Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1331South Africa
D.K and Others v C.F (26567/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1331 (20 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Compromise agreement – dispute of fact relating to a term of the alleged agreement – plaintiffs deny particular term – not expressly discussed during settlement meeting – for a contract to be considered valid and binding, there must be consensus ad idem between the contracting parties – subjectively no meeting of the minds on this aspect – not disputed that the plaintiff, in his mind, did not agree to term – therefore, parties not ad idem – no settlement agreement concluded.
Judgment
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## D.K and Others v C.F (26567/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1331 (20 November 2023)
D.K and Others v C.F (26567/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1331 (20 November 2023)
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sino date 20 November 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
26567/2021
DATE
:
20
th
November 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In the matter between:
K
,
D
First
Plaintiff
F
,
D M
Second
Plaintiff
F
,
I
Third
Plaintiff
And
F
,
C
Defendant
Neutral Citation
:
K and Others v F (26567/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ----
(20
November 2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
: 02 and 03
November 2023 – on 02 November 2023 the trial was conducted in
open court and on 03 November 2023 the matter was
heard ‘virtually’
as a videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
Delivered:
20
November 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 20 November 2023.
Summary:
Compromise agreement – dispute of fact
relating to a term of the alleged agreement – plaintiffs deny
particular term
– not expressly discussed during settlement
meeting – for a contract to be considered valid and binding,
there must
be consensus
ad idem
between the contracting parties – subjectively no meeting of
the minds on this aspect – not disputed that the plaintiff,
in
his mind, did not agree to term – therefore, parties not
ad
idem
– no settlement agreement
concluded.
ORDER
(1)
In terms of Uniform Rule of Court 33(4),
the ‘Special Defence’ of settlement and compromise raised
by the defendant
in paragraphs 25A, 25B, 25C, 25D and 25E of her
amended plea (‘the separated issue’), was separated from
any and/or
all other disputes between the parties.
(2)
At the commencement of the trial on
Thursday, 02 November 2023, it was directed and ordered that the
matter would proceed to trial
only on ‘the separated issue’,
with the hearing relating to the remaining disputes between the
parties postponed
sine die
.
(3)
The defendant’s special defence of
settlement / compromise fails and it is declared that the dispute
between the parties has
not been settled / compromised by a
settlement agreement concluded between them on 02 July 2023, as
alleged by the defendant.
- The
defendant shall pay the plaintiffs’ costs relating to the
separated issue, including the costs consequent upon the employment
of two Counsel, one being a Senior Counsel.JUDGMENT
The
defendant shall pay the plaintiffs’ costs relating to the
separated issue, including the costs consequent upon the employment
of two Counsel, one being a Senior Counsel.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The first, the second and the third
plaintiffs are all related. The second and the third plaintiffs are
husband and wife and the
first plaintiff is their son-in-law, married
to their daughter. The defendant used to be married to Glen F
(‘Glen’),
the son of the second and the third plaintiffs,
but was divorced from him by a decree of divorce of this court on 08
June 2021,
after what appear to have been protracted and somewhat
acrimonious divorce proceedings. On 29 July 2021 – less than
two months
after the divorce was granted – the plaintiffs
caused summons to be issued in this action against the defendant,
claiming
R1 million from her, which they allege is in respect of
monies lent and advanced by them to the defendant at her special
instance
and request during July 2012.
[2].
The
claims by the plaintiffs are vigorously defended by the defendant,
who denies liability
inter
alia
on the basis that the loans in favour of her and Glen were in
contravention of the provisions of the National Credit Act
[1]
(‘the NCA’) and therefore void
ab
initio
.
As regards the alleged loan for R1 350 000 from the second
and the third plaintiffs, the defendant denies liability
for same as,
according to her, there was no loan agreement concluded with her.
[3].
On Sunday, the 2
nd
of July 2023, a meeting was held at the offices of the attorneys of
the plaintiffs, which was attended, on behalf of the plaintiffs,
by
the second plaintiff and the plaintiffs’ attorney, Mr Darryl
Ackerman, and, on behalf of the defendant, by her attorneys,
Mr
Swartz and a Ms Hodes. Also present at the meeting was Advocate
Jonathan Hoffman, who acted in a mediatory role, and who is
in fact
the one who suggested to the parties that they should convene a
meeting to see if they could find a resolution to the dispute
between
them. He had also offered to try and mediate as far as he could, as
the parties and/or their legal representatives are
all known to him.
[4].
