Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 585South Africa
Muza and Another v Mokoena and Others (31542/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 585 (3 June 2025)
Headnotes
the property subject to leasehold from the Ivory Park Metropolitan Substructure.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Muza and Another v Mokoena and Others (31542/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 585 (3 June 2025)
Muza and Another v Mokoena and Others (31542/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 585 (3 June 2025)
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sino date 3 June 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
31542/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 03 June 2025
SIGNATURE: N V KHUMALO.
In the matter between:
MUZA
CONNEX FIDERLISI BERNADO
FIRST
APPLICANT
MUZA
ANNA NOMVULA
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
NANCY
M MOKOENA
FIRST
RESPONDENT
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND
RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS PRETORIA
THIRD
RESPONDENT
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF HOUSING
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
‘
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to be 03 June 2025
JUDGMENT
N
V KHUMALO J
Introduction
[1]
The Applicants seek an order against the Respondents in the following
terms:
1.1
That the sale and subsequent transfer of the property known as Erf no
7[...] Ivory Park Extension 8
Township in the name of the 1
st
Respondent under Title Deed Number: T54097/2019 is cancelled and set
aside;
1.2
An order directing the 3
rd
Respondent (the Registrar of
Deeds, Pretoria) to cancel and set aside the Title Deed which holds
the property known as Erf no 7[...]
Ivory Park Extension 8 Township
in the name of the 1
st
Respondent.
1.3.
The abovementioned property known as Erf no 7[...] Ivory Park
Extension 8 Township reverts back
to its original owner, City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“the 2
nd
Respondent), in order for them to facilitate that the 4
th
Respondent (Department of Human Settlement), Gauteng, holds an
investigation and a hearing in terms of s 24A of the Gauteng Housing
Act 6 of 1998 in order to determine who is rightfully entitled to the
ownership of the property known as Erf no 7[...] Ivory Park
Extension
8 Township;
1.4
It is ordered that a caveat be issued to prevent the alienation of
this property until the
matter is finalized;
1.5
That all subsequent transfer of the immovable property known as Erf
no 7[...] Ivory Park
Extension 8 Township be declared invalid.
1.6
That the Applicant be paid the sum of R350 000.00 as a fair and
reasonable pay for the expenses
incurred in improving the property;
1.7
And costs in the event of opposition.
[2]
The 1
st
Applicant, Mr CFD Muza, and the 2
nd
Applicant, Ms A N Muza, are husband and wife married in community of
property on 26 November 2016 and the occupants of erf no 7[...]
Ivory
Park Extension 8 (the property),
the ownership of which is in
dispute.
[3]
Ms N M Mokoena, the 1
st
Respondent is the registered owner of the property which she holds
under Title Deed number: T54097/2019, transferred to her subject
to a
pre-emptive right in terms of
s10A
of the
Housing Act 107 of 1997
.
[4]
The 2
nd
Respondent is the City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality Region A, cited as the Municipality as
defined in the Municipality
and Structures Act 117 of 1998 read
together with the Municipal and Structure Amendment Act 33 of 2000
and Notice 6766/200.
[5]
The 3
rd
Respondent is the Registrar of Deeds, Pretoria an
entity appointed and regulated by the Deeds Registration Act 47 0f
1947, responsible
for the registration of deeds and maintaining
information on the real estates and mortgages. The 4
th
Respondent is the Director General of the Department of Human
Settlement and an officer responsible for housing and urban
development
matters in terms of s 24A of the Gauteng Housing Act 6 of
1998 (GHA).
[6]
The 1
st
Applicant
has been in occupation of the property since 1997 till
to
date and alleges that he was at all relevant times due to receive
transfer of the property until the unknown occurred and in
consequence thereof, the 1
st
Respondent received transfer of the property instead, which he says
was in error. hence the abovementioned reliefs sought.
Historical background
to the title obtained
[7]
The property was acquired by the 1
st
Respondent’s
deceased husband in December 1990 in terms of the Black Communities
Development Act, 1984 (Act No.4 of 1984),
by signing an agreement
with the Transvaal Provincial Department as the lessor. In March 1997
he and the 1
st
Respondent signed a new lease agreement
with the Department of Housing at the Local Ivory Park Municipality
Offices which falls
under the City of Johannesburg in terms of the
Gauteng
Housing Act 107 of 1997
. They then held the property subject
to leasehold from the Ivory Park Metropolitan Substructure.
[8]
The properties were intended to provide sites for homeless people
with the appropriate
services plus services charges, and for
incorporation into the area of jurisdiction of a local authority
whereupon the Lessee shall
have a pre-emptive right to purchase the
property should it be available for sale. The properties were also
not to be sublet, assign,
ceded or any of the rights or
obligations delegated without prior consent of the lessor. The lessor
was also not to erect
more than one structure without prior written
consent of the lessor. Site competent person" means a competent
person as defined
in
section 1
of the principal Act; (BCDA)
[9]
The Applicant alleges that:
[9.1]
by the time the transfer of the property to the 1
st
Respondent took place on 29 August 2019, the 1
st
Respondent was no longer qualifying for the subsidised housing
(therefore not homeless) as she had acquired a property in the
interim through a mortgage bond originated facility which was
transferred to her name in 2012.
