Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 366South Africa
Magdeline and Others v Indluplace Property Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (022833/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 366 (23 April 2025)
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as follows: “If an order is ambiguous, unenforceable, ineffective, inappropriate, or lacks the element of bringing finality to a matter or at least part of the case, it cannot be said that the court that granted it exercised its discretion properly. It is a fundamental principle of our law that a court order must be effective and enforceable, and it must be formulated in language that leaves no doubt as to what the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Magdeline and Others v Indluplace Property Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (022833/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 366 (23 April 2025)
Magdeline and Others v Indluplace Property Management (Pty) Ltd and Others (022833/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 366 (23 April 2025)
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sino date 23 April 2025
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
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 022833/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
23 April 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MAKOTI
NTHABISENG
MAGDELINE
First Applicant
SELAHLA
SEWELE
SARAH
Second Applicant
SELOMO
NTHABISENG SALAMINAH
Third
Applicant
MASHAU
FUMANI
GOLDWIN
Fourth Applicant
SINGO
ROFHIWA
MILLICENT
Fifth Applicant
MADIBA
LERATOTO MARIA
MOSIMA
Sixth Applicant
NONYANE
SHARMAIN NTWANANO
Seventh Applicant
NICK
MOTEBELE
Eighth Applicant
MUGWENA
TSHIFHIWA
ARABI
Nineth Applicant
CHARITY
MANGANYI
Tenth Applicant
NYIKO
MUKHARI
Eleventh Applicant
and
INDLUPLACE
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
INDLUPROP
I (PTY)
LIMITED
Second Respondent
TSHIDI
MOKOU
Third Respondent
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name
is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file system of this matter on CaseLines.
This matter
was heard in open court on the 11 February 2025. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 23 April 2025.
JUDGMENT
DOMINGO, AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application brought by eleven
applicants who reside at Quagga Estate, Erf 2[...] R[...] Road,
Pretoria West (hereinafter
referred to as “the property”)
managed by the first, second and third respondents. The applicants
are seeking the following
relief from the respondents.
1.1
That the first, second and third
respondents be ordered to restore electricity and water services
permanently at the property, as
it is unconstitutional to block the
applicants’ electricity procurement as alleged;
1.2
That the first, second and third
respondents take full responsibility regarding the applicants'
livelihood as well as the conditions
at the property, hence the
applicants pay the full rental fees at the end of each month in
accordance with the lease agreement;
1.3
Lastly, to prevent future occurrences that
amount to ill-treatment of the respective applicants who are tenants
at the property
managed by the first, second and third respondents
and that the latter take full responsibility regarding the
applicants’
lease agreements not based on individual
leaseholders as the complaints of the applicants are collectively
similar to the issue
of living conditions at the property.
[2]
The first, second and third respondents
oppose the application, and at the outset raise the following three
points
in limine:
2.1
The applicants have failed to make out a case in its founding
affidavit for the relief
sought;
2.2
Misjoinder of the third respondent, having no direct or substantial
interest in the
matter;
2.3
The relief sought by the applicants is immensely vague and ambiguous.
Issues requiring
determination
[3]
The first set of issues called upon for
determination is whether the applicants have made a a case for the
relief sought in its
notice of motion after the determination of the
points
in limine
raised by the respondents.
[4]
The second issue called upon for
determination is costs
de bonis propriis
against the applicants’
attorneys.
First and third point
in limine
[5]
I will deal with the first point
in
limine
(failure to make out a case)
together with the second point
in limine
(
the relief sought is immensely vague
and ambiguous) together as they are interlinked.
[6]
The
applicants seek a final interdictory relief as part of the relief
sought. The respondents have submitted that, it is trite,
that in
order to be successful in seeking interdictory relief, the applicants
will have to show (i) that they have a clear right;
(ii) an injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended; and (iii) the absence
of an alternative remedy. All three requirements
must be present and
be satisfied. The discretion of a court to refuse a final interdict,
provided the three requisites are present
is very limited.
[1]
[7]
The applicants have produced no facts or
evidence regarding the purported maintenance issues, including issues
relating to utilities
at the premises. There are no facts or evidence
regarding the factual background on why, when and how their
electricity and water
supply was cut.
[8]
The applicants have failed to advance any
facts or evidence relating to any purported present, future, or past
ill-treatments of
any of the eleven applicants, or by any of the
respondents.
