Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 181South Africa
Mpfuni v Segwapa Inc and Another (2021/6574) [2022] ZAGPJHC 181 (14 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 March 2022
Headnotes
judgment to be entered against the first and second defendants in respect of a claim for cancellation of a written sale agreement and return of the purchase price and transfer costs paid by the plaintiff under the agreement, and ancillary relief.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mpfuni v Segwapa Inc and Another (2021/6574) [2022] ZAGPJHC 181 (14 March 2022)
Mpfuni v Segwapa Inc and Another (2021/6574) [2022] ZAGPJHC 181 (14 March 2022)
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sino date 14 March 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2021/6574
Reportable: No
Of interest to other
Judges: No
Revised: No
Date: 31/03/2022
In the matter between:
LUTENDO
CYNTHIA MPFUNI
Plaintiff
and
SEGWAPA
INC
First Defendant
NOZWAKAZI
MDLANKOMO
Second Defendant
J U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY J:
1.
The Plaintiff applied for summary judgment
to be entered against the first and second defendants in respect of a
claim for cancellation
of a written sale agreement and return of the
purchase price and transfer costs paid by the plaintiff under the
agreement, and
ancillary relief.
2.
The following order is sought in the
application for summary judgment:
“
1.
That the late filing of the notice for (sic) application for summary
judgment be condoned;
2.
The Sale Agreement between the parties which was signed and dated 30
June 2020 be cancelled;
3.
The First and Second Defendants be ordered to pay to the Applicant
the amount of R547 223.00…which
is made up of the
purchase price of R530 000.00 and R17 223.00 for transfer
costs within 14 (fourteen) days of granting
of this order, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved;
4.
The first and second defendants be jointly and severally liable for
the transfer costs of
transferring the property back to (sic) the
name of the seller;
5.
Interest rate at 10.25% from the date of transfer and registration of
the property;
6.
The First and Second Defendants be ordered to pay the costs of suit,
including costs of counsel,
jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, on an attorney and client scale; and
7.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
3.
It
bears mention that the second defendant did not oppose the action
itself, nor the application for summary judgment. No notice
of
intention to defend was delivered pursuant to service of the summons.
As such, the Plaintiff is entitled to pursue her procedural
right to
seek default judgment against the second defendant. No plea having
been delivered by the second defendant, it is axiomatic
that summary
judgment cannot be sought or granted against the second defendant in
terms of the provisions of the amended uniform
Rule 32.
[1]
4.
The plaintiff seeks condonation for the
late filing of the summary judgment application. The condonation
application was not opposed
by the first defendant. The delay in
filing the summary judgment application was less than 10 days and no
prejudice resulted therefrom.
As the delay was satisfactorily
explained by the plaintiff, it is in the interests of justice that
condonation be granted.
5.
In
terms of Rule 32(2)(b), a plaintiff is required to ‘verify the
cause of action…identify any point of law relied
upon and the
facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim is based…explain
briefly why the defence as pleaded does not raise
any issue for
trial’. Thus, in order to comply with subrule 2(b), the
affidavit filed in support of the application must
contain:
[2]
(1)
A verification of the cause of action and
the amount, if any, claimed;
(2)
An identification of any point of law
relied upon;
(3)
An identification of the facts upon which
the plaintiff’s claim is based upon; and
(4)
A brief explanation as to why the defence
as pleaded does not raise any issue for trial.
6.
The
learned authors in
Erasmus
submit that a court will have to be satisfied that each of these
requirements has been fulfilled before it can hold that there
has
been proper compliance with sub-rule (2)(b)
.
[3]
What
must be verified are the facts as alleged in the summons.
[4]
Further,
the deponent to the affidavit in support of the application for
summary judgment must verify what has been referred to
as a complete
or perfected cause of action.
[5]
As
pointed out in
Mphahlele,
[6]
‘
From
the aforegoing, it is clear that this requirement of the sub-rule
does not provide for a verification of evidence or the supplementing
of a cause of action with evidence. It is confined solely to those
facts which are already present and as pleaded in the plaintiff’s
summons (it being trite that a plaintiff in summary judgment
proceedings is prohibited from taking a further procedural step in
the proceedings by, for example, amending the particulars of claim
and then seeking to claim summary judgment).’
7.
The first defendant argues that a claim for
cancellation does not fall within the purview of rule 32. In the view
I take of the
matter, it is not necessary to decide this point in
these proceedings. In the present case, the plaintiff failed to
verify the
facts alleged in the summons. The plaintiff further failed
to verify the cause of action, which
ex
facie
the allegations in the
particulars of claim, does not in any event constitute a complete
cause of action. I say so for the following
reasons:
8.
