Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 440South Africa
K.N v N.Z and Another (2019/33708) [2024] ZAGPJHC 440 (10 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 May 2024
Headnotes
over the Protea Glen house. That document was placed before me by agreement between the parties. It shows that the Protea Glen house was registered in the defendants’ names on 7 February 2014. The document also confirms the date of the sale of the property and the date on which a copy of the deed was issued in response to N’s enquires.
Judgment
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## K.N v N.Z and Another (2019/33708) [2024] ZAGPJHC 440 (10 May 2024)
K.N v N.Z and Another (2019/33708) [2024] ZAGPJHC 440 (10 May 2024)
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sino date 10 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
10 May 2024
Case
No. 2019/33708
In the matter between:
KMN
Plaintiff
and
NCZ
First Defendant
MZ
Second Defendant
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The
plaintiff, KMN, is 87 years old. She lives with her daughter, N, and
two of her grandchildren, Z and L, in the Jabavu area of
Soweto.
Until late 2013, KMN lived in
Zakariyya Park. She
lived there with Z, but Z spent much of her time away from home at
boarding school. During that year, KMN developed
a heart condition.
She began to feel severe but intermittent chest pain. The pain turned
out to be the result of fluid build-up
in KMN’s chest which was
itself the result of a tear in one of the blood vessels leading to
her heart. Understandably, KMN
worried that her condition was
serious. She feared that, if the worst were to happen, she would die
alone in her home, with no-one
to help her seek medical attention or
attend to her in her final moments.
2
For this reason, KMN
decided to sell her house in
Zakariyya Park, and
to move in with another of her granddaughters, the first defendant,
NCZ. NCZ and her husband, the second defendant,
MZ, purchased a large
house in Kibler Park so as to accommodate KMN, L and Z together with
their own family.
3
KMN’s house in
Zakariyya Park was sold to a colleague of NCZ. The
purchase price was just under R440 000. The proceeds of the sale were
deposited
into KMN’s bank account on 16 September 2013. On 27
September 2013, NCZ and MZ bought a house in Protea Glen. On 1
October
2013, a banker’s cheque in the sum of R430 000 –
that is, nearly all of the money raised on the sale of KMN’s
Zakariyya Park house – was drawn on KMN’s account, and
deposited into NCZ’s account at Standard Bank in Southgate.
4
The
nature and purpose of that transaction is the central issue in this
case. KMN says that NCZ was given the money in order to
purchase the
Protea Glen house on KMN’s behalf.
KMN
said that she intended to purchase the Protea Glen property with the
proceeds of the sale of her Zakariyya Park house. She intended
to use
the rent from the property to supplement her income and support her
grandchildren, particularly Z. NCZ says that the money
was a gift to
her from KMN, with which NCZ and MZ decided to purchase the house in
Protea Glen as an investment.
5
KMN
says that, throughout her stay with the defendants at the Kibler Park
property, she received deposits into her account for the
rent
received in respect of the Protea Glen property. KMN also says that
she made various payments meant to improve the property,
principally
by the addition of a perimeter wall, and the construction of outside
rooms for tenants to occupy.
6
KMN
recovered from her heart condition and lived with the defendants for
around three years. Towards the end of 2016, KMN and NCZ
quarreled
over what KMN says was NCZ’s enmity towards Z, who had come to
live at the Kibler Park property with KMN. It was
said that Z was
thrown out of the Kibler Park house, and that this precipitated KMN’s
departure too. KMN says that it was
during the course of one of these
quarrels that NCZ revealed to her that the Protea Glen house was not
in fact registered in KMN’s
name, but had been transferred to
the defendants.
7
NCZ
denies that there was any such conflict. She specifically denies that
she asked Z to leave the Kibler Park property. She said
that KMN’s
decision to move out of the Kibler Park house was amicably reached,
and that KMN assured her that there was no
ill-will between the two
women.
8
KMN
then moved to the Jabavu house, where she resides with N, Z and L. N
gave evidence that she launched an investigation into the
claim that
the Protea Glen house was not registered in KMN’s name. She
approached the registrar of deeds. On 20 July 2017,
the registrar
issued a copy of the title deed held over the Protea Glen house. That
document was placed before me by agreement
between the parties. It
shows that the Protea Glen house was registered in the defendants’
names on 7 February 2014. The
document also confirms the date of the
sale of the property and the date on which a copy of the deed was
issued in response to
N’s enquires.
