Van Rooyen v Brown and Another (A3104/2015) [2018] ZAGPJHC 453 (28 June 2018)

80 Reportability
Contract Law

Brief Summary

Contract — Sale of property — Misrepresentation and non-disclosure of defects — Appellant sold residential property to Respondents under a voetstoots clause — Respondents discovered significant defects post-occupation, including an invalid electrical compliance certificate and various structural issues — Respondents claimed damages for breach of warranty and misrepresentation — Court a quo found in favor of Respondents, concluding they had established the Appellant's duty to disclose defects and that the Appellant had failed to do so — Appeal dismissed, confirming the validity of the original judgment and the Respondents' claims for damages.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an appeal to the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, against a judgment of the Randburg Magistrate’s Court. The appeal was heard by Cele AJ, with Twala J concurring.


The appellant was Ms Emmerentia Van Rooyen (the defendant in the court a quo), the seller of a residential property. The respondents were Mr Damon Jay Brown and Ms Jenna Cathleen Brown (the plaintiffs in the court a quo), the purchasers of that property.


In the court a quo, the magistrate granted judgment in favour of the respondents on 11 September 2015, awarding R92 352.80 as damages for defects discovered after occupation, together with costs. In the High Court, the appellant sought to set aside the whole of that judgment.


There was also an interlocutory procedural issue: the appellant applied for condonation for the late filing of the appeal record due to difficulties obtaining the transcript. That application was unopposed and was granted.


The subject-matter of the dispute concerned the consequences of a voetstoots sale of a residential property, the purchaser’s remedies for alleged latent defects and non-disclosure, and contractual claims based on an express warranty (fixtures and fittings) and an obligation to provide a valid electrical compliance certificate.


2. Material Facts


During late 2010 or early 2011 the appellant placed her house on the market through an estate agent, Kings Estate Agents and Auctioneers. After an initial rejected offer and an unsuccessful auction, the property was ultimately sold to the respondents in July 2011 when the price was reduced and the respondents made an acceptable offer.


The respondents inspected the property before signing the final agreement. The evidence was unclear on the exact number of inspections, but the court accepted that the inspections occurred in the presence of the agent, and that on one occasion the second respondent brought her father, who was a builder, to assist with the inspection. The respondents took occupation in December 2011 (paying occupational rent), and transfer was registered in January 2012.


The written sale agreement contained a voetstoots clause, provided for an electrical compliance certificate, included a non-variation clause, and contained an express warranty (clause 10) in respect of specified fixtures and fittings, including (as dealt with in evidence) items such as the pool filter and automatic pool cleaner, and security-related fixtures.


After occupation, the respondents identified various defects and asserted that these had not been apparent during viewing and had not been disclosed by the appellant and/or the agent. They pleaded claims founded on non-disclosure (allegedly deliberate or negligent, and pleaded in a manner alleging dolo malo) and on breach of the express contractual warranties and certificate obligations. The defects pleaded included, among others, roof leaks, a leaking thatch carport roof, incorrectly fitted kitchen windows, cracked mirrored cupboard doors, a defective electric fence, defective pool pump and filter, missing front door keys, an invalid electrical compliance certificate, and signs of damp/leaks in walls.


On appeal, the court treated as effectively common cause that the property did have defects and that they were not shown or disclosed to the respondents, while the appellant’s primary contention was that the defects were patent rather than latent and that she was protected by the voetstoots clause. The latent/patent characterisation, and the appellant’s knowledge and non-disclosure, were disputed issues central to the appeal.


In relation to specific items, the court relied on the following facts in its assessment. The leaking and damp problems could only be detected on a rainy day, and there was no evidence that the respondents inspected on such a day. The “hidden bathroom” (accessed via a cupboard door) allegedly showed signs of heavy leakage, including a sagging ceiling and holes made to release trapped water; the respondents’ evidence was that it had not been shown to them at viewings. The appellant acknowledged knowledge of some problems (including occasional leakage at kitchen windows during heavy rain and recurring thatch roof leakage) but stated she did not communicate these to the agent or the respondents.


