Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 190South Africa
Naicker N.O. and Others v Park Village Auctions & Property Sales (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/25152) [2022] ZAGPJHC 190 (30 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Naicker N.O. and Others v Park Village Auctions & Property Sales (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/25152) [2022] ZAGPJHC 190 (30 March 2022)
Naicker N.O. and Others v Park Village Auctions & Property Sales (Pty) Limited and Others (2021/25152) [2022] ZAGPJHC 190 (30 March 2022)
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sino date 30 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2021/25152
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
30
March 2022
In
the matter between:
VASUTHEVAN NAICKER N.O
(In his representative
capacity as Trustee for the time being of the
VEN
FAMILY TRUST
)
(Masters
Reference: IT 000927 /
2018D)
First Applicant
ELAINE NAICKER N.O
((In her
representative capacity as Trustee for the time being of the VEN
FAMILY TRUST)
(Masters
Reference: IT 000927 /
2018D)
Second Applicant
LORRAINE DOORASAMY N.O
(In her representative
capacity as Trustee for the time being of the VEN FAMILY TRUST
(Masters
Reference: IT 000927/
2018D
Third Applicant
and
PARK VILLAGE AUCTIONS
& PROPERTY SALES (PTY)
LIMITED
First Respondent
K P M M CONSTRUCTION
(PTY) LIMITED
(In Business Rescue)
(Registration
Number: 200000070307
Second Respondent
NEIL MILLER N.O
(The Business Rescue
Practitioner for
K
P M M CONSTRUCTION (PTY)
LIMITED
Third Respondent
BIESEMAN
& BIESEMAN (PTY)
LIMITED
Fourth Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS-PRETORIA
Fifth Respondent
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Sixth Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT
Seventh Respondent
JUDGEMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on the 30
th
of March
2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
The application concerns the validity of an
auction sale of an immovable property situate at Erf 3613, Cnr
Constantia Street and
EP Malan Street, Pomona Ext 128, district
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (“the property”),
sold by the first
respondent at the behest of the second and third
respondents to the fourth respondent pursuant to an auction on 2
March 2021.
[2]
The applicants are the trustees of the Ven
Family Trust (“the trust”), who made offers of R17
million and R20 million
for the property subsequent to the auction on
11 March 2021 and 25 March 2021 respectively. The trust did not
attend the auction.
[3]
The
second respondent is a financially distressed company. The third
respondent
[1]
is its appointed
business rescue practitioner, who decided to sell the second
respondent’s property by way of public auction
pursuant to
which the first respondent was mandated to do so. The latter
auctioned the property on 2 March 2021. The application
is opposed by
the second, third and fourth respondents.
[4]
In their notice of motion, the applicants
sought orders: (i) interdicting the transfer of the property into the
name of the fourth
respondent; (ii) setting aside the sale agreement
dated 30 March 2021 of the property concluded between the second and
fourth respondents
pursuant to an auction sale conducted by the first
respondent on 2 March 2021; (iii) directing the second respondent to
accept
the trust’s offer dated 25 March 2021 to purchase the
property for the sum of R17 million and in the alternatively
directing
the second respondent to accept the trust’s offer of
R20 million in terms of an addendum to the offer dated 25 March 2021;
together with costs.
[5]
At
the hearing, the applicants sought slightly attenuated relief and
sought orders interdicting the fifth respondent from effecting
transfer of the property into the name of the fourth respondent;
setting aside the sale agreement concluded at the auction sale
between the second and third respondents and the fourth respondent on
2 March 2021 and directing the second respondent to accept
alternatively give consideration to the applicants’ offer of
R17 000 000. Reliance on the purported offer of R20
million
was in my view correctly jettisoned by the applicants as the offer
was unsigned and thus falls foul of s2(1) of the Alienation
of Land
Act
[2]
.
[6]
The applicants’ case is primarily
predicated on a challenge to the validity of an extension of the
offer period in clause
4.1 of the first respondent’s terms and
conditions of sale (“the auction terms”) and a challenge
to the fourth
respondent’s bid and the acceptance thereof as a
proper purchase and sale. The applicants contend that the first and
third
respondents breached the auction terms by accepting the fourth
respondent’s offer outside the fourteen day offer period and
that the first respondent had no option but to accept the trust’s
offer of R17 million as the only legitimate bid offer for
the
property. They further contend that there are adequate grounds to set
aside the sale agreement concluded with the fourth respondent.
[7]
The second and third respondents’
case as supported by the fourth respondent is that the application is
ill conceived and
the applicants have illustrated no entitlement to
any of the relief sought. They argue that there were no breaches of
the auction
terms and that a valid agreement of sale was concluded
with the fourth respondent. In its explanatory affidavit, the sixth
respondent
adopts the same position, although it abides the court’s
decision.
[8]
The
applicants seek final relief. The matter is thus to be determined on
the basis of the so called Plascon Evans test
[3]
.