[9]
Neither the Founding Affidavit, nor the
Confirmatory Affidavits of the applicants set out any facts to
determine or evaluate on
what basis the applicants formulated the
relief they seek.
[10]
The
determination as to whether a right is clear is a matter of evidence.
To establish a clear right, the applicants must prove
on a balance of
probability, facts which in terms of substantive law establish the
right relied on.
[2]
[11]
The applicants have failed to address and
meet any one of the three requirements for the final interdictory
relief sought. The failure
to advance facts and evidence renders me
incapable to determine or evaluate the existence of any clear rights,
injury committed
or reasonably apprehended by the applicants and
there is the absence of an alternative remedy.
[12]
The relief sought by the applicants to
order the respondents to restore the electricity and water, to order
the respondents to take
full responsibility regarding the applicants
livelihood as well as the conditions at the property and to order the
respondents
to prevent future occurrences of ill-treatment is
unsubstantiated, vague, ambiguous, unenforceable, without any logic
and bad in
law.
[13]
In
Eke
v Parsons
[3]
the
Constitutional Court held as follows:
“
If
an order is ambiguous, unenforceable, ineffective, inappropriate, or
lacks the element of bringing finality to a matter or at
least part
of the case, it cannot be said that the court that granted it
exercised its discretion properly. It is a fundamental
principle of
our law that a court order must be effective and enforceable, and it
must be formulated in language that leaves no
doubt as to what the
order requires to be done.”
[14]
The applicants have failed to make
out a case for the relief sought and the relief sought is vague and
ambiguous, thus I am in agreement
with the submissions made by the
respondents counsel that it would be impossible for any of the
respondents to determine the
obligations flowing from a order
in such terms, rendering the order unenforceable.
[15]
The applicants have failed to make out a
case for the relief sought and the relief sought is indeed immensely
vague and ambiguous,
I accordingly uphold the respondents first and
third points
in limine.
Second point in limine
[16]
The respondents second point
in
limine
is the misjoinder of the third
respondent, having no direct or substantial interest in this matter.
[17]
The first applicant alleges on the one hand
that the third respondent, Mr Tshidi Mokou is an agent of the first
respondent and on
the other hand, that the third respondent holds the
leases with the applicants.
[18]
It has been submitted that the third
respondent does not have any direct and substantial interest in this
matter and the applicants
have failed to make out any case against
the third respondent or advance any facts upon which it can be found
that the third respondent
was correctly joined in his personal
capacity.
[19]
Having considered the submission made above
in respect of the second point raised
in
limine
, I find merit in the submission
as the applicants have failed to provide any facts or evidence to
make out a case against the third
respondent in joining him in his
personal capacity.
[20]
I accordingly uphold the second point
in
limine.
Costs de bonis
propriis
[21]
Counsel
on behalf of the respondents has referred me to the
Multi-Links
Telecommunications LTD v Africa Prepaid Services Nigeria Ltd; Telkom
SA SOC Limited & Another v Blue Label Telecoms
Limited &
Others
[4]
case,
in
which the principles relating to costs order
de
bonis propriis
against legal practitioners were re-stated and explained as follows:
“
Only
in exceptional circumstances and pursuant to a discretion judicially
exercised is a party ordered to pay costs on a punitive
scale. Even
more exceptional is an order that a legal representative should be
ordered to pay the costs out of his own pocket.
It is quite
correct…that the obvious policy consideration underlying the
court’s reluctance, to order costs against
legal
representatives personally, is that attorneys and counsel are
expected to pursue their client’s rights and interests
fearlessly and vigorously without undue regard for their personal
convenience. In that context they ought not to be intimidated
either
by their opponent or even, I may add, by the court.
Legal
practitioners must present their case fearlessly and vigorously, but
always within the context of set ethical rules that pertain
to them,
and which are aimed at preventing practitioners from becoming parties
to deception of the court.
It is in
this context that society and the courts and the professions demand
absolute personal integrity and scrupulous honesty
of each
practitioner.
It is true that legal
representatives sometimes make errors of law, omit to comply fully
with the rules of court or err in other
ways related to the conduct
of proceedings. This is an everyday occurrence. This does not,
however, per se ordinarily result in
the court showing its
displeasure by ordering the particular legal practitioner to pay the
costs from his own pocket.
Such an order is reserved for conduct
which substantially and materially deviates from the standard
expected of the legal practitioners,
such that their clients, the
actual parties to the litigation, cannot be expected to bear the
costs, or because the court feels
compelled to mark its profound
displeasure at the conduct of an attorney in any particular context.
