Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 191South Africa
Sithole N.O. and Another v Giannakis and Others (17987/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 191 (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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## Sithole N.O. and Another v Giannakis and Others (17987/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 191 (30 March 2022)
Sithole N.O. and Another v Giannakis and Others (17987/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 191 (30 March 2022)
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sino date 30 March 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
17987/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
30
March 2021
In
the matter between:
ZANDILE PERTUNIA
SITHOLE N.O.
(Identity No. [....])
First Applicant
DUMISANI BUKU
(Identity No.
[....])
Second Applicant
And
EVANGELOS GIANNAKIS
(Identity No.
[....])
First Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS,
PRETORIA
Second Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
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 30th of March 2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
The genesis
of this application lies in a written sale agreement pertaining to
Unit 1, Villa Dante Morningside Johannesburg
[1]
(“the property”), concluded between Mr Mpumelelo Buku
(“the deceased”) and the first respondent, represented
by
his attorney and agent, Attorney Bisessar Jairaj Badel (“Mr
Badel”) of Badal Inc attorneys at law, on 7 October
2016.
The
property was registered in the name of the deceased after it was
purchased by the applicants and given to the deceased as a
gift. The
deceased was murdered on 18 January 2017 in a botched attempted
high-jacking. The first applicant is the executrix of
the deceased’s
estate.
[2]
Mr Badal had from time to time rendered legal
assistance to both the deceased and the second applicant. He also
provided legal assistance
to the first respondent. Mr Badal passed
away on 24 May 2017.
[3]
The applicants, by way of motion
proceedings, seek orders declaring the sale agreement and the sale
and transfer of the property
invalid and unlawful and setting it
aside and directing that the property be transferred to the estate of
the deceased, alternatively
to the first applicant to be administered
on behalf of the estate, together with ancillary relief. Orders are
further sought directing
the first respondent to pay amounts of
R252 000 and R909 000 to the deceased estate and/or the
applicants, together with
interest. Costs are sought on the punitive
scale as between attorney and client.
[4]
It is common cause that a mortgage bond in favour
of Investec was registered over the property pursuant to a loan
granted to the
first respondent on 6 November 2019. A copy of the
application papers was served on Investec Bank Ltd, but it has not
been formally
joined as a party. Investec Bank Ltd has not involved
itself in the present proceedings.
[5]
Pursuant to Mr Badel’s death, the files
under his control were handed over to the Legal Practitioners Council
and allocated
to another firm of attorneys. Those attorneys queried
the propriety of the transaction and the transfer of the property.
[6]
Legal proceedings are further presently pending in
the Gauteng Division, Pretoria between the first respondent and the
Legal Practitioners
Fidelity Fund pertaining to pecuniary losses
allegedly suffered by the first respondent in respect of funds placed
in trust with
Mr Badal’s firm.
[7]
The
validity of the sale agreement lies at the heart of the present
dispute. In sum, the applicants’ case is that the deceased
fell
victim to a fraudulent scheme similar to the so-called Brusson
finance scheme
[2]
orchestrated
by the first respondent and his attorney, Mr Badal, as a result of
which he became a party to an unlawful
pactum
commissorium
which ought to be voided with restitution of the property to the
deceased estate and restoration of all amounts paid. According
to the
applicants, pursuant to this scheme the property was unlawfully
transferred to the first respondent as part of the fraudulent
scheme
in circumstances where the deceased was led to believe that he was
pledging the property as security for a loan from the
first
respondent.
[8]
The first respondent’s case on the other
hand is that a valid sale agreement was concluded between him and the
deceased and
that the transaction and the payments made by the
applicants are not impeachable. He further denies any fraudulent
scheme and contends
that the applicants’ claim has prescribed
and that the application falls to be dismissed with costs. In the
alternative it
is argued that the matter should be referred to trial
in the light of the factual disputes on the papers.
