Oriental Products (Pty) Ltd v Pegma 178 Investments Trading CC and Others (2011 (2) SA 508 (SCA); [2011] 3 All SA 173 (SCA)) [2010] ZASCA 166; 126/2010 (1 December 2010)

80 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Property Law — Transfer of Ownership — Validity of Transfer — Appellant sought to vindicate immovable property fraudulently transferred without its authority. The property was registered in the name of the first respondent after being transferred from the second respondent, with the third respondent allegedly acting without proper authorization. The court found that the transfers were void due to the lack of intention to transfer ownership by the appellant, and the appellant was not estopped from claiming retransfer. The appeal against the dismissal of the application to recover the property was dismissed with costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned an appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal against an order of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court, Pietermaritzburg (Jappie J), which had dismissed an application for vindicatory relief in respect of immovable property. The appellant, Oriental Products (Pty) Ltd, sought to vindicate (recover) ownership and possession of immovable property described as Lot 117 Clansthal, KwaZulu-Natal, and to compel the Registrar of Deeds for KwaZulu-Natal to register transfer back into its name.


The respondents were Pegma 178 Investments Trading CC (first respondent, the current registered owner), Shield Homes (Eastern Cape) (Pty) Ltd (second respondent, an intermediate transferee), Hong Wei Qu (third respondent, alleged to have acted without authority in procuring transfer), and the Registrar of Deeds (fourth respondent). The second and third respondents filed notices to abide the decision on appeal, and the Registrar did not participate.


Procedurally, the appellant initially brought the matter by application in the High Court. Because material disputes of fact arose on the papers—especially regarding whether Qu was authorised to sell and transfer—the matter was referred to oral evidence on a defined set of issues, including authority and estoppel. The High Court ultimately dismissed the application, and the appellant appealed with leave.


The general subject-matter was the interaction between the registration and transfer of immovable property, the consequences of a transfer effected without the true owner’s authority or intention, and whether the true owner could nonetheless be prevented from vindicating the property due to estoppel, arising from its conduct after discovering the register reflected a different owner.


Material Facts


Oriental Products (Pty) Ltd was controlled by Mr Kuk Siu Wah and his daughter Ms Cook Yin Ping (Ms Cook), who were the only directors. The third respondent, Mr Hong Wei Qu, worked in South Africa in a managerial capacity for companies associated with Mr Kuk. Qu had access to company affairs and was involved in administrative dealings concerning properties owned by the group.


The property in question was originally registered in the appellant’s name. It later emerged that the property had been transferred out of the appellant’s name, first to the second respondent and thereafter to the first respondent. The sequence and dates that mattered to the estoppel enquiry were that the property was transferred to the second respondent on 28 December 2005, and later transferred to the first respondent on 8 February 2007.


A pivotal undisputed fact was that by 18 December 2006 the appellant’s directors had become aware, through a deeds office search conducted by Johannesburg attorneys, that the property was no longer registered in the appellant’s name but in the name of the second respondent. The judgment treated this awareness as the starting point for evaluating whether the appellant’s subsequent inaction amounted to negligent misrepresentation by omission.


The principal disputed factual question at trial (on referral to oral evidence) was whether Qu had been authorised—expressly, tacitly, or otherwise—by or on behalf of the appellant to sell and transfer the property. Qu alleged he had been given a special power of attorney dated 4 May 2005 enabling him to proceed. Mr Kuk and Ms Cook denied any such authorisation and disputed the authenticity of the signatures on the transaction documents. The High Court rejected Qu’s version and found he lacked authority; on appeal, it was not contested that Qu lacked authority, and that both transfers were therefore void on that basis.


A further factual strand relevant to estoppel was that, despite knowing by mid-December 2006 that the deeds register reflected the second respondent as owner, the appellant did not promptly take steps to correct the position (for example by approaching the Registrar, notifying relevant parties, or seeking urgent interdictory relief) in the period before the second respondent transferred the property to the first respondent on 8 February 2007. The first respondent contended that it purchased and proceeded with development in reliance on the register reflecting the second respondent’s ownership, and that earlier action by the appellant could have prevented the subsequent transfer and ensuing prejudice.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were, first, whether the transfer and registration of ownership of immovable property could be valid where the purported transfer occurred without the true owner’s intention or authority, and what that meant for the appellant’s rei vindicatio.