The
plaintiff (as buyer) seeks cancellation of a written sale agreement
concluded with the second defendant (as seller). The buyer’s
written offer of purchase, which was signed by her, was accepted by
the seller who signed same.
[7]
In the result, a binding sale agreement came into being as between
the plaintiff and the second defendant.
[8]
In terms of the agreement, the seller sold an immovable property to
the buyer. The buyer was to pay the purchase price and any
transfer
costs associated with registration of transfer of the property into
her name. As averred in the particulars of claim,
the second
defendant appointed the first defendant as the conveyancer to
‘facilitate the transfer and registration of the
property.’
9.
On 6 July 2020 the plaintiff paid the
purchase price of R530 000.00 and the transfer costs of
R17 223.00 into the conveyancer’s
trust account and on 18
August 2020, transfer of the property was registered into the
plaintiff’s name in the Deeds office.
The purchase price was
paid by the conveyancer (first defendant) to the seller (second
defendant) upon registration of transfer
and before vacant possession
was given to the buyer.
10.
In terms of clause 1.2 of the agreement,
the purchase price of R530 000.00 was payable to the seller upon
registration of transfer.
In terms of clause 3, occupation ‘shall
be given to and taken by the purchaser within seven (7) days of
registration’.
No occupational rent was payable if occupation
took place within such period. If occupation did not take place
within the 7 day
period, occupational rent, calculated from date of
registration, at the rate of 1% of the purchase price was payable to
the conveyancer.
11.
Clause 15.1 contains a manuscript
insertion, stating that ‘The conveyancer should not pay any
proceeds to the seller before
vacant occupation is given to the
purchaser.”
12.
In terms of the breach clause provided for
in clause 5:
“
Should
either party breach any provision of this agreement and fail to
remedy such breach within 10 days after despatch of written
notice
requiring such breach to be remedied, the aggrieved party shall be
entitled, without prejudice to any other rights in law,
to cancel
this agreement forthwith, or claim specific performance…”
13.
In paragraphs 10, 11 and 13 of the
particulars of claim, the plaintiff avers as follows:
“
10
On…25 September 2020, the Plaintiff sent the First Defendant a
letter of demand (a copy is attached…marked
as annesure ‘D’).
The Plaintiff demanded that the sale agreement be cancelled and that
the purchase price be paid back
into her account…
11
The First Defendant is in breach of clause 15.1 of the sale
agreement, which states that ‘
the conveyancer should not pay
any proceeds to the seller before vacant occupation is given to the
purchaser.
The first defendant paid the proceeds to the second
defendant before the property was vacant and made available to the
plaintiff.
Despite the plaintiff’s plea for both the defendants
to remedy the breach of contract, the plaintiff has neither received
right of occupation, the occupational rent or the purchase price
back.
[The provisions of clause
5 are quoted in para 12]
13
The First and Second Defendants have failed to remedy their breach of
the provisions in the sale agreement.
The Plaintiff has not been
afforded the right to move into the property even though the First
Defendant went ahead and paid the
purchase price to the Second
Defendant. The Plaintiff is thus entitled to cancel this agreement
and demand her money back.”
14.
It is immediately apparent from a reading
of the plaintiff’s pleading, that the particulars of claim lack
any allegation to
the effect that the First Defendant was or became a
party to the agreement or that it consented to be bound to clause
15.1 thereof.
15.
The first defendant specifically denied
that it was a party to the agreement or that it was incurred any
obligation in terms of
clause 15.1 thereof and stated that once the
property was registered in the name of the plaintiff, the first
defendant had no legal
right to hold over the proceeds of the sale.
16.
The
plaintiff appears to have entirely overlooked the nature and import
of the first defendant’s defence or the fact that
the doctrine
of privity of contract still forms part of our law. The courts have
applied the rule that a litigant has no contractual
cause of action
against another person who is an outsider to the contract.
[9]
Since a contract is a matter between the parties thereto, no one
other than the contracting parties can incur any liability
or derive
any benefit from its terms. The case of
Gugu
[10]
illustrates
how the privity doctrine has been operating and has been applied in
our law. Known exceptions to the rule are agency
and
stipulation
alteri,
[11]
neither
of which appear to be applicable in
casu.
17.
From the way in which the plaintiff
formulated her claim for cancellation in the particulars of claim, it
is also clear that the
plaintiff entirely overlooked that fact that
she was obliged, in terms of clause 5 thereof, to afford the
defaulting party 10 days
written notice to remedy any alleged breach
before acquiring an entitlement to cancel the agreement. The
plaintiff’s claim
lacks averments that such a breach notice was
given prior to her demand, in annexure ‘D’ to the
particulars of claim,
for cancellation and restitution of the
purchase price paid by her.
18.
