Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 818South Africa
Anioma Property (Pty) Ltd v DMFT Property Developers and Others (49230/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 818 (8 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 March 2023
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## Anioma Property (Pty) Ltd v DMFT Property Developers and Others (49230/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 818 (8 March 2023)
Anioma Property (Pty) Ltd v DMFT Property Developers and Others (49230/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 818 (8 March 2023)
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sino date 8 March 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 49230/2021
REPORTABLE
OF INTREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
ANIOMA
PROPERTY (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
DMFT
PROPERTY DEVELOPERS
First
Respondent
LINDIE
LOMBARD ATTORNEYS
Second
Respondent
PAM
GOLDING PROPERTIES
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHALELO J
Introduction
[1]
The
applicant, Anioma Property (Pty) Ltd (the seller) claims specific
performance by the first respondent,
DMFT Property Developers
(the purchaser), of the obligation to pay transfer costs for the
registration of an immovable property
into the names of the
purchaser, which obligation arose from a written agreement of sale
that was concluded between them during
July 2021 (the contract). The
immovable property, known as
Portion 4 of Erf 208,
is situated at
161 Empire Place, Sandhurst.
The immovable property is owned by the applicant. The agreed purchase
price consideration is R13 Million
rand.
[2]
It is common cause that the purchaser has
paid the full purchase price which money is currently held in the
trust account of the
second defendant. The second defendant is
appointed as the conveyancer of the applicant. No relief is sought
against the second
and third respondents, they are only cited as
interested parties. It is also common cause that an amount of R
1 392 237,27
still has to be paid towards the registration
of transfer of the immovable property into the names of the
purchaser. The purchaser
refuses to pay the transfer costs and take
the transfer of the immovable property.
[3]
The
purchaser states in its answering affidavit in these proceedings that
the
seller or its representative deliberately failed to make
disclosures of material facts notwithstanding an obligation to do so
in
that they failed to make disclosure of all conditions and/or
endorsements on the title deed and/or circumstances that brought
about
the conditions or the endorsements.
According
to the purchaser, the seller or its representative failed to disclose
to the purchaser that the immovable property in
question is under
hijack, that upon learning of the caveat to the title deed and
investigating it, it became aware that the immovable
property was
targeted by hijackers and is under attack. Those hijackers will have
to be warded off in court and that will delay
its plans to develop
the immovable property. The purchaser says that the contract stands
to be rescinded or cancelled. This was
after it had sent
correspondence to the seller and the second and third respondents
through its attorneys on
3 September and stated its “resolve
to withdraw from the transaction”, and further that the “second
and third
respondents cease all activities related to the transfer of
the property” and that it be “reimbursed of all amounts
it had paid in anticipation of the transfer”.
[4]
The seller says that
it
has complied with its obligations in terms of the contract including
instructing the second respondent to deal with the question
of
removing the caveat on the title deed in terms of clause 20.1 of the
contract. The seller contended that the caveat served to
inform the
Registrar of Deeds not to issue a copy of the title deed to the
property to anyone without leave of the court.
[5]
The seller contended
further that there is no truth about the hijacking issue. It argued
that it is the registered and undisputed
owner of the immovable
property and is not fending off hijackers. It says that there has
never been an attempt to hijack the immovable
property either as
alleged or at all. The seller argued that the averments by the
purchaser in respect of hijacking of the immovable
property and its
effect are speculation and far-fetched. The seller stated that the
caveat related to an attempt to liquidate it
and had nothing to do
with hijacking of the immovable property and in any event, clause
20.1 of the contract does not in any way
impede the transfer of the
immovable property. The seller considers the purchaser’s
unilateral non-compliance
with the
terms of the contract a repudiation which it refuses to accept and it
demanded specific performance from the purchaser
of its obligation to
pay the transfer costs for the registration of the transfer of the
immovable property into the purchaser’s
names. The purchaser
did not heed to the demand and hence the present application.