Secondly, and decisively, the court had to determine whether the appellant was estopped from challenging the first respondent’s registered title. This included whether there was a representation attributable to the appellant (including by omission), whether it was made negligently, whether the first respondent relied on the representation, and whether such reliance caused detriment.


The dispute combined issues of fact (what the appellant knew and did after discovering the transfer; whether its conduct amounted to a representation; whether reliance and detriment were shown), issues of law (the principles of the abstract system of transfer; nemo plus iuris; the doctrinal requirements for estoppel), and issues involving the application of legal standards to the facts, particularly the evaluative determination of negligence and causal reliance in the circumstances of a relatively short time-window.


Court’s Reasoning


The Supreme Court of Appeal delivered reasons in two judgments concurring in the result. Shongwe JA delivered the principal judgment. Harms DP concurred in dismissing the appeal but differed in emphasis and some reasoning, particularly regarding the role of the abstract system of transfer and the significance of delay beyond the date of the first respondent’s transfer.


On the question of authority and validity of transfer, Shongwe JA accepted the High Court’s factual finding that Qu had no authority to transfer the property on behalf of the appellant. The judgment linked the invalidity to the requirement that for transfer to be effective there must be the requisite intention to transfer by the transferor and corresponding intention to receive by the transferee. Because authority was absent, the necessary intention attributable to the appellant was missing, rendering the transfers void. It was also recorded that the parties before the SCA did not contest that both transfers were void due to lack of authority.


Shongwe JA then addressed the abstract system of transfer, noting that South African law follows an abstract rather than a causal system, and recording that—under the abstract system—the focus is on whether there is agreement regarding the passing of ownership rather than the formal validity of the underlying transaction. The judgment also discussed the deeds registration system as a mechanism intended to publicise ownership and protect registered owners, and highlighted the importance of accuracy in the register while recognising it is subject to correction.


The decisive enquiry became estoppel. Shongwe JA stated that, as generally accepted in respect of movables, an owner can be estopped from vindicating property where the owner’s negligence misleads an acquirer into believing the disposer is the owner or entitled to dispose of the property. The judgment treated this as equally applicable to immovable property, and articulated the requirements the party raising estoppel must prove: a representation by the owner (including by conduct), negligence in making it, reliance by the party raising estoppel, and detriment causally connected to that reliance.


Applying these principles, Shongwe JA identified the relevant period for misrepresentation by omission as the interval between 18 December 2006 (when the appellant knew the property was registered in the second respondent’s name) and 8 February 2007 (when the first respondent took transfer). In that period, the appellant did not take immediate steps to correct or challenge the register position. The judgment regarded this inactivity, in the circumstances, as capable of conveying a representation to the world that the second respondent was the lawful owner and entitled to dispose of the property, and it found the omission negligent given the appellant’s knowledge and the commercial significance of registered title.


The judgment further accepted that the first respondent acted to its detriment in reliance on this state of affairs, with the appellant’s omission being treated as the relevant misrepresentation that enabled the first respondent to proceed on the assumption that the register was correct. On this reasoning, even though the appellant would otherwise have been entitled to retransfer because the transfers were void, it was prevented from asserting its ownership against the first respondent because estoppel operated. Shongwe JA expressed the result as the appellant being unable to vindicate and thus losing the ability to reclaim ownership as against the first respondent.


Harms DP agreed that both transfers were void, but he considered this conclusion to follow from the simple proposition that a person cannot transfer more rights than he has (nemo plus iuris ad alium transferre potest quam ipse haberet), rather than turning on the abstract theory of transfer. In his view, the abstract system did not resolve the problem because the core defect was that Qu had no authority to transfer ownership from the true owner, and consequently the second respondent could not have become owner and could not transfer ownership to the first respondent.


Harms DP located the real contest in estoppel and specifically analysed misrepresentation and negligence. He accepted that the public is entitled to rely on the deeds register and held that by knowingly leaving the register to reflect an incorrect ownership position, the appellant—by omission—made a representation to the world (and thus to the first respondent) that the second respondent was the owner. On reliance, he considered it could not be confidently said that the first respondent did not take transfer in light of that representation.


On negligence, Harms DP acknowledged the short time between the appellant’s knowledge (18 December 2006) and the first respondent’s transfer (8 February 2007), and treated the question as borderline. However, he held that the appellant’s prior knowledge that Qu was not trustworthy, its knowledge that Qu lacked authority and had nonetheless effected transfer, and its awareness of the importance of deeds registry entries demanded urgent action. He rejected as inadequate the explanation that the appellant had to decide on an attorney, noting it already had access to attorneys who performed the deeds search. On that basis, he held that the first respondent discharged the onus of proving negligence.


Harms DP also addressed the submission that estoppel is merely a defensive shield and cannot operate as a means of acquiring ownership. He did not decide the broader doctrinal question but held it unnecessary in the case, reasoning that the successful estoppel meant the appellant could not deny the correctness of the register entry and could not interfere with the first respondent’s title; if this effectively meant ownership passed by estoppel (or that the underlying transfer was deemed valid), that was the consequence in the circumstances of the case.


Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal with costs. The effect of the dismissal was that the High Court’s order stood: the appellant did not obtain vindicatory relief and did not secure an order compelling the Registrar to transfer registration back into its name.


The court’s conclusion rested on the finding that, notwithstanding the void transfers due to lack of authority, the appellant was estopped from challenging the first respondent’s title because of negligent omission after becoming aware that the deeds register reflected the second respondent as owner, and because the first respondent relied on that position to its detriment by taking transfer.


Cases Cited


Trust Bank van Afrika v Western Bank & andere 1978 (4) SA 281 (A)

Commissioner of Customs and Excise v Randles Brothers & Hudson Ltd 1941 AD 369

Meintjies NO v Coetzer & others 2010 (5) SA 186 (SCA)

Houtpoort Mining and Estate Syndicate Ltd v Jacobs 1904 TS 105

Hollins v Registrar of Deeds 1904 TS 603

Klerck NO v Van Zyl and Maritz NNO 1989 (4) SA 263 (SE)

Apostoliese Geloofsending van S A (Maitland Gemeente) v Capes 1978 (4) SA 48 (C)

Legator Mckenna Inc & another v Shea & others 2010 (1) SA 35 (SCA)

Dreyer & another NNO v AXZS Industries (Pty) Ltd 2006 (5) SA 548 (SCA)

Oakland Nominees (Pty) Ltd v Gelria Mining & Investment Co (Pty) Ltd 1976 (1) SA 441 (A)

Electrolux (Pty) Ltd v Khota & another 1961 (4) SA 244 (W)

Barclays Western Bank Ltd v Fourie 1979 (4) SA 157 (C)

Grosvenor Motors (Potchefstroom) Ltd v Douglas 1956 (3) SA 420 (A)

Johaadien v Stanley Porter (Paarl) (Pty) Ltd 1970 (1) SA 394 (A)


Legislation Cited


Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the third respondent lacked authority to transfer the property on behalf of the appellant, with the consequence that the transfers to the second respondent and thereafter to the first respondent were void. Despite this, the court held that the appellant was estopped from vindicating the property against the first respondent because, after learning that the deeds register reflected the second respondent as owner, the appellant negligently failed to act promptly to correct the position, thereby representing by omission that the second respondent was entitled to dispose of the property; the first respondent relied on this representation in taking transfer and was prejudiced.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, in South African law, transfer of ownership requires the requisite intention (a real agreement) to transfer and to receive ownership; where an apparent transfer is effected without the true owner’s authority, the necessary intention attributable to the owner is absent and the purported transfer is void.


The judgment reaffirmed that South African law has adopted an abstract system of transfer, and it endorsed (with reference to prior authority) the application of the abstract theory to immovable property, while also recognising that deeds registration serves a public function by publicising and evidencing registered rights.


The judgment applied the principle that estoppel can prevent an owner from vindicating property where the owner, by negligent conduct (including omission), makes a representation that another person is the owner or is entitled to dispose of the property, and a third party relies on that representation to their detriment. The requirements emphasised were representation, negligence, reliance, and detriment (causally connected).


In the context of registered land, the judgment accepted that the public is entitled to place weight on the correctness of the deeds register, and that a party who knows the register is incorrect but fails to take urgent steps to correct or challenge it may, in appropriate circumstances, be found to have made a negligent representation by omission capable of founding estoppel.

