Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 84South Africa
Nnese Medicals (Pty) Limited v De Re Motors (Pty) Limited (20/39957) [2022] ZAGPJHC 84 (14 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nnese Medicals (Pty) Limited v De Re Motors (Pty) Limited (20/39957) [2022] ZAGPJHC 84 (14 February 2022)
Nnese Medicals (Pty) Limited v De Re Motors (Pty) Limited (20/39957) [2022] ZAGPJHC 84 (14 February 2022)
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sino date 14 February 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: 20/39957
REPORTABLE:
YES/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:YES/NO
REVISED.
14/02/2022
In
the matter between:
NNESE
MEDICALS
(PTY)
Applicant
Registration
No. 2018 / 577534 /07
And
DE
RM MOTORS (PROPRERTY LIMITED)
Registration
No. 2020 / 112071
/07
Respondent
JUDGMENT:
NNESE
MEDICALS (PTY) LIMITED v DE RM MOTORS (PTY) LIMITED
NGCONGO
AJ:
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1
This matter concerns the crisp question of whether the
applicant is
entitled to cancel an agreement of sale and purchase of a motor
vehicle between itself and the respondent.
2
When the application was initially launched in November
2020, the
primary relief sought by the applicant was an order for specific
performance. The special performance sought was to compel
the
respondent to furnish the applicant with the necessary documentation
to effect transfer of the vehicle described as a 2016
Ford Ranger 3.2
4x4 Auto with license number [....] (“
the Ford Ranger
”)
to the applicant. However, by the time the application was heard, the
applicant informed the Court that it is no longer
pursuing the
primary relief. Instead, the applicant seeks an order that confirms
the cancellation of the agreement and that the
parties be placed in
the position they were prior to the conclusion of the contract.
3
This
abandonment is not unsurprising, especially in light of the
applicant’s previous communication to the respondent of its
election to cancel the agreement. It is generally noted that an
election to either affirm or cancel a contract, once made, is
final.
[1]
Thus, the only relief that remains for consideration in this matter,
is confirmation of the cancellation of the agreement and an
order for
restitution.
# Relevant facts
Relevant facts
4
This case arises as follows.
5
In October 2020, the parties concluded an oral agreement
for the sale
and purchase of the Ford Ranger for an amount of R266 000.00.
6
The applicant took possession of the Ford Ranger on 13
October 2020.
After taking possession, the applicant states that it established
that various repairs and services needed to be
done on the Ford
Ranger and arranged for these to be done. These services and repairs
came to an amount of approximately.
7
As is customary when purchasing a motor vehicle, the applicant
sought
the Ford Ranger’s documentation for the purpose of registering
the vehicle in its name and effecting transfer of ownership.
8
The applicant was informed, however, that the Ford Ranger
was new
stock to the respondent, which is a second-hand motor vehicle
dealership, and that the vehicle registration papers for
the Ford
Ranger were not ready. The respondent informed Mr Matsetela, the
director of the applicant, that the Ford Ranger’s
registration
documents would to be ready for collection within one week from the
13 October 2020.
9
However, after a period of a week, the respondent relayed
to the
applicant that the supplier of the Ford Ranger, Mr Isiaka, had
informed the respondent that there would be a delay in obtaining
the
vehicle registration documents. It was, however, only in mid-November
that Mr Isiaka further informed the respondent of a pending
criminal
case concerning the Ford Ranger, which he had opened in September,
after he had discovered that the Ford Ranger’s
documentation
had been cloned.
10
Shortly after that, on or about 17 November 2020, the applicant’s
attorneys notified the respondent in writing of their cancellation of
the agreement, on the basis that the applicant had, despite
numerous
demands, still not been furnished with the registration documents of
the Ford Ranger necessary to effect transfer. The
cancellation letter
demanded that the purchase price be repaid, along with the cost of
repairs and improvements that the applicant
had made to the vehicle.