[9.2]
The 1
st
Respondent and her deceased husband sold their
subsidised property to him on 11 June 1997 for an amount of R3
500.00, which he
paid in two instalments of R1 500,00. The last
instalment of R500 was paid on August 1997 whereafter he continued to
occupy the
property without any issues. He has been paying the levies
ever since.
[9.3]
It was their agreement that they would approach the offices of the
2
nd
Respondent and change all documents therein to reflect
the Applicant’s name. He was not aware of any rules or law that
pertains
to the sale of the land. As a result of the sale, he
effected improvements that amounts to a sum of R350 000.00 on the
property.
The property was just a stand with a shack at the time of
the verbal sale agreement, with no concrete buildings at the time. He
then built a house and outside structures wherein he resides with his
wife and 3 children.
[10]
The 1
st
Respondent is now reneging on the sale agreement
and insists that his family vacate the premises. She has proceeded
with an eviction
action she instituted in the Magistrate Court which
is pending.
[11]
On 4 December 2009 a dispute arose in a meeting at the 2
nd
Respondent offices that was for the purposes of changing ownership.
In the light of the dispute another meeting was scheduled on
14
January 2010 with no positive results, notwithstanding that an
official of the 3
rd
Respondent, (later herein after
referred to as Ms Makhubela) attended to the matter and had promised
to furnish the 1
st
Respondent with an alternative property
seeing that he made such significant improvements to the property.
[12]
Furthermore, the Applicant claims that since the belated
transfer of the property to the
1
st
Respondent was only in
2019, therefore in error, as at the time she no longer qualified for
the subsidised housing, the transfer
was in violation of the housing
department rules that says ‘a recipient of a state provided
property must be “A FIRST-TIME
HOME OWNER.’
[13]
The Applicant therefore alleges that as a result, the transfer must
be cancelled, with the property
reverting to the 3
rd
Respondent. However in the meantime, the files with the content of
their particulars had disappeared, therefore the 4
th
Respondent must then hold an investigation and a hearing in terms of
s 24A of the Gauteng Housing Act 6 of 1998 (GHA) to determine
the
rightful owner.
[14]
Alternatively, if it is the sale to him that is found to be invalid,
he holds a lien over the property as
security for repayment of the
expenditure incurred. He therefore must be reimbursed all the money
he spent on the improvements
which totals R350 000.
[15]
The 1
st
Applicant attaches amongst other things two
notices from the City of Johannesburg Region A, one dated 4 December
2009, calling
upon the occupier of the property to come and register
for a title deed and the other one dated 14 January 2010 asking the
occupier
to bring water and lights statements with them. 1
st
Applicant has also attached a windeed search that indicates that the
Maokeng property was registered on 13 August 2012 in
the name
of the 1
st
Respondent. Whilst the registration of the
Ivory Park property took place on 29 August 2019. He
attached proof of payment
to the Municipality which shows a sporadic
payment of amounts of R100.
Respondents answer
[16]
The 1
st
Respondent disputes the allegations made by the Applicants that she
or she and the deceased did not qualify for the housing subsidy
when
they acquired the property since her deceased husband applied for the
subsidized housing in 1991. At the time they were staying
with the
deceased’s parents and not owning any property. They were then
allocated the site Erf 7[...] in Ivory Park. The
deceased had to sign
a lease agreement with the Transvaal Provincial Administration on 28
November 1990 and a further month to
month lease agreement with the
Ivory Park Metropolitan Substructure as the lessor on 15 March 1997.
Both leases attached.
[17]
She denies that they sold the property to the 1
st
Applicant. According to her they built a structure on the site that
consisted of 2 bedrooms, a kitchen, a dining room and an outside
bathroom, using board and zinc roofing. They lived comfortably on the
property with their four children for a period of +- 6 years
but
later had to make a choice to move away from the area for the sake of
their small children. At the time crime was on the rise
as it was not
yet a fully built up area. The relocation was intended to be temporal
with an intention to later built a proper structure
and for their son
to take occupation. They were able to buy a house in the Township
Maokeng
(referred to as the Maokeng
property) through a mortgage bond. She and her husband took transfer
of the
Maokeng property in 2010 when
registration took place.
[18]
They let the 1
st
Applicant stay in the property without a
sale or lease agreement concluded as he was destitute, squatting on a
vacant land with
no place to stay. He was also a friend of the
deceased and was to look after the property as they could not leave
it unattended.
Consequently, the Applicant was to remain there until
they were able to build so that their son could take occupation of
the property
or until her husband’s cousin could move to
Gauteng coming down from Limpopo who was the one supposed to occupy
and look
after the property until their son takes over occupation.
The cousin, however, reneged. The deceased is the one who concluded
the
agreement with the 1
st
Applicant to look after the
property. She is therefore not sure of the terms agreed upon, however
it was never their intention
to sell. As far as she knows the 1
st
Applicant was on his own when he moved in.
[19]
After some time the 1
st
Applicant had moved in, they noticed that he had demolished the
structures they had built and started building his own structures
in
the property without their consent. She and the deceased tried to
seek an audience with him to initiate talks about it to no
avail, the
1
st
Applicant refused to meet or to talk to them.
As
they could not get his attention, a notice to vacate was then served
on him.