The Caveat
[6] In
the
founding affidavit the seller (applicant) alleges that p
rior
to 2020, a third party attempted to fraudulently liquidate the
applicant. In early 2020, the applicant successfully approached
this
Court for an interdict to stop the third party. During the
process it caused a caveat to be noted against the title
deed of the
property. The caveat provides, inter alia, as follows:
“
On the 18th of
February 2020, the registered owner [i.e Anioma] and its directors
obtained a court order against various parties
inter alia the
Commissioner of the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission,
the Master of the High Court South Africa, Johannesburg
and Johannes
Hendrickus du Plessis N.O. insofar as to reverse a stay and to
subsequently reverse the unlawful and fraudulent liquidation
in
respect of the registered owner by the Third Respondent.
…
Accordingly the
registered owner being the true applicant, hereby makes objection to
the issuing of a certified copy and/or any
subsequent transfer of the
immovable property in respect of such copy unless leave has been
obtained to do so and pending the outcome
of any actions pending or
to be urgently brought in the High Court.”
The Contract
[7] The material
and relevant terms and conditions of the sale agreement were as
follows: -
1. The immovable property
was sold on a voetstoots basis, for the amount of R 13,000,000.00
(Thirteen Million), payable by a deposit
of R 1,000,000.00 (One
Million), within 3 business days after the date of the signature of
the agreement by the applicant
and R 12,000,000.00 (Twelve Million)
payable within 30 days thereafter.
2. Occupation of the
immovable property to be given to the first respondent on
registration of transfer of the immovable property.
3. Possession and
ownership of and all benefits and risk in respect of the immovable
property would pass to the first respondent
on registration of
transfer, from which date the first respondent would also be liable
for inter alia all rates, taxes and/or levies
pertaining to the
immovable property.
4. Transfer would be
effected by the second respondent as soon as reasonably possible
provided that the first respondent has complied
with the provision of
the agreement, signed all necessary bond and transfer documentation
and paid all necessary costs of transfer.
5. In addition to the
purchase price, the first respondent would pay all costs and charges
incidental to registration of transfer
of the immovable property,
including such administrative amounts as may be necessary to obtain a
rates and/or levies clearance
certificate to facilitate registration
of transfer (excluding rates, taxes, levies and/or arear municipal
charges for which the
applicant is liable).
6. The first respondent
would also be liable for VAT levied in terms of the Value-Added Tax
Act No. 89 of 1991 (as amended) or transfer
duty levied in terms of
the Transfer Duties Act No. 40 of 1949 (as amended) (if applicable);
legal costs charged by the second
respondent and costs of registering
any mortgage bond (if any).
7. The Applicant and the
first respondent warranted in favour of each other that neither party
was aware of the existence of any
fact or circumstance that may
impair its ability to comply with all of its obligations in terms of
the agreement.
[8] Cause 20.1 of
the contract provides that “[t]he seller shall remove all
caveats that may be placed on the property
and facilitate the
transfer process”.
[9]
The following questions arise for
determination in this application:
(a)
Was the language of clause 20.1 of the sale
agreement misleading and were pertinent facts omitted?
(b)
Was there a legal duty on the applicant to
disclose the exact nature of the caveat?
(c)
Were the non-disclosed facts material
thereby invalidating the contract?
Specific
performance as remedy for breach
[10]
Christie’s
Law
of Contract in South Africa
7 ed at 616
states:
“
The remedies
available for a breach or, in some cases, a threatened breach of
contract are five in number. Specific performance,
interdict,
declaration of rights, cancellation, damages. The first three may be
regarded as methods of enforcement and the last
two as recompenses
for non-performance. The choice among these remedies rests primarily
with the injured party, the plaintiff,
who may choose more than one
of them, either in the alternative or together, subject to the
overriding principles that the plaintiff
must not claim inconsistent
remedies and must not be overcompensated.” (Footnote omitted.)
