Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 464South Africa
O.K.M.M v L.M.P.M and Another (2025/040036) [2025] ZAGPPHC 464 (25 April 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## O.K.M.M v L.M.P.M and Another (2025/040036) [2025] ZAGPPHC 464 (25 April 2025)
O.K.M.M v L.M.P.M and Another (2025/040036) [2025] ZAGPPHC 464 (25 April 2025)
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sino date 25 April 2025
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No.
2025-040036
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
DATE:
25 April 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
M[...]:
O[...] K[...] M[...]
Applicant
And
M[...]: L[...]
M[...] P[...]
MATJEE:
TSHEPO JOHANNES
First Respondent
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
YENDE
AJ
[1]
This is an opposed enforcement application in terms of
section 18
(1) and (3) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, in
terms of which the applicant seeks an order that the operation and
execution of the order of Justice Mokose of 2 April 2025
[1]
,
shall
not
be
suspended pending final determination of all present and future
applications for leave to appeal or appeals lodged by the second
respondent.
[2]
The applicant contends that this application is factually in that the
second respondent lodged his application for leave to
appeal on 8
April 2025, this being the date on which the Justice Mokose order
lost its efficacy and the applicant’s urgency
began.
Immediately thereafter, on 9 April 2025, the Applicant launched the
present agent application which points to the applicant’s
promptness in bringing her application before Court.
[3]
The applicant contends further that the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
treats the enforceability of a judgment pending appeal
processes as inherently urgent, thus condoning the applicant’s
non-compliance
with the prescribed forms, manner of service and time
periods in terms of the Rules of the above the Honourable Court and
permitting
this application to be heard as one of urgency in terms of
Rule 6 (12) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[3.1] The applicant
contends that she will not obtain substantial redress at a hearing in
due course if the processes of appeal
unfold in the ordinary course,
thus it is for that reason that the section 18 (3) procedure is
therefore manifestly inherently
urgent.
The
applicant’s main contentions ad exceptional circumstances are
interalia that:
[4]
The applicant was in peaceful and undisturbed possession
of immovable property situated at number 6[...] M[...]
Way, Xanadu
Nature Estate, Hartbeespoort, North-West (“the matrimonial
home”). The second respondent dispossessed the
applicant of the
matrimonial home by terminating the water and electricity supply as
well as by disconnecting and removing solar
equipment mounted on the
wall in the garage for consequent to his non-payment of municipal
charges as well as the home owners’
association levies. The
second respondent has been throughout responsible for payment of
same.
[4.1] The
applicant is a chronic patient and suffers from a chronic condition.
Her possession of the matrimonial
home was surreptitiously spoliated
by the second respondent during her temporary hospitalisation.
[4.2] The
applicant urgently needs water, electricity and solar equipment to be
restored by the second respondent at
the immovable property situated
at number 6[...] M[...] Way, Xanadu Nature Estate, Hartbeespoort,
North-West (“the matrimonial
home”) which has been cut
off by the second respondent while she was hospitalized between the
18 March 2025 until discharged
on Sunday 23 March 2025.
[4.3] Should
the Justice Mokose order not be put into operation with immediate
effect, it would result in the
second respondent who has unlawfully
spoliated the applicant of her peaceful and undisturbed possession
and occupation of the matrimonial
home, benefiting from his unlawful
conduct. The severity of the impact of the suspension of the Mokose J
order is catastrophic
on the applicant and two of her minor children
whose entire livelihoods and existence have been in the matrimonial
home.
[4.4] The
second respondent previously launched an application for leave to
appeal an anti-dissipation order granted
by Nyathi J in the above
Honourable Court in favour of the Applicant on 27 September 2024,
under case number 061379/2024, in connection
with the matrimonial
home, which application for leave to appeal the second respondent
left dormant until it lapsed. Thus, the
enforcement of Justice Mokose
order will incentivise the second respondent to pursue his appeal
with the necessary vigour since
he has been demonstrated to have a
tendency of launching applications for leave to appeal and simply
leaving them dormant.
