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SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this
document in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 66477/20
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
DATE: 26 SEPTEMBER 2025
SIGNATURE OF JUDGE:
In the matter between:
NGWAKO THOMAS THOBAKGALE 1st Applicant
LEAH NANDI THOBAKGALE 2nd Applicant
NANDI TRANSPORT (PTY) LTD 3rd Applicant
And
EVANS JESAYA CHABALALA 1st Respondent
CONSTANCE CHABALALA 2nd Respondent
MS MOFFAT ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD 3rd Respondent
ORDER
1. The exception is upheld.
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2. The Plaintiffs are granted 20 (twenty) days to amend their amended
particulars of claim.
3. Each party to pay their own costs.
JUDGEMENT
FLATELA J
Introduction
[1] This is an opposed exception to the Plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim on
the ground that it lacks the averments necessary to sustain the relief sought, in that
the oral sale agreement concluded with the Plaintiffs to purchase the property
described as ERF 1[…], Silverton Extension 7, Township, Gauteng Province, owned
by the First Defendant (the property) is invalid as it does not comply with the
requirements of Section 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act
1 (the Act) read together
with the definitions of the Deed of Alienation. This judgment concerns the exception
to Claim A.
[2] On 12 December 2022, the Plaintiffs instituted action proceedings against the
Defendants for an order inter alia requiring that the Defendants take all necessary
steps to comply with and effect the transfer of the property described as ERF 1[ …],
Silverton Extension 7, Township, Gauteng Province, owned by the First Defendant (the
property), to the Plaintiffs. If the Defendants fail to do so within 30 days of the
Judgement or Court Orders, authorise the sheriff with jurisdiction within the area of the
property to assist in signing on behalf of the Defendants or to take such necessary
steps on their behalf.
[3] The claim is based on an oral sale agreement concluded by the parties in
2012. The Plaintiffs argue that they fulfilled the contract's conditions by paying the
1 Alienation of Land Act, 1981 (Act No. 68 of 1981).
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full purchase price of R900,000 (Nine Hundred Thousand), with R600,000 paid to the
First Defendant's home loan account and R300,000 to the First Defendant's personal
account.
[4] The Defendants admitted that an oral agreement for the sale of their property
was made with the Plaintiffs; however, they argue that the sale agreement does not
meet the statutory requirements, specifically that it was not put in writing and is
therefore invalid.
Parties
[5] The First Plaintiff is Evans Jesaya Chabalala, a male, residing at 9[ …] B[…]
Street, Silverton, Pretoria, Gauteng Province. The Second Plaintiff is Constance
Chabalala, a female, residing at 9[ …] B[...] Street, Silverton, Gauteng Province. The
Third Plaintiff is M.S Moffat Enterprise (Pty) Ltd, a company with limited liability and
incorporated in terms of the Companies Act 71 of 2002, with its registered address at
02716 Mamelodi West, Pretoria, Gauteng Province.
[6] The First Defendant is Ngwako Thomas Thobakgale, an adult male
businessman and resident at 2[…] C[…] Sable Hill, Roodeplaat, Gauteng Province.
The Second Defendant is Leah Nandi Thobakgale, an adult female businesswoman
and resident at 21 C […], Sable Hill, Roodepoort, Gauteng Province. The Third
Defendant is Nandi Transport (Pty) Ltd, a company with limited liability and
incorporated in terms of the Companies Act 71 of 1977.
Factual Background
[7] The Plaintiffs issued a combined summons on 12 December 2020. They seek
various relief against the Defendants. The Plaintiffs assert that in June 2012, at
Silverton, Pretoria, the First and Second Plaintiff entered into an oral contract of sale
with the First Defendant to purchase the property owned by the First Defendant at a price of
R900,000.00 (Nine Hundred Thousand Rand). It is alleged that the terms of the agreement
were as follows:
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i. R600,000.00 (Six Hundred Thousand Rand) was to be paid into the
Standard Bank Home Loans and Bond Account/ Home Loans, held in the
names of the First Defendant.
ii. The remaining R300.000.00(Three Hundred Thousand Rand) was paid
into the First Defendant’s personal Bank Account.
[8] It is further alleged that the First and Second Plaintiffs complied with the
payment terms of the sale agreement, as a total of R600,000.00 (Six Hundred
Thousand Rand) was paid into the First Defendant’s Standard Bank Home Loans
Account, number 2[…], on 19 and 20 September 2014. The remaining R300,000.00
(Three Hundred Thousand Rand) was paid into the First Defendant’s personal
account.
[9] The Plaintiffs allege that on or about 12th May 2015, the First and Second
Defendants were issued with a title deed or deed of transfer for the property, and the
Bonds registered over the property were cancelled. Despite the demand, the First
Defendant refuses to transfer the property to them.
