Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 162South Africa
AFHCO Holdings (Pty) Limited v Mbowa Schools (Pty) Limited (55828/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 162 (2 March 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Commercial lease agreement – cancellation due to breach – pacta servanda sunt – opposed eviction application – factual dispute relating to grounds of opposition – respondent’s version rejected as far-fetched – application for the eviction from commercial premises granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## AFHCO Holdings (Pty) Limited v Mbowa Schools (Pty) Limited (55828/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 162 (2 March 2023)
AFHCO Holdings (Pty) Limited v Mbowa Schools (Pty) Limited (55828/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 162 (2 March 2023)
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sino date 2 March 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
55828/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE
:
2
nd
march 2023
In
the matter between:
AFHCO
HOLDINGS (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
MBOWA
SCHOOLS (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
27 February 2023
Delivered:
02 March 2023 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00 on 02
March 2023.
Summary:
Commercial lease agreement –
cancellation due to breach –
pacta
servanda sunt
– opposed eviction
application –
factual dispute relating to grounds of
opposition – respondent’s version rejected as far-fetched
– application
for the eviction from commercial premises
granted.
ORDER
(1)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the Commercial premises situate at Shop 101, Anchor Towers, 2 Plein
Street, Johannesburg
(‘the applicant’s property’),
be and are hereby evicted from the said property.
(2)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the said premises shall vacate the applicant’s property on or
before the 1
st
of May 2023.
(3)
In the event that the respondent and the
other occupiers of the premises not vacating the applicant’s
property on or before
the 1
st
of May 2023, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith evict
the respondent and all other occupiers from the said property.
(4)
The respondent shall pay the applicant’s
cost of this application.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
The respondent is a private company, which
carries on business as a private School and a Training College, which
it runs from commercial
premises situated at Shop 101, Anchor Towers,
2 Plein Street, Johannesburg. The respondent presently occupies these
premises (‘the
leased premises’) pursuant to and in terms
of a written lease agreement, which it concluded with the applicant
on or about
the 20
th
August 2020 or the 10
th
of January 2021. The lease agreement was signed on behalf of the
respondent on 20 August 2020 and on behalf of the applicant on
10
January 2021. The lease agreement was to endure for a period of five
years from 1 February 2021 to 31 January 2026 and the respondent
was
to be given vacant occupation of the premises on 01 October 2020. The
initial rental payable in terms of the lease, exclusive
of municipal
services and related charges, was the sum of R43 125 per month,
and an initial deposit of R64 687.50 was also
payable by the
respondent to the applicant.
[2].
The respondent took occupation of the
leased premises, as provided for in the lease, on 01 October 2020,
and the lease commenced
on 01 February 2021. The deposit of
R64 687.50, as well as certain amounts in settlement of the
rental for the months of February
and March 2021, were paid by the
respondent to the applicants during March 2021. However, during April
2021 the respondent started
falling into arrears with its monthly
rentals and by August 2021, the arrear rentals and arrear services
and related charges amounted
in total to R158 818.87. Because of
this breach by the respondent of the lease agreement, the applicant
subsequently cancelled
the said agreement and demanded from the
respondent that they vacate the leased premises, which the respondent
refused or failed
to do.
[3].
In this opposed application, the applicant
applies for an order evicting from the said property the respondent,
who, so the applicant
alleges, is in unlawful occupation of the
leased premises. The respondent does not dispute that, as and at
August 2021, it was
in arrears with payment of the monthly rental to
the tune of R158 818.87, and that it subsequently failed to make
any further
payments towards the monthly rental payable in terms of
the lease agreement. It is instructive that, during the months of
February
and March 2021, the respondent complied, almost to the
letter, with the provisions of the lease agreement in that payment of
the
initial deposit and the monthly rental due was duly made by it to
the applicant. The respondent does however oppose the application
on
the basis of what can best be described as ‘fanciful’
defences, to which I shall revert later on in this judgment.
[4].
