South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal

You are here:
SAFLII >>
Databases >>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal >>
1999 >>
[1999] ZASCA 74
| Noteup
| LawCite
Millsell Chrome Mines (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Land Affairs of Republic of South Africa (in his capacity as Trustee of The Bafokeng Tribe) and Others (458/97) [1999] ZASCA 74 (28 September 1999)
Download original files |
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NUMBER 458/97
In the matter
between:
MILLSELL CHROME MINES (PTY)
LIMITED Appellant
and
THE MINISTER OF LAND AFFAIRS OF
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA (IN HIS
CAPACITY AS TRUSTEE OF
THE BAFOKENG
TRIBE) First Respondent
THE REGIONAL
DIRECTOR : DEPARTMENT OF
MINERAL AND ENERGY AFFAIRS Second
Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF DEEDS Third Respondent
CORAM: ZULMAN, STREICHER JJA
MELUNSKY, FARLAM and MADLANGA AJJA
Date of Hearing: 14 September 1999
Date of Judgment: 28 September 1999
MINERAL LEASE - WHETHER
OPTION DULY EXERCISED
JUDGMENT
ZULMAN JA:
[1] The issue in this appeal is
whether the appellant entered into a valid and enforceable notarial mineral
lease with the trustee
of the Bafokeng Tribe.
[2] In December 1993 the
President of the Republic of Bophuthatswana, in his capacity as trustee of the
Bafokeng Tribe, as the first
applicant, and the Tribe, as the second applicant,
commenced motion proceedings against the appellant as first respondent in the
Supreme Court of Bophuthatswana. The Regional Director: Department of Mineral
and Energy Affairs and the Registrar of Deeds were
cited as the second and
third respondents respectively but they did not oppose the application. They
also take no part in this
appeal and abide by the decision of this Court. After
re-incorporation of Bophuthatswana into the Republic of South Africa the Premier
of North West Province attempted to substitute himself as the first applicant
but his substitution was declared to be invalid. The
true successor to the
first applicant, the President of the Republic of South Africa, designated the
Minister of Land Affairs as
the Tribe's trustee. The Tribe withdrew as a party
to the proceedings and the Minister, in his capacity as trustee, became the sole
applicant. He is now the first respondent in this appeal.
[3] The notice of
motion as finally amended claimed declaratory orders to the effect that there
was no exercise, alternatively no
valid or effectual exercise by the appellant
of an option to acquire a mineral lease under and in terms of a notarial
prospecting
agreement which contained the option; alternatively, if there was a
valid and effectual exercise of the option, the appellant thereafter
abandoned
the resultant mineral lease; and, further alternatively, that the option
contained in the notarial prospecting agreement
lapsed without having been
exercised.
[4] Waddington J dismissed the application with costs but granted
the first respondent leave to appeal to the Full Court of the Bophuthatswana
Division of the High Court.
[5] The Full Court (Khumalo, Hendler and Chulu
JJ) allowed the appeal with costs and declared that no mineral lease arose under
or
in terms of the agreement relied upon by the appellant.
[6] On 18
August 1997 this court granted special leave to the appellant to appeal against
the judgment of the court a quo and ordered the costs of the application
to be costs in the appeal.
[7] The material facts of the case are not in
dispute. On 28 July 1977 a notarially executed agreement was entered into
between the
deputy Minister of Bantu Affairs, acting for and on behalf of the
Minister of Bantu Administration, Development and Education in
his capacity "as
Trustee of the Bafokeng Tribe under Chief Edward Molotlegi" as lessor and
Palmiet Chrome Corporation (Pty) Limited
("Palmiet") as lessee. On 25 October
1978, in terms of a notarially executed document, Palmiet ceded, assigned and
made over all
its right, title and interest in the aforesaid agreement to the
appellant. The amendment to the agreement was notarially executed
on 11 July
1979.
[8] The agreement as amended is of fundamental importance in this
appeal. it is divided into two parts. The first part contains
a prospecting
agreement and the second an option to acquire a mineral lease. In order to
determine whether a valid and enforceable
mineral lease came into being, it is
necessary to decide whether the option was effectively exercised. In terms of
the prospecting
part of the agreement the lessor granted the lessee the sole and
exclusive right to prospect for chrome ore for a period of up to
five years on
portions of certain land owned by the lessor. The relevant part of clause 3,
which contains the option for the mineral
lease, reads as follows:
"During the Prospecting Period the Lessee shall have the sole and exclusive option of mining and disposing of Chrome Ore in, on or under the Mining Area. The Lessee at its sole discretion, may exercise these rights by giving written notice to this effect to the Lessor, the Magistrate Bafokeng and the Bantu Mining Corporation Limited, Pretoria, and shall state a date within the Prospecting Period upon which such operations will commence."
