Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1198South Africa
Szabo N.O v Jarkie-Trust Administrators (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (2023/038089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1198 (21 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Szabo N.O v Jarkie-Trust Administrators (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (2023/038089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1198 (21 November 2024)
Szabo N.O v Jarkie-Trust Administrators (Pty) Ltd (Reasons) (2023/038089) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1198 (21 November 2024)
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sino date 21 November 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
:
NO
21
November 2024
CASE NO:
2023-038089
In
the application between:
JOHANNES
LODEWICKUS VENTER SZABO N.O.
APPLICANT
and
JARKIE-TRUST
ADMINISTRATORS (PTY) LTD
(In
its capacity as trustee of the Amarosa Aftree-Oord Trust,
represented
by Johannes Antonie Roets N.O.)
FIRST
RESPONDENT
WILLEM
JOHANNES STEYN N.O
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: 5[…] in his
capacity
as trustee of the Amarosa Aftree-Oord Trust)
SECOND
RESPONDENT
ALMINDA
SOPHIA KRUGER N.O.
(IDENTITY
NUMBER: 6[…] in her
capacity
as trustee of the Amarosa Aftree-Oord Trust)
THIRD
RESPONDENT
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
1.
I have been asked to provide reasons for an order I handed down on
the 23
rd
of July 2004 which reads as follows:
“
1. The
Respondents are ordered pay the Applicant the amount of
R1 274 000.00, together with
mora
interest
calculated from 1
6
September
2022 until date of final payment;
2. The Respondents are
ordered to pay the Applicant’s costs on the scale as between
party and party”.
2.
The applicant, in his capacity as executor to the
estate late Mr Gabor Szabo, in the Notice of Motion, claims payment
in the the
sum of R 1 274 000-00 from the respondents, as
trustess of the
Amarosa Aftree-Oord Trust (hereinafter
referred to as the Trust). He also claims
interest
from the 16th of September 2022 to date of final payment and costs.
3.
During
his lifetime the late Mr Szabo was married to the late Mrs Catharina
Maria Szabo. In 2014 the Szabos and the Trust entered
into a written
contract (‘the contract’) in terms of which they acquired
from the Trust an exclusive lifelong
occupational right in Unit
11 of a retirement village known as Amorosa.
[1]
It is a housing development scheme as defined in terms of the Housing
Development Schemes for Retired Persons Act 65 of 1988. In
return for
the right of lifelong occupation, the Szabos loaned the Trust (who
was the developer of Amarosa) the amount of R1 274
000.00 (
hereinafter referred to as the loan amount).
4.
The contract provides for the return of the unit
to the trust on the passing of the Szabos (or the survivor of them),
and the repayment
of the loan amount after providing for certain
charges.
5.
The Szabos took occupation of the unit on 29 July
2014. Mrs Szabo passed away on 9 January 2021 and Mr. Szabo passed
away on 16
September 2021 respectively. The death of Mr Szabo (as
survivor of the Szabos) is the trigger event for the present
application.
6.
In terms of contract, the Szabos’
responsibilities, rights and obligations were joint and several. All
the rights and obligations,
on the date of the death of the first of
the Szabos’ to pass away, was to be transferred automatically
to the survivor. Upon
the passing of the the surviving Szabo, his or
her estate was obliged to hand the unit to the Trust to enable the
latter to market
and sell the unit. The Trust was, after thirty (30)
days (free of interest) from the receipt of the consideration from
the new
occupant (if and when the exclusive right of lifelong
occupation to the unit previously occupied by the Szabos was “sold”),
make payment of the loan amount to the estate of the deceased, minus
commission and outstanding costs, if any.
7.
Upon the
passing away of Mr. Szabo the Applicant was appointed executor in his
estate on the 15
th
of October 2021.
[2]
8.
In the
founding affidavit reference is made to an email communication dated
the 15
th
of August 2022
[3]
from a certain
Lorraine from an email account
l[…]
to one Helena Christie of Crest Trust Holdings Inc at an email
address
h[…]
in which she (Lorraine) states that:
“
The keys will be
handed over tomorrow 16
th
August 2022 and therefor the
sale of the life right will be concluded on 16
th
August
2022.
The developer’s
office will finalise the account for the loan amount due to the
estate and forward the account to Juliana
Steyn Attorneys with
instructions regarding payment.
The developer however has
a great backlog in finalising accounts due to circumstances beyond
their control and apologise for the
delay. They are working hard to
rectify this.
Due to the delay the estate will receive interest on
the loan amount due from the 16
th
of
September 2022 until date of final payment
(please see Par 14).
Thank You
Lorraine”
(my emphasis)
9.
According to the Applicant, Lorraine and Juliana Steyn Attorneys are
representatives of the Trust, while Helena is an agent
of the
Applicant.
10.
In the
founding affidavit reference is further made to a letter of demand
dated the 27
th
of January 2023
[4]
which was
sent by the Applicant’s attorneys of record addressed to the
first to third respondents by being emailed to
l[…]
,
r[…]
,
i[…]
,
and
l[…]
.
After recording the material portions of the agreement, the following
is stated:
“
2.9
Also, you have consequent upon the death of Mr. Szabo, granted to a
certain party the exclusive use of lifelong
occupation in respect of
the unit in question. According to our instructions you have
instructed our client on 15 August 2022:
“The keys will be
handed over tomorrow 16
th
August 2022 and therefor the
sale of the life right will be concluded on 16
th
August
2022.” Also “(the) estate will receive interest on the
loan amount due from the 16
th
of September 2022 until date
of final payment”
11.
The letter
of demand elicited an emailed response from Juliana Steyn Attorneys
using the email
l[…]
,
acknowledging receipt of the letter and taking note of the
content.
[5]
12.
All of the above are annexes in the founding
affidavit.
13.
The deponent to the answering affidavit, the third
respondent, who describes herself as the managing agent of the Trust,
denie
s
that Lorraine was ever
authorised or mandated to represent the Trust. It is even denied that
the Trust knows the identity of Lorraine
or Crest Holdings. The
deponent to the answering affidavit states that while Juliana Steyn
did receive the letter of demand, the
Trust did not and that the
Trust did not sell the right to lifelong occupation to anyone. I will
revert to this later.
14.
It is notable that Juliana Steyn used the same email domain (@[…])
as Lorraine did in communicating with Helena
Christie on the 15
th
of August 2022 and in other communications with them both before and
thereafter. Further, she (Ms. Steyn) does not deny the communication
of the 15
th
of August 2022 nor that neither she, nor
Lorraine, were authorised or mandated to act on behalf of the Trust.
However, it is not
stated by the deponent to the answering affidavit
that Juliana Steyn was not authorised to represent the Trust.
15.
In the answering affidavit t
he Respondents
contend that the application is premature, that the applicant has not
alleged that a new loan agreement was entered
into by the Trust
with
a new occupant of the Unit or that
any amount due in terms
thereof was paid to the Trust by the new occupier which was a
necessary precondition for the repayment of
the loan amount to the
Applicant. The deponent to the answering affidavit at paragraph
33.6 thereof states that:
“
33.6 In the
circumstances it would have been prudent for the applicant to provide
evidence to this court in respect of:
33.6.1.
Whether any amounts were paid to the Trust;
33.6.2.
Whether a new occupant took occupation; and
33.6.3.
Whether the Trust received the new loan amount which would have
triggered
the payment provisions in terms of the Agreement”
16.
In the replying affidavit, in response to the allegations made in
paragraph 33.6 of the answering affidavit,
the
Applicant provides information relating to the events leading up to
the email sent by Lorraine.on 15
th
August 2022, as well as the events between the said email and the
letter of demand. In essence it is this:
16.1.
At the end of April 2022 the Trust and a certain Ruth Christine
Derham entered into a written agreement for the
resale of Unit 11 for
the price of R 1 450 000-00
[6]
.
The agreement appears to contain materially the same terms and
conditions as the original agreement entered into by the Trust
with
the Szabos. The occupation date is stipulated as 1
st
July 2022.
16.2.
In compliance with this agreement, a net amount of R 1450 000-32 was
paid by or on behalf of Mrs. Derham into
the account of Julianna
Steyn Attorneys in May 2022. An amount of R 1450 000-00 was in turn
paid over to the Trust.
[7]
16.3.
On the 30
th
of June 2022
[8]
Lorraine advised
Helena Christie by means of an email that the new occupant, Mrs.