9
The
defendants sold the Protea Glen house sometime after N obtained proof
that the house was registered in their name.
10
On 3
October 2019, KMN instituted a trial action in this court in which
she made three separate claims. In claim A, she claimed
R580 000
(being the value of the Protea Glen house when the defendants sold
it). In claim B, she asked for a further R275 000 (being
the amount
the defendants were said to have received in rent on the Protea Glen
house). In claim C, she seeks R264 000 that she
says she would have
received in rent on the Protea Glen property between 1 July 2018 and
1 July 2020 had the Protea Glen house
been registered in her name,
and had the defendants not sold it.
11
In her
particulars of claim, KMN says that the property was sold for R580
000 on 18 July 2018.
In his evidence, MZ
confirmed that the Protea Glen property was sold after the dispute
between the parties about its ownership arose.
However, no
evidence was led to confirm the purchase price or the date of the
sale. In addition, KMN led no evidence of the
amounts of rent
actually collected from tenants at the Protea Glen property. For
these reasons, much of claim A, and all of claims
B and C, is
stillborn. Mr. Mulaudzi, who appeared for KMN before me, conceded as
much in argument.
12
What remains of the case
is whether KMN is entitled to the return of the R430 000 advanced to
NCZ on 1 October 2013. If, on a balance
of probabilities, the amount
was advanced to NCZ as a gift, then I must dismiss the claim. If,
however, the probabilities disclose
that the amount was in fact
advanced to fund the purchase of the Protea Glen house, which was
then to be transferred into KMN’s
name, then I must give
judgment for KMN in the sum of R430 000.
13
Before evaluating where
those probabilities lie, I must first address a special plea of
prescription raised on the defendants’
behalf.
Prescription
14
An ordinary debt
prescribes three years after the creditor acquires knowledge of the
identity of the debtor and the facts giving
rise to the debt. A
debtor wishing to rely on a special plea of prescription must allege
and prove the date on which the creditor
acquired knowledge of the
debtor’s identity and knowledge of the facts from which the
debt arose. In a three-line special
plea, the defendants do no more
than allege that KMN’s claim arose on 1 October 2013; that the
KMN’s summons was issued
on 25 September 2019 and that six
years elapsed between those two dates. That was plainly insufficient.
15
It seems to me that KMN
acquired knowledge of the facts from which the debt she claims arose
when she found out that the defendants
had bought the Protea Glen
house for themselves, and not for her. The defendants did not say
exactly when they told KMN that they
had purchased the house. Nor did
they lead evidence of precisely when KMN must have realised that she
was not the owner.
16
However, on KMN’s
pleaded case, KMN found out that she was not the owner of the Protea
Glen house when she obtained the title
deed to the property in July
2017. It is true that, on the evidence, NCZ had told KMN that the
Protea House was not hers during
an argument in 2016, but I do not
think that exchange could have given rise to the “knowledge”
required to set prescription
running. It seems to me that KMN could
have had no more than a suspicion, albeit perhaps a very strong one,
that she was not the
owner of the Protea Glen house before she
actually saw the title deed. Given that KMN could not have seen the
title deed before
it was issued to N in July 2017, that is when KMN
must have known that the money she advanced to NCZ had not been used
to purchase
a house in KMN’s name.
17
For that reason, the
special plea must fail, because KMN acquired knowledge of the facts
from which the debt arose no earlier than
July 2017. KMN’s
claim was instituted within three years of that date.
18
It is of course possible
that KMN knew all along that the defendants had bought the house for
themselves, because KMN intended the
money she advanced to be a gift
to them. In that event, however, the claim fails on the merits,
because the debt never arose in
the first place, and it could not as
a result have prescribed.
19
I now turn to the issue of
whether the debt KMN claims ever in fact arose.
The
parties’ competing versions
20
Only KMN and NCZ
themselves could give any direct evidence of the parties’
intentions when the R430 000 cheque was drawn on
KMN’s account
and deposited into NCZ’s account. KMN and NCZ each gave
diametrically opposed accounts of those intentions.
KMN said that she
gave control of her account to NCZ with instructions to use the
proceeds of the sale of the
Zakariyya Park house
to purchase a property in KMN’s name. The purpose of the
purchase was to augment KMN’s income and
allow her to support
Z. KMN said that she did in fact receive payments into her account
from NCZ marked “Rental Protea Glen”.
