Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1461South Africa
Pacheco and Another v Louis and Another (2023/120101) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1461 (18 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 December 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1461
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Pacheco and Another v Louis and Another (2023/120101) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1461 (18 December 2023)
Pacheco and Another v Louis and Another (2023/120101) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1461 (18 December 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1461.html
sino date 18 December 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2023-120101
In
the matter between:
JOAO
PAOLO DE FIGUEIREDO PACHECO
FIRST APPLICANT
MONIBA
ADILA AYOB ISMAIL HATLA
SECOND APPLICANT
and
ALOYS
JOHN LOUIS
FIRST RESPONDENT
RUBIN
POSTAN ATTORNEYS
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e mail and publication
on Case Lines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
18 December 2023.
G.S MYBURGH AJ
1.
The applicants seek final relief in the form of a declaration of
rights and an order compelling performance
by the first respondent,
as seller, relative to a disputed contract for the purchase and sale
of a residential property. In the
alternative they seek interim
relief in the form of an interdict prohibiting the first respondent
from alienating the property
pending the determination of their claim
for final relief. The application was brought on an urgent basis with
truncated time periods
for the delivery of answering and replying
papers.
2.
As I consider the matter to require an order (one way or the other)
as a matter of some urgency, I do not propose
to deal with the issues
exhaustively but will instead confine myself to what I consider to be
the central issues.
3.
The facts can conveniently be summarised as follows:
·
On 13 October this year the applicants submitted a written offer to
purchase
an immovable property owned by the first respondent –
to whit erf 311 Bedfordview Extension 71. The applicants were
assisted
by a Ms Pretorius of Wanda Bollo Estates (“WBE”),
which is an estate agency, and WBE conveyed the offer to the
first respondent , as is the norm in respect of such transactions.
The price offered was R3 100 000.00 (three million,
one
hundred thousand).
·
On 19 October the first respondent returned the offer , which he had
signed,
to WBE. However the offer was not in its original form. In
the first instance the first respondent had altered the price
to read R3 200 000.00 (three million two hundred thousand).
He had also deleted the clause which dealt with liability
for agent’s
commission and inserted a provision which provided that the purchaser
would be liable for payment of WBE’s
commission in the amount
of R150 000,00 and which required the purchaser to pay that
amount to the seller’s conveyancers
(the second respondent)
within three days. He also altered the document to stipulate that it
would remain open for acceptance until
19 October 2023 – i.e.
the day of its transmission to WBE.
·
On 23 October WBE emailed a copy of what was alleged to be a contract
of
sale to the first respondent. The document had indeed been
countersigned by the applicants; however, they had amended the clause
relating to payment of agent’s commission by inserting a “4”,
so that it provided for such payment to be made
by the applicants
within 43 days rather than 3 days as the first respondent had
required.
·
The document had also been signed by a representative of WBE and that
signature
was preceded by words which recorded that WBE had accepted
the benefits conferred on them by the agreement.
·
Shortly thereafter (the date is unimportant) the applicants paid the
agreed
deposit of R200 000.00 to the second respondent.
·
On 31 October the first respondent addressed an email to the
applicants
in which he informed them that he was not in agreement
with the change they had made to the document, that he had not signed
the
amendment and that he required the applicants to pay the agreed
amount of R150 000,00 in respect of agent’s commission
to
the second respondent failing which he would “cancel the sale”.
·
The next day the applicants duly complied and paid the amount of
R150 000,00
to the second respondent.
·
On 3 November (i.e. 2 days later) the first respondent informed the
second
respondent that he did not intend to proceed with the sale and
instructed him to return the moneys which he had received.
·
On the same day the second respondent forwarded that email to WBE and
requested
details of the applicants’ bank account so as to be
able to effect the refund.
·
Correspondence followed between the respective attorneys. The
applicants
contended that they had concluded a binding agreement and
required performance of it. The first respondent’s position was
the opposite – i.e. that he was not bound. In the
meanwhile, the second respondent continued to hold the funds which
the applicants had paid to him (i.e. a total of R350 000,00) in
trust.
·
The applicants, having reached an impasse, launched the present
application
on 16 November this year for hearing in the week
commencing 4 December (i.e. the roll commencing on Tuesday 5
December)
4.
One of the
defences raised by the defendant was that the matter was not urgent;
alternatively, that the urgency had been self-created.
I believe it
to be well settled that the test in relation to urgency is
whether the applicants would be able to obtain adequate
and
appropriate relief in due course. Given that the respondent has
denied the existence of a binding agreement and insisted that
he is
entitled to sell the property to a third party (which he appears to
be intent on doing), I am satisfied that the matter is
urgent. I also
do not believe that the delay of approximately two weeks, while the
parties were involved in correspondence, should
effectively non-suit
the applicants. To this I would add that the time periods were not so
truncated as to prejudice the respondents’
ability to put their
cases before the court.
[1]
I
accordingly heard the matter on an urgent basis.
5.
That said, and as I indicated to counsel for the applicants in the
course of argument, I did not (and still
do not) consider the
application for final relief to be urgent in nature. I was therefore
only disposed to entertain the application
for interlocutory relief
on that basis. That is accordingly all that I will deal with in this
judgment.
6.
The requirements for an interim interdict are so well known as not to
bear restatement. Counsel for the parties
were also
ad idem
in
that regard. I will accordingly not adumbrate.
7.
