Els v Venter and Another (449/2024) [2025] ZASCA 163 (27 October 2025)

80 Reportability
Consumer Protection Law

Brief Summary

Consumer Protection — Lease agreements — Interpretation of 'transaction' and 'ordinary course of business' under the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 — Appellant and respondents entered into a residential lease agreement, with the respondents later terminating it to facilitate the sale of the property — Appellant contended that the lease fell within the ambit of the Act and could not be terminated without a material breach — High Court held that the Act did not apply to the lease agreement — Appeal upheld in part, with the High Court's order set aside regarding the validity of the termination notice, but the appeal dismissed with costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


Els v Venter and Another (449/2024) [2025] ZASCA 163 (27 October 2025)


Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa; Coram: Schippers JA (with Goosen, Kgoele and Kathree-Setiloane JJA and Modiba AJA concurring). Heard on 1 September 2025; delivered on 27 October 2025.


Reportability


This judgment is reportable because it provides authoritative guidance on the meaning of pivotal terms in the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 (CPA), including “transaction”, “service”, “rental”, and, critically, “in the ordinary course of business”. The Supreme Court of Appeal clarifies that a residential lease concluded by a private owner who is not in the business of letting property does not fall within the ambit of the CPA. The decision thereby delineates the boundaries of the CPA’s reach in the landlord-tenant context, a recurring issue in residential leasing disputes.


The judgment is also significant in its treatment of termination clauses vis-à-vis section 14 of the CPA. It confirms that, even where parties label an agreement as “fixed-term”, section 14 only applies to “consumer agreements” in the ordinary course of a supplier’s business and is further constrained by the 24-month cap in regulation 5(1) of the Consumer Protection Regulations, 2011, absent demonstrable financial benefit to the consumer. This reasoning provides important certainty for drafting and enforcing residential leases, particularly for private lessors.


Finally, the court addresses the proper characterisation of an order compelling a tenant to vacate by a particular date. It holds that such an order, even if framed as declaratory, may constitute an eviction and must comply with the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE). By setting aside the High Court’s vacate-date order, the SCA affirms procedural safeguards for occupants and the necessity of a just and equitable inquiry under PIE, reinforcing constitutional eviction jurisprudence.


Cases Cited


Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality [2012] ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All South African Law Reports 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) South African Law Reports 593 (SCA).


Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investment 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others [2021] ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All South African Law Reports 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) South African Law Reports 100 (SCA).


Mbambisa and Others v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality [2024] ZASCA 151; (2025) 46 Industrial Law Journal 277 (SCA); 2025 (3) South African Law Reports 112 (SCA).


City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and Another [2011] ZACC 33; 2012 (2) Butterworths Constitutional Law Reports 150 (CC); 2012 (2) South African Law Reports 104 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008, sections 1, 2(1), 3, 5(1), 14(2)(a) and 14(2)(b)(ii).


Consumer Protection Regulations, 2011 (Government Notice R293, Government Gazette 34180, 18 April 2011), regulation 5(1).


Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998, sections 4(7) and 4(8).


National Credit Act 34 of 2005.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited.


HEADNOTE


Summary


The appellant, a tenant in a residential property in Stellenbosch, resisted a three-month termination issued by the private owner-lessors under a clause in a second written lease. He contended that the lease was a “fixed-term” consumer agreement governed by section 14 of the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008, which would permit cancellation by the supplier only for material breach by the consumer after notice. The High Court rejected the CPA argument, upheld the termination, and directed the tenant to vacate by a specified date.


On appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the CPA’s definition of “rental” and “service” applies only to agreements concluded by a supplier “in the ordinary course of business,” and that the private lessors, who had let a former family home pending sale and were not in the business of letting, were not suppliers. Consequently, the appellant was not a “consumer” under the Act, section 14 did not apply, and the termination clause was enforceable according to its terms.


The SCA, however, set aside the portion of the High Court’s order requiring the tenant to vacate by a fixed date. It reasoned that such an order effectively constituted an eviction, for which the PIE Act requires a just and equitable inquiry and compliance with statutory safeguards. Save for that, the appeal was dismissed with attorney-and-own-client costs pursuant to the lease.


