About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAFSHC 261
|
|
412 Brandfort CC v Van Der Merwe N.O. and Others (4463/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 261 (30 June 2023)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
number: 4463/2022
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
CIRCULATE TO MAGISTRATES: YES/NO
In the matter between:
412
BRANDFORT CC
Applicant
And
PIETER
NICOLAAS VAN DER MERWE N.O.
First
Respondent
[In
his capacity as Trustee of the Pieter van der Merwe
Familie
Trust]
JOHANNES
PETRUS VAN DER MERWE N.O.
Second
Respondent
[In
his capacity as Trustee of the Pieter van der Merwe
Familie
Trust]
DAWID
JACOBUS FOURIE N.O.
Third
Respondent
[In
his capacity as Trustee of the Pieter van der Merwe
Familie
Trust]
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, BLOEMFONTEIN
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT BY
: RANTHO, AJ
DATE OF HEARING
:
09
February 2023
DATE OF DELIVERY
:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email and by release to SAFLII.
The
date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
30
June 2023 at 12H00.
Introduction
[1]
This
matter concerns a summary judgment application brought by the
applicant on 17 January 2023 against the first to third respondents,
in their capacity as trustees of Pieter van der Merwe Family Trust
(“the Trust”).
[2]
The
applicant seeks in this application an order for the payment of
arrear rental and ejectment of the Trust from its property.
Facts
[3]
The
applicant is a Close Corporation and a registered owner of the
property described as Farm Franz Hoek no. 412, District Brandfort,
Free State Province in extent 231.8754, held under title deed T12[…]
(“the property”).
[4]
On
02 March 2018 the applicant, entered into a written long-term lease
agreement (“lease agreement”) with Pieter van
der Merwe
Familie Trust (“the Trust”), in terms of which the
applicant, as lessor, leased the property to the Trust.
The lease
agreement was signed in the presence of a notary public and was
registered in the deeds registry against the title deed
of the
property. The Trust took occupation of the property during October
2016 and has been in occupation to date.
[5]
In
terms of clause 2 of the lease agreement the parties agreed that the
rental for the property is R6 000.00 per month (“monthly
rental”), subject to an annual escalation of 8% per annum, and
70% of the net income of the pecan nuts harvested on the property.
The monthly rental was payable on/or before 7 July 2017 and all
subsequent monthly rentals were payable on/or before the seventh
day
of each successive month.
[6]
In
terms of clause 16 of the lease agreement the parties agreed that:
(i)
The
lease agreement is the entire and complete agreement between the
parties and there are no undertakings, warrantees, guarantees
or
undertakings which are not contained in the lease agreement;
[1]
(ii)
No
amendment to the lease agreement shall be of any force or effect
unless it is reduced to writing and signed by the parties;
[2]
(iii)
No
relaxation or indulgence is granted by the plaintiff to the Trust
shall constitute a waiver or novation of the plaintiff’s
rights
in terms of the lease agreement.
[3]
[7]
On
26 April 2022 the applicant gave notice of cancellation of the lease
agreement to the respondents on the basis that the Trust
had not made
any monthly rental payments as agreed between the parties.
[8]
The
respondents oppose the summary judgment on the basis that:
(i)
When
the lease agreement was concluded on 02 March 2018, de Beer was in
terms of section 29(1A) of the Close Corporation Act 69
of 1984, the
sole member of the applicant in his capacity as a trustee of the
appointed representative of De Beers Trust and represented
the
application in the aforesaid capacities;
(ii)
On
09 April 2018 the trustees of De Beers Trust adopted the resolution
to the effect that the rental payments for the property shall
be made
by means of Discovery Policy (“policy”) on the life of
Pieter Nicolaas van der Merwe (“van der Merwe
Senior”)
for the insured amount of
R6
000 000.00 (six million rand)
until
30 June 2037.
[4]
In terms of the resolution, should van der Merwe Senior die before
the expiry of the lease agreement on 30 June 2037, the rent
would be
deemed to be paid in full until 30 June 2037;
(iii)
On
29 April 2018 the trustees of the Trust held the meeting wherein it
was recorded in their minutes that they had accepted the
resolution
taken on 09 April 2018.
[5]
In terms of the said minutes,
the
premium of the policy would serve as a payment of the remaining
extent of ‘Franzhoek’, excluding the pecan nut orchard,
and that upon the death of van der Merwe Senior, the payment of the
premiums will cease until the expiration of the term of the
lease
contract;
(iv)
As
a result of the resolution dated 09 April 2018
[6]
and
the minutes
of
the trustees’ meeting held
on
29 April 2018,
[7]
c
lause
2.1.1 of the agreement, dealing with the
monthly
rental
payment in the amount of R6 000.00 (six thousand rand), was validly
amended;
(v)
That
the formalities in clause 16.2 of the lease agreement for
the
amendment to the lease agreement to be reduced to writing and signed
by the parties
have been complied with by means of the resolution dated 09 April
2018 and the minutes dated 28 April 2018;
(vi)
Alternatively,
that
the
applicant is estopped from relying on the non-variation clause
because
when
the lease agreement was concluded, the
late
Evan de Beer (“de Beer”)
was
in terms of section 29(1A) of Act 69 of 1984 the sole member of the
applicant in his capacity as a trustee and the appointed
representative of De Beers Trust;
(vii)
In
further alternative to the afore-mentioned defences, that the
applicant waived its right to rely on the non-variation clause
by
allowing the cession of the policy to De Beer Trust whilst being
fully aware of its rights in terms of the said clause;
(viii)
That
although the applicant was entitled to 70% of pecan produced in terms
of clause 2.2 and 2.2.1 of the lease agreement, the first
day of
harvest of pecan nut was produced during 2022 and sold for R1 551.50.
The said amount was paid to the De Beers Trust, which
accepted the
payment thereof on behalf of the applicant; and
(ix)
In
the alternative, should the court find that the sum of R593 696.26
claimed by the applicant is due and payable to the applicant,
that a
portion of the claim in the sum of R203 130.88, falling outside the 3
years period of the applicant’s claim of arrear
rental has
prescribed in terms of
section 11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
Issue(s)
[9]
The
pertinent issue to be determined in this application is whether the
Trust was obliged to pay the monthly rental to the applicant
as
contemplated in clause 2.1 of the lease agreement.
[10]
The
applicant contends that it is entitled to be granted the summary
judgment on the basis that:
(i)
the
asserted variation agreement which the respondents rely on offends
the non-variation clause in the lease agreement which binds
the
parties to the provision that the agreement may only be amended if
such amendment(s) are effected in writing and signed by
both parties.
It submits that clause 16 of the lease agreement lays down two formal
requirements for a valid amendment to the lease
agreement. The one is
that there must be a written agreement and the other is that, such
agreement must be signed by both parties.
It argued that the
resolutions on which the Trust relies on does not satisfy any of
these requirements
[8]
and that because clause 16 is in itself ‘
a
provision
in the agreement’
,
it not only entrenches the other provisions, but also itself against
informal variation.
[9]
[11]
The
respondents contend that although the resolution dated 09 April 2018
does not say in so many words, it clearly displays the
intention of
the trustees of De Beers Trust to vary clause 2.1 of the lease
agreement.
[10]
They raised in their opposing affidavit a new issue to the effect
that
the
second respondent (“van der Merwe Junior”) was
incorrectly cited in his capacity as a trustee because he was no
longer a trustee of the Trust at the time when the applicant
instituted its action.
[11]
[12]
The
courts have stressed the fact that the remedy provided by summary
judgment rule is of extraordinary and drastic ‘nature’
which is ‘very stringent’ in that it closes the door to
the defendant, and that ‘the grant of the remedy is based
on
the supposition that the plaintiff’s case is unimpeachable and
that the defendant’s defence is bogus or bad in law’.
[12]
It is only where the court has no reasonable doubt that the plaintiff
is entitled to judgment as prayed, that the plaintiff has
an
answerable case, that summary judgment will be granted.
[13]
Respondents’
asserted variation of the lease agreement a triable issue
?
[13]
Counsel
for respondents submitted during arguments that the intention of the
parties and the validity of the resolutions are not
matters to be
decided at summary judgment stage. He further argued that in order to
establish the capacity in which De Beer signed
the resolution, there
is a need to conduct a full enquiry and thus not expected of the
respondents to prove on a balance of probabilities
that there was a
valid amendment to the agreement. In his view, once a defendant
raises a legally recognisable defence, the court
should refuse to
grant the summary judgment application. This brings to the fore a
question as to whether the respondents before
this Court indeed raise
a legally recognisable defence in this regard?
[14]
The
principle on variation to contractual agreement as developed by the
then Appellate Division in
SA
Sentrale Ko-op. Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
[14]
is
that, a non-variation clause is valid and effectively entrenched both
in itself and all the other terms of the contract against
an oral
variation. The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in
Brisley
v Drotsky
[15]
reaffirmed the
Shifren
principle and held that a court does not, in general, have discretion
to refuse to enforce a valid non-variation clause.