At the said meeting, so the defendant
claims, the dispute between the parties in this action, as well as
other related disputes,
were settled on the basis that the plaintiffs
would be paid in total the sum of R600 000 and that the
aforesaid settlement
sum would be paid, as a first charge, from the
proceeds of the sale of the matrimonial home of Glen and the
defendant, whereafter
the nett proceeds would be divided equally
between Glen and the defendant. The nett effect of this is that the
agreed settlement
amount, as per the defendant, would be paid half by
the defendant and half by Glen. This is denied by the plaintiffs who
avers
that the agreement was that the R600 000 would be paid
from the defendant’s portion of the proceeds of the sale of the
house.
[5].
The defendant is adamant that the
agreement, as alleged by her, was reached and she accordingly raised
a ‘special defence’
of compromise in her amended plea,
the relevant portion of which reads as follows: -
‘
25A.
On 3 July 2023 and at the offices of the plaintiffs' attorneys,
Darryl Ackerman Attorneys, the plaintiffs, duly represented
by the
second plaintiff, and the defendant, duly represented by Ms Gabriella
Hodes and Mr D Swartz of the Defendant's attorneys
concluded an oral
agreement ("the settlement agreement").
25B.
The express terms of the settlement agreement were as follows:
-
25B.1
From the proceeds of the sale of the immovable property being
Portion Number 10 of Erf [...] in the Township of Birdhaven,
held
under title deed number T65744/2012 and situated at […] ,
Johannesburg ("the property"), the amount of R600
000.00
will be paid to the plaintiffs.
25B.2
The balance of the proceeds of the sale of the immovable
property after the deduction of the amount of R600 000.00
referred to
in paragraph 25B.1 above will be paid equally to the defendant and to
Glen F
25B.3
All of the pending litigation between the plaintiffs, the
defendant and F was fully and finally settled on the terms
as stated
in paragraphs 25B.1 and 25B.2 above, save for the monthly payments of
the divorce costs payable by F to the defendant
which would be
unaffected and remained due and payable monthly.
25C.
The plaintiffs refuse to abide by, and have consequently repudiated,
the settlement agreement as evidenced
inter alia
by
correspondence from the plaintiffs' attorneys. The defendant refuses
to accept the plaintiffs' repudiation of the settlement
agreement.
25D.
The plaintiffs’ refusal to abide by, and consequent
repudiation of, the settlement agreement is unreasonable and
mala
fide
.
25E.
In the circumstances: -
25E.1
The plaintiffs are obliged to adhere to the settlement
agreement.
25E.2
The plaintiffs' claims, if any, have been compromised in terms
of the settlement agreement.’
[6].
At this stage, the issue to be
considered in this action is whether agreement has been reached by
the parties, as alleged and pleaded
by the defendant. Crystalized
further, the main dispute between the parties is whether the
agreement provided that the R600 000
settlement amount was to be
paid from the defendant’s portion of the proceeds of the house
or whether that amount was to
be a first charge against the proceeds.
The parties are
ad idem
as regards the other terms of the agreement and it is only the
aforesaid issue which requires consideration by the Court. At the
commencement of the trial on Thursday, 02 November 2023, the
parties indicated that they require this issue to be separated
from
all other disputes between the parties and that the trial should
proceed only on that aspect of the matter. I am in agreement
with the
submissions on behalf of the parties that it would be convenient to
separate the issues and I accordingly granted an order
to that
effect.
[7].
This issue should be decided against the
factual backdrop of the matter and, in particular, against the facts
relating to the meeting
between the parties on 02 July 2023, most of
which is common cause. The facts are to be gleaned from the evidence
led during the
trial. In that regard, Mr Swartz, Ms Hodes and
Advocate Hoffman gave evidence on behalf of the defendant and the
second plaintiff
and Mr Ackerman testified on behalf of the
plaintiffs.
[8].
In my view, the real question to be
asked is whether subjectively there was a meeting of the minds in
relation to this aspect of
the agreement and whether the parties were
ad idem
about this particular term of the agreement. This question is asked
at a fundamental level and relates to the basic general principle
relating to contracts that t
here must be consensus
ad idem
between the contracting parties.
[9].
The parties are agreed that the purpose
of the meeting was to settle this litigation and certain litigation
related to it. The parties
also seem to have agreed on the main terms
of the settlement agreement, such as the amount of the settlement to
be paid to the
plaintiffs. However, the very next day, being Monday,
the 3
rd
of July 2023, it became apparent to all concerned that there may not
have been agreement on this one particular issue. Within an
hour of
receiving the defendant’s version of what transpired at the
meeting from Ms Hodes, Mr Ackerman responded that
there was a
patent misunderstanding, and insisted that:
‘
Before
we take any further steps in preparing a draft settlement agreement,
you need to confirm that your understanding of the agreement
matches
ours.’
