Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 144South Africa
Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 144 (15 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 144 (15 February 2023)
Bubu v Kay and Another (40591/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 144 (15 February 2023)
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sino date 15 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 40591/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
15/02/2023
In
the matter between:
KOLEKA
BUBU
Applicant
And
JUDITH
LYDIA KAY
First
Respondent
L
AND W PROPERTIES (BARRY SCOTT)
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
ON LEAVE TO APPEAL
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The applicant seeks leave to appeal the judgment of this court
dismissing
an application for a declaratory order that an agreement
of sale of immoveable property she entered into with the first
respondent
is valid and enforceable, alternatively the return of her
deposit with interest.
2.
As in the main application, only the first respondent participated in
proceedings,
and I refer to her simply as the respondent.
3.
A few days before the hearing of this application, the applicant
indicated
to the court that she did not intend to apply for leave.
However at the hearing Mr Mphela confirmed his instructions to
proceed.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
4.
The applicant seeks to rely on three grounds of appeal:
4.1.
that the court ought not to have found that the agreement of sale was
cancelled due to the applicant’s
default, because she was not
in default;
4.2.
that the court ought not to have found that the first respondent was
entitled to retain the non-refundable
portion of the deposit as well
as the R1 000 000 (one million rand)
rouwkoop
, should that be
the first respondent’s election, because that amounts to a
disproportionate penalty, and
4.3.
that the court ought not to have found that the applicant was also
liable to pay the agent’s
commission as the agent’s
commission were included in the
rouwkoop
amount.
5.
The respondent opposes the application on all three grounds.
6.
The applicant requested leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeal
(“the SCA”) on the basis that there are
conflicting judgments regarding whether the purchaser can be in
mora
before the seller has indicated it is ready to effect transfer, which
is an element relevant to the first ground of appeal.
FIRST
GROUND: THE APPLICANT WAS NOT IN BREACH
7.
The facts are set out in the main judgment and I do not repeat them
here.
8.
It is submitted for the applicant that she was not in breach at the
time
of the cancellation because:
8.1.
The R3 000 000 (three million rand) that was outstanding was to be
paid against transfer in terms of
clause 1.2, which also required the
amount to be secured in a form acceptable to the conveyancer.
8.2.
Clause 15.4 requires that R3 000 000 (three million rand) to be paid
within 8 months of acceptance
of the offer.
8.3.
When the 8 months had expired, the parties concluded the addendum to
extend the period of time and
make provision for the payments of R250
000 (two hundred and fifty thousand rand) from the deposit.
8.4.
The addendum provided that the terms of the main agreement remained
in force, which meant that payment
had to coincide with transfer.
8.5.
Generally payment and delivery take place at the same time.
8.6.
Where the contract provides that payment is made against transfer,
the purchaser is only obliged to
provide the required guarantee or
make payment when the seller indicates that it is ready to pass
transfer, unless the contract
is clear that security or payment must
be made before transfer, which this contract does not.
8.7.
The contract is unclear, or ambiguous, because there is more than one
possible date for payment, it
provides for both a cash guarantee and
a bond guarantee, and it specifies a payment date without saying if
that must be before
or after transfer.
8.8.
Although the applicant did not comply with clause 15.4 she did comply
with clause 1.2 as she provided
a guarantee acceptable to the
conveyancer.
8.9.
There are no allegations that the seller was ready to give transfer
of the property when the payment
was demanded on 20 July 2021.
8.10.
The applicant was therefore not in
mora
and the respondent was
not entitled to cancel.
9.
This argument is attractive on first blush. However, closer
examination
reveals certain fallacies and inaccuracies.
10.
The first problem is the conflation of the provision of a guarantee
and payment. The idea
that in ordinary sales payment takes place
simultaneously with transfer or delivery is the reason that the
practice of furnishing
a guarantee has evolved. It allows a seller to
transfer the property knowing that the payment is fully available,
and the purchaser
to demonstrate without risk (i.e “guarantee”)
that the payment is available so that the transfer can take place.
The
guarantee is then used to effect payment at the time of transfer.
So the fact that the guarantee was required before transfer is
not
inconsistent with the ordinary rules of sale, and in fact, with
clause 1.2, which itself distinguishes between payment and
the
securing of payment by a guarantee.
11.
The second issue is that the addendum, in stating that the original
agreement remains of
full force and effect, does so with the proviso
that this excludes the amendments contained in the addendum itself.