The 1
st
Applicant resisted and undertook to continue the construction.
[20]
She confirms that in 2010 she and the deceased received an invitation
to attend the local Municipal
Office from the Housing Department but
was not told what it was all about. They found the Applicants already
there. A Ms Caroline
Makhubela, an official from the Housing
Department, after talking to the Applicants alone, came and told them
that the property
now belongs to the Applicants without providing any
clarity why it would be so. They did not accept that as they never
sold the
property. After the meeting they never got a feed back.
[21]
She denies that she ever signed anything for any sale or transfer of
the property to the 1
st
Applicant and did not pursue the
matter of the alleged sale any further. She disputes that she is not
eligible to own the property,
and argue that even if she was not, the
Applicant could not be a receiver of a subsidy as he is a foreign
national from Malawi.
[22]
She points out that, on the passing of the deceased she as the
executor of the estate appointed
her son to assist her with the
administration of the estates whereupon the property was transferred
to her. On a further attempt
to evict the Applicants from the
property, the 1
st
Applicant told her son that he paid an
amount to the Housing Department for the purchase of the property
alleging now to be the
lawful owner of the property. The said
information was not put to her and the deceased when they were called
at the Municipality
Offices. And she was hearing it for the first
time. It, however, did not make sense as she and her husband were the
holders of
the title and do not understand what the 1
st
Applicant was paying for. They also could not prove such
allegations.
[23]
She then attended the offices of the 2
nd
Respondent to
investigate how it could have been possible for the Applicants to
obtain ownership of the property without their
involvement. The
housing Department informed them that they sent several notices to
the property and there was no response. The
outcome of an
investigation into the alleged sale conducted by the Head of
Department at the request of her son did not find to
have been any
resale or re allocation of the property except to her and the
deceased.
[24]
The Applicants were notified of the 2
nd
Respondent’s findings but continue to refuse to vacate the
property despite the numerous requests and lawful demands.
She
was directed to attend head office and uplift her title deed in order
to proceed with the evictions of the Applicants and all
those who
o
ccupy the property through or under the
1
st
Applicant. As a result, in 2021 she launched the eviction proceedings
at the magistrate court which 1
st
Applicant is opposing. The matter was set down for oral evidence on
21 June 2022 and postponed sine die.
[25]
The 1
st
Respondent also indicated that the utilities are
owed on the property to the Municipality in varying amounts, inter
alia, an amount
of R57 282.41, owed as of 22 January 2016, R63 545.41
owed as of 16 March 2016 and an amount of R 111 279.70 owed as of 22
March
2019. Point 2 (b) of the title deed indicate that she and
the deceased could not sell the property within 8 years of transfer
without offering it to the Provincial Housing Department and
obtaining their consent. The 1
st
Applicant cannot produce
proof of any payments made in relation to the sale of the property as
no sale of the property informal
or formal has ever taken place.
[26]
In relation to the construction, the 1
st
Respondent
indicated that the 1
st
Applicant has proceeded to built
whilst fully aware that he was not authorised to do so under a firm
believe that this would confer
ownership on him as he now relies on
the building and reconstruction as grounds for setting aside and
cancellation of her Title
Deed. He did not obtain their consent to
demolish the structures that were already there and to build his
ones.
Applicant’s reply
[27]
In reply, the 1
st
Applicant disputed the averments in the
1
st
Respondent’s affidavit. He denied that
there were rooms built on the property except for a one room shack
which was
also on a very bad state and unoccupiable.
[28]
He disagreed that the 1
st
Applicant and the deceased ever
occupied the property, pointing out that the date of the sale of the
Maokeng property is 2003 and
he started staying at the property from
1997. From 1997 it is not clear where the 1
st
Respondent
and her husband were staying. They had stopped qualifying for a home
subsidy as soon as they qualified to purchase an
immovable property.
Therefore, at all relevant times until the property was transferred
to the 1
st
Respondent in 2019 it remained the property of
the 2
nd
Respondent and a state subsidy property as it was
leased to the 1
st
Respondent. It remained so until
July 2019 when it was transferred to the 1
st
Respondent.
[29]
He points out that the 1
st
Respondent only started
evicting him once she got the title deed and had done nothing since
1997. In the eviction action the 1
st
Respondent brought in
the magistrate court the 1
st
Respondent alleges therein
that the property was leased to him. He denies that the stand was
leased to him but sold.
[30]
On the invitations from the Municipality that he allegedly did not
forward to the Mokoenas,
he disputes that the 1
st
Respondent was not aware of the meeting. He alleges that he delivered
the invitation to attend the meeting personally to the 1
st
Respondent. At the meeting the 1
st
Respondent and her
husband agreed that they sold the property to him but could not abide
by the agreement because their children
were grown up then. The
operations manager advised them that for fairness they must look for
another stand to build on as he has
done. The operations manager then
asked him for his ID as well as birth certificates of his children
and advised them that a new
stand was going to be allocated to 1
st
Respondent and deceased and a new file opened for them.
[31]
He alleges that the 1
st
Respondent only started to evict
him recently after her husband passed away. Whilst her son has been
harassing him telling him
that he was prepared to reimburse him the
purchase price he paid and laments that he lost the recording of the
discussion. When
all this time the allegations were on the basis that
he paid the deceased and not the 2
nd
Respondent.
