Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1390South Africa
TUHF v 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg and Others (A5073/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1390 (29 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 November 2023
Headnotes
with costs. (2) The order of the court a quo is set aside and in its place is substituted the following: -
Judgment
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## TUHF v 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg and Others (A5073/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1390 (29 November 2023)
TUHF v 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg and Others (A5073/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1390 (29 November 2023)
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sino date 29 November 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:NO
REVISED
APPEAL
CASE NO
:
A5073/2022
COURT
A QUO
CASE NO
:
44394/2020
DATE
:
29
th
november 2023
In
the matter between:
TUHF
LIMITED
Appellant
and
68
WOLMARANS STREET
JOHANNESBURG
(PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
10
FIFE AVENUE BEREA (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
FARBER
,
MARK MORRIS
Third
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
: T
UHF v 68 Wolmarans Street
Johannesburg and Others (A5073/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ---
(29
November 2023)
Coram:
Vally, Adams
et
Dlamini JJ
Heard
:
06 September
2023
Delivered:
29 November 2023 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
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 29
November 2023.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Senyatsi J
sitting as Court of first instance):
(1)
The appellant’s appeal against the
order of the court
a quo
is upheld, with costs.
(2)
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and in its place is
substituted the following: -
‘
(1)
Judgment is granted in favour of the applicant against the first, the
second and the third respondents, jointly
and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, for: -
‘
(a)
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg
(Pty) Ltd, 10 Fife Avenue Berea (Pty) Ltd and Mark Morris Farber
("the Respondents"),
jointly and severally, the one paying
the others to be absolved, shall pay to the applicant the sum of
R4 897 004.22,
together with interest thereon at the rate
of 2.50% above the commercial banks' prime rate plus 1% per year,
calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 1 February
2020 to date of final payment, both dates included;
(b)
The applicant is, with immediate effect, authorised to take cession
of any and all rental amounts payable
by every tenant occupying the
immovable property known as Wolbane Mansions (“the Wolbane
Mansions tenants”) to 68 Wolmarans
Street Johannesburg
(Pty) Ltd (‘the First Respondent’), alternatively to the
respondents, further alternatively, to
their duly authorised agent or
agents (“the cession”);
(c)
The respondents are ordered and directed to sign all documents
necessary to facilitate and to give effect
to the cession in (b)
above, failing which the Sheriff is hereby authorised to sign all
documents necessary to give effect to the
cession;
(d)
The respondents shall furnish the applicant, within fifteen days from
date of this order, with the names
and contact information of the
Wolbane Mansions tenants together with: -
(i).
Copies of any written lease agreements
concluded between the first respondent, alternatively the
respondents, further alternatively,
their duly authorised agent, and
the Wolbane Mansions tenants;
(ii).
Particularity in respect of the terms of
any implied and/or oral terms of any lease agreement concluded with
the Wolbane Mansions
tenants; and
(iii).
Particularity and copies of any existing
property management mandates for the management of and rental
collection at the Wolbane
Mansions;
(e)
The applicant is granted leave to take whatever steps necessary for
purposes of collecting rental amounts
from the Wolbane Mansions
tenants;
(f)
The immovable property, being Erf 2[…] Johannesburg Township,
Registration Division IR,
Gauteng Province, measuring 467 (Four
Hundred and Sixty-Seven) Square Metres, Held By Deed of Transfer
Number T75[…] (“the
immovable property”) be and is
hereby declared executable, and the applicant is authorised to issue
Writs of Attachment calling
upon the Sheriff of the Court to attach
the immovable property and to sell the immovable property in
execution;
(g)
The respondents be and is hereby ordered to pay a penalty fee equal
to 5% (Five Percent) plus VAT of
the monthly outstanding instalment
amount in arrears and unpaid by the first respondent within 2 (Two)
days of an Instalment Payment
Date as from 10 February 2020, to date
of payment in full of (a) above, both dates included;
(h)
the first, the second and the third respondents, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved, shall pay the
applicants’ costs of the application on the scale as between
attorney and client, such costs to
include the costs consequent upon
the employment of two Counsel, one being Senior Counsel (where so
employed).’