It was common cause between the parties that The
Bantu Mining Corporation Limited ceased to exercise functions in the then
Bophuthatswana
after it became independent and that notice to him was thereafter
not required in terms of clause 3.
[9] Clause 1(a) of the agreement defines
the "Prospecting Period" as being a period of up to 5 (five) years from the date
of the agreement,
i.e. 28 July 1977. The "Mining Area" is the area in which the
lessee had the right to prospect.
[10] The outcome of this appeal depends
upon whether the requirements of clause 3 and the provisions of section 3(1) of
the General
Law Amendment Act 50 of 1956 ("the Act") were complied with. The
section provides that a lease of any right to minerals in land
shall not be
valid unless attested by a notary public. In my view, in order to succeed,
therefore, the appellant had to establish
-
(a) that the option was exercised in notarial form during the "prospecting period", i.e. on or before 27 July 1982;
(b) that
written notice of the exercise was given to the following persons:
(i) the lessor as defined, namely, the trustee of the Bafokeng Tribe; and
(ii) the Magistrate
Bafokeng;
(c) that the appellant duly "[stated] a date within the prospecting period upon which such operations" [the mining and disposing of chrome ore] "will commence".
[11] If any one of the above
requirements were not fulfilled, it would follow that there was no effective
exercise of the option.
Timeous exercise in notarial form and statement of
commencement date.
[12] It is convenient to consider these two aspects
of clause 3 together. Counsel for the appellant submitted that the exercise
of
the option in notarial form occurred on 7 July 1982. On this date a document
headed "Notarial Exercise of Option to Take a Mineral
Lease" ("Annexure I") was
notarially executed. On behalf of the first respondent it was contended that
the notarial execution relied
upon by the appellant, even though it occurred
timeously, was defective in a number of material respects.
[13] One of
these defects, so it was argued, was that in the operative portion of Annexure
I, as distinct from the preamble thereto,
the appellant purported to exercise
the right to mine manganese ore and not chrome ore. This, according to the
argument, introduced
uncertainty and rendered the notarial document ineffective
(cf Boerne v Harris 1949 (1) SA 793 (A) at 799). Although a substituted
page of the notarial document which referred to chrome ore instead of manganese
ore was forwarded
to the Tribe's attorney, this occurred on 18 August 1982 and
after the date for the exercise of the option had expired. The respondent's
contention was rejected by Waddington J in the court of first instance but was
upheld by the court a quo. It would appear to me, however, that the
recipient of Annexure I should have realised that the appellant had intended to
exercise
the option to mine for chrome ore and that the reference to manganese
ore was an obvious error. However in view of the conclusion
at which I have
arrived in regard to the non-compliance with certain of the other requirements
of clause 3 it is not necessary
to express a firm view on the first respondent's
contentions concerning this aspect of the matter.
[14] A further objection
advanced by the first respondent was that Annexure I did not specify a date on
which mining would commence.
The document merely recorded that the appellant
exercised the option contained in the agreement and that it accepted a lease to
mine "for manganese ore in, on and under the Mining Area". It was submitted on
behalf of the appellant that although clause 3 of
the agreement required the
lessee to state a date within the prospecting period upon which mining
operations would commence, the
agreement drew a distinction between the date of
commencement of the mineral lease and the date of commencement of the mining
operations.
The former, it was submitted, was a material term and required
notarial execution but the latter not. Reliance was placed on a
letter dated 7
May 1982 addressed to the Tribe's attorney and signed by a Mr S M Dougherty on
behalf of the appellant in which it
was stated:
"In terms of the rights granted to the Lessee under clause 3, we hereby exercise the whole and exclusive option thereby granted the Lessee to mine and dispose of chrome ore in, on or under the mining area (as defined). It is our intention to commence such mining operations on 15 July 1982."
(An
earlier letter sent to the Tribe's attorney in identical terms and signed by Mr
Dougherty on behalf of Rand Mines Ltd, was not
relied upon.)