Key Issues


The first issue was whether the residential lease fell within the ambit of the CPA as a “rental” constituting a “transaction” and “service” provided “in the ordinary course of business.” This required determining whether the private lessors were “suppliers” engaged in the continual marketing of services and whether the tenant was a “consumer” to whom services were marketed in that ordinary course.


The second issue concerned the applicability of section 14 of the CPA to the lease. The court had to decide whether the lease was a qualifying “fixed-term consumer agreement,” whether the 24-month cap in regulation 5(1) applied, and whether section 14(2)(b)(ii) could preclude termination without material breach when the agreement itself included a three-month termination clause triggered by the landlord.


The third issue was the character of the High Court’s order compelling the tenant to vacate by a specified date. The question was whether such an order was merely declaratory of the legal position or whether it amounted to an eviction order that must comply with the procedural and substantive requirements of the PIE Act, including a just and equitable assessment.


Held


Held, that the CPA did not apply to the lease because the lessors were not acting “in the ordinary course of business.” They were private individuals who had let their former family home incidentally while relocating and preparing for a sale; they did not continually market leasing services, and the transaction was not part of any day-to-day commercial letting enterprise.


Held, further, that section 14 of the CPA could not assist the tenant. Even aside from the inapplicability of the CPA to the transaction, the lease—running for 36 months—did not conform to the 24-month cap for fixed-term consumer agreements in regulation 5(1), absent demonstrable financial benefit to the consumer. In any event, the agreement was not a “consumer agreement” as defined, so section 14(2)(b)(ii) could not invalidate the contractual three-month termination clause.


Held, however, that the High Court’s directive requiring the tenant to vacate by a fixed date was, in substance, an eviction order. Such an order must comply with the PIE Act, which mandates a just and equitable inquiry and empowers the court hearing a PIE application to determine appropriate dates for vacation and execution. The SCA accordingly set aside the vacate-date paragraph but otherwise dismissed the appeal with attorney-and-own-client costs.


THE FACTS


The respondents, married to each other, owned a residential property in the Winelands Golf Estate, Stellenbosch. They relocated to Australia in 2018 and, uncertain about the permanence of the move, decided to let their family home rather than immediately sell it. On 1 December 2020, they concluded a lease with the appellant for a three-year term ending 31 December 2023. The tenant complied fully with the first lease.


In February 2023, the tenant sought an extension. By then, the owners had decided to settle in Australia and intended to sell the property. They communicated that any extension would be subject to a landlord’s right to terminate on three months’ written notice and that, upon expiry of that period, the tenant would be required to vacate. The appellant agreed to those terms, and on 4 August 2023, the parties concluded a second written lease, for a further three-year period commencing 1 January 2024 and ending 31 December 2026. Clause 29.2 granted the landlord the right to terminate on three months’ written notice prior to the termination date. The lease also contained an attorney-and-own-client costs clause. A friend of the owners residing locally, Mr Deon Roos, managed the lease.


The property was marketed and sold on 19 December 2023, with vacant possession to be given by 1 April 2024. On 21 December 2023, the lessors invoked clause 29.2 and issued a termination notice requiring the tenant to vacate by 31 March 2024. On the same day, the tenant acknowledged the lessors’ right to issue the notice but invoked the principle of “huur gaat voor koop,” indicating that the lease took precedence over the sale and would be transferred to the purchaser. He nevertheless accepted the notice’s validity in correspondence and was urged to liaise with the purchasers about occupation arrangements.


Thereafter, on 28 January 2024, the tenant’s attorneys adopted a different position. They asserted that the lease fell within section 14 of the CPA as a fixed-term consumer agreement and could be cancelled only for material breach after notice. The lessors launched urgent proceedings in the High Court, seeking declaratory relief that the CPA did not apply, that the termination was valid, and that the tenant should vacate by 1 April 2024. The High Court upheld the lessors’ position on the CPA and termination and ordered the tenant to vacate by 31 March 2024 with costs on an attorney-and-own-client scale. With leave, the tenant appealed to the SCA.


THE ISSUES


The primary legal question was whether the second lease constituted a “transaction” for the supply of a “service” by a “supplier” to a “consumer,” “in the ordinary course of business,” as those terms are used in the CPA. The court had to decide whether a residential lease by a private owner of a former family home, pending sale, meets the statutory threshold for the Act’s application.


