Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 539South Africa
Birrell v Alexander (A3113/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 539 (10 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 May 2022
Headnotes
and the order made by the Learned Magistrate is set aside and substituted by the following order:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Birrell v Alexander (A3113/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 539 (10 May 2022)
Birrell v Alexander (A3113/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 539 (10 May 2022)
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sino date 10 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A3113/2021
Reportable:
No
Of
Interest to other: No
10/05/2022
In
the matter between:
BIRRELL,
MICHAEL
Appellant
and
ALEXANDER,
CLIFFORD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ (MAZIBUKO AJ concurring):
[1]
In this matter I make the
following order:
1.
The appellant’s application for condonation for the late
prosecution of the appeal is granted;
2.
The appeal is reinstated;
3.
The appellant is ordered to pay the costs of the application
for condonation on the unopposed scale;
4.
The appeal is partly upheld and the order made by the Learned
Magistrate is set aside and substituted by the following order:
4.1.
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed;
4.2.
The defendant’s counterclaim is dismissed;
4.3.
Each party shall pay his own costs.
5.
Each party shall pay his own costs of the appeal.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow
below.
# Introduction
Introduction
[3]
This is an appeal against a judgment and order of the Johannesburg
Magistrates’ Court in Johannesburg wherein the Learned
Magistrate granted judgment in favour of the respondent (the
plaintiff
a quo
) for the payment of R 52 617, 72 and ancillary
relief, and dismissed the counterclaim of the appellant (the
defendant
a quo
). The appellant persists with its counterclaim
only in respect of one claim.
[4]
The parties are referred to below as they were in the Magistrates’
Court.
# Condonation for late
prosecution of the appeal
Condonation for late
prosecution of the appeal
[5]
The appellant seeks condonation for the late prosecution of the
appeal and for the non-compliance with the sixty-day period
prescribed by Rule 51(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court. The
application
is not opposed.
[6]
The factors
which a Court must consider when exercising its discretion whether to
grant condonation
[1]
includes the degree of lateness and the explanation for the delay.
The appellant was one month late in prosecution the appeal and
the
delay is satisfactorily explained. The delay was not wilful. I
conclude that condonation ought to be granted and that the costs
associated with the condonation must be borne by the appellant on the
basis that it seeks an indulgence.
# The merits of the appeal
The merits of the appeal
[7]
The parties are referred to below as they were referred to in the
court
a quo
, in other words the appellant is referred to as
the defendant and the respondent is referred to as the plaintiff.
[8]
The plaintiff claimed payment of the amount of R52 617,72 as
“contractual
damages” based on an agreement between the
parties that he would be entitled to a refund of monies which he had
invested
into a partnership relating to the purchase and on-sale of
an immovable property.
[9]
The defendant defended the action on the ground that there was no
such agreement and counterclaimed for damages suffered by him in the
amount of R117 617,72 as a result of the plaintiff’s
repudiation of the partnership agreement. The defendant also raised a
special plea of non-joinder which was dismissed and which
is not in
issue in the appeal. The plaintiff and the defendant testified and no
other witnesses were called.
# Analysis
Analysis
[10]
The parties concluded an oral partnership agreement in May of 2014 in
terms of which
they would purchase two immovable properties referred
to as the Junker property and the Silika property, and then sell the
properties
for a profit.
[11]
The parties would be jointly liable for all costs associated with the
purchase of
the immovable properties including costs related to costs
of the eviction of occupiers at the immovable properties. The profit
would be split equally.
[12]
The plaintiff and his wife then signed offers to purchase in respect
of both properties.
The purchase of the Silika Street property was
never finalised but the sale agreement in respect of the Junkers
property provided
for a purchase price of R170 000 payable by a
deposit of R40 000 and the balance upon transfer. Payment was to be
secured by way
of the usual guarantee.
[13]
The breach
clause of the agreement contained a rouwkoop
[2]
provision.
[14]
The plaintiff paid:
14.1
R40 000,00 as the deposit for the Junker Property;
14.2 R9
117,72 and R3 500,00 (i.e. R12 617,72) towards legal fees for the
eviction process at the properties.
[15]
The defendant paid:
15.1
R14 599,64 towards legal fees for the eviction process at the Junker
property;
15.2 R
30 000,00 towards the seller of the Junker property as an ‘incentive’
to negotiate.
[16]
The defendant counterclaimed these amounts together with an amount of
R75 000 in
respect of a loss of profit on the sale of the two
properties. In the appeal the defendant only seeks an order for
payment of the
R30 000.
[17]
There were various delays and the defendant no longer wanted to
proceed with the
partnership business. In September 2015 electronic
mail correspondence took place between the parties:
17.1 On
7 September 2015 the plaintiff wrote:
“
Hi Mike, I have
a proposal or you. Please pay me all the monies that I have spent on
these 2 cases and you can have both. You have
not reverted back to me
as promised. I trusted you with how these two deals were supposed to
pan out, but you don’t seem
to be interested anymore. I have
tried for over a year to push both. Eviction orders were granted for
both and nothing else has
happened. The amount in question is R 40
000, 00 to Sauls and R 12 617, 72 to MJS R 52 617, 72. Please check
and advise soonest.”
17.2
The defendant replied on the same day to refer to amounts due by the
partnership to a third party and charges
that needed to be laid with
the authorities.
17.3
The plaintiff in turn responded by querying that any amount was due
to a third party, and stated:
“
I am done with
both cases. Mike. You have done nothing about both matters for this
year. You are not responding to my proposal.