[10].
The point is simply that, in the minds
of the second plaintiff and Mr Ackerman, the agreement was that
the settlement sum of
R600 000 would be paid from the
defendant’s portion of the proceeds of the sale of the house.
This was their evidence
during the trial and this was their version
right from the start as communicated to the defendant’s legal
representatives
the very next day after the meeting. The parties were
not
ad idem
,
and the minds did not meet. There can be no doubt about that.
[11].
The alternative postulation is that, as
between Mr Ackerman and the second plaintiff, they had specifically
agreed and accepted
on the day of the meeting that the said sum would
be paid from the proceeds before the balance is split equally between
the defendant
and Glen. Thereafter, they decided between them that
they wanted to resile from the agreement, and fabricated the story
about their
understanding of the terms of the agreement. We know from
the evidence that that is not so. The second plaintiff testified that
his understanding was always that the said amount would be paid from
the defendant’s portion of the proceeds. In any event,
this
alternative postulation and version, in my view, is highly improbable
and far-fetched.
[12].
This is so despite the fact that, the
discussion during the meeting was probably to the effect that the
R600 000 settlement
sum would come from the proceeds of the sale
of the house, whereafter the balance would be split ‘equally’
between
the defendant and Glen. The evidence of Advocate Hoffman was
to that effect. This does not however detract from the fact that it
has to be accepted that the second plaintiff understood this to mean
that the said sum would come from the defendant’s portion
of
the proceeds. The second plaintiff never said that he would accept
R300 000 from the defendant. The words R300 000 were
never used
at the meeting. Had he been asked at the meeting whether his
understanding of the agreement is that Glen would be paying
R300 000
towards the settlement amount, his answer would no doubt have been in
the negative.
[13].
The aforegoing, in my view, is confirmed
by the evidence of Mr Swartz, who indicated that, at the time of the
meeting, there may
have been doubt in his mind whether the second
plaintiff knew exactly what his proposal entailed. Why it was not
simply asked of
the second plaintiff as to whether he agreed to his
son paying R300 000, remains a mystery. Moreover, it bolsters my
view
that the second plaintiff, in his mind, was not agreeing to that
particular term. That, in my judgment, is the end of the defendant’s
assertion that an agreement was concluded on the terms and conditions
alleged by her.
[19]
For all of these reasons, the
defendant’s ‘special defence’ of compromise should
fail.
Costs
[20]
The general rule in matters of costs is
that the successful party should be given his costs, and this rule
should not be departed
from except where there are good grounds for
doing so. I can think of no reason why I should deviate from this
general rule.
[21]
The defendant should therefore be ordered
to pay the plaintiffs’ costs relating to the compromise
defence.
Order
[22]
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
In terms of Uniform Rule of Court 33(4),
the ‘Special Defence’ of settlement and compromise raised
by the defendant
in paragraphs 25A, 25B, 25C, 25D and 25E of her
amended plea (‘the separated issue’), was separated from
any and/or
all other disputes between the parties.
(2)
At the commencement of the trial on
Thursday, 02 November 2023, it was directed and ordered that the
matter would proceed to trial
only on ‘the separated issue’,
with the hearing relating to the remaining disputes between the
parties postponed
sine die
.
(3)
The defendant’s special defence of
settlement / compromise fails and it is declared that the dispute
between the parties has
not been settled / compromised by a
settlement agreement concluded between them on 02 July 2023, as
alleged by the defendant.
(4)
The defendant shall pay the plaintiffs’
costs relating to the separated issue, including the costs consequent
upon the employment
of two Counsel, one being a Senior Counsel.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
2
nd
and 3
rd
November 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
20
th
November 2023 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE FIRST TO THE
THIRD PLAINTIFFS:
Advocate J P Daniels
SC, together with Advocate M J Cooke
INSTRUCTED BY:
Darryl Ackerman
Attorneys, Dunkeld West, Johannesburg
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
Advocate C Whitcutt
SC, together with Advocate E Larney
INSTRUCTED BY:
Swartz Weil Van der
Merwe Greenberg Incorporated, Melrose Estate, Johannesburg
[1]
National
Credit Act, Act 34 of 2005;
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