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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2025] ZAGPPHC 249
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## Passano v Erasmus (A163/2023)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 249 (12 March 2025)
Passano v Erasmus (A163/2023)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 249 (12 March 2025)
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sino date 12 March 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Lien –
Improvements
to property
–
Construction
of house and installation of a borehole during marriage –
Improvements constituted a lettable asset –
Proved their
usefulness – Made substantial improvements to property with
consent – Qualifying as a bona fide
possessor and occupier –
Lien is a real right enforceable against all third parties –
Exercise of lien to remain
in occupation of house had been lawful
– Lien provided a lawful defence against eviction –
Appeal dismissed.
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A163/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
12
March 2025
In
the matter between:
CAREL
PASSANO
Appellant
and
BELINDA
ERASMUS
Respondent
Summary:
Enrichment lien – an enrichment lien arising from
improvements effected to a property, constitutes a real right which
can
be enforced against a subsequent purchaser of an immovable
property, despite the claim of enrichment being against the erstwhile
owner, who had been enriched by the improvements. The exercise of
such a lien is a lawful and valid defence against eviction. In
this
matter, the lien was exercised by the holder thereof by remaining in
possession of a house constructed on a previously vacant
plot of
agricultural land. The new owner alleged that the respondent was in
unlawful occupation of the property while she exercised
her lien and
claimed for enrichment based on such alleged unlawful occupation. The
new owner’s appeal against the dismissal
of his claims by the
court a quo was dismissed.
ORDER
The
appeal is dismissed, with costs.
JUDGMENT
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein and is
handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
12 March 2025
.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, having
been the plaintiff in the court a quo, appealed to us against an
order whereby his enrichment claim against
the respondent had been
refused. The basis for the refusal was that the respondent’s
enrichment lien had been declared valid
in respect of a house which
she had built on a property previously belonging to her ex-spouse,
with his consent and while they
were still married.
Proceedings
in the court a quo
[2]
An application aimed
at evicting the respondent was referred to trial by Raulinga J on 25
April 2017. The issues to be determined
at trial were defined as
follows:
“
3.1
If the respondent (defendant in the future action) has effected
necessary and/or useful improvements to the
immovable property
situated at Plot 179, Boltonwold, Meyerton (the “property”)
on or before 3 June 2015 and if so,
3.1.1
Against whom such a claim, if any, vests.
3.1.2
The extent and nature of such improvements.
3.1.3
The qualification of such improvements …
3.1.4
The determination of enrichment of the applicant (plaintiff in future
action), if any.
3.2
If the respondent holds an improvement lien over the property.
3.3
If the respondent was and is entitled to remain in occupation of the
property since 8 September 2015
and, if not, the reasonable
compensation payable to the applicant for such occupation.
3.4
If the Applicant is entitled to an eviction order against the
respondent …
3.5
The costs of the action
”
.
[3]
At the time the
matter came on trial before Van Nieuwenhuizen J in November 2022, the
respondent had already vacated the property,
resulting in the
eviction-related relief having become moot. That only left the
parties’ respective enrichment claims alive.
[4]
In terms of a ruling
by Van Nieuwenhuizen J, the issues of merits and quantum of the
respondent’s counter-claim were separated.
[5]
The issue which the
appellant sought to have decided in the court a quo, was formulated
as follows by his counsel at the time: “
The
only point in dispute is whether the defendant was entitled to be in
possession or occupation and if not, the plaintiff is then
entitled
to compensation in lieu of rental so to speak
”
.
[6]
This formulation
accords with par 3.3 of the order of Raulinga J and is dependent on
the determination of paragraph 3.2 of his order,
that is, whether the
respondent had been entitled to an enrichment lien over the property.
The lien was also called an improvement
lien in the order, but in the
context of this case, the two terms are interchangeable.
[7]
Our learned sister in
the court a quo found as follows in this regard: “
19.
The defendant … had a retention lien in respect of the
property and was entitled to occupy the property until she was
compensated for the improvements she effected to the property. In the
result, the defendant’s occupation of the property
was ex lege
lawful
”
.
The term “
retention
lien”
is
interpreted to mean a lien which allowed the respondent to retain
possession of the property.