Derham, was placed on terms to take occupation
of the Unit by no
later than the 1
st
of August 2022.
The message further reads
reads as follows:
“
There
are problems and until she occupies the deal is not concluded. If she
does not occupy we will have to repay the amount back
to her and
remarket the unit”. The communication was acknowledged by
Helena on the same date.”
16.4.
On the 12
th
of August 2022 Helena Christie requested an update by email from
Lorraine, and on the morning of the 15
th
of August 2022 she received a reply that an update would be
provided.
[9]
The update, as set
out above, was received in the afternoon of the same date from
Lorraine. This was followed by an email sent
about thirty minutes
later by Helena Christie informing Lorraine that late payment would
not be accepted (i.e., after 16
th
September 2022).
[10]
16.5.
On the 26
th
of August 2022 Lorraine responded by informing Ms. Christie that
henceforth she should communicate directly with the attorney of
the
Trust, namely Juliana Steyn. Ms. Christie sent an email on even date
to Ms. Steyn that since the sale of life right had been
concluded,
she requested proof of payment.
[11]
It is however unclear what payment she was referring to, the one made
by Ms. Derham to the Trust, or the one to be made by the
Trust to the
Applicant. Be that as it may, nothing material turns on the point.
16.6. Ms.
Steyn responded to the email, also on the same date, by sending the
following message to Ms. Christie:
“
I
refer you to the email from Lorraine dated 16
th
August 2022. Please be advised that the agreement was one where the
developer granted the right of life long occupation in exchange
for a
loan and the developer now has to repay this loan. The developer will
finalise the account. He will then send this to me
with instructions
regarding payment. I have not received the payment or any
instructions as yet. As per Lorraine’s email,
the developer’s
office has a backlog in finalising accounts.
I can confirm that interest will be
added to the account of the
estate due to this delay.”
[12]
16.7. Later
that day (i.e., the 26
th
of August 2022) at 12h41 the
applicant personally sent an email to Ms. Steyn in which he records
the following:
“
Arthur
said when we put the market onto the market in Jan/Feb that he had
arrange that the developer would pay us out within 30days.
Please can
you honour this agreement.
From when this unit has
been sold and occupation took place it’s been 2-3 months,
really don’t see what is taking so
long – the renovations
are completed and the new owner is in.
So the cost just need to
be deducted from the amount owed to us.
Please get this resolved
urgently”
In response Ms. Steyn
replied that:
“
I
will give this email to the developer and let you know when he gives
me instructions”
[13]
It is however unclear
when this reply was sent.
16.8.
Also on the 26
th
of August but at 13h05
[14]
Ms.
Steyn sent an email to Ms. Christie which reads as follows:
“
Please
be advised that
the developer is my
client
and I am not allowed to give his
details.
Furthermore, the
developers have 12 villages and almost 1000 units. I do not have the
time to answer continuous emails from you
and from different people.
I will communicate with Helena only, for she is dealing with the
estate.
I will contact Helena as
soon as I have heard back from the developer.”
While it is not explained
why this email was sent to Ms. Christie and not the Applicant, it is
in view important to note that Ms.
Steyn clearly confirms once more
that the Trust is her client.
16.9.
On Monday the 26
th
of September 2022
[15]
Ms.
Steyn sent a further email to Ms. Christie written in Afrikaans,
confirming an earlier conversation they had that morning,
in which
she requested an indulgence until Wednesday [the 28
th
of September 2022], when she would be meeting with the developer. She
ended the email with a promise that the money would be paid.
16.10.
On the 29
th
of September 2022
[16]
Ms.
Steyn wrote once more to Ms. Christie in Afrikaans informing her that
she had only managed to speak to the developer that day
as he had
broken his finger. She further informed Ms. Christie that the
developer had instructed her that they were 6 to 8 months
behind with
finalization. She also informed Ms. Christie that she would try and
get an undertaking with a date by which the money
would be paid, and
requested a further indulgence until the following week to obtain
such an undertaking.
16.11.