[15]
The
respondents argued that, contracts even those strictly regulated by
the statute such as the Alienation of Land Act
[16]
,
need not be contained in one document.
[17]
They relied on the decision of
Trever
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Friedhelm Investments (Pty) Ltd
[18]
,
wherein the court held that the requirements for a valid variation
did not mean that the writing and the parties’ signatures
must
necessarily be embodied in one and the same document.
[16]
They
further submitted that, by parity of reasoning, the agreement
resulting from the signed resolution of 9 April 2018 and minutes
of
29 April 2018 must be read together and regarded as an amendment to
the lease agreement that was reduced to writing and signed
by the
parties. In their view, the resolution and the minutes are a written
manifestation of an agreement between the parties to
vary the lease
agreement as well as a record of the terms agreed upon. They further
submitted that if the requirement of the agreement
being in writing
is intended to ensure that there must be a written instrument that
can be used as a subsequent reference, the
resolutions achieved
exactly that.
[17]
Counsel
for the applicant correctly submitted that, on the objective facts,
the applicant was not a party to the resolution relied
on by the
respondents. I agree with the applicant on this point because neither
the resolution nor the minutes of the meeting relied
on by the
respondents evince a contractual agreement between the applicant and
the Trust in the first place.
[18]
It
was also correctly pointed out by the applicant’s counsel that
the resolution is not an offer to the Trust made by the
applicant
with the intention that, by its mere acceptance, a contract should be
formed. Even if it was to be accepted that the
resolution was an
offer by the applicant to the Trust, the minutes dated 29 April 2018
relied on by the respondents do not constitute
an acceptance of such
offer if regard is to the contents of the resolution.
[19]
The
legal position with regard to the trust being a member of a Close
Corporation is spelled out in section 29 of the Close Corporation
Act
69 of 1984 (as amended) which reads as follows:
“
(1)
Subject to subsection (1A) or (2)(b) and (c), only natural persons
may be members of a corporation and
no juristic person or trustee of
a trust inter vivos in that capacity shall directly or
indirectly (whether through the
instrumentality of a nominee or
otherwise) hold a member’s interest in a corporation.
(1A)
A natural or juristic person in the capacity of a trustee of a
trust inter vivos may be a member
of a corporation:
Provided that—
(a)
no juristic person shall directly or indirectly be a beneficiary of
that trust;
(b)
the member concerned shall, as between himself or herself and the
corporation, personally have
all the obligations and rights of a
member;
(c)
the corporation shall not be obliged to observe or have any
obligation in respect of any provision
of or affecting the trust or
any agreement between the trust and the member concerned of the
corporation;…”
[20]
The
Full Court of this Division held in the case of
Vermeulen
& Another v Mellet N.O. & 2 others
,
[19]
that:
“
[27]
It is clear that a trust with multiple trustees may not, without
more, be a member of a close corporation. If such
trust wants to
become a member of a close corporation, it must appoint a
representative of the trust to be a member, if the trust
deed does
not contain a contrary provision. That trustee will then become the
member of the close corporation and not the trust.
One of the reasons
for this prohibition is that the trustees of a trust must act jointly
whilst the member’s interest in
a corporation may not be held
jointly by two or more persons
.”
[emphasis added]
[21]
The
court in
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security & Fire (Pty) Ltd
[20]
held that:
“…
As
has always been the position, the opposing affidavit must "disclose
fully the nature and grounds of the defence and the
material facts
relied upon therefor".
The
purpose
of the opposing affidavit also remains, as historically the case, to
demonstrate that the defendant "has a
bona
fide
defence
to the action
".
There is thus no substantive change in the nature of the "burden",
if that is what it is, placed on a defendant
in terms of the
procedure. However, the broader form of supporting affidavit that is
contemplated in terms of the amended rule
32(2)(b), will in some
cases require more of a defendant in respect of the content of its
opposing affidavit than was the case
in the pre-amendment regime, for
the defendant will be expected to engage with the plaintiff's
averments concerning the pleaded
defence. In this regard I anticipate
that we shall also see much argumentative matter in the opposing
affidavits under the new
regime, for argument will be met with
counter-argument
.”
[own emphasis]
[22]
In
deciding whether the defendant has set out a bona fide defence, the
court is required to enquire as to:
(a)
whether
the defendant has disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence;
and
(b)
whether
on the facts so disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either
the whole or part of the claim, a defence which is
bona
fide
and good in law.
Bona
fides
in terms of Rule 32(3)(b) cannot be given its literal meaning;
the rule does not require the defendant to establish his
bona
fides
;
it is the
defence
which
must be
bona
fide
,
and whether it is
bona
fide
or not depends upon the merits of that defence as raised in the
defendant’s affidavit.
