Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 693South Africa
Junkoon NO and Others v Spar Group Limited (2022/17936) [2023] ZAGPJHC 693 (13 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 June 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 693
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Junkoon NO and Others v Spar Group Limited (2022/17936) [2023] ZAGPJHC 693 (13 June 2023)
Junkoon NO and Others v Spar Group Limited (2022/17936) [2023] ZAGPJHC 693 (13 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_693.html
sino date 13 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case No.2022/17936
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
13.06.23
In the matter between
:
JUJDEESHIN
JUNKOON NO
(in
his capacity as trustee of the
DIPULA
PROPERTY INVESTMENT TRUST)
First
Plaintiff/Applicant
RIDWAAN
ASMAL NO
(in
his capacity as trustee of the
DIPULA
PROPERTY INVESTMENT TRUST)
Second
Plaintiff/Applicant
ISAK
SMOLLY PETERSEN NO
(in
his capacity as trustee of the
DIPULA
PROPERTY INVESTMENT TRUST)
Third
Plaintiff/Applicant
BRIAN
HILTON AZIZOLLAHOFF NO
(in
his capacity as trustee of the
DIPULA
PROPERTY INVESTMENT TRUST)
Fourth
Plaintiff/Applicant
And
SPAR
GROUP LIMITED
RESPONDENT/DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1] The task before
this Court is akin to walking through the remnants of the
fire-ravaged premises, sifting through the debris
to uncover the
allegations of fact relevant on the pleadings, and unearthing
principles of law to determine whether the landlord
is entitled to
amend its particulars of claim by the introduction of a tacit term.
Background
[2] The Plaintiffs
are cited in their capacities as Trustees of the Dipula Property
Investment Trust (“
the Trust
”). The Trust
instituted action against the Defendant claiming that, on account of
the Defendant's breach of a written lease
agreement, the Trust has
suffered damages for which the Defendant is liable.
[3] The Trust as
landlord concluded a lease agreement with the Defendant in respect of
premises situated at Bram Fisherville,
Soweto. The lease agreement
stipulated that the leased premises would be used to operate a
supermarket and a liquor store.
[4] The lease
commenced on 1 May 2018 and would have endured for a period of 10
years if it were not for a fire which damaged
the premises to such an
extent that the Defendant was unable to utilise the leased premises
for the purposes for which it was let.
[5] The lease
agreement expressly stipulated that in the event of the
destruction of or damage to the leased premises
during the first 10
years of the lease agreement, then the tenant would not be liable for
rental in respect of the period calculated
from the date of such
destruction or material damage until the leased premises had been
reconstructed and occupation thereof given
to the tenant (“
the
damage or destruction clause
”).
[6] In addition,
the damage or destruction clause placed an obligation on the landlord
to proceed as expeditiously as reasonably
possible with the
reconstruction and restoration of the premises.
[7] The Defendant
approached the Trust after the fire damaged the leased premises, and
requested alterations to be done in
accordance with its own
specifications and requirements. It is during the process of
reconstructing and reinstating the leased
premises that the dispute
arose.
The proposed
amendment
[8] The Trust’s
instituted this action against the Defendant in May 2022. The
Defendant considered that the particulars
of claim were vague and
embarrassing and / or lacked the necessary averments to sustain a
cause of action against it and accordingly
served a notice in terms
of Rule 23(1) of the Rules of Court on the Trust.
[9] The Trust
thereafter elected to deliver a notice of its intention to amend its
particulars of claim in various respects,
to which the Defendant
objected.
[10] The principal
basis of the Defendant's objection is that: -
10.1. the amendment
renders the particulars of claim excipiable because the Trust sought
to introduce a tacit term to the lease
agreement which was in
conflict with the written terms thereof; and
10.2. the Trust by the
amendment intended to introduce a verbal agreement into the lease
agreement that
sans
the tacit term would invoke the ‘non
variation‘ clause.
[11] During
argument the question to be decided by this Court crystallised into
whether the tacit term proposed by the Trust
could on the papers
before me, without resort to evidence of the surrounding
circumstances present when the lease agreement was
concluded, be
imported to the lease agreement. Mr.
_
Dobie
for the Trust and Mr. van Niekerk for the Defendant agreed that this
issue was dipositive of the application and that costs
should follow
the event.
The tacit term
[12] The Plaintiff
in its notice of intention to amend sought to introduce the following
tacit term to the agreement: -
"
8. It was a
tacit term of the lease agreement that:
8.1 the
Defendant would do all things necessary to assist the Plaintiffs to
finalise the reconstruction and restoration.
8.2 in the event of
the Defendant being required to take any steps to ensure that the
Plaintiff was able to finalise the reconstruction
and restoration,
the Defendant would do so within a reasonable time.
".