11
Despite the cancellation letter, the respondent sought to continue
with
the agreement and informed the applicant on 23 November
2020 that the reason for the delay was the COVID-19 pandemic and the
resultant regulations and restrictions which impacted the operations
of the Department of Transport. Despite these difficulties,
the
respondent assured the applicant that the collection of the
registration documents was expected to take place on 4 December
2020.
12
This letter, however, crossed paths with the institution of this
application,
which was issued on the same day and served on the
respondent a few days later on 26 November 2020. At that point,
the applicant
repeated what had been said in its cancellation letter:
that it was unable to use the Ford Ranger because it had not been
provided
with the registration documents.
13
In an interesting turn of events, shortly before the hearing of this
application,
some ten months after transfer of the Ford Ranger, on 17
August 2021, the respondent eventually furnished the relevant
documentation
to the applicant.
# What are the issues for
determination?
What are the issues for
determination?
14
In the
circumstances, there are two main issues for decision, namely:
[2]
14.1 the
applicant’s preliminary point of non-joinder, insofar that
point is still alive; and
14.2 whether
the applicant is entitled to cancel the agreement in consequence of
the alleged breach on the part of the
respondent.
# Non-joinder
Non-joinder
15
For reasons which follow, I am of the view that, in consequence of
the
applicant no longer pursuing the primary relief of specific
performance, the non-joinder point is no longer engaged.
16
The essence of the respondent’s non-joinder point was that Mr
Isiaka
and the Department of Licensing, Langlaagte, ought to have
been joined in this application. The basis for this contention was as
follows. Under the primary relief, the applicant sought an order
compelling the respondent to furnish the applicant with the necessary
documentation to enable the applicant to effect transfer of the Ford
Ranger to its name. The respondent would be unable to do this
without
Mr Isiaka and the Department of Licensing, Langlaagte, and these
persons therefore had a direct and substantial interest
in any order
which this court might make in these proceedings concerning that
primary relief
. The alternative point was made that such an
order could not be sustained or carried into effect without
prejudicing those persons.
17
On the papers, the respondent additionally asserts that Mr Isiaka
ought
to be joined in the event that the Court confirms the
cancellation of the contract. It appears from the reasoning adopted
in this
argument that the respondent paid the purchase price over to
Mr Isiaka and that an order for cancellation and restitution
would therefore require Mr Isiaka to repay the respondent such amount
before the respondent was able to repay the applicant. This
aspect of
the non-joinder, however, was not pursued in argument where, as
stated above, the respondent sought a joinder of the
Department and
Mr Isiaka
only
if special performance was sought. This was the
correct approach, in my view.
18
In any event, on the argument pursued by the respondent, the
viability
of the non-joinder was contingent upon the applicant’s
seeking of the primary relief. Since that relief is no longer sought,
this point falls by the wayside. It is accordingly not necessary to
decide it.
19
I turn now to the cancellation controversy.
# The parties’
arguments regarding the cancellation of the agreement
The parties’
arguments regarding the cancellation of the agreement
20
The applicant’s case on this score is conceptually simple: the
applicant
says that the respondent bore a legal obligation to furnish
the applicant, within reasonable time, with the necessary
documentation
to enable the applicant to effect transfer of the Ford
Ranger to its name. This did not occur – at least, not until
very
late in the day – and thus the respondent breached the
agreement.
21
As I have it, this gives rise to two questions. First, did the
applicant
have a legal basis on which to seek cancellation; namely,
was there a breach? Second, if the answer to the first question is
yes,
whether the facts of this matter warrant the applicant being
granted the relief it seeks.
22
As regards
the question of the legal basis for the cancellation, the applicant
relied heavily on
Springfield
Omnibus
.
[3]
In that case, t
he
applicant sought an order that its agreement with the first
respondent be cancelled, and that its payment of the purchase price
of a bus be refunded against the return of the vehicle. The reason
was that the first respondent had failed to do all things necessary
for the registration of transfer of ownership of the bus into the
name of the applicant.
23
As in the present matter, the applicant in
Springfield Omnibus
contended that it was the duty
of the first respondent to do all things necessary for the
registration of transfer of ownership
of the bus into the name of the
applicant and that the first respondent had failed to do so. In
consequence, so the argument ran,
the first respondent's omission
constituted a material breach of the agreement which entitled the
applicant to cancel the sale.
