De Villiers v McCay NO and Another (6077/04) [2007] ZAWCHC 10 (28 February 2007)

75 Reportability
Contract Law

Brief Summary

Contract — Inducing contract — Effect of prior inducing contract on rights and obligations of parties — Plaintiff claimed damages from defendants as trustees of the West Coast Trust (WCT) for failing to remit a dividend from the Development Trust after the latter's sequestration — Plaintiff contended he was entitled to the dividend based on a sale agreement where he purchased the WCT's interest in the Development Trust — Defendants argued that the dividend was properly paid to the WCT, discharging the Development Trust's indebtedness — Court held that the defendants breached their obligations under the sale agreement, entitling the plaintiff to claim damages for the amount paid to the WCT.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings took the form of an action in which the plaintiff, Izak Adriaan Johan de Villiers, claimed contractual damages against the defendants, David Lawrence Cornelius McCay N.O. and Marlene McCay N.O., in their capacities as trustees of the West Coast Trust (“WCT”). The plaintiff’s claim was premised on an alleged breach of obligations arising from a written agreement of sale (“the main agreement”), in terms of which the plaintiff contended he became entitled to the benefit of the WCT’s claims against a related trust, secured by mortgage bonds, but was later deprived of that benefit when the defendants caused payment to be made to the WCT instead of to him.


The defendants resisted the claim and advanced a counterclaim (reconvention). Their defence and counterclaim were grounded in the existence and legal consequences of a prior arrangement commonly referred to in South African contract law as a prior inducing contract (here, an “undertaking” regarding the transfer of plots), which they alleged had induced the conclusion of the main agreement. They contended that the failure (or termination) of that undertaking had legal consequences for the continued enforceability of the main agreement and required restitution, including the reversal of benefits the plaintiff claimed under the main agreement.


The matter proceeded to trial before Thring J in the Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division (Western Cape High Court). Only the plaintiff gave evidence. Although a number of doctrinal issues were raised on the pleadings and in argument (including the parol evidence rule, rectification, reciprocity, and whether the agreements were separate or one composite contract), the court explicitly approached the case on a set of assumptions favourable to the plaintiff and decided the matter on a narrower basis relating to the termination of the inducing contract and the resulting restitutionary consequences.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the effect of a prior inducing agreement on the parties’ rights and obligations under a related written contract, particularly where the inducing agreement later becomes impossible to perform and is treated as having terminated retrospectively, and whether that retrospective failure carries restitutionary consequences that undermine the plaintiff’s claim to benefits said to have been ceded under the main agreement.


2. Material Facts


The material facts relied upon by the court were largely common cause. A trust known as The Sixteen Mile Beach Development Trust (“the Development Trust”) was created on 30 June 1993. Its trustees included the plaintiff and the first defendant (among others). The Development Trust was established, among other purposes, to purchase and develop certain land at Yzerfontein (“the property”) into residential plots.


In 1994 the Development Trust purchased and registered the property in its own name (or that of its trustees). On 4 March 1994 the Development Trust registered covering mortgage bonds over the property in favour of the WCT. These bonds secured the Development Trust’s indebtedness to the WCT for loans/advances and predetermined liquidated damages, in a total amount reflected in later documentation as owing to the WCT and secured by the bonds.


On 16 November 2000 the plaintiff and the WCT, represented by the first defendant, concluded a written agreement of sale (“the main agreement”) in terms of which the plaintiff purchased, for a purchase price ultimately reduced to R1 million, the WCT’s “entire right, title and interest” in and to the Development Trust (and related interests). The main agreement provided for payment against, among other things, cancellation of mortgage bonds and cession to the plaintiff of corresponding loan and option agreements. On 28 December 2000 the plaintiff paid the purchase price of R1 million to the WCT.


The plaintiff’s case was that upon payment he became entitled to (and in fact received) the benefit of a cession of the WCT’s claims against the Development Trust, secured by the mortgage bonds. Those claims had a capital value of R1,080,000 at the time (with mora interest accruing later). The plaintiff also relied on the fact that he had been given a general power of attorney (dated 13 December 2000) authorising him, inter alia, to transfer the merx referred to in the main agreement.


On 15 May 2003 the Development Trust was provisionally sequestrated, and the order was later made final. On 29 October 2003 the plaintiff submitted a claim in the Development Trust’s insolvent estate, as the WCT’s “gevolmagtigde”, for an amount that included capital and mora interest. However, during June 2004 the defendants recovered payment from the trustees of the insolvent estate for the benefit of the WCT, instructing that the dividend be paid to the WCT. The dividend was paid to the WCT in good faith, discharging the Development Trust’s indebtedness to the WCT. The amount received by the WCT was R2,481,700.30. The WCT refused to remit this amount to the plaintiff.


The defendants’ defence depended materially on further events in 2000 which were also essentially not in dispute. Before the main agreement was concluded, the first defendant (through his attorney, Mr Key) made it clear that the plaintiff would have to provide a further “sweetener” for the sale. The plaintiff then produced and signed a letter dated 16 November 2000, addressed to the first defendant personally, recording an undertaking that he would procure the transfer to the first defendant (or nominee) of one, two, or three beachfront plots (depending on the approved subdivision yield), with stipulated value for transfer duty/VAT purposes and with transfer costs and taxes payable by the first defendant. It was common cause that Mr Key orally accepted this undertaking on behalf of the first defendant and that it constituted a legally valid and binding oral agreement (as recorded in the letter).


It was further common cause that the first defendant was induced to conclude the main agreement by the undertaking. The court treated the undertaking, for purposes of its reasoning, as a prior inducing contract.


After sequestration of the Development Trust and sale of the property by the trustees in sequestration, it became impossible for the plaintiff to procure transfer of plots as contemplated in the undertaking. The plaintiff did not contend that he was at fault for this impossibility, and he did not really dispute that the undertaking had come to an end.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine concerned the legal consequences of the failure of the prior inducing contract (the undertaking) for the enforceability and performance of the main agreement, and for the plaintiff’s claim to the dividend paid to the WCT. The dispute primarily involved the application of legal principles to largely undisputed facts, and the legal characterisation of the relationship between the two contracts.


Although the parties raised multiple questions—such as whether the main agreement was wholly written or partly oral; whether the undertaking formed part of the main agreement; whether the plaintiff’s undertaking obligations were reciprocal to the WCT’s cession obligations; whether the parol evidence rule excluded evidence of the undertaking; whether rectification of the main agreement was competent; and whether tacit or implied resolutive/suspensive conditions existed—the court stated that it was not necessary to decide most of these issues to resolve the case.