Concerning the electric fence, the appellant showed the respondents the energiser and warned them not to touch the board because it had shocked her gardener on prior occasions. Expert evidence for the respondents was that the energiser was beyond economical repair and that other deficiencies affected the fence’s functionality. The appellant maintained she believed the fence worked because of ticking sounds, but the court relied on her knowledge of the shocking incidents as material undisclosed information.


Regarding the pool equipment, the respondents’ evidence was that the pool pump and filter did not function properly after occupation and stopped working. An expert inspection shortly thereafter concluded the filter and pump required replacement and attributed the condition to wear and tear over years of use. The appellant’s evidence was that the equipment was in working condition at the time of sale.


As to keys, the appellant admitted that she knew there were no keys for the front door and that she did not disclose this, explaining it as an omission.


The Electrical Compliance Certificate furnished by the appellant was found, on the evidence accepted by the courts, to be invalid, and the respondents incurred costs to rectify electrical defects through another electrician after the appellant’s electrician did not remedy the defects within a reasonable time.


The magistrate found the respondents had discharged the onus and accepted their version as more probable and credible, concluding the defects were latent and awarding damages and costs. The appellant challenged those conclusions on appeal.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the appellant could rely on the voetstoots clause to avoid liability for defects, and, if not, whether the respondents established a basis to recover damages for defects that were said to be latent and not disclosed.


A core issue concerned the application of legal principles to facts, namely whether the defects were patent or latent, and whether the appellant knew of defects (or material information about them) and deliberately concealed them or failed to disclose them in a manner defeating reliance on voetstoots.


The court also had to determine contractual issues arising from the sale agreement, including whether the appellant breached an express warranty regarding fixtures and fittings (notably the pool equipment), and whether she breached the obligation to provide a valid Electrical Compliance Certificate, including whether that obligation was confined to the pre-transfer period or persisted in circumstances where the certificate proved invalid and remedial work was required.


These issues involved fact-finding and credibility evaluation (particularly where the magistrate had accepted the respondents’ version), and the legal consequences flowing from those findings in the context of a voetstoots sale and express contractual obligations.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the appeal by identifying the legal effect of a voetstoots clause and the circumstances in which a seller cannot rely on such a clause. It accepted the general proposition that voetstoots entails a sale “as is”, under which a seller is generally not responsible for defects in the merx. However, relying on the principles discussed in the authorities it cited, the court emphasised that reliance on voetstoots is not available where the seller was aware of latent defects and fraudulently concealed them, or where the seller provided an express, implied or tacit warranty covering the defects in question.


Applying those principles, the court rejected the appellant’s submission that the defects (save possibly the fence) were patent and discoverable on inspection. It reasoned that there was no corroboration for the appellant’s assertion that the defects were readily visible. It accepted that certain defects—particularly those involving leaking roofs, walls, and thatch—were not discoverable except under conditions such as rainfall, and there was no evidence that the respondents inspected under such conditions. On this footing, the court regarded those defects as latent in nature.


The court placed weight on the fact that the respondents’ evidence on important aspects remained effectively uncontroverted, particularly because the estate agent who showed the respondents the property was not called to testify. The court treated the “hidden bathroom” evidence as unassailable on the record before it, reinforcing the conclusion that material defects were not disclosed and would not have been obvious during ordinary viewings.


In relation to specific disputed items, the court engaged in an evaluative assessment aligned with the magistrate’s credibility findings. Regarding the front door keys, the appellant’s admission that she knew keys were missing, coupled with the absence of a satisfactory explanation for non-disclosure, supported the conclusion that the respondents were not informed of a material defect or shortcoming at the time relevant to their purchasing decision. As to the cracked mirror panes, the court relied on the magistrate’s advantage in observing witnesses and the demonstration presented at trial, and treated the appellant’s version as a bare denial not sufficient to displace the finding.


On the electric fence, the court rejected the argument that the appellant’s lack of technical expertise excused non-disclosure. It reasoned that the appellant possessed specific, significant information that the fence had shocked a person on multiple occasions, and that she failed to convey this information during the decision-making period before the sale. The court held that no innocent explanation was advanced for that omission and drew the inference that the appellant deliberately concealed that information, which undermined reliance on the voetstoots clause.