The addendum
is perfectly clear about when payment must be made, that
is 18 July 2021. Payment was not made by then, nor, to err in favour
of
the applicant, was any guarantee provided by that date.
12.
There is no ambiguity about payment dates if the contract is
interpreted contextually. Nor
is there any ambiguity caused by the
inclusion of options for a bond guarantee as well as a cash guarantee
– it is clear
that this is simply to provide the purchaser with
flexibility about how those guarantees are furnished, or about how
she chooses
to fund the purchase.
13.
The submission that it was necessary for the respondent to allege in
her answering affidavit
that she was ready to pass transfer is also
problematic. Without an allegation in the founding affidavit that the
respondent was
not in a position to pass transfer, or unable to do
so, there is no need for the respondent to make any such allegation.
The applicant
is the one who has to make out a case in motion
proceedings, not the respondent.
14.
The contention that the applicant’s alleged compliance with
clause 1.2 can somehow
make up for her non-compliance with clause
15.4 and the addendum does not assist. The clauses are not
contradictory or in the alternative
and compliance with one cannot
excuse non-compliance with the other.
15.
In any event the applicant did not comply with clause 1.2 as she did
not provide the required
guarantee within either 20 of bond grant or
35 days of acceptance. Nor did she provide it within 8 months of
acceptance or by 18
July 2021, which may be significant dates if one
were to attempt to interpret the contract and events in the
applicant’s
favour.
16.
It was submitted that the approval in principle dated 04 August 2021
was compliance because
it secured payment in a form acceptable to the
conveyancer. Even if this was the case, it was well after any
possible date for
payment. In fact the letter from the conveyancer
which implies satisfaction with the security was dated after the
notice of cancellation
was transmitted and received.
17.
Finally it was submitted for the applicant that she had not been
placed in
mora
by means of a demand to pay and therefore could
not be in breach. However the applicant was in fact placed in
mora
by the letter of 20 July 2021, which gave her ten days to pay in
accordance with the addendum. Ten ordinary days from 20 July was
30
July, while ten court days would have been 3 August. In either event,
the approval in principle did not eventuate before the
ten days were
up.
18.
I am not satisfied that another court would find in favour of the
applicant on this ground.
SECOND
GROUND: THE NON-REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT TOGETHER WITH THE
ROUWKOOP
SHOULD HAVE BEEN FOUND TO BE A DISPROPORTIONATE PENALTY
19.
The applicant submits that the court ought to have considered that
there was a cumulative
penalty and that the court was required to
consider whether that was disproportionate, and to do so
mero
motu
.
20.
It was submitted that the respondent has already made an election
whether to accept the
rouwkoop
amount or to claim damages.
This is not the case.
21.
It was also submitted that the court found both that the respondent
is not entitled to keep
both the non-refundable payments made in
terms of the addendum and the
rouwkoop
, and that she is
entitled to do so. This is not the case. The court found that the
respondent is not entitled to retain the
rouwkoop
and claim
damages.
22.
The applicant submits that the court ought to have found that the
non-refundable payments
were penalty stipulations, and that the
respondent admits that they are. What the respondent “admits”
is that the non-refundable
payments are retained by the respondent
should there be a cancellation resulting from the applicant’s
breach. The argument
for the applicant is that because they are
retained by the respondent if the contract is cancelled due to
breach, they are forfeited
and therefore a penalty.
23.
Obviously this argument was never made at the hearing of the matter,
nor was it pleaded
that the non-refundable payments were a penalty,
nor was the argument included in the heads of argument submitted
before the hearing.
24.
The only argument submitted at the hearing regarding disproportionate
penalties was that
the respondent cannot both retain
rouwkoop
and claim damages. This was confirmed in the judgment.
25.
As far as the non-refundable payments are concerned, the applicant
pleaded that they should
be refunded because the respondent cancelled
unilaterally and without cause, and that the respondent cancelled in
bad faith. Once
I found that this was not the case, there was no
pleaded basis for an order that the payments should be refunded.
26.
The only element of this ground worth considering, then, in this
context, is that the court
should have considered all of this
mero
motu
.
27.
The applicant submits that the court needed to consider whether the
penalty is disproportionate
once a “penalty stipulation is
raised”.
28.
The duty of the court to consider the proportionality of a penalty
stipulation cannot arise
if it has not been properly pleaded and
argued that a particular stipulation with regard to which either
payment or restitution
is claimed, is in fact a penalty stipulation.