Instead, the court identified the decisive issue as whether the undertaking had terminated due to supervening impossibility of performance, whether that termination operated retrospectively ab initio, and whether the consequence of that termination was to trigger restitution of benefits received as a result of the inducing contract, including the reversal (in effect) of the cession said to have been made under the main agreement. This implicated the doctrinal treatment of failed contracts, conditions (suspensive/resolutive), and enrichment-based restitution in South African law.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court deliberately proceeded on a set of assumptions favourable to the plaintiff, while emphasising that those assumptions were open to serious debate and had been argued at length. The court assumed (without deciding) that the undertaking and the main agreement were two separate and independent contracts, rather than a single partly oral and partly written contract; that there was no contractual reciprocity entitling the WCT automatically to withhold performance of the main agreement upon non-performance of the undertaking; that the undertaking merely induced the main agreement rather than supplying “additional consideration”; that a cession of the WCT’s rights against the Development Trust occurred when the plaintiff paid on 28 December 2000; that rectification of clause 9 of the main agreement was not established; that the parol evidence rule did not prevent proof of the undertaking as a distinct prior inducing contract; and that the main agreement contained no tacit or implied condition making its enforceability depend on performance of the undertaking.


On these assumptions, the court then focused on the fate of the undertaking. It applied the general principle that supervening impossibility of performance discharges a contract, with the consequence that no contractual remedy is available under that contract. The court referred in this connection to Peters, Flamman and Co. v. Kokstad Municipality, 1919 AD 427 and to the discussion in Christie. The court accepted that, after sequestration of the Development Trust on 15 May 2003, it lay beyond the plaintiff’s power to procure the promised transfers of plots, and that there was no evidence that the plaintiff was to blame. The undertaking therefore became impossible of performance and was treated as having terminated.


A further step in the reasoning was the court’s conclusion, derived from Peters, Flamman, that termination in these circumstances took effect ab initio, meaning retrospectively from the time when the undertaking was accepted (16 November 2000). The court treated the position as analogous to the failure of a contract because a resolutive condition is fulfilled or a suspensive condition is not fulfilled, where the effect is to destroy the contractual basis retrospectively and trigger a need to restore performances.


The court then addressed the restitutionary consequences. Drawing on authorities dealing with conditional obligations, insolvency, and restitution, the court held that where a contract fails without fault and is treated as void retrospectively, the parties must restore what they received under it. It cited, among other authorities, Ex parte de Villiers & Another NN.O.: in re Carbon Developments (Pty.) Ltd. (in liquidation), 1993(1) SA 493 (AD) on the “natural death” of an obligation where a condition becomes incapable of fulfilment on sequestration; Wilkens N.O. en ’n Ander v. Bester, 1997(3) SA 347 (SCA) and Melamed & Another v. B.P. Southern Africa (Pty.) Ltd., 2000 (2) SA 614 (W) on the reclaiming of payments and restoration where conditions fail; and Kudu Granite Operations (Pty.) Ltd. v. Caterna Ltd., 2003(5) SA 193 (SCA) on the distinction between contractual damages after cancellation and enrichment remedies where a contract becomes inoperative without breach, including the relevance of the condictio ob causam finitam.


Although the first defendant had received nothing directly under the undertaking (no plots were transferred), the court reasoned that the plaintiff had received a material benefit because the undertaking induced the main agreement. On the court’s assumptions, this benefit included, crucially, the cession of the WCT’s claims against the Development Trust. When the undertaking was terminated retrospectively, the plaintiff was treated as not having been legally entitled to retain those ceded claims; accordingly, the defendants would have been entitled to compel a re-cession (restoration) of those rights to the WCT. The court reasoned that this restitutionary entitlement meant that the defendants’ subsequent recovery of the dividend on behalf of the WCT did not constitute a breach of the main agreement, because the basis upon which the plaintiff claimed entitlement to the ceded debt had fallen away retrospectively.


The court acknowledged that this outcome might appear novel but considered it to follow from the principles it regarded as applicable. It rejected the submission that contract termination operates on a closed list that excludes the termination of an inducing agreement as a relevant event, and it rejected the contention that what the plaintiff had to restore was merely a “spes”. In the court’s view, the plaintiff’s restitutionary obligation related to what he had actually received (on the assumptions made), namely the ceded claims, and restoring those claims necessarily undermined the continued existence of the main agreement in any meaningful sense. The court accordingly held that the termination of the undertaking brought about the termination of the main agreement as well, in the same way that failure of a condition precedent causes a dependent contract to “die a natural death.”


Finally, the court held that restitution must be mutual. Since the WCT had received the R1 million purchase price, it was obliged to restore that amount to the plaintiff, which restoration the defendants had tendered. On that reasoning, the plaintiff could not succeed in a claim for damages measured by the dividend received by the WCT.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the plaintiff’s claim in convention and entered judgment in favour of the defendants, with costs. The plaintiff therefore did not obtain an order directing payment of R2,481,700.30 (or interest) from the defendants.


On the defendants’ claim in reconvention, the court granted an order declaring that the agreement between the parties has been terminated, with costs. The court indicated that the reconvention succeeded only in part, reflecting that not all relief sought in reconvention (such as rectification) was necessary to the result or was granted in the final order as formulated.


The court’s reasoning contemplated restitutionary consequences, including the defendants’ tender to repay the purchase price of R1 million, but the operative order recorded in the judgment was the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim and the declaration of termination, both with costs.


Cases Cited


Peters, Flamman and Co. v. Kokstad Municipality, 1919 AD 427


Ex parte de Villiers & Another NN.O.: in re Carbon Developments (Pty.) Ltd. (in liquidation), 1993(1) SA 493 (AD)


Wilkens N.O. en ’n Ander v. Bester, 1997(3) SA 347 (SCA)


Melamed & Another v. B.P. Southern Africa (Pty.) Ltd., 2000 (2) SA 614 (W)


Design and Planning Service v. Kruger, 1974(1) SA 689 (T)


Thiart v. Kraukamp, 1967(3) SA 219 (T)


Dirk Fourie Trust v. Gerber, 1986(1) SA 763 (A)


Legate v. Natal Land and Colonialization Co Ltd., [1926] LKCA 17; (1906) 27 NLR 439 at 455


Kudu Granite Operations (Pty.) Ltd. v. Caterna Ltd., 2003(5) SA 193 (SCA)


Baker v. Probert, 1985(3) SA 429 (A)


Pucjlowski v. Johnston’s Executors, 1946 WLD 1


Wilken v. Kohler, 1913 AD 135


Clark v. Muller, 1913 NPD 447


du Plessis v. Nel, 1952(1) SA 513 (AD)


De Lassalle v. Guildford, [1901] 2 K.B. 215


Frith v. Frith, [1906] A.C. 254


Morgan v. Griffith, 6 Exchq., 70


Pym v. Campbell, 25 L.J. Q.B., 277


Clifford v. Turnell, 57 Rev. Rep., 275


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment as reproduced.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment as reproduced.