[21]
[23]
In
the present circumstances, I find that respondents’ claimed
variation of clause 2.1 to the lease agreement does not constitute
a
bona
fide
defence that is good in law to justify the refusal to grant the
summary judgment.
Respondents’
reliance on estoppel sustainable in law
?
[24]
In
relying on estoppel, the respondents contend that the late De Beer,
in his capacity as a sole member of the applicant and in
his
representative capacity as trustee of the De Beers Trust negligently
misrepresented to the trustees of the Trust that the lease
agreement
was amended and that he had the authority to conclude such an
amendment on behalf of the applicant.
[25]
It
is now settled law that the effect of the defence of estoppel is to
bar the representor from having recourse to the true facts
or state
or affairs. However, if the representee had knowledge of the true
facts and knew that the representation was untrue or
incorrect, he
cannot be misled into relying on the representation made by the
representor.
[22]
[26]
The
SCA in
HNR
Properties CC v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
[23]
held
in respect of a written suretyship agreement that, a release which is
not in writing cannot be imported into the writing from
some other
source and thus to hold otherwise, would render the principle of
Shifren
wholly ineffective. The SCA further held that estoppel cannot be
upheld when the effect would be to sanction a non-compliance when
the
suretyship agreement, amongst others, contain an express
non-variation clause and provisions to the effect that any release
must be in writing and signed by the parties or otherwise it violates
the
Shifren
principle.
[27]
In
Nyandeni
Local Municipality v MEC Local Government and Traditional Affairs and
Another
[24]
the court had to decide as to whether estoppel by representation
would offer assistance in circumventing a non-variation clause
and
held as follows:
“
[49]
The main problem is that estoppel is forbidden if the result is not
permitted by law. Stripped off all pretentions,
the representation
relied upon by the appellant in this case is conduct on the part of
the municipal manager which points to a
waiver or variation of a term
or terms of the written contract of employment, including a waiver or
variation of the entrenched
non-variation clause. And this is
precisely what the Shifren principle seeks to prevent. If our common
law forbids in particular
circumstances an oral variation (either
expressly or by implication) of a written contract, as does the
Shifren principle, then
the resort to estoppel is thwarted by the
rule that estoppel cannot operate in such a way as to bring about a
result not permitted
by law. This rule was recently reaffirmed by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in HNR Properties CC and Another v Standard
Bank of S.A
Ltd
2004 (4) S.A. 471
(SCA)
(2004) 1 All SA 486
in para
21…
…
[54]
I accept, as stated by Scott JA in
HNR
Properties
(supra) at 479E, that
in particular circumstances reliance on estoppel may not involve a
violation of the
Shifren
principle. Prof Hutchison
(supra) concludes at 746:
The doctrine
of estoppel can offer but limited assistance in circumventing a
non-variation clause. A plea of estoppel can be upheld
only if the
effect thereof is not to vary the contract, but rather, for example,
to discharge an obligation or to establish a
pactum de non
petendo
. Whether resort to estoppel is necessary in such
circumstances is debatable…”
[28]
It
is not suggested by the respondents that the trustees of the Trust
were not aware that any variation to the agreement had to
be reduced
to writing and signed by both parties. Therefore, the respondents’
reliance on estoppel is misplaced and not sustainable
in law.
Respondents’
reliance on waiver sustainable in law
?
[29]
The
respondents contend that the applicant, by its conduct consented to a
waiver of clause 2.1 of the lease agreement. The applicant
argued
that it did not waive any of its rights and referred to clause 16.2
of the lease agreement, which provides that the lease
agreement is
the entire and complete agreement between the parties and that there
are no undertakings, warranties, guarantees or
undertakings which are
not contained in the lease agreement.
[30]
The
applicant further pointed out that clause 16.3 of the agreement makes
it clear that non-relaxation or indulgence granted by
the applicant
to the Trust shall not constitute a waiver of its rights in terms of
the agreement. I agree with the approach adopted
by the applicant in
this regard and find that the respondents’ defence mounted on
waiver falls short of a
bona
fide
defence that is good in law.
The effect of
joinder of the second respondent in this application
[31]
It
is evident from the letter of authority issued by the Master of the
High Court
[25]
that the second respondent was authorised to act as trustee of the
Trust at some point. The second respondent’s role in the
Trust
is also confirmed in the minutes of the meeting of the trustees held
on 29 April 2018, which minutes form the basis of the
defence raised
by the respondents’ in their opposing papers. After all, this
issue does not affect the validity of the summons
because all other
trustees of the Trust are properly before the Court. It is now trite
that a trust is not a juristic person, unless
specifically so defined
in a statute. It is generally regarded as a legal institution
sui
generis
.
