Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1148South Africa
Kloofzicht Property (Pty) Ltd and Others v Beryl Property (Pty) Ltd (20008/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1148 (12 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 October 2023
Headnotes
by the First, Applicant representing 100% of the total issued shares of the Fifth Applicant;
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kloofzicht Property (Pty) Ltd and Others v Beryl Property (Pty) Ltd (20008/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1148 (12 October 2023)
Kloofzicht Property (Pty) Ltd and Others v Beryl Property (Pty) Ltd (20008/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1148 (12 October 2023)
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sino date 12 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
20008/22
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
12.10.23
In the matter between:
KLOOFZICHT
PROPERTY PROPRIETARY LIMITED
FIRST
APPLICANT
PETRUS
PHILIP BOSHOFF
SECOND
APPLICANT
DISIREE
BOSHOFF
THIRD
APPLICANT
THESEN
ISLAND H1 PROPRIETARY LIMITED
FOURTH
APPLICANT
BOSCAR
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
FIFTH
APPLICANT
And
BERYL
PROPERTY PROPRIETARY LIMITED
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
FARBER AJ:
[1] On 29 March 2021, and
pursuant to the conclusion by them of a written agreement, the First,
Second, Third and Fourth Applicants
(“
the sellers
”)
sold the First Applicant’s shares in and their claims against
the Fifth Applicant to the Respondent (“
the purchaser
”).
[2] Two obligations of
the purchaser under the written agreement form the focus of the
relief sought by the sellers. The first
required the purchaser
to make payment to the sellers of the sum of R65,000,000.00, which
sum was comprised of two components,
namely an amount of
R45,000,000.00 and an amount of R20,000,000.00. The former was
payable in nine equal monthly installments
of R5,000,000.00 payable
on or before the 7
th
day of each month commencing on 7
April 2021. The latter was payable in two equal monthly installments,
each in an amount of R10,000,000.00
payable on or before the 7
th
day of each month commencing on 7 January 2022. Additionally,
the purchaser undertook to pay the sellers, certain legal fees,
being
the amounts incurred and due and payable by the First Applicant to
its Attorneys for the preparation, negotiation and finalization
of
the written agreement, which amount was not to exceed R380,000.00
(excluding value added tax). This amount was required
to be
paid to the First Applicant within 30 days after the date of
signature of the written agreement.
[3] It is common cause
that the purchaser failed to comply with the obligations set out in
paragraph [2] hereof and on the 8 August
2022 the sellers instituted
motion proceedings against the purchaser for relief which was framed
in the notice of motion thus:
-
“
1.
The Respondent be directed to specifically perform its
obligations as purchaser in terms of the agreement of sale, (annexed
to the order marked Annexure “A”) to the Applicants in
respect of the sale of 1000 ordinary shares in the capital of
the
Fifth Applicant, held by the First, Applicant representing 100% of
the total issued shares of the Fifth Applicant;
2. The Respondent to
pay the amount of R65 000 000.00 (Sixty Five Million Rand),
free of any deductions or set off, within
7 days of the granting of
the Court order;
3. The
Respondent to pay the legal fees in respect of the costs incurred in
respect of the agreement of sale, within 7 days
of the granting of a
Court order;
4. Costs of the suit
on the attorney and client scale;
5. Further
and/or alternative relief.
IN THE ALTERNATIVE
1.
The Applicants seeks cancellation
of the agreement of sale and payment of damages and prejudice amount
in the amount of
R
2 787 079.00
;
(Two Millon Seven Hundred and Eighty Thousand and Seventy Nine Rand).
2.
Costs of the suite on the attorney
and client scale;
3.
Further and/or alterative relief.”
[4] The relief sought is
resisted on the following discrete grounds: -
·
The purchaser failed to make payments
under the agreement and by virtue thereof “
no
agreement exists
”
.
·
A fresh agreement or an amendment to
the existing written agreement needed to be concluded and as this did
not occur the written
agreement lapsed.
·
The written agreement made provision
for arbitration and that consequently the sellers’ recourse to
curial action was premature.
·
There was in existence a dispute of
fact which precluded the grant of relief on motion.
·
A claim for specific performance
would bear onerously on the purchaser, which would be forced to
proceed with a sale which it was
no longer interested in pursuing as
the subject matter thereof no longer held the value which it had held
when the written agreement
was concluded.
[5] I shall deal with
each of these defences in the order in which they were raised.
THERE IS NO LONGER AN
AGREEMENT BECAUSE THE PURCHASER FAILED TO EFFECT PAYMENT THEREUNDER
[6] This somewhat novel
defence cannot be sustained. The fact that the purchaser has
not complied with its obligations under
the written agreement does
not by any stretch of the imagination hold the legal consequence that
it somehow lapsed or otherwise
became non-actionable at the instance
of the sellers.
THE ABSENCE OF AN
AMENDMENT TO THE WRITTEN AGREEMENT OR THE FAILURE TO CONCLUDE A FRESH
AGREEMENT
[7] It is clear from the
papers that the purchaser was experiencing much difficulty in
discharging its payment obligations under
the written agreement.