[32]
He argues that the notice to vacate was only served in 2019 and 1
st
Respondent saw the house personally for the first time after two
decades. There were no investigations made or concluded as alleged
by
1
st
Respondent.
[33]
He reiterated that the 1
st
Respondent and her husband sold
the stand to him in 1997 before any title was issued and it was still
an informal settlement. The
1
st
Respondent and the
deceased delayed him when they had to approach the municipality to
change the stand to his name. They started
to pull back from the
agreement after he had effected the improvements, that is why he
approached the 2
nd
Respondent.
[34]
The 2
nd
Respondent has nevertheless continued to issue the
title deed to the 1
st
Respondent without proper procedure
for the dispute resolution and or an enquiry in terms of s 24A of the
GHA and the necessary
report or outcome thereof. The title must
revert to 2
nd
Respondent to enable the tribunal to
exercise its powers without a hindrance It will not be able to
exercise its powers whilst
the title remains in the hands of the 1
st
Respondent. The status quo of the title deed in the name of the 2
nd
Respondent is relevant to the enquiry. The 3
rd
Respondent
does not have powers to cancel the title deed in the event that it
surfaces that the property indeed does not belong
to the 1
st
Respondent. property dispute started since 2010, but the
[35]
He submits that the 1
st
Respondent received the title deed in error both in fact and law. At
the time the stand was allocated to him per the 2
nd
Respondent and also per giving effect to their initial agreement of
sale of the stand. Legally the 1
st
Respondent no longer qualified for the housing subsidy. The title
deed came erroneously in the name of the 1
st
Respondent in 2019 disregarding the sale that came about more than 2
decades ago.
[36]
The 1
st
Respondent only issued a letter of demand
attempting to evict him in 2019 after she received a Title Deed when
he has stayed in
the property since 1997. Clause 2 (b) became
applicable only after the property has erroneously been transferred
to the 1
st
Respondent in 2019. He therefore seeks to
correct the error by cancellation of the title deed.
[37]
At the time of the sale he was not aware of
requirements that he had to comply with and that the 1
st
Respondent was not in possession of a title deed yet. It was only in
2009 that he then discussed the matter with his family friends
to
arrange a date and time to go to the local offices of the 2
nd
Respondent to effect their agreement and there was no problem at all.
That they were family friends is indicated by them allowing
him to
stay for 25 years at the time when his family friend was alive. He is
certain that if he was still alive today all the legal
action would
not have commenced and everything was going to be resolved in a good
way.
[38]
The rooms were built before the area had title deeds. All occupants
were informed by the area council that
since the streets are properly
made by the municipality and the sewer pipes clearly installed, they
need to be cautious of the
boundaries when building at least to be
two meters away from the EFR demarcation and not build on top of the
municipal services.
Whenever the title deeds come, they can submit
the plans with no guarantee that plans will be approved. It is also
possible that
certain structures will have to be adjusted for
approval. He alleges that the 1
st
Respondent only became
aware of the developments recently, if she had an issue he could have
stopped him long time ago.
[39]
The provisions of the Housing Act became applicable once the property
was transferred
otherwise it remained
the property of the 2
nd
Respondent then as an owner entitled to allocate and reallocate to
anyone out of its own discretion.
The
invitation letter was clear regarding the subject of the invitation.
The sole purpose of the issue was stand 7[...], the property.
To date
the covers of the office file still bears his name, but the contents
of the file have disappeared. That started when the
1
st
Respondent’s s son became involved and was colluding with the
HOD.
[40]
On the meeting with Makhubela he alleges that
Makhubela enquired on the property and the 1
st
Respondent agreed to have sold the property to him and needed it
back, now that the children have grown. It was then that Makhubela
told the 1
st
Respondent and the deceased that they will be allocated a new stand
as he has already built on the property and it was now allocated
to
him. Makhubela’s duty was to resolve stand disputes. She opened
a new file for the 1
st
Respondent and the deceased for the allocation of a new stand.
[41]
The 1
st
Applicant argues that the basis on which the property was allocated
to him was due to the sale agreement he concluded with the
1
st
Respondent as well as the improvements he had effected. An
investigation how the transfer took place will shed some significant
light as transfer to the 1
st
Respondent was in error.
[42]
There
are numerous disputes of facts in this matter. Notwithstanding their
likelihood foreseeable at the time of launching this
application, as
the parties were also party to an action in the Magistrate Court that
involves the same property, and seeking a
final relief together with
ancillary relief, the Applicants nevertheless proceeded on paper,
without resort to oral evidence. The
Plascon Evans
[1]
Rule is therefore applicable in deciding upon the disputes of fact
inherent in the matter. In essence, the court will grant a final
order if the facts stated by the Respondent, together with the
admitted facts in the Applicant’s affidavit, justify such
an
order. The general rule of resolving the disputes of facts in motion
proceedings emanating from the decision of V
an
Wyk J (with whom De Villiers JP and Rosenow J concurred)
in
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Ltd
v
Stellenvale
Winery
(
Pty
)
Ltd
[2]
where
it is further stated that:
“
.
. . . Where it is clear that facts, though not
formally admitted, cannot be denied, they must be regarded
as
admitted.”