[13] The Defendant
argues that the tacit term contradicts the express terms of the lease
agreement. I have already referred
to the express term above but it
would be prudent to repeat it here in its exact terms: -
“
22 DAMAGE
OR DESTRUCTION OF PREMISES
221. In the
event of the destruction of or damage to the PREMISES during the
first 10 (TEN) years of this lease reckoned from
the COMMENCEMENT
DATE thereof to such an extent that the TENANT is unable to use the
PREMISES for the purposes for which it is
let:
22.1.1 the
TENANT shall not be liable for rental in respect of the period
calculated from the date of such destruction or
material damage until
the PREMISES has been reconstructed and occupation given to the
TENANT;
22.1.2 the
LANDLORD shall proceed as expeditiously as reasonably possible with
the reconstruction and restoration of the PREMISES.
”
The pleadings
[14] The Trust in
its particulars of claim pleads the terms of the lease agreement
relevant to the action, including the damage
and destruction clause
word for word, and adds the following subparagraphs:
“
7.12 In the
event of destruction of or damage to …..
7.12.3
notwithstanding the provisions of the lease, the shopping centre and
the premises would be rebuilt substantially to
the same design and
standard as the original structures and the Defendant would be given
reasonable notice to commence trading
in the rebuilt premises;
7.12.4 if the
Defendant fails to pay any amount due to the Trust in respect of
rental within 14 days after date of delivery
to the Defendant of a
written notice from the Trust calling upon it to do so or if either
the Trust or the Defendant commits a
material breach of any other of
their respective obligations in terms of the agreement and fails to
remedy such breach within 30
days after delivery of written notices
from the aggrieved party to the defaulting party calling upon it to
do so, the aggrieved
party giving such notice shall be entitled to
cancel the lease.
”
The law
[15]
A tacit term is derived
from the mutual intention of the parties involved.
[1]
This can be inferred from the contract's explicit terms, the
circumstances surrounding the conclusion of the contract, and
how the
parties behaved afterwards.
[16]
The passage in
Alfred
McAlpine & Son
in
which Justice Corbett explains the difference between tacit and
implied terms was footnoted
in
the minority judgment of Justice Froneman in the seminal decision of
the Constitutional Court in
Beadica
231 CC and other v Trustees, Oregon Trust and others
[2]
where the learned judge speaks of the concept of ‘hypothetical
consent’ in relation to tacit terms, as follows: -
“
[135]
This process of locating contractual liability outside the subjective
consent of the contracting parties is continued when
the content of
contractual obligations is determined. The prime examples are terms
implied by law. But even so-called 'tacit
terms' (unspoken
terms that the parties would presumably have agreed to, if asked) are
not actual; they, too, may be 'imputed'.
This kind of hypothetical
consent is justified by a finding by a judge that the parties would
have agreed to that term if they
had been made aware of its possible
inclusion at the time of concluding the contract. But they did not.
The practical upshot is
that the judge makes that part of their
contract for the parties.
”
[17]
A tacit term operates
under the same principles as an express term and carries the same
legal weight. It can be actual or imputed.
In
Wilkens
NO v Voges
[3]
Justice of Appeal Nienaber said:-
“
A tacit term,
one so self-evident as to go without saying, can be actual or
imputed. It is actual if both parties thought about
a matter which is
pertinent but did not bother to declare their assent. It is imputed
if they would have assented E about such
a matter if only they had
thought about it - which they did not do because they overlooked a
present fact or failed to anticipate
a future one. Being unspoken, a
tacit term is invariably a matter of inference. It is an inference as
to what both parties must
or would have had in mind. The inference
must be a necessary one: after all, if several conceivable terms are
equally
plausible, none of them can be said to be
axiomatic. The inference can be drawn from F the express
terms and
from admissible evidence of surrounding circumstances. The
onus to prove the material from which the inference is to be drawn
rests
on the party seeking to rely on the tacit term. The practical
test for determining what the parties would necessarily have agreed
on the issue in dispute is the celebrated bystander test. Since one
may assume that the parties to a commercial contract are intent
on
concluding a contract which functions efficiently, a termGwill
readily be imported into a contract if it is necessary to
ensure its
business efficacy; conversely, it is unlikely that the parties would
have been unanimous on both the need for and the
content of a term,
not expressed, when such a term is not necessary to render
the contract fully functional.
”
[18]
The "bystander"
test is a practical way to determine what the parties would have
agreed on. It asks: what would the parties
have said if a bystander
had asked them what would happen in a certain case during the
contract negotiations?
[4]
If
both parties would have said, "Of course, so-and-so; we didn't
bother to say that, it's too obvious", then that outcome
is
considered to have been intended by the parties and a term to that
effect is implied in the contract. In other words, the parties'
common intention must have been such that a reference to the
hypothetical situation would have prompted them to quickly and
unanimously
assert the tacit term to govern it.