A second issue concerned the effect of section 14 of the CPA on the enforceability of the three-month termination clause. The court was asked to determine whether the lease was a “fixed-term consumer agreement” within the meaning of section 14 and regulation 5(1) of the Consumer Protection Regulations, such that a supplier would be constrained to cancel only for material breach by the consumer after 20 business days’ notice.


A third issue related to the nature and permissibility of the High Court’s order that the tenant vacate the property by a specified date. The court had to decide whether that order was, in truth, an eviction order subject to the procedural and substantive protections of the PIE Act or merely a declaratory statement of legal consequences following cancellation of the lease.


ANALYSIS


The SCA approached the interpretive questions by applying the well-established Endumeni methodology, emphasising the primacy of the text read in context and in light of purpose. It reiterated that while context and purpose matter, they cannot be used to produce meanings unmoored from the statutory language. The relevant CPA definitions are anchored in the concept of a “transaction” for the supply of goods or services by a person acting “in the ordinary course of business,” and the definitions of “service,” “rental,” “supplier,” “supply,” and “consumer” interlock around that core idea of an ongoing commercial enterprise.


On the statutory definitions, a “service” includes the provision of access to or use of premises in terms of a “rental.” A “rental,” however, is expressly described as “an agreement for consideration in the ordinary course of business” by which temporary possession or use is delivered to the consumer. The Act defines “business” as “the continual marketing of any goods or services,” and a “supplier” as a person who “markets any goods or services.” Reading these together, the court held that for the CPA to apply to a residential lease, the lessor must be in the business of letting premises—engaged in the continual marketing of such services—and the lessee must be a consumer to whom those services are marketed in that ordinary course.


Applying those concepts to the facts, the respondents were not in the business of letting property. They were a software engineer and a civil engineer who temporarily let their family home when relocating abroad and, after deciding to settle in Australia, let it again pending sale to avoid an encumbrance on the sale process. The lease was a private arrangement to protect an asset rather than a commercial activity of letting stock. Objectively viewed, the transaction did not fall within “the normal and routine day-to-day operations” of a leasing business; it was not part of a continual marketing of rental services. Accordingly, the appellant was not a “consumer” and the respondents were not “suppliers” for purposes of the CPA.


The section 14 argument failed on two levels. First, because the CPA did not apply at all to this lease, the section could not be invoked to invalidate the contractual termination clause. Second, even if the CPA had applied, the lease did not qualify as a “fixed-term consumer agreement” as contemplated by section 14 and regulation 5(1). The term was 36 months, exceeding the 24-month regulatory cap, and there was no basis shown for any demonstrable financial benefit to the consumer justifying a longer period. The court also emphasised that section 14 only regulates “consumer agreements,” and the lease in question was not such an agreement as defined.


The SCA then turned to the vacate-date order. It held that directing a tenant to vacate by a specified date is, in substance, an eviction order, as it deprives a person of occupation against their will. Such an order triggers the safeguards of the PIE Act, including the requirement that a court, after considering all relevant circumstances, determine a just and equitable date for vacation and for execution if necessary. The High Court’s vacate-date order was inconsistent with that framework. It also risked contempt consequences and improperly encroached on the powers of a court seized with a PIE application to undertake the statutorily mandated just and equitable inquiry.


REMEDY


The court granted the appellant limited success by setting aside paragraph 49(iv) of the High Court’s order, which had compelled the appellant and those holding title under him to vacate the property by 31 March 2024. The SCA concluded that this portion of the order amounted to an eviction and had been issued without compliance with the PIE Act’s requirements, including a just and equitable assessment and the determination of appropriate dates under sections 4(7) and 4(8).


In all other respects, the appeal was dismissed. The SCA affirmed that the CPA did not apply to the lease because it was not concluded “in the ordinary course of business,” and thus section 14 of the CPA did not regulate its termination. The termination notice given under clause 29.2 of the lease was valid, and the lease was cancelled with effect from 31 March 2024, as declared by the High Court.


As to costs, the SCA ordered that costs follow the result and be paid on the scale as between attorney and own client, in accordance with the contractual costs clause in the lease. The appellant’s partial success was not substantial enough to warrant a different costs order, particularly given the opportunistic nature of his CPA reliance in the face of the parties’ clear contractual arrangements.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The CPA applies only to transactions for the supply of goods or services by a supplier acting “in the ordinary course of business.” A “rental” within the CPA presupposes that the lessor is engaged in the continual marketing of the service of providing access to premises for consideration. Private, incidental letting of a family home pending sale does not meet this threshold. In such circumstances, the lessor is not a “supplier,” the lessee is not a “consumer,” and the CPA does not regulate their agreement.