24
The court in
Springfield Omnibus
upheld the grounds of
cancellation relied upon by the applicant for cancellation of the
contract. In particular, and at pages 5
to 6, the court found as
follows:
“
All
that is required of an auctioneer is to ensure that delivery of the
vehicle is passed to the purchaser once payment has been
effected
as
well as to provide the purchaser with all documents as are necessary
which would enable the purchaser to effect registration
of transfer
of ownership into his or her name
. There is no doubt on the
papers before me that the applicant made numerous requests to the
first respondent to furnish the original
certificate of registration
as well written confirmation from the second respondent consenting to
the registration of the bus in
the applicant's name. These requests
however fell on deaf ears.” (
Emphasis added
)
25
Kruger J went on to hold that the
fact that the papers were subsequently tendered did not change the
fact that there had been a
breach. This is stated at page 6 as
follows:
“
It
is noted that the first respondent, by way of affidavit dated 2 March
2005, has now tendered the original documents to enable
the applicant
to effect registration of transfer of ownership into its name.
However, this tender is far too late.
The applicant was, in my
opinion, accordingly entitled to cancel the contract which it duly
did by letter dated 28 June 2004.”
(
Emphasis added
).
26
Likewise,
the present applicant says that fact that the respondent defaulted on
its obligation to deliver the vehicle registration
documents (within
a reasonable time) is enough to entitle it to cancel the agreement
between the parties. In oral argument, the
applicant’s counsel
pressed the fact in the present case the respondent took some ten
months to furnish the relevant. This,
in circumstances where there
were extensive efforts by the applicant during that period to obtain
those papers and where, as I
have indicated, the applicant cancelled
the agreement by way of a letter dated 17 November 2020.
This was in accordance
with the principle in our law that an innocent
party rescinds a contract by communicating that to the guilty
party.
[4]
27
The applicant also made much of the fact that, at the time of the
conclusion
of the contract, it was not apprised of the proper state
of affairs. In this regard, it says that it concluded the agreement
under
the misapprehension that the respondent was the owner of the
Ford Ranger (this proved not to be so) and without knowing that the
Ford Ranger would subsequently be (or was already) embroiled in
investigations concerning whether its registration documents had
been
cloned.
28
What is the respondent’s answer to all this? It disputes that
the
delay amounted to a breach of the agreement. Its primary answer
is that the delay arose as a result of the discovery, following
the
conclusion of the agreement, that the registration documents were
cloned, which precluded it from furnishing the applicant
with the
necessary documentation. This, it says, was an unforeseeable event.
29
The respondent says that the solution to this difficulty lay outside
its
hands, and that the fulfilment of the respondent’s
obligation required it to enlist the participation of the Department
of
Licencing and Mr Isiaka. Indeed, the respondent states that rather
than sitting on its hands, it took positive steps – with
the
assistance of Mr Isiaka – and approached the Department of
Licensing to obtain the required documentation in order to
furnish
these to the applicant to enable it to transfer ownership.
30
The respondent says that its predicament did not end there. The
Covid-19
pandemic and the restrictions that were imposed upon the
inhabitants of the country as a result worsened its position. More
specifically,
the respondent relies upon the limitations on the
number of personnel in government offices which had impacted the
provision of
services by the Department of Licensing.
31
The respondent asserts that it informed the applicant of the causes
of
the delay as these events were unfolding. In oral argument it also
sought to distinguish
Springfield Omnibus
on the basis that
the factual circumstances in that case were different and did not
involve the consequences of the pandemic. The
respondent further took
issue with the fact that the applicant still seeks cancellation even
though the respondent has (belatedly)
now performed.
32
In sum, then, the respondent accepts that it did not
timeously
perform its obligation, but it seeks salvation in the notion that it
is not responsible for failure to perform. On this score,
it says
that it was temporarily impossible for it to meet its obligation
which, it contends, excuses its failure to perform. As
I understood
its case, and to be precise, the respondent’s contention is not
that performance was permanently impossible
but that it was
temporarily impossible, which occasioned (and ought to excuse) a
delay of performance.
# Where does all this leave
matters?
Where does all this leave
matters?
## Was the respondent in
breach of the agreement?
Was the respondent in
breach of the agreement?
33
The applicant seeks an order that the sale and purchase agreement is
cancelled
and that the parties are placed in the position they would
have been prior to conclusion of the contract. It is necessary to
note
that, under our law, cancellation of a contract is an
extraordinary remedy, and an innocent party may only avail itself of
it in
certain circumstances.
34
There are three dominant methods of cancelling a contract:
34.1
Firstly, a
party may cancel in terms of the common law where a breach occurred
of a term “that goes to the root of the contract”.
In
such an instance, the materiality of the breach is a relevant factor
in the determination of whether cancellation should be
ordered or
not.
[5]
34.2
Secondly,
the contract may be cancelled if the contract contains a provision
that affords a party such a right on the occurrence
of a specific
breach.
[6]
This is cancellation clause
.
Whether
a breach of the contract has been committed that allows the innocent
party to rely on the cancellation clause is then a
matter of
interpretation of the contract.
[7]
34.3
Thirdly, a
party may cancel a contract
in
the absence of a breach having occurred
,
unilaterally, and usually on notice. Whether a party is entitled to
terminate a contract unilaterally in absence of a breach is
not
something provided for in the common law and depends on the terms of
the contract under consideration.
[8]
This legal principle is not engaged in the present case.
35
On the current facts, I am persuaded by the applicant’s
reliance
on
Springfield
Omnibus
that the respondent was
indeed duty-bound to
ensure that
delivery of the vehicle was passed to the purchaser once payment had
been effected and to provide the purchaser with
all documents that
were necessary which would enable the applicant to effect
registration of transfer of ownership into its name.
The duty to
supply the necessary papers to the purchaser of a vehicle is, as was
found in that case, one of the primary obligations
of the seller in
such a sale and purchase contract. In addition, I am in agreement
with the finding in
Springfield
Omnibus
that
this
is a duty that needs to occur timeously. Failure to perform such an
obligation within a reasonable time after payment of the
purchase
price and delivery of the vehicle would therefore amount to a
material breach of the contract.
36
It is unnecessary here to focus too
much on what would constitute a “reasonable time” for
these purposes. In the current
circumstances, I would think that one
month was sufficient delay to occasion a breach (that being roughly
the period after which
the applicant sent its cancellation letter to
the respondent). Nothing turns on this, however, because, in any
event, I am satisfied
that ten months after purchase of the Ford
Ranger and payment of the purchase price by the applicant is
certainly
not
a reasonable time within which to deliver the papers necessary to
effect transfer into the applicant’s name. The respondent
has
therefore committed a material breach of the agreement, and, in my
view, the applicant is entitled to cancel the agreement
and seek
restitution.
37
This is not the end of the matter, however, as the respondent’s
defence
of temporary impossibility must be considered.
## Was it temporarily
impossible for the respondent to perform its obligations and does
this excuse the respondent’s delay?
Was it temporarily
impossible for the respondent to perform its obligations and does
this excuse the respondent’s delay?
38
The general
rule in our law is that impossibility of performance prevents the
creation of obligations and if, after the conclusion
of the contract,
performance subsequently becomes objectively impossible, the
obligation to perform is, generally, extinguished.
[9]
In order to rely on impossibility, the impossibility must be
objective in that no person could perform the obligation. Mere
relative
or subjective impossibility is therefore not a defence to
non-performance of a contract and may justify the other party
exercising
an election to cancel.
[10]
39
The
impossibility must arise through either
vis
major
or
casus
fortuitous
.
Currently in our law there appears to be, as
Christie’s
Law of
Contract in South Africa
notes, no real distinction between these concepts, simply that the
impossibility must arise from “
any
happening whether due to natural causes or human agency, that is
unforeseeable with reasonable foresight and unavoidable with
reasonable care.
”
[11]
40
Impossibility
can arise due to the conduct of a third party. In
Bischofberger
,
[12]
the parties had entered into an agreement for the sale of land. The
respondent agreed that a third party would cede the proceeds
of a
sale of another portion of land to the applicant
in
lieu
of
obtaining a bank guarantee. The sale by the third party fell through
and the cession became impossible for the third party to
perform. The
court held that this rendered performance impossible and the
agreement therefore “
ceased
to exist
”.
[13]
41
The usual consequence of supervening impossibility of performance is
termination
of the obligation. In
Kudu Granite
, the parties’
contract became void due to supervening impossibility as a result of
a third party. The parties concluded a
sale of shares and loan
accounts in a certain company. The value of the loan account was in
dispute and the contract provided that
the parties would have 60 days
to agree, failing which KPMG would determine the loan amount. As it
turns out, KPMG was incapable
of determining the loan amount.
42
The court held that:
“
[the respondent’s]
case was one of a lawful agreement which afterwards failed without
fault because its terms could not be
implemented. The intention of
the parties was frustrated. The situation in which the parties found
themselves was analogous to
impossibility of performance since they
had made the fate of their contract dependent upon the conduct of a
third party (KPMG)
who was unable or unwilling to perform.”
[14]
43
As a result, it is clear that impossibility can arise through the
conduct
of a third party, as the respondent seeks to assert in the
current matter. The respondent does not, however, rely on
impossibility
as a basis to terminate the obligations, but rather
seeks to assert that, because of what it deems “temporary
impossibility”,
its obligations to perform
timeously
ought to be excused.
44
On the facts of this case, it does appear to me that an objective,
albeit
temporary, impossibility arose as a matter of fact. However, I
am not convinced, for the reasons that follow, that this is
sufficient
to excuse the respondent’s failure to deliver the
vehicle documents timeously to the applicant.
45
All rules
are, of course, susceptible to exceptions. Therefore, whilst the
general rule in our law is that obligations are extinguished
where
performance after the conclusion of a contract becomes impossible due
to no fault of the parties, this general rule is subject
to an
assessment of the “
nature
of the contract, the relation of the parties, the circumstances of
the case and the nature of the impossibility
.”
[15]
46
Examples of this can be seen in the following:
46.1
Where the
impossibility is self-created or due to the fault of the debtor then
impossibility cannot be relied on as a defence to
non-performance.
[16]
46.2
Where the
impossibility was reasonably foreseeable, or the risk of the
impossibility arising was within the contemplation of the
parties at
the time of concluding the contract, then the defence cannot be
relied on.
[17]
46.3
Where a
debtor takes on the risk of the impossibility in terms of the
contract, then the debtor will still be liable in damages
despite the
impossibility.
[18]
In
Southern
Era
,
this occurred as a matter of law following the perfection of a sale
of mineral rights. Upon perfection, the risk transferred to
the
buyer. The intercession of a change to the law that rendered delivery
impossible did not excuse the debtor (who had in law
assumed the risk
of destruction of the
merx
)
from payment of the purchase price.
46.4
In
Oerlikon
SA (Pty) Ltd v Jhb
CC
,
[19]
the contract specifically provided that one party would bear the risk
of “
any
accident, fire, drought, flood, frost or tempest
”
[20]
and the court accepted that the parties could do this.
[21]
46.5
In
Nuclear
Fuels
,
the plaintiff raised in its replication that the defendant’s
reliance on the defence of impossibility could not succeed
as the
defendant had either guaranteed performance or alternatively had
assumed the risk of impossibility.
[22]
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal ultimately found that, on a
proper interpretation of the contract, there was no such
guarantee.
[23]
However, what is instructive is that the court did not reject the
argument as a matter of law, but engaged with the allegation
and
argument substantively to determine whether the contract did indeed
contain such a guarantee. One may therefore draw the inference
that
the Court saw no issue with the proposition that a guarantee of
performance, if proved, could displace reliance on impossibility.