At first blush and
ex
facie
the applicant is entitled to the
relief claimed in this eviction application. And I say so for the
simple reason that the respondent
was in arrears with its monthly
rental, which entitled the applicant to cancel the lease agreement
and to have the respondent evicted
from the leased premises. In that
regard, the lease agreement provided as follows:
‘
(2)
Rent and Deposit
The
monthly rental payable in terms of this Lease shall be payable
monthly in advance,
without deduction or set off including bank
charges
, on the first day of each calendar month. The rent in
respect of the first month shall become due and payable by the
[respondent]
on the date of signature of this Lease Agreement, and
prior to occupation of the leased premises.’ (My Emphasis).
[5].
The point is simply that, if regard is had
to this provision of the lease, the rental was payable in advance and
the respondent’s
failure to timeously make payment of the
rental amounted to a breach of the contract. The lease also expressly
provides that, in
the event of breach or failure by the respondent,
as the lessee, to pay any amount due by it on the due date, ‘and
fails
to remedy that breach within a period of seven days after the
receipt of written notice to that effect to [the respondent] by the
[applicant], or, being hand delivered by the [applicant]’, the
applicant becomes entitled to cancel the lease agreement.
[6].
That is exactly what the applicant did. On
10 August 2021, the applicant hand delivered to the respondent’s
offices a letter,
demanding that the arrear rental, amounting at that
stage to R158 818.87, be brought up to date, failing which the
applicant,
so the demand read, intended cancelling the lease
agreement. The respondent did not comply with the demand, and on the
7 September
2021, the applicant addressed to the respondent a
notice of cancellation of the lease agreement and demanded that the
respondent
vacates the premises by the 16 September 2021.
[7].
Therefore, in my view, the lease was
validly cancelled by the applicant, entitling it to an eviction
order. The only question remaining
is whether there is merit in any
of the defences raised by the respondent in opposition to this
eviction application.
[8].
In its answering affidavit, the respondent
denies that the lease was signed on its behalf by a duly authorised
representative and
it takes issue with the fact that the lease was
signed by ‘Mbowa Schools’. This, so the respondent
contends, means
that the agreement was not properly signed on behalf
of the respondent, which, according to its resolution passed on the
same day
on which the lease was allegedly signed by the respondent,
namely 20 August 2020, should have been represented by a Mr Abbey
Mbowa.
Mr Mbowa did in fact sign the lease agreement, albeit in his
capacity as a Surety, on the exact same page on which the ‘signature’
of the respondent (‘Mbowa Schools’) appears.
[9].
All of the aforegoing mean, so the argument
on behalf of the respondent is concluded, that the lease agreement is
invalid and unenforceable.
This argument, which relates to a factual
issue, is void of any merit. This contention flies in the face of the
admission by the
respondent that it occupied the premises in terms of
the lease agreement. What is more is that the respondent acted in
accordance
with the provisions of the lease, which is as clear an
indication as one will ever get that the respondent regarded itself
as bound
by the agreement. So, for example, the respondent paid the
exact amount of the initial deposit payable in terms of the lease
agreement.
Also, the agreement appears to have been signed by Mr
Mbowa, who signed on behalf of the respondent as ‘Mbowa
Schools’.
Howsoever one views this matter, it has to be
accepted that the respondent signed the agreement and regarded itself
as bound by
its terms and conditions. The respondent’s denial
in that regard is so far-fetched and untenable that it can and should
be
rejected on the papers. The point is simply that, having denied
that a valid and enforceable lease agreement had been entered into
between the applicant and it, the respondent does not proffer an
alternative basis for its occupation of the leased premises or
for
the fact that it evidently acted in accordance with the letter of the
said agreement. The respondent’s contention that
the lease is
invalid and unenforceable makes no sense.
[10].
