Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 681South Africa
Mohamed v Moosa and Others (44567/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 681 (2 July 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 July 2025
Headnotes
under title deed T[…], situated at number 1[…] J[…] N[…], E[…] G[…], E[…], Gauteng Province. [2] The application is opposed by the first and second respondents (“the respondents”), who filed a counter application. In the counter application the respondents are seeking an order the following terms:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mohamed v Moosa and Others (44567/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 681 (2 July 2025)
Mohamed v Moosa and Others (44567/2021) [2025] ZAGPPHC 681 (2 July 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 44567/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: YES
02/07/2025
In the matter between:
MOHAMED JAVED
GANI
APPLICANT
and
GH
MOOSA
FIRST RESPONDENT
Z
MOOSA
SECOND RESPONDENT
ALL OTHER
OCCUPIERS
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MUNICIPALITY
Delivered:
This
judgment
was
handed
down
electronically
by
circulation
to
the
parties’
legal
representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed on 2 July 2025
JUDGMENT
#
Phahlamohlaka AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the eviction of
first and respondents and all other occupiers who are in occupation
of Erf 2[…],
Eldoraigne Extension 35, City of Tshwane,
Registration Division JR, held under title deed T[…], situated
at number 1[…]
J[…] N[…], E[…] G[…],
E[…], Gauteng Province.
[2]
The application is opposed by the first and
second respondents (“the respondents”), who filed a
counter application.
In the counter application the respondents are
seeking an order the following terms:
2.1
Interdicting the applicant from disposing
of, selling, ceding or encumbering the property situated at Erf 3[…],
E[…]
Extension 35, City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality,
Registration Division J.R., held under Title Deed number T[…],
situated at number 1[…] J[…] N[…], E[…]
G[…], E[…], Gauteng Province, pending the finalization
of the action that will be instituted by the respondents for specific
performance;
2.2
Alternatively, acknowledgement and fair
accounting of the payments made to date are provided, a fair and
reasonable price is set,
and that the respondents are afforded a
right to 1st refusal to purchase the property;
2.3
Costs.
2.4
Further and/or alternative relief.
#
# Factual background
Factual background
[3]
During November 2012, the applicant and the
respondents proposed an installment sale agreement in terms whereof
the respondents
would purchase the applicant’s property.
[4]
The following factors are important to take
note:
4.1
A
written
agreement was proposed, drafted, and provided to the respondents, who
signed it;
4.2
The applicant never signed the agreement;
4.3
The agreement was never recorded by the
Registrar of Deeds in terms of the provisions of the Alienation of
Land Act, 68 of 1981
(“the Act”); and
4.4
The purchase price was not paid in the
required 60-month period in terms of the Act.
[5]
The applicant, therefore, contends that in
terms of the Act, the agreement is void
ab
initio.
# The Applicant’s
case
The Applicant’s
case
[6]
The applicant contends that, in August
2021, the applicant’s attorney of record addressed a letter to
the respondents in which
they were informed that the agreement is
void, cancelled, and that the tenancy is unlawful. Furthermore, the
respondents were informed
that all the proceeds that have been paid
by them to the applicant will be held in trust pending the
finalization of the action
proceedings.
[7]
As a consequence, the applicant contends
that the respondents have been in unlawful
occupation
of
the
immovable
property
since
September
2021.
This
is
so,according to the applicant, because the
respondents were indebted to the applicant in the amount of
approximately R475 500.00
in November 2017 and have made little to no
payments since then whilst remaining in unlawful occupation of the
property.
# The respondents ’case
The respondents ’case
[8]
The respondents contend that the parties
were introduced to each other in 2012. A written agreement of the
sale of the property
was drafted on the applicant’s instance,
which the respondents signed. The respondents took occupation in
December 2012.
On the applicant's own version, as expressed to the
respondents, the agreement was signed by him. The applicant collected
payments
of R 750,000.00 and R 150,000.00, and thereafter several
installments by the respondents under the agreement.
