The Land and Agricultural Development Bank (Land Bank) advanced loans totaling approximately R62.5 million to Westside Trading 570 (Pty) Ltd for urban township development (R51 million for property acquisition and R11.5 million of a planned R49 million for township establishment). The applicant and second to ninth respondents stood as written sureties for these loans. The Land Bank was subsequently advised that the loan agreement exceeded its statutory powers under the Land and Agricultural Development Bank Act 15 of 2002, which limited its mandate to promoting equitable ownership and development of agricultural land by historically disadvantaged persons, not urban development. After stopping further advances, the Land Bank claimed Westside owed approximately R95 million with interest. Westside's financial director then signed an acknowledgment of debt accepting liability for R82 million in full and final settlement. When Westside failed to repay and was liquidated, the Land Bank sued the sureties not on the original loan agreement but on their alleged liability for the R82 million acknowledgment of debt. The High Court found in favor of the Land Bank, holding that the invalidity of the loan agreement did not necessarily invalidate the suretyship, and that the sureties were liable based on the acknowledgment of debt read with the suretyship agreement.
1. The second to ninth respondents' applications to intervene as applicants are dismissed. 2. Leave to appeal is granted. 3. The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel. 4. The High Court order is replaced with: "The plaintiff's claim is dismissed with costs".
An acknowledgment of debt that merely perpetuates or repackages an admittedly invalid original agreement remains tainted by that invalidity and cannot found a valid claim, particularly where an organ of state acted ultra vires (beyond its statutory powers) in entering the original agreement. A subsequent agreement following an invalid contract will be valid only if: (1) the cause of original invalidity can be removed; or (2) it is premised on an independent valid obligation such as unjust enrichment (recognizing the absence of legal indebtedness from the invalid agreement) rather than attempting to enforce the invalid debt itself. Where parties do not dispute the invalidity of an original agreement and the subsequent acknowledgment refers only to the debt under that invalid agreement (rather than to enrichment or other independent obligations), the acknowledgment cannot transform the invalid agreement into something valid. An accessory obligation such as suretyship can only create liability where there is a valid principal obligation; if no valid claim lies against the principal debtor due to the invalidity of the acknowledged debt, no claim can lie against sureties. The principle applies regardless of whether the subsequent agreement is characterized as a novation or compromise - what matters is whether it perpetuates the invalid obligation or addresses independent valid claims.
The Court made several important obiter observations: (1) While distinguishing between public and private entities regarding invalidity may be sound, the rigid distinction is not necessary - even between private parties, a subsequent agreement seeking to resuscitate an invalid agreement remains tainted with invalidity, even where the invalidity does not stem from illegality or immorality. (2) There are differences between enrichment claims (restoring legally unjustified imbalance) and the "no-profit principle" from AllPay (preventing profit from unlawfulness), though some overlap exists. The no-profit principle is part of just and equitable relief when suspending declarations of unlawfulness, while enrichment is a remedial claim. The Court expressly declined to address "the merits or demerits of substituting a just and equitable remedy, in keeping with the 'no-profit principle', for an ordinary enrichment claim in invalid contracts by organs of state." (3) The judgment does not address compromises by organs of state where validity remains disputed, noting only that if such compromises are sought to be made court orders, they will only be sanctioned if they accord with the Constitution and law, and if not made court orders they risk later challenge. (4) The judgment does not impact the state's ability to enter compromise agreements regarding indubitably invalid original agreements where there are uncertain associated claims founded on unjust enrichment or the no-profit principle. (5) The Court noted but did not decide the issue of whether sureties could be held liable when the object and purpose of the original loan agreement had been frustrated, as this became moot.
This judgment clarifies important principles regarding the consequences of invalidity in contracts involving organs of state and the limits of resuscitating invalid agreements through subsequent acknowledgments or compromises. It establishes that where an organ of state acts beyond its statutory powers (ultra vires), subsequent agreements that merely perpetuate or repackage the invalid obligation remain tainted by the original invalidity. The judgment distinguishes between invalid attempts to enforce ultra vires agreements and legitimate enrichment claims that may arise from such invalidity. It provides guidance on when subsequent agreements following invalid contracts will be considered tainted novations versus valid compromises, emphasizing that the characterization depends on whether the subsequent agreement enforces the original invalid debt or addresses independent obligations like enrichment. The case also clarifies the application of Panamo, confirming that accessory security agreements (whether mortgage bonds or suretyships) can only create liability for untainted obligations, and distinguishes between broad security covering "any debt" versus security limited to specific invalid indebtedness. The judgment reinforces the principle of legality and its application to state commercial activity, while leaving open questions about compromise of disputed validity and settlements based on enrichment claims.