On a proper
construction of the provisions of the mineral lease it is, however, plain that
the date of commencement of the mineral
lease was to coincide with the stated
date on which mining operations were to commence. Clause 3(h) being one of the
provisions
that was to apply to the mineral lease, reads:
"The Mineral Lease shall endure for an initial period of 15 (fifteen) years from the date advised in the written notices referred to in the first paragraph of this Clause 3, with two further periods of renewal of 10 (ten) years each if required by the lessee."
The date of the commencement of
mining operations was, therefore, also the date on which the mineral lease was
to commence. This
date was a material term of the lease (cf Johnston v
Leal 1980(3) SA 927(A) at 937B - 938B). It determined, inter alia,
when the prospecting rights and duties would cease and when the mining rights
and obligations would commence, when the lease would
begin and when it would
terminate and when the lessee's obligation to pay mining royalties would start.
Counsel for the appellant
conceded, quite correctly, that if the date of
commencement of mining was material it had to be recorded in a notarially
executed
document and that the letter of 7 May 1982 would not suffice in this
regard.
[15] In the court of first instance Waddington J held that in the
absence of any other stated date in Annexure I, it was the date
of execution of
that document, 7 July 1982, that the appellant
"must have intended should be regarded as the date on which mining operations would commence".
I am unable to agree with this conclusion.
There is nothing to indicate that the appellant intended to regard 7 July 1982
as the
date on which it would commence mining operations. Moreover, even if
this was the appellant's intention, it was not expressed in
the document and was
not conveyed to the parties referred to in clause 3 of the contract.
[16]
The provisions of the clause, if one reads the clause in its ordinary
grammatical sense, fall to be construed conjunctively
and not disjunctively.
The requirements are imperative, since clause 3 specifies “and
shall state a date” (the emphasis is mine). The wording is not
simply “may” state a date.
[17] I also agree with the first
respondent’s contention that the scheme of clause 3 was that the exercise
of the option
to bring about a mineral lease did not in itself lead to
commencement of the mineral lease. The appellant was required to state
a date.
This would determine two matters. The first would be the date when mining
operations “will commence” and secondly
as a consequence thereof,
the date when the prospecting agreement referred to in the document would cease
and a mineral lease would
become operative in terms of the second paragraph of
clause 3. This paragraph provides as follows:-
“In the event of these mining rights being exercised the liability for paying prospecting rentals as provided under Clause 1 hereof and the prospecting rights granted under Clause 2 hereof shall cease as from the date that the mining right shall commence. The following terms and conditions shall then apply as from the date:-”
(A number of
terms and conditions then follow in clauses 3(a) to 3(h)).
There were thus
two relevant dates. The one being the date on which the notice itself had to be
given and the other the date when
the mining operations “will”
commence. The notice had to be given by 27 July and the date upon which mining
operations
were to commence had to be on or before the same date.
[18] It
was also argued on behalf of the appellant that Annexure I, which was in
notarial form and was executed in that form on
7 July 1982, “declared on
that date” to exercise the option contained in clause 3 to take
“thereby” a lease.
The taking of the lease, so it was argued, is
intended to take effect from the declaration therein that the appearer states
himself
“thereby” to take. That being so the duration of the lease
extended from that date, namely 7 July 1982. I find this
argument untenable.
There might have been some merit in the argument were it not for the clear and
unambiguous requirement of clause
3 that there was to be a statement which was
to be communicated to “the lessor, the Magistrate Bafokeng and the Bantu
Mining
Corporation Ltd” of the date in the written notice exercising the
option “in the Prospecting Period upon which such operations
will
commence”. This provision cannot simply be ignored.
As the appellant
failed to state in a notarially executed document the date on which mining
operations would commence, it follows
that the exercise of the option is of no
force and effect and that no mineral lease came into existence. There are,
moreover, other
obstacles in the appellant's path. These are considered briefly
hereunder.