[19]
If the suggested term is
necessary for the contract to work effectively, it's likely that the
parties had the term in mind or would
have agreed to it if the
bystander had asked the hypothetical question.
[5]
On the other hand, if the term isn't necessary for the contract to
function fully - if it would have just been reasonable, sensible,
or
convenient for the parties to have adopted it - it doesn't
necessarily mean that the parties had it in mind or would have agreed
on it if the situation that makes it desirable had been brought to
their attention. It's obvious that a term can only be implied
if it
can be formulated in substantially one way only. If there's
difficulty in formulating the term or doubt about its scope,
the
Courts won't imply it.
Application of the
law
[20] The parties to
the lease agreement considered the damage or destruction of the
leased premises, and the consequences
thereof. Hence the inclusion of
the damage or destruction clause into the written lease agreement.
[21] This is
not
a case
where the Trust and the Defendant considered the relevant
matter but didn't express their agreement. Both parties thought about
a matter which is pertinent and declared their assent.
[22] The parties
actually considered the relevant matter and foresaw the situation
where, due to damage or destruction whether
by fire or otherwise, the
Defendant would not be able to occupy the leased premises. The
parties, after considering the relevant
matter, included an express
term into their written agreement – the damage or destruction
clause. This clause signifies the
common intention of the parties and
it is thus not necessary to determine their hypothetical consent.
[23] The parties
agreed that the sole obligation to restore and reconstruct the leased
premises would fall on the Trust, and
thus there is no room to import
a tacit term into the lease agreement imposing an obligation on the
Defendant to assist the Trust
in the reconstruction and restoration
of the leased premises.
[24] The Trust was
obliged to proceed as expeditiously as reasonably possible with the
reconstruction and restoration of the
leased premises without the
assistance of the Defendant.
[25] A Court
doesn't easily import a tacit term. It can't make contracts for
people or add to the parties' agreement just
because it seems
reasonable. The Court must be convinced that the parties intended to
contract on the basis of the suggested term.
[26] Mr. Dobie
forcefully submitted that it was the common (but unexpressed)
intention of the parties to impose an obligation
on the Defendant to
expeditiously take occupation of the leased premise (and therefore to
cooperate with the Trust in the reconstruction
of the leased
premises) in order to comply with an express term of the lease to
keep the premises open for business during the
hours stipulated in
the agreement. I disagree. The parties considered the situation which
eventuated here and expressly agreed
to clothe the Trust with the
sole responsibility to reconstruct the premises ‘…
as
expeditiously as reasonably possible’.
[27] In any event a
term requiring the Defendant to assist the Trust with the
reconstruction of the damaged premises is neither
necessary nor does
it give business efficacy to the agreement.
[28] I therefore
find that the parties actually considered the relevant matter and
foresaw the situation where the Trust could
not give the Defendant
beneficial occupation of the leased premises as it was damaged or
destroyed. The parties thought about this
scenario and declared their
assent in the express wording of the damage or destruction clause.
Conclusion
[29] In the
circumstances, the Court concludes that the tacit term cannot be
imported into the lease agreement.
[30] Accordingly, I
refuse the amendment.
Order
In consequence, the Court
makes the following order:-
1. The application
is dismissed with costs.
R. SHEPSTONE
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Heard
:
06 June 2023
Judgment
:
13 June 2023
Appearances
For
Applicant
:
Adv
J G Dobie
Instructed
by
:
Reaan
Swanepoel Attorneys
For
Respondent
:
Adv
D Van Niekerk
Instructed
by
:
Hammand
Pole Attorneys
[1]
Alfred
McAlpine & Son
(
Pty
)
Ltd
v Transvaal Provincial Administration
[1974]
SA 506 (A).
[2]
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC) at [135] and footnote [259].
[3]
[1994] ZASCA 53
;
1994
(3) SA 130(A)
at 136 H-J.
[4]
Consol
Ltd t/a Consol Glass v Twee Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another
2005 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at
[50] – [51],
and
City
of Cape Town (CMC Administration) v Bourbon-Leftley and Another NNO
2006
(3) SA 488
(SCA) at
[19] – [21].
[5]
Wilkens
NO v Voges
[1994] ZASCA 53
;
1994
(3) SA 130(A)
at 137.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Junkoon N.O. and Others v van den Berg and Others (2020/33237) [2022] ZAGPJHC 351 (24 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 351High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Kunkoon NO and Others v Tsholoba (Pty) Ltd and Another (2022/26671) [2025] ZAGPJHC 247 (11 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 247High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
N.N.K.K v V.W.K (108650/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 896 (2 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 896High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African Securitization Program (RF) Limited and Others v Maxidor SA (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/8473) [2024] ZAGPJHC 669 (25 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 669High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Lucic (2022/6034) [2023] ZAGPJHC 768 (6 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 768High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar