Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1255South Africa
George and Another v Dirk and Others (56949/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1255 (27 October 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## George and Another v Dirk and Others (56949/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1255 (27 October 2023)
George and Another v Dirk and Others (56949/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1255 (27 October 2023)
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sino date 27 October 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 56949/21
In the matter between:
DESMOND
DOUGLAS GEORGE
First
Applicant
MYRTLE
MAUREEN GEORGE
Second
Applicant
And
DIRK
CORNELIS UYS N.O.
First
Respondent
CARL
ALEXANDER GREATOREX N.O.
Second
Respondent
HESTER
SOPHIA UYS N.O.
Third
Respondent
THE
CORNELIS FAMILY TRUST
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
STRYDOM, J
Introduction
[1]
This matter
concerns
two written agreements,
both entered on or about 2 March 2018,
between the
applicants, Desmond Douglas George and Myrtle Maureen George (the
applicants), and the respondents, the Cornelis Family
Trust (the
Trust), represented by its trustees. The first written agreement, on
the face of it, is a sale agreement (the sale agreement)
in terms of
which the immovable property situated at […], Roodepoort (the
Property) was sold to the Trust for the sum of
R600 000 (Six Hundred
Thousand Rand). The second agreement was, on the face of it, a lease
agreement (the lease agreement). The
applicants also signed a power
of attorney, on or about 15 March 2018, providing the Trust’s
representatives with authority
to transfer the Property to the Trust.
[2]
The applicants
claim the sale agreement was a simulated transaction and that the
parties intended to enter into a loan agreement
in terms of which the
Trust undertook to advance a loan in the amount of R600 000 to
the applicants against the collateral
security of the Property. The
applicants seek orders declaring,
inter
alia
, the
sale agreement to be
void
ab initio
,
and compelling the Trust to attend to the transfer of ownership of
the immovable property back to the applicants, and costs.
[3]
The respondents oppose the
application on the basis that the claims have no merit, as the
agreements are what they purport to be,
and the application should be
dismissed. The respondents filed a conditional counterclaim that
should the applicants succeed in
their application then the
Applicants must repay the amount of R611 190.90, plus interest
based on the undue enrichment of
the applicants.
Background
[4]
The
applicants, an elderly married couple, purchased the Property 22
years ago. They
were the
registered owners
and
resided at the Property since then. In 2018 they ran into financial
difficulties but could not obtain a loan. They were prepared
to put
up the Property as security to obtain the loan. Eventually, through
an agent, they were introduced to the Trust which was
prepared to
advance them a loan against security of the Property. Despite the
structure of the transaction, the applicants maintain
that it was at
all relevant times their intention not to permanently relinquish
ownership of the Property but rather to put it
up as collateral
security for the repayment of the loan.
[5]
According to
the applicants the Trust was willing to provide them with the loan
but on its proposed terms. In the founding affidavit,
it was stated
that they signed the sale and lease back agreements which entitled
the Trust to perfect its security. This is also
why the power of
attorney was signed. They allege that this transaction was unlawful.
It is common cause that the loan was not
repaid.
[6]
The structure
of the loan and security, according to the applicants, was that they
would borrow R600 000 from the Trust, although
they ended up
only receiving R350 000, and to secure the loan they would sign
the sale agreement in terms of which the Property
was sold for
R600 000 to the Trust. The Trust became entitled to take
transfer of the Property, but it was never the common
intention
between the parties that the applicants would permanently divest
themselves from their ownership of the Property.
[7]
In terms of
the lease agreement, which was simultaneously entered into by the
parties, the applicants could lease the Property for
one year from
the date of transfer to the Trust. The applicants had to pay
R11 000.00 rental and R1 000.00 option fee,
totalling
R12 000 per month, from the date of transfer of the Property to
the Trust. In terms of clause 25.1 of the lease
agreement, the
applicants were provided with an option to repurchase the Property
for R700,000 during the lease period. According
to clause 25.4 should
the applicants want to exercise this option, any bond approvals and
other conditions attached to the option
must be in place and approved
before the expiry of the initial lease period so that the option is
unconditional at that time. The
terms of the repayment of the loan
are not clearly stipulated in the agreements but it appears that the
loan could have been repaid
by the applicants in the lump sum of
R700 000, having regard to clause 25.1 of the lease agreement
which provides for the
repurchase of the Property. The repurchase of
the Property would effectively have constituted the repayment of the
loan.
[8]
The applicants
averred that the Property was worth substantially more than R600 000
and attached a municipal account which
reflects a valuation of
R920 000.
[9]
As stated hereinbefore, it was
argued on behalf of applicants that the true nature of the agreement
was a loan, not a sale and that
this was a simulated transaction.
They understood it to be a loan agreement and so did the Trust. The
parties knew all along that
the written sale agreement was not
intended to be a sale agreement but rather a loan agreement. The
applicants further contend
that there
was
no valid real agreement to transfer ownership, an essential
requirement under the abstract theory of transfer for immovable
property. They deny intending to permanently relinquish ownership
despite signing transfer papers. In sum, the applicant’s
case
is that the sale agreement should be declared a simulated
transaction, as it is not a sale agreement, and that they remained
the true owners of the property.
[10]
According to
the Trust, the agreements are exactly what they purport to be, to
wit, a sale agreement, which allowed the transfer
of the Property to
it, and a lease agreement in terms of which the Trust leased the
Property to the applicants for one year from
date of transfer of the
Property to the Trust. It is denied that this transaction constituted
a loan agreement.
[11]
The Trust countered
the applicant’s version on several grounds, in the main, it was
argued that
ownership was
lawfully transferred to the Trust, but the applicants then defaulted
on paying rent entitling the Trust to cancel
the lease agreement. The
dispute between the parties, therefore, relates to what the true
intentions of the parties were when the
sale agreement was entered
into.
[12]
The respondents
contended that the applicants should have realised when it
elected
to launch motion proceedings instead of an action,
that
a material dispute of fact
whether the transaction was, as evidenced by the sale agreement, a
sale, or a simulated loan agreement. F
or
this reason, the court should dismiss the application
since
it should have been foreseen that this factual dispute was not
capable of being decided on the papers before the court
.
[13]
The applicants
disputed this and submitted that
the
matter turns on a point of law regarding simulation which could be
decided on common cause facts and does not require oral evidence.
[14]
The court must consider if this issue
can be decided on the papers before the court.
[15]
The respondents submitted that the
applicants must prove that both sides intended to conceal the truth,
not just themselves, and
that there is no evidence that the Trust
meant to disguise a loan. The Trust denies entering into a loan
agreement and says it
planned to buy the property and rent it back,
and none of the "features" raised by the applicants prove
simulation. This
can only be decided on trial.
[16]
Before a decision can be made whether
this court can decide the matter on the papers the legal requirements
for a finding that a
transaction is simulated should be restated and
considered.
[17]
In
Amler’s Precedents of Pleadings
[1]
,
the learned author
,
with
reference to case law
[2]
defines
a simulated transaction to be essentially a dishonest transaction
because the parties to the transaction do not intend
it to have the
legal effect it purports to convey. The purpose of the disguise is to
deceive by concealing the real transaction.
In such a case, substance
rather than form determines the nature of a transaction.
[18]
The
test for simulation is not simply whether there is an intention to
give effect to a contract in accordance with its terms. Invariably,
when parties structure a transaction to achieve an objective, other
than the one ostensibly achieved, they intend to give effect
to the
transaction on the terms agreed. The test requires an examination of
the commercial sense of the transaction, of its real
substance and
purpose. In
Roshcon
v Anchor Auto Body Builders,
[3]
the SCA found as follows:
“
Whether
a particular transaction is a simulated transaction is therefore a
question of its genuineness. If it is genuine
the court will
give effect to it, if not, the court will give effect to the
underlining transaction that it conceals. And
whether it is genuine
will depend on a consideration of all the facts and
circumstances surrounding the transaction”
[19]
To apply this test a court will have to
consider the intention of the parties having not only regard to the
terms of the agreements
but also the broader factual context or
surrounding circumstances in existence when these agreements were
entered into, the genuineness
of the transactions, the unusual
features of the transaction, and the commercial sense it makes. There
are indeed unusual features
detectable when these agreements are
jointly considered. Why was there a buy-back clause at all and why
did it take one year and
two months before the Property was
transferred? These aspects point to a simulation but the court
is not going to come to
a final conclusion in this regard.
Particularly, in circumstances where it appears that the applicants
appeared to have at least
agreed that transfer of the Property could
have taken place, although not permanently. I also do not make a
final decision in this
regard. In my view, the best way to
establish the facts pertaining to these issues is by way of oral
evidence and cross-examination.
Only then legal conclusions should be
reached.
[20]
It goes further. The applicant’s
alleged that the sale and lease-back structure of this transaction is
unlawful. It was submitted
that the agreements of sale and lease
together constituted impermissible credit agreements. The court was
referred to the full
court of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria, which
matter involved the same Cornelis Family Trust. The full court sat in
an appeal
from a finding of the National Consumer Tribunal.
[21]
In
this matter cited as
National
Credit Regulator v Cornelis Family Trust and 3 Others
[4]
the
Tribunal found that the agreements for the sale and leaseback of the
fixed property in that case were simulated transactions.
[22]
The matter
concerned an appeal by the trustees of the Cornelis Family Trust
against sanctions imposed by the National Consumer Tribunal
for
violating the National Credit Act. The Trust had entered into
agreements with consumers to purchase their properties below
market
value, with the consumers then leasing back the properties with an
option to repurchase. The Tribunal found these agreements
constituted
unlawful credit agreements designed to disguise loans, as the
consumers were essentially borrowing money with their
properties as
security.
[23]
The
Trust appealed mainly against the sanctions requiring them to
reimburse all consumers and appoint an auditor to identify other
possible similar credit agreements. The High Court upheld the
Tribunal's finding that the agreements violated the National Credit
Act as simulated credit transactions.
[5]
[24]
In my view evidence would be required
not only on the simulation claim but also on the possibility of a
finding of breaches of the
National Credit Act. A factual finding
after oral evidence is led is also important concerning the claim for
cancellation of the
deed of transfer and the reregistration of the
Property in the name of the applicants. This pertains to the
so-called real agreement
between the parties.
[25]
In
the case of
Legator
McKenna v Shea & Others
[6]
Brand
JA found as follows—
“
In
accordance with the abstract theory the requirements for the passing
of ownership are twofold, namely delivery – which
in the case
of immovable property is effected by registration of transfer in the
deeds office – coupled with a so-called
real agreement or
‘saaklike ooreenkoms’. The essential elements of the real
agreement are an intention on the part
of the transferor to transfer
ownership and the intention of the transferee to become the owner of
the property (see e.g.,
Air-Kel
(Edms) Bpk h/a Merkel Motors v Bodenstein en ‘n andere
1980
(3) SA 917
(A) at 922E-F;
Dreyer
and Another NNO v AXZS Industries (PTY) Ltd
supra
at para 17). Broadly stated, the principles applicable to agreements
in general also apply to real agreements. Although the
abstract
theory does not require a valid underlining contract, e.g., sale,
ownership will not pass - despite registration of transfer-if
there
is a defect in the real agreement.”
[7]
[26]
The
court was referred to the matter of
ABSA
v Moore
[8]
where
the court with reference to the facts of that matter decided that the
transaction was not a simulated transaction. The court
found that the
Moores and other victims of the so-called Brusson scam did not
disguise their contracts as something they were not.