The second ground on which the respondent
opposes the eviction application relates to a number of complaints
which it has relative
to the leased premises. The respondent avers
that, in terms of the agreement between the parties, the applicant
was required to
attend to the following issues: additional toilets
were to be installed; water and sewer leaks were to be repaired; an
occupancy
certificate by the local authority was to be furnished; and
a glass wall, which was unstable and had at least two cracked panes,
was to be repaired. Also, so the case on behalf of the respondent
went, the leased premises were supposed to have been ready for
occupation thirty days after the commencement of the lease, but to
date the premises are still not ready for occupation. In fact,
so the
respondent avers, it had caused to be installed partitioning for
classrooms and offices at a cost of approximately R600 000,
which, presumably, it requires to be set off against the rental.
[11].
The difficulty with this part of the
respondent’s case is that it flies in the face of the express
provisions of the agreement,
notably clause 3, which provides that
the applicant ‘does not warrant that the leased premises are
fit for the specific purposes
for which the [respondent] intends to
use them’. Moreover, as alluded to
supra
,
payment of rental on a monthly basis was to be made ‘without
deductions of set-off’. Then, there is also the non-variation
so-called
Shifren
clause
in the lease (clause 17), which provides as follows: -
‘
(17)
General – Whole Agreement
This
Lease Agreement comprises the entire agreement between the
[applicant] and the [respondent], and the [respondent] records that
no representations of any nature whatsoever have been made by the
[applicant] or any person acting on the [applicant’s] behalf
to
the [respondent] inducing it to enter into this Lease Agreement.
No
alteration or variation of this Lease Agreement shall be of any force
or effect unless it is recorded in writing and signed by
both the
[applicant] and the [respondent].’
[12].
The death knell for the respondent’s
case – and especially its claim that the applicant was in terms
of the agreement
required to effect certain repairs and renovations
to the property by the time of the official commencement of the lease
–
is however the following clauses in the lease: -
‘
(8)
Alterations to Premises and Installation
therein
(a)
Unless anything to the contrary is stated
anywhere else in this Lease Agreement, the [respondent] shall not
make or allow, any alterations
or additions of any nature whatsoever,
to the leased premises or any structural alterations or additions to
the leased premises
without the [applicant’s] prior written
consent.
(b)
The [respondent] shall not at any time be
entitled to any compensation whatsoever from the [applicant] for any
such alterations
or additions, nor shall the [respondent] at any time
be entitled to remove such alterations or any part thereof, whether
made with
or without the [applicant’s] prior written consent,
but should it nevertheless do so, then without prejudice and in
addition
to the [applicant’s] rights in terms of this Lease
Agreement, the [applicant] shall be entitled to direct the
[respondent]
to reinstate the leased premises to their same state and
condition as prior to the carrying out of such alterations or
additions
or removals. Any such reinstatement will occur at the
[respondent’s] own cost and expense and will be completed by
the [respondent]
within 30 (thirty) days of notice to the
[respondent] to reinstate the leased premises, failing which;
(c)The
[applicant] shall be entitled to enter upon the leased premises to
reinstate the same as aforesaid at the cost of the [respondent].’
[13].
The aforegoing clause defeats completely
the respondent’s second ground of opposition. The clause in
fact goes further and
provides that, if in order to obtain a licence
to carry on the business for which the premises are hired, the
premises are required
to be altered, added to or renovated, ‘the
[applicant] shall not be obliged to do so’. The respondent is,
however,
entitled at its own expense to carry out such alterations,
additions or renovations provided that the applicant’s prior
written
consent is obtained. In the face of these express and
unequivocal provisions, it is inconceivable that the respondent can
persist
with its contentions in regard to the additional work
allegedly required to be performed on the premises. The point is best
demonstrated
finally by citing one more sentence from clause (8),
which reads thus: -
‘
The
[respondent]
shall under no
circumstances
have any claim for
compensation for any such alterations, additions or renovations,
whether or not they are removed and the premises
reinstated, save
where otherwise agreed between the parties.’ (My emphasis).
[14].
