Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 929South Africa
Boesch N.O and Others v Mason Africa Group (Pty) Limited (2021/55096) [2023] ZAGPJHC 929 (18 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 April 2023
Headnotes
JUDGMENT]
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Boesch N.O and Others v Mason Africa Group (Pty) Limited (2021/55096) [2023] ZAGPJHC 929 (18 April 2023)
Boesch N.O and Others v Mason Africa Group (Pty) Limited (2021/55096) [2023] ZAGPJHC 929 (18 April 2023)
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sino date 18 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 2021/55096
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
18.04.23
In
the matter between:
TIFFANY-ANN
BOESCH N.O.
First
Plaintiff
VICTOR
SCHROEDER N.O.
Second
Plaintiff
NICHOLAS
JOHN BATTERSBY N.O.
Third
Plaintiff
IZAK
JOHANNES SMIT N.O.
Fourth
Plaintiff
And
THE
MASON AFRICA GROUP (PTY) LIMITED
Defendant
JUDGMENT (SUMMARY
JUDGMENT]
This judgment is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading
the signed copy to
Caselines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1] This matter
arises out of the alleged breach of a commercial lease agreement. The
plaintiffs, in their capacities as trustees
of the PPS Property Fund
Trust, seek summary judgment against the defendant on:
(a)
a monetary
claim for payment in the sum of R1,219,034.73 comprising arrear
rental, “
ancillary
charges
”,
[1]
interest, legal costs and VAT; and
(b) a claim for
ejectment arising out of the defendant’s alleged breach of a
commercial lease agreement, which the plaintiffs
purported to cancel
in their combined summons, which was served on 30 November 2021.
[2]
The
calculation of the monetary claim is set out in an account attached
as annexure D to the particulars of claim, from which it
is evident
that the total sum comprises amounts alleged to have become payable
by the defendant during the period January 2020
to November 2021.
[2]
[3] The defendant’s
defence, as contained in its plea (and counterclaim for a statement
and debatement of the account),
is essentially a denial that it was
in breach of its payment obligations under the lease as at the date
of the purported cancellation
and an allegation that annexure D is
incorrect. The defendant specifically alleges that:
(a) the monthly
rentals were not payable monthly in advance as the plaintiffs allege,
and that the agreement stipulates that
they were only payable 60
calendar days after invoice;
(b) it was not a
term of the lease agreement that the monthly rentals were payable
without deduction or set off, as the plaintiffs
allege;
(c) the defendant
was excused from making payment under the lease agreement for the
period 27 March 2020 to 31 May 2020 due
to supervening temporary
impossibility of performance of the terms of the contract because the
plaintiffs were prevented by operation
of the regulations promulgated
in response to the COVID-19 pandemic from tendering occupation of the
premises to the defendant
during that period;
(d) the parties had
in any event agreed that no rental would be payable under the lease
agreement for the period of April
2020 to June 2020 (although this is
pleaded in the form of an “
offer
” by the
plaintiffs to “
waive their right to recover rental
”
during this period, which offer had been accepted by the defendant);
(e) the Plaintiffs
failed to perform their reciprocal obligations under the lease in
relation to the proper maintenance of
the leased premises;
(f) the amount claimed by
the plaintiffs “
includes charges which are … at
variance with the agreed upon terms of the Lease Agreement”
,
and it is pleaded in particular that Annexure D is incorrect respect
of:
i. diesel
recovery charges;
ii. common
area electricity, water and sewerage consumption charges;
iii. rental of
parking bays;
iv. increases in
assessment rates;
v. “
the
electricity and water consumption of which the Defendant is allegedly
responsible for a proportionate share
”;
vi. electricity
and water consumption charges for periods when the defendant’s
offices were closed;
vii.
interest accrued on the defendant’s deposit since 2014; and
viii. interest on
charges that were not due (which I presume refers to the charges
referred to in (i) to (vi) above).
[4] The defendant
also pleads that even if it was indeed in breach, the plaintiffs did
not duly cancel the lease because they
failed to comply with the
requirements in the (rectified) lease agreement to regarding the
delivery of a breach notice.