21
NCZ
says that she never had control over KMN’s account. NCZ gave
evidence that, in late 2013, KMN thought that she did not
have long
to live, that she regarded NCZ as her favourite granddaughter, and
that she wanted to gift the proceeds of the sale of
her Zakariyya
Park house to NCZ before she died. In order to do this, NCZ says that
she and KMN went personally to the First National
Bank at Southgate,
where KMN authorised the banker’s cheque for R430 000 to be
drawn on her account. Both women then took
the banker’s cheque
to the Standard Bank at Southgate, where the cheque was deposited
into NCZ’s account. The banker’s
cheque, which was placed
before me as an exhibit, confirms that, whatever the parties’
true intent, the transaction was processed
by means of a banker’s
cheque deposited into NCZ’s account.
22
KMN
denies that she ever went to the bank with NCZ, and maintains that
she left the transaction in NCZ’s hands. KMN was clear
and
consistent in her evidence that the purpose of the transaction was to
purchase a house for herself, not to make a gift over
to the
defendants.
23
Accordingly, I have before
me two mutually destructive versions. There was nothing inherently
unsatisfactory about either witness’s
version. Ms. Leeuw, who
appeared for NCZ, argued that there was something to be made of the
fact that KMN had said in her particulars
of claim that she wrote a
cheque in NCZ’s favour, whereas the truth was that a banker’s
cheque was drawn on her account.
I do not accept this. The
inconsistency between KMN’s pleaded version and the common
cause fact that the transaction was
executed by way of a banker’s
cheque is insignificant. It also seems to me that not much can be
made of the parties’
disagreement about whether KMN was present
when the cheque was drawn on 1 October 2013. If, as KMN claims, NCZ
had control of the
account, KMN would not have needed to be present.
24
I have nothing before me,
other than the parties’ say-so, about who had control of KMN’s
account. Perhaps KMN should
have produced some evidence that the
account was controlled by NCZ, but there is nothing inherently
improbable about the version
that she had handed her financial
affairs over to NCZ in order to ensure the purchase of the Protea
Glen house. The parties agree
that, at the time the purchase went
through, KMN was seriously ill, and that she was in and out of
hospital. In those circumstances,
it seems odd that KMN would have
bothered herself with overseeing the transaction if she could have
authorised NCZ to do so.
The
documentary evidence
25
If I had only the mutually
destructive evidence of KMN and NCZ before me, I would have been
bound to absolve NCZ from the instance.
There would have been nothing
to choose between the two versions. However, KMN discovered a
selection of her own bank statements
between September 2013 and
September 2017, which, in my view, tip the probabilities in her
favour.
26
These statements were
alluded to in KMN’s discovery affidavit, but only actually
disclosed to the defendants during the trial.
Ms. Leeuw objected to
the late discovery, but was unable to argue that the evidence was not
material or reliable on its face. Nor
did Ms. Leeuw apply for a
postponement to deal with the contents of the bank statements. She
merely asked that I stand the trial
down to allow her to consult on
the contents of the statements. I stood the trial down for a short
while as requested.
27
What the bank statements
show is critical to the central issue. There are two sets of relevant
transactions. The first set of transactions
is a series of deposits
marked “Rental Protea Glen”. The first such deposit was
dated 1 April 2014. The last was dated
1 November 2016. The deposits
were irregular, and the amount of each deposit varies between a few
hundred rand and R3000. The deposits
started seven months after the
purchase of the Protea Glen property and ended at around the time KMN
moved out of the Kibler Park
property. The second set of transactions
were purchases made out of the account at “Norman’s
Hardware” (R4673
on 12 April 2014 and R540 on 17 April 2014)
and “Cashbuild Protea Glen” (R437 on 25 April 2014).
28
Ultimately, neither of the
defendants was able to provide a satisfactory explanation of why NCZ
had consistently deposited amounts
for “rent” into KMN’s
account over a period of three and a half years. I was originally
puzzled by the irregularity
of the dates of the deposits and the
fluctuation in the amounts deposited. However, MZ confirmed in his
evidence that the defendants
struggled to find suitable tenants
(there were at least three sets of tenants over the period), and that
the tenants did not always
pay what they owed, or at all.
29
NCZ confirmed that she
made the payments to KMN. She explained that she only meant to mark
the first payment as “rent”.