The
applicant’s main contentions ad irreparable harm included
interalia that:
[5]
The Applicant has been deprived of possession and
occupation of the matrimonial home on an ongoing basis, as such,
she
continuously suffers irreparable harm and prejudice with each day
that passes. That at the time of the hearing of the
present
application, the Applicant would have been deprived of possession of
the matrimonial home for a full month.
[5.1] The applicant
further contends that the right of possession is inextricably linked
to time in that a period of enjoyment of
such a right cannot be
restored after the fact of its deprivation. A period of unlawful
spoliation cannot be taken out of the hands
of the second respondent,
after that time has passed, to be handed back to the Applicant.
[5.2] The applicant
averred that the second respondent will not suffer any irreparable
harm if the order of Justice Mokose of 2
April 2025, is
not
be
suspended pending his application for leave to appeal or appeal.
That there is no impediment to the second respondent bringing
eviction proceedings against the applicant for her ejectment. Should
the second respondent so choose, he may, without waiting for
the
appeal process to unfold, pursue eviction proceedings against the
applicant alternatively, the second respondent may also if
needs be
instituting legal proceedings against the applicant for the recovery
of the outstanding municipal debt that he claims
the applicant has
accumulated by virtue of her occupation of the matrimonial home.
[5.3] The applicant
further contends that she will not be able to obtain substantial
redress at a hearing in due course unless the
order sought in her
Notice of Motion to is granted on urgent basis. Since this flows from
the nature of the right she sought to
vindicate through Justice
Mokose order, being a possessory right.
SECOND
RESPONDENT’S MAIN CONTENTIONS:
[6]
The second respondent opposes this application and argues
that the applicant is accommodated by her loving family
and is
subjected to daily support and warmth of her family and parents. The
second respondent argues further that, the applicant
continues to
coexist with her children and she is gainfully employed earning a
substantial salary.
[7]
More over the second respondent contends that the applicant
owns an immovable property at 6[...] B[...] Crescent,
Pretoria North,
0182 which is a 3-bedroom house, with 2 bathrooms, kitchen, sitting
room and a double garage which is unoccupied
she can relocate to
same. The second respondent does not deny that the applicant has
chronic illness but maintains that the Applicant
has a Bestmed
medical aid scheme and therefore her chronic illness is treated by
top medical practitioners and in private medical
facilities.
[8]
In the main the second respondent complains that he has
got no means to pay for the Municipality debts thus if Justice
Mokose
order is enforced the second respondent will be bound to be in
contempt of the same court order due to financial constraints.
The
second respondent argued that the applicant failed to join the
Municipality who cut the water and electricity to the matrimonial
home, the party to whom this application ought to have been directed
to. As a result of this non joinder, the entire case before
this
honourable court falls and must be dismissed with costs.
Legal
frame work.
[9]
Section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act
provides
in the relevant part as follows that
“
Suspension
of decision pending appeal: -
‘
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under
exceptional circumstances orders otherwise, the operation
and
execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended pending the
decision of
the application or appeal.
(2)
… … …
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection
(1) or (2), if the party
who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable
harm if the court does not so order and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4)
If a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1)—
(i)
the court must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii)
the aggrieved party has an automatic right of appeal to the next
highest
court;
(iii)
the court hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of
extreme
urgency; and
(iv)
such order will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of
such appeal.
[10]
When considering the legal framework mentioned
supra
it is apposite in
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act that
it
allows for the execution of a court order, despite an appeal, if
certain conditions are met. In
casu,
the applicant is seeking
an order enforcing the order of Justice Mokose which order was
obtained consequent to the second respondent
having acted unlawfully
and in disregard of the law and the rule of law. The second
respondent has noted an appeal against
the order of Justice Mokose
which in effect means that the second respondent who has by all
accounts, made himself guilty of self-help,
having acted unlawfully
and disregarded the rule of law must benefit from such conduct (Which
conduct Justice Mokose has pronounced
on its unlawfulness) cannot and
should not be countenanced.