The starting point is the establishment of a right. It need not be
established clearly. On the contrary, it
may be open to some doubt –
i.e. what is frequently referred to as a “
prima facie
right”. While it is true that a strong balance of convenience
in favour of an applicant can compensate for weaknesses in
its case
relative to the right contended for, the establishment of a right,
albeit perhaps open to some doubt, is a
sine qua non
. If the
applicant is not successful in crossing this threshold, then no
relief will be granted.
In casu
the primary question is
whether the applicants have succeeded in showing, at least
prima
facie
(in the sense used above) that they concluded a binding
contract of sale with the first respondent.
8.
The first obstacle which arises in this regard is that it was not
clear from the papers when the alleged acceptance
took place. In
their founding papers the applicants said that they immediately
decided to accept the counteroffer; however, they
did not say when
they in fact signed the amended document. In the course of argument
Mr Bollo, who appeared for the applicants,
said that I could proceed
on the basis that they did not do so prior to 23 October, which is
when WBE communicated the countersigned
document to the first
applicant. That was, of course, well outside the allowed period for
acceptance. The enquiry does not however
end there for it is settled
that a party in the position of the first respondent has an election
to treat a late acceptance as
a nullity or to treat it as an
acceptance notwithstanding its lateness. The enquiry thus turns to
whether the first respondent
in fact condoned the lateness.
9.
On this issue, I am of the view that the facts favour the applicants.
It is abundantly clear that the first
respondent did not, at any
time, adopt the attitude that the purported acceptance was out of
time and hence ineffective. On the
contrary, he clearly condoned the
lateness. That he did so is clear from the content of his email
communication of 31 October,
in which he demanded payment of the
amount of R150 000,00 in respect of agent’s commission. At
that time, he was clearly
seeking to enforce the agreement, but
sans
the amendment which the applicants had made to the handwritten clause
5.2. That the “acceptance” had been out of time
was never
mentioned, and it was clearly not a fact that was of any concern to
him.
10.
This
brings me to the crux of the matter – i.e. did what transpired
give rise to a binding contract of sale? The answer
to this question
turns on the requirements of S2 (1) of the Alienation of Land Act
(“the Act”)
[2]
. That
subsection stipulates that:
“
No
alienation of land after the commencement of this section shall,
subject to the provisions of section 28, be of any force or
effect
unless it is contained in a deed of alienation signed by the parties
thereto or by their agents acting on their written
authority
.”
11.
It is well settled that the requirement for the document to signed
relates to the document in its final form – i.e., a
signature
which may have been appended prior to an amendment is irrelevant for
the purpose of applying the sub-section in issue.
Counsel who
appeared for the parties were (unsurprisingly)
ad idem
in this
regard.
12.
That the first respondent did not at any time countersign the amended
clause 5.2 was at all times common cause on the papers.
This being
so, the requirements of the sub section were, at least
prima
facie
, not satisfied.
13.
The argument which was advanced on behalf of the applicants on this
issue was to the effect that clause 5.2 was in the nature
of a
stipulatio alteri
which had duly been accepted by WBE. The
position, so the argument went, was that clause 5.2 was, in truth,
not a term of
the agreement between the applicants and the
first respondent but rather an agreement between the applicants and
WBE.
The fact that the amendment was never assented to or
signed off by the first respondent was accordingly irrelevant. I was,
in this
regard, referred to a number of authorities which have dealt
with the nature and effect of a so called
stipulatio alteri;
however, I have to say that I did not find any of them to be on
point or helpful. While it may be so that the clause was of the kind
contended for, it does not follow that it did not form a term of the
sale alleged agreement. Indeed, I understand it to be well
settled
that a term of that kind must necessarily form part of a valid
agreement before it can be accepted by the
alterius.
As
pointed out above, a contract for the sale of land has to be in
writing, signed by the parties (or their duly authorised agents)
in
order to be valid. There is nothing in the act which suggests that it
is sufficient for some but not all of the terms to be
“signed
off”. I was also not pointed to any authority for that
proposition. Clause 5.2 was clearly a term of the contract.
The fact
that the agent and the parties may, at an earlier date, (i.e. in the
course of their exchanges) have reached an agreement
or “in
principle agreement” to the effect that the purchaser
rather than the seller would be liable for is, to
my mind,
neither here nor there.
14.
For these reasons I am of the view that the applicants have
failed to satisfy the first requirement for an interim interdict
–
i.e. the existence of a so called “
prima facie right
”.
It is accordingly unnecessary for me to consider the remaining
requirements for interdictory relief.
15.
I accordingly make the following order.
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
___________________
G
S Myburgh
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg
Date
of Hearing:
8 December 2023
Date
of Judgment:
14 December 2023
Appearances:
On
behalf of Applicants:
C Bollo
Biccari Bollo Mariano Inc
Attorneys
011 6299300
dagan@bbmlaw.co.za
On
Behalf of First Respondent:
Adv
R J Groenewald
Instructed by Fluxmans
Inc
011 3281700
shafir@fluxmans.com
[1]
The second respondent in fact took no part in the proceedings.
[2]
Act 68 of 1981
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
P. v Housing Development Agency (21/50612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 234 (4 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 234High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Paredes-Tarazona v Worley Parsons South Africa (Pty) Ltd (23347/2014) [2025] ZAGPJHC 753 (4 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 753High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
P.G.M. obo M.M. v Road Accident Fund (22670/2018) [2025] ZAGPJHC 469 (8 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 469High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
N.M v P.M and Others (22/1716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 644 (9 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 644High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
L.T v P.E.T (14994/2013) [2023] ZAGPJHC 273 (15 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 273High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar