Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 682South Africa
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Pitse N.O. and Others (A5049/17;14138/16; 34564/14) [2022] ZAGPJHC 682 (13 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Law of contract- Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981 – interpretation of section 27 – right of purchaser to demand transfer –sale agreement subject to certain stipulated conditions– paid purchase price – Breach of contract – purchaser not entitled to demand transfer in terms of section 27 (4) - The provisions of this section shall not apply in respect of a deed of alienation in terms of which the State or a local authority is the seller- proper construction of a written contract
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Pitse N.O. and Others (A5049/17;14138/16; 34564/14) [2022] ZAGPJHC 682 (13 September 2022)
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Pitse N.O. and Others (A5049/17;14138/16; 34564/14) [2022] ZAGPJHC 682 (13 September 2022)
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sino date 13 September 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appeal
No: A5049/17
Case
No 14138/16 & 34564/14
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
13 September 2022
In
the matter between:
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
FIRST APPELLANT
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG PROPERTY COMPANY
SOC
LTD
SECOND APPELLANT
AND
MOGOROSI
IKOPELENG PITSE N.O
FIRST RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
SECOND RESPONDENT
MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT, JOHANNESBURG
THIRD RESPONDENT
SHERIFF, JOHANNESBURG
CENTRAL
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Coram:
Wepener J, Mudau J
et
Todd AJ
Heard
:
10 August 2022
Delivered:
13 September 2022 –
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 11H00 on 13 September 2022.
Summary:
Law of contract-
Alienation
of Land Act 68 of 1981
– interpretation of
section 27
–
right of purchaser to demand transfer –sale agreement subject
to certain stipulated conditions
–
paid purchase price – Breach of contract – purchaser not
entitled to demand transfer in terms of
section 27
(4)
-
The provisions of this section shall not apply in respect of a deed
of alienation in terms of which the State or a local authority
is the
seller-
proper
construction of a written contract
Appeal:
Upheld with costs
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
1.
The
appeal accordingly succeeds, with costs, and the order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and the following order is substituted:
“
1.
Confirming that the agreement of sale entered into between the first
respondent, duly
represented by the second respondent. and Abel
Ikgopoleng Pitse dated 4 October 2001 pertaining to Stand [....],
Orlando East,
was validly terminated by the first and second
respondents on 6 August 2015.
2.
That the main application brought by the applicant be dismissed with
costs.
3.
That the applicant is to pay the costs of the counter-application”.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J: (WITH
WEPENER J AND TODD AJ CONCURRING)
[1]
This
is an appeal against a decision of the Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
made by Pather, AJ, on 30 October 2017, whereby the first
appellant,
the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“the City”)
was directed to pass transfer to the first
respondent, of certain
landed property pursuant to a written deed of sale. The City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
has been established in
accordance with
Section 2
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act 32 of 2000
. It is the successor in title to the Greater
Johannesburg Metropolitan Council.
[2]
The
appeal arose from the following distinct applications. The first, was
brought by the appellants, seeking the eviction of the
current
occupiers of the property -a church. The eviction application
resulted in an order by the court (per Baqwa J) that
proceedings
must be instituted by either party for the first respondent to compel
transfer of the property to the deceased’s
estate
alternatively, for the appellants to bring proceedings for the
cancellation of the agreement of sale entered into between
the
deceased and the appellants in these proceedings.
[3]
The
first respondent subsequently launched an application to compel the
appellants to transfer the property in terms of the sale
agreement
(the second application). The appellants in turn launched a counter
application, seeking an order declaring their cancellation
of the
sale agreement to be valid. The counter application was dismissed and
the main application granted by Pather AJ, who ordered
the appellants
to pass transfer of the property to the deceased’s estate. The
eviction application was as a result, also
dismissed. The appeal is
with leave of Pather AJ.
Background
Facts
[4]
There
is no dispute concerning the facts of the case, which may be
summarised as follows. Following public tenders invited for the
acquisition of a vacant piece of land, stand No [....] Orlando East,
Soweto (“the property”) in 2001, the late Mr Ikgopoleng
Abel Pitse (“the deceased”) submitted a tender to the
City, which
was
accepted to purchase the property for an amount of R108 000,00. On
4 October 2001, the first appellant represented by the
second
appellant (then called Propcom) concluded an agreement of sale with
the deceased. Subsequent to entering into the sale agreement,
the
deceased took possession of the property. However, transfer of the
property was never effected by the first appellant.
The deceased
passed away in 2006. The first respondent is the executor of his
estate. The estate remains in possession and occupation
of the
property. From the time the sale agreement was concluded, until 30
June 2015, a period of some fourteen years, nothing happened
in terms
of the agreement.