[5] The defendant
resists the summary judgment application on the following four
grounds:
(a) the plaintiffs’
affidavit in support of summary judgment does not “
identify
any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which the plaintiff’s
claim is based”
as required by Rule 32(2)(b)
;
(b) the affidavit
does not “
explain briefly why the defence as pleaded does
not raise any issue for trial
” as required by Rule
32(2)(b);
(c) the plaintiff’s
monetary claim is not a liquidated amount in money as required by
Rule 32(1)(b); and
(d) the affidavit
resisting summary judgment should satisfy me as required by Rule
32(3)(b) that the pleaded defences to the
plaintiffs’ monetary
claim and claim for ejectment are
bona fide
.
Have the plaintiffs
identified the points of law and facts upon which their claims are
based?
[6]
With regard
to the first ground of opposition relating to the need for the
plaintiff to “
identify
any point of law relied upon and the facts upon which the plaintiff’s
claim is based”,
I respectfully agree with the approach adopted by Binns-Ward J in
Tumileng.
[3]
Since summary judgment may only be sought under the amended rule
after the delivery of a plea, it may be assumed by the plaintiff
that
the defendant does not contend that the particulars of claim are
either excipiable or non-compliant with the requirements
of rule 18
as to particularity. As such, in order to meet the requirement of
identifying the points of law and facts upon which
the claim is
based, a plaintiff seeking summary judgment is required to do no more
than “
confirm
what should already be apparent from their pleaded case
”,
which they may do “
as
succinctly as possible
”
– even by means of a “
formulaic
mode of expression if it serves the purpose
”.
[4]
[7] In the current
matter, paragraph 4 of the affidavit in support of summary judgment
not only contains the required “
formulaic
”
confirmation of the facts and conclusions of law pleaded in the
particulars of claim (the deponent swears to and verifies
“
both
the facts as well as the causes of action and amounts set out in the
Plaintiffs’ Particulars of Claim
”), but paragraph 5
goes further, and sets out the factual basis of the claim. I am
therefore satisfied that the plaintiffs
have complied with the
requirement to identify the facts and legal basis upon which their
claim is based, and that the first ground
of opposition identified in
paragraph 7(a) above does not avail the defendant.
Have the plaintiffs
explained why the pleaded defence “
does not
raise an
issue for trial
”?
[8]
As for the
second ground of opposition identified in paragraph 7(b) above, and
the requirement to “
explain
briefly why the defence as pleaded does not raise any issue for
trial
”,
[5]
I also respectfully agree with the holding in
Tumileng
that while a plaintiff is required to engage with the content of the
plea, it must do so not for the purposes of showing that the
merits
or prospect of success of the defence are weak (which is not relevant
for the purposes of summary judgment), but for the
purposes of
substantiating the plaintiff’s averment that the defences are
not
bona
fide
.
[6]
Although this undoubtedly requires a plaintiff to deal pertinently
with any defences and allegations positively raised in the plea,
this
requirement cannot in my view be so onerously interpreted as to
require the plaintiff to demonstrate that the defendant’s
bare
denial of an allegation in the particulars of claim is not
bona
fide
.
In the case of such denials, plaintiffs are in no better position
under the amended rule than they were under the rule as previously
formulated. It must be recalled that Rule 32(3)(b) makes it clear
that it is the defendant that must satisfy the court (but not
prove)
that it has a
bona
fide
defence to the action, by disclosing fully the nature and grounds of
the defence and the material facts relied upon therefor (i.e.
“
facts
which, if proved at trial, will constitute an answer to the
plaintiff’s claim
”).
[7]
[9] As such, the
technical ground of opposition regarding the content of the
plaintiff’s affidavit raised in paragraph
7(b) above only
avails a defendant in circumstances where the plaintiff has failed to
engage pertinently with the positive averments
contained in the plea.
If the plaintiff has done so and has sought to substantiate its
averment that the defence is not
bona fide
, its affidavit
would be technically compliant, and the summary judgment application
will not fail on this basis but may still be
dismissed if the
defendant indeed satisfies the court that its defence is
bona
fide
.
[10] Although the
plaintiffs state in paragraph 8 of their affidavit in support of
summary judgment that the defendant “
has not set out a
defence which if proven at trial would amount to a defence to
plaintiffs’ claim and has not set out a defence
which is
bona
fide”, the sole allegations made in substantiation of this
averment are contained in paragraph 7 of the affidavit. While
some of
the positive allegations in the plea are indeed dealt with, my view
is that the plaintiffs have fatally (i) failed to substantiate
its
averment that the positive allegations that it does engage with are
not
bona fide
; and (ii) altogether ignored a number of the
defendant’s pleaded defences.
