Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 673South Africa
Aposroliese Geloof Sending Van Suid Afrika v Chayah Investments (Pty) Ltd (2023/112776) [2024] ZAGPJHC 673 (26 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 July 2024
Headnotes
an owner who sells property under an agreement that ultimately fails is entitled to eject the purchaser from the property merely upon proof of the seller’s ownership and the fact that the purchaser has no right in law to remain in occupation. The question of the extent to which the purchaser may be entitled to restitution as a result of the agreement’s cancellation or voidness is irrelevant to the seller’s right of exclusive possession as owner (see paragraphs 22 to 25).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Aposroliese Geloof Sending Van Suid Afrika v Chayah Investments (Pty) Ltd (2023/112776) [2024] ZAGPJHC 673 (26 July 2024)
Aposroliese Geloof Sending Van Suid Afrika v Chayah Investments (Pty) Ltd (2023/112776) [2024] ZAGPJHC 673 (26 July 2024)
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sino date 26 July 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
26
July 2024
Case
No. 2023-112776
In the matter
between:
APOSTOLIESE GELOOF SENDING VAN SUID
AFRIKA,
GEMEENTE
PRIMROSE
Applicant
and
CHAYAH
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
The applicant, AGS
Primrose, owns ERF 2[…],[…] T[…] Road, P[…]
Township, G[…] (“the property”).
In late July
2022, AGS Primrose agreed to sell the property to the respondent,
Chaya. The sale fell through, because Chaya did
not pay the
instalments due under the agreement. Chayah paid R1.2 million towards
the R3 million purchase price, but failed to
make good on the rest.
AGS Primrose now approaches me to evict Chaya from the property,
having cancelled the sale agreement on
breach.
2
Chaya agrees that the sale
agreement is dead, but avers that it was never valid in the first
place. Chaya says that AGS Primrose
was not authorised, under its own
constitution, to sell the property, and that the sale was accordingly
void from the outset for
lack of the “written authority”
required under
section 2
(1) of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of
1981
. Chaya also says that the sale agreement was, in substance, a
credit agreement under the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
. That being
so, the validity of the sale depended upon AGS Primrose being a
registered credit provider. Since AGS is not so registered,
the sale
was void from the outset.
3
AGS Primrose denies that
the
National Credit Act applies
to the sale agreement. It also
asserts that its agents were properly authorised to enter into the
sale agreement. But neither party
contends that the issue of whether
the sale agreement was cancelled on breach or void from the outset
affects the unlawfulness
of Chayah’s occupation. Both parties
accept that Chayah has no right to occupy the property, and that it
must vacate. Chayah
in fact tenders to vacate, provided that AGS
Primrose returns the R1.2 million Chayah paid toward the purchase
price and R28 557.94
in rates and taxes it has paid on the property
while in occupation. Chayah also claims an enrichment lien to the
value of R50 000
it spent building a boundary wall at the property,
and R100 000 it spent securing the property while in occupation.
The
payments made under the sale agreement
4
AGS Primrose asserts a
right of “
rouwkoop
”, provided for in clause 6.2 of
the sale agreement, to retain the purchase price instalments Chayah
has already paid. Though
harsh,
rouwkoop
clauses are
enforceable, so long as they are not excessive. If I find that the
rouwkoop
clause applicable in this case is excessive, section
3 of the Conventional Penalties Act 15 of 1962 empowers me to reduce
the amount
AGS Primrose is entitled to retain to the extent that it
is equitable to do so, taking into account the parties’
“rightful
interest[s]”.
5
The dispute about the
underlying cause of the sale agreement’s demise is accordingly
material to the extent to which Chayah
is entitled to restitution of
its performances under the sale agreement. If the sale agreement was
void from the outset, then so
was the
rouwkoop
clause, and
Chayah is entitled to the return of all the money it paid under the
agreement. If the sale agreement was valid, and
AGS Primrose
cancelled it on breach, then the extent of Chayah’s entitlement
to the return of the money depends on the extent,
if any, that I
should temper the application of the
rouwkoop
clause.
