Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1370South Africa
Hassen v Govender and Others (2021/6723) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1370 (24 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hassen v Govender and Others (2021/6723) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1370 (24 November 2023)
Hassen v Govender and Others (2021/6723) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1370 (24 November 2023)
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sino date 24 November 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2021/6723
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
HASSEN,
MOHAMED AABID
Applicant
And
GOVENDER,
PRESHNEE N.O.
(As
duly substituted for the first and second respondents)
First
Respondent
BOOLEY,
MUMTAZ
Second
Respondent
HASSEN,
HASMET
Third
Respondent
HASSEN,
NAZIMA KHATUN
Fourth
Respondent
HASSEN,
HASIENA DAWOOD
Fifth
Respondent
HASSEN,
NIESAR AHMED
Sixth
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
Seventh
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS
Eighth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
STAIS AJ:
This judgment is
handed down electronically by circulating it to the parties’
representatives by email and by uploading on
CaseLines.
[1]
The
dispute, essentially between heirs of a deceased estate, turns on the
interpretation and validity of a written agreement (“agreement”)
for the sale of immovable property (“property”) concluded
on 1 November 2018 between the applicant, as purchaser, and
his late
grandmother shortly before her death (“deceased”).
[2]
The
second to sixth respondents are children of the deceased and heirs in
her estate.
In terms of the deceased’s will of 11 April
1994 and but for the agreement, the property would have passed in
equal shares
to her five children, the second to sixth respondents.
[3]
The
second and third respondents are former joint executrixes of the
estate and were removed by order of court and substituted by
the
first respondent. The third respondent, acting in her
then-representative capacity, opposed the application at the outset,
whilst her co-executrix filed a notice to abide by the court's
decision. The first respondent, in her capacity as the substituting
executrix, persists in opposing the application and is the only
respondent to do so.
[4] It is common cause
that the agreement is an instalment sale in terms of the Alienation
of Land Act, 1981 (“Act”),
the material terms of which
are the following (I transpose the deceased for “seller”;
and the applicant for “purchaser”):
[4.1]
The purchase price was the sum of
R775,000-00 payable in instalments of R5,000-00 per month, which
amounts shall be paid immediately
upon request of the conveyancer and
prior to registration being affected.
[4.2]
The applicant shall pay all costs incurred
in connection with the transfer of the property.
[4.3]
Transfer of the property shall be passed by
the deceased’s conveyancer Dockrat Jassat attorneys.
[4.4]
Possession and vacant occupation of the
property shall be given to the applicant on transfer from which date
it shall be at his
sole risk, loss or profit.
[4.5]
The applicant is liable for the payment of arrears
rates
taxes, municipal service fees and other charges in respect of the
property up to date of transfer as well as thereafter.
[4.6]
If
the date of occupation and possession does not coincide with the date
of transfer, the party in occupation whilst it is registered
in the
name of the other party, shall not pay occupational rental.
[4.7]
In the event of the applicant failing to
fulfil on due date any of the terms and conditions of the agreement,
the deceased shall
have the right either to cancel the sale by
registered letter in which event the applicant shall at the option of
the deceased
and without prejudice to any other rights which the
applicant may have, either forfeit all monies paid to the deceased
alternatively
be liable to the deceased in damages; or claim
immediate payment of the whole of the purchase price and the
fulfilment of all the
terms and conditions thereof.
[4.8]
No legal proceedings may be instituted by
the deceased against the applicant on account of the applicant’s
default or breach
of any provisions of the agreement unless the
deceased has given the applicant notice specifying the nature of the
default, demand
that the default be rectified within 30 days and
indicate to the applicant the steps that the deceased intends to take
if such
breach of contract is not rectified.
[4.9]
The
contract is subject to the provisions of the Act which supplements
any omission or material provisions in the agreement and
are deemed
to be incorporated in the agreement by reference, and in the event of
a conflict between the terms of the agreement
and the provisions of
the Act, the latter will prevail.
[4.10]
The
agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and no
modification, variation or alteration thereof shall be
valid unless
in writing and signed by both parties.
[5] The relevant facts
were either common cause or not disputed:
[5.1] The deceased
implemented the agreement by signing a power of attorney in favour of
the conveyancers on 13 November 2018
to transfer the property to the
applicant.
[5.2] Mr Jassat
initiated the transfer process on the same day by submitting a
transfer duty declaration form to the South
Africa Revenue Service.
[5.3] The applicant
was born and grew up in the property and continued to occupy the
property with knowledge of the deceased.
[5.4] The applicant
paid the municipal rates and taxes.