[9]
The respondents have instituted an
application to have that agreement of sale declared valid under case
number 2023- 107954, in
the same court. The application is still
pending. The respondents have also brought a counter application for
interdictory relief,
pending the decision as to whether the agreement
should be enforced.
[10]
The
respondents, therefore, contend that they have highlighted a dispute
of fact, yet the applicant has chosen to proceed on motion.
The
respondents further submitted that the application should be dealt
with in terms of the trite principles laid down in the matter
of
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Rieebeck Paints (Pty)
Ltd
[1]
(“the
Plascon-Evans
rule”), by considering whether the applicant would be entitled
to the relief claimed on the facts stated by
the respondents, read
with the admitted facts in the applicant's affidavit.
# Issues for determination.
Issues for determination.
[11]
The issues to be determined
are whether the respondents are, in fact,
unlawfully occupying the applicant’s property and whether the
respondents have raised
a dispute of fact. Further, the court has to
determine whether the respondents have made a case for the
interdictory relief.
# The legal position
The legal position
[12]
Section 4(1) of the
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act,19 of
1998(“PIE Act”)
provides
that notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any law or
the common law, the provisions of this section apply
to proceedings
by an owner or a person in charge of land for the eviction of an
unlawful occupier.
[13]
Subsection 1(xi) of the PIE Act defines an
unlawful occupier as a person who occupies land without the express
or tacit consent
of the owner or person in charge, or without any
other right in law to occupy such land, excluding a person who is an
occupier
in terms of the
Extension of
Security of Tenure Act
, 1997, and
excluding a person whose informal right to land, but for the
provisions of this Act, would be protected by the provisions
of the
Interim Protection of Informal Land
Rights Ac
t, 1996 (Act No. 31 of 1996).
[14]
In the case of the
Plascon-Evans
case (
supra
),
Corbett JA said it is correct that where in proceedings on notice of
motion disputes of fact have arisen on the affidavits, a
final order,
whether it be an interdict or some other form of relief, may be
granted if those facts are averred in the applicant’s
affidavits which have been admitted by the respondent, together with
the facts alleged by the respondent, justify such an order.
The power
of the Court to give such final relief on the papers before it is,
however, not confined to such a situation. In certain
instances, the
denial by the respondent of the fact alleged by the applicant may not
be such as to raise a real, genuine, or
bona
fide
dispute of fact.
# Discussion
Discussion
[15]
It is common cause that the applicant is
the owner of the property in question. It is further common cause
that the applicant and
the respondents proposed an agreement of sale
in
November
2012,
and
pursuant
thereto,
the
respondents
took
occupation
of
the
property. It is further common cause that as a result of the
agreement, the respondents paid a large sum of money to the applicant
in honour of the agreement to purchase the property in question. The
respondents, however, could not keep up with payments, and
the agreed
purchase price was not paid in full as per the agreement between the
applicant and the respondents.
[16]
The applicant does not dispute being paid
money, although the amount is in dispute. In the replying affidavit,
the applicant makes
the following concessions:
16.1
That an agreement was used for the
applicant to sell the property to Moosa and the second respondent;
16.2
That the agreement was
drafted
by the applicant's attorneys of record
and provided to the first and the second respondent
(my
emphasis);
16.3
The agreement was returned to the
applicant’s attorneys of record after the respondents signed
the agreement. The agreement
was not signed by the applicant;
16.4
The agreement makes provision for, amongst
others, payment of installments which exceeded the allowable period
stipulated in the
Alienation of Land Act, 68 of 1981 (“the
Act”), and for a period within which the property had to be
registered in
the name of the respondents;
16.5
The agreement was not recorded in
accordance with the provisions of the act; and
16.6
The respondents have made several
installments towards the applicant.
[17]
Although the applicant concedes that
several payments were made towards him, the applicant contends that
through a letter from his
attorneys of record, the right afforded to
the respondents to occupy the property was cancelled. The applicant
does not make it
clear what the payments made to him by the
respondents were meant for, but argued that the agreement never came
into being, and
therefore, it is void
ab
initio
.