[43]
There are exceptions applicable to the rule, that is when allegations
or denials of the Respondent
are so far-fetched or clearly untenable
that
the Court is justified in rejecting them merely on paper (see Botha
AJA’s remarks in A
ssociated
South African Bakeries Pty
Ltd
v
Oryx
& Vereinigte Bäckereien
(
Pty
)
Ltd
en Andere).
[3]
In
certain instances the denial by Respondent of a fact alleged by the
applicant may not be such as to raise a real, genuine or
bona
fide
dispute
of fact (see in this regard
Room
Hire Co. (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
Da
Mata v Otto, NO
,
[5]
).
[44]
Inversely, since the 1
st
Respondent failed to avail herself of her right to apply for the viva
voce evidence of the Applicant, if the court is to be satisfied
as to
the inherent credibility of the Applicant’s factual averment,
it may proceed based on the correctness thereof and include
this fact
among those upon which it will determine whether the Applicant is
entitled to the final relief he seeks.
[6]
Issues arising are:
[45]
The Applicant alleges that the transfer was erroneous and should be
cancelled on the basis that
(1) the property was already sold to him
at the time of transfer (2) and the 1
st
Respondent did not
qualify to take transfer of the property in her name as she already
at the date of transfer owned an immovable
property. The question to
be determined in that regard is therefore;
[45.1] whether or
not there was a sale of the property de facto and de iure as alleged
by the 1
st
Applicant that entitled him a right to own the
subsidised property or to be considered for ownership thereof. It is
therefore to
be determined if 1
st
Applicant had proven
factually the conclusion of such an agreement and its legality and
his eligibility to buy the property.
[45.2] Whether
ignorance of the law exonerates the ignorant from the application
thereof. (It excuses no one from compliance)
[46]
With regard to the second issue the question is whether the 1
st
Respondent was at the time of registration of transfer of the
property in 2019 eligible to take transfer of the property even
though she already held ownership of the Maokeng property.
Whether or not the 2
nd
Respondent was authorised to pass transfer of the property to the 1
st
Respondent at the time of transfer,
Whether or not there
was a sale of the property as alleged by the 1
st
Applicant?[
[47]
Prior to determining the facts, it is apropos to determine the legal
framework applicable with
regard to saleability of the property at
the time alleged. The starting point in determining that issue would
be to look at the
terms and conditions under which the property or
site was held by the deceased and the 1
st
Respondent, the alleged seller, at the time the alleged sale
supposedly took place.
The Leasehold and
Lease agreement
[48]
The salient terms and conditions under which the property was
obtained by the deceased in 1990
are pronounced in the preamble of
the Leasehold agreement he entered into with the Transvaal Provincial
Department, which,
inter alia
read as follows:
“
Whereas
the Transvaal Provincial Department as the Lessee who was in the
process of acquiring certain land, being portion
1 (a portion
of portion 4) of the farm Kaalfontein 12 IR, and generally known as
“Kaalfontein Squatter Camp” (the property)
through
expropriation,
And whereas the Lessor
intends transferring the property to the local authority in order to
allow it to be incorporated within the
jurisdiction of such local
authority thus enabling the Lessees of the sites on the property to
acquire the sites under Leasehold
or Freehold Ownership.
And whereas the Lessor
has agreed to let the sites on the property to certain Lessees in the
interim pending the acquisition thereof
by such Lessees as set out
before;
[49]
The lease agreement thereafter provides for, inter alia, the
following selected pertinent conditions,
cited verbatim hereunder:
[49.1] paragraph 1
thereof reads:
“
The
lessor hereby lets to the lessee who hereby hire site number 7[...]
situated in the property (the premises) “
[49.2]
paragraph 2 reads:
“
Notwithstanding
the date of signature of this agreement, the lease shall commence or
shall be deemed to have commenced on 28 November
1990.
[49.3]
paragraph 7 reads:
“
The
lessee shall not have a right to cede or assign this lease or sublet
the premises or any building erected on the premises or
any portion
thereof, or to cede or assign his rights to this agreement, not to
part with the occupational possession thereof to
any person
whatsoever without the prior consent of the lessor.’
[49.4] Paragraph 8
reads:
The lessee undertakes not
to erect more than 1 structure on the premises or allow any other
party to erect such additional structure.
[49.5]
Paragraph 9 reads :
The parties place on
record that the property is intended for incorporation into the area
of jurisdiction of a local authority.
However, the lessee’s
right of occupation
shall not otherwise be affected by such
incorporation and
he shall have a pre-emptive right to purchase
the premises should it become available.
[49.6]
Paragraph 10 reads:
It is noted that the
intention of the parties is to
provide sites
for homeless
persons
with the appropriate services and service charges.
[50]
The deceased’s signed a declaration for Resettlement of
Squatters/Backyard Dwellers to
Ivory Park on 24 September 1990
stating the following:
“
I
hereby declare that I am
neither a
Lessee
of a Tembisa City Council
dwelling nor an owner of property within the jurisdiction of the City
or Council of Tembisa.
I consent to being
resettled to Ivory Park as I am
homeless and consent that should
it be discovered that I do in fact lease or own a home of my own, the
stand allocated to me at
Ivory Park should revert back to Transvaal
Provincial Administration and should then be allocated to a homeless
person.
