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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No.: 19022/2017
In the matter between:
TSIU VINCENT MATSEPE N.O First Plaintiff
CHAVONNES BADENHORST ST CLARE COOPER N.O Second Plaintiff
JUNITA CAROLINA KLOPPERS-LOURENS N.O Third Plaintiff
(in their capacity as joint liquidators of OK Kloof Plase CC
in liquidation)
and
KRISTOFFEL HENDRIK FOURIE N.O First Defendant
HEINIE FOURIE N.O Second Defendant
(in their capacity as duly appointed trustees of the
Kwartelrivier Trust, I[...])
MELKBRON BOERDERY CC Third Defendant
EDMUND ELS Fourth Defendant
,,.. ... ~
Date heard: 10 December 2025
Judgment delivered: 27 January 2026
JUDGMENT
(APPLICATION FOR ABSOLUTION FROM THE INSTANCE)
___________________________________________________________________
GOLDEN, AJ:
1. The plaintiffs are the duly appointed liquidators of OK Kloof Plase CC (“ OK Kloof”).
They have two main claims as well as a number of alternative claims against the
defendants. The main claim is based on the rei vindicatio, alternatively the actio ad
exhibendum for, (i) the return of dairy cows, alternatively the value thereof and (i i) the
return of sheep, alternatively the value of the sheep. The plaintiffs also seek the setting
aside of certain dispositions in terms of Sections 26, 29 and 31 of the Insolvency Act,
24 of 1936 (“ the Act ”). For purposes of this judgment, I do not need to set out or
address the various alternative claims in detail.
2. The subject matter of the action is what is commonly referred to as a consumption for
loan agreement, a lease agreement for the lease of livestock (in this case, cows and
sheep) which the lessee uses in order to earn an income. The current legal position is
that ownership of the livestock passes to the lessee pursuant to the agreement. There
does not appear to be disagreement among counsel that this is the legal effect of the
agreement. There is, however, disagreement in relation to the facts underlying the
action as to whether these agreements had been cancelled and/or validly terminated,
which, according to the first and second defendants, the trustees of the Kwartelrivier
Trust (‘the T rust”) and the fourth defendant, Mr Els, brought an end to the lessee’s
ownership. Ownership is central to the plaintiffs’ claims as liquidators of the O.K
Kloof Plase CC insolvent estate.
3. The plaintiffs have presented their evidence and have closed their case. Save for the
third defendant who has since settled with the plaintiffs, the Trust and the fourth
defendant, Mr Els, now apply for absolution from the instance. They contend that the
plaintiffs have failed to present a case to which they need to answer.
4. The effect of the grant of absolution is that the plaintiff is non -suited. Absolution
should thus be granted sparingly.
5. The test for absolution was first set out in Claude Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel 1976
(4) SA 403 (A) at 409H and subsequently confirmed in Carmichele v Minister of
Safety and Security [2001] ZACC 22; 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC).
6. The Supreme Court of Appeal in Gordon Lloyd Page & Associates v Rivera 2001 (1)
SA 88 (SCA) confirmed the test for absolution as follows:
“The test to be applied is not whether the evidence led by the plaintiff
established what would finally b e required to be established, but whether there
is evidence upon which a Court, applying its mind reasonably to such evidence ,
could or might (not should, nor ought to) find for the plaintiff.”1
7. Thus, the test is not whether the evidence led establishes what would finally be
required to be proved at the end of the trial for the plaintiff to succeed on a balance of
probabilities.
8. Harms JA in Gordon Lloyd Page amplified the test as follows:
1 Gordon Lloyd Page & Associates v Francesco Rivera & another 2001 (1) SA 88 (SCA) at paragraph
[2].
“This implies that a plaintiff has to make out a prima facie case – in the sense
that there is evidence relating to all the elements of the claim – to survive
absolution because without such evidence no court could find for the plaintiff …
As far as inferences f rom the evidence are concerned, the inference relied upon
by the plaintiff must be a reasonable one, not the only reasonable one …
Having said this, absolution at the end of the plaintiff’s case, in the ordinary
course of events, will nevertheless be granted sparingly but wh en the occasion
arises a court should order it in the interests of justice.”2
9. The plaintiffs must make out a prima facie case to survive absolution.
10. Central to the plaintiffs’ claims, is the issue of the ownership of the cows and the sheep
which were the subject of a consumption for loan agreement. The conclusion of these
agreements is not in dispute. The plaintiffs, as the liquidators of OK Kloof, contend
that they on behalf of the insolvent estate are the owners of the livestock given that the
various lease agreements concluded between the parties were loans for consumption,
and that the legal position is that ownership passes upon delivery of the livestock to the
lessee. The defendants do not dispute that ownership is transferred pursuant to such a
contract and upon delivery of the livestock.