It is well established that motion proceedings, unless concerned with
interim relief, are about the resolution of legal issues
based on
common cause facts. Where there is a genuine dispute of fact, the
respondent’s version must be accepted. A dispute
will not be
genuine if it is so far-fetched or so clearly untenable that it can
be safely rejected on the papers.
[4]
The respondents’ respective versions are supported by
documentary evidence and cannot be rejected on the papers as palpably
false or clearly untenable and must thus be accepted.
[9]
The relevant facts are not contentious. The
relevant portions of the auction terms provide:
“
4.1
This document Constitutes an Offer to Purchase by the Purchaser,
which is subject to written acceptance by the Seller within
14
(fourteen) business days (hereinafter referred to as “the offer
period”) from date hereof and shall remain irrevocable
and open
for acceptance by the Seller at any time during the offer period. For
the sake of clarity, the Purchaser’s offer
is open for
acceptance until 17h00 on the 14
th
(fourteenth) business day after the signature hereof by the
Purchaser, the counting of the 14 (fourteen) business days to
commence
on the 1
st
(first) business day after date of signature hereof and shall endure
until 17h00 on the 14
th
(fourteenth) business day thereafter.
4.2 During the offer
period, the Seller or the Auctioneer may continue to market the
property in the normal course of business as
they may deem fit and in
consequence of same, they may take in further and better written
Offers to Purchase from prospective Purchasers,
to be submitted for
the seller’s consideration.
4.3 The Auctioneer
shall advise the Purchaser in writing (which may either be by telefax
or by electronic mail) of any higher written
offer (hereinafter
referred to as “a competing offer”) which is received
from any third party during the offer period.
The Purchaser shall,
for a period of 24 (twenty-four) hours (hereinafter referred to as
“the option period” after transmission
of the written
advice of the competing offer by the Auctioneer as aforesaid, have
the option to increase the purchase price offered
by him in terms of
this agreement to an amount equal to the purchase price of the
competing offer but subject otherwise to all
other terms and
conditions of this agreement.
4.4 If the Purchaser
wishes to exercise the option to match the competing offer during the
option period, the Purchaser must do
so in writing in clear and
unambiguous terms, which notice must be delivered to the Auctioneer
before the expiry of the 24 (twenty-four)
hour option period. This
written notice must either be hand delivered to the business premises
of the Auctioneer and a receipt
signed in respect thereof, or may be
telefaxed to the Auctioneer at the indicated telefax number or email,
provided that in such
an instance the Purchaser must telephonically
confirm receipt of the said telefax or email at the business premises
of the Auctioneer,
as the onus rests upon the Purchaser to confirm
receipt of the said notice by the Auctioneer.
4.6 Should the
Purchaser exercise the option within the option period and match the
competing offer, the purchase price in terms
of this agreement shall
be the increased amount. The Seller shall be entitled until the lapse
of the offer period to accept this
agreement at any increased
purchase price. This option process is a continuation of the original
process and any sale thus concluded
shall be a sale by auction.
4.9 The Seller
reserves the right to decline the purchaser’s offer. The Seller
shall have no obligation to accept the offer
and shall not be obliged
to furnish a reason for the rejecting (sic) of an offer. If the
Seller rejects the purchaser’s offer,
the Seller shall be
entitled to accept any other offer that may be received in respect of
the property.”
[10]
The fourth respondent was the highest
bidder at the auction held on 2 March 2021, with an offer of R14
million, exclusive of VAT.
[11]
Subsequent to the auction, the fourth
respondent received an email from an employee of the first respondent
on 16 March 2021, requesting
it to agree to an extension of the 14
day offer period to Wednesday 24 March 2021. The fourth respondent
agreed to the request
in writing. The reason for the request was that
a competing offer from a prospective purchaser was awaited.
[12]
The
competing offer was relayed to the fourth respondent on 24 March
2021. Within 24 hours and on 25 March 2021, the fourth respondent
exercised its right of first refusal and matched the offer from the
trust. The fourth respondent made the required payments, whereafter
the third respondent accepted the offer on behalf of the second
respondent on the same date, to wit 25 March 2021. Later that same
day, the trust purported to increase its initial offer to R20 million
by way of an unsigned offer
[5]
,
but only after the fourth respondent’s offer had been accepted
by the second and third respondents. The following day, the
trust was
advised that its higher offer could not be accepted as the fourth
respondent’s offer had already been accepted.
[13]
I
turn to consider the issues. It is trite that to obtain final
interdictory relief, the applicants must illustrate a clear right,
an
injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended and the lack of
an adequate alternative remedy in order to obtain the relief
sought
[6]
.
[14]
These
elements were not addressed in the applicant’s founding papers
at all but are only addressed for the first time in reply.
It is
trite that a party must make out its case in its founding affidavit
and a case cannot for the first time be made out in a
replying
affidavit.