[11]
In terms of
section 18(3)
, the applicant(s) seeking enforcement
of the order must prove on balance of probabilities that they will
suffer irreparable harm
if the execution of the order is suspended,
and that the respondent(s) will not suffer irreparable harm if the
execution proceeds.
The court must then weigh up the potential harm
to both parties to determine whether the exceptional circumstances
pleaded warrants
allowing the execution to proceed. Lastly the
exceptional circumstances pleaded must be unusual or extraordinary to
justify overriding
the general rule of suspension of orders pending
the appeal process.
[12]
The Supreme Court of Appeal has held that the prospects of
success on appeal, or lack thereof, are an important
consideration
[2]
. The enquiry as
to the existence of ‘exceptional circumstance’ is a
factual one and the court has discretion to exercise
[3]
.
In
casu
,
I find that there are exceptional circumstances present in this
matter as mentioned
supra
.
In deed the applicant would suffer severe irreparable harm if Justice
Mokose Order is suspended pending the appeal process launched
by the
second respondent. The second respondent has demonstrated that in the
past he had once launched an application for leave
to appeal an
anti-dissipation order granted in favour of the applicant on 27
September 2024 under case number 061379/2024 pertaining
to the
matrimonial home -which application the second respondent left
dormant until it lapsed.
[13]
I have weighed more on this aspect as the same gives the court an
impression that the second respondent has also launched the
present
appeal against Justice Mokose order in order to have same suspended
and later not pursue the appeal processes until is
it dormant.
Thus, benefiting from his already pronounced unlawful conduct. The
second respondent have failed to demonstrate
that he will suffer
irreparable harm if Justice Mokose order is not suspended save to
decry the fact that he will not be able to
pay the Municipality the
arrear rates and taxes which issue was never pleaded during the
spoliation application.
[14]
I found that when considering the both submissions by the counsel for
the applicant as well as the counsel for the second
respondent I am
constraint to find that the applicant has demonstrated that
exceptional circumstances exist that entitles her to
an order that
the operation of Justice Mokose granted on 2
nd
April 2025
shall not be suspended. I am therefore satisfied on the balance of
probabilities that indeed the applicant will suffer
irreparable harm
if the relief sought is not granted, further that the applicant has
demonstrated exceptional circumstances entitling
her to an order
enforcing the order of Justice Mokose pending the second respondent’s
leave to appeal and appeal.
[15]
I found that this matter warrants urgency by virtue of
its nature and that indeed the requirement of Rule 6(12)
of the
Uniform Rules of the Court has been met.
[12]
As the consequence, I make the following order.
Order
1. In terms of section
18(1), read with section 18(3), of Act 10 of 2013
[4]
,
it is ordered that the operation and execution of the order of
Justice Mokose granted on 2
nd
April 2025, shall not be
suspended pending a final decision on the second respondent’s
application for leave to appeal and
in the event of leave to appeal
granted, the final outcome of such appeal process;
2. The second respondent
shall pay the cost of this urgent application on attorney and client
scale B.
J
YENDE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This
judgment was prepared by
YENDE AJ.
It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and uploaded on Caselines
electronic
platform and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down
is deemed
25
April 2025.
Appearances:
Attorney
for Applicant
:
Mr
S Twala
From
Twala Attorneys Inc
C/O
Hack Stupel & Ross Attorneys
2
nd
floor, Standard Bank Chambers
Church
Square, Pretoria
Advocate
for Second Respondent
:
P
Mafu
Instructed
by:
Masipa
Attorneys.
1027
Stanza Bopape Street
Hatfield,
Pretoria
Heard:
23
April 2025
Delivered:
25
April 2025
[1]
Justice Mokose order granted on 2 April 2025 -Spoliation order.
[2]
University of Free State v AfriForum and Another
2017 (5) SA 402
(SCA) at paragraph(s) 14-15
[3]
Incubeta Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another 2014 (3)
SA 189 (GJ).
[4]
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
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