Derivative Acquisition of Ownership Part1 2013
Derivative Acquisition of Ownership Part1 2013
Derivative Acquisition of Ownership Part1 2013
Introduction
title and only takes place with the previous owner’s co-operation. The two
registration. We will deal with the various forms of delivery and the principles
The role of the previous owner’s title to a thing is embodied in the Latin maxim nemo
plus juris transferre ad alium potest quam ipse habet, which translates as “no-
one may transfer a greater right to another than he himself has”. The practical
application of this principle is, essentially, that only the lawful owner may transfer
and he purports to transfer title to someone else, then the transaction is subject to
contractual capacity;
registration);
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4. Where the owner of the thing intends to pass ownership to the transferee;
derivative acquisition. If any one of them is not satisfied, the transfer may be void.
Of particular importance is the state of mind of the transferor and the transferee.
Both must have the intention to pass and receive ownership. If there is no such
intention, then ownership does not pass. This meeting of minds relating to transfer of
pass (for example a contract of sale or donation). They are entirely different things.
This was set out in Commissioner of Customs and Excise v Randles Brothers.
“Ownership of movable property does not in our law pass by the making of a
contract. It passes when delivery of possession is given accompanied by an intention
on the part of the transferor to transfer ownership and on the part of the transferee to
receive it. If it is delivered in pursuance of a contract of sale, the ownership may pass
at the time of delivery or it may not. Conditions may occur in the contract of sale
which will delay or, if they are not fulfilled, altogether prevent the passing of
ownership . . . whether or not an intention to transfer ownership by delivery exists is
a question of fact, not of law.”
In contracts of sale, there are some general rules governing when ownership
1. On a cash sale, ownership passes when the full purchase price is paid, even
if delivery has already taken place. Notwithstanding delivery, the parties to the
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agreement are presumed to have intended ownership to pass only when the
against payment of the purchase price at some future time on agreed terms
However, both of these rules are limited by the actual intention of the parties. If,
notwithstanding the cash sales rule, it is clear from the circumstances that ownership
was intended to pass on delivery despite the fact that the purchase price was not
paid, then ownership passes on delivery. Conversely, in a credit sale, if it is clear that
the owner of the property does not intend to pass ownership on delivery, ownership
does not pass until whatever condition in the credit agreement governing passing of
These principles are illustrated by the case of Eriksen Motors v Protea Motors.
Protea Motors, based in Warrenton, was approached by a Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, who
were interested in purchasing a Ford station wagon. Protea did not have any in
stock, and so telephoned Eriksen Motors to ask if they had any in stock. This was
part of a long standing arrangement whereby each dealership would buy stock from
the other in order to re-sell to a customer in the event that either did not have a
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On this occasion, Eriksen had two Ford station wagons and invited a representative
of Protea to come to Eriksen’s to inspect them, together with the Ellises. Eriksen’s
was in Welkom. Protea was in Warrenton. Warrenton and Welkom are around 240
km apart.
An employee of Protea, called Turner, drove the Ellises to Eriksen’s, where they
inspected the Ford station wagons and agreed to purchase one of them. Then
Turner paid Eriksen’s for the car, and then re-sold it to the Ellises straight away. The
Elisses left Welkom in their new car, and Turner returned in his car to Warrenton.
Turner’s cheque then bounced. Eriksen’s subsequently went into liquidation, and
Protea Motors applied for an interdict placing the motor car in the care of the Sheriff
The interdict was refused in the High Court, and Protea appealed to the Appellate
Division.
The Appellate Division accepted that the sale of the car was probably a cash sale,
which generally means that ownership does not pass until payment of the purchase
price. Because Protea’s cheque bounced, the purchase price was never paid.
However, the court then examined whether there was nonetheless a real agreement
to pass ownership to Protea Motors notwithstanding the fact that the purchase price
was not paid. Remember that this, according to the Appellate Division in Randles, is
a question of fact.
1. The sale of the car was part of an ongoing practice of sale and resale
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2. There could have been no doubt on the part of Eriksen that Turner intended to
There probably was an intention on the part of Eriksen to pass ownership to Protea.
There could also be little doubt that the Ellises intended to become owners of the
car.
Accordingly, there was, on the probabilities, a real agreement between Protea and
Eriksen to pass ownership, and the prospects of success in the trial action were
weak. There were accordingly insufficient grounds to grant an interim interdict. The
Du Plessis v Prophitius
The principles of real agreement are also applicable to immovable property. This is
the Campbell Children’s Trust sold land to a company called Whiktel for R45000.
In the meantime, the Campbell Trustees received a better offer for their land from a
Mr. and Mrs. Prophitius. The Prophitiuses offered R195000 for the land. Accordingly,
the Campbell trustees, before transfer to Whiktel was effected, applied for a new title
deed for the land by fraudulently misrepresenting that the old title deed had been
lost.
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The Campbell Trust then sold the land for R195000 to the Phrophitiuses and transfer
to the Prophitiuses took place on the second title deed. Meanwhile, transfer to
Whiktel and then to Du Plessis was effected on the first title deed.
Prophitiuses and Du Plessis that the High Court would have to decide who the owner
The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the real intention of the Campbell Trustees
was to pass ownership of the land to the Prophitiouses. The Prophitiouses did not
know about the Trust’s fraudulent scheme, and so they really intended to receive
transfer. That was the real agreement to which the court was required to give effect.
It did not matter that the scheme was fraudulent. Even if it was, the scheme could
intention must, therefore, have been to pass ownership to them. The appeal was
accordingly dismissed.