It quite openly addressed its difficulties with the sellers who, so
it seems, were prepared to enter
into negotiations to restructure the
payment schedule thereunder. This emerges from a message which
the Second Applicant
sent to the purchaser on 18 October 2021
recording the following: -
“
To
agree on Amendments and procession of payment of the Sale of Shares
and Claims Agreement”
[8] On the following day
Ms Neveri Kambasha, a representative of the purchaser, addressed an
e-mail to Mr Gareth Osterioh, a representative
of the sellers, which
e-mail reads as follows: -
“
As
discussed earlier please kindly find below what we are working on in
order conclude the transaction.
I
will make the initial payment of R5m towards the SPA on or before the
27
th
of
October,2021.
I will also make an
additional payment towards the legal fees on the or before the 27
th
Octiober,2021.
As soon as these
payments are made I will schedule a call with both yourselves to
discuss schedules for further payments.”
[9] The intent was
undoubtedly good. However, an amendment or fresh agreement was
not concluded. The legal effect is
clear. The written
agreement previously concluded by the parties remained fully
effectual and the purchaser was required
to perform according to the
tenor thereof. This much is plain from clause 18.2 of the
written agreement which provides as
follows: -
“
No
variation, termination or consensual cancellation of this agreement
or any of its terms nor any settlement of disputes arising
out of,
pursuant to or in connection with this agreement shall be of any
force or effect unless embodied in a written document
signed by or on
behalf of the parties.”
THE REFERENCE TO
ARBITRATION
[10] There is no
evidence to suggest that a dispute arose between the parties prior to
the institution of the proceedings.
Absent that, the sellers
had no cause to refer the matter to arbitration. An arbitration
clause in all events does not oust
the jurisdiction of the Court and
I see no reason to delay the matter by suspending the proceedings
pending the outcome of an arbitration.
The issues between the
parties are clear and may easily be disposed of. The
purchaser’s reliance on the arbitration
clause under the
written agreement cannot succeed.
THE EXISTENCE OF A
DISPUTE OF FACT WHICH PRECLUDES THE GRANT OF RELIEF ON MOTION.
[11] There is in my view
no dispute of fact whatsoever. The purchaser has simply failed
to put up cognisable defences in law.
SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE
[12] The general
rule concerning specific performance has in part been formulated in
Paragraph 251 of Volume 5 Part 1 of the
Second Edition of the Law of
South Africa (footnote omitted) thus: -
“
The
general rule
As
a rule, the innocent party in the case of breach of contract is
entitled to enforce performance of the contract
in
forma specifica
,
that is, performance of precisely that which was agreed upon or
specific performance. A creditor has a
prima
facie
right
to specific performance regardless of the nature or content of the
obligation, and irrespective of whether an award of damages
would
adequately compensate him or her.
The
right to specific performance applies to both positive and negative
obligations. Specific performance of a negative obligation
takes the form of an interdict prohibiting the debtor from doing what
he or she is bound to do or an order compelling the creditor
to
remove what he or she has brought into existence contrary to his or
her duty not to act.
The
innocent party’s right to specific performance is not
absolute. The court cannot grant a decree of specific
performance
where performance has become impossible or where the
debtor is insolvent. And even where the debtor is able to carry
out
his or her side of the contract, the court has limited discretion
to refuse an order for specific performance if, in the circumstances,
this would produce a result which is unjust or contrary to legal or
public policy. Some of the different categories of exceptions
which have become recognised under this discretionary rule are dealt
with in the next paragraph….….”
[13] The learned
authors then proceed in paragraph 252 to identify the different
categories thus: -
·
“
Performance entails the
rendering of services of a personal nature
·
It would be difficult for the
court to supervise or enforce its decree
·
Damages would adequately
compensate the plaintiff
·
The cost of performance
considerably exceeds the benefit
·
Performance would severely
prejudice third parties”
[14] The purchaser
has not brought itself within the ambit of one of the recognised
exceptions. It has advanced scant
reason why an order for
payment should not issue in this case. Its sole case is that
should an order for payment be granted
it will be forced to continue
with the agreement of sale in circumstances where it no longer
desires to do so. This in my
judgment does not constitute a
proper basis upon which a discretion might be exercised in its
favor.
CONCLUSION
[15] In the result
the application must succeed. The legal fees which form the
subject matter of prayer 3 of the notice
of motion amount to
R330,434.78. I arrive at this figure by deducting the Vat
component of the amount of R380,000.00 referred
to in annexure “
PB
5
” to the founding affidavit. The written agreement
makes provision for the payment of costs “
in accordance with
the High Court tariff, determined on an attorney-and-client scale
”.
There is no reason why I should not give effect thereto.
In the result I make the
following orders:
1.
The Respondent is directed to pay the
Applicants: -
1.1.
The sum of R65,000,000.00;
1.2.
The sum of R330,434.78, to which
amount value added tax is to be added;
both payments to be made
free of deduction or set off within 7 days of the date of Judgment.
2.
The costs of the application are to
be paid by the Respondent on the scale as between attorney and own
client.
G Farber
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Date of Hearing: 9
October 2023
Date of Judgment: 12
October 2023
APPEARANCES
For the Applicants:
Adv. R. Andrews
Instructed by:
Hengst & McMaster
Inc. Attorneys
For the Respondents:
Adv. E. Prophy
Instructed by:
Jenings Inc. Attorneys
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