The respondent also relies on an alleged
oral agreement between the parties that the applicant would grant the
respondent, over
a six-month period, a thirty percent so-called
‘Covid relief discount’ on the rental. This assertion
suffers from the
same defect as all of the other supposed agreements
between the parties which had not been reduced to writing. They are
not binding
by virtue of the non-variation clause. There is a good
reason for the existence of such non-variation clauses in contractual
arrangements,
which our courts, including the Constitutional Court,
have declared to be binding. The rationale behind them are to avoid
disputes
between contracting parties, exactly as is the case
in
casu
. There is a further problem with
the averment by the respondent relating to the ‘Covid relief
discount’, that simply
being that the respondent, by all
accounts failed to pay even the balance of seventy percent due in
respect of the monthly rental.
So even on its own version, the
respondent was in arrears with its monthly instalments and therefore
in breach of the lease, which,
in turn entitled the applicant to
cancel the contract.
[15].
This point therefore falls to be rejected.
[16].
During the hearing of this opposed
application on 27 February 2023, Mr Ngqwalgele, Counsel for the
respondent, argued that
there is a factual dispute between the
parties, as evidenced by what is averred by the parties in their
respective affidavits,
which cannot be resolved on the papers. For
this reason alone, so he submitted, the application should be
dismissed. As an example,
Mr Ngqwalgele referred to the denial
by the deponent to the respondent’s answering affidavit that
the lease agreement
was not signed by a duly authorised
representative for and on behalf of the respondent. Another example
relates to the numerous
oral agreements, which, according to the
respondent, were concluded between the parties. It is pointed out
that the applicant,
in responding to these allegations, did not
dispute them and therefore they should be accepted by the Court.
[17].
The respondent’s arguments in that
regard are misguided. All of the facts which, according to the
respondent, are disputed
are not material to the adjudication of this
matter. I say so for the reasons already alluded to
supra
,
notably the fact that any evidence of agreements at variance with the
written instrument is irrelevant because of the non-variation
clause.
In fact, all of that evidence is inadmissible by virtue of the parole
evidence rule. The simple fact of this matter is
that a written
agreement of lease was entered into between the parties, and
pacta
servanda sunt
. Therefore, on the basis
of that agreement the applicant is entitled to the relief sought in
this application.
[18].
In
any event, the one possible material factual dispute between the
parties – whether or not the respondent signed the written
lease agreement – can and should be decided in favour of the
applicant on the basis of the principles enunciated in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Limited
[1]
.
As already alluded to above, on the evidence as a whole, the
respondent intended to be bound by the lease agreement, which was
probably signed by its representative on its behalf. Why else, would
the respondent conduct itself in accordance with the provisions
of
the said lease? Moreover, the respondent admits and concedes that it
occupied the leased premises in terms of a lease agreement,
but
denies that it is the lease agreement attached to the founding
affidavit. However, the respondent does not say what the other
detailed terms and conditions of the lease agreement are. This, in my
view, makes the version of the respondent on that aspect
of the
matter an untenable one, which can and should be rejected on the
papers as far-fetched.
[19].
The general rule is that a court will only
accept those facts alleged by the applicant which accord with the
respondent's version
of events. The exceptions to this general rule
are that the court may accept the applicant’s version of the
facts where the
respondent's denial of the applicant's factual
allegations does not raise a real, genuine, or
bona
fide
dispute of fact. Secondly, the
court will base its order on the facts alleged by the applicant when
the respondent's version is
so far-fetched or untenable as to be
rejected on the papers. It is necessary to adopt a robust,
common-sense approach to a dispute
on motion. If not, the effective
functioning of the Court can be hamstrung and circumvented by the
simplest and blatant stratagem.
A Court should not hesitate to decide
an issue of fact on affidavit merely because it may be difficult to
do so. Justice can be
defeated or seriously impeded and delayed by an
over-fastidious approach to a dispute raised in affidavits.
[20].
Applying these principles, I reject the
version of the respondent insofar as there may be a dispute of
material facts.
[21].
