Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1217South Africa
Hyundai Automotive South Africa (Pty) Limited v Super Group Dealerships (Pty) Ltd ta Chatz (2023/034424) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1217 (11 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hyundai Automotive South Africa (Pty) Limited v Super Group Dealerships (Pty) Ltd ta Chatz (2023/034424) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1217 (11 October 2024)
Hyundai Automotive South Africa (Pty) Limited v Super Group Dealerships (Pty) Ltd ta Chatz (2023/034424) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1217 (11 October 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023-034424
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
11
October 2024
In
the matter between:
HYUNDAI
AUTOMOTIVE SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)
LIMITED
Applicant
and
SUPER
GROUP DEALRESHIPS (PTY) LTD
T/A
ARNOLD CHATZ
Respondent
JUDGMENT
AUCAMP
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, Hyundai Automotive South Africa (Pty) Ltd, makes
application for a declaratory order that it is the owner
of a certain
2020 Jeep Cherokee 3.2 Trailhawk A/T, Engine number: G[…], VIN
Number: 1[…] (“the vehicle”)
and that possession
of the vehicle be returned to the applicant at Hyundai Constantia
Kloof, Hendrik Potgieter Road, Allen’s
Nek, Roodepoort (“the
dealership”).
[2]
It is the applicant’s case that it was, and still is, the
unlawful registered owner of the vehicle, which vehicle
is in
possession of the respondent and without the applicant’s
knowledge or authority one Calyton Myburgh (“Myburgh”),
its previous dealer principal, committed fraud and allowed one
Celestein Dianne Kelmovitz (“Kelmovitz”) to take
possession
of the vehicle and in an unexplained manner the natis
ownership report reflected Kelmovitz to be the owner of the vehicle
from
22 December 2022 to 17 February 2023, whereafter it reflects the
respondent to be the owner.
[3]
The founding affidavit is deposed by a certain Jurgens Johannes Nel
(“Nel”), the Regional General Manager
of the applicant.
Nel, in the founding affidavit, inter alia alleges:
“
5. I am
further the person who can depose to this affidavit as I have, given
my position, personally communicated with Myburgh,
relating to the
merits of the applicant’s claim to ownership and the theft and
fraud perpetrated against the applicant by
Myburgh and have, as a
result of my office:”
[4]
Nel continuous to allege that:
“
7.
The basis upon which the applicant seeks the relief is the following:
7.1
The Vehicle was initially registered in the applicant’s name as
a “stock” vehicle
to be subsequently sold in the
applicant’s ordinary course of business.
7.2
Mr Clayton Myburgh (the then dealer principal of the applicant)
[“Myburgh”] stole the vehicle
from the applicant’s
premises and fraudulently assisted reregistering the vehicle in the
name of a certain Celestine Kelmovitz
“Kelmovitz”]. There
were no exchange of monies or official documentation at this point to
constitute a sale of the
vehicle.
7.3
…
8.
The above sequence of events occurred as a result of fraud and theft
on the part of Myburgh
and without the knowledge or consent, whether
express or otherwise, of the applicant nor did Myburgh act as agent
for and on behalf
of the applicant or within the course and scope of
his employment.”
[5]
Kelmovitz subsequently sold the vehicle to the respondent.
[6]
The respondent in opposition of the application delivered an
answering affidavit deposed to by Natalie Joy Matticks, (“Matticks”)
a Risk Manageress in the employ of the respondent. Matticks in her
affidavit inter alia alleges:
“
4.
In as far as I rely on allegations of a hearsay nature, I have
considered same and I believe same
to be true and correct.
4.1
In as far as reference is made to Celestein Dianne Kelmovitz
(“Kelmovitz”), I refer to her
affidavit annexed hereto as
annexure “A”, which is dated 15 March 2023.
4.2
Kelmovitz’s affidavit does not purport to be a confirmatory
affidavit, but it provides the factual
position pursuant to her
purchasing the Jeep Cherokee motor vehicle (“the vehicle”)
which is the subject of the dispute.”
[7]
The remainder of the answering affidavit, contains allegations of a
speculative nature with reference to what transpired
between Myburgh
and Kelmovitz and a description of the sale between Kelmovitz and the
respondent.
