).
23.
In
short, insofar as the ownership issue is concerned, I find that the
defendant has “
provided
the skeleton of a defence but has failed to flesh it out so that it
can be held to sustain an independent existence”
.
[10]
That is also true of his allegations that the agreement was signed
mistakenly and/or without authority (particularly where the
defendant
does not deny Mr. Ahmed’s express claim that the terms of the
agreement were explained to him). The position is
made worse, on that
score, by his contradictory claim that the agreement was signed
pursuant to undue pressure. It makes no sense
for the defendant to
claim that he was pressurised into signing an acknowledgement of
receipt. His versions on the reason for his
signature of the
agreement are irreconcilable.
24.
I consequently
find that the defendant has failed to show that he has a
bona
fide
defence
to the claim, and he has therefore not made out a basis for properly
resisting summary judgment.
25.
In those
circumstances, the plaintiff is entitled to its costs of the
application. Despite Mr. Alli’s urging, I do not
think
there is adequate basis for the award of punitive costs.
ORDER
26.
I accordingly
grant summary judgment in favour of the plaintiff against the
defendant, in the following terms:
26.1.
Payment in the
amount of R1 600 000, 00 (one million six hundred thousand
Rand);
26.2.
Interest on
the aforesaid amount at the prescribed rate of interest per annum,
from the date of demand to the date of payment; and
26.3.
Costs of suit.
# I GOODMAN, AJ
I GOODMAN, AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION JOHANNESBURG
Hearing
date:
25 January 2024
Judgment
date:
1 February 2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
plaintiff:
Y Alli
Instructing
attorneys:
Soomar & Malik Inc.
Counsel for the
defendant:
R Smith
Instructing
attorneys:
Cummings Attorneys
[1]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 423F-G;
Tesven
CC v South African Bank of Athens
2000
(1) SA 268
(SCA) at 275H.
[2]
Joob
Joob Investments
(
Pty
)
Ltd v
Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) para 32-33.
[3]
See
Rule 32(3)(b). In terms of Rule 32(3)(a), the defendant may elect
instead to give security to the plaintiff for any potential
judgment
against him. That did not occur in this case.
[4]
Visser
and Another v Kotze
[2013]
JOL 29985
(SCA), (519/2011)
[2012] ZASCA 73
(25 May 2012) para 11.
[5]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 423F-G, 426A-E;
Joob
Joob Investments
(
Pty
)
Ltd v
Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) para 24.
[6]
1976
(2) SA 226
(T).
[7]
1946
AD 946
at 951-2.
[8]
Mr
Smith initially indicated he would also rely on the replying
affidavit filed by the plaintiff. That affidavit was not permitted
under Rule 32 and was improperly filed by the plaintiff who placed
no reliance on it. I consequently ruled that I would not have
regard
to it unless Mr Smith sought to have it admitted. He elected
not to do so.
[9]
1986
(3) SA 654
(C) at 659C.
[10]
Pansera
Builders
at
659F.
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