11. The nature of the loan for consumption contract was explained in Keyter N.O. v Keevy
(CA311/2017) [2018] ZAECGHC, a decision of the full bench of the Eastern Cape
Division of the High Court , Grahamstown . The judgment confirms that ownership
does not vest in the lessor but in the lessee or the possessor, an d what the lessor retains
is a personal right to claim the delivery of livestock of equal number and value to that
which had been delivered to the lessee at the commencement of the lease.3
12. The plaintiffs led evidence on the lease agreements which were concluded between
12. The plaintiffs led evidence on the lease agreements which were concluded between
OK Kloof and the Trust in respect of the lease of 275 dairy cows. The y also led
evidence of the lease concluded between OK Kloof and Melkbron, the third defendant
2 Ibid at paragraph [2]
3 Keyter N.O. v Keevy (CA311/2017) [2018] ZAECGHC at paragraph [20]
(who has since settled with the plaintiffs) in respect of the lease of 440 sheep and the
lease agreement between the fourth defendant and OK Kloof for the lease of 554
sheep.
13. These agreements are not disputed, and the first, second and fourth defendants accept
as a matter of law, that OK Kloof as the lessee became the owner of the livestock
pursuant to the delivery of the animals.
14. Given that the plaintiffs rely on the rei vindicatio, they must prove as the liquidators of
the insolvent estate in relation to the Trust and the claim for the dairy cows: (i) that OK
Kloof was the owner of the dairy cows and, (ii) the Trust is or was in possession of the
dairy cows. The rei vindicatio is aimed at the return of the livestock, alternatively, the
value thereof. They also rely on the actio ad exhibendum which requires, in addition to
ownership, that the defendants were in possession of the l ivestock knowing that OK
Kloof was the owner of the livestock and that the loss of possession was mala fide.
This of course applies to the claims in respect of the cows and sheep.
15. The defendants contend that the loan for consumption agreements were validly
terminated and/or cancelled by the time that OK Kloof was declared insolvent.
Counsel for the Trust, Mr de Wet, argued that these loan for consumption agreements
were no longer extant at the time that the plaintiffs’ cause of action arose which is fatal
to the plaintiffs’ claims. Counsel for the fourth defendant, Mr Fehr, supports this
argument.
16. According to the Trust, the livestock was returned by OK Kloof to the Trust before 14
July 2016 given the mutual cancellation of the lease agreements. It contends that there
was no lease for consumption as at 14 July 2016. Mr de Wet also argued that there was
a repudiation of the ag reements given that Kotze (on behalf of OK Kloof) was unable
to feed the livestock.
17. According to the Trust, OK Kloof was n ot the owner of the sheep at the time that the
cause of action arose , which the plaintiffs have not established in their evidence, and
that accordingly, the Court can grant absolution against them in respect of the sheep
loan for consumption agreement. They rely on the fact that Kotze owned and
personally operated the dairy, not OK Kloof.
18. Mr Fehr argued that the plaintiff has pleaded that OK Kloof is still the owner of the
sheep, and that the loan for consumption agreement was never terminated between OK
Kloof and Els. Counsel argued that the p laintiffs have not led any evidence of any
transaction or agreement with Els, and that there was no evidence of any disp osal
between Els and OK Kloof. Accordingly, no case against Els has been presented.
Like the Trust, Mr Fehr argued that it is the value of the lease that should be claim ed,
not the value of the livestock, and that the lease is an asset in the insolvent estate.
19. The Trust also takes the point that the plaintiffs’ pleadings are deficient, including that
they have not pleaded that the leases were not cancelled, and that fo r the plaintiffs to
succeed, the leases must have been extant. Counsel for the Trust argued that it is the
lease which is an asset in the insolvent estate, but which was not pleaded by the
plaintiffs for them to rely on any disposition in terms of the Act.
20. I am not persuaded that the defendants should be absolved from the instance.
21. In my view, the plaintiff has at least made out a prima facie case which the defendants
are required to answer.
