Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 724South Africa
Botha N.O. v Leboko-Radebe and Others (16835/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 724 (22 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Opposed application – rei vindicatio – cancellation of title deed relating to immovable property – section 6(1) of the Deeds Registries Act – fraud unravels everything – if agreement is tainted by fraud, ownership of the property will not pass despite registration – the applicant’s application granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Botha N.O. v Leboko-Radebe and Others (16835/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 724 (22 September 2022)
Botha N.O. v Leboko-Radebe and Others (16835/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 724 (22 September 2022)
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sino date 22 September 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
16835/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
22
nd
September
2022
In the matter between:
BOTHA
,
CORNELIUS ERASMUS N O
Applicant
And
LEBOKO-RADEBE
,
NTHIBI DORA
First Respondent
ABSA
BANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
23 May 2022 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of the
application was conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
Delivered:
22 September 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email,
by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00 on 22
September 2020.
Summary:
Opposed application –
rei
vindicatio
– cancellation of
title deed relating to immovable property – section 6(1) of the
Deeds Registries Act –
fraud unravels everything –
if
agreement is tainted by
fraud, ownership of the property will not pass despite registration –
the
applicant’s application granted.
ORDER
(1)
Endorsement number [....], in terms of
section 45(1) of the Deeds Registries Act, Act 47 of 1937 (‘the
Act’), of Deed
of Transfer number [....], in terms of which Erf
[....], P [....] G [....] Extension [....] Township, Registration
Division IQ,
Gauteng Province, in extent 255 (two hundred and fifty
five) square meters, held under Deed of Transfer number [....] (‘the
property’), was transferred to and registered in the name of
Nthibi Dora Leboko-Radebe, identity number: [....], be and is
hereby
cancelled in terms of section 6(1) of the Act.
(2)
The fourth respondent shall forthwith
cancel the aforementioned Endorsement number: [....].
(3)
The fourth respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to forthwith cancel the Continuing Coverage
Mortgage Bond number: [....],
registered in favour of the second
respondent over Erf [....], P [....] G [....] Extension [....]
Township, Registration Division
IQ, Gauteng Province, in extent 255
(two hundred and fifty-five) square meters, held under Deed of
Transfer number [....] (‘the
property’).
(4)
Upon cancellation of the aforementioned
Endorsement number: [....], the Deed under which the property was
held immediately prior
to registration of Endorsement number: [....],
shall be revived.
(5)
There shall be no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The applicant
is the executor in the deceased estate of the late Mr Jeremiah
Jerry Radebe (‘the deceased’), who
passed away almost two
decades ago on 17 April 2004. At the time of his death, the deceased
was the owner of immovable property,
namely
Erf
[....], P [....] G [....] Extension [....] Township, Registration
Division IQ, Gauteng Province, in extent 255 (two hundred
and
fifty-five) square meters, held under Deed of Transfer number [....]
(‘the property’). The deceased was married
to the first
respondent until the date of their divorce on 13 March 1997, and he
acquired the property during 2002.
[2].
During 2005, the first respondent,
through fraudulent means and by misrepresenting to the third
respondent (‘the Master’)
that she was the surviving
spouse of the deceased, first obtained letters of authority,
entitling her to take control of the assets
of the deceased, and
secondly caused the property to be transferred into her name by
having the Deed of Transfer relating to the
property endorsed to that
effect by the fifth respondent (the Registrar of Deeds). The fraud by
the first respondent did not end
there. During 2006 she obtained a
loan from the second respondent (‘Absa Bank’) and, as
security for the said loan,
she had a mortgage bond registered over
the property in their favour.
[3].
In this
opposed application, the applicant applies for vindicatory relief in
relation to the property. In his notice of motion,
the applicant
requests that the endorsement of the title deed relating to the
property and in terms of which the property was effectively
transferred to the first respondent, be cancelled so as to have
ownership of the property revert back to the estate of the deceased.
[4].
The
application is based on the provisions of section 6 of the Deeds
Registries Act, Act 47 of 1937 (‘the Act’) for
the
cancellation of
Endorsement number
[....], in terms of section 45(1) of the Act, of Deed of Transfer
number [....], in terms of which the property
was transferred the
first respondent. The applicant also applies for a cancellation of
the mortgage bond which the first respondent
had caused to registered
over the property in favour of Absa Bank.
[5].
I interpose here to note that,
although the applicant’s application was duly served on Absa
Bank, it has to date not delivered
notice of intention to oppose. I
assume from their quiescence that they acquiesce and will abide the
decision of the Court. In
light of my finding in this matter, that
seems like a prudent approach.
[6].
Section 6 of
the Act provides as follows:
‘
6
Registered deeds not to be cancelled
except upon an order of court –
(1)
Save as is otherwise provided in this Act or in any other law no
registered deed of grant, deed of transfer, certificate of
title or
other deed conferring or conveying title to land, or any real right
in land other than a mortgage bond, and no cession
of any registered
bond not made as security, shall be cancelled by a registrar except
upon an order of Court.
(2)
Upon the cancellation of any deed conferring or conveying title to
land or any real right in land other than a mortgage bond
as provided
for in subsection (1), the deed under which the land or such real
right in land was held immediately prior to the registration
of the
deed which is cancelled, shall be revived to the extent of such
cancellation, and the registrar shall cancel the relevant
endorsement
thereon evidencing the registration of the cancelled deed.’
[7].
The question
to be decided in this application is whether the transfer of the
property into the name of the first respondent was
valid and based on
a lawful and sustainable
causa
.
That question should be decided against the backdrop of the relevant
facts, some of which I have already alluded to
supra
,
and which are expanded on in the paragraphs which follow.
[8].
As already
indicated, the late Jeremiah Jerry Radebe divorced from the first
respondent on 13 March 1997 and their joint estate
was subsequently
divided. Thereafter, he purchased the property. And he passed away on
17 April 2004. On 2 July 2004 the first
respondent reported the
estate of the deceased to the office of the Master, fraudulently
claiming that she was the surviving spouse
of the deceased. She was
then issued with ‘letters of authority’ with the power to
receive and liquidate the assets
of the deceased. In that capacity,
she caused the property to be registered into her name. Thereafter,
she had a bond registered
over the property.
[9].
When this
fraudulent conduct by the first respondent came to the attention of
the third respondent, the latter revoked the first
respondent’s
letters of authority and on 4 September 2015 appointed the applicant
as the Executor in the estate of the deceased.
[10].
As correctly
pointed out by Mr Kellerman SC, who appeared on behalf of the
applicant, the transfer of the property from the deceased
estate to
the first respondent was tainted by fraud and the resulting
registration of ownership in the name of first respondent
falls to be
set aside. The same applies to the mortgage bond. The point is simply
that the so-called ‘fraud unravels all’
principle finds
application
in
casu
. The
transfer of the property into the name of the first respondent, as
well as the registration of the bond over the property,
stand to be
set aside on the grounds that they were underpinned by acts of fraud.
And it matters not that Absa Bank was completely
innocent and not
implicated at all in the fraud.
[11].
As
was held by the SCA in
Namasthethu
Electrical (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
[1]
,
it is trite law that fraud is conduct which vitiates every
transaction known to the law. In affirming this principle, the SCA,
in
Esorfranki
Pipelines (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mopani District Municipality and
Others
[2]
,
referred with approval to Lord Denning's dicta in
Lazarus
Estates Ltd v Beasley
[3]
,
when he said:
‘
No
court in this land will allow a person to keep an advantage which he
has obtained by fraud. No judgment of a court, no order
of a
Minister, can be allowed to stand if it has been obtained by fraud.
Fraud unravels everything. The court is careful not to
find fraud
unless it is distinctly pleaded and proved; but once it is proved it
vitiates judgments, contracts and all transactions
whatsoever …
'.
[12].
Fraud unravels
everything – that is our law. And I have already found that
first respondent committed fraud in that she misrepresented
to the
office of the Master that she was the surviving spouse of the
deceased, when in fact and in truth they had divorced many
years
before his death. This misrepresentation resulted in the two impugned
transactions, which therefore need to be ‘unravelled’
as
being based on fraud. For this reason alone, the transactions fall to
be set aside.
[13].
Moreover, it
is trite that the requirements for transfer are twofold: (1) delivery
effected by registration of transfer in
the deed’s office; and
(2) the existence of a real agreement, the essential elements of
which are an intention on the
part of the transferor to transfer the
property and an intention on the part of the transferee to acquire
ownership of the property.
[14].
If
there is any defect in the real agreement, that is the lack of
intention on the part of the transferor and the transferee to
transfer and acquire ownership of the property respectively, then
ownership will not pass despite registration. (Per Nicholls J
in
Radebe
and Another v Sheriff for the District of Vereeniging and Others
[4]
).
If the agreement is tainted by fraud or obtained by some other means
that vitiates consent, ownership of the property will not
pass
despite registration in the deed’s registry.
[15].
For all of
these reasons, I am of the view that the applicant is entitled to
vindicate the property and to the relief claimed in
this opposed
application.
Costs
[16].
The general rule in matters of costs is
that the successful party should be given his costs, and this rule
should not be departed
from except where there are good grounds for
doing so.
[17].
In casu
,
the first respondent, who appeared in person at the hearing of the
matter on 23 May 2022, advised the Court that she had in fact
utilised the R100 000 she obtained from Absa Bank to pay some of
the expenses relating to the property, such as the municipal
accounts. She also indicated – and this appears to be common
cause – that she has never had the benefit of occupying
the
property. She has been prevented from occupation by the family
members of the deceased. The aforegoing, in my view, justifies
a
costs order to the effect that each party should bear his / her own
costs.
[18].
I therefore intend awarding no order as to
costs.
Order
Accordingly, I make the
following order: -
(1)
Endorsement number [....], in terms of
section 45(1) of the Deeds Registries Act, Act 47 of 1937 (‘the
Act’), of Deed
of Transfer number [....], in terms of which Erf
[....], P [....] G [....] Extension [....] Township, Registration
Division IQ,
Gauteng Province, in extent 255 (two hundred and fifty
five) square meters, held under Deed of Transfer number [....] (‘the
property’), was transferred to and registered in the name of
Nthibi Dora Leboko-Radebe, identity number: [....], be and is
hereby
cancelled in terms of section 6(1) of the Act.
(2)
The fourth respondent shall forthwith
cancel the aforementioned Endorsement number: [....].
(3)
The fourth respondent be and is hereby
ordered and directed to forthwith cancel the Continuing Coverage
Mortgage Bond number: [....],
registered in favour of the second
respondent over Erf [....], P [....] G [....] Extension [....]
Township, Registration Division
IQ, Gauteng Province, in extent 255
(two hundred and fifty-five) square meters, held under Deed of
Transfer number [....] (‘the
property’).
(4)
Upon cancellation of the aforementioned
Endorsement number: [....], the Deed under which the property was
held immediately prior
to registration of Endorsement number: [....],
shall be revived.
(5)
There shall be no order as to costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
23
rd
May 2022 – in a ‘virtual hearing’ during
a
videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
22
nd
September 2022 – judgment handed
down
electronically
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
Advocate L Kellerman SC
Cell no
: (082) 464-7974
Email
:
kelly@brooklynadvocates.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Cornel Botha Attorneys, Pretoria
Cell no
: (084) 580-0598
Email
:
cornel@cornelbothaattorneys.co.za
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
In
person
INSTRUCTED
BY:
In person
FOR THE SECOND, THIRD AND
FOURTH
RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No appearance
[1]
Namasthethu
Electrical (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
2020 JDR 1279 (SCA);
[2]
Esorfranki
Pipelines (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mopani District Municipality and
Others
[2014] ZASCA 2
;
[2014] 2 All SA 493
(SCA) para 11;
[3]
Lazarus
Estates Ltd v Beasley
[1956] 1 QB (CA) at 712;
[4]
Radebe
and Another v Sheriff for the District of Vereeniging and Others
[2014] ZAGPJHC 228 para 20;
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