Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 762South Africa
Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Others v Pogatsi and Others (2020/19559) [2022] ZAGPJHC 762 (7 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Others v Pogatsi and Others (2020/19559) [2022] ZAGPJHC 762 (7 October 2022)
Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Others v Pogatsi and Others (2020/19559) [2022] ZAGPJHC 762 (7 October 2022)
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sino date 7 October 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2020/19559
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
07/10/2022
In
the matter between:
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT: DEPARTMENT
OF
HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
First Applicant
ESTATE
LATE OF BALTINA KIDIBONE BOGATSU
Second Applicant
ESTATE
LATE OF ELUSAI BOGATSU
Third Applicant
and
DITHABISO
ELIZABETH POGATSI
First Respondent
(Identity
Number: [....])
ESTATE
LATE OF SEMPU WILLIAM POGATSI
Second Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
[1]
This is an application to rectify a title deed to a house in
Dobsonville Soweto. Its
history is a microcosm of the transition from
Apartheid land control in townships to the law as it is presently.
[2]
This legal history provides important context for the present
dispute. Prior to 1988
African people could not own property in so
called white designated areas. But since African people were required
by the apartheid
system to provide a work force in white areas they
needed to stay in these areas. Hence the fiction was created that
they were
present but not permanent occupants. To bring some reality
to this fiction policies under the apartheid government started to
change.
[3]
In
Moloi
v Moloi
,
Dodson AJ gives a lucid account of this history as the change started
from 1988.
[1]
“
The
Conversion of Certain Rights to Leasehold Act 81 of 1988 was part of
the apartheid government's attempts to reform its influx
control
policy when it was forced to recognise that Africans could not
perpetually be relegated to the status of temporary sojourners
in
South Africa's cities.
The Act allowed for
rights of occupation under the racially discriminatory regulations
which controlled the occupation of African
townships ("the Urban
Area regulations") to be converted into 99-year leasehold. The
99-year leasehold was recognised
as a form of title which was
registrable in the Deeds Registry. It was capable of transfer.
However racial discrimination persisted
in so far as it did not
accord recognition of full ownership to its intended beneficiaries
.
In
1993 the Act was substantially amended. The name of the Act was
changed to the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or
Ownership Act 81 of 1988. I will refer to it as the "Conversion
Act". As the name change suggests, provision
was
now made for the conferral not only of leasehold but also of
ownership where the affected property was situated in a formalised
township for which a township register had been opened.
By
way of Proclamation 41 of 1996 dated 26 July 1996 the administration
of the Conversion Act was assigned to the provinces in terms
of
section 235(8) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
Act 200 of 1993 and
section 2(2)
of the
Land Administration Act 2 of
1995
. The Gauteng Province has effected subsequent amendments to the
Conversion Act”
[2]
[4]
As noted earlier prior to 1988 Black persons could not own land in
Urban areas. Instead,
they were given permits in terms of the then
prevailing regulation.
[3]
One
such permit was given to the late Martha Bogatsu. There is no date in
the record when she passed away. However, it must have
been before
1984 because on that date there is a housing permit in the record. It
records the following:
a.
That William Pogatsi is the permit holder;
b.
That his three brothers and one sister (the
second applicant) were granted the right to occupy the house as well;
c.
Later the first respondent name was added
and is recorded as his wife.
[5]
William has also since past away on 12 April 2005. He was it is
common cause the eldest
son of the late Martha which probably
explains why he is recorded as the holder of the permit in 1984.
[6]
In 1986 William married Elizabeth Pogatsi the first respondent
(Elizabeth). Elizabeth’s
says her name was added to the housing
permit after William had got divorced and married her. From the
housing permit it does appear
her name was added on at a different
time to the others as the signature of the township manager is
different.
[7]
Elizabeth says at that time she stayed in the house together with
William and his
youngest brother Piet. She says at that stage
Baltinah, who is the second applicant was not staying in the house
and that she has
since her own marriage being living in the
North-West.
[8]
Then as outlined earlier leasehold was introduced. This allowed
permit holders to
convert their rights first to 99-year leasehold and
then to full ownership.
[9]
As explained by Dodson AJ in
Moloi
under the 99-year leasehold
regime:
“
The
determination of who would be entitled to the leasehold rights would
in terms of section 2 of the Act be determined at an administrative
inquiry.”
[4]
[10]
But he notes that even when full ownership became possible later
under the 1993 Conversion Act:
“
the
procedure for determination of the person entitled to leasehold or
ownership pursuant to an inquiry was retained.”
[5]
[11]
In 1998 the home was transferred into the name of William and
Elizabeth by the Western Metropolitan
Substructure of the Greater
Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council.
[6]
.
According to Elizabeth after her husband passed away in 2005, she
reported his death to the Master. She was then advised by the
Master’s office to have the house (then according to her
registered in both their names) to get registered in her name. This
duly came about in 2006.
[12]
It is this transfer the applicants seek to set aside. The Department
says this was an error on
its behalf.
[13]
The facts it relies on are that after that death of Martha the
Housing Transfer Bureau sold the
property at a discount William.
There is no detail as to when this occurred nor on whose information
this is based. Elizabeth claims
to have no knowledge of any family
consultation. But what is clear from the record is that at the time
the 1998 transfer, William
was the permit holder and thus in a
different position to his siblings.
[14]
Then in 2004 according to the Department a Family House Rights
Agreement was entered into by
William, the second applicant and the
one sibling Elusia Bogatsi (also since deceased in 2019) Next to
Elizabeth’s name is
the remark “refused to come and sign”
The other three all arrived and signed.
[15]
Elizabeth denies any knowledge of the existence of this agreement and
claims that the first time
it came to her notice was in the course of
these proceedings.
