Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 563South Africa
Banchan (Pty) Ltd v Des Naidoo and Associates and Another (8494/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 563 (25 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Commercial lease agreement – cancellation due to breach – non-payment of monthly rental – opposed eviction application – cancellation notice, following notice to remedy breach, delivered prematurely – defective and therefore invalid – cancellation of lease agreement unlawful – application for the eviction from commercial premises dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Banchan (Pty) Ltd v Des Naidoo and Associates and Another (8494/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 563 (25 May 2023)
Banchan (Pty) Ltd v Des Naidoo and Associates and Another (8494/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 563 (25 May 2023)
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sino date 25 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
8494/2023
DATE
:
25
th
May 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In the matter between:
THE
BANCHAN (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
DES
NAIDOO & ASSOCIATES
First
Respondent
DES
NAIDOO
Second
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
The Banchan v Des Naidoo & Associates and Another (8494/2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 563
(25 May 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
22 May 2023 – in a ‘virtual hearing’ as a
videoconference on
MS Teams
.
Delivered:
25 May
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 11:30 on 25 May 2023.
Summary:
Commercial
lease agreement – cancellation due to breach –
non-payment of monthly rental – opposed eviction application
–
cancellation notice, following notice to remedy breach,
delivered prematurely – defective and therefore invalid –
cancellation
of lease agreement unlawful – application for the
eviction from commercial premises dismissed.
ORDER
(1)
The applicant’s application is
dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The first
respondent is a law firm, which carries on business as such from
commercial premises situated at 108 Victoria Avenue,
Parkmore,
Sandton (‘the leased premises’), which it presently
occupies pursuant to and in terms of a written lease
agreement. The
lease agreement was concluded with the previous owner of the said
property on the 13
th
May 2021 and was to endure for a period of three years from 1 June
2021 to 31 May 2024, apparently with the option to renew, at
the sole
discretion of the lessor, for a further period of two years. The
initial rental payable in terms of the lease, exclusive
of municipal
services and related charges, was the sum of R12 650 (inclusive
of VAT) per month, and the present rental appears
to be R13 800
per month. In terms of the lease agreement, rental is payable in
advance on or before the first of each and
every month.
[2].
The second
respondent is the sole proprietor of the first respondent and he
signed the lease agreement on its behalf, in addition
to binding
himself as surety and co-principal debtor to the landlord. There is
no dispute that the applicant, as the new owner
of the property on
which the premises are situated, succeeded the previous owner as the
landlord in terms of the said agreement.
[3].
In this
opposed application, the applicant applies for an order evicting from
the leased premises the first and second respondents,
who, so the
applicant alleges, is in unlawful occupation of the said premises.
The case made out by the applicant in its founding
affidavit is that
the first respondent was, as and at the date on which this
application was issued on or about 3 February 2023,
in breach of the
provisions of the lease agreement, more particularly in that it had
since November 2022 failed to pay any rental
or other amounts due in
terms of the lease Agreement. Despite due and proper demand to the
first and second respondents, so the
applicant avers, they (the
respondents) failed and/or refused to remedy the alleged breach, thus
entitling the applicant to cancel
the lease, which was done as per
the cancellation notice dated 25 January 2023.
[4].
The breach
clauses of the lease agreement provide, in the relevant parts, as
follows: -
‘
9
Breach of lease
9.1
Should the
tenant:
9.1.1
fail to pay any amount due by it in terms of this lease on the due
date thereof or commit any other breach of
any provision of this
lease and fail to make such payment or to remedy such breach within a
period of 7 (seven) days after the
receipt of written notice to that
effect by the landlord. Should that breach be one which is not
reasonably capable of being remedied
within the said period of 7
(seven) days, payment of rental being excluded from such reason for
breach, then the tenant may be
allowed, at the landlord's sole
discretion, an additional period of 7 (seven) days to remedy such
breach; or
9.1.2
consistently breach any of the conditions of this lease in such
manner as to justify the landlord in holding that
the tenant's
conduct as inconsistent with the intention or ability of the tenant
to carry out the provisions of this lease; or
9.1.3
… … …;
Then,
and in any of such events, the landlord shall be entitled to cancel
this lease without prejudice to any other claim of any
nature
whatsoever which it may have against the tenant as a result thereof,
and without prejudice and in addition to all other
rights available
to the landlord in law.
9.2
… … …’
.
[5].