(3)
The first, the second and the third
respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, shall pay the appellant’s
costs of the appeal,
including the costs of the application for leave to appeal to the
court
a quo
,
all such costs to include the costs consequent upon the employment of
two Counsel, one being Senior Counsel (where so employed).
JUDGMENT
Dlamini J (Vally
et
Adams JJ concurring):
[1]
This appeal came before us as a result of
leave being granted by the court
a quo
to this court. The appellant who was
cited as the applicant in the court below is appealing against the
whole judgment and order
made by Senyatsi J, delivered on 17
September 2021, sitting as the court of first instance in the
Gauteng, Division, Johannesburg.
Background Facts
[2]
The facts underlying this appeal are
largely common cause.
[3]
The appellant (TUHF), on or about 23 August
2013, entered into a loan agreement with the first respondent (68
Wolmarans Street)
to assist the first respondent with the purchase
and refurbishment of an immovable property. The total estimated costs
of the loan
facility were an amount of R12 223 191. Under
the loan agreement and the security for the facility, a mortgage bond
was
registered over Wolbane Mansions in terms of which 68 Wolmarans
Street ceded, assigned, and transferred to TUHF all of its rights,
title and interest in and to any rent that would arise in respect of
Wolbane Mansions. The second and the third respondents also
concluded
written unlimited suretyship agreements in favour of TUHF.
[4]
There was a fallout between the parties and
as a result TUHF launched the first application against the
respondents under case number
2020/7844, seeking an order claiming
the repayment of the monies lent and advanced in terms of the loan
agreement (‘the first
application’). In that application,
the respondents raised a point in their defence that the second
respondent's suretyship
agreement was void but they (the respondents)
did not provide the applicant with alternative security, as they
would have been
required to do in terms of the loan agreement.
[5]
It also appeared that the respondents were
in default with their monthly rentals in that they had failed to pay
the full monthly
installments for months of May and June 2020. This
failure, according to the appellant, gave rise to another event of
default in
terms of the loan agreement.
[6]
It is the above alleged two events of
default that arose after the launch of the first application that
gave rise to TUHF launching
the second application which is the
subject of this appeal.
[7]
Several issues came up for determination by
the court
a quo
.
In sum, these were the following: the special plea of
lis
pendens
raised by the respondents.
Whether there was a breach of the suretyship agreement by the
respondents. Whether there was any short
payment of the monthly rent
by the respondents. Whether the immovable property was executable in
terms of rule 46A, and, lastly
whether the launch of the second
application by the TUHF amounted to an abuse of the court process.
[8]
Upon hearing the matter, the court
a
quo
upheld the respondents’
special plea of
lis pendens
.
The court
a quo
also upheld the respondents’ defence that there was a signed
amendment of the loan agreement as contemplated in the non-variation
clause. Finally, the court below upheld the respondent's claim that
TUHF's second application amounted to an abuse of the court
process.
It must be pointed out that the court
a
quo
did not deal with the rest of the
issues that were raised during the trial in light of his findings
relating to the preliminary
points raised by the respondents, which,
according to the court
a quo
,
were dispositive of the matter.
[9]
Feeling aggrieved by this decision, TUHF
filed an application for leave to appeal, which application was
granted by the court
a quo
,
who granted leave to appeal to the Full Court of this court.
Grounds of Appeal
[10]
In its grounds of appeal, the appellant
alleged the following: -
10.1
That
the learned judge erred by finding that the appellant alleges that
the short payment for May and June was central to the number
of
events of default the applicant relied upon, and which gave rise to
the launch of the application, and thereby the learned Judge
erred by
failing to deal with the respondents’ intention to repudiate
the security they had provided and their failure to
provide the
applicant with alternative security.
10.2
That
the learned Judge erred in finding that the respondents have
succeeded in proving that the cause of action in the second
application
is the same as the cause of action in the first
application and that the respondents’ special plea of
lis
pendens
should succeed.
10.3
That
the learned Judge erred in finding that a dispute of fact had arisen
and that the disputed fact on whether there has been a
variation to
the loan agreement is not of such a serious nature.
10.4
The
learned Judge erred in finding that just because the email
correspondence dated 11 May 2020 was ‘clearly from Mr.
Makwela’,
that constituted compliance with the requirements of
the loan agreement to effect a valid variation of its terms
10.5
The
learned Judge erred in finding that the applicant's determination to
obtain the relief it seeks amounts to an abuse of the court
process.
[11]
Below I deal with these grounds of appeal.,
Lis Alibi Pendens
[12]
At the hearing of the trial, the
respondents raised the special plea of
lis
pendens,
alleging that the cause of
action in the second application is the same as the cause of action
in the first application.
[13]
The legal principles relating to
lis
pendens alibi
are trite and have been
pronounced upon in a number of our court's decision. A party raising
lis pendens
must allege and prove the following: -
13.1 that there is
pending litigation.
13.2 between the
same parties.
13.3 based on the
same cause of action; and
13.4 in respect of
the same subject matter
[14]
In upholding the respondent’s plea of
lis pendens
,
Senyatsi J held at [34] that “
As
in the first application TUHF seeks judgment against the second
respondent based on the same Deed of Suretyship which was argued
in
the first application. This in my respectful view, meets the second
requirement pertaining to the same cause of action for the
special
plea of
lis pendens
to
succeed. I hold the view that the respondents have succeeded in
proving that indeed this is the same cause of action”.
[15]
Before us, TUHF contends that the court
a
quo
should have dismissed the special
plea of
lis
pendens
because the dispute or even the nature of the events of default in
the first application was not the same as those in the second
application. And that the events of the security breach only arose
after the launch of the first application. Finally, there was
no
litigation pending between the same parties at the time of handing
down the order in the second application.
[16]
The case made out by the respondents is
that the central issue in both the first application and the second
application before the
court
a quo
were the same, which is the breach by the first respondent of the
loan agreement and the mortgage bond and the obligation of the
first
respondent in terms of the loan agreement and the second and third
respondent as sureties to make payment monthly repayments
to the
TUHF.
[17]
In
adjudicating the
lis
pendens
point, a court has a discretion to hear the matter. In
Gerotek
Test Facilities v New Generation Ammunition
[1]
,
following the principle laid down in
Geldenhuys
v Kotze
[2]
,
it was held that a Court should not only consider what would be the
correct procedure at the time of hearing the matter, but it
must
delve into all the facts to determine whether equity dictates that
the matter should be heard. See also
Nestle
(SA) (PTY) Ltd v Mars Incorporated.
[3]
[18]
It is useful to restate the provisions of
the loan agreement in particular clause 18 headed ‘Events of
Default’. Relevant
to us are the following: -
‘
18.1
Each of the following events of breach shall constitute an Event of
Default under the Loan Facility
18.1.1
the Borrower fails to pay any amount(s) due by it in terms of this
Agreement on the due date for
payment thereof or breaches any other
provision of this Agreement and fails to remedy any such breach
within any applicable cure
period.
18.1.7
the Borrower or any Surety breaches or repudiates or evidences an
intention to repudiate any of the
provisions of this agreement or the
Security to which it is a party and does not remedy any such breach
within any applicable notice
or cure period calling upon it to do so.
… … …
18.1.10 any
Security or any part thereof shall for any reason cease to be in full
force and effect under the applicable law
or any part thereof
otherwise ceases to constitute valid security in respect of the
relevant asset(s) or revenue, and the Borrower
fails to restore or
procure the restoration of such security or fails to provide
additional security to the satisfaction of the
Lender within 10 (ten)
Business Days of being required to do so or such longer period as the
Lender may agree.’
