Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 611South Africa
De Lange v Benade and Others (2024-084568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 611 (25 June 2025)
Headnotes
in ex parte applications all material facts must be disclosed which might influence a court in coming to a decision.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## De Lange v Benade and Others (2024-084568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 611 (25 June 2025)
De Lange v Benade and Others (2024-084568) [2025] ZAGPPHC 611 (25 June 2025)
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sino date 25 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
2024-084568
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
25 June 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
GEORGE
TROSKIE DE
LANGE
Applicant
and
JOHANNES
HENDRIK BENADE
First Respondent
LEE-ANN
VERA BENADE
Second Respondent
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third 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/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
25 June 2025.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI,
J
[1]
This is an
ex
parte
application in terms of section 4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal
Evictions from and the Unlawful Occupation of Land Act,
[1]
whereby the Applicant sought authorisation for the service of the
Section 4(2) Notice on the First and Second Respondents (“the
Respondents”). The matter served before me in the
unopposed motion court of 17 March 2025. The application was
opposed, the Respondents having filed the notice to oppose on 12
March 2025. The Respondents had not filed an answering affidavit
but
maintained that their entitled to argue the matter from the bar since
the ground of opposition was on a point of law.
[2]
The issue that was to be decided was whether the section 4(2)
application complied with the provisions
of section 4(5)(c) and if
so, whether such non-compliance rendered the application defective.
[3]
The present application is an interlocutory application in an
application for eviction of the
Respondents from a property alleged
to be that of the Applicant. ("the eviction application").
The eviction application
was opposed, and the pleadings were closed.
Heads of Argument had been filed, and the Registrar had allocated the
opposed hearing
date for 5 May 2025. As this is an
ex parte
application, it was not served on the Respondents. The
Respondents were said to have come to know about the application on
12 March 2025. A letter was written by the Respondents’
attorneys to the Applicants’ attorneys informing them
that the
application was defective and that the Applicant start the
application
de novo
. The Applicant’s counsel
submitted that the said letter was responded to, but the response
appeared not to be uploaded
onto Caselines, as such, the contents
thereof were not taken into consideration for purposes of this
judgment.
[4]
In terms of section 4(2) at least fourteen (14) days before the
hearing of the proceedings contemplated
in sub-section (1), the court
must serve written and effective notice of the proceedings on the
unlawful occupier and the municipality
having jurisdiction. The
section is to be read with sub-section (5) which provides for
requirements that the notice of proceedings
contemplated in
sub-section (2) should comply with.
[5]
The contention by the Applicant’s counsel was that there was no
basis or merit for the Respondents
to oppose an
ex parte
application where an order is sought to get the sanction from the
court to inform the Respondents of the day on which the eviction
application was to be heard. Counsel argued that any defence which
the Respondents might have to the eviction, must be raised on
that
date. There was no merit for the Respondents to convert the section
4(2) application, that was an
ex parte
application, into an
opposed application, counsel argued.
[6]
The gravamen of the Respondents’ complaint was that the
Applicant’s
ex
parte
application in terms of
section 4(2) was defective. Counsel argued that the Respondents’
opposition was not premised on the
procedural aspect as argued by the
Applicants’ counsel, but on the substance of the application.
Counsel conceded that, procedurally
there was nothing wrong with the
application, what was at issue was the substance of the application.
[7]
The contention by the Respondents’ counsel was that the section
4(2) application did not
comply with the provisions of section
4(5)(c) which requires the Applicant to set out the grounds upon
which the eviction is sought.
The non-compliance according to the
Respondents’ counsel was that the cause of action set out in
the section 4(2) founding
affidavit was materially different from the
cause of action on which the eviction application was premised.
[8]
The Respondents’ counsel argued that the ground for eviction in
the section 4(2) application
must concur with the ground for eviction
in the eviction application. If they are different, a new cause of
action is introduced
which is contrary to the provisions of section
4(5)(c). The submission was that the Applicant was prohibited in law
and in fact
to introduce a new cause of action in the
ex parte
founding affidavit.
[9]
Section 4(5)(c) provides that the notice of proceedings contemplated
in subsection (2) must set
out the grounds for the proposed
eviction. It is worth noting that the word “must”
is used in the said subsection
which gives a connotation that
compliance is peremptory. It means that the sub-section must be
complied with and that failure to
comply might render the application
defective.
[10]
It was common cause between the parties that the cause of action on
which the eviction application was premised
was that of breach of a
lease agreement. The Applicant alleged in the founding
affidavit to the eviction application that
there was a lease
agreement concluded by the parties and the Respondents failed to pay
rental and, as such, breached the terms
of the said agreement. As a
result of such breach, the Applicant cancelled the lease agreement.
This is basically what was
pleaded in the founding affidavit to the
eviction application. The ground that is pleaded in the section
4(2) application
is that the lease agreement has come to an end by
effluxion of time.
[11]
On the face of the two applications it is clear that these are two
different grounds or causes of action
set out for the eviction.
However, the Applicant’s counsel denied that the cause of
action in the section 4(2) application
was a new cause of action.
He argued that the cause of action had to be changed because, as he
put it, life happened, as
the lease agreement had, at the time of
instituting the section 4(2) application, lapsed due to effluxion of
time.
[12]
According to the Respondent, the cause of action raised in the
section 4(2) application made its first appearance
in the papers in
the replying affidavit. The alleged new cause of action was
said to be a subject of a legal argument in
the eviction application
and was raised as a point
in limine
in the heads of argument.
As such, the Respondent’s counsel argued that the
Applicant wanted to have a tactical advantage
by raising a new cause
of action for the first time in the reply. This, according to
counsel, was litigation by ambush. Counsel
submitted that the
Respondents had to oppose the section 4(2) application on this fact,
otherwise, the Applicant would during argument
in the eviction
application, argue that the Respondents acquiesced to the new cause
of action.
[13]
I have to conclude without deciding the point, that, the ground for
the eviction set out in the section 4(2)
application is materially
different from the ground for the eviction set out in the eviction
application. On that basis,
there is no compliance with the
requirements of section 4(5)(c). I have already indicated that
compliance with the provisions
of sub-section 4(5)(c) is imperative.
Non-compliance in this regard, is a substantial non-compliance which
cannot be condoned by
the court, because strict compliance is
required by the provisions of section 4(5)(c).
[14]
I must also add, in passing, that because the section 4(2)
application was instituted
ex parte
, as is the norm, it should
comply with all the requirements of an
ex parte
application.
Counsel for the Applicant gave an explanation orally in court why it
was that the cause of action appeared to
be different to that
disclosed in the eviction application. This explanation should have
formed part of the evidence in the founding
affidavit of the section
4(2) application.
[15]
Counsel for the Respondents in his argument referred, correctly, to
the decision in
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
,
[2]
a judgment which is mostly referred to as the
locus
classicus
when it comes to
ex
parte
applications. The court in that judgment held that in
ex
parte
applications all material facts must be disclosed which might
influence a court in coming to a decision.
[16]
My conclusion is that the application should in essence be dismissed.
However, dismissing the application
at this stage seems to be a harsh
step to take for the Applicant. Notification of the Respondents is a
condition precedent to the
hearing of the eviction application, and I
am reluctant to shut the door on the Applicant at this stage.
Striking the application
from the roll to allow the Applicant to
institute same
de
novo
, seems more appropriate under
the circumstances.
[17]
This judgment is delivered terribly late. The matter was heard in
March 2025, and the judgment ought to have
been delivered before the
hearing of the eviction application, which was on 5 May 2025. I have
to apologise profusely for such
lateness, which was occasioned by
circumstances beyond my control. I have, during the better part of
that period, been afflicted
by illness.
[18]
On the issue of costs, the Respondents’ counsel argued that the
Applicant should be held accountable
for the Respondents unnecessary
costs, including costs of counsel on Scale B. In the exercise of my
discretion, it is my view that
costs in this application should
follow the successful parties. The Respondents are entitled’,
as the successful parties,
to their costs.
[19]
In the premises I make the following order
1.
The application is struck from the roll.
2.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application which
costs shall include the costs of counsel
on scale B.
E.M KUBUSHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv CJC NEL
Instructed
by:
Assenmacher
Brandt attorneys
Tel:
011 706 1312
For
the First & Second Respondents
Adv
Scheepers
Instructed by:
Basson attorneys
inc.
Tel:
010 020 6275
Date of the
hearing:
17 March 2025
Date
of judgment:
25
June 2025
[1]
Act 9 of 1998.
[2]
1979(4) SA 342 (W).
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