As I said, my patience
is up with asking you for months on end, to no avail. I want out of
these two cases. Tomorrow eve @ 8? Best
regards Clifford C
Alexander.”
17.4
The defendant suggested a meeting.
17.5
The plaintiff responded on 8 September 2015:
“
Mike, my 1st
email states my case clearly. I do not want any further part in
both.”
17.6
The defendant replied:
““
I will
go on then pay your money back on registration.”
17.7
The plaintiff then wrote:
“
Thanks Mike.
Please note that both otps
[3]
are cancelled forthwith as far as me and Brenda
[4]
is concerned”
[18]
This
evidence is at odds with the case pleaded by the plaintiff,
[5]
namely that –
18.1
the defendant would reimburse the plaintiff the amount of R52 617.72;
18.2
This payment would be made when both properties had been transferred,
alternatively within a reasonable time
from 8 September 2015,
whichever occurred first;
18.3
the plaintiff would then assign his rights in the two properties to
the defendant;
18.4
the partnership would be dissolved once payment was made.
[19]
Once the plaintiff had cancelled the agreement of sale and the offer
to purchase,
there was nothing to assign.
[20]
In the
absence of
consensus
there can be no contract.
[6]
The evidence and argument show that the parties had widely divergent
views of what was agreed in September 2015. However, the email
correspondence seems to indicate that the partnership was now at an
end and the defendant intended to continue with the partnership
business.
[21]
The partnership was established to purchase the two properties and
once the plaintiff
cancelled the agreement of sale of the Junker
property it was no longer possible to continue with the business. The
deposit for
the Junker property was forfeited as rouwkoop.
Subsequently, in 2016 the defendant was however able to purchase the
Junker property
with a new partner and a deposit was paid again, and
then re-sold at a profit to a third party purchaser.
[22]
The plaintiff did not set out to prove its pleaded case. The evidence
that was led,
related to a different contract allegedly set out in
the email correspondence. The case on the evidence then turns on two
questions:
22.1
The meaning of the phrase ‘
your money’
. It could
refer to the deposit or the legal costs or to both amounts, and
22.2
the meaning of the phrase ‘
on registration’
. It
could refer to registration of the Junker property pursuant to the
offer to purchase made by the plaintiff and the resultant
agreement
of sale, or the registration of the transfer of both properties, or
to the transfer of the Junker property at the behest
of the defendant
independently of the partnership business.
[23]
The
agreement relied on by the plaintiff is so vague that no real meaning
can be attached to it.
[7]
[24]
A plaintiff has to prove its case on a preponderance of
probabilities. The plaintiff
failed to prove the agreement
8
alleged in the particulars of claim and also the agreement alleged to
be apparent from the email correspondence and relied upon
in the
appeal. I therefore conclude that the Learned Magistrate erred in
granting judgment in favour of the plaintiff.
[25]
The defendant abandoned its counterclaim for R75 000 as loss of
profit and for the
amount of R14 599,64 paid towards the eviction of
unlawful occupiers. The amount of R30 000 that was paid as an
“incentive”
remains.
[26]
This
payment was admitted in a replication that was subsequently withdrawn
and the Learned Magistrate did not find it necessary
to deal with the
“validity of the withdrawal of the admission” as the
plaintiff could not dispute the payment in evidence.
[8]
[27]
In paragraph 3.1 of his counterclaim
10
the defendant
alleged that he suffered damages in this amount of R30 000 “
in
respect of the deposit paid for the Junker Street Property.”
It was however common cause that the whole deposit of R40 000 was
paid by the plaintiff and it was not seriously suggested that
the R30
000 was paid in terms of the written contract for the sale of the
Junker property.
[28]
In my view the defendant did not prove this amount on a preponderance
of probabilities
and the counterclaim stands to be dismissed.
# Costs
Costs
[29]
The appeal is upheld in part. In the order made on appeal, both the
claim and the
counterclaim are dismissed because neither party could
prove his claim
a quo
on a preponderance of probabilities.
[30]
Under these circumstances it is appropriate to order each party to
pay his own costs.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[31]
For these reasons I made the order set out in paragraph 1 above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
N
MAZIBUKO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
10 MAY 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
T LIPSCHITZ
(DEFENDANT):
INSTRUCTED
BY:
PRESHNEE GOVENDER ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT (PLAINTIFF): DM POOL
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MERVYN SMITH ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF THE APPEAL HEARING:
25 APRIL 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
10 MAY 2022
[1]
See
Section
84
of
the
Magistrates’ Courts
Act, 32 of
1944
and
the discussion by Erasmus et al
Superior
Court Practice
2015, D1- 669 to 678, 688, and see
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital (Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus
Curiae)
2008
(2)
SA 472
(CC)
477A–B
and
United
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Hills
1976
(1) SA 717
(A)
720E–G.
[2]
As to which, see
The
Mine Workers' Union v J Prinsloo; the Mine Workers' Union v J P
Prinsloo; the Mine Workers' Union v Greyling
1948 (3) SA 831 (A).
[3]
The offers to purchase the two properties.
[4]
The plaintiff’s spouse.
[5]
Particulars of claim, paragraph 6, Caselines 001-252 to 001-253 and
001-275.
[6]
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging v Friedman
1979 (3) SA 978
(A) 993E-F.
[7]
Compare
Levenstein
v Levenstein
1955 (3) SA 615
(SR)
8
See
Pillay v Krishna
1946 AD 946.
[8]
Judgment, p 30, footnote 1 (Caselines 001-217)
10
Caselines 001-290.
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