[10] On 4 March 2021, the Defendants filed a notice of intention to except the
particulars of claim on the ground that it lacks the averments necessary to sustain the
relief sought, in that the oral sale agreement they entered into with the defendants to
purchase the property described as ERF 1[ …], Silverton Extension 7, Township,
Gauteng Province, owned by the First Defendant (the property), is invalid as it does
not comply with the requirements of Section 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act (the
Act), read together with the definitions of the Deed of Alienation.
[11] On 23 April 2021, the First and Second Plaintiff filed their amended
particulars of claim. In their amended particulars of claim, they averred as follows:
6.
“The First and Second Plaintiffs demanded the passing and transfer of the
property, and despite commissioning a professional conveyancer, who agreed
to assist in the transfer of the property, the defendants rejected and refused to
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sign the relevant documents in compliance with the legal transfer of property.
7.
“Wherefore the First and Second defendant be compelled to sign the relevant
transfer documents before a conveyancer appointed by the Plaintiffs for the
transfer of the property”
[12] The defendant filed an exception in terms of Rule 23 of the Uniform Rules,
excepting the Plaintiff’s Claim “A” of the amended particulars of claim served on 26
April 2021, as lacking averments to sustain the relief sought in paragraph 7 on the
following grounds:
1. The First and Second Plaintiff’s reliance upon an alleged oral contract
of sale in paragraph 4 of their particulars of claims does not comply with the
requirements of Section 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act No.68 of 1984(the
Act read together with the definitions of the Deed of Alienation and contract
where such are found in Section 1 of the Act.
2. By not having complied with Section 2(1) of the Act as aforesaid, no
agreement came into effect ab initio
3. In the premises aforesaid, the First and Second plaintiff cannot compel
the First and Second to agree to transfer immovable property, nor can the
Plaintiff request the court to create an agreement by authorising the relevant
sheriff to sign an agreement on the defendant’s behalf
4. In the further premises aforesaid, prayer (1) of paragraph 11 of the first
and second plaintiff’s amended particulars is equally legally unsustainable.
[13] In response to the exception, the Plaintiff submitted that, notwithstanding non-
compliance with the provisions of section 2(1), the oral sale agreement is valid ab initio
in terms of Section (28)(2) of the Act in that the Plaintiff performed in terms of the
contract.
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The parties’ contentions The Plaintiff’s contention
[14] The plaintiffs argue that Section 2(1) of the Act recognises contracts in any
form, including verbal or oral agreements. The Plaintiff further contends that Section
2(1), read together with Section 28(2), validates non -compliant alienations if the
alienee has fully performed and the land has been transferred. The Plaintiffs further
assert that they have fully performed the terms of the deed of alienation and the
contract.
[15] To support the argument that the oral agreement, which would otherwise be
invalid under the Act, has been validated by section 28(2), the Applicant submitted the
following:
“4. The Plaintiffs submit that a proper case has been made in "Claim A", in
that there was an agreement between:
4.1 Owner and seller being the Plaintiffs and Defendants.
4.2 The object of sale is the residential house at: ERF 1[ …] SILVERTON
EXTERNTION 7 TOWNSHIP, REGISTRATION DIVISION: GAUTENG
PROVINCE
4.3 Agreement as to price payable was duly paid.
4.4 The plaintiffs have been in occupation since 2012.
[16] The plaintiffs relied on the matter of McKelvey v. Cowan, NO. 1980 (4) SA
525
(Z) at 526 D-E, emphasising that a pleading is not excusable if evidence could disclose a
cause of action.
[17] The plaintiff prays for dismissal of the exception application with costs, as
statutory compliance is allowed in terms of Section 28(2) of the Act.
The Defendant’s contentions
[18] The defendants argue that the plaintiffs' claim based on an oral contract for the
sale of land is excipiable under Rule 23(1) due to non-compliance with section 2(1) of
the Alienation of Land Act (the Act). This section requires that contracts for the
alienation of land be in writing, signed by the parties or their agents with written
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authority; therefore, oral contracts for the sale of land are null and void.
[19] The Defendants further argue that the plaintiffs have neither pleaded nor can
they plead that the property has been transferred to their names or that there is a valid
deed of alienation. The Defendants contend that, without a valid deed of alienation,
the payments claimed by the plaintiffs cannot be regarded as fulfilling a contract of
alienation.
[20] The defendants contend that the oral contract is void due to non- compliance
with the statutory formalities, and therefore, no cause of action exists for the plaintiffs
regarding claim A. They further argue that the only legal basis for enforcing such a
contract would be compliance with the Alienation of Land Act or a valid deed of
alienation, neither of which applies in this case.
[21] The defendants contend that the plaintiffs cannot invoke Section 28(2) of the
Alienation of Land Act, which offers an exception when a purchaser has paid the full
purchase price, and the property has been transferred to them. Since no transfer has
occurred to the plaintiffs, this exception does not apply to their claim. The defendants
rely heavily on the matter of Legator McKenna Inc. and Another v Shea and Others.
