Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 599South Africa
Salestalk 598 (Pty) Ltd v Giant Eagle Trading CC (2021/53855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 599 (17 May 2023)
Headnotes
to be valid means of communication, it is not surprising that electronic messages have attained the same level of acceptance. This is indeed so, where it is accepted practice in this Division that in applications for substituted service, summonses and notices are sent to potential defendants or respondents via SMS's and WhatsApp messages.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Salestalk 598 (Pty) Ltd v Giant Eagle Trading CC (2021/53855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 599 (17 May 2023)
Salestalk 598 (Pty) Ltd v Giant Eagle Trading CC (2021/53855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 599 (17 May 2023)
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sino date 17 May 2023
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Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
2021/53855
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
SALESTALK
598 (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
GIANT
EAGLE TRADING CC
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Salestalk 598 (Pty) Ltd v Giant Eagle Trading
CC
(Case No: 2021/53855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 599 (17 May 2023).
JUDGMENT
WANLESS AJ
Introduction
[1]
In this matter Salestalk 598 (Pty) Ltd
("the Applicant")
seeks an order:
1.1
evicting Giant Eagle Trading CC
("the
Respondent")
from the commercial
premises situated at Erf 1504 Johannesburg Township and Erf 1510
Johannesburg Township, situated at 5 King
George Street, Johannesburg
("the Property");
1.2
directing the Respondent to pay the costs
of the application on the attorney and own client scale.
[2]
The Respondent occupies only Shop 6 of the
Property. This has been conceded by the Applicant in reply and
the Applicant indicated
that it would seek an order evicting the
Respondent only from the aforesaid Shop 6
("the
premises").
Facts
[3]
It is common cause that the Respondent took
occupation of the premises pursuant to a lease agreement
("the
agreement")
entered into between
itself, as lessee, and Alizay Properties 16 (Pty) Ltd
("Alizay"),
as lessor, on 29 June 2010.
[4]
It is further common cause that the
applicant is the successor in title of Alizay, having purchased the
property from Alizay on
30 June 2010.
[5]
In terms of the agreement:
5.1
The lease would commence on 1 July 2010 and
would expire on 30 June 2020;
5.2
The Respondent would have the right to
renew the lease for a further period of seven years, provided that it
gave the Applicant
notice, in writing, of its intention to so
exercise its option at least two calendar months prior to the expiry
of the initial
period (clause 2 of the agreement).
The dispute between
the parties
[6]
The Respondent alleges that it exercised
the option to renew and denies that the agreement has lapsed by
effluxion of time whilst
the Applicant denies that the Respondent
exercised its option to renew the agreement in terms of the
agreement.
[7]
Clause 2 of the agreement states that:
"2.1 This lease
agreement shall commence on 1 July 2010 ("the commencement
date") and shall endure until 30 June
2020 ("the initial
period").
2.2 The tenant shall
have the right to renew this lease for a further period of 7 (seven)
years, provided that it gives the Landlord
notice
in writing
of its intention to so exercise its option, at least 2 (two) calendar
months prior to the expiry of the initial period ..."
(emphasis added).
[8]
The Respondent alleges that it exercised
its option by means of sending a WhatsApp message on 28 April 2020 at
19h12 to Sam Krisno
Saha
(“Saha
”)
a director of the Applicant on cellphone number […]as well as
by sending an email to Saha’s email address
at
[…]
on
29 April 2020 at 17h03.
[9]
The Applicant contends that the notice
given by the Respondent to exercise its option to extend the
agreement is not valid because
it does not comply with the provisions
of clause 17 of the agreement. Clause 17 of the agreement reads as
follows:
"17
Domicilium Citandi et Executandi
17.1 the parties
hereto respectively choose domicilia citandi et executandi at their
respective addresses as set out in the
preamble hereto for the
delivery of all notices and services of all processes arising out of
this agreement.
17.2 any notice
delivered by one party to the other at the addresee's domicilia (sic)
citandi et executandi shall be deemed
to have been received by the
addressee on the date of the delivery."