Held


The court held that the undertaking regarding the transfer of plots, accepted orally on 16 November 2000 and inducing the conclusion of the main agreement, became impossible of performance after the Development Trust’s sequestration. Applying the principle of supervening impossibility, the court treated the undertaking as terminated and, on the authority relied upon, as having failed retrospectively ab initio.


On the assumptions adopted, the retrospective failure of the undertaking triggered restitutionary consequences. In particular, the plaintiff was not entitled to retain the benefit he had received as a result of the inducing contract, which (on the assumed facts) included the cession of the WCT’s claims against the Development Trust. The defendants’ recovery of the dividend for the WCT therefore did not constitute a breach of the main agreement, and the plaintiff’s damages claim failed.


The court further held that the failure of the inducing contract had the consequence that the main agreement itself could not stand, such that the relationship between the parties was to be treated as terminated, with mutual restitution contemplated (including repayment of the R1 million purchase price by the WCT, as tendered). Judgment was granted for the defendants on the plaintiff’s claim, and the defendants obtained declaratory relief in reconvention that the agreement between the parties had been terminated, with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that supervening impossibility of performance discharges a contract, rendering it void and extinguishing contractual remedies under that contract, where the impossibility is not attributable to fault.


It treated the retrospective effect of such discharge as analogous to the consequences that follow when a contract fails due to the fulfilment of a resolutive condition or the non-fulfilment of a suspensive condition/condition precedent, in which event the law may regard the contract as if it had never existed and require parties to restore what has been transferred in performance.


The judgment endorsed that, where a contract becomes inoperative without breach and the contractual nexus is extinguished, the appropriate remedy for recovery of transferred value lies in unjust enrichment, including the use of enrichment actions such as the condictio ob causam finitam or, in suitable circumstances, the condictio indebiti, rather than conflating such remedies with contractual damages for breach.


In relation to proof of the undertaking, the court accepted (on its approach) that a prior inducing contract may be proved as a separate agreement that induced a written contract, and that evidence of such an inducing contract is admissible provided it is not inconsistent with the written contract; accordingly, the parol evidence rule did not, on the court’s reasoning, preclude proof of the undertaking when treated as distinct and not repugnant to the main agreement.


Finally, the judgment applied the restitutionary principle that the termination or failure of an inducing agreement may require restoration of benefits received as a consequence of that inducing agreement, and that such restoration may, as a matter of practical and legal compatibility, entail the dissolution or termination of the related main agreement where the benefit obtained under the main agreement is itself the subject of restitution.

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[2007] ZAWCHC 10
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De Villiers v McCay NO and Another (6077/04) [2007] ZAWCHC 10 (28 February 2007)

REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(CAPE OF
GOOD HOPE PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
CASE NO:
6077/04
In the
matter between:
IZAK
ADRIAAN JOHAN DE VILLIERS
Plaintiff
and
DAVID
LAWRENCE CORNELIUS McCAY N.O.
First Defendant
MARLENE
McCAY N.O.
Second Defendant
________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED THIS 28
th
DAY OF FEBRUARY, 2007
________________________________________________________
THRING, J.:
This case is, in essence, about what has become known in our law as
a prior inducing contract and its effect, if any, upon the
rights and
obligations of the parties to the contract whose conclusion it has
induced.
The facts, and the respective contentions of the parties
I shall
attempt to summarise the facts on which the plaintiff bases his claim
against the defendants as briefly as practicable.
None of these facts
are in dispute. The conclusions of law which may or may not flow from
them, however, are in issue.
On the
30
th
June, 1993 a trust called The Sixteen Mile Beach
Development Trust was created by trust deed, of copy of which is
Exhibit “A 2”.
I shall refer to this trust as “the Development
Trust”. Its trustees were the plaintiff, the first defendant, one
S.H. de Kock
(now deceased) and the plaintiff’s brother, W.S. de
Villiers. The founders of the Development Trust were four other
trusts, each
of which was effectively controlled by the plaintiff,
the first defendant, de Kock and W.S. de Villiers, respectively. The
trust
which was, in effect, controlled by the first defendant, and of
which both defendants have at all material times been the trustees,
is called the West Coast Trust. I shall refer to it as “the WCT”.
The trust deed of the Development Trust provided that each
of the
founding trusts was to lend and advance sums of money to the
Development Trust in certain stipulated proportions. The trust
deed
also provided that in certain instances its founders were to
determine matters, and that in the event of disagreement between
the
founders, the trusts of the plaintiff, of de Kock and of the first
defendant (i.e. the WCT) were each to enjoy two votes, whilst
that of
W.S. de Villiers was to enjoy only one vote.
One of the objects for which the Development Trust was founded was
the purchase of certain land at Yzerfontein. I shall refer to
this
land as “the property”. It was to be developed as residential
plots. In 1994 the Development Trust duly purchased the property
for
R8 million, and it was registered in the name of the Development
Trust (or of its trustees). On the 4
th
March, 1994 certain
covering mortgage bonds (a copy of one of which is Exhibit “A 15”)
were registered by the Development Trust,
as mortgagor, over the
property in favour of the WCT as mortgagee. These bonds were to
secure the Development Trust’s indebtedness
to the WCT “in
respect of moneys loaned (
sic
) and advanced or to be loaned
(
sic
) and advanced” (R800,000 in all) and in respect of
“predetermined liquidated damages” (R280,000 in all). A balance
sheet of
the Development Trust dated the 29
th
February,
2000 (a copy of which is Exhibit “A 25”) duly reflects these
debts as owing by the Development Trust to the WCT, and
as being
secured by the mortgage bonds.
On the 16
th
November, 2000 the WCT, as the seller,
represented by the first defendant as one of its trustees, and the
plaintiff (“or nominee”),
as the purchaser, concluded a written
agreement of sale, to which I shall refer as “the main agreement”,
in terms of which, as
it then read, the plaintiff purchased from the
WCT for the sum of R1,250,000 a “
merx
” comprising,
inter
alia
, “the Seller’s entire right, title and interest in and
to” the Development Trust. Clauses 5 and 12 of the main agreement
had
already been deleted by the first defendant or his agent when the
plaintiff signed it. Subsequently, on the 13
th
December,
2000 the purchase price of R1,250,000 stipulated in clause 2 of the
main agreement was reduced by agreement between the
parties to R1
million, the agreement was amended accordingly, and the amendment was
duly signed by them. Still later, on the 27
th
June, 2003
the description of the first defendant in the heading of the document
as “a trustee” of the WCT (the seller) was amplified
by the
addition of the words “and in his personal capacity”, and this
amendment was also duly signed by the parties. As it ultimately
came
to be, the main agreement reads as follows, as is reflected in the
copy thereof which is Exhibit “A 28”:
“AGREEMENT
between
THE WEST COAST TRUST
(No.
/193) herein represented
by
David Lawrence Cornelius McCay
in his
capacity as a trustee, duly
authorised
thereto: and in his
personal
capacity
(“Seller”)
and
IZAK
ADRIAAN JOHAN DE VILLIERS
(Id no.
4612165034 08 1)
or
nominee
(“Purchaser”)
________________________________________________
1. The Seller hereby sells to the Purchaser who purchases the
Seller’s entire right, title and interest in and to The Sixteen
Mile
Beach Development Trust(No T865/93) (“SMBDT”) and/or Salt
Lake Syndicate (Pty.) Ltd. and/or the Sixteen Mile Beach Resort
development
(“the
merx
”).
2. The purchase price of the
merx
shall be the sum of ONE
MILLION RAND (R1,000,000-00) which shall be paid by the Purchaser to
the Seller in cash against registration
of the cancellation of the
existing eight (8) mortgage bonds registered by SMBDT in favour of
the Seller and cession to the Purchaser
of the corresponding Loan and
Option Agreements.
3. Registration of the abovementioned cancellations shall be attended
to by the Seller’s attorneys as soon as possible after signature
of
this agreement.
4. The Purchaser shall within fourteen (14) days of being so
requested by the Seller’s attorneys supply them with a bank
guarantee
for payment of the purchase price. Such request shall only
be made a reasonable time before registration.
(deleted)
In the event of the Purchaser failing to provide a bank guarantee as
provided for in paragraph 4 above or failing within fourteen
(14)
days of demand to pay any other monies for which he is liable in
terms of this agreement or failing to comply with any other
condition of this agreement within fourteen (14) days of being
requested in writing to do so the Seller shall be entitled to cancel
this agreement forthwith.
7. As
domicilium citandi et executandi
the parties choose
the following addresses:
The
Seller: Invicta Bearings (Pty.) Ltd,
Constantia
Uitsig.
The
Purchaser: Sixteen Mile Beach,
P.O.
Box 136,
YZERFONTEIN.
7351.
and agree that all mail shall be dispatched by pre-paid registered
mail by the one party to the postal address of the other.
The Seller shall, in terms of this agreement, have no further right
and/or title in and to the SMBDT or the property and development
known as Sixteen Mile Beach Resort or in any partnership, trust,
close corporation or company related thereto.
9. This agreement contains all the conditions of the agreement
between the parties and no amendment shall be valid unless it is
in
writing and signed by both parties hereto.
The Seller and David Lawrence Cornelius McCay, in his personal
capacity, declare that to the best of their knowledge and belief
no
trust or legal
persona
other than the Seller has any right to
or interest in the
merx
hereby sold.
The parties hereto shall upon demand do or cause to be done or sign
or have signed all such documents as may be necessary to
successfully
comply with and give effect to the provisions of this
agreement.
(deleted)
DATED at
CAPE TOWN on this 16 day of November 2000.
AS WITNESSES
(Signed)_______
(Signed)______
(Signed)________
D L C McCAY
DATED at CAPE TOWN on this 16 day of November 2000.
AS
WITNESSES
1.
(Signed)____________
(Signed)_____________
(Signed)________
I A J DE VILLIERS”
On the 28
th
December, 2000 the plaintiff paid the
purchase price of R1 million to the WCT, or its order.
On the
plaintiff’s case he thereupon became entitled,