[11]
Firstly,
although the plaintiffs concede that they indeed “
offered
the defendant rental reduction in terms of a written variation to the
lease agreement
”,
they allege that “
same
was never signed by defendant
”.
The difficulty here is that the defendant did not make an allegation
that the agreement in question was concluded by means
of a signed
written variation, and the plaintiffs make no allegation in either
the (verified) particulars of claim or in the affidavit
in support of
summary judgment that any such agreement would have to be signed
and/or in writing. There is thus no basis upon which
to conclude that
this defence is not
bona
fide
or
that it would not amount to a partial defence should it be proven at
the trial.
[8]
[12] Secondly, the
plaintiffs allege that nothing in the agreement obliges them to
account to the defendant. In my view, even if
I assume not only that
this is correct but that the defendant’s allegation to the
contrary is not
bona fide
, nothing turns on the issue, as I do
not understand the defendant to allege that its alleged right to an
accounting in itself constitutes
a defence (either partial or
complete) to the plaintiffs’ claims.
[13] Thirdly, the
plaintiffs allege that they “
are entitled to invoice the
defendant for diesel as the defendant is obliged to make payment for
amounts in respect of the supply
of electricity which includes the
diesel recovery
”. While I do not exclude the possibility
that this may indeed ultimately prove to be a correct interpretation
of the agreement
(and that the amount owing therefore may not
ultimately have to be reduced by the somewhat paltry amount of
R3,131.33 on the plaintiffs’
version), the plaintiffs do not
identify any reason (for example any provision of the lease
agreement) that might lead me to conclude
that the defendant’s
allegation to the contrary lacks
bona fides
.
[14] The plaintiffs next
allege that they “
are entitled to claim all other amounts
having regard to the provisions of the lease agreement and that the
defendant is obliged
to pay its pro rata share of water and
electricity
”. Although the plaintiffs refer to clauses 3.2
to 3.5 of the lease agreement, which allows for water and
electricity, sewer,
refuse removal and “
other levies,
imposts and charges
” to be charged on the basis of the
defendant’s “
proportionate share
”), they
fail to engage with the true nature of the defendant’s pleaded
allegations – namely that the amount of
the proportionate
shares of the water and electricity charges captured in annexure D
was incorrect. Again, the plaintiffs point
to no basis upon which it
might be concluded that this contention is not
bona fide
.
[15] While the plaintiffs
refer to the defendant’s contention regarding common area
electricity, water and sewerage consumption
charges, no attempt is
made to suggest that the dispute in this regard is not
bona fide
.
The plaintiffs simply seek to avoid the issue altogether by
contending that “
even if the defendant is not liable for
such charges
”, the amount in question is trivial.
[16] The plaintiffs
simply do not deal with the defendant’s remaining pleaded
contentions (i) that the monthly rentals were
only payable 60
calendar days after invoice; (ii) that it was not a term of the lease
agreement that the monthly rentals were payable
without deduction or
set off; (iii) regarding supervening temporary impossibility of
performance; (iv) regarding the alleged non-performance
of the
reciprocal obligation to maintain the premises; (v) regarding the
amounts charged in respect of rental of parking bays;
(vi) regarding
incorrect allocation of increases in assessment rates; (vii)
regarding charges for electricity and water consumption
for periods
when the defendant’s offices were closed; and (viii) interest
on the defendant’s deposit. There is no basis
to doubt that the
defendant’s reliance on any of these defences for its
contention that it is not in breach of its payment
obligations under
the lease agreement is not
bona fide
.
[17]
To conclude
on this aspect, although I accept that the plaintiffs’
affidavit adequately puts the
bona
fides
of the defendant’s allegation of failure to comply with the
formal requirements for the delivery of the breach notice into
dispute,
[9]
that cannot
constitute an effective basis on which to substantiate the
plaintiff’s averment that the defendant’s defence
to the
claim of ejectment is not
bona
fide
in
the absence of any allegations in the plaintiff’s affidavit
that could justify a conclusion that the defendant’s
pleaded
contention that it was not in breach of its payment obligations lacks
bona
fides
.