[8]
The appellant’s
claim (and the respondent’s counter-claim) were both dismissed
on the merits by Van Nieuwenhuizen J.
She made no order as to costs
and refused leave to appeal. The matter came before us with leave
from the Supreme Court of Appeal.
The
evidence
[9]
Save for the issue of
the quantum of the improvements and the extent of the respondent’s
alleged enrichment at the expense
or impoverishment of the appellant,
surprisingly little of the remainder of facts were in serious
dispute. I shall hereunder attempt
to summarise and distil the facts
from the parties’ affidavits and their rather scant oral
evidence.
[10]
When the respondent
and Mr Erasmus intended getting married, Mr Erasmus bought a 2,5ha
piece of vacant land for R 15 000.00
from his father in 2004. He
told the respondent that because the property was agricultural land,
it could not be registered in
both their names hence he became the
sole registered owner.
[11]
After the purchase,
the respondent started improving the property with the consent of Mr
Erasmus. Over time, she equipped the property
with a borehole,
secured electrical reticulation, erected a three-bedroomed house with
a double garage, planted trees and cultivated
a fenced garden around
the house.
[12]
The respondent
testified that the improvements either cost her or were valued at
R520 000.00. She had all the “slips”
to prove this,
and the improvements were financed by her from the proceeds of a
dog-breeding business that she ran as well as from
her sheep farming
operations. The details of the improvement costs were listed in
Annexure A to the respondent’s counter-claim.
[13]
The house was
completed in 2006, after her marriage to Mr Erasmus, and they moved
in in 2007.
[14]
On
4 June 2015, the appellant bought the property from Mr Erasmus for
R300 000.00. The respondent, upon hearing of this,
unsuccessfully
attempted in the Magistrates Court of Meyerton to stop
the transfer of the property. Due to the fact that the Magistrates
Court
was found to have lacked the requisite jurisdiction, the
respondent could not obtain an interdict, as a result of which the
applicant
took transfer of the property on 15 August 2021. By that
time, the relationship between the respondent and Mr Erasmus had
become
so acrimonious that the proceedings in the Magistrate Court
had even been initiated in terms of the Domestic Violence Act
[1]
.
[15]
At the time that the
appellant bought the property, he was told by Mr Erasmus that the
respondent would vacate the house soon thereafter.
This was, however,
not the case and the respondent continued to occupy the house with
her two children, refusing to leave.
[16]
Prior to the
launching of the eviction application, the appellant unsuccessfully
attempted to coerce the respondent into signing
a lease agreement.
[17]
In
his founding affidavit, the appellant disputed the respondent’s
improvement lien (of which he had gained knowledge due
to the
application in the Magistrates Court) and claimed that the
“
Placaeten
”
[2]
were applicable. Despite this, he formulated the position in his
founding affidavit thus: “
I
believe that an enrichment lien, should an applicant be successful,
entitles said applicant to remain in possession of said property
until compensated for any useful and necessary improvements
”
[3]
.
[18]
The only evidence led
by the parties, were that of themselves and a letting agent called by
the appellant.
[19]
While the parties’
evidence was in accordance with that summarized above, the letting
agent testified about the possible rental
amount of the house. She
testified however, that she could only testify as to rental at the
time of the trial and said: “
I
cannot speak before that, but for now the house has been renovated,
everything has been replaced, so we can look at about ten
”
(meaning R10 000.00
per month).
[20]
Although she was
asked to make an estimation, the letting agent could not specify with
any level of certainty what rental might
have been justified at any
time from 2015 to 2022. She said that while the house had been
“beautifully” re-done at
the time of her inspection in
2022, “
...
I cannot speak for years ago because I have not seen the property
then
”
.
Discussion
[21]
The
court a quo, in respect of an enrichment lien, referred to the
following extracts from
Lakka
v Beukes and Another
[4]
:
“
It
is trite that a bona fide possessor who has preserved or made
improvements to another’s property at his or her expense
has a
right of retention against the property to secure compensation for
his or her necessary and useful expenses. This is a real
right and an
absolute defence against eviction by the owner or any future owners
of the property. The exceptions being where ownership
is acquired
though a sale in execution where the purchaser was unaware of the
right of retention and the retentor, with full knowledge
of the sale
fails to inform the purchaser of this right and sales in insolvency.