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Oriental Products (Pty) Ltd v Pegma 178 Investments Trading CC and Others (2011 (2) SA 508 (SCA); [2011] 3 All SA 173 (SCA)) [2010] ZASCA 166; 126/2010 (1 December 2010)

Links to summary

THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case no: 126/2010
In the
matter between:
ORIENTAL
PRODUCTS (PTY) LIMITED
.........................................................
Appellant
and
PEGMA
178 INVESTMENTS TRADING CC
.......................................
First
Respondent
SHIELD
HOMES (EASTERN CAPE) (PTY) LIMITED
...................
Second Respondent
HONG
WEI QU
...................................................................................
Third
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS FOR KWAZULU-NATAL
...............
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral citation:
ORIENTAL PRODUCTS v PEGMA 178
(126/10)
[2010] ZASCA 166
(1 December 2010)
Coram:
HARMS DP, LEWIS, MAYA, SHONGWE JJA and
R PILLAY
AJA
Heard:
12 NOVEMBER 2010
Delivered: 1 DECEMBER 2010
SUMMARY: Sale of immovable property – whether transfer and
registration of ownership is valid where the intention to transfer
is
absent – Vindication – Power of Attorney to sell
fraudulently obtained – Estoppel – whether original
owner
is estopped from claiming retransfer – requirements for
estoppel to succeed
___________________________________________________________________
ORDER
___________________________________________________________________
On
appeal from
:
KwaZulu-Natal High Court
(Pietermaritzburg) (Jappie J sitting as court of first instance).
The
following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
___________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________________
SHONGWE JA:
[1] This appeal is against the order of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court,
Pietermaritzburg (Jappie J) dismissing the appellant’s

application to vindicate the immovable property described as Lot 117
Clansthal, situated in the development area of Clansthal,
Province of
KwaZulu-Natal and 4047 square metres in extent (the property) which
is registered in the name of the first respondent
and also for an
order against the fourth respondent, (the Registrar of Deeds for
KwaZulu-Natal), to register the transfer of the
said property in the
name of the appellant. The appeal is with leave of the court a quo.
[2] The appellant’s case in the court a quo, as well as before
us, is that it was, at all material times, the lawful registered

owner of the property and that its property was fraudulently
transferred, first to the second respondent and thereafter to the

first respondent, without the appellant’s knowledge or
authority. The third respondent is alleged to have purported to
represent
the appellant in passing transfer of the property to the
second respondent. In truth, he had never been authorized to do so.
The
second and third respondents, who took part in the proceedings
below, have filed notices to abide the decision of this court. The

Registrar did not participate at all in these proceedings.
[3] The factual background is as follows: A Mr Kuk Siu Wah, a
businessman and a Chinese national resident in Hong Kong, visited

South Africa in or about 1990. He then bought inter alia the
following companies, Oriental Products (Pty) Ltd, the appellant
company
and Galaxy Minerals (Pty) Ltd. He, together with his
daughter, Ms Cook Yin Ping, who is for convenience referred to as Ms
Cook,
were the only two directors of the appellant. The third
respondent, Mr Hong Wei Qu, also a Chinese national, came to South
Africa
in 2001 to work as manager of Mr Kuk’s companies Galaxy
Minerals (Pty) Limited and Flourishing Trading (Pty) Limited in
Mtubatuba,
KwaZulu-Natal.
[4] The third respondent refers to Mr Kuk as his grandfather. On
18 December 2006, Mr Kuk discovered that the property
in
question was no longer registered in the name of the appellant. This
he discovered after instructing attorneys in Johannesburg
to do a
property search at the deeds office. After numerous letters between
his Hong Kong attorneys and Johannesburg attorneys
it transpired that
the property in question had indeed been sold and transferred to the
second respondent, who in turn sold and
transferred it to the first
respondent.
[5] The appellant, represented by Mr Kuk, instructed his attorneys to
launch the application to recover the property. This happened
in
January 2008
[6] It transpired that the third respondent was indeed responsible
for the sale and transfer of the property. His version was that
he
was authorised by Mr Kuk to look for a buyer and sell the property.
He alleges Mr Kuk provided him with a special power of attorney
dated
4 May 2005 authorizing him to proceed with the transaction. Mr Kuk
vehemently denied that he authorized the third respondent
to sell and
transfer the property. He alleged that the signatures appearing on
all the documents used to sell and transfer the
property were not
his. Even Ms Cook disavowed any knowledge of any authority given to
the third respondent.
[7] As a result of these material disputes of fact on the papers, the
application was referred to oral evidence on the following
issues:
(a) Whether the third respondent was authorized expressly, implicitly
or tacitly by or on behalf of the appellant to transfer the
said
property to the second respondent;
(b) Whether the appellant is estopped from challenging the first
respondent’s title by bringing these proceedings in the
time
and in the circumstances in which it did;
(c) Whether the appellant is estopped from denying the authority of
the third respondent to transfer the said property to the second