Examples are dishonesty, obstructions
of the interests of justice,
irresponsible and grossly negligent conduct, litigating in a a
reckless manner, misleading the court,
gross incompetence and a lack
of care.”
[22]
The applicants’ application before
this court is fatally flawed and bad in law.
[23]
Counsel for the applicants have placed no
facts before the court to allow me or the respondents to remotely
determine what the applicants’
case is about.
[24]
The applicants’ papers submitted in
this application were riddled with case law and legislation, none of
which were relevant.
The applicants’ heads of argument were
also riddled with lengthy quotes from various case law, none of which
were applied
to any facts or contextualised in order for me or the
respondents to determine its application to ‘non-existing’
facts.
It failed to advance any argument in support of the
requirements for the relief sought having been met.
[25]
Our
courts have in exceptional circumstances ordered costs
de
bonis propriis.
In
the
Silinga
and Others v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[5]
the
court stated:
“
An
order that a legal practitioner (or for that matter a representative
litigant) should pay the costs personally carries with it
obviously
serious consequences that necessarily impinge upon the rights and
interests of that representative. It is for this reason
that, in
dealing wish such cost orders, a practice has been developed by the
courts to afford the affected party
notice
of the intention to impose such an order
and
an opportunity to make representations or submissions prior to such
order being made and is based upon constitutionally protected
fundamental rights to a fair hearing.”
[26]
In the present matter, the respondents’
answering affidavit stated that they would be seeking an order that
the applicants’
attorneys be ordered to pay costs of the
application
de bonis propriis.
[27]
In
Hlumisa
Technologies (Pty) Ltd and Another v Voigt N.O. and Others
[6]
the
court stated that notice in an answering affidavit that a cost order
de
bonis propriis
is being sought is sufficient in terms of notifying the affected
party of the intention to impose such an order.
[28]
In the present matter, it was also
submitted by Counsel on behalf of the respondents that on the 8 April
2024, and before
delivering the respondents’ answering
affidavit, the respondents’ attorneys advised the applicants’
attorneys
of the flawed application and offered them an opportunity
to withdraw the application, failing which the respondents’
attorneys
would seek costs
de bonis
propriis.
[29]
Furthermore, on the 4 February 2025 in an
email correspondence to the respondents’ attorneys, the
applicants’ attorneys
indicated that they would furnish the
respondents with a notice of withdrawal. The respondents’
attorneys replied through
email correspondence on the 4 February
2025, that they would proceed to argue costs
de
bonis propriis
and urged the
applicants’ attorneys to be present at the Pretoria High Court
at 10h00 on 10 February 2025. They also informed
the applicants’
attorneys that a copy of this email correspondence would be uploaded
onto CaseLines and brought to the Judge's
attention.
[30]
Despite the aforesaid warnings and the
notice that a cost order
de bonis
propriis
would be sought by the
respondents, the applicants’ attorneys persisted with the
application.
[31]
However, the applicants’ attorneys on
the eve of the hearing of this matter, on the 10 February 2025,
uploaded a notice of
withdrawal as attorneys of record. While this
case was heard in open court on the 11 February 2025, it must be
noted that the opposed
motion roll was set down for the week starting
from the 10 February to 15 February 2025.
[32]
This application is wholly misconceived,
and it is with profound displeasure that I express my discontent at
the behaviour by the
applicants’ attorneys which falls short of
and materially deviates from the standard expected of legal
practitioners, to
the detriment of the eleven applicants.
[33]
In the premises, I grant the cost order
de
bonis propriis.
Order
[34]
I hereby make the following order:
1.
The applicants’ application is
dismissed.
2.
The applicants’ attorneys are to pay
the first, second and third respondents cost
de
bonis propriis.
W DOMINGO
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
No
appearance
For
the Respondent:
ADVOCATE
C ERASMUS instructed by MJS ATTORNEYS
[1]
See
Supreme Court of Appeal decision in
Hotz
and Others v University of Cape Town
2016 4 AII SA 723 (SCA).
[2]
LAWSA
Vol. 11, 2
nd
Ed. 397.
[3]
[2015]
ZACC 30
para 74.
[4]
[2013]
4 AII SA 436 (GNP) paras 34 and 35.
[5]
(CA266/2017)
[2018] ZAECGHC 50 (26 June 2018) para 11.
[6]
(111/2018)
[2020] ZAECGHC 133 (1 December 2020) para 22.
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