[19]
The
principle of interpretation of contracts in our law is well
established and has been pronounced upon in a number of our court's
decisions. In
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v
KJ
Foods
,
[4]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that in interpreting terms of contract
or legislation as the case may be; the principles enunciated
in
Natal
Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[5]
and
Novartis
SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading (Pty) Ltd
[6]
find
application. Furthermore, as was said in Endumeni, ‘
a
sensible meaning is to be preferred to that that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results
”.
[20]
What is common cause in this case is the
fact that the action is between the same parties. I disagree with the
court
a quo’s
finding that the rest of the requirements of
lis
pendens
have been met. This is so because the words used in the above clauses
are plain, clear and unambiguous. Clause 18 postulates that
there
might exist a situation where there will be several events of default
that might occur during the existence of the agreement
and in the
event of the occurrence of each event of such default (there are a
number listed in the loan agreement, I quoted only
three above),
which are relevant to this case, then in that situation, the loan
agreement expressly grant TUHF the right sue. In
other words, the
fact that the appellant had issued the first application is no bar,
precluding TUHF from launching a separate
application if a new event
of breach arises.
[21]
Furthermore, the events of default in the
first application have no bearing and are completely unrelated to the
events of default
in the second application. In the first
application, TUHF sought an order claiming the repayments of the
monies lent and
advanced to the respondents. In the second
application, the appellant’s application is based on two
claims. TUHF’s
first claim is founded on the basis that the
respondent's evidence of an intention to breach the loan agreement by
the respondents
alleging that the second respondent’s
suretyship was void and the respondents’ failure to remedy this
breach by restoring
the security to TUHF (the security breach). The
second claim is the short payment, which is the failure by the
respondents to pay
the full monthly installments due for May and June
2020, in terms of the loan agreement. The cause of action is
therefore the money
judgment (the short payment).
[22]
In general, contracting parties possess
enough freedom in choosing how they structure their agreements, and
it is not the function
of the court to protect consenting parties
from bad bargains. The established principle of our law of contract
is that legal certainty
and the notion of
pacta
sunt servanda
must always be honored
and enforced by our courts.
[23]
It is therefore evident that the facts and
questions that had to be answered in the first application are
different from the issues
that had to be determined by the court in
the second application, i.e. the security breach and the rental short
payment.
[24]
In
National
Union of Metal Workers of SA & Others v Bumatech Calcium
Aluminates
[7]
,
the Court held that the factual matrix in the two matters should be
the same. The facts alleged in this case are substantially
different
from the facts in the first application. As is the case in the second
application, different questions had to be answered
in the different
proceedings. In light of the above, the court
a
quo
misdirected
itself by upholding the respondent's special plea of
lis
pendens
.
The Suretyship
Agreement
[25]
The issue for determination in this regard
was whether the claim by the respondents that the second respondent’s
suretyship
agreement was void, was an event of default or breach of
the loan agreement that entitled TUHF to launch the second
application.
It should be noted that the court
a
quo
did not pronounce on this issue and
it thus stands to be determined in this appeal.
[26]
The case made out by the appellant is that
the claim by the respondents that the second respondent's suretyship
agreement is void
in terms of
sections 45(6)
and
46
of the
Companies
Act 2008
, is evidence of an intention to repudiate the provisions of
the loan agreement. TUHF says that despite its efforts in requesting
the respondents to correct the aforesaid breach and restore the
security or at the least to provide alternative security, the
respondents have failed to correct the aforesaid breach. As a result,
TUHF insists that it had no option but to launch the second
application.
[27]
The crux of the respondents’
submission is that they could only repudiate the second respondent's
suretyship if the respondents’
assertion that the suretyship is
void, is incorrect. Finally, the respondents argue that the assertion
that the surety is void
in terms of the
Companies Act it
did not
constitute an event of breach in terms of clause 18.1.7 of the loan
agreement.
[28]
It is apposite at this stage to look at the
relevant provisions of the loan agreement dealing with this aspect,
under the heading
‘Events of Default’. Clause 18 reads,
in the relevant, as follows: -
‘
18.1.7
the
Borrower or any Surety
breaches or repudiates or evidences an intention to repudiate any of
the provisions of this Agreement or
Security to which it is a party
and does not remedy such breach within the applicable notice or cure
period calling upon it to
do so.