[10]
In the premises, it is necessary for this
Court to decide (a) whether notice was given and received and (b)
whether that notice
constitutes proper notice in terms of the
agreement extending the lease. If the answer is in the
affirmative the application
must be dismissed. If not the Respondent
must be evicted from the premises.
The law
[11]
In
the matter of
Judson
Timber Co (Pty) Ltd v Ronnie Bass and Co (Pty) Ltd & Another
[1]
Margo, J dealing with a
domicilium
citandi
clause in a lease, held
[2]
the
following:
"The purpose of
choosing a
domicilium citandi
, for the giving of a prescribed
notice under a contract, is the same as it is for the service of
process, namely to relieve the
party giving the notice from the
burden of proving receipt. See the cases referred to in Loryan
(Pty) Ltd v Solarsh Tea &
Coffee (Pty) Ltd 1984(3) SA 834(W) at
847G.
The
Domicilium Citandi
clause
is therefore one for the benefit of the party giving the notice and,
in the absence of indications to the contrary in the
contract, such
party is entitled to adopt the more burdensome process of giving
direct notice to the other party and of proving
that it was received
.
There
is no indication in clause 5(j) of the lease that notice to the first
respondent could be given only at the
domicilium
citandi
and that direct notice, even if received by the first Respondent,
would not suffice."
[3]
[12]
Applicant's
Counsel relied heavily on the decision of
Cohen
& Another v Lench & Another
[4]
as authority for the proposition that where an agreement contains a
domicilium
citandi
clause that in order to be valid, a notice in terms of that agreement
must be served at the chosen
domicilium
to be effective and nowhere else. Regrettably for the
applicant, this decision by the Supreme Court of Appeal
("the
SCA")
is not authority for such a principle in our law. In that matter the
party who had to prove proper service relied upon service
at the
chosen
domicilium
but had not, as a matter of
fact
,
properly served the document thereat. Consequently, it could
not be said that the document would come to the attention of
the
other party and that effective service had taken place. The matter
is, in the premises, also distinguishable to the present
matter on
the facts.
Findings
[13]
As set out earlier in this judgment the
Respondent relies on the sending of a WhatsApp message and an email
to exercise its option
to renew the agreement.
[14]
On the application papers before this Court
it must be accepted that:
14.1
On 28 April 2020 at 19h12 the Respondent
sent a WhatsApp message to the cellular telephone of Saha;
14.2
On 29 April 2020 at 17h03 the Respondent
sent an email (from an iPhone) to Saha;
14.3
Saha is a director of the Applicant;
14.4
The contact details of Saha as set out
above are correct;
14.5
There is a bald denial (in reply) by the
Applicant that both the WhatsApp message and the email were received
by Saha and the Applicant
relies on the fact that the notice to renew
was not delivered at the
domicilium
address. The Applicant's replying affidavit is deposed to by
one Jose Alberto Mendes
("Mendes")
and no confirmatory affidavit by Saha was placed before this Court.
In the premises, the denial by Mendes that the WhatsApp
message and
the email came to Sasha's attention constitutes hearsay evidence;
14.6
The WhatsApp message and the email are
identical and read as follows:
"Good day sir.
I refer to the lease
arrangement between giant eagle trading cc and alizay properties 16
(pty) Ltd and in terms of paragraph 2.2
I on behalf of giant eagle
trading cc hereby exercise the option to renew the lease for a future
period of 7 years.
Kindly acknowledge
receipt here of "thanks
[15]
It was never disputed by the Applicant that
the form of giving notice by way of a WhatsApp message was not proper
and did not constitute
proper written notice as provided for in terms
of the agreement. In fact, the form of notice by way of a
WhatsApp message
was not raised by either party during the course of
argument before this Court. In the premises, it is not
necessary for
this Court to decide whether the transmission of the
notice to exercise the option to extend the agreement by way of
WhatsApp message
complied with the provisions of the agreement that
such be
"in writing"
.
Suffice it to say, in this modern day, where emails have long been
held to be valid means of communication, it is not surprising
that
electronic messages have attained the same level of acceptance.
