Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 723South Africa
Anphil Investments (Pty) Ltd v OGM Mining Supplies CC (2022-6275) [2023] ZAGPJHC 723 (22 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Anphil Investments (Pty) Ltd v OGM Mining Supplies CC (2022-6275) [2023] ZAGPJHC 723 (22 June 2023)
Anphil Investments (Pty) Ltd v OGM Mining Supplies CC (2022-6275) [2023] ZAGPJHC 723 (22 June 2023)
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sino date 22 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022-6275
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
22.06.23
In the application by
ANPHIL INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
OGM MINING SUPPLIES
CC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Order
[1] In this matter
I made the following order on 20 June 2023:
1.
Directing
the respondent to restore to the applicant possession of Portion 1 of
Erf 279, Cason Extension 2 Township, Province of
Gauteng, identified
by letters A-B-C-D-A on the diagram attached as “X”
herewith, within thirty days of the date of
this order;
2.
In
the event that the respondent fails to comply with the order, the
Sheriff is authorised to take control of the said Portion,
evict the
respondent, and to restore possession to the applicant;
3.
The
applicant is authorized when in possession of the Portion to demolish
the wall identified by A-B on the diagram that separates
Portion 1
and the Remainder of Erf 279;
4.
The
respondent’s counter-application is dismissed;
5.
The
respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs of the
application and counter-application.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
Introduction
[3] The applicant
is the owner of Erf 279, Cason Ext 2 Township, Province of Gauteng.
This application is concerned with Portion
1 identified by the
letters A-B-C-D-A on the diagram attached herewith as annexure “
X”
.
Portion 1 forms part of Erf 279.
[4] Portion 1 is
also identified in the papers as “Portion X” as shown on
a photograph that forms part of the
papers:
In limine
:
The authority of the deponent of the founding affidavit
[5] The respondent
alleged that the deponent to the applicant’s founding affidavit
was not properly authorised.
[6]
The
respondent never invoked the provisions of Rule 7 of the Uniform
Rules.
[1]
There is no merit in
the contention that the applicant’s deponent did not have
authority. The deponent is identified as the
Managing Director of the
applicant and I am satisfied that as the Managing Director the
applicant is indeed properly represented
before the Court.
The merits
[7] The respondent
purchased Erf 268 from the applicant in the year 2002. Erven 268 and
279 share a common boundary indicated
by the letter A-D on the
diagram referred to above.
[8] At the time of
the sale both parties were under the impression that Portion 1 formed
part of Erf 268. Erf 268 was transferred
to the respondent and the
description in the deed of transfer correctly reflects the extent of
the property as 2 791m².
[9]
The deed of
transfer forms paper of the papers but the deed of sale did not find
its way into the papers. Neither party has a copy.
This is
unfortunate, and it is therefore not possible to refer to the
description of the property in the deed of sale. The size
of the
property is accurately reflected in the deed of transfer and one is
left to speculate about the description in the deed
of sale. Be that
as it may, the real rights that were transferred are accurately
reflected in the deed of transfer. It follows
that ownership of Erf
268 passed from the applicant to the respondent.
[2]
The proposed
subdivision of Erf 279 and the consolidation of Portion 1 with Erf
268
[10]
During 2003
or 2004 the parties became aware of the true boundaries of Erf 268.
It was then envisaged that Erf 279 be subdivided
and that Portion 1
be consolidated with Erf 268. Town Planners were appointed to advise
on the subdivision and consolidation. The
deponent to the answering
affidavit signed
[3]
a special
power of attorney appointing the Town Planners in July 2004 and land
surveyor diagrams were prepared that same year.
[11] The respondent
knew of the error by July 2004 and there is evidence that the
applicant knew already in July 2003.
[12] The
applicant’s evidence is that such a consolidation would have
required an agreement that complied with
section 2
of the
Alienation
of Land Act, 68 of 1981
. The respondent argues however that no such
agreement would have been necessary as the consolidation would have
been done in fulfilment
of the applicant’s obligations in terms
of the deed of sale.
[13] The failure to
put up the deed of sale is fatal to this argument. The obligations of
the parties as contained in the
deed of sale are not known. It is
also common cause that the deed of sale provided for the sale of Erf
268 as it then existed,
and not Erf 268 as consolidated with a
portion of Erf 279. This follows from the fact that neither party
knew of the true boundaries
of Erf 268 when the deed of sale was
signed.
[14] Surprisingly,
the respondent’s deponent expresses his surprise at the fact
that the consolidation process was never
finalised. He states in
paragraph 4.7 of the answering affidavit: “
It would now
appear as if the applicant failed to register the approved
consolidation”
. It is incomprehensible that consolidation
could have occurred without the knowledge of the respondent as owner
of the property.
It is then stated that the “
effect of the
approved consolidation would have been to transfer the whole property
as initially pointed out to the”
respondent by the
applicant.