Section 14 of the CPA governs only “fixed-term consumer agreements,” which must, absent justification, not exceed 24 months as per regulation 5(1) of the Consumer Protection Regulations. The section’s protection—restricting cancellation by the supplier to instances of material breach after notice—cannot be invoked where the underlying agreement is not a consumer agreement concluded in the ordinary course of the supplier’s business, or where the term exceeds the regulatory cap without demonstrable consumer benefit. Contractual termination clauses in non-CPA residential leases remain enforceable according to their terms.


An order directing a person to vacate property by a specified date is, in effect, an eviction and engages the PIE Act. Courts must ensure compliance with PIE’s procedural and substantive requirements, including the just and equitable inquiry under section 4(7) and the setting of appropriate dates under section 4(8). A court should not pre-empt that process by issuing vacate-date orders outside the PIE framework, and doing so risks both contempt consequences and the circumvention of constitutionally informed eviction safeguards.

SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document in
compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy




THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT

Reportable
Case no: 449/2024
In the matter between:

JOHANN ELS APPELLANT

and

DANIEL WOUTER VENTER FIRST RESPONDENT
MELANIE CHRISTINA VENTER SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Els v Venter and Another (449/2024) [2025] ZASCA 163
(27 October 2025)
Coram: SCHIPPERS, GOOSEN, KGOELE and KATHREE-
SETILOANE JJA and MODIBA AJA
Heard: 1 September 2025
Delivered: This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication on the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand -down of the judgment
is deemed to be 11h00 on 27 October 2025.

Summary: Statutory interpretation – Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 –
meaning and effect of ‘transaction’, ‘service’ and ‘rental’ – whether residential lease

2

agreement concluded ‘in the ordinary course of business’ of lessor – whether order
to vacate property constitutes an eviction.

3

__________________________________________________________________

ORDER
__________________________________________________________________

On appeal from: Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (Slingers
J, sitting as court of first instance):

1 The appeal succeeds in part.
2 Paragraph 49(iv) of the High Court’s order is set aside.
3 Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs on the scale as between
attorney and own client.

__________________________________________________________________

JUDGMENT
__________________________________________________________________
Schippers JA ( Goosen, Kgoele and Kathree -Setiloane JJA and Modiba AJA
concurring)

[1] The centra l issue in t his appeal is whether a residential lease agreement
concluded between the appellant and the respondents , constitutes an agreement for
consideration in the ordinary course of business , as contemplated in the Consumer
Protection Act 68 of 2008 (the Act). The High Court of South Africa, Western Cape
Division (the High Court) held that the Act does not apply to the lease agreement.
The appeal is with its leave.

[2] The facts can be briefly stated. The respondents are married, and are the
registered owners of Erf 5[....] D[...] Z[...], located at 1[...] G[...] Street, D[...] Z[...],

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Winelands Golf Estate, Stellenbosch (the property). Prior to relocating to Australia
in 2018, the property was their primary residence. Not knowing whether their move
to Australia would be permanent, they decided to let the property. On 1 December
2020 they concluded a lease agreement with the appellant for three years, ending on
31 December 2023 (the first lease). The appellant complied fully with his obligations
under the first lease.

[3] In February 2023 the appellant asked the respondents to extend the first lease.
At that point, the respondents had decided that they were going to settle in Australia
and would sell the property. They informed the appellant accordingly and told him
that any further lease would be subject to a notice period of three-months for
termination by the landlord. Upon expiry of that period, the appellant would have to
vacate the property . They did not want a lease to stand in the way of its sale. The
appellant agreed to this.

[4] On 4 August 2023 the parties entered into a new written lease agreement for
a further period of three years, which commenced on 1 January 2024 and would have
terminated on 31 December 2026 (the second lease). Clause 29.2 of the second lease
provided:
‘The Landlord shall be entitled to terminate this agreement on 3 (three) months’ written notice to
the Tenant before termination date.’