… … …
18.1.10
any security or any part thereof shall for any reason cease to
be in full force and effect under any applicable law
or any part
thereof otherwise ceases to constitute valid security in respect of
the relevant asset(s) or revenue, and the Borrower
fails to procure
the restoration of such Security or fails to provide additional
security to the satisfaction of the lender within
10 (ten) business
days of being required to do so or such longer period as the Lender
may agree.’
[29]
In
my view, a sensible and businesslike interpretation (
see
First Rand Bank
[8]
)
of the Security clause is that the duty to provide valid security
rests on the respondents. There is no obligation on the appellant
to
investigate whether the security provided by the respondents is valid
or not. The duty and the onus rest on the respondents
to ensure that
whatever security they provided to TUHF is valid. If, for whatever
reason the respondents are alleging that the
security they provided
is invalid or void, then in that event, the Security clause requires
the second respondent to provide additional
or alternative valid
security as the case may be. TUHF attempted by letter through their
attorneys dated 20 September 2020 calling
upon the respondents to
correct the aforesaid breach and provide the appellant with
additional valid security. From the evidence
presented before us, the
respondents have failed and refused to provide alternative valid
security. Therefore, absent the restoration
of such security by the
respondents, (as they have done), this is tantamount to a breach of
the Security clause, and it follows
therefore that TUHF was in terms
of clause 18.1.7 entitled to launch the second application.
Short Payment
[30]
It was a common cause between the parties
that there was short payment of the rental by the respondents for the
months of May to
June 2020. In light of the respondents’ rental
short payment as aforesaid, TUHF demanded in a letter addressed to
the respondents
that the first respondents pay the arrear amount
within ten days of receipt of that letter.
[31]
Following this letter of demand, the
parties engaged in negotiations to resolve the impasse. Numerous
emails were exchanged between
them, and it appears that there was no
successful solution to this conflict, hence the launch of the second
application by TUHF.
The issue that arose during the trial was
whether after the respondents failed to make the monthly payments
there was a variation
of the loan agreement between the parties that
entitled the respondents to make short payments during the aforesaid
months. If
so, whether the email of 11 May 2020, constitutes a
variation agreement and whether Mr Nano Makwela ‘signed’
the email.
[32]
In deciding this question, the court
a
quo
held as follows at [46]:
‘
TUHF
contends that the email by Mr Makwela in terms of which he purports
to agree to the reduced payment does not comply with the
loan
agreement requirement on variation clause and should therefore be
ignored. Because he did not attach his signature. This contention
is
without merit; it loses sight of the fact that the email (email) is
clearly from Mr Makwela. This is a proven fact on the papers.
The
bare denial does not assist TUHF in this regard.’
[33]
The court
a
quo
continued at [50] and held: -
‘
Having
regard to the contents of the quoted email exchanges between the
parties and the dispute of fact raised by the respondents
based on
the said emails, I am not persuaded that the dispute of fact is so
far-fetched that it must be rejected on the papers.
I hold the view
that the first respondent was justified in making reduced payments in
accordance with what was proposed and with
the rental collected for
each property. It follows, in my respectful view, that the disputed
fact on whether there has been variation
to the agreement is not of
such of serious nature and, I find no reason to reject the version
advance by the first respondent.
This matter can therefore be
disposed of on papers.’
[34]
TUHF contends that the 11 May 2020 email by
Mr. Makwela in terms of which it is alleged he purports to agree to
the reduced payment
does not comply with the non-variation clause of
the loan agreement requirement and should therefore be ignored
because Makwela
did not attach his signature. The appellant insists
that there was no valid variation of the agreement that was entered
into between
the parties. Even if there was a variation agreement
(which it denies), so TUHF contends, that agreement was not signed by
Mr Makwela
and is therefore not binding on the parties.
