Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 792South Africa
Orpen Brothers Properties 2 (Pty) Ltd v Siemens Healthcare (Pty) Ltd (35613/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 792 (13 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 August 2024
Headnotes
judgment for payment of R1 051 677.56, for breach of a lease agreement. The matter is opposed, and the respondent has raised three defences.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Orpen Brothers Properties 2 (Pty) Ltd v Siemens Healthcare (Pty) Ltd (35613/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 792 (13 August 2024)
Orpen Brothers Properties 2 (Pty) Ltd v Siemens Healthcare (Pty) Ltd (35613/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 792 (13 August 2024)
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sino date 13 August 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
3.
REVISED:
13
August 2024
Case
No. 35613/2021
In
the matter between
ORPEN
BROTHERS PROPERTIES 2 (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff/
Applicant
And
SIEMENS
HEALTHCARE (PTY) LTD
Defendant/
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOMED,
AJ
The
plaintiff, the lessor in this matter has applied for summary judgment
for payment of R1 051 677.56, for breach of
a lease
agreement. The matter is opposed, and the respondent has raised three
defences.
# THE LAW
THE LAW
1.
Rule 32 of the Uniform Rules provides that, for summary
judgment the applicant must demonstrate that the defendant
is not
bona fide and raised a defence simply to delay the proceedings and
that the defendant has not raised a triable issue.
This is a
drastic order in that the defendant is denied its right to a hearing.
However, the defendant cannot raise just any defence
to avoid
judgment, and therefore a plea must be filed in which the defendant
in compliance with Rule 18 sets out its defence and
the material
facts it will rely on.
2.
In
Cohen
NO and Others v D
,
[1]
the court stated:
“
All that the
defendant is required to do is to disclose a genuine defence, as
opposed to a sham defence. Prospects of success
are irrelevant
and as long as the defence is cognisable in the sense that it amounts
to a valid defence if proven at trial, then
the application for
summary judgment must fail.”
##
## The Defences
The Defences
3.
The defendant raised three defences.
3.1. that the
plaintiff’s claim is based on charges which it was not liable
for in terms of the lease agreement, alternatively,
3.2. that the claim
is based on rights which did not accrue to the plaintiff during the
period of the lease agreement and
is therefore unenforceable, further
alternatively,
3.3. that the claim
is not sustainable in law due to a tacit term in the lease agreement.
4.
Mr H van der Merwe appeared for the plaintiff and submitted that the
agreement is clear, and it is common cause that the
plaintiff could
only render the account once the municipality had finalised its
accounting exercise in respect of the leased property.
Counsel
referred to clause 10 of the agreement:
“
10. Levies
and Utilities
10.1 In addition
to monthly rental, the [defendant] shall be liable for and obliged to
pay:
10.1.1 all utility
service fees including but not limited to, water server charges and
refuse removal, in respect of the
premises hereby let,
including charges payable in terms of the relevant City
Council’s tariffs and By-laws as amended
from time to time.,
10.1.2 All
electricity consumption charges.”
5.
Counsel submitted that the claim for the costs of electricity demand
and service charges or availability charges, is rendered
in terms of
the city’s bylaws and are payable. The charges were
rendered only once the amount of the charge had become
available to
the plaintiff.
6.
Counsel proffered that it would serve no purpose to refer the matter
to trial there are no witnesses to be led, the by-laws
set the tariff
and the charge for each property, and therefor the defendant cannot
succeed in its defence.
7.
Mr Mabuza
who appeared for the defendant submitted that the court need not be
concerned with the defendant’s prospects of
success at this
stage, but only that the defendant raises bona fide defences,
and a triable issue. Counsel argued that clause
10 refers only to
electricity consumption charges, and further submitted that according
to rules of interpretation, the “expressed
word supersedes
[2]
what is implied”. Counsel argued the plaintiff has not placed
before this court any evidence that its defence is not sound,
the
defendant’s defence is bona fide and must be ventilated at
trial.
8.
Mr Mabuza
further submitted that clause 10.2 provides that the charges in 10.1
as set out above, are”
payable
in arrears within 7 days
,
upon the
lessor’s presentation of an account invoice of statement.”