Clause 5 of the agreement
constitutes
a classic
lex
commissoria.
It affords the innocent party the right to cancel in the event of
default on the part of the other party after the latter has been
given written notice to remedy the default within 10 days, and has
failed to do so.
19.
Christie
[12]
provides
the following useful synopsis in regard to a
lex
commissoria
:
“
The
contract may explicitly state that if one party fails to perform a
particular obligation by a specified time the other party
is entitled
to cancel the contract. In a lease where the landlord is given the
right to cancel for non-payment of rent, such a
provision it is
usually called a forfeiture clause, and in a contract of sale where
the seller is given the right to cancel for
non-payment of the
purchase price, a
lex
commissoria,
but either
description may be used in respect of any type of contract.
Such
clauses are valid and enforceable strictly according to their terms,
and the court has no equitable jurisdiction to relieve
a debtor from
the automatic forfeiture resulting from such a clause.
(own
emphasis)
20.
Thus,
where
an agreement lays down a procedure for cancellation, that procedure
must be followed or a purported cancellation will be ineffective.
[13]
21.
For all the reasons given, not least of
all, the plaintiff’s failure to comply with the provisions of
rule 32(2)(b), including
her failure to make out a cause of action
that is cognisable in law, she not entitled to summary judgment.
22.
The general rule is that costs follow the
result. I see no reason to depart therefrom.
23.
In the circumstances, the following order
is granted:
ORDER:
1.
Condonation for the late filing of the
application for summary judgment is granted.
2.
The application for summary judgment is
dismissed with costs.
_________________
AVRILLE
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
14 March 2022
Judgment
delivered
31 March 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 31 March 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for Plaintiff:
Ms P Muthige
Attorneys
for Plaintiff:
Mukwveho R Attorneys
Counsel
for First Defendant:
Mr BT Moeletsi
Attorneys
for First Defendant:
K Mokale Attorneys
Counsel
for Second Defendant: No
appearance
Attorneys
for Second Defendant: No appearance
[1]
The
delivery of a plea is now a prerequisite to an application for
summary judgment under Rule 32(1) in its amended form. See:
Absa
Bank Limited v Mphahlele N.O and Others
(45323/2019,
42121/2019) [2020] ZAGPPHC 257 (26 March 2020), par 14.
(‘
Mphahlele
’)
[2]
See:
Erasmus, ‘Superior Court Practice’ (2
nd
edition) at D1-401
[3]
This
view was endorsed in
Mphahlele
supra,
at
par 15 and is a view I share. It accords with the established case
law under the former rule 32(2) wherein the requirements
of such
sub-rule were considered to be peremptory. See, for example, the
reasoning employed in
Shackleton
Credit Management (Pty) Ltd v Microzone Trading 88 CC
2010
(5) SA 112
(KZP) at 122F-I
[4]
See
Erasmus
at D1-402H and read with authorities cited in fn 183 thereof.
[5]
See
Erasmus
at D1-402H and read with authorities cited in fn 184 thereof;
[6]
Id
Mphahlele,
par
17.
[7]
Page
6 of the sale agreement appears in annexure ‘SJ1” to the
founding affidavit filed in support of the summary judgment
application. The agreement uploaded to caselines as annexure ‘A”
to the particulars of claim, does not contain page
6 thereof. It
remains unclear whether the completed agreement (containing all
pages, i.e., including page 6) was actually served
upon the
defendants at the relevant time.
[8]
See
para 5 of the particulars of claim where it is averred that on 30
June 2020 a written sale agreement was entered into by the
plaintiff
and the second defendant.
[9]
See:
Van Huyssteen
Contract
Law in South Africa
(2017)
146;
Cullinan
v Noordkaaplandse Aartappelkenrnoerkwekers Kooperasie Bpk
1972
(1) SA 761
;
Barclays
National Bank Ltd v HJ de Vos Boerdery Ondernemings (Edms) Bpk
1980
(4) SA 475
(A);
Minister
of Public works and Land Affairs v Group Five Building ltd
1999
(4) SA 12 (SCA).
[10]
Gugu
v Zongwana
2014
(1) All SA 203
(ECM). There a sale of property formed the subject
matter of the dispute,. The court concluded that the first
respondent had
not intended to sell, and the appellants had not
intended to buy, the first respondent’s undivided share in the
property,
but rather the actual property itself. The second
respondent had not consented to the sale of the property to the
appellants
on the terms in the sale agreement.
[11]
These
are discussed by Hutchison et al
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
3
rd
ed (2018) 227.
[12]
GB
Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa (7
th
ed)
at 599.
[13]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Koekemoer
(70014/2011) [2012] ZAGPPHC 300 (20 November 2012)
,
para
5.
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