[8]
Kelmovitz in her affidavit attached to Mattick’s answering
affidavit records the sequence of events as follows:
“
3. I confirm
that on the 22
nd
December 2022, I purchased a vehicle from
Clayton Myburgh at Hyundai, Constantia Kloof for a purchase price of
R275,000.00 (TWO
HUNDRED AND SEVETY-FIVE THOUSAND RAND).
4. I annex hereto …
5. The purchase
price in respect of the said vehicle was paid in full by me as
follows:
On or about the
22
nd
December 2022, I transferred an amount of R100 000.00
to the account of Clayton Myburgh as the vehicle was transferred into
my name. On the 23
rd
December 2022, I transferred into my
name. On the 23
rd
December 2022, I transferred another
amount of R100 000.00 to him, and paid him an amount of
R70 000.00 in cash and the
vehicle was delivered to me along
with the registration papers. I had no reason to doubt that he was
not legally entitled to dispose
of the vehicle:
1.
He was the Sales Manager at Hyundai;
2.
The deal
had been negotiated at the Dealership
.
6. Prior to this, I
have never had any business dealings with Clayton Myburgh.”
[9]
I don’t believe that the affidavit of Mattick is of any
assistance in the resolution of the issues before me. Matticks’s
evidence, from a probative value, is relevant only in relation to the
transaction between Kelmovitz and the respondent. It has
no probative
value to the transaction between Myburgh and Kelomovitz. Furthermore,
the validity of the sale between Kelmovitz and
the respondent is
entirely dependent upon a valid and binding transaction having been
concluded between the applicant and Kelmovitz.
The affidavit of
Kerlmovitz however is relevant to these proceedings.
[9]
The respondent submits that the application is incapable of
resolution on these papers by virtue of the existence of
irreconcilable disputes of fact. Consequently, so the argument goes,
the application should be dismissed, alternatively be referred
to
trial. As a general rule, decisions of fact cannot properly be
founded on a consideration of the probabilities unless the court
is
satisfied that there is no real and genuine dispute on the facts in
question, or that the one party’s allegations are
so
far-fetched or so clearly untenable or so palpably implausible as to
warrant their rejection merely on the papers or that
viva
voce
evidence would not disturb the balance of probabilities appearing
from the affidavits. In Cape Town City v South African National
Roads
Agency Ltd
[1]
Binns-Ward and Boqwana J observed that:
“
In
South
African Veterinary Council and Another v Szymanski
2003 (4) SA 42
(SCA)
(2003) (4) BCLR 378)
para 24 it was suggested in passing that
“denials that are ‘so far-fetched or clearly untenable
that the Court is justified
in rejecting them merely on the papers’
constitute a separate category of ‘uncreditworthy denials’
from those
which do not raise ‘a real, genuine or bona fide
dispute of fact’.” With respect, we doubt whether there
is in
fact a basis for such a distinction: a denial that is so
far-fetched or clearly untenable as to be rejected on the papers
cannot
provide the evidential basis for a genuine dispute of fact. We
read the distinction drawn by Corbett JA in Plascon-Evans
supra
at 634I – 635C as having been made on a different basis, viz as
between the effect of the failure by the respondent who makes
a bald
denial to an inherently credible allegation by the applicant and
fails to apply to cross-examine the applicant, as being
insufficient,
within the ambit of the general rule, to raise a genuine dispute of
fact and, by way of an exception to the general
rule, the rejection
of the respondent’s evidence where its allegations or denials
of the respondent are so far-fetched or
clearly untenable that the
court is justified in rejecting them merely on the papers. In both of
the posited situations, whether
within the general rule, or by way of
an exception to it, the effect will be the same – the
respondent’s averments
will not be sufficient to bar the
applicant from obtaining final relief on the papers. In the current
matter the City needed to
persuade us to disregard Sanral’s
denial in terms of the exception to the Plascon-Evans rule.”
[10]
It has been held
[2]
that a court should, in deciding disputed facts in application
proceedings, always be cautious about deciding probabilities in
the
face of conflicts of facts in the affidavits. This is so because
affidavits are settled by legal advisers with varying degrees
of
experience, skill and diligence, and a litigant should not pay the
price for an adviser’s shortcomings. Nevertheless,
the courts
have recognised reasons to take a stronger line to avoid an
injustice.
[3]
Mere
assertions of witnesses do not of themselves need to be believed and
testimony which is contrary to all reasonable probabilities
or
conceded facts (i.e testimony which no sensible man can believe) goes
for nothing, while the evidence of a single witness to
a fact, there
being nothing to throw discredit on it, cannot be disregarded.