This is indeed so, where it is accepted practice in
this Division
that in applications for substituted service, summonses and notices
are sent to potential defendants or respondents
via SMS's and
WhatsApp messages.
Onus
[16]
This was another issue which neither party
dealt with either in their Heads of Argument or during the course of
argument before
this Court (despite this Court raising same).
Perhaps (to give Counsel credit) this was due to the fact that same
was fairly
self-evident. Nevertheless, in the opinion of this
Court, the incidence of the onus in this matter is fundamental to
deciding
the merits thereof.
[17]
The
Applicant seeks the eviction of the Respondent from the premises
based on the fact that, on the Applicant's version, the agreement
has
expired by the effluxion of time. In opposition thereto the
Respondent relies, in support of its right to continue to occupy
the
premises, upon the fact that it has exercised its option in terms of
the agreement to extend the period of occupation in terms
thereof. By
doing so the Respondent has attracted the onus of proof.
[5]
[18]
During the course of the argument the
Applicant contended that there was no genuine dispute of fact on the
application papers before
this Court. On behalf of the Respondent it
was submitted, in the alternative and in the event of this Court not
accepting the version
as put forward on behalf of the Respondent,
that there was a genuine dispute of fact in respect of whether the
Respondent had given
notice to the Applicant to extend the
agreement. Neither party asked for the matter to be referred
for oral evidence.
The Respondent asked for the application to
be dismissed.
Conclusion
[19]
The importance of the aforegoing is that:
19.1
If there is a genuine dispute of fact this
Court may refer the matter to oral evidence or to trial;
19.2
the onus is upon the Respondent to prove,
on a balance of probabilities, that it complied with the provisions
of clause 2.2 of the
agreement.
[20]
The
bald denial of the Applicant that Saha received either the WhatsApp
message or the email from the Respondent, without any evidence
whatsoever from Saha himself and no explanation as to why such
evidence has not been placed before this Court, is highly prejudicial
to the Applicant's case when weighing up the probabilities in this
matter. On the other hand and taking into account all
of the
factors which this Court must accept and as set out earlier in this
judgment
[6]
there is nothing
improbable whatsoever about the version of the Respondent.
Moreover, it is clear therefrom that no genuine
or
bona
fide
dispute of fact exists pertaining to the issue as to whether or not
the Respondent sent the WhatsApp message and email exercising
its
option to extend the agreement and that it came to the attention of
Saha the director of the Applicant. The Applicant relied
solely on
the (incorrect) proposition that the Respondent was restricted by the
agreement to giving notice at the Applicant’s
domicilium
address and not by any other means.
[21]
In the premises, it is clear therefrom that
the Respondent has complied materially with the provisions of clause
2.2 of the agreement,
thereby exercising the right of the Respondent
to extend the agreement. Following thereon, the Respondent has
discharged the onus
incumbent upon it to prove, on a balance of
probabilities, its right to occupy the premises and the application
must be dismissed.
Costs
[22]
It is trite that costs fall within the
general discretion of the Court and that unless exceptional or
unusual circumstances exist,
costs normally follow the result.
No such facts or circumstances have been brought to the attention of
this Court. In the
premises, the Applicant should be ordered to pay
the costs of the application.
Order
[23]
This Court makes the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The Applicant is to pay the costs.
B.C. WANLESS
Acting Judge of
the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Heard
: 18 January
2023
Ex Tempore
:
17 May 2023
Transcript
:30 May
2023
Appearances
For
Applicant
:
M
Rodrigues
Instructed
by
:
Farinha
Ducie Christofi Attorneys
For
Respondent
:
K
Lavine
Instructed
by
:
Saders
Attorneys
[1]
1985 (4) SA 531(W).
[2]
At 538A-C.
[3]
Emphasis added.
[4]
2007 (6) SA 132
(SCA) at paragraph [36].
[5]
Chetty v Naidoo 1974 (3) SA 13 (AD).
[6]
Paragraph [14] ibid.
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