[5] The second lease also provided that the appellant would pay costs on an
attorney and own client scale , in the event of the respondents taking any action
against him to enforce the obligations under the lease. The respondents a ppointed
their friend, Mr Deon Roos, who lives in Stellenbosch, to manage the second lease.

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[6] Following the conclusion of the second lease, the property was marketed . It
was sold on 19 December 2023. In terms of t he deed of sale , the purchasers were
granted vacant possession of the property on 1 April 2024.

[7] On 21 December 2023 , in terms of clause 29.2 of the second lease, the
respondents served a notice of termination on the appellant (the termination notice).
In terms of that notice, the appellant was required to vacate the property by 31 March
2024.

[8] The appellant responded to the termination notice on the same day ie,
21 December 2023 . He conceded that the respondents were entitled to issue the
termination notice, but referred to the principle ‘huur gaat voor koop’ (an existing
lease agreement takes precedence over a subsequent sale of property) which, he said,
meant that the second lease was transferred to the new owner , who knew of its
existence. The respondents’ agent, Mr Roos, replied that there was no contract
between the new owner and the appellant, and that he knew that the property had
been sold , which was the reason for the termination notice. Subsequently, the
appellant raised the same issues with the first respondent . He again conceded that
the respondents were entitled to issue the termination notice, but said that he had
hoped the new owner would have done so when the property was transferred . The
first respondent replied that the appellant should negotiate with the new owners, who
were going to occupy the property by 1 April 2024. These facts are common ground.

[9] There was no further communication between the parties until the respondents
received a letter from the appellant’s attorneys on 28 January 2024. In this letter it
was contended that the second lease fell within the ambit of s 14 of the Act; that it
could only be terminated on the ground of a material breach by the appellant; that

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its termination was unlawful and invalid; and that the appellant would hold the
respondents to the terms of the second lease.

[10] After multiple failed attempts to resolve the dispute, the respondents filed an
urgent application in the High Court. They sought a declaration that the second lease
was valid; that the Act did not apply; that the termination notice had properly been
given; and that the appellant should vacate the property by 1 April 2024.

[11] Before the High Court, the appellant stated that he understood that the sale of
the property would be subject to the second lease. Further, he contended that the
lease constitutes a fixed -term agreement concluded in the ordinary course of
business, as contemplated in the Act; and that it could not be terminated in
circumstances where he had not materially breached its terms.

[12] The High Court granted the relief sought by the respondents. It made an order
that the termination notice was valid; that the appellant and those holding title under
him, should vacate the property by 31 March 2024; and that the appellant should pay
the costs of the application on the scale as between attorney and own client.

The relevant provisions of the Act
[13] The starting point is s 5(1) of the Act. It states, inter alia:
‘5(1) This Act applies to–
(a) every transaction occurring within the Republic, unless it is exempted by subsection (2), or in
terms of subsections (3) and (4).’

[14] Section 1 defines a ‘transaction’, inter alia, as follows:
‘(a) in respect of a person acting in the ordinary course of business-

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(i) an agreement between or among that person and one or more other persons for the supply
or potential supply of any goods or services in exchange for consideration; or
(ii) . . .
(iii) the performance by, or at the direction of, that person of any services for or at the direction
of a consumer for consideration.’

[15] The Act defines ‘service’ as including but not limited to:
‘. . .
(e) the provision of-
(v) access to or use of any premises or other property in terms of a rental.’

[16] The Act defines ‘rental’ as follows:
‘“rental” means an agreement for consideration in the ordinary course of business in terms of
which temporary possession of any premises or other property is delivered, at the direction of, or
to the consumer, or the right to use any premises or other property is granted, at the direction of,
or to the consumer, but does not include a lease within the meaning of the National Credit Act.’1

[17] The term ‘ordinary course of business’ is not defined in the Act. However, it
defines ‘business’ as ‘the continual marketing of any goods or services’ ; and
‘market’, when used as a verb, as meaning to ‘promote or supply any goods or
services’.

[18] The Act states that a ‘supplier’ means ‘a person who markets any goods or
services’; and that
‘“supply”, when used as a verb–
(a) in relation to goods, includes sell, rent, exchange and hire in the ordinary course of business
for consideration; or

1 Emphasis added.

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(b) in relation to services, means to sell the services, or to perform or cause them to be performed
or provided, or to grant access to any premises, event, activity or facility in the ordinary course of
business for consideration.’