respondent;
(d) Whether the appellant has established a right to vindicate the
immovable property, and;
(e) Whether the first respondent has a claim for compensation for
improvements to the said property and the quantum thereof;
(f) Whether the first respondent has a right of retention or lien in
its favour over the property;
(g) Whether the second respondent has any claim for improvements to
the property and the quantum thereof.
[8] Several witnesses testified on behalf of the appellant. The first
respondent and the second respondent called only one witness
each and
the third respondent testified and called a handwriting expert, Mr
Irving.
[9] The court a quo found that the third respondent was not properly
authorized to pass transfer of the property to the second
respondent,
therefore the transfer was void as it lacked the prerequisite to
effect registration of transfer, being that the transferor
(in this
case the appellant), must intend to transfer and the transferee (in
this case the second respondent) must intend to take
transfer (
Trust
Bank van Afrika v Western Bank & andere
1978 (4) SA 281
(A)
at 302 A-F referring with approval to
Commissioner of Customs and
Excise v Randles Brothers & Hudson Ltd
1941 AD 369
at
397-398. See also
Wille’s Principles of South African Law
9 ed (2007) at 520-521.)
[10] The above conclusion, which I respectfully agree with, answers
the first question referred to oral evidence. Considering the

evidence as a whole and taking into account that the credibility of
the third respondent was at stake, the court a quo rightly
rejected
the evidence of the third respondent that he had any authority to
pass transfer of the property.
[11] Before us neither of the parties contest the lack of authority
of the third respondent which resulted in both transfers, ie
the
transfer to the second respondent as well as the transfer to the
first respondent, being void.
[12] It is trite that our law has adopted the abstract system of
transfer as opposed to the causal system of transfer. Under the

causal system of transfer, a valid cause (
iusta causa
) giving
rise to the transfer is a
sine qua non
for the transfer of
ownership. In other words if the cause is invalid, eg non compliance
with formal requirements, the transfer
of ownership will also be void
– see Carey Miller ‘Transfer of Ownership’ in
Feenstra & Zimmermann
Das Römisch-Hollandische Recht
537; ‘Transfer of Ownership’ in Zimmerman & Visser
Southern Cross
727 at 735-9. Under the abstract system the
most important point is that there is no need for a formally valid
underlying transaction
provided that the parties are
ad idem
regarding the passing of ownership:
Meintjies NO v Coetzer &
others
2010 (5) SA 186
(SCA).
[13] It is correct that registration of title in terms of the
Deeds
Registries Act 47 of 1937
is a brilliant system of public access to
the register of owners of property and the registration of other
protected rights such
as servitudes. What is even more important is
the correctness of the contents of the register. It is said that
‘[w]hen the
Dutch settled in the Cape Colony they brought over
from Holland this system of registration, and the titles to land
granted by
the governors were registered before the Commissioners of
the Court of Justice. No sales of this land and no servitudes imposed

thereon were recognised, unless these were registered against the
title before the Commissioners’. The purpose is to publicise
to
the world and for the protection of registered owners –
Houtpoort Mining and Estate Syndicate Ltd v Jacobs
1904 TS 105
and
Hollins v Registrar of Deeds
1904 TS 603
and the cases
cited therein. Even though there is no guarantee of title, the record
needs to be accurate, though subject to correction.
The record
provides proof of the present registered owner of the property or
right.
[14] Most cases deal with transfer of ownership of movables, however,
there is no reason in principle why an abstract system of
transfer
should not be applied to immovables as well (
Klerck NO v Van Zyl
and
Maritz NNO
1989 (4) SA 263
(SE) at 273). See also D
L Carey Miller with Anne Pope in
Land Title in South Africa
51;
Apostoliese Geloofsending van S A (Maitland Gemeente) v Capes
1978 (4) SA 48
(C). Recently this court in
Legator Mckenna Inc &
another v Shea & others
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA) para 21 Brand JA
stated that ‘time has come for this court to add its stamp of
approval to the view point that the
abstract theory of transfer
applies to immovable property as well’. I agree with the
sentiment expressed by him and wish
to add that in effect the result
is the same whether one deals with movable or immovable property. See
also
Dreyer & another NNO v AXZS Industries (Pty) Ltd
2006
(5) SA 548
(SCA) and the cases cited therein.
[15] The next question is whether the appellant is estopped from
challenging the first respondent’s title by bringing these