inter alia
,
to cession of the WCT’s claims against the Development Trust (see
clauses 2 and 11 of the main agreement) secured as they were
by the
mortgage bonds: in fact, his case is that this cession actually took
place when he paid the purchase price, after having on
the 13
th
December, 2000 been placed in possession by the first defendant of a
general power of attorney (a copy of which is Exhibit “A 33”)
in
terms of which the WCT empowered the plaintiff,
inter alia
, to
transfer the
merx
referred to in clause 1 of the main
agreement. These claims then amounted to R1,080,000 (in terms of the
bonds they were at that
time still interest-free: but
mora
interest subsequently accrued on them).
On the
15
th
May, 2003 the Development Trust was provisionally
sequestrated. The provisional order was subsequently made final. On
the 29
th
October, 2003 the plaintiff submitted a claim
against the trustees (in sequestration) of the Development Trust as
“gevolmagtigde”
of the WCT for R2,147,079.44. This consisted of
the original capital indebtedness of the Development Trust to the WCT
and
mora
interest accrued thereon as at that stage. However,
the claim was not paid to the plaintiff. Instead, during June, 2004
the defendants
recovered this debt from the trustees (in
sequestration) of the Development Trust for the benefit of the WCT,
instructing them to
pay the dividend in respect thereof to the WCT,
and the WCT then received and accepted payment of the dividend (which
was the full
amount claimed). The trustees (in sequestration) of the
Development Trust paid this dividend to the WCT in good faith,
thereby discharging
the Development Trust’s indebtedness to the WCT
and rendering it nugatory from the plaintiff’s point of view. The
amount paid
to the WCT was R2,481,700.30. The WCT refuses to remit
this dividend to the plaintiff. All this is common cause.
The
plaintiff avers that, in acting as they did, the defendants breached
their obligations under the main agreement, and that he
has suffered
damages as a result in the sum which was paid to the WCT, and which
ought to have been paid to him. He accordingly claims
from the
defendants in their capacities as the WCT’s trustees payment of the
sum of R2,481,700.30, with interest thereon at the
rate of 15.5%
per
annum
from the date of service of his summons, and costs.
The
defendant’s defence to this claim, as it emerged on the pleadings
and during the trial, rests on certain events, most of which
took
place in 2000, and many of which are not in dispute. I shall attempt
to summarise them, too, as briefly as I can.
In
August, 2000 the first defendant indicated at a meeting with the
plaintiff and others that he would be prepared to sell “his”
(i.e. his and the WCT’s) interests in the Development Trust to the
plaintiff for R1,250,000. He made the same offer to de Kock.
The
plaintiff, who is an attorney of this Court, then drew up the main
agreement in its initial form. He sent this draft to Mr. Mervyn
Key,
also an attorney, who represented the first defendant and the WCT, on
the 23
rd
October, 2000. On the following day Key
telephoned the plaintiff and said to him that the first defendant had
signed the main agreement
after deleting clause 5, but that he (the
first defendant) wished to “think it over for a few days”
(apparently the first defendant
was then about to leave for abroad).
In
mid-November, 2000, the plaintiff thinks that it was on the 13
th
,
he had a meeting with Key at la Colombe Restaurant, Constantia
Uitsig. Key told him that the first defendant maintained that he
(the
plaintiff) owed the first defendant R500,000 in respect of other,
unrelated transactions between them, and that the first defendant
wanted one plot in the proposed subdivision and development of the
property for each of his children. This was the first time that
any
transfer or delivery of plots to the first defendant had been
mentioned. In his evidence the plaintiff readily conceded that
it was
made perfectly clear to him by Key that unless he agreed to do what
the first defendant wanted in this regard the main agreement
would
not be concluded. Because he was extremely keen to finalise the main
agreement, the plaintiff agreed to the first defendant’s
request.
In his evidence the plaintiff more than once referred to the first
defendant’s conduct in this regard as “blackmail”:
but of
course it was nothing of the kind. Key suggested that the plaintiff
give the required undertaking in a separate letter. This
the
plaintiff did. He duly drafted and signed a letter which he dated the
16
th
November, 2000 (a copy is Exhibit “A 31”). It was
addressed to the first defendant personally. It reads:
“Dear David
RE:
SIXTEEN MILE BEACH
I refer to the Agreement between us dated today and confirm that you
will give me a General Power of Attorney against payment to
you of
the cash and that I shall procure that the company which develops
Sixteen Mile Beach transfers to you (or your nominee) three
(3)
beachfront residential plots which plots shall as closely as possible
resemble the beachfront plots indicated on the attached
provisional
layout herewith marked “A” provided that the final approval of
the layout be for at least seventy five (75) plots;
provided further
that should the final approval however be for anything up to thirty
(30) plots the plots so to be transferred shall
be one (1) and should
the approved plots number from thirty one (31) to forty five (45) the
plots so to be transferred shall be two
(2).
The value of the said plots shall for Transfer Duty and/or VAT
purposes be R100 000 (one hundred thousand Rand) each and the
transfer
costs together with any such Transfer Duty and/or VAT shall
be payable by you.
It is also agreed that the
causa
for the above transfer shall
be a sweetener for your selling control and shall fully and finally
clear the slate between us.
Kind
regards
(signed)
Sakkie.”
On the
16
th
November, 2000 the plaintiff met Key again at
Constantia Uitsig. He handed him the letter, to which I shall refer
as “the undertaking”.
Key read it and indicated that he was
satisfied with it. Key then produced the main agreement, which had
already been signed by the
first defendant, and the plaintiff signed
it. Nobody has ever signed the undertaking for or on behalf of the
first defendant or the
WCT. However, it is common cause that it was
orally accepted by Key on behalf of the first defendant, and that it
constituted a legally
valid and binding oral agreement between him
and the plaintiff. Henceforth in this judgment, wherever I refer to
the undertaking
I refer to it in this sense, viz. as the valid and
binding oral agreement between the plaintiff and the first defendant
as recorded
in the undertaking.
Counsel
on both sides are
ad idem
on the evidence that the first
defendant was induced by the undertaking to conclude the main
agreement, and that seems to me to be
so.
It is
part of the defendant’s case that the obligation assumed by the
plaintiff in the undertaking, viz. to procure transfer to
the first
defendant or his nominee of one, two or three plots, as the case may
be, when the property was developed, was reciprocal
to the WCT’s
obligations under the main agreement - in particular to its
obligation to cede its claims against the Development
Trust to the
plaintiff - and that the plaintiff’s subsequent failure to perform
his obligations under the undertaking justified
the withholding of
its performance by the WCT under the main agreement.
The defendants contend that the main agreement was partly oral and
partly written: the oral portion consisting of the undertaking,
as
orally accepted by Key on behalf of the first defendant.
The
defendants contend furthermore that performance of the plaintiff’s
obligations under the undertaking has become impossible
as a result
of the sequestration of the Development Trust and the subsequent sale
