Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 383South Africa
Body Corporate of Candice Glades vs Derrocks Attorneys and Another (47219/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 383 (6 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 June 2022
Headnotes
the levy clearance certificate until the outstanding levies were paid. [10] During November 2018, the first respondent approached the applicant to provide the levy clearance figures. Angor Property Specialists (Pty) Ltd (Angor) the applicant's property management agent, furnished the levy clearance figures provided to the first respondent on the 22 November 2018. The relevance of their role features later in the judgment.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Body Corporate of Candice Glades vs Derrocks Attorneys and Another (47219/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 383 (6 June 2022)
Body Corporate of Candice Glades vs Derrocks Attorneys and Another (47219/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 383 (6 June 2022)
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sino date 6 June 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
47219/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
NO
6
June 2022
In
the matter between
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF CANDICE GLADES
Applicant
And
DERROCKS
ATTORNEYS
First Respondent
VERNOL
KEVIN DERROCKS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SIWENDU
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is the Body Corporate of Candice Glades, a Sectional
Title Scheme established
by virtue of the registration of the
Sectional Title with SS 714/2004 as is required under the Sectional
Titles Management Act
8 of 2011. It has its principal place of
business at 18 Maple Drive, Northwold, Ext 62, Randburg, Gauteng.
[2]
The first respondent is Derrocks Incorporated Attorneys, with
registration number
2015/294773/21, a company duly registered and
incorporated in terms of the company laws of the Republic of South
Africa having
its principal place of business situated at Aspen
Business Park, Chicago House 1" Floor, 3 Madison, Aspen Lakes,
Gauteng.
[3]
The second respondent is Vernol Kevin Derrocks an adult male attorney
and a director
alternatively a shareholder of the first respondent
currently residing at 7 Losberg Street, Glenvista, Johannesburg,
Gauteng.
[4]
The applicant seeks an order for the payment of an amount of R270
219.02 plus interest
at the mora interest rate from the 20 of
February 2019 being the date of registration of the property to date
of final payment
jointly and severally from the respondents.
[5]
It claims that the second respondent is liable, jointly and
severally, with the first
respondent for the debts and liabilities of
the first respondent as are or were contracted for during his period
of office in terms
of
Section 34(7)(c)(i)
of the
Legal Practice Act
28 of 2014
., The second respondent's liability stems from
Section
34(7)(c)(i)
of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
as a director of the
law firm.
Background
[6]
On 28 November 2018, the first respondent represented by the second
respondent provided
the applicant with an irrevocable guarantee to
pay to the applicant R270 219.02 in respect of outstanding levies due
to the applicant.
[7]
The undertaking was made in the context of a transfer of Unit 11 then
jointly owned
by the late Lungelo Gregory Magubane and Thembinkosi
Themba Ronnie Shabangu in equal shares. Lungelo Magubane passed away
on the
3 January 2014. It is common cause that as at March 2014,
arrear levies were due and owing to the applicant in the sum of R 13
941.88. The property was sold to a third party for a purchase price
of R700 000.00 on the 3rd of October 2018. An email from
Nedbank
dated 3 March 2014 reveals that the home loan over the property which
appears to have been secured bys bond was settled
and the account
stood in credit.
[8]
The executrix of his estate appointed the first respondent to assist
in the administration,
liquidation and distribution of the deceased’s
late estate. The first respondent was appointed as a conveyancer to
register
and transfer of the property to the new owner.
[9]
Transfer of the property could not pass to the new purchaser. The
applicant was required
to issue a levy clearance certificate in terms
of
Section 15B(3)(a)(1)(aa)
of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
.
It is common cause that the applicant withheld the levy clearance
certificate until the outstanding levies were paid.
[10]
During November 2018, the first respondent approached the applicant
to provide the levy clearance
figures. Angor Property Specialists
(Pty) Ltd (Angor) the applicant's property management agent,
furnished the levy clearance figures
provided to the first respondent
on the 22 November 2018. The relevance of their role features later
in the judgment.
The
Undertaking
[11]
In a letter dated the 26 of November 2018, the first respondent
represented by the second respondent
provided the applicant through
the managing agents, Angor with the following letter:
"We
wish to inform you that we are the attorneys attending to the
transfer of the above property, as well as the estate. We
received
levy clearance figures in the amount of R270 639.02 for the provision
of a levy certificate /rates certificate for transfer
purposes. We
are prepared to provide you with an irrevocable undertaking to make
payment in the amount of R270 639.02 (which includes
an additional
amount of R580.00) on date of registration. We expect the
registration to be around the 14"of December 2018.
Kindly
advise whether this undertaking is acceptable."
[12]
On 28 November 2018 at 09:15 Angor informed the first respondent that
the applicant was prepared
to accept the undertaking, but the full
amount must be paid upon registration. On 28 November 09:24 the first
respondent informed
Angor that:
"
We
will pay
the total outstanding on the day of registration."
[13]
As already stated above, the property was transferred and registered
on 19 February 2019. The
applicant claims that the respondents issued
an irrevocable undertaking to pay the levies due. It contends that
the aforementioned
undertaking created a binding agreement between
the applicant and first respondent, as well as a personal obligation
on the first
respondents’ part to pay the applicant.
[14]
The first respondent breached the agreement and failed to pay on
registration of the property
on 19 February 2019. Instead, months
after the registration of the property, the first respondent
presented the applicant with
a settlement offer on 9 July 2019 which
read as follows:
"My
instructions from client is that we present a full and final
settlement offer in the amount of R50 000,00"
[15]
When confronted with the undertaking the first respondent stated
that:
"The
estate does not have sufficient cash to cover the expense. l will
send you the Liquidation and Distribution Account, then
the Body
Corporate can decide whether they want to proceed or not."
[16]
In opposition, the respondents categorically deny that the
correspondence of 28 November 2018
created a binding obligation on
them to pay the R270 219.02 claimed. They say the applicant's
claim against them is based
on a misconstruction of the
correspondence because at all times, the applicants were alive to the
fact that the respondents acted
as agents of the Estate Late
Magubane
.
The subject matter of the correspondence between the
applicant and the respondents expressly related Estate Late
Magubane's account
for levies.
[17]
Over and above this, the respondents raise two interrelated defences,
namely a misjoinder and
a misrepresentation to dispute liability. It
is contended that the applicant, ought to have brought an action
against the Estate
Late Magubane and/or the co — owner of the
sectional title Unit in question, of Themba. The debt was claimable
from the Estate
Late Magubane and Themba
[18]
In addition, as a further defence, they contended that the claim had
prescribed.
[19]
In so far as the misrepresentation, the respondents claim that apart
from the debt not being
the debt of the respondents, as at February
2019, the undertaking to settle R270 209.02 had been repudiated and
revoked due to
misrepresentation on the part of the applicant. The
point about the alleged misrepresentation of the amount due, is
linked to a
call for a debatement of the account after the fact of
the undertaking.
[20]
The respondents further contend that although the duty to make
payment of the debt on behalf
of the Estate Late Magubane remained,
the obligation to pay the amount of R270 209.02 fell away because
there was a dispute about
the levies there was a misrepresentation
and no meeting of the minds. I pause to mention that all this is
raised after the fact
months after the registration of the property.
[21]
The respondents complain that the applicant merely refers to the levy
clearance certificate that
was provided to the respondents on the 22
of November 2018 attached to the founding affidavit. The breakdown
does not substantiate
the amounts due in any way. They contend
applicants have not denied the misrepresentation therefore no amount
of money could be
regarded as due by the Estate Late until the
debatement of the account. They say their request for the debatement
of the levies
account was met with material discrepancies in the
levies account.
Issues
[22]
The questions are whether there is a biding undertaking, if it is
found there is –
·
Can the terms be construed as an
assumption of personal liability either by the first or second
respondent?
·
whether the respondents can resile from
it on account of an alleged misrepresentation and a lack of
debatement of the account.
·
the application of
section 34(7)(c)(i)
of the
Legal Practice Act to
the matter; and
[23]
The starting point is the terms of the undertaking itself. Mr
Carstens (for the applicant) contends
in considering the undertaking,
the court must consider the express intention from its express
wording. I agree. The undertaking
is embodied in two letters which
state:
“
We
are prepared to provide you with an irrevocable undertaking to make
payment in the amount of R270 639.02 (which includes an additional
amount of R580.00) on date of registration.
and
"We
will pay the total outstanding on the day of registration."
[24]
Over and above the consideration of the express terms of the
undertaking, the principle that
a provision in a contract must be
interpreted not only in the context of the contract as a whole, but
also to give it a commercially
sensible meaning applies to the case.
[1]
[25]
The letter of undertaking was issued pursuant to the transaction
to transfer the property.
It is clear from the wording that the
undertaking is to effect payment upon an occurrence of an event,
namely the registration
of transfer of the property. It is
unequivocal that payment would be effected on registration from the
receipt of the proceeds
of the sales.
[26]
The
argument by Mr Liphosa (for the respondents) in opposition is that
(1) the undertaking is based on an inference that the first
respondent took personal responsibility to settle the debt of the
estate. He contends that (2) the express terms are “
we
are prepared to”
do not make the undertaking unconditional. He argues that without the
express undertaking that “
I
take responsibility”,
the first respondent cannot be held personally liable. Furthermore,
(3) there was no obligation created because the undertaking
was
provided on behalf of the Late Estate under administration. He relies
on the decision in
Stupel
& Berman Inc v Rodel Financial Services Pty
[2]
[27]
Mr Carsten (for the applicant) disputes this based on the court’s
decision in
Steyn
v LSA Motors Ltd
[3]
where the court notes that part of the consideration is not merely
the offerer’s implicit intention and states that :
Remaining
for consideration is the further and crucial question whether a
reasonable man in the position of the offeree would have
accepted the
offer in the belief that it represented the true intention of the
offeror, in accordance with the objective criterion
formulated long
ago in the classic dictum of Blackburn J in Smith v Hughes (18
71) LR
6
QB 597 at 607. Only if this test is satisfied can the offeror be
held contractually liable."
[28]
I find favour with the view because the undertaking was by a firm of
attorneys. Secondly, as
was found by the court in
Enslin
v Fourie
[4]
,
the
undertaking was not qualified in any way. Contrary to the partial
reading of the documents making up the undertaking by Mr Liphosa,
the
second email which confirms the first says: “
We
will pay”.
The only condition it was subject to was the registration of the
property and that occurred. In any event, the fresh challenge
to the
letters of undertaking contradicts the answering affidavit. The
contents of the letters were admitted and not disputed.
[29]
The decision in
Stupe
l
,
does
not assist the respondents in this instance. Mr Liphosa confirmed
that in
Stupel
& Berman
,
it was clearly stated that they were acting “
on
behalf of”
and the first respondent did not state this. The respondent’s
mandate was not terminated. Furthermore, the court in
Stupel
did not alter the position confirmed by the court in
Frans
Jacobus Kruger h/a Kruger Attorneys v Property Lawyer Services (Edms)
Bpk
[5]
that t
he
fact that a party acted as the agent of another in giving the
undertaking does not mean, that it could not have incurred a personal
liability in terms of the letter of undertaking. There is no merit in
the defence.
[30]
The next issue is whether the respondents could rely on a
misrepresentation after the fact to
resile from the undertaking.
Inherent with this argument is an indirect admission of liability
based on the undertaking. This point
is connected with the demand for
a debatement of the account. I pause to mention that the express
words used in the undertaking
embodied in the first email are that it
was “
irrevocable
”.
[31]
I am unable to discern from the papers exactly what, by whom and when
the misrepresentations
were allegedly made. What is clear however is
that the applicant’s managing agents, Angor presented the
respondent the levy
statement. The email exchanges between them are
annexed to the papers and pleaded by the applicant.
[32]
Instead on 9 July 2019 when asked about the payment which had been
outstanding for more than
two months, the respondent says:
“
I
was away for a month and only came back today. I discussed the matter
with client before going on leave. My instruction from client
is that
we present a full and final settlement offer in the amount of R50
000.00. Should this offer not be acceptable, client is
prepared to
face the litigation, as there are clear discrepancies in how the
statement is compiled.
[33]
In any event, the court in
Novick
and Another v Comair Holdings Ltd and Others
[6]
Coleman J set out what a party seeking to avoid a contract on the
ground of misrepresentation must prove, namely: -
(a) That the
representation relied upon was made.
(b) That it was
representation as to a fact.
(c) That the
representation was false.
(d) That it was material,
in the sense that it was such as would have influenced a reasonable
man to enter into the contract in
issue
(e) That it was intended
to induce the person to whom it was made to enter into the
transaction sought to be avoided.
(f) That the
representation did induce the contract.
[34]
Other than a vague allegation of a discrepancy, the respondents do
not provide any information
or basis on which the discrepancy is
based. In
Doyle
v Fleet Motors
[7]
and
Doyle v Board of Executors
[8]
,
and
party seeking a debatement
should
aver
(a) his right to
receive an account, and the basis of such right, whether by contract
or by fiduciary relationship or otherwise;
(b) any contractual
terms or circumstances having a bearing on the account sought;
(c) the defendant's
failure to render an account.
[35]
None of these were alleged in the answering affidavit. In addition,
it is clear that the respondents
were provided with cancellation
figures and a full levy statement reflecting the brake down of the
amounts due. As the attorneys
and conveyancers, it was open to them
to request a further break down beyond that evident from the levy
statement before providing
the undertaking or at the very latest,
before effecting the transfer. They failed to do so. They cannot
resile from the undertaking
after the fact. Once more, there is no
merit to the defence.
[36]
Linked to the argument that the undertaking is based on inferences
and hearsay, Mr Liphosa also
sought to persuade the court that the
application is subject to Rule 6(5)(g) of the High Court Rules. He
argued that the relief
sought by the applicant could not be granted
due to several material disputes of fact. He contended that the
letter of undertaking
was issued to
Angor
the managing agents
and there is no proof that Trustees accepted the undertaking. On this
account it was not binding. He argues
that the application is best
served by hearing of oral evidence and rest of the case is an
academic exercise.
[37]
None of these issues were raised in the answering affidavit and there
is nothing to indicate
there is a genuine dispute of facts on the
papers. Furthermore, it is not disputed that Angor were managing
agents for the applicant.
There is nothing to prevent the applicant
form taking up the cudgels to prosecute this claim as principal. The
argument is
misplaced.
[38]
Lastly the respondents contend that
S37(7)(c)(i)
of the
Legal
Practice Act does
not apply in this case. The argument goes as
follows: the first respondent could not be held jointly and severally
liable at the
same time with the second respondent if he had taken
personal responsibility. Invoking
section 34(7)(c)(i)
indicates that
the first respondent could have only acted in his professional
capacity as agent and administrator.
[39]
Section 34(7)(c)(i) of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (The Act)
provides as follows:
(7)
A commercial juristic entity may be established to conduct legal
practice provided that, in terms of its founding documents—
(c)
all present and past shareholders, partners or members, as the case
may be, are liable jointly and severally together with the
commercial
juristic entity for—
(i)
the debts and liabilities of the commercial juristic entity as are or
were contracted during the period of office ..."
(emphasis
added).
[40]
The section mirrors its predecessor in section 23 of the Attorneys
Act 53 of 1979
23(1)
A private company may, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Act, conduct a practice if-
(a)such
company is incorporated and registered as a private company under the
Companies Act, 1973 (Act 61 of 1973), with a share
capital, and its
memorandum of association provides that
all
present and past directors of the company shall be liable jointly and
severally with the company for the debts and liabilities
of the
company contracted during their periods of office;
…"
[Emphasis
added]
[41]
Furthermore, Section 53(b) of the Companies Act provides that:-
"(the)
memorandum of a company may, in addition to the requirements of s 52
-
(a)
. . .
(b)
in the case of a private company, provide that the directors and past
directors shall be liable jointly and severally, together
with the
company,
for such debts
and liabilities of the company as are or were contracted during their
periods of office, in which case the said directors
and past
directors shall be so liable
.
"
[Emphasis added]
[42]
In view of my finding that the undertaking was unqualified and bound
the first respondent, there
was a contractual debt created by the
respondent in favour of the applicant. As already alluded to above,
the throughout, the respondent
referred to either “I am”
and “we” in all the correspondence with the applicant and
its agents. The section
applies and carters for the first and second
respondent’s liability for the debt created in terms of the
undertaking in this
instance.
[44]
Not much was made of the defence of prescription which was merely
raised on the papers, presumably
because Mr Liphosa without
abandoning same took the view that it lacked merit.
[43]
Accordingly, the applicant succeeds in its claim.
[44]
As a result, I make the following order:
a.
the Respondents, jointly and severally,
in the amount of R270 219,02;
2.
b.
Interest on the aforesaid amount at
the mora interest rate from the
20 the February 2019 being the date of registration of the property
to date of final payment;
c.
The costs of the suit which are to be paid jointly and
severally by
the 1" and 2" Respondent
T
SIWENDU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 2 June 2022.
Heard
on:
10 May 2022
Delivered
on:
6 June 2022
Counsel
for the Applicant :
Mr WC Carstens
Instructed
by:
Ott Krause Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Mr H R Liphosa
Instructed
by:
JA Bossr Attorneys
[1]
Lewis
JA in Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Germiston
Municipality Retirement Fund[1] affirms
[2]
Ltd
2015 (3) SA (SCA) at para.15
[3]
1994
(1) SA49(A)
[4]
At para 6, 9 and 10
[5]
[2011]
JOL 27347 (SCA)
[6]
1979 (2) SA 116
(W) at 149 D-H and 150 A-B,
[7]
1
971
(3) SA 760 (T)
[8]
1999
(2) SA 605
(A)
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