[11]
In
Farmers’
Co-operative Society v Berry
[1]
the
question was whether specific performance should be decreed. The case
concerned a claim for the delivery of certain movables,
alternatively
for damages. Innes JA answered that question as follows:
“
Prima facie every
party to a binding agreement who is ready to carry out his own
obligation under it has a right to demand from
the other party, so
far as it is possible a performance of his undertaking in terms of
the contract. As remarked by KOTZE, C.J.,
in Thompson vs.
Pullinger (1 O. R., at p. 301), “the right of a plaintiff to
the specific performance of a contract
where the defendant is in a
position to do so is beyond all doubt.” It is true that Courts
will exercise a discretion in
determining whether or not decrees of
specific performance should be made. They will not, of course, be
issued where it is impossible
for the defendant to comply with them.
And there are many cases in which justice between the parties can be
fully and conveniently
done by an award of damages.”
[12]
As
Zondi JA held in
Basson
and Others v Hanna
,
[2]
there
are many cases in which it was held that, if one party to the
agreement repudiates the agreement, the other party at his election
may claim specific performance of the agreement or damages in lieu of
specific performance and that his claim will in general be
granted,
subject to the court's discretion.
Analysis
[13]
Where a party has entered a contract, or
otherwise been induced to enter said contract as a result of a false
representation by
the other party, this amounts to misrepresentation.
Misrepresentation occurs when a false or incorrect statement is made
by a contractor
or agent to the contracting party, which consequently
induces the latter party to conclude the contract. The effect of such
misrepresentation
is that the party who was induced into concluding
the contract may rescind the contract. This can only be done if the
misrepresentation
was material, and is therefore essential to whether
the contracting party would have entered into the contract or not.
The duty
to disclose a material fact arises when a party has sole
knowledge of the material fact which the other party would have
relied
upon and must be in line with the
boni
mores
of the community.
[14]
Such
actions are regarded as non-disclosure, which is often thought of as
misrepresentation by silence.
[3]
As
a result, the failure to disclose a material fact to the other
contracting party when there is a legal duty to do so constitutes
misrepresentation. Non-disclosure and misrepresentation are treated
in the same manner, in that they are both grounds for rescission
of
the contract if one party is under a duty to disclose such facts and
fails to do so.
[15]
The case of
McCann v
Goodall Group Operations (Pty) Ltd
illuminates on instances when a duty to disclose exists:
[4]
“
(c)
A negligent misrepresentation by way of an omission may occur in the
form of a non disclosure where there is a legal
duty on the
defendant to disclose some or other material fact to the plaintiff
and he fails to do so.
(d)
Silence or inaction as such cannot constitute a misrepresentation of
any kind unless there is a duty to speak or act as aforesaid.
Examples
of a duty of this nature include the following:
(i)
A duty to disclose a material fact
arises when the fact in question falls within the exclusive knowledge
of the defendant and the
plaintiff relies on the frank disclosure
thereof in accordance with the legal convictions of the community.
(ii)
Such duty likewise arises if the
defendant has knowledge of certain unusual characteristics relating
to or circumstances surrounding
the transaction in question and
policy considerations require that the plaintiff be apprised thereof.
(iii)
Similarly, there is a duty to make a
full disclosure if a previous statement or representation of the
defendant constitutes
an incomplete or vague disclosure which
requires to be supplemented or elucidated.”
[16] Given the facts of
the present matter, the only two grounds the purchaser can rely on in
establishing that the seller had a
duty to disclose the exact nature
of the caveat are the “sole knowledge” ground and the
“omission of pertinent
facts or using misleading language”
ground. These grounds are discussed in further detail below.
Sole knowledge of the
material fact
[17]
A
contracting party is under a duty to disclose any information that he
has sole knowledge of, which the other party would have
relied upon,
and where silence and ultimately a lack of communication to the other
party would amount to misrepresentation.
[5]
In order to determine whether a failure of a duty to disclose will
result in the defendant’s failure amounting to unlawfulness,
one must look at the general test for liability.