[9]
The issues requiring determination are wide
ranging and are:
[9.1] whether the written
deed of sale of immovable property (“alleged sale agreement”)
concluded between the deceased
and the first respondent constitutes a
valid and enforceable sale of immovable property or an invalid and
unenforceable simulated
transaction;
[9.2]
whether the alleged sale agreement is subject to, and failed to
comply with the requirements of the National Credit Act
[3]
,
rendering the agreement void and capable of being set aside;
[9.3] the applicants’
claim for payment, particularly: (i) whether the deceased paid
R252 000 to first respondent in
consequence of the alleged sale
agreement; (ii) whether applicant paid the sum of R909 000 to
first respondent; (iii) the
purpose of the payments which the first
respondent admits receiving from the deceased and whether they
constitute occupational
interest or repayment of an unlawful loan;
[9.4] whether the
applicants’ claims have prescribed;
[9.5] the applicants’
reliance on supervening impossibility because of the death of the
deceased which it is contended rendered
it impossible for the
deceased to perform in terms of the alleged sale agreement in
consequence of this the deceased’s estate
is entitled to
restitution of the property and repayment of the sum of R252 000;
and
[9.6] If the court
determines that performance in terms of the alleged sale agreement
was made as a result of excusable error, whether
the sale agreement
is invalid and the applicants have an enrichment claim.
[10]
The applicants’ arguments invoke the
application of various principles applicable to the various
categories of relief relied
on. First, the absence of an intention to
sell or permit the transfer of immovable property; second,
restitution on the grounds
of fraudulent misrepresentation; third,
the unlawfulness of the Brusson financial scheme; fourth, restitution
of performance effected
under an illegal contract; fifth, the failure
to comply with the NCA and finally, unjustified enrichment.
[11]
The
applicant seeks final relief. The matter is thus to be determined on
the basis of the so called Plascon Evans test
[4]
.
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.
[5]
[12]
In
Buffalo
Freight Systems (Pty) Ltd v Crestleigh Trading (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[6]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal enunciated the approach to be followed in
relation to whether disputes of fact are bona fide thus:
“
The
court should be prepared to undertake an objective analysis of such
disputes when required to do so. In J W Wightman (Pty) Ltd
v Headfour
(Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371(SCA)
, it was suggested how that might be
done in appropriate circumstances. ....
A court must always be
cautious about deciding probabilities in the face of conflicts of
facts in affidavits. Affidavits are settled
by legal advisers with
varying degrees of experience, skill and diligence and a litigant
should not pay the price for an adviser’s
shortcomings.
Judgment on the credibility of the deponent, absent direct and
obvious contradictions, should be left open. Nevertheless
the courts
have recognised reasons to take a stronger line to avoid injustice.
In Da Mata v Otto
1972 (3) SA 858
(A) at 689 D-E, the following was
said:
In regard to the
appellant ‘s sworn statements alleging the oral agreement, it
does not follow that because these allegations
were not contradicted
– the witness who could have disputed them had died –
they should be taken as proof of the facts
involved. Wigmore on
Evidence, 3
rd ed., vol. VII, p.260, states
that the mere assertion of any witness does not of itself need to be
believed, even though he is
unimpeached in any manner, because to
require such belief would be to give a quantative and impersonal
measure to testimony. The
learned author in this connection at p. 262
cites the following passage from a decision quoted:
“
it
is not infrequently supposed that a sworn statement is necessary
proof, and that, if uncontradicted, it established the fact
involved.
Such is by no means the law. Testimony, regardless of the amount of
it, which is contrary to all reasonable probabilities
or conceded
facts-testimony which no sensible man can believe-goes for nothing;
while the evidence of a single witness to a fact,
there being nothing
to throw discredit, cannot be disregarded.”
[13]
The papers are replete with factual
disputes on numerous issues, including how the various parties
interacted and how the sale agreement
is to be interpreted. It is not
necessary to particularise all the factual disputes raised on the
papers in detail. Suffice it
to state that to illustrate the point,
the first respondent provided a detailed schedule in excess of ten
pages particularising
such factual disputes.