There were two more issues raised by the
respondent’s Counsel during the hearing of the matter, although
those issues were
not canvassed in the papers, and for that reason
alone I should disregard them as grounds on which to refuse the
application. The
first issue relates to the non-joinder of the surety
in these proceedings, the argument being that he has a vested
interest in
this application, because he is at risk of being held
liable, at a later stage, by the applicant if the application is
successful.
[22].
As
stated by
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
,
‘the question as to whether all necessary parties had been
joined does not depend upon the nature of the subject matter
of the
suit, but upon the manner in which, and the extent to which, the
court’s order may affect the interests of third parties’.
The test is whether or not a party has a ‘direct and
substantial interest’ in the subject matter of the action, that
is, a legal interest in the subject matter of the litigation which
may be affected prejudicially by the judgment of the court.
A mere
financial interest is an indirect interest and may not require
joinder of a person having such interest. The mere fact that
a party
may have an interest in the outcome of the litigation does not
warrant a non-joinder plea. The rule is that any person
is a
necessary party and should be joined if such person has a direct and
substantial interest in any order the court might make,
or if such an
order cannot be sustained or carried into effect without prejudicing
that party. (
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
[2]
).
[23].
Applying
these trite principles
in
casu
,
it cannot possibly be suggested that the order sought by the
applicant may affect the Surety – far from it. An eviction
order against the respondent would have no effect whatsoever on him.
Moreover, as
In
re BOE Trust Ltd and Others NNO
[3]
held, the failure to join a necessary party may also be cured if an
informal notice asking such party whether it wished to intervene
is
met by an unequivocal response that it would abide by the decision of
the court. In the matter before Court, the Surety was
in fact the
deponent to the respondent’s answering affidavit, which means
that he was well aware of application against the
respondent. In my
view, it can safely be inferred that, if the Surety wished to
intervene in these proceedings he would long have
done so. The fact
that he did not, can be interpreted as an unequivocal decision to
abide by this court’s decision. Accordingly,
the point of
non-joinder should fail on the basis of the applicable legal
principles, but in any event because it was not raised
by the
respondent on the papers.
[24].
The last point raised by the respondent,
which was not dealt with on the papers, relates to the alleged
infringement on the constitutional
rights of the learners who attend
the respondent’s school. Their basic right to education, so the
respondent contends, would
be violated, as would be their right to
human dignity should the respondent be evicted from the leased
premises. The main difficulty
with this contention is that no case is
made out in the papers based on the alleged infringement of the
constitutional rights.
So, for example, the respondent has not
pleaded nor proven that the children, when the respondent is evicted
from the premises,
would not be able to receive the same or similar
education somewhere else. This defence should therefore fail.
[25].
Accordingly, the relief sought by the
applicant should be granted.
Costs
[26].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[4]
.
[27].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule.
[28].
I therefore intend awarding costs against
the respondent in favour of the applicant.
Order
[29].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the Commercial premises situate at Shop 101, Anchor Chambers, 2 Plein
Street, Johannesburg
(‘the applicant’s property’),
be and are hereby evicted from the said property.
(2)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the said premises shall vacate the applicant’s property on or
before the 1
st
of May 2023.
(3)
In the event that the respondent and the
other occupiers of the premises not vacating the applicant’s
property on or before
the 1
st
of May 2023, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith evict
the respondent and all other occupiers from the said property.
(4)
The respondent shall pay the applicant’s
cost of this application.
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
27th February 2023
JUDGMENT
DATE:
2nd March 2023 – judgment handed down
electronically.
FOR
THE APPLICANT: Advocate Vanessa
Fine
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Mervyn Joel Smith
Attorneys,
Parkhurst, Johannesburg
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: Advocate Ngqwalgele
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TJP Attorneys,
Marshalltown,
Johannesburg
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Limited
1984 (3) SA 623 (A).
[2]
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949
(3) SA 637 (A)
at
659;
[3]
In
re BOE Trust Ltd and Others NNO
2013 (3) SA 236
(SCA) at 242A–C;
[4]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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