2
[22] The defendants seek an order dismissing the plaintiff’s claim A with costs.
Issue
[23] The issue to be determined is whether the alienation of land through an oral
agreement of sale remains valid ab initio under section 28(2) of the Act, despite non-
compliance with section 2(1). If it is valid, then the exception must be dismissed. If the
alienation is void ab initio due to non- compliance with section 2(1), the exception
should be upheld.
[24] Section 2 (1) provides as follows:
2 Legator McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others 2010 (1) SA 35 (SCA) at 44 para [21]
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“No alienation of land after the commencement of this section shall, subject to
the provisions of section 28, be of any force or effect unless it is contained in
a deed of alienation signed by the parties thereto or by their agents acting on
their written authority”.
[25] Section 28 (2) reads as follows:
Any alienation which does not comply with the provisions of section 2 (1) shall
in all respects be valid ab initio if the alienee had performed in full in terms of
the deed of alienation or contract and the land in question has been
transferred to the alienee”.
Discussion
[26] The courts have had numerous occasions to examine the legal requirements
of a contract of purchase and sale under the Act. It is now settled that one of the formal
legal requirements is that the material terms of the contract must be reduced to writing.
[27] Dealing with the predecessor of the Act, more than 40 years ago, in Johnston
v Leal
3 Corbett JA said the following regarding the legal effect of this legal
requirement:
‘ It had been held and in my opinion correctly so - that what section 1(1), or its
predecessors , require is that the whole contract of sale, or at any rate all the
material terms thereof [must] be reduced to writing…The material terms of the
contract are not confined to those prescribing the essentialia of a contract of
sale, viz the parties to the contract, the merx and the pretium , but include, in
addition, all other material terms. It is not easy to define what constitutes a
material term. Nor is it necessary in the present case to do so since clause 11,
upon which the dispute turns and which has the effect (if operative) of
suspending the whole contract pending fulfilment of a condition as to the
procurement of a loan on the security of a first mortgage bond to be passed
3 1980 (3) SA 927 (AD)
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over the property sold and also of causing the contract to be “automatically
cancelled” in the event of such a loan not being obtained, would clearly
constitute a material term of the contract.’
[28] The learned judge stated in the following paragraphs that:
“the result of non-compliance with section (1)(1) is that the agreement
concerned is of no force and effect - void ab initio and cannot confer any right
of Action. (see Wilken v Kohler
4 1913 AD 135, at pp. 142 -3, 149
[29] In Wilken5 the court held that:
“[a] transaction which has no force or effect is necessarily void ab initio and
can in no circumstances confer any right of action.”
6
[30] In the subsequent paragraph, the learned judge said:
“It by no means follows that because a court cannot enforce a contract which
the law says has no force, it would therefore be bound to upset the result of
such a contract which the parties had carried through in accordance with its
terms.”
7
[31] Most recently in Cooper N O and Another v Curro Heights Properties(Pty)
Ltd
8 Meyer JA, writing for the unanimous court, said:
“Section 2(1) requires the whole contract of sale – its material terms – to be
reduced to writing signed by or on behalf of the parties. The material terms of
the contract are not confined to those prescribing the essentialia of a contract
4 Wilken v Kohler 1913 AD 135
5 Wilken v Kohler 1913 AD 135
6 Wilken at p. 143
7 Wilken at p. 144
8 Cooper N O and Another v Curro Heights Properties (Pty) Ltd (1300/2022) [2023] ZASCA 66 (16
May 2023)
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of sale, namely the parties to the contract, the merx and the pretium. Generally
speaking, these terms, and especially the essentialia, must be set forth with
sufficient accuracy and particularity to enable the identity of the parties, the
amount of the purchase price and the identity of the subject -matter of the
contract, and also the force and effect of other material terms of the contract,
to be ascertained without recourse to evidence of an oral consensus between
the parties.
9 Whether a term constitutes a material term is determined with
reference to its effect on the rights and obligations of the parties.10
[32] To substantiate their claim that the transaction is valid, the plaintiffs rely on
Section 28(2) of the Act. The plaintiffs assert that they have paid the purchase price in
full and have been occupying the property since 2012, maintaining that they have
fulfilled their obligations under the contract. They argue that the contract has been
validated in accordance with Section 28(2).
[33] Bloem J, dealing with the provisions of section 28 (2) of the Act, in Bester
N.O v Van Wyk
11 , held that:
“[7] The use of the words “or contract” in section 28(2) indicates that the
legislature made provision for an instrument as an alternative to a deed of
alienation in terms of which land may be alienated. The subsection refers to
performance by the alienee in terms of a deed of alienation or a contract. I
understand section 28 (2) to mean that an alienation of land will,
notwithstanding non-compliance with the provisions of section 2 (1), be valid if:
(a) the alienee had performed in full in terms of the deed of alienation; or
(b) the alienee had performed in full in terms of the contract; and
(c) the land in question has been transferred to the alienee.