[6]
This is expressed as follows:
“
A party is
expected to speak when the information he has to impart falls within
his exclusive knowledge (so that in a practical
business sense the
other party has him as his only source) and the information,
moreover, is such that the right to have it communicated
to him
‘would be mutually recognised by honest men in the
circumstances”
[7]
[18]
In
Speight
v Glass
[8]
the plaintiff purchased shares in a hotel in its entirety, and at the
time of the conclusion of the contract he was unaware that
the town
council was exploring the possibility of constructing a road that
would run through the property that the hotel was on.
The seller on
the other hand was aware of this possible construction, and as a
result the purchaser was of the opinion that the
court should cancel
the contract, and he should be reimbursed for the purchase price of
the property. The purchaser based his allegations
on the basis that
he would not have entered into the contract had he been aware of the
construction. Furthermore, he alleged that
the seller was under a
duty to disclose the planned construction.
[19]
The court
ultimately determined that the seller had no specialised knowledge of
the terms of the construction.
[9]
The court further agreed with the counter allegation of the seller
that the necessary information, and full details of the construction
plan, was accessible to the purchaser through the town council.
[10]
As a result, the claim for the cancellation of the contract of sale
was dismissed due to the failure of the purchaser to prove
that the
seller had a duty to disclose the information to him.
[11]
[20] A parallel can be
drawn between
Speight
and the present matter. In
Speight
,
the Court found that the seller did not have sole knowledge of the
construction and that this information could be easily accessed
through the town council. Similarly, in the present matter, the
information detailing the history of events that led to the filing
of
the caveat could be easily accessed through the Deeds Office.
[21]
In
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Fouche
[12]
the court canvassed the notion of classifying information as being
“exclusive” to a single person. The court found
that,
“information which is, if desired, [is] readily ascertainable…,
should not be categorised as exclusive knowledge.
'Exclusive
knowledge' in this sense is
knowledge
which is inaccessible to the point where its inaccessibility produces
an involuntary reliance on the party possessing
the information
”.
[13]
(own emphasis added)
[22]
Here again,
a parallel can be drawn between the present matter and
Fouche
.
Given that the caveat could have been easily uncovered through a
simple deeds search and subsequently accessed through the Deeds
Office, it may not qualify as being exclusive knowledge or knowledge
which the seller was the sole possessor of.
[14]
[23]
Even if the
information is qualified as “exclusive” to the seller,
the second part of the test in order to establish
a duty to disclose
is that the right to have the knowledge communicated to him
“would be mutually recognised by honest
men in the
circumstances.”
[15]
[24] In the present
matter, I am not persuaded by the presence of the caveat that the
immovable property was hijacked. Further,
the seller submits that the
existence of the caveat would not have impeded the transfer.
Importantly, in terms of clause 20.1 the
applicant was bound to
remove all caveats in terms of the agreement. Therefore, it would
appear that disclosing all the facts surrounding
the caveat was not
considered necessary by the seller because there were, in fact, no
title issues. Given that the property was
never hijacked and the
title deed was never compromised, and all litigation regarding the
alleged fraudulent liquidation of the
applicant was resolved, it
seems reasonable to assume that an “honest man” in the
circumstances would not deem it necessary
to disclose the entire
nature of the caveat. It is important to reiterate here again, the
information in question was readily accessible
had the purchaser
performed his due diligence and simply conducted a deed search.
Omission or misleading
language
[25]
A legal
duty to disclose in this instance occurs when the contractor has
omitted pertinent facts or has used language that is misleading.
[16]
Certain policy considerations may also necessitate the communication
of certain facts or information to the other party.
[17]
Often during the negotiation process the contractor may use vague,
unclear or elusive language in order to secure a sale, or to
ensure
the conclusion of the contract. Nonetheless, a duty to disclose
exists if such previously used equivocal terms require
clarification.
[18]
This
indicates that non disclosure or an omission in certain
circumstances would result in the failure to disclose being
wrongful.