[35]
The respondents remain adamant that there
was no ‘Event of Default’ by way of short payment. They
also contend that,
even if there was a short payment, there was a
subsequent variation of the loan agreement between the parties,
wherein the parties
reached an agreement to the effect that the first
respondent could pay a certain percentage of the monthly installments
due in
terms of the loan agreement.
[36]
Alternatively, the respondents argue that
there was a
pactum de non petendo
,
the effect of which was that TUHF would not take steps to enforce the
loan agreement for so long as the first respondent paid
48.16% of the
monthly installments due in terms of the loan agreement.
[37]
It is appropriate to revisit the
non-variation clause of the loan agreement, as it is relevant in
deciding this issue before us.
Clause 29 provides as follows: -
‘
No
addition to or variation, consensual cancellation or novation of this
agreement and no waiver of any rights arising from this
Agreement or
its breach or termination shall be of any force or effect unless
reduced to writing and signed by all the parties.’
[38]
On a sensible and businesslike
interpretation, the 11 May 2020 email does not meet the requirements
of clause 29 of the non-variation
clause and it does not constitute a
variation agreement. In my view, Senyatsi J erred in finding that the
aforesaid email constitutes
a variation agreement both factually and
in law. This is because the aforementioned email does nothing more
than capture the discussion
between the parties encompassing their
attempt to resolve the dispute. At best it indicates that Mr. Makwela
of the appellant was
still awaiting the respondent’s bank
statement to enable TUHF to determine whether it was amenable to a
settlement and agree
on the repayable amount and period. It is
therefore evident that the negotiations were inconclusive in that the
Bank statements
were never sent to TUHF by the respondents which
statements would have assisted the appellant in determining the
revised monthly
repayments and period. I conclude therefore that the
email of 11 May 2020 does not constitute a variation agreement.
[39]
In dealing with the issue of the
signatures, Senyatsi J, quoting from the emails, held as follows at
[40]: -
‘
On
the 11 May 2020, Mr Makwela then responded as follows by way of email
… …
“
Dear
Mark.
Agreed, but as per our
last communication on the subject matter please send us bank
statements. This in a nutshell is what the parties
engaged on.
Kind Regards
Nano Makwela”
This in a nutshell is
what the parties engaged on.’
[40]
Even
if the respondents insist that the 11 May 2020 email constitutes a
variation agreement (which it does not), the aforesaid email
was not
signed by Mr Makwela. It was thus not compliant with
section 13
of
the ECTA act and in line with the decision of the court in
Spring
Forest Trading CC
v
Wilberry (Pty) Ltd t/a Ecowash and Another
[9]
.
I
say this because the 11 May 2020 email was not signed by Mr Makwela.
This email ends with the salutation ‘
Kind
Regards’.
There is no signature therafter. By itself, it does not, in my view,
establish that the agreement was varied. The court
a
quo
erred in finding otherwise.
[41]
It should follow therefore that there are
no material disputes of fact in this case. The respondent's
contention that the 11 May
2020 email constitutes a variation
agreement and their contention of the existence of the
pactum
is far-fetched and is not
bona fide
.
These allegations are raised by the respondents to avoid their
obligations to TUHF in terms of the loan agreement and are therefore
dismissed.
Abuse of the Court
Process
[42]
The nub of the issue in this regard was
whether the launch of the second application by TUHF amounted to an
abuse of the court process.
[43]
In upholding the respondent's defence that
the second application amounts to abuse of the court process,
Senyatsi J said the following
at [56]: -
‘
In
the instant case, when TUHF initiated this application, it was
already busy in another directly related application based on
the
same loan agreement, mortgage bond and deed of suretyship. To hide
the true colors (the true extent) of the abuse, TUHF made
new
averments regarding the defenses that were raised in the first
application and used those and the alleged short payments as
additional new grounds of breach. This was despite the fact that the
other application had not been determined and in the face
of a
glaring dispute of fact on the averred variation of payments for May
and June 2020 as part of the COVID-19 relief. I cannot
infer any
motivation for launching such legal attack other than it is the abuse
of the court process. This unfairly exposed the
respondents to
multiple actions that are all related and the same.’
