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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 379
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## van den Berg and Another v Junkoon N.O. and Others (2020/33237)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 379 (6 June 2022)
van den Berg and Another v Junkoon N.O. and Others (2020/33237)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 379 (6 June 2022)
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sino date 6 June 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2020/33237
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
YES
In
the matter between:
DAWID
STEFANUS VAN DEN BERG CC t/a BALLBREAKERS
(REGISTRATION
NO. 2002/062289/23)
First Applicant
DAWID
STEFANUS VAN DEN BERG
(ID
NO. [....])
Second Applicant
and
JUJDEESHIN
JUNKOON
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE AFRICA PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
First
Respondent
RIDWAAN
ASMAL
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Second Respondent
PETERSEN,
ISAK SMOLLY
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Third Respondent
AZIZOLLAHOFF,
BRIAN HILTON
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Fourth
Respondent
In
re
:
JUJDEESHIN
JUNKOON
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE AFRICA PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
First Plaintiff
RIDWAAN
ASMAL
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Second Plaintiff
PETERSEN,
ISAK SMOLLY
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Third Plaintiff
AZIZOLLAHOFF,
BRIAN HILTON
(ID
NO. [....]) N.O. in his capacity as
Trustee
of MERGENCE PROPERTY
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 11263/2006)
Fourth
Plaintiff
and
DAWID
STEFANUS VAN DEN BERG CC t/a BALLBREAKERS
(REGISTRATION
NO. 2002/062289/23)
First
Defendant
DAWID
STEFANUS VAN DEN BERG
(ID NO.
[....])
Second Defendant
Heard:
6 June 2022
Judgment:
6 June 2022
JUDGMENT
MOVSHOVICH
AJ:
1.
This is an application for leave to appeal
against my judgment dated 24 May 2022, where I partially granted the
plaintiffs' application
for summary judgment. Part of the relief
granted was an order for eviction, with effect from 31 May 2022, of
the first defendant
from the commercial premises it leased from the
plaintiffs.
2.
The leave to appeal application dated 31
May 2022 essentially grounds the defendants' prospects of success in
the following central
proposition. Clauses 14.1 and 14.2 of the lease
(which deal with waiver of the right to retention and compensation in
cases of
improvement liens) did not survive the repudiation and
cancellation of the lease, and whether the parties intended those
clauses
to survive requires oral evidence and proper
contextualisation, which is for the trial court to consider and
decide.
3.
The first difficulty for the defendants is
that the above defence is novel and is not foreshadowed in any papers
filed in this matter.
It forms no part of the defendants' answering
or supplementary answering papers in the summary judgment
application. The plaintiffs
squarely raised the issue that any rights
of retention in connection with a lien for improvements (or payment
in respect of improvements)
was waived by the first defendant in
terms of clause 14 of the lease. This was the gravamen of paragraph
13.9 of the supplementary
founding affidavit,
jurat
28 June 2021. The defendants, in their supplementary answering
papers, failed substantively to address this averment. They contented
themselves with a bald denial. There is no suggestion that the
defendants were raising a defence to the effect that clause 14 no
longer existed and did not apply to any lien after the termination
date of the lease, nor were any facts pleaded in this regard.
4.
This averment also formed no part of the
argument before me in the main hearing on summary judgment.
5.
The allegation that there was extinction of
clause 14 with effect from the termination of the lease, and that
this had the effect
of reviving a lien (or allowing reliance on a
lien), is simply not an averment open to the defendants to raise at
this late stage,
not only in argument but also on appeal. Moreover,
the defendants have nowhere articulated what the additional "
oral
evidence
" or "
context
"
would need to be led by them or how this would influence the proper
interpretation of whether clause 14 survived and its
effect.
6.
In motion proceedings, the affidavits
constitute the pleadings and the evidence, and it is incumbent on the
party resisting summary
judgment to set forth its defences in
sufficient detail in the answering papers. As stated in rule
32(3)(b), "
such affidavit or
evidence shall disclose fully the nature and grounds of the defence
and the material facts relied upon therefor
".
The defendants have simply failed to do so in relation to the defence
which they now allege to have to clause 14 of the
lease. This in
itself is fatal to their application for leave to appeal. A failure
to plead their case is destructive of its ability
to rely on the
defence.
7.
But, in any event, it is unclear what
effect this aspect can assist the defendants' case on the merits. The
purported improvement
lien on which the defendants rely would have
been formed (or not formed) in 2018 and 2019, many months prior to
the termination
of the lease. Clause 14, on any version, would have
been operative at that time, and it has not been disputed on the
papers that,
in its terms, the clause prevents any right of
retention. Clause 14.2 also precludes any monetary claims in respect
of improvements.
A right of retention cannot "
revive
"
after cancellation, after it has been contractually waived: that
waiver is effective from the time that the improvements
were
incurred. The defendants have not proffered any legal authorities
which suggest otherwise. Moreover, the defendants had already
abandoned (in terms of clause 14) any right to a monetary claim for
improvements at the conclusion of the lease (and the time that
they
were incurred in 2018 and 2019). This is likewise fatal to the
defendants' defence.
8.
Moreover, to date, the defendants have not
adverted to any facts or "
context
"
they intend to rely on to ground their newly articulated defence.
9.
The defendants aver that my findings in
relation to the lien in the judgment of 24 May 2022 are inconsistent
with my findings in
relation to the claims pertaining to
vis
maior
and arrear rental, to the effect
that it is often impossible to come to definitive conclusions as to
the proper interpretation
of contractual clauses without oral
evidence and contextualisation. It is not the law that in no
circumstances may the Court in
summary judgment proceedings interpret
contractual provisions and grant summary judgment, and my judgment of
24 May 2022 does not
suggest otherwise. The contentions about the
survival of clauses 14.1 and 14.2 were not raised in the papers, and
neither was any
additional context pleaded by the defendants. But,
ultimately, the interpretation of clauses 14.1 and 14.2 is not
seriously disputed
and was not even disputed in the leave to appeal
application or written submissions supporting that application. In
oral argument
in the leave to appeal application, it was faintly
suggested that the interpretation of those clauses may also now be in
dispute,
but the legal and factual basis for this submission was not
made clear. In my view, and on the papers, their import is clear and
unambiguous, and there is no reasonable prospect that another court
would find otherwise (even if it is open to the defendants
to raise
this issue at this stage).
10.
In all the circumstances, there are no
reasonable prospects that an appeal court would come to a different
conclusion and the application
for leave to appeal falls to be
dismissed.
11.
There is no reason to deviate from the
usual rule pertaining to costs.
12.
I thus make the following order:
12.1
the leave to appeal application is
dismissed with costs.
Hand-down
and date of judgment
13.
This judgment is handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties or their legal representatives by email
and by uploading
the judgment onto Caselines. The date and time for
hand down of the judgment are deemed to be 13:00 on 6 June 2022.
VM
MOVSHOVICH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Plaintiffs'
Counsel:
JG Dobie
Plaintiffs'
Attorneys: Reaan
Swanepoel Attorneys
Defendants'
Counsel:
R Bosman
Defendants'
Attorneys:
Messina Incorporated
Date
of Hearing:
6 June 2022
Date
of Judgment:
6 June 2022
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