of the property by its trustees in sequestration
to an outside entity
over which the plaintiff has no control: supervening impossibility of
performance has thus put an end to the
parties’ respective
obligations under the undertaking; alternatively, they plead that it
has been terminated by the defendants
by reason of the plaintiff’s
failure to procure the transfer of the plots. The plaintiff does not
really dispute this.
The
defendants contend further that, in consequence, the main agreement
has “fallen away”, alternatively that it has been terminated
by
them, and that they have consequently ceased to be bound by it. As a
result, they contend, each of the parties is obliged to make
restitution of whatever he or it has received to date under the main
agreement, or under the undertaking, or under both. Alternatively,
they plead that the undertaking introduced a tacit or implied
resolutive condition into the main agreement, or a tacit term that,
should the plaintiff fail to procure the transfer of the plots within
a reasonable time, or become unable to procure such transfers,
both
the undertaking and the main agreement would “fall away” and all
parties would be obliged to make restitution of what they
had
received under either or both of them. The defendants tender to repay
the purchase price of R1 million to the plaintiff.
In a
claim-in-reconvention the defendants seek,
inter alia
, the
rectification of the main agreement by the deletion therefrom of
clause 9, the inclusion of which they plead was occasioned
by an
error common to the parties. They also seek an order declaring that
the agreement between the parties has been terminated,
and costs of
suit.
Only the
plaintiff gave evidence.
Questions which arise
A number of interesting questions arise in this matter. They
include: whether the main agreement between the parties was entirely
written, or whether it was partly written and partly oral, inasmuch
as the defendants contend that the orally accepted undertaking
in
effect formed part of it; whether the plaintiff’s obligations under
the undertaking were reciprocal to performance by the WCT
of its
obligations under the main agreement, so that failure by the
plaintiff to perform his aforesaid obligations justified the
withholding by the WCT of its performance under the main agreement;
whether, in other words, the undertaking imported “additional
consideration” for the rights which had been sold to the plaintiff;
whether a cession has ever taken place to the plaintiff of
the WCT’s
rights against the Development Trust; whether the defendants are
entitled to have the main agreement rectified by the
deletion of
clause 9 thereof; whether the parol evidence rule in this instance
excludes evidence extrinsic to the document embodying
the main
agreement which goes to show that an additional term or terms was or
were agreed upon by the parties; and whether a further
term or terms
is or are to be tacitly or impliedly read into the main agreement
constituting a suspensive or resolutive condition
which would come
into operation on the plaintiff’s failure to perform his
obligations under the undertaking, or within a reasonable
time.
However,
in the view which I take of this matter it is not necessary to decide
any of these questions, save to the very limited extent
that follows,
and I need say little more about them.
The
Court’s assumptions
I propose to approach this case on the basis of the following
assumptions, all of which are in favour of the plaintiff, but all
of
which are open to serious debate, and all of which were, indeed,
debated at length by counsel in argument, but the correctness
of none
of which I find it necessary to decide, and therefore leave open:
(1) The main agreement and the oral agreement constituted by Key’s
acceptance on behalf of the first defendant of the plaintiff’s
undertaking did not constitute a single agreement, partly written and
partly oral: they constituted two entirely separate and distinct
contracts, each standing alone and independent of the other, save
that, as is common cause, the first defendant was induced to conclude
the main agreement by the fact that the plaintiff had given the
undertaking, which the first defendant had accepted, much as if it
had been no more than a representation;
(2) The plaintiff’s obligations in terms of the undertaking were
not reciprocal to the WCT’s obligations under the main agreement
in
the sense that the plaintiff’s failure to perform his obligations
per se
and automatically entitled the WCT to withhold
performance under the main agreement; breach and/or termination of
the undertaking
might have this practical effect, but if it did, it
was not because of any contractual reciprocity;
The undertaking did not import any “additional consideration” to
be performed or delivered by the plaintiff in return for the
rights
which he had purchased from the WCT, over and above payment of the
purchase price; it merely induced the conclusion by the
first
defendant of the main agreement;
The WCT’s rights against the Development Trust were legally ceded
to the plaintiff when he paid the purchase price on the 28
th
December, 2000;
The defendants have failed to establish that they are entitled to
have the main agreement rectified by the deletion of clause 9
thereof;
The parol evidence rule excludes evidence extrinsic to the document
which embodies the main agreement (Exhibit “A 28”) which
goes to
show that that agreement contained other or additional terms;
non
constat
, of course, because of assumption (1) above, that such
evidence is inadmissible to prove the existence and terms of the
undertaking
as a separate, distinct and independent contract, as a
prior inducing contract: see
Christie, “The Law of Contract in
South Africa”
, 5
th
Ed. 198-199;
Subject to what is set out above under assumption (2), the main
agreement did not contain any tacit or implied term constituting
a
resolutive or suspensive condition rendering the performance by the
plaintiff of his obligations under the undertaking, either
within a
reasonable time or at all, a condition on which the enforceability
of performance by the WCT of its obligations under
the main
agreement depended.
The
termination of the undertaking
As I
have said, it is not disputed by the plaintiff that once the
Development Trust had been sequestrated with effect from the 15
th
May, 2003 it lay beyond his power to procure the promised transfer of
the plots to the first defendant: in effect, the undertaking
had
become impossible of performance by him. There is no evidence that he
was to blame for this.
The
general rule is that supervening impossibility of performance
discharges a contract: it becomes void and no contractual remedy
can
be sought or obtained under it: see
Peters, Flamman and Co. v.
Kokstad Municipality
,
1919 AD 427
at 434 – 435 and
Christie
,
op. cit
., 472. Insofar as may be necessary, the defendants
have in any event given notice of the termination of “the
agreement”, which,
on their case, includes the undertaking. As I
have also said above, it is not really in dispute that the
undertaking has been terminated.
It seems to me that the event which
caused this to happen was the provisional order of sequestration of
the Development Trust. On
the strength of what was said in the
Peters, Flamman
case,
supra
at 434 I find that the
termination took effect
ab initio
, that is, as from the date
when the undertaking was accepted by Key on behalf of the first
defendant on the 16
th
November 2000.
The
legal consequences of the termination of the undertaking
The undertaking is no more: it has become a nullity, and neither of
its parties can now enforce it. The position is analogous,
it seems
to me, to that which arises where a contract has failed by reason of
the fulfilment of a resolutive condition or the non-fulfilment
of a
suspensive condition or condition precedent. As to this
Christie,
op
cit., says at 146:
“The effect of fulfilment of a resolutive condition is to destroy
the contract, and again the theory is that the fulfilment of
the
condition operates retrospectively so the contract will be regarded
as if it had never existed.
.........................................
A question that has not received much attention in the modern law is
the extent to which the parties must be made to disgorge what
they
have received under a conditional contract before it fails. The
question may arise when a contract subject to a condition precedent
has been partly in operation in anticipation of the fulfilment of the
condition, which has then not been fulfilled; or it may arise
when an
operative contract has been destroyed by the fulfilment of a
resolutive condition.
A party who, in anticipation of the fulfilment of a condition
precedent, has made payments under the contract is entitled to the
return of the money, unless the contract provides otherwise......”
Goldstone,
J.A.
put it thus in
Ex parte de Villiers & Another NN.O:
in re Carbon Developments (Pty.) Ltd. (in liquidation
), 1993(1)
SA 493 (AD) at 505 A:
“In the event of the insolvency of the debtor, sequestration would
normally mean that the condition upon which the enforceability
of the
debt depends will have become incapable of fulfilment. The legal
result of this would be that the debt dies a natural death
(see
De
Wet and Yeats “Kontraktereg en Handelsreg”
5
th
Ed.
Vol. 1 at 153;
Christie “The Law of Contract in South Africa”
2
nd
Ed. at 169;
Kerr “The Principles of the Law of
Contract”
4
th
Ed. at 341). The result would be that
the erstwhile creditor would have no claim which could be proved in
insolvency.”
In
Wilkens
N.O. en ‘n Ander v. Bester
, 1997(3) SA 347 (SCA)
van
Heerden, J.A
., as he then was, said at 358 A:
“
Nou
is dit geykte reg dat indien ‘n voorwaardelike skuld betaal word in
die waan dat die voorwaarde vervul is, die betrokke bedrag
met die
condictio
indebiti
teruggevorder
kan word.”
In
Melamed & Another v. B.P. Southern Africa (Pty.) Ltd.
,
2000 (2) SA 614
(W)
Blieden, J.
said the following at 625 D-H:
“
A
suspensive condition is a condition suspending the operation of the
obligations from the contract, pending the occurrence or
non-occurrence
of a particular specified event (
Design
and Planning Service v. Kruger
1974(1) SA 689 (T) at 695C-D;
Thiart
v. Kraukamp
1967(3) SA 219 (T) at 225A-C). The agreement under consideration is
subject to a suspensive condition. This entails that the agreement
would be discharged
ipso
iure
on non-fulfilment of the condition (
Dirk
Fourie Trust v. Gerber
1986(1) SA 763 (A) at 773F-G;
Design
and Planning Service v. Kruger
(
supra
at 697G-H)). In
Tuckers
Land and Development Corporation (Pty.) Ltd. v. Strydom
(
supra
at 23H)
Joubert,
J.A.
said:
‘
By
nie-vervulling van die opskortende voorwaarde, wat nie aan die
toedoen van die partye te wyte is nie, veral (
sic
:
verval?) die koop/verkoop.’
.............................................
Where there has been performance pursuant to a contract subject to a
suspensive condition
pendente conditione
the parties must
restore that which they have received
pendente conditione
or
conditione extincta
. The authorities seem to indicate that
restoration can be claimed with one or other of the enrichment
remedies.”
At 626 G-H
the learned Judge, after considering the relevant authorities,
concluded:
“
From
the above it is clear that payment made
pendente
condicione
(sic:
conditione
?)
may be reclaimed with the
condictio
indebiti
.
When the condition is not fulfilled the agreement on which it is
based is discharged with retrospective effect and the parties have
to
restore that which they have performed (
Tuckers
Land and Development Corporation
case
supra
at 20E-24H).”
There has been much debate in this matter about the applicability
or otherwise of the parol evidence rule, and whether or not it
excludes evidence of the undertaking. However, in my view, as long as
the undertaking and the main agreement are regarded as being
two
separate, distinct and independent contracts, as the plaintiff
contends that they were, and as I assume in his favour to be the
case, I do not think that the problem arises. There is also, to my
mind, nothing in the undertaking which is repugnant to the main
agreement or inconsistent or incompatible with it. In
Clark v.
Muller
,
1913 NPD 447
Broome, J.
, as he then was, said at
450:
“
But
even if the written contract appears on the face of it to be a
complete agreement proof may be given of a prior or contemporaneous
oral agreement upon some collateral or independent matter, though
relating to the same general subject, so long as it is not
inconsistent
with the terms of what has been reduced to writing.
(
Morgan
v. Griffith
,
6 Exchq., 70;
De
Lassalle v. Guildford
[1901] 2 K.B., 215
;
Clifford
v. Turnell
,
57 Rev. Rep., 275;
Frith
v. Frith
[1906]
A.C. 254).
Evidence is also admissible of any separate oral
agreement, constituting a condition precedent to the attaching of any
obligation.
(
Pym
v. Campbell
,
25 L.J. Q.B., 277).”
And in
du Plessis v. Nel
, 1952(1) SA 513 (AD)
Schreiner
,
J.A
. said this at 529 C-E:
“That in proper cases collateral agreements can be proved and sued
upon is not open to doubt, and whether one states the parol
evidence
rule as being subject to an exception in respect of such agreements
or as being exceptionless but to that extent a limited
rule appears
to be a matter of taste in the use of language. So, I apprehend, it
is a matter of wording whether one treats agreements
creating
conditions precedent to the coming into force of a written contract
as a kind of collateral agreement or as a distinct exception
to or
limitation of the parol evidence rule.”
(His was a minority judgment, but there was no disagreement amongst
the learned Judges of Appeal on this aspect.) I agree with
Christie,
op. cit
. where he says at 201:
“
In
the result, we will be well advised to forget all about ‘collateral
contracts’ and ‘additional consideration’ and to think
only of
prior inducing contracts. To assist our thinking we should remember
that these contracts can be said to operate as conditions
precedent
to the written contract and are admissible in evidence on the same
basis as conditions precedent and subject to the same
limitations as
to conflict with the written contract, but it must not be overlooked
that they differ from normal conditions precedent
by being contracts
and therefore enforceable in their own right.”
It is not necessary here to consider the
question whether a claim for restitution in this context is based on
enrichment, or is to
be regarded as a distinct contractual remedy.
In my opinion the same principle applies where, as here, on my
finding, the contract concerned (i.e. the undertaking) has failed
for
impossibility of performance: each of the parties must restore what
he has received under it. See, in this regard,
Legate v. Natal
Land and Colonialization Co Ltd.
,
[1926] LKCA 17
;
(1906) 27 NLR 439
at 455,
Ex
parte de Villiers and Another NN.O.: in re Carbon Developments (Pty.)
Ltd. (in liquidation)
,
supra, loc cit
. and
Melamed and
Another v. B.P. Southern Africa (Pty.) Ltd.
,
supra
,
loc.cit
. and cases there cited.
Restitution
The precise identification of the cause of action of a party to a
contract which has failed without fault for restitution of what
he
has performed there-under has been said, with one exception, not to
be of importance, save that it was said to be covered by one
or the
other remedy for unjust enrichment: see
Kudu Granite Operations
(Pty.) Ltd. v. Caterna Ltd
., 2003(5) SA 193 (SCA) at 202 E-F
(paragraph [16]). In that case
Navsa, J.A. and Heher, A.J.A.
,
as he then was, said at 201 D-J (Paragraph [15]):
“
There
is a material difference between suing on a contract for damages
following upon cancellation for breach by the other party (as
in
Baker
v. Probert