(my emphasis”)
[51]
In March 1997, (the year the 1
st
Applicant alleges that
the property was sold to him), following the incorporation of the
leased sites into the area of jurisdiction
of a local authority, the
deceased and the 1
st
Respondent concluded a lease
agreement with the Ivory Park local Municipality that had acquired
the property in the meantime. Some
of the terms and conditions of the
old lease were retained with the inclusion, inter alia, of the
following pertinent clauses:
5.1
the sites are solely for residential
purposes
5.2
Lessee entitled to erect a prefabricated
building on site
5.3
Before any building is erected on the
site
,
the
lessee shall submit a building plan in respect thereof to the Lessor
for approval
6.
The Lessee shall not sublet the site of
building erected thereon or any portion thereof, cede or
delegate any of this right
or obligation in terms of this agreement
of lease to any other person or body
.
7.
The
Lessee shall not without the prior written consent erect more than
one structure on the site
.
10.
This agreement shall terminate and shall
cease to be of force and effect from the date upon which the Lessee
enters into a deed
of sale in respect of the site.
10.3
The Lessor
may
terminate
this lease if :
10.3.1
The Lessee at the time of entering into
the Lease made a false statement which was material into entering
into this agreement of
lease or
10.3.3
The Lessee breaches any other term of
this agreement
10.3.4.
The
lessee vacates the site
.
10
.4
The site shall be deemed vacated if the lessee or his immediate
family has not occupied the site for a period of 30 days without
advising the Lessor in writing of the absence.
[52]
In the affidavit attached to the Lease Agreement the deceased
confirms that he is a South African
citizen possessing a South
African ID.
He does not own or lease any
other residential property
nor derive
any benefit from the housing subsidy scheme. The documents were
attached and referred to by the 1
st
Respondent in her response to the Application.
Analysis
[53]
The 1
st
Respondent has stated in her affidavit that at the
time of application and conclusion of the leasehold agreement, she
and the deceased
owned no property and were together with their
children staying with the deceased’s parents at Defateng in
Tembisa. Only
the deceased was employed. There is no cogent and
factual disputation to those allegations which are confirmed in a
declaration
and an affidavit filed by the deceased as part of the
documents when signing the lease agreements.
[54]
The property was therefore obtained with the terms and conditions of
the leasehold fully applicable,
particularly those in relation to the
cession, assigning of the rights therein, subletting, vacating or
temporarily absenting oneself
from the leased property or parting
with the occupational possession of the stand to any person
whatsoever without the prior consent
of the lessor.
[55]
The 1
st
Respondent confirms that the family’s
vacation of the premises did occur in 1997, albeit temporarily with
the intention to
retain the property for their son and rebuild a
proper structure. The 1
st
Applicant was requested to stay
in and look after the property at least for a period of 6 years until
their son was old enough
to take over ownership of the property. This
happened when they could not secure the deceased’s cousin who
was supposed to
look after the property. They agreed with the 1
st
Applicant, in accordance with their intention, to temporarily vacate
the premises. It is not in dispute that the 1
st
Applicant
moved in to the site or property in June 1997.
[56]
The temporal absenteeism or permanent vacation was in terms of the
lease prohibited without the
consent of the Lessor upon which the
lease could be terminated. The agreement further stated that
the property shall be deemed
vacated if the Lessee or his immediate
family has not occupied the site for a period of 30 days without
advising the Lessor in
writing of their absence. The result of which
was that the Lessor could cancel the lease following the proper
protocol as per terms
of the lease agreement. The reason for the
temporal move is alleged by the 1
st
Respondent to have
been due to the crime that was on the rise at the settlement with no
proper structures and their children were
still small for that
environment. That fact is not challenged by the 1
st
Applicant.
[57]
The 1
st
Applicant on the other hand disputes that his possession of the
property and the move by the Mokoenas was temporal. He alleges
that
he bought the property from the deceased and the 1
st
Respondent for R3 500.00 which he paid in full by way of three (3)
equal instalments of R1000 and the R500. However, there is no
written
agreement or proof of payment. He insists to have negotiated the
terms thereof with the deceased. Furthermore, that he
was at the time
unaware of the law applicable on sale of land but they had agreed, as
parties to the sale agreement that they will
approach the 2
nd
Respondent for change of ownership. It is because of this sale that
there is a dispute on ownership.
[58]
Notwithstanding the point of view that the matter is to be decided on
the facts as alleged by
the Respondent unless the allegations are
far-fetched and inherently improbable. The 1
st
Applicant
disregards the fact that the 1
st
Respondent and the
deceased were not able to deal with the property in any way they wish
except as per the terms of the Leasehold
that was applicable at the
time, unless they obtained consent to deviate from the terms thereof.
[59]
It was nevertheless, inherently impossible for the deceased and 1
st
Respondent to sell the property at the time and guarantee ownership,
when they did not own it, a fact that the Applicant himself
points
out that it was an informal settlement and they did not have a title
deed. They could not derive any gain from it. The property
was still
held under a subsidised leasehold meant for the poor and the
homeless, bestowing only a pre-emptive right to a subsidised
Freehold
ownership as and when it becomes available for transfer. As a result
absent a real right, property ownership could not
be sold.