[19]
[26]
In
Dormell
Properties 658 (Pty) Ltd v Rowmoor Investments 513 (Pty) and
Another
[20]
the court held:
“
Silence
(non-disclosure) may amount to a misrepresentation where there is a
duty to communicate the omitted information. There may
be particular
circumstances, usually associated with the prior conduct of the
person who remained silent, that require such person
to speak –
Christie … at 288 gives as examples where only part of the
truth has been told and the omission of the
remainder gives a
misleading impression… . Outside of particular cases of this
kind,
there
is in general no duty on one contracting party to tell the other
everything material to the transaction
– policy only requires him to speak if the information falls
within his exclusive knowledge (so that the counter-party must
needs
rely on the other) and the information is such that the right to have
it communicated ‘would be mutually recognised
by honest men in
the circumstances’ (
Absa
Bank Ltd v Fouche
2003 (1) SA 176
(SCA) para 5).”
[21]
(own emphasis added)
[27] The court held
further:
“
At best …
the brochure was in this respect unclear. There is in my opinion an
important difference between making a statement
which the reasonable
reader would understand as meaning X; a statement which the
reasonable reader would understand as meaning
Y; and a statement
which would leave the reasonable reader uncertain whether the meaning
was X or Y. The first and second would
be statements of known content
which might be true or untrue; the third would be a statement of
unclear content, and in such a
case it cannot be said that the maker
was making statement X or that he was making statement Y at the
election of the reader,
because
in the posited circumstances the reasonable reader would seek
clarification.
In the
present matter, if the statements in the brochure did not in their
context clearly convey that what had been approved …
the
statements were at best for Dormell unclear to the reasonable reader
….
A
reasonable reader to whom this question was important would have made
enquiry to clarify the matter.
The
fact that subjectively a particular reader latched onto one meaning
which the reasonable reader would not have taken as the
clear import
of the statement is not relevant at the stage of determining whether
a misrepresentation has been made.”
[22]
(own emphasis added)
[28]
The
purchaser submitted that the language of clause 20.1 caused him to
draw an inference that there were, in fact, no caveats but
rather,
the seller simply added the clause for the sake of being
thorough.
[23]
The purchaser
submits further:
“
The signed offer
to purchase did not record the existence of any Caveat on the
immovable property, instead, the Applicant stated
as follows:
The Seller shall remove
all caveats that
may be placed on the property
and facilitate
the transfer process.
The non-committal
construct of the above underlined statement negates questions that
ordinarily follow in the event of the positive
statement that:
The Seller
shall
remove all caveats
on the property and facilitate the transfer process.”
[24]
[29] The purchaser
submits that had the seller phrased the clause as a positive
statement, he would have followed up with questions
relating to the
nature of the caveat. However, this explanation does not appear
plausible. Clause 20.1 is, at best, unclear - as
was articulated by
the court in
Dormell
. The seller had intentionally penned the
clause in at the end and the purchaser, as an interested party,
should have questioned
why this was so regardless of the wording. The
purchase of the property was going to cost the purchaser a
substantial amount of
money and as such, required a certain amount of
due diligence from him. A reasonable person in the position of the
purchaser would
have sought clarity on the clause to ensure that
there were no issues pertaining to the title of the property and to
further ensure
that there were no caveats on the title. A reasonable
person, with as much investment in the matter as the first
respondent, would
have certainly questioned why the seller had
specifically added that particular clause into the agreement.
Materiality of the
non-disclosed facts
[30] Even if I am wrong
in deciding that there was no duty on the seller to disclose the
precise nature of the caveat, the failure
to disclose these facts
would still have to qualify as material in order to affect the
validity of the contract.
[31] As enunciated in
LAWSA:
“
A
misrepresentation (or nondisclosure), to give rise to a claim for
rescission, must relate to a material fact. The courts have
not
always formulated the requirement of materiality in precisely the
same way but the test would appear to be essentially whether
the
statement would have induced a reasonable person to enter into the
contract in issue (or, in the case of nondisclosure, whether
disclosure of the relevant information would have persuaded a
reasonable person not to enter into the contract). However, the
desirability of applying an objective test where the representor has
been dishonest or fraudulent has been questioned, and lately
it has
been held that the test to be applied in such cases is subjective:
namely, whether the representee actually believed the
representation.”
[25]
[32] In applying the
above test to the facts of the present matter, it would appear
unlikely that the disclosure would persuade
a reasonable person to
not enter into the contract. The existence of the caveat did not
affect the title deed nor does it prevent
transfer from occurring.
Furthermore, the immovable property was not the subject of an
attempted hijacking and has never, in fact,
been actually hijacked.
So the consequences of buying a hijacked property will not be
suffered by the purchaser. As such, it could
be argued that a
reasonable man in the position of the purchaser would have proceeded
with the sale. At worst, a reasonable man
may have instituted a
delictual claim against the applicant if he believed he suffered a
financial loss during the negotiation
of the purchase price however,
it would appear unlikely that a reasonable man would attempt to
rescind the contract entirely.
[33] For the aforegoing
reasons the following order is made:
1. The first respondent
is ordered to pay to the second respondent, the amount of R
1,392,237.27 in respect of the registration
of transfer of the
immovable property known as Portion 4 of Erf 208 Sandhurst ("the
immovable property"); and
2. Sign any/all
documentation required by the second respondent for the purposes of
the registration of transfer of the immovable
property into the name
of the first respondent; within 10 days of the handing down of this
order.
3. That failing, the
first respondent's compliance with the aforesaid is ordered, that: -
3.1 The second respondent
is directed to utilize the purchase price paid by the first
respondent in respect of the immovable property,
held on trust by the
second respondent, for the purposes of the payment of the aforesaid
transfer costs; and
3.2 The Sheriff of the
above Honourable Court is authorised to sign on behalf of the first
respondent, any/all documentation required
by the second respondent
for the purposes of the registration of transfer of the immovable
property into the name of the first
respondent.
4. That the costs of this
application be paid by the first respondent on attorney and client
scale.
M B MAHALELO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This judgment was
delivered electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail and uploading onto
CaseLines. The date and
time of hand down is deemed to be 08 March 2023 at 10h00.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
applicant:
Adv E.R. venter
Instructed by:
JHS Attorneys
Counsel for the first
respondent:
Adv M Mphaga SC
Adv M.E. Manala
Instructed by:
Manala & Co Inc.
[1]
1912 AD 343
at 350.
[2]
2017 (3) SA 22
(SCA) at para 23.
[3]
Bluegrass
Trading 1112 CC t/a Rawson Properties v Ramsern and Another
[2021]
ZAGPJHC 753 at para [40].
[4]
1995 (2) SA 718
(C) at para 726C-G.
[5]
RH Christie
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
7th
(2016) 323.
[6]
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Fouche
2003
(1) SA 176
SCA at para 5.
[7]
Pretorius
and Another v Natal South Sea Investment Trust Ltd
(under
judicial management)
1965 (3) SA 410
(W) at para 418E-F.
[8]
Speight
v Glass and Another
1961
(1) SA 778 (D).
[9]
Id
at 783.
[10]
Id.
[11]
Id
at 784.
[12]
2003
(1) SA 176
SCA.
[13]
Id
at para [8].
[14]
See
also
The
Trustees for the time being of the SAS Trust v New Adventure
Investment 193 (Pty) Ltd
[2003] JOL 11579 (SCA).
[15]
Pretorius
and Another v Natal South Sea Investment Trust Ltd
(under
judicial management)
1965 (3) SA 410
(W) at para 418E-F.
[16]
RH Christie
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
7th
(2016) 323.
[17]
McCann
v Goodall Group Operations (Pty) Ltd
1995
(2) SA 718 (C).
[18]
Id.
[19]
RH Christie
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
7th
(2016) 287.
[20]
[2013] ZAWCHC 152.
[21]
Id
at para 105.
[22]
Id
at para 112.
[23]
First
Respondent’s Answering Affidavit at paras 57-59.
[24]
First
Respondent’s Heads of Argument at paras 8-10.
[25]
Van
Rensburg “Contract” in
LAWSA
3 ed (2014) vol 9 at 318.
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