proceedings at the time and in the circumstances in which it did.
Perhaps it would be appropriate at this stage to give a brief

background of the circumstances and the time in which the initial
application was launched. It is common cause that the third
respondent held a responsible position in running the affairs of Mr
Kuk and the applicant. He became privy to transactions which
were
initiated by Mr Kuk, for instance he knew of the intended sale of the
very property, which fell through, although he was not
directly
involved. He was thereafter contacted telephonically by Mr Kuk to
procure a new purchaser for the property. Ms Cook also
confirmed that
the third respondent was required to perform various administrative
duties in connection with certain other properties
owned by the group
of companies.
[16] Ms Cook in her founding affidavit states that ‘at about
the end of 2006 and for reasons not relevant for present purposes,
Mr
Qu ceased his aforesaid employment and Mr Kuk and I lost track of
him’. It is common cause that the property was transferred
to
the second respondent on 28 December 2005. Already at the end of 2006
Mr Kuk started making enquiries from the conveyancer at
Webber
Wentzel Bowens in Johannesburg to ascertain whether the third
respondent had been in contact with them regarding any sale
of the
property. Clearly Mr Kuk and Ms Cook were suspicious of the third
respondent’s conduct as early as December 2006.
[17] By 18 December 2006 the directors of the appellant knew that the
property was no longer registered in its name but in the
name of the
second respondent. They did nothing to intervene and put the record
straight by either writing a letter to the Registrar
or the new
registered owner (the second respondent) or launching an interdict
for that matter. Since the appellant was represented
by attorneys in
Johannesburg, it cannot be heard, in my view, to plead ignorance of
the South African system of registration of
transfer of ownership of
immovable property. Ms Cook conceded, during her cross-examination,
that Hong Kong also has a system of
property registration and
transfer similar to our system.
[18] The first respondent’s contention is that the failure to
take immediate steps to bring proceedings against the second

respondent amounts to a representation that the second respondent was
the lawful and registered owner with a right to sell the
property.
The first respondent further argues that the said failure also
carries with it the requisite negligence on the part of
the appellant
to found estoppel. The first respondent contends that, had the
appellant acted timeously, the property would not
have been
transferred to the second respondent and the first respondent would,
not have embarked on high scale development of the
property, which it
did. In order to demonstrate that the appellant acted negligently, Ms
Cook testified that in January 2007 she
did not know that the first
respondent had purchased the property and she had not decided who was
going to be her attorney to deal
with the matter. On the contrary, by
18 December 2006 she knew that the property had been
transferred and registered
in the name of the second respondent.
Webber Wentzel Bowens had already informed her of the first
transaction. Relying on the appellants’
inaction the second
respondent sold the property to the first respondent who consequently
started developing it. Had the appellant
acted swiftly the chain of
events would have been avoided.
[19] It is generally accepted that an owner of movable property is
estopped from asserting his right to his property only where
the
person who acquired his property did so because the negligence of the
true owner misled him into the belief that the person
from whom he
acquired it was the owner and was entitled to dispose of it. (See
Oakland Nominees (Pty) Ltd v Gelria Mining & Investment Co
(Pty) Ltd
1976 (1) SA 441
(A);
Electrolux (Pty) Ltd v Khota &
another
1961 (4) SA 244
(W)). There seems to be no reason why
this principle cannot be applied to immovable property. The possessor
raising estoppel must
prove that:
(a) There was a representation by the owner, by conduct or otherwise,
that the person who disposed of his property was the owner
or was
entitled to dispose of it;
(b) The representation must have been made negligently in the
circumstances;
(c) The representation must have been relied upon by the person
raising the estoppel, and
(d) Such person’s reliance upon the representation must be the
cause of his detriment.
[20] The appellant contends that there is no proper basis for an
estoppel to operate because there is no evidence tendered to the