The court
further found as follows:
“
On
the contrary: they were hoodwinked as to the nature of the
transaction. They believed them to serve some other purpose entirely.
The Brusson transactions, certainly the ones before the Free State
High Court and the court a quo, were not simulated in the sense
in
which that term is properly used. The question is whether they were
rendered invalid as a result of a fraud perpetrated on the
victim
client. And the further question is what the victim clients really
intended to achieve by contracting with Brusson and so-called
investors.”
[9]
[27]
It was further
held that –
“
The
distinction is an important one. Where a transaction pursuant to
which property is to be transferred is simulated – where
all
parties intend to disguise the true nature of the transaction –
the transferor and the transferee may well intend to
transfer
ownership. And since a valid transaction is not required for a
transfer to be effected, the transfer itself may not be
impeached.”
[10]
[28]
I am of the
view that the matter of ABSA v Moore is distinguishable on the facts
as in that matter the rights of third parties were
considered and not
immediate parties to the transaction. Clearly, a finding on the facts
is important to establish what the legal
consequences are in this
case before court. On the papers before the court, it is difficult to
ascertain the intentions of the
parties, particularly with reference
to the transfer of the Property.
[29]
Then there is
also the conditional counterclaim for unjustified enrichment.
Depending on the factual and legal findings this claim
may be
sustainable or not. The extent of enrichment will require evidence
and the
condictio
ob turpem vel iniustam causam
may
become applicable. In my view, this can best be decided by a trial
court.
[30]
I intend to
refer this matter to trial on the basis that cost to be cost in the
cause. I have considered the respondent’s
submission that a
factual dispute should have been foreseen and that the application
should be dismissed. I am of the view, that
this matter is a rather
complicated, one where a court might have decided that the intention
of the parties to this transaction
could have been inferred from the
structure and terms of the agreements standing alone. However, this
Court, decided not to draw
inferences, especially where illegalities
are averred, because it would, in my considered view, be just to
refer this matter to
trial where these issues can be properly
ventilated.
[31]
The following
order is made:
Order
1.
This matter is
referred to trial.
2.
The
Applicant’s Notice of Motion will stand as a simple summons and
the Respondent’s Answering Affidavit as a Notice
to Defend.
3.
Within 20 days
of this Order, the Applicants must file their declaration. Thereafter
the Uniform Rules of this Court would apply
in relation to filing of
further pleadings, discovery, and the conduct of the trial.
4.
Costs to be
cost in the cause.
R. STRYDOM, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicants:
Mr. L. Mbale
Instructed by: LM
and Company Attorneys Inc
For the Respondents: Mr.
C. Bornman
Instructed by:
Bester and Lauwrens Attorneys
Date of Hearing: 02
August 2023
Date of Judgment: 27
October 2023
[1]
Harms
Amlers
Precedent of Pleadings
9 ed (LexisNexis, South Africa)
[2]
See
Zandberg
v Van Zyl 1910
AD 302;
Skjelbreds
Rederi AS v Hartless (Pty) Ltd
[1982] 1All Sa15 (A), 1982 (2) SA 710 (A).
[3]
Roshcon
(Pty) Ltd v Anchor Auto Body Builders CC and others
[2014] 2 All SA 654
(SCA);
2014 (4) SA 319
(SCA) at para 27.
[4]
National
Credit Regulator v Cornelis Family Trust and 3 Others
NCT/142671/2019/140.
[5]
Id
at para 6.
[6]
Legator
McKenna INC and Another v Shea and Others
[2008]
ZASCA 144
;
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA);
[2009] 2 All SA 45
(SCA).
[7]
Id
at para 22.
[8]
Absa
v Moore [
2015]
ZASCA 171; 2016 (3) SA 97 (SCA).
[9]
Id at para 26.
[10]
ABSA v
Moore
above
n 8 para 27.
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