[44]
The case made out by the appellant is that
the court ought to have first determined the parties' respective
rights and obligations,
which in turn was a matter of interpreting
the loan agreement and assessing on the facts whether the respondents
were in breach
of their obligations, or not. That if there was a
breach of these obligations, TUHF insists that it was then entitled
to exercise
the remedies provided for in the loan agreement. Those
remedies according to TUHF entitled it to launch the second
application.
[45]
In sum, the respondents are adamant that
the appellant’s second application was an abuse of the court
process. They insist
that the appellant should have not instituted
the second application but rather should have supplemented the
grounds upon which
it sought relief in the first application.
[46]
In this appeal, I have already made a
finding and dismissed the respondents’ plea of
lis
pendens.
My finding is that the
respondents’ conduct in disputing the validity of the third
respondent's suretyship amounted to a separate
breach of the loan
agreement which entitled TUHF to launch the second application.
Evidently, the breach of the monthly repayments
by the respondents is
clearly a separate event of default. Our view is that it is the loan
agreement's express provision that gave
the appellant the right to
launch the second application and to seek the relief that TUHF
sought. It must therefore follow that
the Senyatsi J erred in finding
that TUHF's second application amounted to an abuse of the court
process.
Rule 46A
[47]
The issue that required to be decided by
the court was whether TUHF is entitled to an order to declare the
immovable property, being
Erf 2[…] Johannesburg Township,
Registration Division IR (the immovable property), specially
executable in terms Rule 46A
of the Uniform Rules of court. However,
Senyatsi J did not make any ruling on this aspect as a result this
court had to decide
in this regard.
[48]
TUHF insists that it is entitled to the
order on the basis that the property is a large multi-unit
residential property comprising
51 residential units which are owned
by 68 Wolmarans Street. According to the appellant, as a legal entity
68 Wolmarans Street
is not capable of having a primary residence nor
is the case being made by the respondents that the third respondent,
its director,
or shareholder uses 68 Wolmarans Street as their
primary residence.
[49]
The core of the respondent's submission is
that the fact that the immovable property is owned by the first
respondent, being (a
juristic entity), and is used for residential
purposes, this therefore does not follow that Rule 46A is not
applicable. Even though
the respondents concede that the immovable
property is only occupied by the first respondent's tenants, they
insist that the TUHF
ought to have given notice of the proceedings to
the occupants, that is the persons who would be affected by the
execution. Accordingly,
argues the respondents, the appellant is not
entitled to execute against the first respondent’s immovable
property. Finally,
TUHF's relevant factors being the evaluation of
the immovable property were not stated in the appellant's affidavit
in terms of
Rule 46A (5).
[50]
The
principles relating to the provisions of Rule 46A are trite and have
been dealt with in numerous decisions of our courts. In
my view, the
first respondent is a legal entity, it is not an individual and a
natural person, therefore the provisions of rule
46 A are not
applicable to it. See
Investec
Bank Ltd v Fraser N.O and Others
[10]
.
[51]
Significantly, at the hearing of this
appeal, the parties advised us that in a separate case under case
number A5015/2022, involving
the same parties, a Full Court of this
division made a ruling and declared that the immovable property
specifically executable
and the Full Court authorized TUHF to attach
and sell the immovable property in execution. Having regard to all
the facts and pleadings
in this case, we agree with the full court's
decision. This therefore means that until the full court's decision
is set aside,
this court is bound by this decision.
[52]
In all the circumstances, I am satisfied
that the appellant has discharged the
onus
that rested on its shoulders and the appeal ought to succeed.
There is no reason why the costs should not follow the result.
Order
[53]
In the result, the following order is made:
-
(1)
The appellant’s appeal against the
order of the court
a quo
is upheld, with costs.