The condition set out above was never fulfilled, the plaintiff
conceded that it could only render invoices after January
2023, and
by that date the lease had expired. Therefore the rights and
obligations of the parties in casu terminated, whatever
way the
agreement is terminated.
[3]
Counsel submitted that the monies “
must
have been due
”
and referred the court to
Farocean
Marine (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Trade and Industry
[4]
,
where the court held that, “
a
debt must be one in respect of which the debtor is under an
obligation to pay immediately.”
The plaintiff failed to render accounts during the lease period, the
condition in 10.2 was not fulfilled, the debt did not
accrue during
the lease period therefor the claim is unenforceable. It was
submitted that the plaintiff failed to meaningfully
engage with this
defence, and on the law and the plaintiff’s version this
defence is competent.
9.
Mr Mabuza argued further alternatively that it was an implied,
alternatively tacit term of the agreement that the defendant
was only
liable for those charges, if the plaintiff supplied electricity to
the lease property. In paragraph 11 of the founding
affidavit the
plaintiff conceded it did not supply electricity to the leased
property, and the defendant would not have agreed
to pay for this
service charge.
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
10.
The court must decide if the plaintiff’s claim is unimpeachable
and whether the defendant’s defence is a sham,
or bad in law.
11.
The amended Rule 32 aims to avoid speculative summary judgment
applications. This means that a plaintiff would be justified
in
bringing such an application only if it demonstrates that the pleaded
defence is not bona fide.
12.
I agree
with Mr Mabuza, that the plaintiff knew that the lease had expired
and therefore the duties and obligations between the
parties had
ceased. This defence was pleaded, however the plaintiff failed to
meaningfully engage with this defence. In
Ingenuity
Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Ignite Fitness (Pty) Ltd
[5]
was held that “
the
plaintiff must engage meaningfully with the content of the plea, so
that the application may be adjudicated on the basis of
defendant’s
pleaded defence,
”
more is needed of the plaintiff, than a formulaic supporting
affidavit, to substantiate its averments that the defence is
not bona
fide and is raised merely to delay proceedings.
13.
In terms of the amended rule the plaintiff is obliged to, in its
supporting affidavit, inter alia, verify the cause
of action.
If the condition in 10.2, as set out in paragraph 8 of this judgment
was not fulfilled, the cause of action cannot
properly be verified,
the defendant has an arguable point and must be allowed to ventilate
its defence. The plaintiff ought
not to have applied for
summary judgment, given it did not indicate in its papers if it
complied with the condition in 10.2 prior
to termination of the
lease.
14.
Similarly, regarding the defence of a tacit term of the agreement,
the evidence is that no claim for provision of electricity
services
was ever raised during the period of the lease agreement, the
defendant was serviced from an adjoining property, the defendant
has
raised a bona fide defence, and at this stage the defendant’s
prospects of success is irrelevant.
15.
I am of the view that the defendant has “genuinely”
raised issues for trial, and therefore summary judgment
is refused.
16.
Mr Mabuza is correct, the application was an unnecessary and not
justified, the pleaded defence was clear, and the plaintiff
ought to
have known at the very least, on its version that it had not
met the condition in 10.2, and triable issue was raised
it ought to
have proceeded to trial. In the circumstances, the costs
on an attorney client scale are appropriate.
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
1. The application
for summary judgment is dismissed.
2. The defendant is
granted leave to defend.
3. The papers stand
as the pleadings and supplemented where necessary.
4. The applicant is
to pay the respondent’s costs on an attorney client scale.
MAHOMED
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Mahomed. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on Case lines. The date for hand-down
is deemed
to be 13 August 2024.
Appearances:
For
applicant:
Adv H
van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Senekal
Simmonds Inc
Email:
ewan@sesi.co.za
For
Respondent:
Adv V
Mabuza
Instructed
by:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
Email:
hhugo@ensafrica.com
[1]
(368/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 56
par 29
[2]
CL
008 – 28 HOA fn 22
[3]
Tarspray
CC v Ashalt Services CC
(A5061/2016) ZAGPC 307 (8 November 2017
),
Cellular Insurance Managers (Pty) Ltd v Foshini Retail Group (Pty)
Ltd
(456/2010)
[2011] ZASCA 85
par 6
[4]
2007
(2) SA (SCA) 334 par 12
[5]
2023
(5) SA 439
WCC at [47]
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