[26]
[32]
The
applicant sought to cure the defect in the summons by way of an
amendment substituting the second respondent. This in my view
is
acceptable and in line with the court’s reasoning in
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Roestof
[27]
wherein it was stated that:
“…
If
the papers are not technically correct due to some obvious and
manifest error which causes no prejudice to the defendant, it
is
difficult to justify an approach that refuses the application,
especially in a case such as the present one where a reading
of the
defendant’s affidavit opposing summary judgment makes it clear
beyond doubt that he knows and appreciates the plaintiff’s
case
against him.”
[33]
Having
considered the circumstances of this matter, I find that, save for
the issue of the prescription, the respondents have not
raised the
defences that are good in law to justify the refusal of granting of
the summary judgment application in favour of the
applicant.
Costs
[34]
The general rule is
that the costs should follow the result.
The
applicant, having substantially succeeded in this application is
entitled to the costs.
[35]
In
the result, I make the following order:
1.
The
cancellation of the notarial long-term lease agreement entered
between the applicant and Pieter van der Merwe Familie Trust
on 02
March 2018 is hereby confirmed.
2.
The
first and third respondents are ordered to pay to the applicant the
arrear rental amount of R390 565.38 plus interest at the
rate of
15.5% per annum a
tempore
morae
from date of judgment to date of payment.
3.
The
first and third respondents are granted leave to enter defence on a
portion of a claim of arrear rental in the sum of R203 130.88
based
on the defence of prescription raised in their plea.
4.
The
fourth respondent is directed to cause cancelation of the
registration of the notarial long term lease agreement under
reference
number K27[…] as registered against the title deed
of the farm Franz Hoek no. 412, District Brandfort, Free State
Province
in extent 231.8754 hectares held under T12[…].
5.
Pieter
van der Merwe Familie Trust is ordered to vacate the farm Franz Hoek
no. 412, District Brandfort, Free State Province in
extent 231.8754
hectares held under T12[…] within 14 days of this order.
6.
The
first and third respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be
absolved.
M.R. RANTHO, AJ
APPEARANCES:
On
behalf of applicant:
Adv.
W.A. Van Aswegen
Instructed
by:
Peyper
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
On
behalf of respondents:
Adv
H.J. van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Bezuidenhout
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Clause
16.1.
[2]
Clause
16.2.
[3]
Clause
16.3.
[4]
Annexures “P1” and “O5” to the plea and
opposing affidavit respectively.
[5]
Annexure “P1” to the plea.
[6]
Annexures
“P1” and “O5” to the plea and opposing
affidavit respectively.
[7]
;
Annexures “P2” and “O6” to the plea and
opposing affidavit respectively.
[8]
Plaintiff’s
heads of argument at
paras
4 and 24.
[9]
Plaintiff’s
heads of argument at
para
25.
[10]
Opposing
affidavit at
para
9.19.
[11]
Notice
of intention to amend the defendants’ plea was filed on 16
January 2023 to that effect
.
[12]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A); Tesven CC v SA
Bank of Athens 2000
(1) SA 268 (A).
[13]
Edwards v Menezes
1973 (1) SA 299
(NC) at 304 -5.
[14]
1964
(4) SA 760
at 766(B) – 767(B).
[15]
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA) at paras 6-10 and 12.
[16]
Act
68
of 1981.
[17]
See
Johnston v Leal 1980 (3) SA 927 (A).
[18]
1982
(1) SA 7
(A) at 18C-E
[19]
[2021]
ZAFSHC 141
;
[2021] 4 All SA 281
(FB) (27 May 2021)
[20]
[2020]
zawchc 28;
2020 (6) SA 624
(WCC) at para 24.
[21]
Erasmus Superior Practice Vol. 2: p D1-411;
See
also
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Limited v
Stocks
Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
[2009] ZASCA 23
;
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA) ;
[2009] 3 All SA 407
(SCA) (27 March 2009).
[22]
Van
Rooyen v Minister van Openbare Werke en Gemeenskapbou
1978 (2) SA
835
(A) at 849G-H.
[23]
[2003]
ZACSA 135;
[2004] 1 All SA 486
(SCA), par 19 to 21.
[24]
[2009] ZAECMHC 28; 2010 (4) SA 261 (ECM).
[25]
Application
papers: pg. 45.
[26]
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v Parker and Others 2005 (2)
SA 77 (SCA).
[27]
2004
(2) SA 492
(W) 496F-H.