[7]
But even
if I accept that this document was entered into by William at the
time, it does not purport to give any rights of ownership
to the
other siblings or their descendants.
[16]
The document has several features to it which are at variance with
the then known facts. It records
that the council will be
transferring the house to William who it describes as the
‘custodian.’ But by this time William
was already the
owner of the property (having with Elizabeth taken transfer in 1998).
It is not clear why it should state “the
Council proposes to
sell the property” to Willam in a document dated 2004.
[17]
But this notwithstanding the rights sought to be relied on the
document by the applicants are
those of the remaining siblings, who
are referred to as the ‘entitled family members.’
[18]
The department alleges that:
The
intention of this agreement was to ensure that the custodian and his
spouse shall keep the property as a family house with residential
accommodation available for the benefit of the entitled family
members (the Second and Third Applicants), their spouses and their
minor children. I annex hereto the family house rights agreement as
annexure
"MF2".
[19]
But the content of this document does not go this far as the
department contends it does. What
it does state is the following:
5.Customary rules
The Entitled Family
Members shall
a) endeavour to find
other suitable accommodation within their means and shall then vacate
the property;
b) keep the Custodian
regularly informed on the general nature of their financial and
employment circumstances, so that their ability
to contribute to
expenses may be ascertained.
[20]
The second applicant I will accept can claim to be one of the
contemplated “entitled family
members.” But this document
does not confer any rights of ownership or possession of the
property. Rather, it gives them
certain temporary rights of tenancy
which in any event they did not exercise at the time.
[21]
What the agreement goes on to record is that the Custodian must keep
a signed original of the
agreement to the title deed, and second,
that if at any stage in the future legislation comes into effect for
a form of family
ownership to be recorded then they (the entitled
members) could apply to have a note of the agreement endorsed on the
title deed.
Quite what the effect of such an endorsement would mean
is by no means clear. But assuming for the time being on the most
favourable
construction of it for the applicants, that it meant that
once a law creating family membership was passed, they could become
joint
owners there are two problems. First Elizabeth to whom joint
title had passed in 1998 was never a party to the agreement. Without
her consent no title could have been passed nor for that matter give
the other any other rights in respect of the property. Second
no such
legislation has yet been passed.
[22]
In short there is nothing in this agreement between the entitled
members and William, then a
joint owner of the house with the first
respondent, which suggests that:
d.
That property was erroneously transferred
to the first respondent in 2006;
e.
That the second applicant or any other of
the descendants of the entitled members have any rights to the house.
[23]
It may well be that in 1998 a better process of consultation should
have taken place before the
house was transferred to William and
Elizabeth – but that has long passed and if there was to be
review it should have taken
place then.
[24]
What now appears to have precipitated this dispute so many years
later is that
:
“
The
descendants of the custodian have also been denied rights of
admission to the property by the First Respondent. She has ultimately
illegally appropriated the property to herself to the exclusion of
the other entitled family members and their descendants.”
[25]
I accept that the shortage of housing has had unfortunate
consequences for later generations,
but this does not mean anything
unlawful has taken place.
[26]
In
Myers v Van Heerden,
the court held that the only grounds
on which a deed can be altered or added to are when:
“
(a)
that there was no justa causa for the execution of the deed, for
example, because the transfer was induced by fraud or because
the
contract, in execution of which the deed was registered, was induced
by fraud; and (b) that the deed does not reflect truly
the agreement
entered into by the parties, for example, because the deed as
registered does not truly carry out, and is not a true
record of the
contract entered into by the parties or because the contract, in
execution of which the deed was registered, does
not, on account of
mutual error, reflect the true intentions of the parties and the deed
in consequence does not carry out the
contract nor is it a true
record of the execution of the contract.”
[8]
[27]
There is nothing in the family agreement that evidences an agreement
to change the ownership
of the property. At best it gave some rights
of tenancy to the family members at the time. But that was in any
event not a right
they could exercise since they were not in the
house in the time. Nor did it purport to confer joint ownership on
the other siblings.
There is no language in it to this effect. And as
noted Elizabeth a co-owner was not party to this agreement. There is
thus no
evidential basis to go behind the existing terms of the deed.
[28]
If this is the case, then there is no basis to suggest that the 2006
transfer was done in error.
The applicants have not made out a case
for the relief they seek. The application accordingly fails.
ORDER:-
[29]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are liable for the costs of the first respondents
jointly and severally the
one paying the other to be absolved.
N.
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 19 April 2022
Date
of judgment: 07 October 2022
Appearances:
Counsel
for the First, Second and Third Applicant:
Adv JD
Napo
Instructed
by.
Raborifi R.Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
Adv S.F Sibisi
Instructed
by:
Motlhasedi Attorneys
[1]
Moloi
v Moloi and others; Smith and another v Mokgedi and others
[2014]
JOL 32594 (GSJ).
[2]
This
was by way of the Gauteng Conversion of Certain Rights into
Leasehold or Ownership Amendment Act 7 of 2000;
Gauteng General Law Amendment Act 4 of 2005.
[3]
Government
Notice R1036 of 14 June 1968 Regulations Governing the Control and
Supervision of an Urban Black Residential Area and
Relevant Matters.
As Dodson AJ points out this was amended on numerous occasions, the
last such amendment having been effected
by Government Notice 2733
of 17 December 1982. See Moloi op cit. footnote 2.
[4]
Moloi
v Moloi and others; Smith and another v Mokgedi and others
[2014] JOL 32594
(GSJ) para 3.
[5]
Moloi
v Moloi and others; Smith and another v Mokgedi and others
[2014] JOL 32594
(GSJ) para 4.
[6]
Answering
affidavit ad paragraph 9 and annexure DEP 3.
[7]
Answering
affidavit ad paragraph 9.
[8]
1966
(2) SA 649
(C).
sino noindex
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