[5.5] The deceased
passed away on 8 December 2018 and the transfer process was put on
hold pending the appointment of the
joint executrixes nominated in
the will.
[5.6] The
executrixes were appointed on 23 May 2019.
[5.7] During August
2020 the third respondent, purporting to act in her capacity then as
joint executrix (but without the
approval of her co-executrix), wrote
to the applicant and refused to recognise the agreement because it
was “
rendered invalid on many clauses
” and advised
the applicant that he could purchase the property for R2,950,000.00,
failing which it would be put up for sale
and sold to the highest
offeror in order to wind up the estate. (It is worth noting that the
municipal valuation of the property
at the time was R760,000.00)
[5.8] Further
correspondence did nothing to resolve the dispute; nor did the
introduction of the first respondent. Hence the
present application.
[6] The applicant
essentially seeks a declaration of validity, together with the usual
and necessary ancillary relief that will
enable him to take ownership
of the property.
[7] The answering
affidavit raises three defences:
[7.1] The agreement
should be declared void in terms of section 24(1)(c) of the Act, for
non-compliance with sections 6(1)(h),
6(1)(p) and 6(1)(q) thereof.
[7.2] The agreement
is void for vagueness because it does not expressly state that the
instalments were payable on demand.
[7.3] The applicant
repudiated the agreement by failing to pay any of the monthly
instalments.
Non-compliance with
the Act
[8]
It is
well-established that section 24(1) of the Act
affords
the applicant as purchaser the right to approach the court for
appropriate relief in the event the agreement does not substantially
comply with section 6 thereof. But the first respondent, as executrix
of the deceased state, is afforded no rights under section
24(1) of
the Act and cannot avail herself of the provisions thereof in the
event of non-compliance with the provisions of section
6 thereof.
[1]
[9]
Mr Desai,
who appeared for the applicant, initially attempted to persuade me
not to follow precedent, for the reason that the protection
afforded
to a purchaser endures only for two years and that a seller may
thereafter approach the court for relief under section
24(1) of the
Act. I am not persuaded by the argument, which ignores the fact that
section 6 in its terms and having regard to the
context of the Act
and its precursors, is aimed at protecting a purchaser.
[2]
It is, however, a moot issue because Mr Desai fairly conceded that
not one of the sub-sections referred to by the first respondent
is
applicable
in
casu
and that
section
24 and non- compliance with section 6 is not an issue that in itself
supports dismissal of the application for non-compliance
with the
Act.
[10] Instead, Mr Desai
sought to argue that non-compliance with the Act in the circumstances
rendered the agreement void; an issue
which I shall consider next.
Void for vagueness
[11] In an argument
not raised on the papers and not foreshadowed in his heads of
argument,
Mr Desai suggested that the agreement is
vague because it does not objectively identify a place where payment
should take place
as required by section 6(1)(l) of the Act. Mr Van
der Vyfer, appearing for the applicant, rightly objected to this
argument being
raised for the first time before me. It can, however,
be dispensed with without too much ado.
[12]
The
argument appears to me to be merely another way of relying on non-
compliance with the provisions of section 6 of the Act. However,
accepting that it does merit consideration as a self-standing
argument in support of the vagueness defence, I am mindful that
the
agreement was a commercial document executed by the deceased and her
grandson with a clear intention that it should be given
effect to,
and I must not lightly hold it to be ineffective. Rather, I should
attempt to find therein, with reasonable certainty,
the terms
necessary to constitute a valid contract.
[3]
[13]
I
can find no uncertainty as to where payment wasto be made –
payment of the purchase price would be made to the deceased
(and she
could readily inform her grandson whether she would take all the
instalments or any particular instalment in cash or to
the credit of
an account to be provided); payment of transfer costs would be made
to the conveyancer and payment of rates and taxes
would be made to
the municipality.
[14]
The
other argument on vagueness was directed at the fact that the
agreement did not expressly provide for a date of payment. But,
as Mr
Desai accepted, the general rule laid down a century ago,
[4]
is to the effect that in instances where no date is stipulated for
payment of a monetary obligation, to be in mora (i) there must
be a
valid and enforceable claim and (ii) the debtor must have failed to
perform timeously. If no date for performance is stipulated,
there
must be a demand made on the debtor to place him/her in mora
ex
persona
.
It is common cause that no demand was made on the applicant to
perform in terms of the agreement.
[15]
The
absence of a demand and failure to record the agreement were a
consequence of the co-executrixes not being
ad
idem
as to the validity of the agreement. They were required to act
jointly and not independently of one another. Theirs was a dual
position no different to co-trustees, co-liquidators and other
persons who are appointed jointly to hold a representative
capacity.