On the 12
th
of October 2022
[17]
Ms. Steyn
addressed a further email in Afrikaans to Ms. Christie in which she
states that she had not yet received a written undertaking
from the
developer, but that he was pushing to finalise the matter. In
reference to the earlier email, Ms. Steyn clarified that
when she
said the developer was “6 to 8 months behind with finalization”
meant that the estate would be finalized and
that the loan amount
owed would be paid anytime between 10
th
December 2022 and 10
th
February 2023, but could be earlier. She had received no further
instructions from the developer but that he had assured her that
they
were working hard in the background.
16.13. Having heard
nothing further from the Trust, the present application was launched
and thereafter served on
the 8
th
of May 2023 by the Sheriff on the Respondents. The
founding affidavit was deposed to on the 24
th
of April
2023.
17.
In the founding affidavit the Applicant only
relied on the contract and “acknowledgement of debt”
contained in the email
from Lorraine dated the 15
th
of August 2022. The remaining allegations are contained in the
replying affidavit in response to the answering affidavit.
18.
In argument, the Respondent contends that the
Applicant has not made out a case in the founding affidavit and that
it is precluded
from doing so in the reply. It relies on the
following passage from the case of Bowman NO v De Souza Roldao
1988
(4) SA 326
(T) at 327 C-I:
Generally speaking, an
applicant must stand or fall by his founding affidavit; he is not
allowed to make out his case or rely upon
new grounds in the replying
affidavit. See, for example, Director of Hospital Services v
Mistry
1979 (1) SA 626
(A) at 635 in fin - 636 where Diemont JA
said the following:
'When, as in this
case, the proceedings are launched by way of notice of motion, it is
to the founding affidavit which a Judge will
look to determine what
the complaint is. As was pointed out by Krause J in Pountas' Trustee
v Lahanas
1924 WLD 67
at 68 and as has been said in many other
cases
"... an applicant
must stand or fall by his petition and the facts alleged therein and
that, although sometimes it is permissible
to supplement the
allegations contained in the petition, still the main foundation of
the application is the allegation of facts
stated therein, because
those are the facts which the respondent is called upon either to
affirm or deny".
Since it is clear that
the applicant stands or falls by his petition and the facts therein
alleged
"it is not
permissible to make out new grounds for the application in the
replying affidavit".'
What should be set out
in the founding affidavit and the particularity required has been
dealt with in a number of cases; see, for
example, Joseph and Jeans v
Spitz and Others
1931 WLD 48
; Victor v Victor
1938 WLD 16
at 17 and
Titty's Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd and
Others
1974 (4) SA 362
(T) at 369B. Each case will depend on its
own facts. The correct approach is set out in the Titty's Bar case
supra as follows:
'
It lies, of
course, in the discretion of the Court in each particular case to
decide whether the applicant's founding affidavit
contains sufficient
allegations for the establishment of his case
. Courts do not
normally countenance a mere skeleton of a case in the founding
affidavit, which skeleton is then sought to be covered
in flesh in
the replying affidavit.'
(My
emphasis)
19.
The Respondent further relies on the following passage from paragraph
[16] of the case of Lagoon Beach Hotel (Pty) Ltd
v Lehane NO and
Others
2016 (3) SA 143
(SCA):
[16] Then there is the
fact that a voluminous replying affidavit containing a great deal of
evidential material relevant to the
issues at hand had been filed.
Relying upon authorities such a Sooliman, the appellant argued that
it was 'axiomatic . . . that
a reply is not a place to amplify the
applicant's case' and that the new matter had been impermissibly
raised by Lehane in reply,
that it was evidential material to which
the appellant had not been able to respond, and that it fell to be
ignored. However, again,
practical common sense must be used, and it
is not without significance that many of the hearsay allegations
complained of were
admitted by the appellant in its answering
affidavit
20.
For the sake of completeness, the remainder of paragraph [16] of the
judgment reads as follows:
And although Lehane
had been appointed the official assignee to Dunne's estate some 13
months before the application was launched
in the court a quo,
and
the information set out in reply could therefore have been contained
in the founding affidavits
, sight must not be lost of the fact
that the application was initially launched by Lehane's deputy
official, Mr D Ryan, in the
absence of Lehane who was abroad at the
time and unable to depose to an affidavit. The detailed allegations
made by Lehane speak
of he, and not Mr Ryan, having been more au fait
with the facts and circumstances of the matter. Moreover, the initial
application
was moved as a matter of urgency, and the courts are
commonly sympathetic to an applicant in those circumstances, and
often allow
papers to be amplified in reply as a result, subject of
course to the right of a respondent to file further answering papers.