22. My reasons are briefly as follows.
EVALUATION
23. There is no disagreement that ownership of the livestock passes to the lessee in terms
of a consumption for loan agreement. This is the legal position. The plaintiffs have led
evidence as to the conclusion of these agreements, which agreements are not disputed
by the defendants. The plaintiffs have accordingly, in my view, established prima facie
at least , the first element of its rei vindicatio claim notwithstanding the defendants’
position that the agreements were validly terminated and/or cancelled.
24. Counsel for the plaintiffs, Ms McChesney, contended that ownership cannot be
transferred back to the lessors, which is effectively what the defendants contend. She
argued that the l essor has a personal right i n the event of a cancellation and/or breach
of the agreement. Support for her contention is the judgment of Keyter.
25. The evidence which has been led demonstrates that there was movement of the
livestock from OK Kloof to the defendants at various times pre and post the meeting of
14 July 2016, when it was unequivocally conveyed to Kotze and his wife on their farm
that AFGRI would be proceeding with OK Kloof ’s liquidation. The evidence which
has been led demonstrates that Kotze was in a very difficult financial position for some
time before the meeting on 14 July 201 6 and was aware that OK Kloof was in deep
trouble financially. The difficulties did not only turn on the fact that Kotze could not
feed the livestock, but also that Kotze was unable to pay the rental for the farms which
he had leased to house the livestock. The livestock (both cows and sheep) were moved
around the time that OK Kloof could not meet its financial obligations, when there was
engagement between AFGRI and Kotze as to how to resolve the debt owed to AFGRI,
and when Kotze was told that AFGRI was now going to proceed with the liquidation
of OK Kloof. The cows were moved between 18 and 21 July 2016 immediately after
of OK Kloof. The cows were moved between 18 and 21 July 2016 immediately after
the meeting on 14 July 20 16 when Kotze was informed that AFGRI would proceed
with OK Kloof’s liquidation. The application for liquidation was launched on or about
25 July 2 016 and the order granted on 28 July 2016. The timing of the events which
occurred and the movement of the livestock are important factors which this Court
cannot ignore.
26. The meeting which Kotze had with the trustees of the Trust allegedly prior to 14 July
2016 where the lease was purportedly cancelled calls for an answer and/or explanation
by the first and second defendants as to their involvement in the discussion , what was
in fact discussed and whether the lease was indeed terminated and/or cancelled . What
motivated Kotze to return the livestock to the defendants and wh at motivated their
acceptance of the livestock goes to the heart of the claims . These are relevant issues
which call for an explanation, and which must be interrogated in the trial when the
defendants present their evidence, should they elect to do so. Given the events leading
up to 14 July 2016, and immediately thereafter involving the liquidation of OK Kloof,
the defendants are required to explain and to answer as to their involvement in the
movement and/or possession of the livestock.
27. The issue as to whether the consumption for loan agreements was validly terminated
and/or cancelled is a legal question which I can only appropriately determine at the
conclusion of all the evidence. But this does not detract from the prima facie case
which the plaintiffs have presented, and which calls for an answer.
28. The plaintiffs have presented a prima facie case also in relation to sections 26, 29 and
31 of the Insolvency Act 24 of 1936 where they seek the setting aside of certain
dispositions. This claim is not dependent on the cancellation and/or termination of the
consumption for loan agreements and fall to be proven in terms of the requirements of
the Insolvency Act.
29. I find that the first, second and fourth defendants should not be absolved from these
claims. The plaintiffs have presented at least a prima facie case in relation to the issue
of ownership of the livestock and in respect of the setting aside of dispositions in terms
of the Insolvency Act.
30. Absolution is accordingly refused and the application is dismissed.
31. The first, second and fourth defendants shall jointly and severally pay the plaintiffs’
costs on Scale C.
_______________________
TJ GOLDEN
Acting Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Western Cape Division, Cape Town
APPEARANCES:
On behalf of the Plaintiffs: Adv M McChesney
Instructed by: Strijdom & Bredenkamp Inc
Attorneys for the Plaintiffs
(Ref: A Venter)
On behalf of the First and Second Defendants: Adv de Wet
Instructed by: BBS Attorneys Inc
Attorneys for the First and
Second Defendants
c/o Werksmans Inc
On behalf of the Fourth Defendant: Adv Fehr
Instructed by: FW Jansen van Rensburg
Attorneys Inc
Attorneys for the Fourth
Defendant Hermanus
c/o C&A Friedlander Inc
42 Keerom Street, Cape Town