[5]
Should they lock
horns (as they did), the co-executrixes were obliged to approach the
court to cut the Gordian knot.
[16] I referred above to
the second respondent’s letter of August 2018,
which
contained no demand for payment
.
[17] The applicant
immediately responded through his attorney
and
advised that instalments were to commence on demand by the deceased
and that this accords with the legal position where a date
of payment
is not stipulated; and tendered payment of the first instalment on
demand.
[18]
Nothing
further appears to have happened for some 18 months, when
the
second respondent, continuing to act in her representative capacity
without the consent of her co-executrix,
penned a
lengthy letter
inter alia
raising
various reasons for her contention that the agreement was
“
null
and void and cancelled
” and unless the applicant paid
rental of R10,000.00 per month, he had to vacate the property.
This
letter also did not contain a demand that the applicant should
commence payment in terms of the agreement.
[19]
It
was common cause that the first respondent, who is the only person
authorised to act as sole custodian of the estate, has not
made a
payment demand on the applicant.
[20] The
lex
commissoria
in the agreement is applicable in the event the
deceased (or the executrix of her estate) intended to institute legal
proceedings
against the applicant. As the applicant initiated the
litigation, it is not applicable in the present instance.
[21] However, the
agreement incorporates in express terms the provisions of the Act,
which provides in section 19 for a statutory
lex commissoria
,
failing compliance with which a seller (
i.e.
, the first
respondent) is precluded from enforcing acceleration of the payment
of any instalment of the purchase price or to terminate
the agreement
or claim damages.
[22]
In
any event and in terms of section 26 of the Act, the deceased was not
entitled to receive any payment in terms of the purchase
price until
the property is registerable
and
the recording of the agreement has been affected. It is common cause
that the second of these conjunctive requirements has not
been met.
[23]
In my
opinion the agreement contains
the
essential terms of a contract for the sale of land,
i.e.
,
the parties, the price and the subject matter, which must be in
writing and defined with sufficient precision to enable them to
be
identified.
[6]
.
The
defence is not that the agreement was void for vagueness for non-
compliance with the requirements of section 2(1) of the Act.
[24] That the leaves the
issue of the applicant’s repudiation of the agreement.
Repudiation
[25]
Mr Desai
argued that the applicant repudiated the agreement by failing to make
payment of any instalments. In doing so and relying
on
Tuckers
Land and Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Hovis
and
Taggert
v Green
,
[7]
he contended that applicant’s conduct amounted to an
anticipatory breach of the agreement and therefore did not require
the contractually agreed notice to purge the default. I have already
indicated that the contractual
lex
commissoria
is only applicable in the event the deceased/executrix instituted
legal proceedings. However, in the event I am wrong in this,
I shall
deal with the argument.
[26]
Tuckers
chronicles the doctrine of anticipatory breach, finding that the duty
not to commit an anticipatory breach of contract flows from
the
implied requirement of
bona fides
which underlies our law of
contract, and held that a repudiation is a well-recognised form of
anticipatory breach by conduct measured
by having regard to an
objective test based upon the reasonable expectation of the
promisee.
[27] In
Taggert
,
there was a continued failure to pay to the creditor what had already
fallen due, and it was conceded that the debtor’s
conduct
amounted to a repudiation in communicating that he was not bound by
the agreement and that the creditor was at liberty
to take such
action as he deemed fit. The court held that, viewed objectively and
when faced by a clear repudiation, the party
not in breach is
entitled to bring the agreement to an end without further delay. The
party who repudiated the agreement, cannot
simultaneously rely on a
term of that very agreement to insist on notice before cancellation.
[28] In my opinion, the
submission that the applicant repudiated the agreement by his conduct
has no substance.
[29] A letter from Mr
Jassat on 13 June 2019 to the then joint executrixes (shortly after
their appointment) evinces a clear intention
by the applicant to
adhere to the terms of the agreement. Mr Jassat informed them that
the applicant had contacted him regarding
payment of the instalments,
and requested details of the estate banking account once opened so
that the applicant could commence
with payment of the instalments.
The response was the unlawful attempt by the second respondent to
cancel the agreement by means
of her letter of 20 August 2019.
[30] On 26 August 2019
the applicant, as it was entitled to do, tendered payment of the
first instalment on demand. The response
came from the second
respondent some 18 months later, on 8 December 2020, alleging that
the applicant had repudiated the agreement
and that she had cancelled
the agreement. She subsequently threatened to forcefully take
possession of the property.
[31] The applicant in his
founding
affidavit tendered to pay the full
purchase price within 14 days from the granting of the order sought
herein. He advises in his
replying affidavit that he has not been
furnished with the estate account details but that he paid the full
purchase price into
the trust account of Docrat Jassat attorneys
on 1 September 2021.