(2)
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and in its place is
substituted the following: -
‘
(1)
Judgment is granted in favour of the applicant against the first, the
second and the third respondents, jointly
and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved, for: -
‘
(a)
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg
(Pty) Ltd, 10 Fife Avenue Berea (Pty) Ltd and Mark Morris Farber
("the Respondents"),
jointly and severally, the one paying
the others to be absolved, shall pay to the applicant the sum of
R4 897 004.22,
together with interest thereon at the rate
of 2.50% above the commercial banks' prime rate plus 1% per year,
calculated daily and
compounded monthly in arrears from 1 February
2020 to date of final payment, both dates included;
(b)
The applicant is, with immediate effect, authorised to take cession
of any and all rental amounts payable
by every tenant occupying the
immovable property known as Wolbane Mansions (“the Wolbane
Mansions tenants”) to 68 Wolmarans
Street Johannesburg
(Pty) Ltd (‘the First Respondent’), alternatively to the
respondents, further alternatively, to
their duly authorised agent or
agents (“the cession”);
(c)
The respondents are ordered and directed to sign all documents
necessary to facilitate and to give effect
to the cession in (b)
above, failing which the Sheriff is hereby authorised to sign all
documents necessary to give effect to the
cession;
(d)
The respondents shall furnish the applicant, within fifteen days from
date of this order, with the names
and contact information of the
Wolbane Mansions tenants together with: -
(iv).
Copies of any written lease agreements
concluded between the first respondent, alternatively the
respondents, further alternatively,
their duly authorised agent, and
the Wolbane Mansions tenants;
(v).
Particularity in respect of the terms of
any implied and/or oral terms of any lease agreement concluded with
the Wolbane Mansions
tenants; and
(vi).
Particularity and copies of any existing
property management mandates for the management of and rental
collection at the Wolbane
Mansions; [CHECK NUMBERING]
(e)
The applicant is granted leave to take whatever steps necessary for
purposes of collecting rental amounts
from the Wolbane Mansions
tenants;
(f)
The immovable property, being Erf 2[…] Johannesburg Township,
Registration Division IR,
Gauteng Province, measuring 467 (Four
Hundred and Sixty-Seven) Square Metres, Held by Deed of Transfer
Number T75[…] (“the
immovable property”) be and is
hereby declared executable, and the applicant is authorised to issue
Writs of Attachment calling
upon the Sheriff of the Court to attach
the immovable property and to sell the immovable property in
execution;
(g)
The respondents be and is hereby ordered to pay a penalty fee equal
to 5% (Five Percent) plus VAT of
the monthly outstanding instalment
amount in arrears and unpaid by the first respondent within 2 (Two)
days of an Instalment Payment
Date as from 10 February 2020, to date
of payment in full of (a) above, both dates included;
(h)
the first, the second and the third respondents, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to
be absolved, shall pay the
applicants’ costs of the application on the scale as between
attorney and client, such costs to
include the costs consequent upon
the employment of two Counsel, one being Senior Counsel (where so
employed).’
(3)
The first, the second and the third
respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, shall pay the appellant’s
costs of the appeal,
including the costs of the application for leave to appeal to the
court
a quo
,
all such costs to include the costs consequent upon the employment of
two Counsel, one being Senior Counsel (where so employed).
J DLAMINI
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
6
th
September 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
29
th
November 2023 – judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Adv
Adrian Botha SC, together with Adv Eloïze Eksteen
INSTRUCTED BY:
Schindlers Attorneys,
Melrose Arch, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND
AND THIRD RESPONDENTS:
Adv Louis Hollander
INSTRUCTED BY:
Swartz Weil Van der
Merwe Green Attorneys, Melrose Estate, Johannesburg
[1]
[2005]
JOL 15779 (T)
[2]
1964
(2) SA 167 (O)
[3]
[
2001] 4 ALL SA 542 (SCA)
[4]
(734/2015)
[2015] ZASCA 50( 26 April 2017)
[5]
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13(15 March 2012)
[6]
(20229/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 111(3 September 20150)
[7]
(2016)
37 ILJ 2862(LC)
[8]
supra
[9]
2015
(2) SA 118 (SCA)
[10]
2020
(6) 211 (GJ);
sino noindex
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