[19] The Act defines ‘consumer’, inter alia, as follows:
‘“consumer” in respect of any particular goods or services means–
(a) a person to whom those particular goods or services are marketed in the ordinary course of the
supplier’s business.’

[20] Section 14(2)(b)(ii) of the Act, on which the appellant relies, provides:
‘If a consumer agreement is for a fixed term–
(a) . . .
(b) despite any provision of the consumer agreement to the contrary–
(i) . . .
(ii) the supplier may cancel the agreement 20 business days after giving written notice
to the consumer of a material failure by the consumer to comply with the agreement, unless
the consumer has rectified the failure within that time.’

[21] A ‘consumer agreement’ is defined in the Act. It means ‘an agreement
between a supplier and a consumer other than a franchise agreement’.

Is the lease one in the ordinary course of business?
[22] The approach to statutory interpretation is settled. The inevitable starting point
is the language of the provision , understood in the context in which it is used and
having regard to the purpose of the provision .2 Recently this Court affirmed this
approach and said:
‘Interpretation begins with the text and its structure. They have a gravitational pull that is
important. The proposition that context is everything is not a licence to contend for meanings

2 Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality [2012] ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 ALL SA 262 (SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) (Endumeni) para 18.

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unmoored in the text and its structure. Rather, context and purpose may be used to elucidate the
text.’3

[23] The Act provides that ‘rental’, ie an arrangement to rent premises or the act
of renting premises, is ‘an agreement for consideration in the ordinary course of
business’, in terms of which temporary possession of premises is delivered to the
consumer. On its plain wording , the Act requires that the letting of premises must
fall within the ‘ordinary course of business ’ of the lessor , and the lessee must be a
‘consumer’, ie a person to whom ‘services are marketed in the ordinary course of
the supplier’s business’.

[24] In other words, the lessor firstly, must be in the business of letting or hiring
premises. That much is clear from the Act’s definition of business, which means ‘the
continual marketing of any goods or services’. In turn, ‘service’ includes, but is not
limited to ‘access to or use of any premises or other property in terms of a rental’.

[25] Secondly, the rental or lease agreement must fall within the lessor’s ‘ordinary
course of business’ . Black’s Law Dictionary defines ‘course of business’ as ‘the
normal routine in managing a trade or business’.4 The word, ‘ordinary’ means ‘as a
matter of regular practice,5 of common occurrence,6 or usual.7 The concept ‘ordinary
course of business’, is defined as the ‘normal and routine day -to-day operation s
consistent with the past p ractices and customs of the business’.8 These day-to-day
operations are obviously not once-off transactions.

3 Capitec Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investment 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others [2021] ZASCA 99;
[2021] 3 ALL SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA) para 51. See also Mbambisa and Others v Nelson Mandela Bay
Metropolitan Municipality [2024] ZASCA 151; (2025) 46 ILJ 277 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 112 (SCA).
4 Bryan A Garner Black’s Law Dictionary 11 ed (2019).
5 Oxford English Dictionary <https://www.oed.com>.

5 Oxford English Dictionary <https://www.oed.com>.
6 Collins English Dictionary <https://www.collinsdictionary.com>.
7 Cambridge English Dictionary <https://dictionary.cambridge.org>.
8 <https://ca.practicallaw.thomsonreuters.com>.

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[26] Whether a lease is within the lessor’s ordinary course of business is an
objective test that requires an examination of the relevant transaction in its factual
setting. This depends on what business is conducted by the supplier in question and
how it is carried on. The issue is not whether the transaction is ordinary, but whether
it is carried out in the ordinary course of the supplier’s business.

[27] Applied to the present case, the respondents are not in the business of letting
property for consideration. They were not engaged in any trade, or business – the
continual marketing of services – when they concluded the second lease with the
appellant. Thi s is not a case where property was let from rental housing stock.
Rather, the first respondent, a software engineer and the second respondent , a civil
engineer, in 2018 rented out their family home in South Africa after moving with
their children to Australia. They did not want to sell the property immediately in
case their move was unsuccessful. Put simply, the second lease constitutes an
agreement between private individuals, concluded to protect an asset pending its
sale, after the respondents decided to settle in Australia. That is also how the
appellant understood the transaction.