Regard
should also be had to the intricacy of Mr Dunne's dealings
that required intensive and ongoing investigations.
Furthermore,
the appellant, as respondent a quo, did not seek to avail itself of
the opportunity to deal with the additional matter
Lehane set out in
reply, and I see no reason why these allegations should therefore be
ignored.
(My emphasis)
21.
The
primary purpose of the replying affidavit is to put up evidence which
serves to refute the case made out by the respondent in
his answering
affidavit.
[18]
22.
In my view, while the founding affidavit could have been more
detailed and while most of the annexes mentioned in the
replying
affidavit should have been contained in the founding affidavit for
the sake of completeness and context, the founding
affidavit contains
enough averments to make out at least a prima facie case against the
Respondent. In particular, in my view it
was enough for the Applicant
to rely only on the acknowledgment contained in the email sent by
Lorraine dated the 15
th
of August 2022. It is also notable
that at no time did the Respondent seek to strike out any of the
averments contained in the
replying affidavit but merely sought to
deal with them in argument. Further, at no point did the Respondent
apply to file a further
set of papers to deal with the allegations
contained in the replying affidavit.
23.
The allegations contained in the answering affidavit are essentially
a bare denial. The allegation in the answering affidavit
that the
Respondent has no knowledge of who Lorraine is appears to be
far-fetched especially when cognisance is taken of the email
domain
used by her, which is the same as that used by Ms. Steyn. Further,
Ms. Steyn mentions Lorraine in her email communications
with the
Applicant’s representatives. Likewise, one would have expected
the answering affidavit to at least deal with the
nature of
relationship between the Respondents and Ms. Steyn. The deponent
chose to remain silent on the issue. It is also notable
that the
deponent to the answering affidavit does not deny that there was any
relationship between the Respondents and Ms. Steyn,
nor that he did
not know who she is. From the correspondence attached it is clear
that the relationship was one of attorney and
client
24.
The allegations pertaining to the Derham contract, compelling as they
appear, should have been dealt with in the
founding affidavit
and not in the reply. The Applicant should be constrained to the case
made out in the founding affidavit. I
thus ignored it as far as
fixing a date from which payment of arrear interest is due is
concerned, which I fixed to be the 16
th
of September 2022.
25.
I hand down the reasons for judgment
CAJEE AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING:
DATE
OF ORDER:
DATE
REASONS GIVEN:
21
FEBRUARY 2024
23
JULY 2024
21
NOVEMBER 2024
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT
:
ADV
J LUBBE
TEL:
082 820 1279
E-MAIL:
janlubbe@911law.co.za
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE APPLICANT:
LOUW
& HEYL ATTORNEYS
TEL:
011 475 5090
EMAIL:
jeandri@louwheyl.co.za
martin@louwheyl.co.za
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV
V VERGANO
TEL:
082 536 4969
advocatevergano@gmail.com
ATTORNEY
FOR RESPONDENTS
:
CASPER
LE ROUX INC.
TEL:
011 412 2820
E-MAIL:
casper@cjleroux.co.za
[1]
Annexure FA4 to the Founding Affidavit
[2]
Annexure FA1 to the Founding Affidavit
[3]
Annexure FA5 to the Founding Affidavit
[4]
Annexure FA6 to the Founding Affidavit
[5]
Annexure FA7 to the Founding Affidavit
[6]
Annexure RA1 to the Replying Affidavit
[7]
Annexure RA2 to the Replying Affidavit
[8]
Annexure RA3 to the Replying Affidavit
[9]
Annexes RA5 and RA6 to the Replying affidavit
[10]
Annexure RA8 to the Replying Affidavit
[11]
Annexes RA9 and RA10 of the Replying Affidavit
[12]
Annexure RA11 to the Replying Affidavit
[13]
Annexes RA12 and RA13 to the Replying Affidavit
[14]
Annexure RA14 to the Replying Affidavit
[15]
Annexure RA16 of the Replying Affidavit
[16]
Annexure RA16 to the Replying Affidavit
[17]
Annexure RA17 to the Replying Affidavit
[18]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Sewpersadh
2005 (4) SA 148
(C) at paragraph
[21]
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