effect that the first and second respondents knew of the
representation and that they relied upon it in conducting their
affairs
in regard to the property. The appellant argued that all that
the first respondent relied upon was the mere fact of the sale of
the
property by the second respondent to the first respondent and the
process of registration of transfer, which followed from
the sale.
The appellant further contended that estoppel ‘is by its
nature, a weapon of defence, it cannot be used as a weapon
of attack,
to transfer ownership of a property which, but for the operation of
estoppel, would not have been transferred’.
The logical
consequence of upholding the defence of estoppel is that the person
in possession of the goods or property, raising
estoppel, acquires an
unassailable right to continue possessing the goods. In my view, it
is still a defence entitling the possessor
to continue exercising
that right. In the present case transfer had already occurred long
before the defence was raised. We were
not referred to any
unequivocal authority, nor have I found any, to the effect that
estoppel can or cannot be used in cases involving
the transfer of
ownership of immovable property. The case quoted by counsel for the
appellant (
Barclays Western Bank Ltd v Fourie
1979 (4) SA 157
(CC)) simply states the requirements to prove the defence of
estoppel. I consider this point moot in the South African
jurisprudence.
The present case does not strictly turn on this point.
(See J W Louw ‘Estoppel en die Rei Vindicatio’
(1975) 38
THRHR
218
and H J O van Heerden ‘Estoppel: ‘n
Wyse Van Eiendoms-verkryging?’
(1970) 33
THRHR
19
at
25).
[21] The relevant period in this case is between 18 December 2006,
when attorneys Webber Wentzel Bowens wrote a letter to Mr Kuk

advising him that the property had been registered in the name of the
second respondent and 8 February 2007 when the
property was
indeed transferred to the first respondent. The directors of the
appellant remained inactive for almost two months
after learning that
its property had been registered in the name of the second
respondent. The inaction for almost two months is
sufficient to
constitute negligence considering the surrounding circumstances as
described above. One must bear in mind that we
are dealing with
immovable property which was the core business of the appellant. It
should have rung a bell and raised a red flag
immediately to Mr Kuk
and Ms Cook after they heard of the new developments in mid December
2006. They only launched the application
for vindication on 7 May
2008, almost seventeen months after knowing that the property had
been fraudulently sold and transferred.
[22] I am satisfied in concluding that the appellant’s inaction
was negligent representation which led the first respondent
to rely
on it to its detriment. Steyn JA in
Grosvenor Motors
(Potchefstroom) Ltd v Douglas
1956 (3) SA 420
(A) at 427 defines
estoppel as a principle in terms of which an owner ‘forfeits
his right to vindicate where the person who
acquires his property
does so because, by the culpa of the owner he has been misled into
the belief that the person from whom he
acquired it, is entitled to
dispose of it.’ (See Voet
Commentarius ad Pandectas
, 6 1
13 & 23; P J Rabie
The Law of Estoppel in South
Africa
at (1992) 86 599; D L Carey Miller
The Acquisition and
Protection of Ownership
(1986) at 263 and
Johaadien v Stanley
Porter (Paarl) (Pty) Ltd
1970 (1) SA 394
at (A) 406).
[23] In the context of this case, the appellant is entitled to
retransfer of the property but for the fact that it cannot assert
its
right of ownership because of estoppel. Hence the applicant loses its
ownership of the property. It is not necessary to deal
with the other
points referred to oral evidence in view of the conclusion I have
reached.
[24] For the above reasons the appeal is dismissed with costs.
_________________
J SHONGWE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
HARMS DP (Lewis and Maya JJA and R Pillay AJA concurring)
[25] I have read the judgment of my learned my colleague Shongwe JA
and although I agree with the conclusion that the appeal should
be
dismissed with costs I do not agree with all the reasoning. His
judgment sets out the salient facts and I do not intend to repeat