This was done, NCZ said, to
show KMN what she had done with the R430 000 gift. Each subsequent
payment was marked as rent but was
only really meant as “pocket
money” for KMN. NCZ said that the reference was never changed
because she did not know
how to change it.
30
I find this explanation
improbable, and I reject it. It is unlikely that NCZ would have
marked the first deposit as “rent”
merely to inform KMN
of what she had done with the amount NCZ says was gifted to her. KMN
was living with NCZ at the time. Plainly,
NCZ did not have to
communicate with KMN by labelling deposits into KMN’s bank
account. NCZ could have simply informed KMN
of what she had done with
the “gift”.
31
NCZ’s explanation
for never changing the beneficiary reference on the deposit is
equally uncreditworthy. NCZ could clearly
have changed the reference
if she wanted to. She gave evidence that she has three bank accounts
and that she herself used to work
at a major commercial bank. The
idea that she would not have known how to change a simple beneficiary
reference is untenable.
32
That leaves KMN’s
purchases at the two hardware stores in the months following the
purchase of the Protea Glen house. The
defendants could not explain
these purchases, even though KMN was living with them at the time. It
would be unusual for KMN to
purchase hardware for a house she did not
own, and there is no apparent reason, other than to assist in the
renovation of the Protea
Glen property, that KMN would make any
purchases at a hardware store at around that time.
33
It seems to me that the
probable explanation of these facts is that the defendants purchased
the Protea Glen property in their own
name, but let KMN believe that
they had purchased it for her, as NCZ had been instructed to do. KMN
was gravely ill and of advanced
age. The defendants did not expect
KMN to live very long. The evidence is that KMN had at least three
children and several grandchildren,
each with a potential claim over
her estate.
Putting the Protea Glen house in the
defendants’ names would allow them to prevent any of KMN’s
other relatives from
making a claim on it after KMN’s death.
34
NCZ
claimed that KMN had made a will in which she left NCZ her entire
estate. KMN disputed this, but the will was in any event never
produced. It seems likely that the will, if it ever existed, did not
in fact give NCZ a secure grip on KMN’s estate. The
fact that
the house was sold soon after the dispute about it arose is also
consistent with the proposition that the defendants
felt entitled to
the proceeds of the sale of the
Zakariyya
Park property, whatever KMN’s wishes were.
35
There
is also Z’s evidence that, at around the time the Protea Glen
house was purchased, KMN said that the purchase had been
made to help
support Z. Z’s evidence is obviously hearsay of the fact of the
purchase of the house, but it is not hearsay
of the fact of Z’s
conversation with KMN. While of very little weight on its own, Z’s
unprompted recollection of KMN’s
account of the reason for the
purchase of the Protea Glen house is consistent with KMN’s own
account, and the documentary
evidence in KMN’s bank statements.
36
The
fact of Z’s recollection was not challenged in
cross-examination. Nor was it suggested that Z had any ulterior
motive
for corroborating KMN’s version. Z in fact struck me as
quite distressed that she was giving evidence at all, and appeared
to
me at pains to avoid impeaching either KMN or the defendants.
Order
37
For all
these reasons, I am satisfied, on a balance of probabilities, that
KMN did not intend the R430 000 deposited into NCZ’s
bank
account on 1 October 2013 as a gift. She rather intended that the
defendants would use it to purchase a house in her name
as an
investment for her, and for Z. By transferring that house into their
own names, the defendants misappropriated that money,
and breached
the mandate KMN gave them.
38
It
follows that KMN is entitled to be refunded the money she gave NCZ,
with interest, to run from the date on which the summons
was served
on the defendants.
39
Accordingly
-
39.1 The special
plea is dismissed.
39.2
I
give judgment for the plaintiff on claim A, in the sum of R430 000,
plus interest at prescribed rate, to run from 3 October 2019
until
the judgment is satisfied.
39.3
The
defendants are absolved from the instance on claims B and C.
39.4
The
defendants are directed, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, to pay the plaintiff’s costs
of suit.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 10 May
2024.
HEARD
ON:
30 April, 2 and 3 May 2024
DECIDED
ON: 10 May 2024
For
the Plaintiff:
L
Mulaudzi
Instructed by PK Nhlapo
Inc
For
the Defendants: L Leeuw
Instructed
by LS Mashifane Attorneys
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