The plaintiff’s case
[22] The plaintiff testified that he first met late Schneider in April/May 2004 and expressed interest in the property and established
that it was owned by a Close Corporation (the 3rd defendant) in which late Schneider was the 100% member. They agreed then he would purchase the disputed membership interest and in
that way acquire the property. It was agreed that he would rent the property in the meantime until he takes transfer of the disputed
membership interest. Mudge testified that he was also allowed to effect alternations to the property to fit his needs, but at his
own expense. He testified that he was never under any impression that late Schneider was putting him under pressure to sign anything,
or that he was planning to sell the disputed membership interest to someone else. (In my view to suggest that the plaintiff was allowed
to effect alterations ‘to fit’ his ‘needs’ is, with respect, stretching it a bit far. The purchaser had very
limited authorisation as I have shown).
[23] Mudge testified that around 25th June and before he left on holiday, late Schneider told him he would ask his lawyers to attend to the drafting of a contract which
they would sign. Schneider then faxed through to him a written agreement which he duly signed and returned to Schneider. (The purchase
price in that agreement is given as N$1 700 000.) Mudge testified that he was not aware that late Schneider never signed the document
as it has since turned out to be the case.
[24] Mudge testified that upon his return from holiday he met Schneider and told him that he was busy with a ‘development project’
and would use some of the proceeds thereof to pay part of the purchase price. He testified that he did not mention a specific amount.
He added that he informed late Schneider that the project was behind schedule and would be completed only around December 2004/January
2005, and Schneider said there ‘is no pressure’. This implies that both Mudge and Schneider at that stage foresaw the
possibility that the proceeds from the property development might only come to hand later than 31 December 2004. This is significant
because it is a factor which could influence Schneider in deciding what to have included in the agreement.
[25] It is Mudge’s testimony that late Schneider was quite happy for him to take occupation of the property, start with the
alterations and that the transfer of the disputed membership interest take place at a later stage. According to Mudge they agreed
that the initial agreement Schneider had not signed be changed to reflect this, Schneider offering to have his attorneys attend thereto.
Mudge testified that the reason he wanted the transfer to take place much later was because he wanted to pay a ‘substantial
amount’ of the purchase price from the earnings derived from the property development and that Schneider had no problem with
this. Again, Mudge testified, he had to leave town on business and Schneider promised to deliver to him the new agreement reflecting
the changes agreed. Schneider, however, later called to say that his attorneys had not completed the agreement. This was still in
July 2004. Mudge testified that he had also at that stage informed Schneider that his bank had approved loan finance for a part of
the purchase price and that he would pay the balance in cash.
[26] Upon Mudge’s return from the business trip he learnt that late Schneider had concluded a written agreement with the 2nd defendant for the purchase of the disputed membership interest. Mudge testified that he protested to Schneider about that, reminding
Schneider that the two of them had concluded an oral agreement in respect of the disputed membership interest. Schneider then said
to him not to worry as the ‘option’ given to the 2nd defendant would run out in 10 days. Mudge testified that he chose not to do anything further because he was sure he had an agreement
with Schneider.
[27] Mudge, however, on 13th August decided to write a letter to late Schneider insisting that they had a binding agreement and was told by Schneider that the
2nd defendant had not yet performed under his contract and that he was prepared to sign another agreement with Mudge. It was then they
concluded the written agreement of 24th August 2004 after Mudge paid the deposit of N$50 000, Schneider first having refused to sign the agreement until he was paid the
deposit.
[28] Mudge in evidence produced an application for a home loan on the letterhead of Bank Windhoek dated 22nd June 2004. There is no indication for what amount and in respect of which subject matter the application was completed. He says the
application pertained to the purchase of the disputed membership interest. Mudge was asked by his counsel for what amount the loan
application was and he answered:
“It was an amount that I mention to the Bank that I wanted an amount or they wanted to know from me for what amount and I said “well
the best you can do” because I had in mind, as I said to pay a substantial amount in cash and I said to them you can do your
evaluation of the property and you tell me what you can, are prepared to give on that property and then I could decide how much of
that I will take up.”
This implies that Mudge left it to the bank to decide how much to advance to him.
[29] Mudge next produced a letter dated 12th August 2004 from Bank Windhoek’s ‘Loan Administration’ to him advising that his ‘application for a Mortgage Loan to the value of N$1 213 200 has been approved and will be payable on the registration of a
Covering Mortgage Bond in favour of Bank Windhoek Limited’. Mudge also produced another application, again on a Bank Windhoek letterhead, with a loan amount of N$1 700 000 in respect of No.
6 Hügel Street as property to be mortgaged and the seller being Jörn Schneider. This document is undated.
[30] Mudge testified that he applied for an amount ‘as high as possible and then I have the opportunity to decide what I need and what I don’t need. What I didn’t
want to happen was to be prepared to pay five hundred thousand of the purchase price and that Bank only agreed to give a loan of
eight hundred thousand (800 000)…” (What is clear to me is that whatever amount he applied for, Mudge was authorised a loan of N$1213 200 only by Bank Windhoek and that
it was the ‘best’ the bank could do.)