6
Tempting as it is to delve
into these issues, I do not think I can do so on the facts of this
case. In
Rhoode v De Kock
2013 (3) SA 123
(SCA) the Supreme
Court of Appeal held that an owner who sells property under an
agreement that ultimately fails is entitled to
eject the purchaser
from the property merely upon proof of the seller’s ownership
and the fact that the purchaser has no
right in law to remain in
occupation. The question of the extent to which the purchaser may be
entitled to restitution as a result
of the agreement’s
cancellation or voidness is irrelevant to the seller’s right of
exclusive possession as owner (see
paragraphs 22 to 25).
7
Rhoode
left open
the possibility of making the execution of an ejectment order
conditional upon the payment of restitution. However, Cloete
JA made
clear that if there is any doubt about what is due to either party as
a result of the sale agreement’s failure, the
proper approach
is to require the parties to establish the extent of their rights to
damages or restitution in separate proceedings
(see paragraph 25).
8
Here, there is a great
deal of doubt about whether and to what extent Chayah is entitled to
restitution. In the first place, there
is a dispute about the
validity of the sale agreement. Secondly, if the sale agreement was
valid, there is a dispute about the
extent to which the
rouwkoop
clause is enforceable, and about the extent to which the AGS
Primrose’s damages arising from the cancellation of the
agreement
affect the extent to which it should be entitled to retain
Chayah’s payments. The first question – whether the
sale agreement was void from the outset – may be capable
of resolution on the undisputed facts. But the second question
–
what is due to the parties if the sale agreement was valid but
cancelled on breach – is hopelessly disputed on the
papers, and
is irresolvable in these motion proceedings.
9
However, since both
parties accept that the sale agreement no longer provides Chayah with
a right of occupation of the property,
the issue of whether the
agreement was void from the outset or cancelled on breach has nothing
to do with AGS Primrose’s
right to the ejectment relief it
seeks. That question, together with the question of who owes what to
whom on any given answer
to it, can and must be explored in a
separate case, which may well require the hearing of oral evidence.
10
In other words, what, if
anything, AGS Primrose may have to repay Chayah as a result of the
collapse of the sale agreement cannot
be determined on the papers
before me. And it need not be determined before I order Chayah’s
ejectment.
No
enrichment lien
11
That leaves only the
question of whether Chayah is entitled to retain the property
pursuant to an enrichment lien. Chayah’s
papers are sorely
lacking in the detail necessary for me to find that such a lien
exists.
12
A right of retention
pursuant an enrichment lien is only available to an occupier who
makes necessary or useful improvements to
the property. Wisely, Ms.
Bhabha did not attempt to press Chayah’s contention that the
employment of security guards at the
property constituted an
“improvement” to the property. It plainly did not. But
Chayah also fails to allege the primary
facts necessary for me
conclude that the construction of the boundary wall was either a
necessary or a useful improvement to the
property. Ms. Bhabha
submitted that a boundary wall is always at least useful to a
property on which it is constructed. I do not
agree. Without knowing
more about the nature of the wall and the property to which it is
added, I cannot fairly infer that the
wall is either necessary or
useful.
13
If that were not
sufficient to conclude that no enrichment lien has been shown (it
is), then I would have to point out that the
amount by which AGS
Primrose was enriched by the construction of the boundary wall was
not established. A lien secures the occupier’s
expenses on the
improvements, or the extent to which the improvements enhanced the
property’s value, whichever is the lower
amount. Chayah has not
established the extent, if any, to which the wall enhanced the value
of the property, so it is impossible
to work out the value secured by
the right of retention Chayah claims.
Order
14
For all these reasons, the
ejectment application must succeed.
15
I make the following order
–
15.1 The respondent is ejected
from
ERF 2[…], 2[…] T[…]
Road, P[…] Township, G[…] (“the property”).
15.2
The
respondent is ordered to vacate the property by no later than Friday
16 August 2024, failing which the sheriff may evict it.
15.3
The
respondent is directed to pay the costs of this application.
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
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 26 July 2024.
HEARD
ON:
22 July 2024
DECIDED
ON:
26 July 2024
For
the Applicant:
HF Geyer
N Sibanyoni
Instructed by Swanepoel Van Zyl Inc
For the Respondent:
B Bhabha
Instructed by WP
Steyn
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