[7]
[60]
Moreover as it has been pointed out by the 1
st
Respondent, that besides the fact that they lacked ownership at the
time, the 1
st
Applicant was a foreigner therefore not eligible for consideration
for either the Leasehold or Freehold ownership under the applicable
subsidy scheme. As it has happened with the deceased, he, as the
intended Lessee, had to confirm that he is a South African citizen
in
possession of a South African ID and further that he
does
not own or lease any other residential property nor derive any
benefit from the housing subsidy scheme.
[61]
In addition, the 1
st
Applicant’s claim is based on an alleged oral agreement for the
sale of the land, which is an immovable property. Verbal
agreements
in respect of sales of immovable property are invalid therefore not
binding in law.
[8]
[62]
The 1
st
Applicant has also alleged that at the meeting
that took place at 2
nd
Respondent’s offices in 2009
or January 2010, one Makhubela an official at 2
nd
Respondent, told the 1
st
Respondent and the deceased
that due to the sale, they will be furnished with another site, and
that the property will now be registered
in the name of the
Applicants. This also could not be possible, for the fact that the
1
st
Applicant was not a citizen of South Africa. It would
have been interesting to see the documents that 1
st
Applicant alleges to have submitted to the 2
nd
Respondent,
which he conveniently claims to have disappeared from his file. He
could not prove the refuted sale either . It is
also noted that he
only got married to the 2
nd
Applicant in 2016.
Nevertheless, the property could not be sold or alienated for gain.
[63]
Therefore, the allegations by the 1
st
Applicant that the meeting was
an enquiry in terms of s 24A of the GHA (even though the notice did
not say so and there is
no report or proof of outcome) whereupon a
decision was made that the property was then to be transferred to him
and that the subsequent
transfer not to him but to the 1
st
Respondent was erroneous is ill advised. The conduct of such
enquiries is regulated by the GHA.
Lack of awareness of
the Law
[64]]
The 1
st
Applicant further alleges
that
he did not know or was not aware of the law applicable in relation to
the sale of the property. Ignorance of the law is an
excuse if it can
be proven to be both genuine and material. In that case, the excuse
acceptable. No individual is blanketly exonerated
from compliance
with the law due to ignorance. Hence in
S
v Waglines (Pty) Ltd and Another
[4]
Didcott J (as he then was) stated that:
‘
Ignorance
of or a mistake about the law is indeed an excuse cognisable by our
courts. The excuse does not always amount, however,
to an acceptable
one. That the ignorance or mistake must first be both genuine and
material goes without saying. Less obviously,
but in principle no
less necessarily, it has to be reasonable in addition
whenever culpa enters the reckoning, whenever
that serves
as mens rea. It cuts no ice otherwise, since the unlawful act
which it explains is then committed through culpa.
The
question therefore posed by such a case is whether the person
concerned should reasonably have realised that what he was doing
or
about to do might well be unlawful. And the answer depends largely on
the care he took or did not take to acquaint himself with
the true
legal position.
The duty to
investigate this is clear, to speak generally at all events and not
of any area where the law’s reach is suspected
so little that
the possibility of trouble and the consequent need for caution would
never occur to a prudent mind. Strong
demands are placed, by
comparison, on all those engaged in trades, occupations or activities
which are legally regulated and known
by them to be. They are
expected to learn the rules and obliged to make the effort.
Sometimes,
to be sure, the duty to investigate will be performed satisfactorily
when advice on the lawfulness or otherwise of the
course envisaged is
obtained from a source ostensibly qualified to furnish such, and to
think it lawful will be reasonable once
the assurance has thus been
given that it is
.’ [Emphasis
mine].
[65]
The 1
st
Applicant’s ignorance of the law does not exonerate him from
the effect of non-compliance or to put it in another way, validate
what is rendered invalid because of his non-compliance. To seek that
the 2
nd
Respondent recognise the non-compliant questionable sale and give
effect thereto is ill considered.
No
one is allowed to improve his own condition or to benefit by his own
wrong (
Nemo
ex suo delicto meliorem suam
conditionem
facere potest).
[9]
In
Coetzee
v Steenkamp
[10]
the court opined as follows:
[16]
I am satisfied that in this matter the plaintiff
sought from this Court to accord him its imprimatur to benefit from
his own wrongful
act, which the Supreme Court of Appeal has enjoined
a person cannot do, and which precedent binds this Court. In
Brooks
v Minister of Safety and Security
2009(2) SA 94
(SCA) at 100E –F (para 16) in a different context but on the
same principle
Ponnan JA
remarked
:
“
[16]
It is true that in matters of human behaviour we are often told not
to judge by results, but in law, when considering whether
a
contention is well founded, the absurdity of the results to which it
will give rise is not an immaterial consideration. That
a person in
the position of Brooks could by his own intentional wrongful act
create in favour of his dependents a cause of action
that would not
otherwise exist is nothing short of preposterous; indeed in my view
that would be a dangerous proposition.
After
all it is a trite principle of our law, that a person should not be
allowed to benefit from his/her own wrongful act.
”
(My emphasis).
[66]
The
attempt by the 1
st
Applicant of a deranged show of ignorance is devoid of all credence.