[28] Thus, the appellant is not a ‘consumer’ as contemplated in the Act. The
respondents are not suppliers, and the second lease is not an agreement concluded in
the course of any trade or business conducted by them for consideration, let alone in
the ordinary course of business. Solely for these reasons, the appeal falls to be
dismissed.

[29] It follows that the appellant’s reliance on s 14(2)(b)(ii) of the Act is misplaced.
In any event, the second lease is not a fixed-term agreement as envisaged in the Act.
Section 14(2)(a) provides that ‘if a consumer agreement is for a fixed term . . . that

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term must not exceed the maximum period, if any, prescribed in terms of subsection
(4) with respect to that category of consumer agreement’. Regulation 5(1) prescribes
the maximum period of a fixed-term consumer agreement – in this case, 24 months
from the date of signature by the consumer , unless a longer period is expressly
agreed with the consumer , and the supplier can show a demonstrable financial
benefit to the consumer. 9 The ten ure of the second lease is 36 months , which is
destructive of the appellant’s reliance on s 14(2)(b) of the Act. Aside from this, the
second lease is not a ‘consumer agreement’ as defined in the Act.

[30] The plain wording of the concept ‘rental agreement’ is buttressed by the
immediate context. Neither respondent is a ‘supplier’ – a person who markets goods
or services – as defined in the Act. They are not engaged in marketing goods or
services: they do not ‘promote or supply any goods or services’ to consumers. What
all of this shows, is that the Act applies only to residential leases which form the
subject of services that are continually marketed for consideration to consumers, in
the ordinary course of the business of the lessor or a person acting on its behalf or at
its direction.

[31] The above interpretation is further reinforced by the purposes of the Act.
These include the promotion and advancement of the social economic welfare of
consumers by, inter alia, establishing a legal framework for a fair , accessible ,
efficient and sustainable consumer market. The Act is also aimed at reducing and
ameliorating disadvantages experienced in accessing the supply of goods or services

9 Regulation 5(1)(a) of the Consumer Protection Regulations published under GN R293 in Government Gazette 34180
of 18 April 2011, provides:
‘For purposes of section 14(4)(a) of the Act, the maximum period of a fixed-term consumer agreement is 24 months
from the date of signature by the consumer –

from the date of signature by the consumer –
(a) unless such longer period is expressly agreed with the consumer and the supplier can show a demonstrable
financial benefit to the consumer.’

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by vulnerable, low-income consumers who live in remote areas or communities, and
whose ability to read and understand advertisements, agreements and notices is
limited because of low literacy, vision impairment or limited fluency. Its purposes
also include promoting fa ir business practices ; and protecting consumers from
unconscionable, unfair , unreasonable and unjust trade practices , and deceptive,
misleading, unfair or fraudulent conduct . In short, the Act is directed at protecting
the rights of historically disadvantaged persons who are easily exploited , and
promoting their full participation as consumers.10 Section 2(1) provides that it ‘must
be interpreted in a manner that gives effect to the purposes set out in section 3’.

[32] So construed, the Act excludes agreements such as the second lease , which
was not concluded with a supplier in the ordinary course of business, by a lessee
such as the appellant – the Chief Group Economist of Old Mutual – who is not a
vulnerable, low-income consumer. The appellant freely concluded the second lease
and was in an equal bargaining position as the respondents. He was well aware of its
terms, in particular clause 29.2, and the circumstances under which it was concluded.
More specifically, he knew that the termination notice would be given upon the sale
of the property, and in that event, undertook to vacate it.


10 The preamble to the Act states, inter alia:
‘The people of South Africa recognise-
That apartheid and discriminatory laws of the past have burdened the nation with unacceptably high levels of poverty,
illiteracy and other forms of social and economic inequality;
That it is necessary to develop and employ innovative means to-
(a) fulfil the rights of historically disadvantaged persons and to promote their full participation as consumers;
(b) protect the interests of all consumers, ensure accessible, transparent and efficient redress for consumers who

are subjected to abuse or exploitation in the marketplace; and
(c) to give effect to internationally recognised customer rights;
That recent and emerging technological changes, trading methods, patterns and agreements have brought, and will
continue to bring, new benefits, opportunities and challenges to the market for consumer goods and services within
South Africa; and
That it is desirable to promote an economic environment that supports and strengthens a culture of consumer rights
and responsibilities, business innovation and enhanced performance.’

