Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 654South Africa
Mashoro Phasha and Other v Kgosiltsile Aaron Mosweu and Others (020142/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 654 (7 June 2023)
Headnotes
with costs which costs are to be paid jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mashoro Phasha and Other v Kgosiltsile Aaron Mosweu and Others (020142/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 654 (7 June 2023)
Mashoro Phasha and Other v Kgosiltsile Aaron Mosweu and Others (020142/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 654 (7 June 2023)
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sino date 7 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 020142/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
Date:7/06/2023
In the matter between:
MASHORO PHASHA
First Plaintiff
MBALI DHLAMINI
Second Plaintiff
-and-
KGOSILTSILE AARON MOSWEU
First Defendant
BOITUMELO VICTORIA MOSWEU
Second Defendant
ABSA BANK SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Third Defendant
Neutral
Citation
:
Mashoro
Phasha and Other v Kgosiltsile Aaron
Mosweu and Others
(Case no:
020142/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 654 (07 June 2023)
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed
to be 10h00 on 07 June 2023
JUDGMENT
INGRID OPPERMAN J
[1]
The
Third Defendant (ABSA) has taken exception to Claim 2 of the
Plaintiffs’ particulars of claim on the grounds that it fails
to disclose a cause of action against ABSA.
[2]
The
cause of action against ABSA is founded upon a breach of a mortgage
loan agreement
[1]
concluded between the Plaintiffs and ABSA. They
contend that ABSA:
‘
failed to attend to the valuation of the
property, breaching the mortgage bond with the result that a much
higher bond was granted
in favour of the Plaintiff’.
[3]
The
Plaintiffs have not relied on a particular clause which places an
obligation on ABSA to value the property. This, ABSA argues,
is so
because clause 12.1 of the mortgage loan agreement provides the exact
opposite. It reads:
‘
[Absa’s] valuation of the Property is
solely for [Absa] to determine the value of
the security for [the Plaintiffs’] Mortgage Loan. [Absa’s]
Assessors may not
have physically inspected the Property and have not assessed the
condition of
the Property, structural or otherwise. The valuation is not intended
to be an
indication of the present or future value of the Property and may not
be the
same as the purchase price.’
[4]
Thus,
even if ABSA did value the property the Plaintiffs would not have
been able to rely on it because it was not intended to be
an
indication of the value of the property. The Plaintiffs argue that
ABSA had a duty to attend to the valuation of the property
as this
was necessary for the Plaintiffs to obtain property insurance based
on the replacement value of the property. The Plaintiffs
rely on
clause 15.1 which provides:
‘
Until you have paid off
your Mortgage Loan you agree to maintain:
·
Credit
life Insurance, if required, for an amount not less than the
outstanding balance on your Account;
·
Property
Insurance for all risks against which such property is normally
insured, for an amount of not less than full replacement
value of the
buildings and improvements on the Property. Our estimate of the full
replacement value is provided in your Quotation.’
[5]
The
reference to an ‘estimate of the full replacement value’
is precisely that, an estimate. It is not a valuation.
To infer from
these clauses that a valuation had to be performed is an untenable
interpretation. At best for Plaintiffs, they had
an estimate provided
in the quotation for the replacement value that they could not rely
on for market value even if it had been
provided. It will be
remembered that the Plaintiff’s complaint is that ABSA ‘failed
to attend to the valuation of the
property’.
[6]
The
Plaintiffs contend that it is an implied term of the mortgage loan
agreement that ABSA would provide it with a market related
valuation.
An implied term is one which is read into an agreement by operation
of law. There is no law which imports a term having
this effect.
Therefore, I will assume that what was meant is that there is a tacit
term to be found which could avail the Plaintiffs.
A tacit term is
tested for by means of the officious bystander test. A tacit term
cannot be found to exist in a contract if the
tacit term contended
for is at variance with the express provisions of the written
agreement. Was there a term that ABSA
would provide Plaintiffs
with a market valuation?
[7]
The
express wording provides that ABSA’s valuation is not intended
to be an indication of the present or future value of the
property.
The tacit term sought to be introduced would read: The valuation
represents the present or future value of the property.
These
propositions are diametrically opposed. No amount of admissible
evidence can cure the position at trial on the pleadings
as they
stand.
[8]
It
is clear from the express wording that the parties agreed that the
valuation does not serve as a representation of the present
or future
market value of the property. The parties regulated this feature by
agreement and any evidence sought to be introduced
to contradict the
express provisions of clause 12.1 would be inadmissible.
[9]
During
argument much emphasis was placed on the estimate provided in ABSA’s
quotation. But the 3
rd
bullet point of paragraph 1 of the quotation specifically provides:
‘
The property to be mortgaged is to be
insured for not less than the full asset value (replacement value) of
the property as it may
change from time to time.
We
encourage you to seek external advice on the value provided.
The current estimated full asset value is R2 685 700, 00.’
(Emphasis provided)
[10]
Our courts have, in the absence of a clause
such as 12.1, found that the representations relied upon (or risks
taken) by the Plaintiffs
in this case, lie between seller and
purchaser and not between credit grantor and credit receiver.
[2]
Thus, even in the absence of clause 12.1, no cause
of action would lie.
[11]
The Plaintiffs seek the following relief
against ABSA: the cancellation of the current registered mortgage
loan and the registration
of a new bond for the actual value. This
relief might conceivably have been competent had the Plaintiffs
relied on a delictual
cause of action but they have not. Their cause
of action is contractual and as such, for the moment, they would be
limited to contractual
damages which they have not sought.
[12]
In conclusion I find that the Plaintiffs
have a defective cause of action against ABSA but assuming it is
competent (which I have
already found it is not), it does not support
the relief claimed against ABSA.
[13]
I thus conclude that on every
interpretation that the particulars of claim can reasonably bear and
on every possible construction
of the particulars of claim as a
whole, no cause of action as against ABSA is disclosed.
[3]
[14]
Which brings me to the costs: ABSA argues
for a punitive costs order on the basis that prior to noting its
exception, ABSA’s
representatives afforded the Plaintiffs the
opportunity to withdraw the claim against ABSA and thereby avoid the
costs of the exception
and further litigation. This invitation and
its rejection are noted in the exception.
[15]
There was no obligation to accept the
invitation. The Plaintiffs’ case was based on what I have found
was an untenable interpretation
of the agreement, but litigants get
interpretations wrong every day. The cause of action against ABSA is
manifestly ill-founded.
The awarding of costs is a matter of judicial
discretion to be exercised having regard to all the facts of the
case. Punitive costs
are not only awarded to penalise dishonesty or
mala fides or where a party has committed a grave or blameworthy
transgression in
the conduct of the case. It can also be awarded
where a litigant was forewarned and invited to withdraw the claim and
warned that
a punitive costs order will be sought. I do not consider
that the Plaintiffs’ erroneous interpretation is deserving of a
punitive costs order.
[16]
I accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The
Third Defendant’s (ABSA’s) exception to the Plaintiffs’
particulars of claim is upheld with costs which costs
are to be paid
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
2.
The
Plaintiffs’ claim (claim 2) as against the Third Defendant
(ABSA) is set aside, and the Plaintiffs are afforded a period
of 15
(fifteen) days within which to amend claim 2, if they so wish,
failing which their action against ABSA shall be deemed dismissed
and
they shall pay the costs of the action against ABSA jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
I OPPERMAN
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg
Counsel for the Excipient (3
rd
Defendant):
Adv R Scholtz
Instructed by:
Lowndes Dlamini Incorporated
Counsel for the Respondents
(Plaintiffs):
Adv K.T Kgole
Instructed by:
MG Law Incorporated
Date of hearing:
05/22/23
Date of Judgment:
06/07/23
[1]
Paragraphs 16 and 17 of the particulars of claim.
[2]
Absa
Bank Limited v Kganakga
,
2016 JDR 0664 (GJ)
[3]
[3]
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd
,
2001 (3) SA 976
(SCA) at 997B;
CW
v GT
(867/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 23
(13 March 2023) at para [9]
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