47
As explained above, I am convinced that the respondent in the present
case
breached its obligations in terms of the contract to timeously
deliver the Ford Ranger documents to the applicant with the result
that the applicant was unable to enjoy the use of the Ford Ranger it
had purchased. The
real issue is
therefore what is to be made of the temporary impossibility raised by
the respondent? Does this excuse the respondent’s
late delivery
with the effect that it may be said that the late delivery of the
documents, some ten months later, did not constitute
a material
breach that entitled the applicant to cancel the agreement?
48
By reason of the respondent’s raison d'etre as a second hand
motor
vehicle dealership, the impossibility that arose in this case
did so principally because it transpired, only once the agreement
had
been concluded (and the purchase price paid and the Ford Ranger
delivered), that the respondent was not, in fact, the owner
of the
Ford Ranger. The respondent did not have the papers for the vehicle
and, it appears, had also not prior to the conclusion
of the
agreement pressed the true owner for these. Under those
circumstances, my view is that the impossibility was either
reasonably
foreseeable on the part of the respondent; the risk of the
impossibility arising was within the contemplation of the respondent
at the time of concluding the agreement; or, at the very least, the
respondent took on the risk of the impossibility in terms of
the
agreement.
49
That being so, I find that the defence of temporary impossibility
does
not avail the respondent in the current matter.
I thus conclude that the applicant was entitled to cancel the
agreement, and properly did so by communicating the cancellation
to
the respondent in November 2020. On the facts of this case, the
defence of temporary impossibility is unsustainable.
# Restitution
Restitution
50
It is trite
that where a contract has been cancelled due to breach or otherwise,
the general position is that each party is bound
to restore to the
other that which he or she has received in terms of the contract.
[24]
51
In the current case, it is therefore clear that the applicant must
return
the Ford Ranger to the respondent and that the respondent must
repay the purchase price of R266 000.00 to the applicant.
52
The applicant further seeks repayment of the amounts it incurred in
improving
and servicing the Ford Ranger. According to the applicant,
total amount that arises from the invoices in this regard was
R49 481.46
.
I am of the view that the respondent ought to
refund the applicant for the improvements that the applicant made to
the vehicle.
This is in line with restoring the applicant to the
position had the contract not been concluded. It is also fair, as the
respondent
will receive an improved and serviced Ford Ranger as a
result of the services and repairs effected by the applicant.
# Final points
Final points
53
The respondent’s counsel urged me that, in the event that I
reached
the conclusion at which I have arrived, that I order the
applicant to pay rent for the period in which the Ford Ranger has
been
in the applicant’s possession. I am not persuaded that a
case for this made out. It is common cause that the applicant has
not
been able to use the vehicle due to the respondent’s failure to
provide it with the papers.
54
The applicant seeks costs against the respondent on an attorney and
client
scale. Whilst the respondent’s actions left the
applicant in an undesirable position, I am not persuaded that the
facts warrant
costs being paid on an attorney and client scale.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
55
I accordingly conclude that the respondent materially breached the
sale
and purchase agreement regarding the Ford Ranger. The applicant
was therefore entitled to cancel the agreement and validly did so
by
communicating this election to the respondent. In addition, I find
that the respondent has not succeeded in raising a defence
of
temporary impossibility in the current circumstances.
56
I therefore make the following order:
56.1 The
agreement between the parties was duly cancelled;
56.2 The
respondent is ordered to refund the purchase price of the Ford Ranger
(R266 000.00) to the applicant;
56.3 The
respondent is ordered to pay to the applicant the amount of
R49 481.46 for repairs, improvements and service
that was done
to the Ford Ranger;
56.4 The
applicant is ordered to return the Ford Ranger to the respondent
within one day of receiving the refund of
the purchase price of the
Ford Ranger as well as the aforesaid amount for repairs, improvements
and service that was done to the
Ford Ranger;
56.5 The
respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs on a party
and party scale.