With respect to the pool pump and filter, the court treated the matter as falling within the scope of the express warranty in clause 10. The evidence accepted was that shortly after occupation the equipment was not functioning and required replacement, with expert evidence indicating long-term wear and tear. The court concluded that the warranty provided by the appellant did not, on the accepted facts, achieve the purpose for which it was intended, and therefore the appellant’s ground of appeal on this issue lacked merit.


Concerning the Electrical Compliance Certificate, the court accepted the evidence that the certificate provided was invalid and that the respondents suffered damages because defects were not remedied by the appellant’s electrician within a reasonable time, prompting the respondents to engage their own electrician to rectify defects and obtain a valid certificate. The court characterised the failure to provide a valid certificate as a clear breach of the relevant contractual term. It rejected the appellant’s contention that the obligation was limited to the period before transfer, reasoning (on the facts accepted) that the breach and its consequences were not confined to pre-transfer timing where the certificate proved invalid and remedial steps were required.


Finally, the court referred to the appellant’s evidence that she decided not to fix faults because she had accepted a low offer, treating this as indicative of her approach and as reinforcing the conclusion that known faults were not disclosed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court granted condonation for the late filing of the appeal record, as the application was unopposed and the delay was explained by difficulties obtaining the transcript.


On the merits, the appeal was dismissed. The court upheld the magistrate’s award of damages in favour of the respondents.


The appellant was ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.


Cases Cited


Legadima Garden Services CC v Lightstorm Electrical CC [2017] JOL 38393 (GP)


Odendaal v Ferraris 2009 (4) SA 313 (SCA)


Beyers NO and Another v Ackerman [2007] 3 All SA 125 (C)


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment text provided.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 50(7)(a)


Held


The court held that the appellant could not successfully rely on the voetstoots clause on the facts accepted by the magistrate and sustained on appeal, including that key defects were not shown or disclosed and were not established to be patent and readily discoverable on inspection.


The court further held that the appellant’s non-disclosure in relation to certain defects and conditions (including knowledge relating to the electric fence and other defects) justified the rejection of the appellant’s defence, and that the respondents’ claims based on warranty (pool pump and filter) and breach of the obligation to provide a valid Electrical Compliance Certificate were properly upheld.


Accordingly, the court dismissed the appeal with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A voetstoots clause generally denotes a sale “as is”, limiting a seller’s liability for defects in the merx, but it does not protect a seller in circumstances where the seller was aware of a latent defect and fraudulently concealed it or refrained from disclosing it to the purchaser.


A seller remains obliged to deliver the merx without defects, and delivery is not in accordance with the contract where a latent defect is fraudulently concealed or where the seller has furnished an express warranty that the property or specified items are free from the relevant defect.


Where an agreement imposes a contractual obligation to provide a valid electrical compliance certificate, failure to provide a valid certificate constitutes a breach of contract on the facts accepted, and liability may follow where the purchaser incurs costs to remedy defects and secure compliance after the seller’s certificate proves invalid and remedial steps are not taken within a reasonable time.

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[2018] ZAGPJHC 453
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Van Rooyen v Brown and Another (A3104/2015) [2018] ZAGPJHC 453 (28 June 2018)

REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
APPEAL
CASE NO.: A3104/2015
CASE
NO.
A QUO
: 48763/2012
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
In
the matter between:-
VAN
ROOYEN,
EMMERENTIA

APPELLANT
(DEFENDANT
–COURT A QUO)
AND
BROWN,
DAMON
JAY

FIRST RESPONDENT
(FIRST PLANTIFF
–COURT A QUO)
BROWN,
JENNA CATHLEEN

SECOND RESPONDENT
(SECOND
PLAINTIFF- COURT A QUO)
JUDGMENT
Heard:
05 June 2018
Delivered:
28 June 2018
CELE
AJ (TWALA J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
In these proceedings, the Appellant seeks an order to set aside the
whole of the judgment of Magistrate H.A. Twele sitting in
Randburg
Magistrate’s Court  granted in favour of the Respondents
on 11 September 2015. She awarded the Respondents
R92 352 80 as
damages for physical defects to a residential property they purchased
from the Appellant. The Respondents oppose
the appeal. The Appellant
also seeks to be granted condonation for the late filing of the
record of the appeal but this application
is not opposed by any of
the Respondents.
Factual
Background
[2]
Sometime towards the end of 2010 or at the beginning of 2011 the
Appellant put her house on sale for R3 600 095 .00

utilising the services of Kings Estate Agents and Auctioneers (“the
agent”) to market and sell the property. The Respondents
were
introduced to and shown the property by the agent. The first offer
they put was rejected. This house was also put on auction
but no
buyer put up any acceptable offer. When the selling price was finally
dropped to R2 300 00.00, the Respondents presented
an acceptable
offer to purchase in July 2011. The agreement was that the
Respondents would move into the property once transfer
into their
names had been effected. However, by agreement the Appellant moved
out in December 2011 relocating to Cape Town and
the Respondents
moved in, also in December 2011, paying occupational rent. The
property was transferred to their names in January
2012.
[3]
Prior to signing the final sale agreement the Respondents inspected
the property. It remained unclear whether they visited the
house
once, signed and then visited it again on two or three occasions or
that there were two or three occasions of their visit
before they
signed. All such visits were only in the presence of the agent. In
one of such visits, the second Respondent invited
her father, who was
a builder, to come and help inspect this house.
[4]
The Sale Agreement specifically made provision for a warranty,
voetstoots sale condition, electrical certificate of compliance
and a
non-variation clause. In particular, clause 10 of the contract of
sale catered for the warranty in respect of fixtures and
fittings,
including the pool filter and automatic pool cleaner. Clause 13
stated that the seller will, at her expense, obtain and
provide an
Electrical Compliance Certificate in respect of the wiring and
electrical installations on the property  to the
purchaser and
will also be liable for the costs of any work and materials required
for the issue of the certificate, prior to registration
of transfer.
[5]
After the Respondents had taken occupation of the property they
discovered a number of defects to the property which they contend
had
not been apparent at the time of viewing the property and which were
not pointed out to them by either the Appellant or the
agent and/or
were deliberately withheld from the Respondents by the Appellant
and/or her agent. They also contend that they discovered
that the
property was not electrically compliant and that the Electrical
Compliance Certificate presented to them by the Appellant,
was
invalid. Further, they contend  that they discovered, upon
taking occupation, that certain fixtures and fittings, which
the
Appellant warranted to be in good working order and condition, were
not in good working order and condition as warranted. As
a result of
the said defects and breach of warranty, the Respondents claimed
damages from the Appellant. They identified the following
as defects:
1
A leaking roof in the office bathroom;
2
Leaking Thatch Carport Roof;
3
Kitchen windows being installed incorrectly;
4
Broken mirrors on the cupboard doors;
5
Defective Electric Fence;
6
Defective Pool Pump and Filters;
7
Missing Front Door Keys;
8
Invalid electronic compliance certificate;
9
Lick in the office and spare room walls.
[6]
The pleaded case of the Respondents can be summarised as follows: -
Claim
1:
1
The Appellant had a tacitly agreed or an implied duty to disclose all
defects
whether latent or patent, as well as all other relevant
facts;
2
The defects were deliberately, negligently or without fault withheld
from
the Respondents by the Appellant and/or her agent;
3
The aforesaid non-disclosure induced the Respondents into entering
into
the Sale Agreement;
4
The defects were latent and invisible to the Respondents;
5
The defects either diminish or destroy the use of the property for
what
it was sold or commonly used;
6
The Appellant acted
dolo
malo
with the intention of defrauding the Respondents;
7
The Respondents sought damages, alternatively a
quanti
minoris
.
Claim
2
:
8
The Appellant breached the warranty in respect of the pool pump and
filters;
9
The Appellant failed to provide a valid certificate of compliance.
[7]
On the other hand, the Appellant raised the following in defense to
the claim: -
1
The property was sold “voetstoots”;
2
The pool pump and filters were in normal working order at the time
the property
was sold;
3
A valid certificate of compliance was provided, in terms of which
transfer
took place.
Evidence
led at trial
[8]
At the commencement of the trial, the Appellant disputed every fact
pertaining to defects pleaded by the Respondents. However
when trial
proceeded, not much challenge was made on the evidence tendered by
witnesses called by the Respondents as experts. In
a nutshell, the
evidence led on disputed issues was that the Electrical Compliance
Certificate provided by the Appellant to Respondents
was invalid and
the Respondents suffered damages as a result thereof when the
electrician engaged by the Appellant failed to correct
the defects.
The Respondents had to employ the services of another electrician to
correct various defects in order for such electrician
to provide a
valid Electrical Compliance Certificate.
[9]
Clause 10 has the warranty in respect of fixtures and fittings which
included the burglar alarm and panic buttons. Upon collecting
the
keys of the property the Appellant showed the Respondents the
energizer for the electric fence in the garage. The Appellant
advised
the Respondents not to touch the board as it had shocked her gardener
a few times. They engaged the services of a security
company which
upon inspection advised them that the whole energizer needed to be
replaced. Mr. Holt, being the expert in respect
of the electrical
fence inspected the fence on 14 December 2011 and found that the
energizer was damaged beyond economical repair.
There were no earth
spikes on the fence from the entrance gate to the end of the fence.
In the absence of earth spikes, the alarm
could not activate. The
fence required general maintenance such as bobbins, hooks, springs,
ferrels and the fence needed to be
re-tensioned. Only an expert was
able to determine the issue with the fence. In this regard, the
Appellant testified that a loose
wire shocked the gardener but she
did not tell this to the agent. As the lights were flickering and the
fence had a ticking sound,
she assumed it was working properly.
[10]
The warranty in respect of fixtures and fittings in clause 10
included the pool filter and the automatic pool cleaner. The
Second
Respondent testified that after taking occupation it came to her
attention that the pool pump and the filter were not working
as they
should have and eventually stopped working. An expert was called in,
being Mr. Cullen who inspected the pool on 2 January
2012 and found,
amongst others, that the entire pool filter and pump had to be
replaced as both were not in working order. He opined
that the pool
had been maintained through the use of chlorine to keep water looking
clean. The damage to the pool pump was due
to wear and tear and years
of being used and had to be replaced. The Appellant testified that
the pool pump and the filter were
in working condition at the time of
the sale.
[11]
In respect of the house keys, the Appellant admitted that at all
times she knew that there were no keys for the front door.
She would
not normally use that door to exit the house. She would lock the door
from inside and then use a different exit door
when leaving the
house. She merely forgot to mention this to the agent or the
Respondents.
[12]
In respect of the cracked mirror panes the Respondents’
testimony was that upon taking occupation of the property, they

noticed that two of three mirrored panes on a mirrored cupboard
sliding door were cracked. The two panes could slide behind one
fixed
pane such that the broken mirror panes were hidden behind the fixed
pane, which was not broken. A sketch demonstration was
produced in
court to show how the panes converged to the fixed one thus hiding
the shattering. The Appellant disputed that evidence
by averring that
it was not possible to conceal the cracks with the fixed pane.
[13]
The Respondents said that it was upon taking occupation of the
property that they discovered that the kitchen windows had been

fitted backwards and only opened to the inside. During rain storms, a
substantial amount of water leaked through the kitchen windows.
They
conceded that there were burglar guards fitted on the outside of such
windows. The backwards fitting was not shown to them
by the Appellant
or her agent. To correct the defect they had to remove these windows
and replace them with sliding windows which
turned out to be
expensive. On this aspect, the Appellant testified that she was aware
of the leak which happened occasionally
when it rained heavily. She
forgot to tell her agent and the Respondents about this.
[14]
The Second Respondent testified that the Respondents only discovered
that there was a bathroom upon taking occupation. The
bathroom was
never showed to them when they viewed the property as it is only
discovered upon opening one of the cupboard doors
in a built in
cupboard in the office. However, they were pleasantly surprised until
they discovered that the bathroom had obvious
signs of heavy leaking
such as sagging ceilings through which holes has been punched to
release the water. They would have seen
the damage had the bathroom
been shown to them at the time of viewing the property. A substantial
amount of water leaked through
the roof when it rained.
[15]
In respect of the leaking thatch carport the evidence of the
Respondents was that when it rains, there was a substantial amount
of
water that leaks into the garage. They only became aware of the
problem when it rained after occupying the property. The Appellant

testified that after winter season the thatch would leak after a
storm. It was an annual thing. Sometimes it would not stop leaking

and then they would have to get repairers in, but they did
maintenance every two years. As this roof was near trees, leaves had

to be brushed off the roof constantly before they created damp sports
on the roof. She did not tell the agent anything about the
thatch,
the care, the maintenance or the dangers of storms. Patches on the
thatched roof left visible signs of leaks.
[16]
The
court
a quo
found that the Respondents had discharged the onus of proof placed on
them on a balance of probabilities and accepted their version
as more
probable and credible. It found that all the defects identified by
the Respondents were not readily visible upon inspection
and were
therefore latent. It then granted judgment in their favour and
ordered the Appellant to pay damages with costs of the
action.
Appeal
[17]
When initiating the appeal the Appellant had not been furnished by
transcribers with a full transcript of the trial record.
It was only
after months of investigations that the recording was made available
and a transcript arranged for. As such the Appellant
failed to comply
with rule 50 (7) (a). An application for condonation for the late
filing of the record of appeal was heard unopposed
on the appeal
hearing date and condonation was granted.
[18]
The Appellant concedes that the house she sold to the Respondents had
defects but contended that such were patent and not latent.
The
Appellant contended that:
1)
She
was protected by the voetstoots clause and that she could not be held
responsible for any diseases or defects in the property.
The
submission was that the buyer had an opportunity to inspect the
property before buying it and that therefore, against patent
defects,
the buyer has no recourse against the seller.
2)
In
respect of the electric fence, the submission is that the fence had a
latent defect which the Appellant was unaware of,
as the fence
made ticking sounds, she thought it was working.
3)
In
respect of the pool pump and the filter, the Appellant warranted that
these were in normal working order but there was no warranty
against
every day wear and tear.
4)
On
the electrical compliance certificate, the Appellant secured the
services of an electrician who had issued a certificate on the

strength of which transfer of ownership of the house was effected.
Notwithstanding their reservations, the Respondents accepted
the
certificate of compliance and allowed the property to be transferred.
Legal
principles
[19]
The Appellant has relied on the principle of voetstoots to avoid
contractual liability after she had sold her property to the

Respondents. It is accepted that “voetstoots” is the
action of buying something “as is” or “just
as it
stands” and the seller may not be held responsible for any
diseases or defects in respect of the
merx
.
[1]
In
Legadima
Garden Services CC v Lightstorm Electrical CC
[2]
,
the court held that a seller may be able to hide behind the
voetstoots clause between the parties only where the seller was not

aware of the defects and as such did not conceal them from the
purchaser or where no warranty, expressly, impliedly or tacitly
was
given to the purchaser by the seller.
[20]
It remains the duty of the seller to deliver the
merx
sold to the buyer without defects. Where the
merx
is latently defective, delivery is not considered to be in accordance
with the contract in instances where the seller fraudulently
conceals
the defect in the
merx
sold or in an instance where the seller gives an express warranty
that the thing sold is free of the particular defect. For the
buyer
to get around the seller’s exemption in such circumstances
through the voetstoots clause, he or she would have to prove
that the
seller at the time of the conclusion of the contract was aware of the
existence of the latent defect in the
merx
sold and deliberately concealed the existence of the defect to the
purchaser or refrained from informing the purchaser of its
existence.
[3]
Evaluation
1.
The Voetstoots defense
[21]
. Counsel for the Appellant submitted that all defects, except the
electric fence, were patent and visible upon mere inspection.

Further, as the argument goes, the Respondents had an opportunity to
inspect the house thoroughly before buying it, however they
elected
not to.
[22]
In my view, the existence of the defects has become common cause
between the parties as well as the fact that they were not
shown or
disclosed to the Respondents. There is no evidence to corroborate the
Appellant’s version that the defects were
readily visible. It
is on record that the licking thatch roofs and walls could only be
detected on a rainy day and there is no
evidence that the Respondents
came on a rainy day to inspect the property. Evidence of the hidden
bathroom which had drilled ceilings
remained unassailable as the
agent of the Appellant was never called to testify. The defects
constituted by the licks were therefore
latent in nature. The
Appellant has failed to demonstrate her
bona
fides
in not disclosing these defects and therefore the appeal falls to be
dismissed on this ground.
[22]
In respect of the house keys, the Appellant admitted that at all
times she knew that there were no keys for the front door.
No valid
explanation was proffered on why this was not disclosed to the
Respondents. As regards the cracked mirror panes the court
a quo had
the benefit of watching witnesses who testified on the issue. A
sketch demonstration was presented to court. Appellant’s

version amounts to nothing but a bare denial of this defect. The
agent who showed the respondents around the property was not called

to testify and therefore this piece of evidence remained
uncontroverted. The appeal falls to be dismissed on this ground.
2.
The electric fence
[23]
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the fence had a latent
defect which the Appellant was unaware of since it made ticking

sounds which made her think that it was working well. The evidence of
Mr. Holt for the Respondents was that only an expert was
able to
determine the issue with the fence. Upon collecting the keys of the
property the Appellant showed the Respondents the energizer
for the
electric fence in the garage. The Appellant advised the Respondents
not to touch the board as it had shocked her gardener
a few times.
This was vital information which was not communicated to the
Respondents when they came to inspect the property. In
as much as the
Appellant was no expert on electric fence, she had important
information about a defect in the fence which on a
number of
occasions had shocked a human being. No innocent explanation was
proffered by the Appellant why this dangerous situation
was not
explained to the Respondents at the critical decision making period
on whether or not to buy the property. The only reasonable
inference
to draw from this is that the Appellant deliberately concealed this
information. The appeal falls to be dismissed on
this ground as well.
3.
The pool pump and the pool filter
[24]
The warranty in respect of fixtures and fittings included the pool
filter and the automatic pool cleaner. In this respect the
Second
Respondent testified that after taking occupation of the property it
came to her attention that the pool pump and the filter
were not
working as they should have and eventually stopped working. Mr.
Cullen inspected the pool only to find that the entire
pool filter
and pump had to be replaced as both were not in working order. The
damage to the pool pump was due to wear and tear
and years of being
used and had to be replaced. Clearly therefore the warranty given by
the Appellant was not good enough to serve
the purpose for which it
was intended. The pump and the filter showed years of wear and tear.
This defect was discovered in about
a month since the Respondents
moved into the property. This ground of appeal lacks merits and
should therefore also fail.
4.
The electrical compliance certificate
[25]
The Electrical Compliance Certificate provided by the Appellant to
Respondents was invalid and the Respondents said they suffered

damages as a result thereof when the electrician engaged by the
Appellant failed to correct the faults. Even after the ownership
of
the house was transferred to the Respondents, the Appellant accepted
her responsibility to sort out the problem. It was only
when her
electrician failed to remedy the defect within a reasonable time
period that the Respondents engaged the services of their

electrician. Failure to provide a valid electrical compliance
certificate was a clear breach of the contractual term in this regard

and the breach was not limited to time before the transfer, as
contended by the Appellant. This ground of appeal stands to be
dismissed.
[26]
In conclusion, it was Appellant testimony that she had decided not to
fix any faults on the premises because she accepted a
low offer. This
approach to resolve her gripe in accepting a low offer is telling in
why she did not disclose faults in the house
of which she was aware
for some time.
Order:
I
accordingly propose that the appeal be dismissed with costs.
________________
H
Cele.AJ
I
agree/ disagree.
________________
M
Twala J
Appearances
For
the Appellant:

Adv. J Scallan
For
the respondent

Adv. K Potgieter
[1]
Kerr: The Law of
Sale and Lease (2004) at page 150: Odendaal v Ferraris 2009 (4) SA
313 (SCA).
[2]
[2017] JOL 38393 (GP).
[3]
Beyers NO and Another v Ackerman
[2007] 3 All SA
125
(C)