[11]
There is no possibility of a dispute of fact between the version
presented by Nel and Matticks. This is so, because the
evidence of
Matticks, for present purposes has no probative value. There is
however a possible dispute of fact between the versions
presented
between Nel and Kelmovitz. It is submitted on behalf of the
respondent that Nel’s evidence constitutes hearsay
evidence in
that the evidence presented is really that of Myburgh and that no
confirmatory affidavit of Myburgh is provided. For
the reasons that
follow, a determination of whether the evidence of Nel constitutes
hearsay evidence and/or whether same should
be allowed as admissible,
is unnecessary. Be that as it may, the only material difference
between the versions of Myburgh and Kelmovitz,
for present purposes,
is where the transaction was concluded. According to Nel, “…
[“Myburgh”] stole the vehicle from the applicant’s
premises and fraudulently assisted reregistering the vehicle
in the
name of a certain …
” Kelmovitz in contrast testifies
that “
I confirm that on the 22
nd
December 2022, I purchased a vehicle from Clayton Myburgh at Hyundai,
Constantia Kloof
,…”. The applicant interprets
Kelmovitz’s evidence as conceding that the vehicle was
purchased from Myburgh and
not from the applicant. The applicant’s
interpretation in this instance is inaccurate as it disregards the
totality of her
evidence on this issue, being that she bought it from
Myburgh at Hyundai, Constatia Kloof.
[12]
The applicant, the owner of the dealership employed a certain Myburgh
as sales manager or dealer principle. The affidavits
filed in this
application seem to vacillate between these two positions, however I
am of the view that, for present purposes, the
differences are
immaterial. Both positions, I assume for present purposes are
associated with the authority to bind the applicant
as principal in
terms of a valid and binding sale agreement of the vehicles at the
dealership.
THE
ISSUE FOR CONSIDERATION
[13]
The issue for consideration in this application is however, whether
transfer of ownership in and to the vehicle was effected
between the
applicant and Kelmovitz. For present purposes, I am satisfied to
assume that Myburgh, as dealer principal or sales
manager, was
authorised, to have sold the vehicle and concluded the transaction
with Kelmoviz on behalf of the applicant.
THE
COMMON CAUSE FACTS
[14]
The agreed relevant factual chronology as recorded in the joint
practice note is as follows:
14.1 Myburgh, in
his capacity as Dealer Principal of the applicant, was in possession
of the vehicle from early December
2022 and advised the applicant
that the vehicle was in for repairs.
14.2 Prior to 22
December 2022, the applicant was registered as the owner and title
holder of the vehicle.
14.3 On 22
December 2022, Myburg, sold the vehicle to Kelmovitz and the vehicle
was subsequently registered in her name.
14.4 Between 25
January 2023 and 7 February 2023 Myburgh, via email correspondence,
continued to assure the applicant that
he is in possession of the
vehicle and would return the vehicle to the applicant after it had
been repaired.
14.5
Notwithstanding the assurances and the change of ownership to
Kelmovitz on 22 December 2022, the vehicle was ‘purchased’
by the respondent and the vehicle was registered into the name of the
respondent on 17 February 2023.
14.6 The applicant
became aware of the fraud / theft when it was placed in possession of
the Enatis Vehicle Ownership Query
Form and when it discovered that
the vehicle was for sale by the respondent on 24 February 2023.
THE
APPLICANT’S SUBMISSIONS
[15]
It is submitted on behalf of the applicant that the applicant is and
remains the owner of the vehicle, notwithstanding
the fact that the
vehicle is in the possession of the respondent. The applicant claims
that Myburgh, the applicant’s previous
dealer principal,
without the knowledge and/or authority of the applicant, committed a
fraud by having allowed one Kelmovitz to
take possession of the
vehicle and in an unexplained manner the natis report reflected
Kelmovitz as the owner of the vehicle from
22 December 2022 to 17
February 2023, whereafter it reflects the respondent to be the owner.
In summary, the applicant alleges
that Myburgh, its head of business
at its branch, acted fraudulently and was not authorised to place
Kelmovitz in possession of
the vehicle.