[32] There is, in my
view, no basis upon which the second respondent could have formed the
reasonable expectation that
the applicant did not
intend to be bound by the terms of the agreement and in particular,
that he repudiated the obligation to make
payment in terms thereof.
[33]
In
any event, neither
Tuckers
nor
Taggert
is an answer to the failure to comply with the statutory-required
section 19 breach notice.
Costs
[34] Mr Van der Vyfer
sought a punitive costs order. The original relief included costs
against the third respondent personally
(then cited in her capacity
as the first respondent
nominee officio
), but this was
abandoned in argument. I should perhaps add that the third respondent
may consider herself fortunate in this regard.
[35] It is agreed that,
should I find for the applicant,
only the first
respondent would be liable for costs (in her representative capacity
as cited, of course).
[36]
Mr
Desai attempted to defend against a punitive cost order and suggested
that this was a family dispute involving a problematic
agreement, and
that it would be appropriate in the circumstances not to make any
order as to costs.
[37]
I
disagree. The conduct of the second respondent (acting as she did at
the time in a representative capacity as appointed co-custodian
of
her mother’s deceased estate) was nothing short of shameful and
her opposition to implementing the agreement and granting
the
applicant ownership of the property against the express wishes of her
mother and decision of her co-executrix, is deserving
of the court’s
opprobrium. It is apparent from the evidence that the other
respondent-heirs are not without blame (excluding
the second
respondent).
[38]
Although valiantly argued by Mr Desai, his
case was doomed from the first letter, and he fairly and properly
conceded several of
the main arguments that had underpinned the
defence. It is quite apparent that the defence was stillborn, and the
first respondent’s
continued opposition to the application
vexatious (whether of her own volition or that of the other
respondents).
[39]
It
appears to me that the applicant at all times acted reasonably and
that he has been mulcted in costs that were wholly unnecessary
in the
circumstances. I intend that my order shall ensure that he is
properly compensated.
[40]
I
consequently make the following order:
1.
The
agreement of sale of immovable property known as Erf 415, Dadaville
Township, Registration Division IQ, Province of Gauteng,
measuring
847m²
and held by Deed of Title
T28945/1991 concluded between the late Halima Hassan and applicant on
or about 1 November 2018 is
valid and binding.
2.
The
executrix of the estate of the late Halima Hasson, being the first
respondent, shall take all steps necessary to give effect
to the sale
agreement and to sign all documents reasonably required to allow the
conveyancer to give effect to the transfer of
the property into the
name of the applicant or his nominee.
3.
Directing
Dockrat Jassat Attorneys, upon transfer of the property being
affected, to pay the purchase price R775,000.00 held in
their trust
account, into the trust account held by the first respondent for the
deceased estate.
4.
Should
the first respondent fail to comply with any provision of this order,
then and in that event the Sheriff of the Court,
alternatively
his deputy, is authorised and directed to sign all documentation and
to do all things necessary and to bring all necessary applications,
on behalf of the first respondent to give effect to the transfer of
the property.
5.
The
costs of the application shall be paid out of the deceased estate,
such costs to be taxed on the scale as between attorney and
client.
P STAIS
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Johannesburg
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date
and time for hand down is deemed to be 24 November 2023.
APPEARANCES
:
Applicant: Adv Van der
Vyfer
Instructed by Ayoob Kaka
attorneys
First Respondent:
Adv Desai
Instructed by Shamla
Pather Attorneys
Date of hearing: 6
November 2023
Date of judgment: 24
November 2023
[1]
Mulder
v Van Eyk
1984(1)
A 204 (SE);
Chetty
v Erf 311, Southcrest CC
2020
(3) SA 182
(GJ) at [36]-[38]
[2]
Sarrahwitz
v Maritz
NO & Anor 2015(4) SA 491 (CC)
[3]
Burroughs
Machines Ltd v Chenille Corporation of SA (Pty) Ltd
1964 (1) SA 669
(W) at 670G-H
[4]
Breytenbach
v Van Wijk
1923 AD 541
at 549
[5]
Van
den Heever NO & Anor v Poulos NO & Others
2023
JDR 1208 (GJ) at [62];
Thorpe
& Others v Trittenwein & Anor
2007
(2) SA 172
(SCA) at [12]
[6]
Mulder
supra
at
205
in
fin
[7]
Tuckers
Land and Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Hovis
1980
(1) SA 645
(AD) at 652D-653F and
Taggert
v Green
1991 (4) SA 121
(WLD) at 125E-126J
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