13

[33] It follows that the second lease is not an agreement for consideration in the
ordinary course of business, as contemplated in the Act. The inescapable inference
to be drawn from the facts is that the appellant’s reliance on the Act is opportunistic
and contrived.

[34] What remains is the appellant's submission that ‘it is reasonable to infer that
the property was let to other parties between November 2018 and September 2020’.
It can be dealt with briefly. First, the inference has no foundation in the evidence –
it was raised for the first time in the appellant’s heads of argument. Second, the
inference is pure speculation.

The order that the appellant vacate the property
[35] It is submitted that the High Court erred in making the order in paragraph
49(iv) of its judgment, directing the appellant and all those holding title under him
to vacate the property by 31 March 2024. The appellant contends that this is an
eviction order, which is incompetent because at the stage when the respondents
sought an order that the termination notice was valid, he was not an unlawful
occupier as envisaged in the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (the PIE Act).

[36] The respondents submit that there is nothing wrong with the High Court
declaring that the appellant should vacate the property on the date on which he
becomes an unlawful occupier. That order, the respondents say, is simply a statement
of the position in law, and the High Court stopped short of ordering the appellant’s
eviction.

14

[37] Given the High Court’s finding in paragraph 48 of its judgment, that the
appellant was not in illegal occupation of the property and there was no basis on
which the court could evict him, the order in paragraph 49(iv) is inexplicable and
cannot be sustained, essentially for two reasons. First, it is in effect an eviction order:
the PIE Act defines ‘eviction’ as meaning ‘to deprive a person of occupation of a
building or structure, or the land on which such building or structure is erected,
against his or he r will’. Further, in the event that the appellant did not vacate the
property by 31 March 2024, the respondents would have been entitled to apply to
the High Court for an order holding him in contempt of the order in paragraph 49(iv).
Second, the latter order cuts across the power of a court seized with an application
under the PIE Act, to (a) make a just and equitable order under s 4(7), for the eviction
of the appellant and other persons living on the property, after considering the
relevant circumstances;11 and (b) determine a just and equitable date on which they
must vacate the property, and the date on which an eviction order may be carried out
if they fail to do so, as contemplated in s 4(8). 12 If the court intended merely to
declare the position in law, then the order in paragraph 49(iv) is superfluous, since
paragraph 49(iii) of the High Court’s order states that the termination notice
cancelled the second lease with effect from 31 March 2024.

11 Section 4(7) of the PIE Act provides:
‘If an unlawful occupier has occupied the land in question for more than six months at the time when the proceedings
are initiated, a court may grant an order for eviction if it is of the opinion that it is just and equitable to do so, after
considering all the relevant circumstances, including, except where the land is sold in a sale of execution pursuant to
a mortgage, whether land has been made available or can reasonably be made available by a municipality or other

organ of state or another land owner for the relocation of the unlawful occupier, and including the rights and needs of
the elderly, children, disabled persons and households headed by women.’
See City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and Another [2011]
ZACC 33; 2012 (2) BCLR 150 (CC); 2012 (2) SA 104 (CC) paras 37 and 39.
12 Section 4(8) of the PIE Act states:
‘If the court is satisfied that all the requirements of this section have been complied with and that no valid defence has
been raised by the unlawful occupier, it must grant an order for the eviction of the unlawful occupier, and determine-
(a) a just and equitable date on which the unlawful occupier must vacate the land under the circumstances; and
(b) the date on which an eviction order may be carried out if the unlawful occupier has not vacated the land on the
date contemplated in paragraph (a).’

15

[38] Paragraph 49(iv) of the High Court’s order must therefore be set aside. The
appellant has not achieved substantial success in the appeal. There is no reason why
costs (as contractually agreed) should not follow the result.

[39] In the result, the following order is made:
1 The appeal succeeds in part.
2 Paragraph 49(iv) of the High Court’s order is set aside.
3 Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs on the scale as between
attorney and own client.





____________________
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL

16


Appearances

For the appellant: R Randall
Instructed by: Marlon Shevelew & Associates Inc, Cape Town
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein.

For the respondent: P S van Zyl
Instructed by: Vos Maree Incorporated, Stellenbosch
Honey Attorneys Inc, Bloemfontein.