Acting
Judge of the High Court,
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 14 February 2022
Date
of hearing: 06 September 2021
Date
of judgment: 14 February 2022
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Sanele Fezile
Sibisi
Instructed
by:
QQ Mkhatshwa Incorporated Attorneys
For
the respondent:
Sandra Makoasha
Instructed
by:
Sibanda Bukhosi Attorneys Inc
[1]
See the
rationale of Hoexter JA in
Chamber
of Mines of SA v National Union of Mineworkers
1987 (1) SA 668
(A) at 690 for this general proposition, where it
was held:
“
One
or other of two parties between some legal relationship subsists is
sometimes faced with two alternative and entirely inconsistent
courses of action or remedies. The principle that in this situation
the law will not allow that party to blow hot and cold is
a
fundamental one of general application.”
However,
it is important, too, to note the qualification of this general
statement, as noted by Hoexter JA in reference to Bower’s
Estoppel by Representation
(1923) at para 244 which states
that “[
a] man may change his mind as often as he pleases,
so long as no injustice is thereby done to another
.” In
the current matter, therefore, as the respondent had not relied (to
its detriment) on the applicant’s letter
of cancellation of 17
November 2020, it is arguable that the applicant was entitled to
pursue an order of specific performance,
despite having elected to
cancel the agreement and communicating such election to the
respondent in unequivocal terms. This point
is, however, purely
academic in the current matter as the applicant has abandoned the
claim for specific performance.
[2]
In
its answering affidavit, the respondent also alleged, as a further
preliminary point, that the applicant had failed to comply
with the
Practice Directive. This point was not ultimately pursued by the
respondent – save in relation to a debate about
the
appropriate scale for costs. It is accordingly unnecessary to
consider it further.
[3]
Springfield
Omnibus Service Durban CC v Peter Maskell Auction CC & another
[2006] JOL 16436
(N). This, in fact, was the sole authority invoked
by the applicant on this point.
[4]
Datacolor
International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001 (2) SA 284
(SCA) at para 28.
[5]
Oatorian
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Maroun
1973
(3) SA 779
(A) at 784.
[6]
Id
at 784-785.
[7]
North
Vaal Mineral Co Ltd v The Lovasz
1961
(3) SA 604
(T) at 606.
[8]
Van
Streepen & Germs (Pty) Ltd v The Transvaal Provisional
Administration
1987 (4) SA 569 (A).
[9]
Ngcobo J
described the underlying principle thus in
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007
(5) SA 323
at para 75:
“
[The]
common law does not require people to do that which is impossible.
This principle is expressed in the maxim
lex non cogit ad
impossibilia
no one should be compelled to perform or
comply with that which is impossible. This maxim derives from the
principles of
justice and equity that underlie the common law.”
[10]
Unibank
Savings and Loans (formerly Community Bank) v ABSA Bank
2000
(4) SA 191
(W) at 198B.
[11]
Bradfield GB,
Christie’s
Law of
Contract in South Africa
7ed
2016 (Lexis Nexis) page 548.
[12]
Bischofberger
v Van Eyk
1981
(2) SA 607 (W).
[13]
Id
a
t
611G.
[14]
Kudu
Granite Operations (Pty) Ltd v Caterna Ltd
2003
(5) SA 193
(SCA) at para 15.
[15]
Bischofberger
above
at
610H-611C.
[16]
MV
Snow Crystal, Transnet Ltd t/a National Ports Authority v Owner of
MV Snow Crystal
[2008] ZASCA 27
;
2008
(4) SA 111
(SCA) at para 28.
[17]
Nuclear
Fuels Corp of SA (Pty) Ltd v Orda AG
1996
(4) SA 1190
(SCA) at 1209F-1210C.
[18]
Southern
Era Resources Ltd v Farndell NO
2010
(4) SA 200 (SCA).
[19]
1970 (3) SA 579
(A).
[20]
Id a
t
582B.
[21]
Id
at
585B-E.
[22]
Nuclear
Fuels
above
at
1195G-H.
[23]
Id
at
1208B-H.
[24]
Cash
Converters Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Rosebud Western Province
Franchise (Pty) Ltd
2002 (1) SA 708
(C) at 717G.
sino noindex
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