Conclusion and costs
[18] In view of the
conclusion that I have reached that the plaintiffs did not in their
founding affidavit comply with the requirement
in Rule 32(2)(b) to
“
explain briefly why the defence as pleaded does not raise
any issue for trial
” in the sense of substantiating their
averment that the pleaded defence is not
bona fide
, it is not
strictly necessary for me to consider the defendant’s remaining
grounds of opposition.
[19]
I do
however note that I do not consider that the plaintiffs’
monetary claim can be said to be one for a liquidated amount
in
money, as contemplated in Rule 32(1)(b). A liquidated amount in money
is an amount which is either agreed upon or which is capable
of
speedy and prompt ascertainment or, put differently, where
ascertainment of the amount in issue is a mere matter of
calculation.
[10]
[20] Had the plaintiffs’
claim been limited to payment of the arrear basic monthly rentals,
rental in respect of the balcony
and rental in respect of the
basement parking bays (all of which are pleaded by the plaintiffs
with reference to an initial rental
amount escalating at an
identified rate per annum compounded yearly on each anniversary of
the commencement date of the lease),
then I would have little
difficulty accepting that it is one for a liquidated amount in money.
[21]
However,
the speedy and prompt ascertainment of the amount owing even in these
limited respects has been rendered impossible by
the fact that the
fixed rental charges have been ‘lumped together’ in the
same account with a range of other charges,
some of which the
plaintiffs themselves contend were to be calculated by methods that
are not pleaded (even if it may be assumed
that such methods were
agreed), and others of which (such as legal fees)
[11]
in respect of which nothing at all is pleaded regarding their means
of determination. This is compounded by the fact that it appears
from
annexure D that such payments as were made by the defendant were not
allocated solely to the rental amounts but were partly
allocated to
the amounts calculated on the basis of unpleaded methodologies. This
in turn renders it impossible in my view to speedily
and promptly
calculate the amount of interest owing on the arrear rentals –
especially in circumstances where the pleaded
interest rate is a
variable one, linked to the prime overdraft rate charged from time to
time by Standard Bank. The consequence
of all of this is that I find
myself unable to identify any portion of the plaintiffs’ claim
that is capable of speedy and
prompt ascertainment with accuracy.
[22] It follows that the
application falls to be dismissed. I can see no reason why the
plaintiffs should not be ordered to pay
the defendant’s costs
on the usual scale.
[23]
The application for summary judgment is dismissed with costs.
RJ Moultrie AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
For
the plaintiffs:
JG
Dobie
Instructed
by
Reaan
Swanepoel Attorneys
For
the defendant:
BH
Steyn
Instructed
by
Schindlers
Attorneys
[1]
These ancillary charges are “
rental
in respect of the balcony
”,
“
rental
in terms of … basement parking bays
”,
“
pro-rata
rates and taxes
”;
“
electricity
and water consumption charges (as metered)
”;
“
sewer
charges
”;
and “
refuse
removal charges
”.
[2]
I note for the sake of completeness that the plaintiffs also
advance a claim for damages arising from the alleged breach
of the
lease agreement, but do not seek summary judgment in respect of this
claim.
[3]
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
2020 (6) SA 624 (WCC).
[4]
Id. paras 18 - 20.
[5]
The requirement was evidently introduced in view of the fact
that summary judgment may now only be sought after the delivery
of a
plea.
[6]
Tumileng
(above), paras 21 – 23 and 40.
[7]
Zephan
(Pty) Ltd v De Lange
2016 JDR 2263 (SCA) para 10.
[8]
I do, however, accept the plaintiffs’ contention that
acceptance of the validity of this defence would result in
a
reduction of the amount owing of only R164,821.40 (plus interest
thereon), and that this defence would not, on its own, constitute
a
complete defence to the plaintiffs’ monetary claim and
allegation of breach.
[9]
They do so by (i) referring to annexure E to the particulars
of claim and a response received thereto from the defendant
showing
that it had been received; and (ii) alleging that there is no
requirement in the lease to serve the notice on the defendant’s
chosen
domicilium
.
[10]
Botha v
Swanson & Co (Pty) Ltd
1968 (2) P.H. F85;
Tredoux
v Kellerman
2010 (1) SA 160
(C) para 18, approved by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Blakes
Maphanga Inc v Outsurance Ins Co Ltd
2010 (4) SA 232
(SCA) para 17.
[11]
cf.
Tredoux
v Kellerman
2010 (1) SA 160
(C) para 18.
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