them unless necessary for an understanding of this judgment.
[26] The case of the appellant was that it remained owner of the
property because it had been transferred to the second respondent
by
Mr Qu who had no authority to transfer it; and that the transfer to
the first respondent was likewise void because the second
respondent
was not the true owner and could, accordingly, not have effected
transfer. Both transfers were consequently void for
the same reason.
The old adage, nemo plus iuris ad alium transferre potest quam ipse
haberet, as formulated by Ulpian (Digest 50.17.54),
applies: no one
can transfer more rights to another than he himself has (using
Hiemstra and Gonin’s translation for safety’s
sake).
Applied to this case it means that Qu had no rights to ownership and,
in the absence of the owner’s authority, he
could not have
transferred ownership to the first purchaser. And because the first
purchaser did not become owner it, in turn,
was unable to transfer
ownership to the second purchaser. All this, in my respectful view,
has nothing to do with the abstract
system of transfer which, in any
event, is a well established principle of our law. Because counsel
argued the case before the
court below with reference to the abstract
system that it, incorrectly, found that the second transfer was valid
– something
no one argued before us.
[27] The real issue in this case concerns estoppel. The two
requirements for a valid reliance on estoppel at issue in this case

require consideration: misrepresentation and negligence. Although the
issues are legally discrete, they become intermingled because
the
same facts are relevant to both issues.
[28] The first respondent’s case was that the deeds registry
reflected, to the knowledge of the appellant, that the second

respondent was the true owner of the
property. In his judgment, Shongwe JA has pointed out with reference
to cases dating back to 1904 that the public is entitled to
rely on
the correctness of entries in the deeds office. Although the fact of
registration is not a guarantee of any right registered,
a party will
not take transfer of immovable property if he has reason to suspect
that the register is wrong. By knowingly leaving
the register to
reflect the incorrect position as to ownership the appellant, by
omission, represented to the world in general
and to the first
respondent in particular that the second respondent was the true
owner of the property. It could not be said with
any measure of
confidence that the first respondent did not take transfer in the
light of this representation.
[29] The more difficult issue concerns negligence because of the
short period that elapsed between the date on which the appellant

became aware of the state of affairs (18 December 2006) and the date
on which the first respondent acted on the representation,
which was
the date of transfer (8 February 2007). Although the application was
launched only during January 2008, nothing in my
views turns on this
delay as far as the vindicatory claim is concerned because the
detrimental act on which the first respondent
relies was the taking
of transfer.
[30] The following facts dispose in my view of this issue in favour
of the first respondent. The appellant knew from past experience
that
Qu was not to be trusted with company property. The appellant also
knew that Qu had no authority to transfer the property
and that he
had in fact done so. It was aware of the value attached to entries in
the deeds register and it should have known that
others could act on
the assumption that the register was correct by not only selling the
property but also by effecting improvements
thereon. All this called
for urgent action, which was feasible because there was no suggestion
that the appellant did not have
the necessary funds or expertise to
launch an application. The only explanation for the lackadaisical
approach given by Ms Cook
was that the company had to find an
attorney. But this explanation does not hold water. The company had
access to the services
of the attorney who did the deeds office
search on its behalf. Although this is a borderline case I am
satisfied that the first
respondent was able to discharge its onus.
[31] Counsel for the appellant argued that a finding that the first
respondent could rely on estoppel meant that estoppel has become
a
method of acquisition of ownership while it is supposed to be a
shield of defence and not a sword of attack. That estoppel may
only
be used as a defence is part of English law and since the Roman-Dutch
roots of the doctrine are said to be found in the exceptio
doli, a
legal defence rather than an action, the same may be said to apply in
our law. Whether this formalistic approach can still
be justified
need not be considered in this case even though the effect of the
successful reliance on estoppel has the effect that
the appellant may
not deny that the first respondent holds the unassailable title in
the property or that the deeds registry entry
is correct. This means
that should the latter wish to dispose of the property the appellant
would not be able to interfere. If
this means that ownership passed
by virtue of estoppel so be it. The better view would be that the
underlying act of transfer is
deemed to have been validly executed.
_____________________
L T C HARMS
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellants:
J C King SC
Instructed
by:
Shepstone
& Wylie
RICHARDS
BAY
Claude
Reid Inc
BLOEMFONTEIN
For 1
st
Respondent: A J Dickson SC
Pegma 178
Investments
Trading CC
Instructed
by:
Austen
Smith
PIETERMARITZBURG
Lovius-Block
BLOEMFONTEIN