[15] It is also
common cause that no subsequent agreement was entered into that
provided for subdivision and consolidation,
or that provided for the
transfer of Portion 1 to the respondent. The applicant testifies that
the requirements of the local authority
could not be met and for this
reason the envisaged subdivision and consolidation was not
implemented.
[16]
On 2 March
2022 the parties entered into a second
[4]
written agreement. The parties noted that the applicant had sold Erf
270 (a property adjacent to both Erf 268 and Erf 279) and
Erf 279,
and that it was a condition of that sale and of the mortgage bond
obtained by the purchaser that the borderline fence
between Erf 270
and Erf 268 as well as the borderline fence between Erf 268 and Erf
279 be restored to “
its
original position”
.
It was then recorded that the respondent had agreed to “
cooperate
and attend to the necessary”
.
[17]
The parties
then agreed that the respondent “
undertakes
to cooperate and allow (
sic
)
restore the Seller
[the
applicant]
(
sic
)
to the borderline fence between Erf 270
[5]
and 268
as well as the borderline fence between Erf 268 and Erf 279 to its
original position”
.
[18] The agreement
was drawn haphazardly and is by no means a model of clarity. What is
clear however is that the respondent
agreed to cooperate and to
restore the borderline fence between Erf 268 and 279 to the original
position as it was before Portion
1 was separated from the remainder
by means of a wall erected by or for the respondent. No other
interpretation of this second
agreement is possible.
[19] The
respondent’s deponent now however denies that the agreement was
unequivocal. The deponent says that: “
Co-operate meant that
Respondent would also be compensated for its losses and that it would
also benefit in some manner from the
restoration of the border.”
He then made proposals to the applicant in full and final
settlement of the matter and he did so two days later, on 4 March
2022.
This was rejected by the applicant and the respondent now
regarded the agreement as terminated.
[20] There is
nothing in the agreement of March 2022 that gives rise to the
interpretation that a second agreement on compensation
was going to
be entered into.
[21] It would seem
that both parties regarded the March 2022 agreement as terminated as
the applicant did not rely on it in
the founding affidavit. For this
reason the order made above is not based on this agreement but on the
applicant’s ownership.
The other defences
[22] The respondent
relies on a number of defences also relevant to the
counter-application, namely –
22.1 An intentional or
mistaken misrepresentation of the boundaries of Erf 268;
22.2 The applicant
created the impression that it would consolidate Portion 1 with Erf
268;
22.3 The applicant is
estopped from claiming Portion 1 because of the instructions given to
the land surveyors;
22.4 The respondent is
entitled to the diminution in value of the Erf 268 without Portion 1;
22.5 The respondent is
entitled to be compensated for the wall it built between points A and
B on the diagram referred to.
22.6 The applicant would
be enriched if the application were to succeed.
[23] There is no
evidence of an intentional or negligent misrepresentation that
induced the contract. The respondent’s
argument that an
intentional misrepresentation must be inferred from the fact that the
applicant is unable to explain why it erred
in respect of the
boundaries can not be accepted.
[24]
The
misrepresentation of the boundaries was, on the available evidence,
not a intentional (i.e. fraudulent) misrepresentation. An
innocent
misrepresentation which induced a contract does not give rise to a
claim for damages but may be relied upon to avoid the
contract.
[6]
A negligent or intentional misrepresentation may give rise to a claim
for damages and may of course also be relied upon to avoid
a
contract.
[25] The reliance
on enrichment as defence is misplaced. It seems to be related to the
counterclaim for what appears to be
a price reduction.
[26] There is
similarly no merit in the averment that the applicant “created
an impression” that she would consolidate
Portion 1 with Erf
268 and is therefore estopped from claiming its property. No such
“impression” appears from the
papers and nor is there any
allegation that the respondent then acted to its detriment when the
“impression” was created.
The
counter-application
[27] The respondent
counter-applies for an order that the applicant be ordered to
27.1 complete the
approved consolidation process in respect of the property as depicted
in the Surveyor General Diagram No 109/2005,
27.2 alternatively that
the applicant be ordered to compensate the respondent a fair and
reasonable market-related value for the
disputed portion of the
property as determined by a sworn Property Valuator appointed by the
Court,
27.3 that the applicant
be ordered to erect a wall “
exactly similar to the current
walls surrounding the disputed portion of the property”
,
and
27.4 that the applicant
“
be ordered to pay the respondent an amount of R250 000.00
as compensation for the wall build by the respondent around portion
X
of the property”
.
27.5 I deal with each
counterclaim in turn.
The counterclaim
based on the implementation of the consolidation
[28] The
consolidation process was never approved and can not be implemented.
[29] There is no
agreement that complies with the provisions of
Section 2
of the
Alienation of Land Act, 68 of 1981
, in terms of which the respondent
can lay claim to the transfer of Portion 1.
[30] The respondent
did not identify any basis for this counterclaim
The counterclaim
based for compensation
[31]
This
counterclaim seems to be based on damages or the
actio
quanti minoris
.