[16]
The applicant relies on the
rei
vindicatio
to reclaim possession of the vehicle. For an owner to succeed he must
prove that (a) he is the owner of the vehicle, (b) that the
other
party is in possession of the vehicle at the time of the commencement
of the application and (c) that the vehicle is still
in existence and
clearly identifiable.
[4]
If the
person claiming vindication can prove all the requirements, the onus
then shifts to the person claiming a right to retain
the vehicle to
establish such right.
[5]
It
makes no difference whether the possessor is bona fide or mala fide.
The owner of the movable property found in possession of
a third
party may recover it from any possessor without having to compensate
him. This principle applies even where the possessor
came into
possession of the item in good faith and gave value for it.
[6]
[17]
The respondent, in the alternative, seeks to fend off the applicant’s
claim by relying on the principle of estoppel.
As far as and in
relation to the issue of estoppel the applicant has referred this
court to Oakland Nominees (Pty) Ltd v Gelria
Mining & Investment
Co (Pty) Ltd
[7]
wherein it was
held that:
“
Our law jealously
protects the right of ownership and the correlative right of the
owner in regard to his property, unless, of course,
the possessor has
some enforceable right against the owner. Consistent with this, it
has been authoritatively laid down by this
Court that an owner is
estopped from asserting his rights to his property only –
(a) Where the
person who acquired his property did so because, by the culpa of the
owner, he was misled into the belief that
the person, from whom he
acquired it, was the owner of was entitled to dispose of it; or
(b) ….
As to (a), supra, it may
be stated that the owner will be frustrated by estoppel upon proof of
the following requirements -
(i) There must be a
representation by the owner, by conduct or otherwise, that the person
who disposed of his property was
the owner of it or was entitled to
dispose of it. A helpful decision in this regard is Electrolux (Pty)
Ltd v Khota and Another
1961 (4) SA 244
(W), with its reference at
247 to the entrusting of possession of property with the indicia of
dominium or jus disponendi.
(ii) The
representation must have been made negligently in the circumstances.
(iii) The
representation must have been relied upon by the person raising
estoppel.
(iv) Such person’s
reliance upon the representation must be the cause of his acting to
his detriment.”
[18]
In Concor Holdings (Pty) Ltd t/a Concor Technicrete v Potgieter
[8]
it was held that:
“
Our law is that a
person may be bound by a representation constituted by conduct if the
representor should reasonably have expected
that the representee
might be misled by his conduct and if in addition the representee
acted reasonably in construing the representation
in the sense in
which the representee did so… Nevertheless, if a
representation by conduct is plainly ambiguous, the representee
would
not be acting reasonably if he chose to rely on one of the possible
meanings without making further enquiries to clarify
the position.”
[19]
From the aforesaid the applicant concludes that the respondent failed
to show that a legitimate transaction took place
between Myburgh and
Kelmovitz and fails to show how Kelmovitz could possibly have thought
that she was doing an above board transaction
with Myburgh when (a)
on her version, she knew the car belonged to the applicant, (b) the
Natis documents showed that the applicant
was the owner and title
holder of the vehicle and (c) she stated that she purchased the
vehicle from Myburgh and not the applicant
and (d) she paid Myburgh
in three tranches and not the applicant.
THE
RESPONDENT’S SUBMISSIONS
[20]
The respondent alleges that Myburgh was employed with the Constantia
Kloof branch of the applicant. He was employed as
such during or
about July 2021. He was appointed as the dealer principal, which
essentially is the head of the business or the
general manager at the
dealership in question. His role was to oversee the business
operations at the branch in question. He was
further, partly
responsible to monitor and control the availability of vehicles,
parts, stock. The respondent describes Myburgh
as “the boss”
of the dealership.
[21]
The applicant placed Myburgh in this position and he was inter alia
placed in a position to sign all necessary documents
in order to
effect registration into the name of other parties. Together
herewith, other personnel at the brach would perform a
function of
assisting in keeping track of stock levels and a stock controller at
a particular branch would monitor the stock levels.
In the present
instance, a certain Martine Mare, assisted herein.
[22]
The vehicle was subsequently registered into the name of Kelmovitz on
22 December 2022 as evidenced by the Enatis ownership
report for the
period 24 November 2022 to 17 February 2023. Pursuant thereto,
Kelmovitz, on or about 13 February 2023 sold and
gave possession of
the vehicle to the respondent.
[23]
The respondent continues to argue that the respondent purchased the
vehicle from the applicant as represented by its
dealer principal or
“boss”, a person who sells vehicles on a daily basis.
Furthermore, that Kelmovitz approached the
respondent on 13 February
2023 whereafter the respondent performed certain HPI checks on the
National Vehcile Database in respect
of the vehicle. The checks did
not reveal any theft records or police interest, the absence of which
caused the respondent to conclude
that there were no issues attached
to the vehicle. As a consequence, the sale of the vehicle to
Kelmovitz was concluded.
[24]
In the alternative, the respondent argues that the respondent is and
remains the owner of the vehicle and contends that
the applicant
should be estopped from insisting that it, the applicant is the owner
of the vehicle and disputing Myburgh’s
authority to have
legally sold the vehicle to Kelmovitz on account of the fact that at
all relevant stages, Kelmovitz dealt with
the dealer principal of
“the boss” of the applicant.
THE
DISCUSSION
[25]
Only one of the requirements in respect of the applicant’s
rei
vindicatio
is at issue, that being the applicant’s ownership in and to the
vehicle and whether same was validly transferred to Kelmovitz.
In
order for the transaction between the applicant and Kelmovitz to have
become perfecta, and for ownership to have passed from
the applicant
to Kelmovitz, the purchase price must have been paid in full. Holmes
JA in Eriksen Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors,
Warrenton and
Another
[9]
held:
“…
The
general rule is that –
(a)
in a sale for cash, ownership does not pass until the price
is paid,
even if delivery has meantime [been] given.”
[26]
There appears to be no dispute that the purchase price was
R275,000.00. However, and on the evidence of Kelmovitz, three
payments were made, two payments of R100,000.00 and one of
R70,000.00. This a total amount of R270,000.00 was made and not
R275,000.00.
Consequently, the full purchase price was not paid and
ownership in and to the vehicle did not pass from the applicant to
Kelmovitz.
Equally, Kelmovitz could not have given transfer of
ownership in and to the vehicle to the respondent. It follows that
the applicant
is and remains the owner of the vehicle and the that it
is entitled to have same returned to it.
THE
ORDER
1. It is declared
that the applicant is the owner of the vehicle described as:
2020 JEEP CHEROKEE 3.2
TRAILHAWK A/T
Engine number: G[…]
VIN Number: 1[…]
[“the vehicle”]
2. The respondent
is directed to forthwith return the vehicle to the applicant at
Hyundai Constantia Kloof, Hendrik Portgieter
Road, Allen’s Nek,
Roodepoort, alternatively to disclose to the applicant the
whereabouts of the vehicle, the person(s) or
entities to whom the
vehicle was given and all documents relating to the vehicle.
3. Should the
respondent fail to deliver the vehicle to the applicant within 24
hours from date of service of this order on
the respondent, the
Sheriff of this Court is authorised to attach and remove the vehicle
from the premises of the respondent or
any other premises wherever
the vehicle is to be found and return it to the applicant.
4. The respondent
is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs; such costs to be taxed
on Scale B.
S
AUCAMP AJ
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant:
Adv
S McTurk
Instructed
by Remon Gerber Attormeys Inc
Ref:
AMH1/0106/RGerber/ny
For
the Respondent:
Adv
JW Kloek
Instructed
by Ross Munro Attorneys
Ref:
Mr R Munro/sd/S182/109
[1]
2015 (6) SA 535
(WCC) at 608F – I
[2]
Buffalo Freight Systems (Pty) Ltd v
Crestleigh Trading (Pty) Ltd
2011 (1) SA 8
(SCA) at 14D - F
[3]
Buffalo Freight supra at 14E – H
referring to Da Mata v Otto NO
1972 (3) SA 858
(A) at 869D - E
[4]
Silberberg and Schoeman’s, The Law of Property, 5
th
Edition at pages 243 and 244
[5]
Dreyer and Another NNO v AXZA Industries (Pty) Ltd 2006 (5) DA 548
(SCA)
[6]
Goudini Chrome (Pty) Ltd v MCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 208
;
1993 (1) SA 77
(A); Concor Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Santambank Ltd 1993 (3)
SA 930 (A)
[7]
1976 (1) SA 441
(A) at 452A - G
[8]
2004 (6) SA 491
(SCA) at 495A – C and 496D -E
[9]
1973 3 SA 685
(A)
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