The fact that he alleges the existence of a void sale agreement
of
the land to justify his erection of buildings on it and to garner
sympathy cannot assist him.
Particularly
regard being had to the fact that he was aware that 1
st
Respondent obtained the property through a Leasehold or Freehold
housing subsidy scheme for
the homeless for which
he
didn’t qualify for
at
the time as a
foreigner.
Likewise, to have interacted with the 2
nd
Respondent’s office on numerous occasions. He seemed in any way
to have been aware that ownership was not yet passed to the
deceased
and 1
st
Respondent, therefore they
held
no title deed to the property yet
.
Also of the restrictions applicable on alienation of the property and
the erection of buildings or structures on the property.
[67]
As to the purpose of him being in the property he said his friends
allowed him to stay in the
property for 25 years, to show that they
were good friends, confirming 1
st
Respondent allegation
that he was let in the property as the deceased’s friend who
was destitute, therefore with no likelihood
of a sale agreement. He
even laments that if his friend was still around he would still be
staying in the property
[69]
Absent a valid sale agreement, the 1
st
Respondent and the
deceased remained the legitimate holders of the property in
terms of the lease agreement. They were qualified
at the time they
obtained the subsidised leasehold and continued to hold a pre-emptive
right to ownership of the property from
1991 which was not disturbed
in 2010 by their acquisition of the Maokeng property. They still
validly remained entitled to the
ownership of the property and
therefore registration of the property or transfer of ownership
effected by the 2
nd
Respondent not erroneous.
Reimbursement
[70]
T
he
Applicant seeks also an order that he be paid the sum of R350 000.00
as a fair and reasonable pay for the expenses he incurred
in
improving the property without any proof of how the amount is
constituted. He built more than 1 structure
on
the property without submitting any building plans and illegally
sublet the said structures without permission from the lessee
and or
the 2
nd
Respondent contrary to the terms and conditions of the Leasehold. His
reply of a mere shrug that the building plans were to be
submitted
thereafter and structures not required to be demolished nullifies his
claim for the unsubstantiated reimbursement amount.
He fails to
make a case for that order, that is, reimbursement and the quantum
thereof. This is notwithstanding the provisions
of s 28 (1) of the
Alienation of Land Act
[11]
as
he has also failed to prove the applicability thereof since he could
not prove the existence of a sale agreement.
[69]
The Applicant has not made a case for an order for the reliefs sought
against the Respondents. As a result the
Application will have to
fail.
[70]
Under the circumstances the following order is made:
1.
The
Application is dismissed with costs.
2.
The Applicant to pay the Respondent’s
costs on a party and party Scale B.
N V KHUMALO J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
On
behalf of the Applicant
:
Mr Mchasa
Instructed
by:
NGOETJANA ATTORNEYS
walter@ngoetjana.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents
:
Mr S Singede
Instructed
by:
RAJEN V NAIDOO ATTORNEYS
Info@rajenvnaidooattorneys.co.za
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984]
(3) SA 623
(
[2]
1957 (4) SA 234 (C)
at p 235 G,
[3]
1982
(3) SA 893 (A) at p 924A).”
.
[4]
1949
(3) SA 1155
(T)
at pp 1163-5;
[5]
1972
(3) SA 585
(A)
at p 882 D - H
[6]
Rikhoto v East
Rand Administration Board
,
1983 (4) SA 278 (W),
at p 283E-H).
[7]
Wessels
J in
Glutthaar
vs Hussain
1912 TPD 322
[8]
T
he
Alienation of Land Act No. 65 of 1981 (“
the
Act
”)
in s 2 provides that
“no
alienation of land shall….. be of any force or effect unless
it is contained in a deed of alienation signed by
the parties
thereto or by their agents acting on their written authority.”
[9]
Roman
Law. Ulpian in D50.17. 134.1
[10]
(579/2009)
[2010] ZANCHC 25
(18 June 2010)
[11]
28.
Consequences of deeds of alienation which are void or are
terminated
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (2), any person who has
performed partially or in full in
terms of an alienation of land
which is of no force or effect in terms of section 2(1), or a
contract which has been declared
void in terms of the provisions of
section 24(1)(c), or has been cancelled under this Act, is entitled
to recover from the other
party that which he has performed under
the alienation or contract, and—
(a)
the alienee may in addition recover from the
alienator—
(i)
interest at the prescribed rate on any payment that he made in terms
of the deed of alienation
or contract from the date of the payment
to the date of recovery;
(ii)
a reasonable compensation for—
(aa)
necessary expenditure he has incurred, with or without the authority
of the owner or alienator of the land, in
regard to the preservation
of the land or any improvement thereon; or
(bb)
any improvement which enhances the market value of the land and was
effected by him on the land with the express
or implied consent of
the said owner or alienator; and
(b)
the alienator may in addition recover from the alienee—
(i)
a reasonable compensation for the occupation, use or enjoyment the
alienee may have had of the
land;
(ii)
compensation for any damage caused intentionally or negligently to
the land by the alienee
or any person for the actions of whom the
alienee may be liable.
(2)
Any alienation which does not comply with the provisions of section
2(1) shall in all respects be
valid
ab
initio
if the alienee had
performed in full in terms of the deed of alienation or contract and
the land in question has been transferred
to the alienee.
sino noindex
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