[7]
The respondent’s counterclaim for compensation is not
quantified and no application was made to refer the matter to trial
or oral evidence for the quantification of any such claim. This is
also rather academic as the claim would have arisen by the latest
in
2004 and 2005, and would have prescribed three years later.
The counterclaim
for the erection of a new wall
[32] This
counterclaim is seems to be related to an improvement of Erf 279 but
it is not clear what the legal basis of the
claim is and where the
new wall is to be built.
The counterclaim
for payment of R250 000
[33] This
counterclaim relates to the expenditure of the respondent on the wall
surrounding Portion 1.The claim is not quantified.
The wall was
erected in 2010, long after the respondent became aware of the
incorrect boundaries and knew that subdivision and
consolidation
would be required for the respondent to become owner of Portion 1.
While it is so that the wall was erected at the
expense of the
respondent, the respondent also had the use of the wall and of the
whole of Portion 1 during the intervening thirteen
years.
[34]
The legal
basis of the claim is probably unjustified enrichment or damages. The
words of Van Heerden J in
FHP
Management (Pty) Ltd v Theron NO and Another
[8]
come to mind:
“
The
respondents have not adduced sufficient evidence to provide that the
purported expenditure has in fact been incurred - indeed,
the only
'evidence' of such expenditure is a list of expenses annexed to the
respondents' answering affidavit. In the absence of
any contractual
agreement between the parties in respect of the purported
expenses, the respondents have not provided any
evidence to show that
the alleged 'improvements' to the property were either necessary or
useful, or that such alleged improvements
have maintained or enhanced
the market value of the property (see, in this regard, Scott 'Lien'
in Joubert (ed) The Law of
South Africa vol 15 1st re-issue
(1999) in para 54 and the authorities cited by this
writer)”
Prescription of the
respondent’s claim
[35] The
respondent’s claims arose in 2003 or 2004 (or perhaps 2010 in
respect of the wall) when the error was discovered.
Section 12(1)
to
(3) of the
Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
provides as follows:
When prescription begins
to run
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsections (2), (3), and
(4), prescription shall commence to run as soon as the debt
is due.
(2)
If the debtor wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of
the existence of the debt, prescription shall
not commence
to run until the creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.
[36] On the common
cause facts the inference that any such claim was prescribed by 2008
(or perhaps 2013 in respect of the
wall) is irresistible. The
respondent argues that that prescription only started running when
the applicant launched the application
and that the damages will only
be suffered in the future.
[37]
There is no
merit in this submission. The respondent knew in 2004 that the
property transferred to it albeit in extent 2 791m²
as
reflected in the deed of transfer, was smaller than envisaged by both
parties when the boundaries were pointed out. At that
point in time
the respondent had the facts at its disposal to claim damages or a
reduction in purchase price. Facts not at its
disposal could have
been acquired by exercising reasonable care.
[9]
[38] The
respondent’s deponent alleges that he first learned of the
incorrect boundaries when a letter dated 23 July
2019 was received
from the applicant’s attorney. The date of 23 July 2019 is
important as if one assumed for the sake of
argument that
prescription only began running when the emailed letter was received
on that date, then the claim would have prescribed
on 22 July 2022
before the counter-application was brought. The applicant’s
claim is not based on the contract of sale and
the respondent can not
(and indeed does not seek to) rely on
section 13(2)
of the
Prescription Act.
Conclusion
[39] For the
reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
22 JUNE 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
I
OSCHMAN
INSTRUCTED
BY:
TUCKERS
INC
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
P
A WILKENS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STRYDOM
ATTORNEYS (BOKSBURG)
WRIGHT
ROSE INNES ATTORNEYS (JOHANNESBURG)
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
25
MAY 2023
DATE
OF ORDER:
20
JUNE 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
22
JUNE 2023
[1]
See
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992 (2) SA 703 (W).
[2]
See
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA) para 22.
[3]
The respondent’s deponent stated that he first became aware
of the incorrect boundaries in 2019 but it is obvious from
the fact
that he participated in the appointment of Town Planners in 2004
that he knew in 2004 that Portion 1 did nor form part
of Erf 268.
Had it formed part of Erf 268 there would have been no need to
subdivide Erf 279 and consolidate Portion 1 with Erf
268.
[4]
The first written agreement was the deed of sale.
[5]
The fence between Erf 268 and 270 was dealt with and does not
feature in this application.
[6]
See
Cockcroft
v Baxter
1955 (4) SA 93 (C).
[7]
See
Le
Roux v Autovend (Pty) Ltd
1981
(4) SA 890
(N),
[1981] 2 All SA 466
(N) and
Labuschagne
Broers v Spring Farm (Pty) Ltd
1976
(2) SA 824 (T), [1976] 1 All SA 181 (T).
[8]
FHP
Management (Pty) Ltd v Theron NO and Another
2004 (3) SA 392
(C) 405F.
[9]
See also Loubser
Extinctive
Prescription
1996
p 101 to 105. See also
Van
Staden v Fourie
1989
(3) SA 200
(A) 214H-215H.
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