The breach
notice dated 17 January 2023, as required by clause 9.1.1 of the
lease agreement, was hand delivered on behalf of the
applicant by its
attorneys to the first respondent on 18 January 2023. The said notice
advised the first respondent that it was
in breach of the lease
agreement in that it was in arrears with the rental and the ancillary
charges payable by it in respect of
the months of November and
December 2022 and January 2023, and that such arrear rental amounted
in total to R53 519.79. The
said notice therefore demanded
payment of the said sum within seven days, failing which, so the
demand read, ‘[the applicant]
[would] cancel the lease
agreement’.
[6].
That is
exactly what the applicant purported to do by its letter dated
25 January 2023, which was hand delivered to the first
respondent on the same day. The said letter referred to the
applicant’s breach notice dated 17 January 2023 and stated
that,
the first respondent having failed to remedy its breaches of
the lease agreement ‘in that [it] [had] failed and/or neglected
to make payment of the sum of R53 519.79 or any amount
whatsoever’, the applicant was thereby cancelling the lease
agreement. I interpose here to mention that the first respondent
remedied the aforesaid alleged breach by making payment to the
applicant’s attorneys of an amount of R54 322.16 on 4
February 2023.
[7].
The difficulty
with the applicant’s case is, as contended by the respondents,
that by all accounts the cancellation notice
dated 25 January 2023
was premature and accordingly invalid. If regard is had to the
provisions of the lease agreement, then it
has to be accepted that
the breach notice was given to the first respondent at the earliest
on 19 January 2023. In that regard,
clauses 10.3.1 and 10.3.2 reads
as follows: -
‘
10.3.1
All notices delivered by hand to a domicilium address shall be deemed
to be received on the day after delivery;
‘
10.3.2
All notices delivered via electronic mail (email) to the numbers set
out in the schedule during normal office hours shall
be deemed as
received on the day following such transmission;’.
[8].
The aforegoing
translates into the fact that the breach notice from the applicant
was received by the first respondent on 19 January
2023, which, in
turn, means that the first respondent would have had seven days until
26 January 2023 within which to remedy its
breach by paying the
arrear rental. This is however one day after the day on which the
applicant, through its attorneys, sent out
the cancellation notice.
Therefore, the lease was purportedly cancelled before the expiration
of the ‘notice to remedy the
breach’ period.
[9].
In my view,
the agreement had not been lawfully cancelled. The first respondent
has quite clearly not been given a proper opportunity
to remedy the
breach. The cancellation notice was given prior to the expiration of
the period within which the first respondent
was obliged to remedy
the breach. Therefore, the lease agreement was not lawfully cancelled
and the applicant’s application
falls to be dismissed. The
point is simply that the applicant’s cancellation notice was
defective and thus invalid, because
it was given before the expiry of
the period during which the first respondent was required to remedy
its breach. They had until
26 January 2023 and the cancellation
notice was given on 25 January 2023, which was one day short of the
seven days within which
they were entitled to remedy the breach.
Therefore, a right to cancel the lease agreement had not accrued to
the applicant.
[10].
Accordingly,
in my view, the lease was not validly cancelled by the applicant.
This, in turn, means that the applicant is not entitled
to an
eviction order against the first respondent.
[11].
During the
‘virtual hearing’ of this opposed application on 22 May
2023, Mr Nowitz, Counsel for the applicant,
argued that, even if
the notice of cancellation of the lease agreement was defective for
non-compliance with clause 9.1.1 of the
lease, the applicant is still
entitled to cancel the said agreement in term of clause 9.1.2 (supra)
on the basis that the first
respondent had consistently breached some
of the conditions of the lease. There is no merit in this contention
for the simple reason
that such a case is not pleaded by the
applicant. Moreover, the evidence does not even begin to support an
averment (which is,
in any event, not made by the applicant) that the
first respondent’s alleged consistent breaches of the lease
agreement is
such as to justify the applicant concluding that the
first respondent did not have the intention or the ability to comply
with
its obligations in terms of the lease agreement.
[12].
Accordingly,
the relief sought by the applicant should be refused.
Costs
[13].
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
[1]
.
[14].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule.
[15].
I therefore intend awarding costs against
the applicant in favour of the respondent.
Order
[16].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The applicant’s application is
dismissed, with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
22
nd
May
2023 – in a ‘virtual hearing’ on
Microsoft
Teams
JUDGMENT DATE:
25
th
May
2023 – judgment handed down electronically.
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Advocate Mark Nowitz
INSTRUCTED BY:
Hirschowitz Flionis
Attorneys, Rosebank, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND RESPONDENTS:
Advocate Adriaan
Venter
INSTRUCTED BY:
Des Naidoo &
Associates, Parkmore, Sandton
[1]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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