9 Johnstone fn 9 above at 937G-938C.
10 Rockbreakers fn 9 above para 8.
11 Bester N.O v Van Wyk (2845/2012)[2016 ZAECGHC 37
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[34] In paragraph 8 of the judgment, the learned judge held that:
“The alienation shall be valid if the defendant had performed in full in terms of
the oral contract. In terms of section 1 of the Act, “contract”:
“(a) means a deed of alienation under which land is sold against payment by
the purchaser to, or to any person on behalf of, the seller of an amount of
money in more than two instalments over a period exceeding one year;
(b) includes any agreement or agreements which together have the same
import, whatever form the agreement or agreements may take”.
[9] A contract accordingly includes any agreement or agreements which have
the same import as a deed of alienation under which land is sold against
payment by the purchaser to the seller of an amount of money in more than
two instalments over a period exceeding one year. Furthermore, in terms of
the definition of “contract”, it is immaterial whether it is in the form of an oral or
written contract”.
[35] In that case, an oral agreement was concluded between a mother and a
daughter, where the mother sold her property for R300,000, and a registration of the
property had taken place, despite the purchase price not being paid in full. The learned
judge held that the purchase price was not paid in full; therefore, the requirements of
28(2)(b) were not met even though the property was already transferred to the
defendant.
[36] Recently, In Daniels and Fourie and others
12, Eksteen J, dealing with the
requirements of sec 28 (2), he said:
“That's 28 requires full performance by all parties to the contract. Partial
performance, or full performance by one of the parties, would not suffice to
clothe the transaction with validity.
13
[37] Based on the evidence before me, it is clear that not all parties involved have
12 Daniels and Another v Fourie and Others (24932/2019) 2023 ZAECPEHC 50
13 Christie’s: The Law of Contract in South Africa (8th ed) p. 158
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fully performed. The Plaintiffs argue that they paid the full purchase price and,
therefore, they have fully fulfilled their obligations under the contract. Unfortunately for
the plaintiff, Section 28(2) does not assist their case because the property had not yet
been transferred to them; hence, Section 28(2) is not applicable. Section 28(2) affirms
the validity of a sale that might otherwise be invalid if the parties had not fully
performed according to the oral agreement. For example, in this case, if the plaintiff
had paid the full purchase price and the Defendants had transferred the property to
the Plaintiffs, section 28(2) would legitimise the transaction. In the current case, the
parties had not fully performed; therefore, the alienation is void ab initio due to non-
compliance with section 2(1).
[38] The Plaintiff also relied on the decision of this division in a matter of Masango
v Masango and Another
14 where the Full Bench of this division set aside the court's
order, which had upheld the exception.
[39] The Masango case is distinguishable from the current case in that, in the
Masango matter, the appellant’s pleaded case is summarised at paragraph 10 of the
judgment as follows:
“ [10] In the case pleaded by the appellant, the orders sought by him are: “an
order that the 1
st and/or 2nd Defendant take all necessary steps to uphold and
give effect to the oral agreement reached between the Plaintiff and the 1 st
Defendant. . .” The order that is sought by him is not for the transfer of
any immovable property but rather in its terms, an order for specific
performance in respect of the oral agreement pleaded and for the second
respondent to give effect to it.
[11] The Court a quo proceeded from the premise that the case pleaded was
one which had as its “effect” the alienation of immovable property which can
only be effected in terms of a written agreement as provided for in section 2(1)
of the Alienation of Land Act.”15
of the Alienation of Land Act.”15
14 Masango v Masango N.O. and Another (A296/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 602.
15 68 of 1981.
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[40] In the current case, the Plaintiff is seeking an order that the First and Second
Defendants be compelled to sign the relevant transfer documents before a
conveyancer appointed by the Plaintiffs for the transfer of the property. The effect of
this order is the alienation of the immovable property, which can only be affected in
terms of a written agreement as provided for in sec 2(1) of the Act.
[41] In my view, for the reasons set above, the exception must succeed.
[42] As a result, I make the following order:
1. The exception is upheld.
2. The Plaintiffs are granted 20 (twenty) days to amend their amended
particulars of claim.
3. Each party to pay their own costs.
FLATELA LULEKA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ and or
parties’ representatives by email and by being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and
time for the hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 26 September 2025.
Appearances
Counsel for the Applicant: Adv M.L Khomola
Instructed by: Mashiyi S Attorneys
Counsel for the Respondents: Adv L.J.L Mokoape
Instructed by: Mwim Attorneys
Date of the Hearing: 11 February 2025
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Date of the Judgement: 26 September 2025