That has not been done.
29.
It is not open to the applicant to constantly change the case that
the respondent has to
meet and the court to adjudicate. It did this
by raising the first penalty argument in the hearing without
foreshadowing it in
pleadings or written argument, and it does this
now by raising yet another argument.
30.
While it may be open to a court to raise the issue
mero motu
,
a court would be required to give both parties sufficient opportunity
to deal with the issue before considering it. This does
not mean that
a court is obliged to raise,
mero motu
, whether a stipulation
is a penalty stipulation and whether it is proportional.
31.
The
authority relied upon by the applicant makes
[1]
it clear that, once a party either claims payment of a penalty
stipulaton, or restitution of a payment that was forfeited in
accordance
with a penalty stipulation, the court must
mero
motu
consider the proportionality of that penalty, and is entitled to
reduce it, should it be disproportionate to the damage suffered.
32.
This not being, on the pleadings, a claim for restitution of an
amounted forfeited as a
penalty, did not have that power.
33.
Secondly, the authority relied upon in
Matthews
makes it clear
that, where a court is “left in doubt” about whether a
penalty is markedly disproportionate, to the
prejudice suffered, the
court must enforce the penalty as it is contained in the agreement.
34.
There being no evidence before me regarding the proportionality of
the penalty to the prejudice
suffered, I would not have been able to
make any determination.
35.
On this ground too, I am not satisfied that another court would find
differently.
THIRD
GROUND: THAT THE AGENT’S COMMISSION SHOULD HAVE BEEN FOUND TO
BE INCLUDED IN THE
ROUWKOOP
AMOUNT AND NOT A SEPARATE AMOUNT
36.
The applicant submitted that the court erred in finding that the
applicant had to pay the
balance of the agent’s commission
separately to the
rouwkoop
being retained, because clause 8.1
provides that the agent’s commission come out of the
rouwkoop
in the event of breach.
37.
It is submitted for the respondent that clause 7.2 of the sale
agreement provides that if
either party does not fulfil their
obligations the agent’s commission may be recovered from the
defaulting party. The applicant
having been found to be in breach,
the submission is that she is liable for the commission.
38.
However, the wording of clause 7.2 does not say in so many terms that
the defaulting party
is liable for the agent’s commission. It
is clearly a clause intended to protect the agent, where a sale falls
through. It
allows an agent to claim from either the defaulting party
or the party cancelling the agreement, or if the agreement is
cancelled
by mutual consent, from one or both parties. This does not
determine liability. Nor does it override the provision in clause
8.1.
It provides an additional protection for the agent, for example
when there is no retention of
rouwkoop
.
39.
In her founding affidavit, the applicant points out that the agent’s
commission comes
out of the
rouwkoop
, and the respondent does
not deny it.
40.
However, this court did not order that the agent’s fee must be
paid separately to
the
rouwkoop
, nor did it make any finding
regarding whether the
rouwkoop
included that amount or not.
However, the judgment does say that in addition to the non-refundable
payments and the remainder of
the agent’s commission, the
rouwkoop
may be deducted from the deposit before any refund is
made to the applicant, should the respondent choose to accept the
rouwkoop
rather than claim damages.
41.
This is clearly ambiguous, and ought to have been considered and set
out properly.
42.
The application for leave to appeal should therefore succeed on this
ground, as I am satisfied
that another could would come to a
different, or clearer, decision on this issue.
CONCLUSION
43.
For the reasons set out above, the application is successful only to
the extent that the
applicant relies on the third ground.
44.
The applicant has been partially successful. However it seems to me
that the success is
small compared to what the applicant asked for. I
consider therefore that it is appropriate to make no costs order.
45.
I see no reason why the Supreme Court of Appeal need deal with this
matter. It is appropriate
that it be dealt with by a Full Court of
this division.
46.
I make the following order:
“
The
applicant is granted leave to appeal to the Full Court of this
division on the ground contained in paragraph 4 of her notice
of
application for leave to appeal.”
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the applicant: R Mphela
Instructed
by: Onyemepu
Attorneys
For
the first respondent: TJ
Daswon (attorney)
Instructed
by: Naudè
Dawson Inc
Date
of hearing: 28
November 2022
Date
of judgment: 15
February 2023
[1]
Matthews
v Pretorius 1984 (W) 547
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