Where
it is the previous owner of property who has been enriched (as in
this case the Visagies) at the expense of the lien holder,
it is to
him that the lien holder should seek redress for purposes of a
possible enrichment claim, but the right to retention can
be held
against the new owner (even though he or she has not been enriched)
until the lien holder has been duly compensated. In
Pheiffer v Van
Wyk and Others
[5]
the
SCA held:
[12]
A real lien (an enrichment lien) is afforded a person who has
expended money or labour on another’s
property without any
prior contractual relationship between the parties. The lien holder
is entitled to retain possession until
his enrichment claim has been
met. It is an established principle of our law that the owner of the
property subject to a right
of retention may defeat the lien by
furnishing adequate security for the payment of the debt
”
.
[22]
As
to the issue of whether the respondent qualified to be regarded as a
bona
fide
occupier,
the court a quo relied on the following extract from
Boshoga
& Another v Mmakolo and Others
[6]
:
“
[32]
In Wille’s Principles of South African Law
[7]
reference
is made to de Vos Verrykingsaanspreeklikheid 245-7 who defines (for
the purposes of the law of enrichment) a bona fide
possessor as
someone who possesses (either directly or indirectly) property of
which he believes he is the owner; a mala fide possessor,
on the
other hand, acts as if he were the owner, while knowing that he is
not. An occupier is someone who does not have the animus
domini but
nevertheless occupies the property because it is in his interest to
do so. Occupiers are divided into lawful occupiers
(i.e. those who
have the right to occupy the property), bona fide occupiers (i.e.
those who believe themselves to be lawful occupiers,
but are not) and
mala fide occupiers (i.e. those who occupy property as if they are
lawful occupiers, but know that they are not)
”
.
[23]
To
the above can be added that the learned authors of
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
contended
that “useful improvements” must be taken to mean
improvements that increase the value of the property
[8]
.
[24]
Although
the cases relied on by the learned judge in the court a quo (apart
from
Pheiffer
v Van Wyk
)
are somewhat obscure Saflii references, the contents correctly
reflect the state of our law. See in this regard inter alia
Kommisaris
van Binnelandse Inkomste v Anglo American (OFS) Housing Co Ltd
[9]
,
Hochmetals
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Otavi Mining Co (Pty) Ltd
[10]
,
Roode
v De Kock & Ano
[11]
and
Mancisco
& Sons CC
(in
liquidation) v Store
[12]
.
[25]
I am also of the view
that the law had correctly been applied to the facts: the respondent
had had permission of the owner of the
property to effect the
improvements. She afterwards also occupied the property with the
obvious consent of Mr Erasmus – she
was therefore not only a
bona fide possessor, but also a bona fide occupier.
[26]
It is also common
cause that there never existed any lease agreement between the
respondent and Mr Erasmus and also not between
the respondent and Mr
Erasmus’ successor in title, the appellant.
[27]
The fact that the
improvements were useful, also cannot be denied. The mere fact that
the improvements constituted a lettable asset,
as claimed by the
appellant, alone prove their usefulness. It also cannot be gainsaid
that the construction of a house, together
with ancillary works,
would have and, in fact did improve the value of what had before been
mere vacant land.
[28]
The respondent had,
therefore, satisfied all the requirements of an enrichment lien.
[29]
Although it was Mr
Erasmus, as the property owner at the time, who had been enriched by
the respondent’s conduct in her having
constructed the house,
her lien is a real right enforceable against all third parties, that
includes also the appellant.
[30]
Not only could the
appellant not have succeeded in his claim for eviction of the
respondent, the exercise of her lien by remaining
in occupation of
the house, had been lawful.