[31] Mudge testified that at some stage during the month of September, the 2nd defendant came to the property and laid claim to it and enquired what Mudge’s people were doing there. Mudge said he raised
this issue with Schneider who promised to look into the matter. Schneider later came back to him and said he was ‘in trouble’
as the 2nd defendant threatened to sue him for damages for selling the disputed membership interest to Mudge. Mudge then offered Schneider to
write a letter recording what had transpired in respect of the transaction and, if Schneider agreed, to take same to his lawyer,
presumably to enable Schneider’s lawyers to counter 2nd defendant’s threats of litigation and to demonstrate that Schneider was not in a position, when he did, to sell the disputed
membership interest to 2nd defendant. Mudge wrote such a letter on 17th September 2004. This letter makes no mention of the loan already secured by Mudge at that stage and that he does not wish to secure
the entire balance of the purchase price by way of a loan since some of the money will come from his own pocket.
[32] Mudge testified that Schneider then by letter confirmed the contents of his letter. The alleged confirmation is contained in
a terse letter dated 21 September 2004 which states:
“Dear Mr Mudge,
I can confirm that we had an agreement as described in your letter.
The reason why I gave an option to Mr Maritz for ten days is that I was not sure of how serious you were with regard to the purchase of the Hügel STR 6CC because we could not get hold of each other and I did not want to lose a buyer again. (My emphasis)
Mudge in a letter dated 10 February 2005 to legal practitioners Behrens & Pfeiffer who were then acting as executors of the estate
of late Schneider asserted his right to the transfer of the disputed membership interest. Mudge testified about the extensive renovations he effected to the property, totalling N$128 000. Mudge is conspicuously silent about whether these alterations were
allowed by the agreement. Mudge remains in occupation of the property since September 2004, and is paying occupational rent of N$15
000 per month.
[33] Mudge denied the correctness of the averments he made in paragraphs 12 and 15 of the founding affidavit for the urgent application
and to which I already referred. He attributes this to possible misunderstanding between him and his legal advisors which, in turn,
was attributable to the fact that he was under a lot of pressure when the urgent application was brought.
[34] Mudge also testified that on 19th July 2004 he had informed Schneider by letter that he no longer wished to apply for loan finance in respect of the full balance of
the purchase price. By reference to a loan application submitted to Bank Windhoek, Mudge testified that he had at the time informed
Bank Windhoek that his own contribution towards the purchase price would be N$500 000.
[35] On cross-examination, Mudge did not give a satisfactory explanation for why the averment was made in the affidavit in support
of the urgent relief that he had secured the full balance of the purchase price by way of loan from a financial institution. This
when regard is had to the fact that he reiterated those allegations in the replying papers. When Mr Heathcote put to him that he
approached Court to obtain urgent interdictory relief on the basis of falsehoods in papers he had on his own admission not read,
Mudge testified:
“My Lord I’m not a legal person and I’ve got a legal team and I rely on them to do the whatever necessary and if there
are mistakes been made then that can be rectified. I’ve got no problem to admit that if anything has been said or written it
is not correct to say that it is not correct.”
[36] Mudge maintained on cross-examination that the clause in the agreement that he should obtain loan finance for the balance of
the purchase price was for his (buyer’s) benefit and that he could have waived that whenever he wanted – as indeed he did. He was, however, unable to give any satisfactory explanation for the absence of this averment
in the urgent application, considering that this is now the main pillar of his case. ‘Whenever’ is, in light of the state
of the law as I will presently demonstrate, untenable.
[37] The plaintiff made a very poor impression on me as a witness. He was very evasive in the answers he gave when confronted with
statements he made under oath in the urgent application in support of the relief he sought in those proceedings, but which have now
turned out, on his own admission, to be falsehoods. He even chose the rather suspect and risky approach of placing the blame on his
legal advisors as the possible source of these falsehoods, but was unable to explain how his legal advisors could have come to the
information which has now turned out to be false – the very information which he, by signing the affidavits, accepted as emanating
from him. Waiver was not the basis for the urgent application, contrary to Mr Sniijman’s submission. Paragraph 7 which I quoted
above in any event is very ambiguous and tentative at best. Waiver requires clear evidence. Mudge could not in any event have relied
in the urgent application on the allegation that he complied with the suspensive condition while relying on a waiver. The two are
mutually exclusive. It was really one or the other. In the unreported judgment of this Court in L O Rall Scrap Dealers CC and Anor v Oosthuizen & 2 Others (P) A 162/2000 delivered on 11.08.2004 I said (at p14): “The rule nisi obtained by the applicants … was in all probability on the basis of perjured testimony … . It surely
must offend judicial conscience and sensibilities to confirm a rule nisi that was granted, albeit with hindsight , on the strength of such testimony …” For that reason I discharged the rule in that case.
[38] Mudge testified on cross-examination that it was when he returned in January 2005 that he learnt that Schneider had died. He
then called the executors to inform them that he was ready to proceed with the transaction and that he was in a position to perform.
He is not specific as to when in January he returned and the date on which he called the executors or what proof he provided that
he was in a position to perform.
[39] In cross-examination of Mudge Mr Heathcote established two things: (a) that late Schneider was not prepared to sign the agreement
of 24th August 2004 with Mudge before he had been paid the deposit of N$50 000 and (b) late Schneider, despite Mudge’s version that
he, with Schneider’s knowledge, intended to source a substantial part of the purchase consideration from the property development
he was then busy with , proceeded to instruct his lawyers to settle the agreement of 24 August containing the suspensive condition
requiring Mudge to obtain loan finance by 31st December 2004 ; and Mudge then signed that document as presented. The only conclusion that I can come to, if Mudge’s assertion
that he told Schneider that the property development would be completed in December 2004/January 2005 is to be accepted, is that
Schneider did not accept