• A Cape Town father reclaimed his home after his daughter did not pay the agreed R650,000.
  • The court rejected claims that the pensioner had dementia and could not litigate.
  • The transfer was set aside, and the daughter must help return the property and pay legal costs.

A Cape Town father has regained ownership of his home after the High Court found his daughter never paid the R650,000 purchase price agreed when the property was transferred into her name.

The dispute was between Reginald Norman Fredericks and his daughter, Lauren Lee Fredericks. They signed a written sale agreement in February 2022. She agreed to buy the house for R650,000, with payment due when the transfer was registered.

The property was transferred in May 2022, but the agreed payment was never made. Three years later, the father cancelled the deal and asked the High Court to set aside the transfer and return the house to him.

Daughter’s objections dismissed

The daughter opposed the application and argued that her father could not bring the case because he allegedly had dementia. She also said he should have tried mediation first and claimed there were factual disputes that needed a full trial.

The court rejected all three arguments from the daughter. The dementia allegation was central to the case. The daughter relied on referral letters and medical notes after concerns about her father’s behaviour. But the court found that none of these documents showed a clear diagnosis of dementia.

Instead, the father provided a report from a specialist psychiatrist who assessed him in April 2025. The psychiatrist found no evidence of dementia or Alzheimer’s disease and said he was able to manage his affairs.

"The first respondent’s reliance upon an alleged diagnosis of dementia is accordingly without foundation," the judge said. The court found the father had a direct personal interest and the legal right to bring the case.

Mediation not required

The daughter also argued that her father should have tried mediation before going to court. The court found he had complied with Rule 41A by filing the required notice to oppose mediation. By contrast, the daughter did not file the notice required for someone who wanted mediation.

The judgment said the daughter’s reliance on the mediation argument could not be sustained. The court said parties must consider mediation, but are not forced to participate.

No dispute over the sale agreement

The key issue was whether the daughter had to pay the R650,000 in the sale agreement. The daughter argued the amount in the agreement was not meant as a purchase price, but rather part of an arrangement for her to care for her father. She said the house was transferred because her father feared being taken advantage of by his sons.

The court found that this version was contradicted by the written agreement and other documents. The deed of sale clearly stated a purchase price of R650,000. Letters from the conveyancer also described the deal as a sale and made no mention of any caregiving arrangement.

The judge found there was no real factual dispute needing a trial and that the documents showed the property had been sold, not donated. "The first respondent is fully aware that she never paid the purchase price as stipulated in the deed of sale," the court found.

Protection for older persons

The judgment focused on the protections available to older people under South African law. The court noted the Older Persons Act aims to protect elderly people from financial abuse, losing their property, and exploitation.

Judge S Yake said the father's situation fit clearly within the protections of the law. The court criticised the daughter for pretending to act in her father’s interests while keeping a house she never paid for.

The judge said this showed she was acting out of self-interest while pretending to protect her father. The court also noted that while family disputes are usually best settled outside court, the daughter forced her elderly father into legal action despite knowing she had not paid.

Property to be returned

After finding that the daughter broke the agreement by not paying, the court ruled the father could cancel the sale. The sale was cancelled, and the transfer into the daughter’s name was set aside.

The Registrar of Deeds must transfer the property back into the father’s name. The daughter must sign all documents needed, or the sheriff will do it if she refuses.

She was also ordered to pay all costs of returning the property and the legal fees.

Conviction.co.za

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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