[31]
The
appellant’s contention, raised in the founding affidavit, that
the
Placaeten
should
find application, was not dealt with by the court a quo but was again
relied on by the appellant before us. As set out in
Coetzer
v Palabora Mining Co Ltd
(supra),
the
Placaeten
sought
to ameliorate the position of a landlord who is held ransom by an
erstwhile tenant who refuses to vacate the property by
claiming
reliance on an enrichment lien. The
Placaeten
,
which had been received into our law, only apply to rural land, and
their application to urban property as considered in
Coetzer
v Palabora Mining Co Ltd
,
has been rejected by the Supreme Court of Appeal
[13]
.
[32]
Notwithstanding that
the vacant plot in Meyerton might be agricultural land (a fact which
had not even been clearly proven), there
was never any
landlord/tenant relationship between the appellant (or Mr Erasmus)
and the respondent. The
Placaeten
then clearly finds no
application.
[33]
Would the appellant
in any event be able to claim that he has an enrichment claim against
the respondent for the value of her occupation?
[34]
It
has been held
[14]
that the
exercise of a right of retention diminishes the rights which a
property owner would normally have in respect of his property
(i.e.
by not being able to use it himself). It has also been held
[15]
that a person exercising his or her right of retention may not
benefit therefrom beyond the consequences of exercising a lien e.g
where a lien is exercised over business premises and the retentor
then capitalizing on this exercise by making a profit therefrom.
[35]
The
appellant had not, however, based his claim on any limitation of his
rights as the property owner or any exercise by the respondent
of her
right “wider than merely an object of security”
[16]
.
There was also no evidence of any “commercial
exploitation”
[17]
.
[36]
The
appellant had squarely based his enrichment claim on the premise that
the respondent’s occupation at the time had been
unlawful. Not
only had he expressly pleaded that the respondent’s enrichment
was as a result of her unlawful occupation
[18]
,
but he had pleaded that “…
during
the same period, the applicant has been impoverished by the
respondent unlawful occupation of the property
”
[19]
.
The alleged unlawfulness of the respondent’s conduct was the
premise upon which the appellant had claimed R528 000.00.
[37]
The appellant must be
held to his pleadings and it follows that, once the respondent’s
occupation had been found to have been
lawful, then the appellant’s
enrichment claim (as pleaded) fell away.
Costs
[38]
In the court a quo,
no order as to costs was made. This was because neither party had
been successful in their respective claims.
Before us, only the
appellant had appealed. Costs should follow the event of his
unsuccessful appeal. Although the respondent had
not appeared at the
appeal, we are uncertain as to whether any taxable costs had been
incurred by her. For that reason, a formal
costs order should be
made.
Order
[39]
In the premises, I propose that the appellant’s appeal be
dismissed, with costs.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
I agree
C VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
I agree and it is so
ordered.
N.G.M MAZIBUKO AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 19
February 2025
Judgment delivered: 12
March 2025
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv A. J. J du Plooy
Attorney
for the Applicant:
Richards Attorneys, Pretoria.
For
the Respondent:
Ms M Muller
Attorney
for the Respondent:
Legal Aid Board, Vereeniging
[1]
116 of 1998.
[2]
In particular, act 10 of the
Placaeten
of 1658 and 1659, as
considered in
Coetzer
v Palabora Mining Co Ltd
1993
(3) SA 306
(T) per Mahomed J (as he then was).
[3]
Par 30 of the founding affidavit.
[4]
(CA
& R 60/2018)
[2020] ZANCHC 11
(23 March 2020).
[5]
2015
(5) SA 464
(SCA) at 467.
[6]
(82446/2016)
[2018] ZAGPPHC 656 (7 March 2018).
[7]
9
th
Edition at 1075
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
1960
(3) SA 642 (A).
[10]
1968
(1) SA 571 (A).
[11]
2013 (3) SA 123
(SCA).
[12]
2001 (1) SA 168
(W) (a decision of a full court).
[13]
Business
Aviation Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Rand Airport Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2006 (6) SA 605 (SCA).
[14]
Rekdurum (Pty) Ltd v Weider Gym Athlone (Pty) Ltd
1997 (1) SA 646
(CPD).
[15]
Ibid.
[16]
Ibid at 653 D – E.
[17]
Ibid at 653 E – F.
[18]
Par 7.1 of the appellant’s declaration.
[19]
Par 9 of the appellant’s declaration.
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