The giving of notice
[19] It is trite that ordinarily
and in the absence of any contractual provision to the contrary, the fact of the
exercise of an
option which involves the acceptance of an offer, must, to bring
about a binding contract, be communicated to the grantor. The exercise
of an
option is governed by the ordinary principles applicable to the acceptance of an
offer. (See for example R v Nel 1921 AD 339, Laws v Rutherfurd
1924 AD 261 at 262, and Westinghouse Brake and Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Bilger
Engineering (Pty) Ltd 1986(2) SA 555(A) at 573 E - G and Amcol Collieries
Limited v Truter 1990(1) SA 1 (A) at 4 D-F). Not only did clause 3
of the agreement not dispense with communication but it required it in clear and
unequivocal terms. This
is not a case such as Driftwood Properties (Pty) Ltd
v McLean 1971(3) SA 591(A) where the agreement dispensed with communication
of acceptance. In this case the appellant, as was the situation
in Orion
Investments (Pvt) Ltd v Ujamaa Investments (Pvt) Ltd and Others 1988(1) SA
583 (ZS), was required in terms of clause 3 to communicate its exercise of the
option. Even although such communication
was not required to be in notarial
form, it was required to be in “written form”. Furthermore the
communication had
to be made on or before 27 July 1982.
Counsel for the
appellant correctly conceded that there was no communication of the purported
exercise of the option before 27 July
1982 and that the option then lapsed. He
sought, however, to rely on some sort of subsequent communication by conduct
which he called
a “waiver”. He argued that the subsequent
communication by conduct, enabled one to conclude that the option was
“revived”,
as it were. It seems to me, as I put to counsel for the
appellant during the course of his argument that one cannot “breathe
life
into a corpse”. Van Heerden JA stated the matter in these lucid terms in
Trans-Natal Steenkoolkorporasie Bpk v Lombaard en ‘n Ander 1988(3)
SA 625 at 639 I - 640 A:-
“Die opsie moes voor ‘n bepaalde datum uitgeoefen word. By onstentenis daarvan sou die bedingde aanbod tot verlenging outomaties verval. Daar sou dus nie meer ‘n reg kon wees waarvan die eiseresse afstand kon doen nie. Kortom, die eiseresse se “verpligting” om nie die aanbod te herroep nie en die verweerder se ooreenstemmende reg om dit te aanvaar, sou uitgewerk gewees het. Gevolglik kon ‘n gepoogde afstanddoening na die sperdatum nie herlewing van die verpligting en die reg tot gevolg gehad het nie.”
[20] The decision in Neethling v Klopper en
Andere 1967(4) SA 459 (A) to which the appellant’s counsel referred
does not assist the appellant. In that case it was held that
the revival of a
contract for the sale of land which had been terminated by waiver of the rights
which arose from the termination
of the contract did not have to comply with the
formal requirements of section 1(1) of the Act. This case is distinguishable
from
the present case in that it concerned the revival of an existing contract,
not the creation of a contract where none previously
existed. Here no contract
came into being.
[21] In any event there is no specific allegation in the
papers, by the appellant, to the effect that there was a waiver. In
so far as
it may be inferred from the papers that there was such a waiver, there is no
indication or averment that such waiver took
place by any person authorised by
the respondent to waive his rights.
As the option lapsed it was no longer
available to be turned into a mineral lease. In consequence thereof, no
subsequent non-notarial
circumstances may be relied upon by the appellant as
amounting to a fresh notarially executed contract. This is especially so in
the
light of the provisions of s 3(1) of the Act.
[22] The fact that the
parties or even one of them believe that there was a valid contract is
irrelevant (Fuls v Leslie Chrome (Pty) Ltd and Another 1962(4) SA 784(W)
at 787 C - E). Part performance by either or both of the parties cannot make up
for the need for notarial execution.
(Wilken v Kohler 1913 AD 135 at 142
and 143). Furthermore the fact that royalty payments were formally agreed
upon between the parties and that such payments
were made and accepted without
objection is also irrelevant (Fuls’ case (supra) at 787 E - F,
Jolly v Herman’s Executors 1903 TS 515 at 522 and Pucjlowski v
Johnston’s Executors 1946 WLD 1 at 3). It is trite that parties may
not, by private agreement, derogate from, or vary or waive statutory
requirements which are
not intended to be exclusively for their benefit. This
is so because the formality required by the statutory requirement set out
in s
3(1) was introduced as a matter of public policy, and not for the benefit of any
class of person for example lessors or lessees
(cf Wilken’s case
(supra) at 142, Hersch v Nel 1947(3) SA 365 (O) at 369 and
Fuls’ case (supra) at 787H - 788C).
[23] I conclude therefore
that the appellant did not enter into a valid enforceable mineral lease with the
respondent.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.
________________________
ZULMAN JA
STREICHER JA )
MELUNSKY AJA )
FARLAM
AJA )CONCUR
MADLANGA AJA )