1985(3) SA 429 (A), a judgment relied on by the Court
a
quo
)
and having to concede that a contract in which the claim had its
foundation, which has not been breached by either party, is of
no
force and effect. The first-mentioned scenario gives rise to a
distinct contractual remedy:
Baker
at 439A, and restitution may provide a proper measure or substitute
for the innocent party’s damages. The second situation has
been
recognised since Roman times as one in which the contract gives rise
to no rights of action and such remedy as exists is to
be sought in
unjust enrichment, an equitable remedy in which the contractual
provisions are largely irrelevant. As
van
den Heever, J.
said in
Pucjlowski
v. Johnston’s Executors
1946 WLD 1
at 6:
‘
The
object of condiction is the recovery of property in which ownership
has been transferred pursuant to a juristic act which was
ab
initio
unenforceable or has subsequently become inoperative (
causa
non secuta; causa finita
).’
The same principle applies if the contract is void due to a statutory
prohibition (
Wilken v. Kohler
1913 AD 135
at 149-50), in which
case the
condictio indebiti
applies. There is no reason why
contractual and enrichment remedies should be conflated. Caterna’s
case was one of a lawful agreement
which afterwards failed without
fault because its terms could not be implemented. The intention of
the parties was frustrated. The
situation in which the parties found
themselves was analogous to impossibility of performance since they
had made the fate of their
contract dependent upon the conduct of a
third party (KPMG) who was unable or unwilling to perform. In such
circumstances the legal
consequence is the extinction of the
contractual
nexus
: se
De Wet and Van Wyk, “Kontraktereg
en Handelsreg”
5
th
Ed. Vol. 1 at 172 and the
authorities there cited. The law provides a remedy for that case in
the form of the
condictio ob causam finitam
, an offshoot of
the
condictio sine causa specialis
.”
In the present case the first defendant has received nothing under
the undertaking: the plots which he was promised have not been
forthcoming. Consequently there is nothing for him to restore to the
plaintiff as a direct result of the failure of the undertaking
per
se.
The same cannot be said of the plaintiff. In terms of and pursuant
to the undertaking, and because it induced the first defendant
to act
as he did, the plaintiff procured the first defendant’s willingness
to conclude the main agreement. As a result, the plaintiff
received
the benefits of the main agreement, including effective control,
via
the WCT’s two founders’ votes, of the Development Trust and, more
importantly for the purposes of the present litigation, cession
of
the Development Trust’s indebtedness to the WCT. Control of the
Development Trust is, of course, now academic and of no value
either
to the plaintiff or to the WCT because of the sequestration of the
Development Trust. But the defendants, in effect, seek
retrospective
restoration to the WCT of the claims against the Development Trust
which it ceded to the plaintiff. Implicit in what
they seek is the
termination of the main agreement, the conclusion of which was a
benefit which the plaintiff received as a direct
result of the
undertaking.
In my judgment, applying the basic principles of restitution to
which I have referred above, the defendants became entitled to
such
restoration when the undertaking was terminated, which I find took
place retrospectively
ab initio
. When the WCT’s claims
against the Development Trust were ceded to the plaintiff on the 28
th
December, 2000, as I assume that they were, the plaintiff was not
legally entitled to them: on the subsequent sequestration of the
Development Trust on the 15
th
May, 2003 the defendants
could lawfully have compelled the plaintiff to cede them back to the
WCT. The recovery by the defendants
of the claims on behalf of the
WCT from the trustees of the Development Trust (in sequestration),
although it had the effect of extinguishing
the claims by having them
paid, consequently did not constitute a breach by them of their
obligations or of those of the WCT under
the main agreement. In
effect, the plaintiff’s obligation to restore what he has received
under the undertaking has, as a necessary
consequence, the
dissolution of the main agreement: for his duty to restore is not
compatible with the survival of the main agreement.
This means, of
course, that the WCT must likewise give restitution of what it has
received under the main agreement by repaying the
purchase price of
R1 million to the plaintiff, as it has tendered to do.
The above conclusions may seem novel, but after careful
consideration I can find no good reason to reject them. They appear
to
me to follow inevitably from what I regard as the applicable
principles. Mr.
Duminy
, who appears for the defendants, was
not able to refer me to any authority in which similar conclusions
may have been drawn in the
past, and I am not aware of any. However,
in my view this does not preclude them.
Mr.
du Toit
, who replied for the plaintiff in the temporary
absence of his leader, Mr.
van Heerden
, submitted that there
was a
numerus clausus
of recognized grounds on which contracts
can be terminated, and that the termination of an inducing agreement
was not one of them.
I am not aware of any such
numerus clausus
,
and Mr.
du Toit
cited no authority for his proposition. He
also submitted that what the plaintiff was obliged to return to the
first defendant was
an enforceable right, and that the
spes
created by the acceptance of the undertaking, viz. that the first
defendant (or the WCT) would conclude the main agreement, was not
such a right. I do not think that this argument is sound. What the
plaintiff became bound to restore was what he had actually received
under the undertaking: as I have said, this included, on the
assumptions which I have made, actual cession of the Development
Trust’s
indebtedness to the WCT. Restitution to the WCT of these
claims by necessary implication undoes the main agreement and
dissolves
it. I can see no reason in principle why such restitution
should not be an inevitable consequence of the termination of the
undertaking.
Summary
To sum up, I arrive at my conclusions by way
of the following process of reasoning:
The undertaking became impossible of performance; the effect of this
was to terminate the undertaking and render it void
ab initio
;
The undertaking was a prior contract which induced the conclusion of
the main agreement; it was separate and distinct from and
independent of the main agreement; it contained nothing which was
repugnant to or inconsistent or incompatible with the main
agreement;
evidence of its existence or content is thus not
precluded by the parol evidence rule;
A prior inducing contract is analogous to a suspensive condition or
condition precedent;
The failure of a condition precedent puts an end to the conditional
contract which is dependent on its fulfilment; it “dies a
natural
death”;
The supervening impossibility of performance of the undertaking
consequently put an end, not only to the undertaking, but also
to
the main agreement;
It follows that there must be restitution, not only of what the
parties have received, respectively, under the undertaking, but
also
of what they have received under the main agreement: the position is
the same as it would have been had a condition precedent
governing
the main agreement failed.
Conclusion
For the above reasons I conclude that the plaintiff’s claim must
fail and the defendants’ claim-in-reconvention must succeed,
in
part.
In the result I make the following order:
On the plaintiff’s claim-in-convention judgment is given in favour
of the defendants, with costs.
On the defendants’ claim-in-reconvention an order is granted
declaring that the agreement between the parties has been
terminated,
with costs.
__________________________
THRING,
J.