[14]
The
applicants argued that the first respondent’s version should be
rejected as untenable on the papers. I do not agree. The
test for
rejection of a respondent’s version on paper as palpably false
or untenable
[7]
is a stringent
one
[8]
and I am not persuaded
that such threshold has been met. The first respondent has not
persisted with bald denials but has grappled
with the issues raised
by the applicants in their founding papers and provided a detailed
version of events supporting his contention
that the sale agreement
is valid and is not a simulated transaction. That version cannot be
rejected on the basis of probability
findings, as the applicants
urged me to do in various respects.
[15]
It
is further apposite to refer to
Seumungal
and Another NNO v Regent Cinema
[9]
,
wherein Leon J held:
“
In
approaching this particular type of problem, it is not wrong for a
Court at the outset to have some regard to the realities of
litigation. What appears to be a good case on paper may become less
impressive after the deponents to the affidavits have been
cross-examined. Conversely, what appears to be an improbable case on
the affidavits, may turn out to be less improbable or even
probable
in relation to a particular witness after he has been seen and heard
by a Court. An incautious answer in cross-examination
may change the
whole complexion of a case”.
[16]
The
realities of litigation in my view require full trial proceedings in
which oral evidence must be led. The complexities pertaining
to the
validity of the sale agreement are exacerbated by the untimely demise
of both the deceased and Mr Badal, who could have
shed much light on
the issues. It would in my view be vital for oral evidence to be led
to determine the central issues pertaining
to the validity of the
sale agreement and to ensure a proper interpretation of the sale
agreement, applying the relevant principles
[10]
.
[17]
I am
fortified in this view by the principle that motion proceedings are
by their very nature generally inappropriate for the purpose
of
making findings of fraud
[11]
.
In my view similar considerations would be applicable in relation to
simulated transactions.
[18]
I am not
however persuaded that the application should be dismissed, as argued
in the first respondent’s heads of argument.
It is trite that a
court has a discretion as to the future course of the
proceedings
[12]
. Considering
the wide ambit of the disputes between the parties it would be
appropriate to refer the matter to trial rather than
to oral
evidence. It would be appropriate to reserve the issue of costs.
[13]
[19]
I grant the following order:
[1] The application is
referred to trial;
[2] The notice of motion
shall stand as a simple summons;
[3] The answering
affidavit shall stand as a notice of intention to defend;
[4] The applicants are
directed to deliver their declaration within 20 days of date of this
order;
[5] The Uniform Rules of
Court dealing with further pleadings, discovery and the conduct of
trials shall thereafter apply;
[6]
The costs of the application are reserved.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 09 February 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 30 March 2022
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. CT Vetter
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Shepstone & Wylie Attorneys
1
st
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL
: Adv. JL Kaplan
1
st
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS
:
Ian Levitt Attorneys
[1]
Erf [....] Morningside, Extension 179.
[2]
Explained by the Constitutional Court in ABSA Bank Ltd v Moore and
Another
[2016] ZACC 34
at paras [3]-[5]; Ditshego and Others v
Brusson Finance (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2010] ZAFSHC 68
(22 July 2010)
[3]
34 of 2005
[4]
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd,
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3)
SA 623
(A) at 634E to 635C
;
NDPP
v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) para [26]
[5]
J
W Wightman (Pty) Ltd v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371(SCA)
para
12
[6]
2011
(1) SA 8
(SCA) at paras [19] and [20]
[7]
PMG
Motors Kyalami (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) v Firstrand Bank Ltd,
Wesbank Division
2015 1 All SA 437
(SCA);
2015 (2) SA 634
(SCA);
Wightman supra para 13
[8]
National Scrap Metal (Cape Town) (Pty) Ltd and Another v Murray &
Roberts Ltd and Others
2012 (5) SA 300
(SCA) paras [21]-[22]
[9]
819 A-C,
[10]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para [18]
[11]
Commissioner South African Revenue Service v Sassin and Others
[2015] 4 All SA 756
(KZN)(“Sassin”) paras [45]-[49] and
the authorities cited therein
[12]
Sassin supra para [71] and the authorities cited therein; R6(5)(g)
[13]
Gray v Goodwood Municipality
1943 CPD 78
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