[7]
Equally trite is
that in motion proceedings, the affidavits constitute both the
pleadings and the evidence and the issues should
appear clearly from
the founding papers
[8]
. This
strongly militates against the granting of interdictory relief.
[15]
In any event, the applicants have not in my
view illustrated a clear right to interdictory relief. I am further
not persuaded that
the applicants have illustrated any entitlement to
the remaining relief sought for the understated reasons.
[16]
First, the applicants did not attend the
auction and did not make any auction bid. The auction terms thus do
not apply to them and
the trust’s offer was not regulated by
and did not fall under the ambit of the auction terms. The
applicants’ argument
that the trust became a party to the
prospective sale agreement the moment it made an offer which it did
in terms of clause 4.1
of the conditions of sale, is misconceived.
For the same reasons, the argument that the trust was not an outsider
in the contractual
relationship, does not pass muster.
[17]
Second, the trust’s offer is
regulated by the terms of its offer. Clause 2.3 of the trust’s
offer confirms the common
law position that it creates no binding
rights and obligations and that the third respondent was under no
obligation to accept
the applicants’ offer or to provide
reasons for its rejection thereof.
[18]
Third, I am not persuaded that there was
any breach of the auction terms by the first, second or third
respondents, as contended
by the applicants. Under clause 4.4 of the
terms and conditions of sale the fourth respondent had a right of
first refusal which
it exercised during the extended offer period.
The offer period was extended by mutual agreement. The fourth
respondent’s
offer was the highest offer received during the
offer period. The reason for the extension of the period, being to
await a further
offer from a prospective purchaser must be accepted.
Moreover, the auction terms did not preclude the parties from
agreeing to
extend the offer period. The applicants were unable to
point to any prejudice they would suffer as a result of the
extension. It
is further undisputed that when the acceptance of the
offer was communicated to the fourth respondent, there was no higher
offer
in existence and that the fourth respondent’s higher
offer of R17 million matched the trust’s offer and represents
the purchase price.
[19]
Fourth, the applicants’
argument that there is no legally binding agreement between the
second and fourth respondents for
the sale and purchase of the
property and that the second respondent is legally obliged to accept
the trust’s offer is not
supported by the undisputed facts.
[20]
Fifth, the applicants did not provide any
cogent factual basis for the contention that they had a legitimate
expectation that they
would be allowed to make a further offer,
considering the auction terms and the terms of the trusts offer to
purchase. No reasonable
grounds were provided on which a court may
set aside the extension of the offer period. Moreover, the applicants
did not request
the court to review and set aside the decision of the
third respondent to sell the property to the fourth respondent. It is
by
no means clear that in law they would have been entitled to do so.
No case was made out for the setting aside of the decision of
the
third respondent or for the setting aside of the sale agreement.
[21]
Sixth,
the applicants are not entitled to circumvent the business rescue
practitioners and their compliance with their statutory
obligations
and powers under Chapter VI of the Companies Act
[9]
.
No cogent factual case was made out in the applicant’s papers
for the alleged breach of the third respondent’s fiduciary
duties.
[22]
Last, the argument that the auction
proceedings were performed in an unjust manner and that it would be
just and equitable for the
auction sale to be set aside and bids to
be reopened, is not underpinned by any cogent basis, either in fact
or in law.
[23]
I conclude that the applicants have not
illustrated any legal right to any of the relief sought and have
failed on all grounds advanced
to make out a proper case for relief.
It follows that the application must fail.
[24]
There is no reason to deviate from the
normal principle that costs follow the result. I am persuaded that
the costs of two counsel
is justified, considering the complexities
involved.
[25]
I grant the following order:
[1] The application is
dismissed;
[2] The applicants are
directed to pay the costs of the application, jointly and severally,
including the costs of two counsel,
where so employed.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 07 February 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 30 March 2022
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. A. Jeffrey SC
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Kathy James Attorneys
2
nd
and 3
rd
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL
: Adv A. Bester SC
: Adv K. Mvubu
2
nd
and 3
rd
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Knowles Husain Lindsay Inc.
4
th
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv.
P. Wilkins
4
th
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS
:
Strydom Attorneys
[1]
Together with Mr Chevalier, who was not cited as party to the
application. This is however not an issue in this application.
[2]
68 of 1981.
[3]
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd,
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3)
SA 623
(A) at 634E to 635C
;
Natioinal
Director Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) para [26]
[4]
J
W Wightman (Pty) Ltd v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371(SCA)
para
12
[5]
Falling foul of the provisions of
s2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land
Act 68 of 1981
.
[6]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227
[7]
Betlane v Shelly Court CC
2011 (1) SA 388
(CC) par [29]; Director of
Hospital Services v Mistry
1979 (1) SA 626
(AD) 635H-636B
[8]
Minister of Land Affairs and Agriculture v D & fFWevell Trust
2008 (2) SA 184
(SCA0 at 200D
[9]
71 of 2008
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