[5]
The
agreement provides
inter
alia
,
in clause 5 that “[t]ransfer of the PROPERTY into the name of
the PURCHASER shall be effected by the COUNCIL's conveyancers.
The
PURCHASER shall be liable for all costs in connection with such
transfer…”. Clause 7.1 provides as follows:
“
[t]he
PURCHASER shall commence the erection on the PROPERTY of a building,
for business purposes within l (one) year from date of
signing of
this Agreement by the COUNCIL and at least the first phase of the
said building shall be ready for occupation and operation
within 18
(eighteen) months from the date of signing of this Agreement by the
COUNCIL failing which reasons for such Failure shall
be submitted to
the COUNCIL in writing for consideration”.
[6]
Clause
7.2 records that “[t]he COUNCIL reserves the pre-emptive right
to repurchase the PROPERTY at the cost of the PURCHASER,
should the
provisions of clause 7,1 above not be complied with…”.
[7]
Clause
7.3 provides as follows:
“
[t]he
PURCHASER shall not dispose of the PROPERTY before a building(s),
specified in clause 7.1 above, has been erected thereon
except to the
COUNCIL at a price to be determined in terms of clause 7.2: Provided
that the COUNCII. may in such event compensate
the PURCHASER for any
improvements effected to the PROPERTY, the value of which shall be
determined by the COUNCIL's Executive
Officer: Valuation Services or
an independent valuer appointed by the Council. All costs in
connection with the re transfer of
the PROPERTY into the name of the
COUNCIL, shall be borne by the PURCHASER”.
[8]
Clause
8 made provision that, should the purchaser fail to comply with any
obligation imposed on the purchaser in terms of this
agreement, after
having been given 14 (fourteen) days' written notice by the council
in the manner prescribed by the agreement,
then the council shall
have the right, in addition and without prejudice, to use any other
remedies available in law to terminate
the agreement and withdraw
from it; to cancel the agreement and claim and recover such damages;
or to claim specific performance.
[9]
On
30 June 2015, pursuant to having instituted eviction proceedings
against the tenants on the property, the appellants’ attorneys
addressed a letter including a notice pursuant to clause 8 of the
sale agreement to the first respondent. The letter pointed out
that
the deceased had, during his lifetime, breached clause 7.1 of the
agreement, which required the deceased to erect buildings
on the
property. The letter called upon the first respondent to remedy the
breach within fourteen days of the date of service of
the letter.
[10]
The
first respondent, on 17 July 2015, through its attorneys addressed a
letter to the City’s attorneys’ denying that
there had
been a breach of the agreement by the deceased. The letter pointed
out that it was the appellants who had breached the
agreement in that
they had failed, within a reasonable time, to transfer ownership of
the property to the deceased estate. The
letter also pointed out that
the prior approval of the local authority was required before any
building construction could commence
and that building plans had to
be submitted for approval to the local authority by the registered
owner of the property together
with the title deed and if no title
deed was available, proof that transfer of the property had
commenced.
[11]
The
appellants refused to transfer the property to the deceased estate
and purported to cancel the agreement in terms of a letter
dated 6
August 2015. The letter pointed out that:
“
Clause
7.1 of the agreement … was and is totally unrelated to the
transfer of ownership of the property in question ….
Furthermore, that, the deceased and/or his estate and/or an executor
of the estate and/or anybody else on their behalf never took
any
steps to have the property transferred or to comply with the
provisions of clause 7.2 of the contract”.
[12]
The
letter of 6 August 2015 went on to point out that, “[t]he
National Building Regulations Act 103 of 1977, the regulations
promulgated thereunder or any practice did not and does not require
the passing of ownership prior to the submission of any plans
before
the commencement of the building operations envisaged in clause 7.1
of the contract”. In addition, no attempts were
made
to
have the property registered nor were any building plans submitted or
any steps taken whatsoever so as to comply with the Act.
The
appellants further tendered to refund the purchase price of R108
000.00 to the deceased estate. As a result of the alleged
breach of
clause 7.1 of the contract which the respondents failed to remedy
despite due notice in terms of clause 8 of the contract,
the
appellants terminated the contract and withdrew from it in terms of
clause 8.1 thereof.
[13]
The
first respondent’s attorneys addressed further correspondence
to the appellants’ attorneys rejecting the validity
of the
purported cancellation of the agreement in a letter dated 2 September
2015, further persisting with the claim for transfer
of the property
to the deceased’s estate. The developments led to the
applications before the court
a
quo
.
The first respondent sought to enforce a contractual obligation to
transfer the property into the estate. The City resisted this,
on the
basis that it had validly cancelled the agreement.
[14]
The
first respondent contended before the court below and in this appeal
that as the deceased had paid the purchase price at the
time of
conclusion of the agreement, an obligation arose on the part of the
appellants to transfer the property to the deceased.
ln respect of
the parties’ reciprocal duties, the court
a quo
and this court was referred to the case of
Botha
v Rich NO
[1]
wherein the Constitutional Court stated that:
"…
It is an accepted principle of our law that where a contract creates
reciprocal obligations, own performance or tender
of own perfonnance
by a claimant is a requirement for the enforceability of her claim
for counter performance. This is an instance
of the principle of
reciprocity … . For the principle to operate the obligations
of the parties must be reciprocal in the
sense that performance of
the one cannot be enforced without performance of the other."
[15]
The
court
a
quo
reasoned in its conclusion for the transfer order that “the
agreement in my view required the council to effect transfer
of the
property before the building commenced. That is the only way in which
the contract makes business sense. The respondents
were wrong to ask
for specific performance before it had complied with its obligation
to transfer the property.”
The
grounds of appeal
[16]
The
various grounds of appeal raised by the City can be distilled into
three contentions. First, that clause 7.1 of the agreement
was
engaged upon the signature date, not transfer. Second, that there was
no reciprocity between clauses 5 and 7.1; and 7.3. Third,
that the
City validly cancelled the agreement.
[17]
As
regards the principle of reciprocity, the SCA in
Cradle
City (Pty) Ltd v Lindley Farm 528 (Pty) Ltd
,
[2]
which counsel for the appellants also referred to, put it thus:
“…
.
The principle of reciprocity (
exceptio
non adimpleti contractus
) recognises
the fact that, in many contracts, the common intention of the
parties, expressed or unexpressed, is that there should
be an
exchange of performance. Whether there is such an intention must
often be determined by an interpretation of the contract
(see Van der
Merwe et al
Contract: General
Principles
5 ed (2015) at 335 and
the references therein). In fact, there is a presumption that
interdependent promises are reciprocal
unless there is evidence to
the contrary (
Contract: General
Principles supra
). The common
intention is that neither should be entitled to enforce the contract
unless he/she has performed or is ready
to perform his/her own
obligations… ”.
[18]
But,
as counsel for the respondents was constrained to concede during
argument before us,
Botha
,
[3]
on which the court placed heavy reliance, is distinguishable on the
facts from the facts of this matter. In that case, Botha had
concluded an instalment sale agreement to buy immovable property
from
a trust. A cancellation clause stated that breach by Botha would
entitle the trust to cancel the agreement and retain all payments
made.
[19]
When
Botha, having paid three-quarters of the purchase price, began to
default on the instalments, the trust successfully sued for
cancellation and eviction. Botha, citing s 27(1) the
Alienation of
Land Act
(“the Act”),
[4]
demanded the transfer of the property into her name. The
Constitutional Court held in Botha,
[5]
as to the forfeiture clause and cancellation, that granting
cancellation and
therefore forfeiture
in
circumstances when more than three-quarters of the purchase price had
already been paid, would amount to a disproportionate penalty
for
Botha's breach. In such circumstances, the trust would not be
entitled to cancellation. Botha, as the Constitutional Court
found,
was entitled to transfer against registration of a bond in favour of
the trust, provided all arrears were brought up to
date at or before
transfer.
[20]
However,
what makes Botha distinguishable on the facts is that
section 27
(4)
of the Act specifically provides that, “The provisions of this
section shall not apply in respect of a deed of alienation
in terms
of which the State or a local authority is the seller”. In this
case, the seller of the property is the City, a
local authority,
which is exempted.
[21]
The
City contends that the obligations in clauses 5 and 7 were not
reciprocal. That is, the parties did not contemplate that they
would
be performed in exchange for one another. I am persuaded to agree. It
would seem to me that nothing in the writing of the
agreement
suggests that the obligation to build was linked with the obligation
to effect transfer. In my view, if it was, the milestones
in clause
7.1 would have been dependent upon transfer, not signature. From the
written agreement all that was necessary for the
obligation to erect
a building to arise, was possession of the property, which had been
given.
[22]
In
my view, the obligations in clause 7.1 arose upon signature of the
agreement, and not on transfer and in this regard, I am fortified
for
the following reasons. Clause 7.1 set two milestones, both of which
were in reference to the signature date. The milestone
for the first
phase was one year from the signature date. The second, was 18 months
from the signature date.
Transfer
of ownership was, I find, neither a factual nor legal requirement to
commence building. On the first respondent’s
version, a power
of attorney from the City would, in any event, have sufficed. The
first respondent did not allege that he failed
to achieve transfer
with a power of attorney. The City’s own breach, if it was
such, is of no consequence as there was no
demand made for it to
remedy any breach.
[23]
As
for the allegation regarding existence of the building plans, there
was no evidence in support thereof, except for the bold allegation
that they were available, which the appellants denied, either at the
time of the breach, or before
the
court
a
quo
.
The first respondent did not attach the alleged building plans or any
proof of submission of those building plans to the City
for its
consideration. In my view, in the light of the first respondent’s
breach, the City was entitled to demand performance,
which it did.
With the first respondent having failed to comply with the terms of
the contract in relation to clause 7.1, the City
was accordingly
entitled to cancel the agreement
by
virtue of clause 8 thereof.
[24]
In
determining the intention of the parties as 'expressed' in their
contract, the Court is of course primarily concerned with a
difficult
construction. There are no grounds in this case on which to adopt the
purposive interpretation for which the court
a
quo
relied upon in its reasoning.
I
find myself unable to construe the contract in the manner contended
for by the first respondent. It must be remembered that the
property
was sold for the deceased to construct business premises, in contrast
with the purpose for which it was subsequently leased
out. A
local authority is bound to comply, and enforce compliance, with
zoning schemes. The use of the City property as a
church in
contravention of the Town-Planning legislation of the City of
Johannesburg Land Use Scheme of 2018 also constitutes an
offence.
[25]
Our
courts have affirmed the role and duty of local authorities to
regulate and enforce “with the requisite degree of vigour
and
efficiency” land use in their areas of responsibility.
[6]
The purpose of zoning or town planning and its concomitant
restriction on the use rights attaching to land is to provide for the
orderly, harmonious and effective development of the affected
area.
[7]
[26]
It
is trite that the Court does not readily import a tacit term as it
cannot make contracts for parties; nor can it supplement the
agreement of the parties merely because it might be reasonable to do
so.
[8]
Before it can imply a
tacit term, the Court must be satisfied, upon a consideration in a
reasonable and businesslike manner of
the terms of the contract and
the admissible evidence of surrounding circumstances, that an
implication necessarily arises that
the parties intended to contract
on the basis of the suggested term.
[9]
[27]
The
purposive or business-like approach adopted by the court
a
quo
in its construction of the contract would accordingly, in effect,
amount to rewriting the contract for the parties, which the Supreme
Court of Appeal specifically warned against in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
:
[10]
“
Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible or business-like
for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between interpretation
and
legislation. In a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact made.”
[28]
In
this matter, all the clauses, and in particular, clause 7.1 are
stipulations concluded between freely contracting parties which
are
thus
prima
facie
binding and enforceable. When the parties contracted, they were fully
alive to the nature of the issues that were likely to arise
and with
that in mind, they stipulated for terms in the written agreement and
should accordingly be held to it. In my judgment,
the
respondents' submissions cannot, therefore, be sustained, and the
appellants’ contention that they validly terminated
the
contract should be upheld.
Order
[29]
The
appeal accordingly succeeds, with costs, and the order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and the following order is substituted:
“
1.
Confirming that the agreement of sale entered into between the first
respondent, duly represented by
the second respondent. and Abel
Ikgopoleng Pitse dated 4 October 2001 pertaining to Stand [....],
Orlando East, was validly terminated
by the first and second
respondents on 6 August 2015.
2.
That the main application brought by the applicant be dismissed with
costs.
3.
That the applicant is to pay the costs of the counter-application”.
MUDAU J
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
WEPENER J
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
TODD AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
For the
Appellants:
Adv. M V Chauke (Heads by Adv M Sibanda)
Instructed
by:
Moodie & Robertson Attorneys
For the 1
st
and 2nd Respondents:
Adv NL Dyirakumunda
Instructed
by:
DMB Attorneys
Date of
Hearing:
10 August 2022
Date of
Judgment:
13 September 2022
[1]
2014
(4) SA 124
(CC) at para 43.
[2]
2018
(3) SA 65
(SCA) at para 20.
[3]
Botha
above n 1.
[4]
Act
68
of 1981.
[5]
Botha
above n 1
at
paras [50]–[51].
[6]
See
Chapmans
Peak Hotel (Pty) Ltd and Another v Jab and Annalene Restaurants CC
t/a O’Hagans
2001
(4) All SA 415
(C)
at para 38.
[7]
Id
at para 12.
[8]
Alfred
Mcalpine & Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administr
ation
1974 (3) SA 506
(A) at 532
.
[9]
Id
at 532G-533A.
[10]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA)
at para 18.
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