[18]
This court cannot ignore the fact that the
respondents have approached the court to seek an order declaring the
agreement valid.
The applicant has not disputed this, although the
application was instituted after the current application. However,
the respondents
filed a counter application in which they indicated
that they would apply for the agreement to be declared valid.
[19]
The
Constitutional Court in
Botha
and Another v Rich N.O and Others
[2]
had
to determine whether the respondents were obliged, in terms of
section 27
(1) of the
Alienation of Land Act, to
register the
transfer of the property in the name of the first applicant after
more than half of the purchase price of the immovable
property had
been paid. The Constitutional Court in
Botha
’s
case held
[3]
:
“…
granting
cancellation- and therefore, in this case, forfeiture- in
circumstances where three-quarters of the purchase price has
already
been paid would be a disproportionate penalty for the breach. In
their application for cancellation the Trustees did not
properly
address the disproportionate burden their claim for relief would have
on Mis. Botha. They took the view that the question
of forfeiture and
restitution was independent of, and logically anterior to, the
question of cancellation. That was a fundamental
error. The fairness
of awarding cancellation is self-evidently linked to the consequences
of doing so. The Trustees’ stance
therefore meant that they
could not justify this Court’s awarding the relief they sought.
In view of the above the cancellation
application must fail.”
[20]
The relevance of Botha’s judgment to
the current proceedings is that the respondents in this case have
paid more than half
of the purchase price. After having done so, the
applicant seeks to cancel the agreement, which the applicant avers is
void
ab initio
.
By seeking to cancel the
agreement, in my view, the applicant concedes that at least the
agreement existed, hence the need for it
to be cancelled.
# Dispute of fact
Dispute of fact
[21]
In
the replaying affidavit
[4]
the
applicant denies that an initial amount of R750,000.00 was paid by
the respondents around 2012, contending that he does not
have the
records of the amount. The applicant further contends that the
respondents provide no documentary proof that the said
amount was, in
fact, paid. In the same breath, the applicant concedes that the
respondents were indeed given occupation of the
property during
December 2012.
[22]
In
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[5]
,
Heher JA said the following:
‘
A
real, genuine and
bona fide
the
dispute of fact exists only where the court is satisfied that the
party who purports to raise the dispute has in his affidavit
seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said to be disputed.
There will of course be instances where a bare denial meets
the
requirement because there is no other way open to the disputing party
and nothing more can therefore be expected of him. But
even that may
not be sufficient if the fact avered lies purely within the knowledge
of the averring party and no basis is laid
for disputing the veracity
or accuracy of the averment. If the facts alleged are such that the
disputing party must necessarily
possess knowledge of them and be
able to provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) if they be not
true or accurate but, instead
of doing so, rests his case on a bare
or ambiguous denial the court will genuinely have difficulty in
finding that the test is
satisfied. I say ‘generally’
because factual averments seldom stand apart from a broader matrix of
circumstances all
of which needs to be borne in mind when arriving at
a decision. A litigant may not necessarily recognize or understand
the nuances
of a bare or general denial against a real attempt to
grapple with all relevant factual allegations made by the other
party.”
[23]
The applicant does not offer the
circumstances under which occupation was given to the respondents.
The applicant does not even
attempt to give clarity in respect of why
the respondents have been in occupation of the property since 2012 to
date. In my view,
the applicant has not succeeded in making out a
case that the respondents are in unlawful occupation of the property
or that they
are illegal occupants of the property.
[24]
Considering the applicant’s founding
affidavit, as well as the facts not disputed in the respondents’
answering affidavit,
a dispute of fact has been raised. This matter
cannot, therefore, be finalized on paper, without evidence being led.
# Were the respondents in
unlawful occupation of the property?
Were the respondents in
unlawful occupation of the property?
[25]
It is a well-established principle of our
law that the applicant in motion proceedings must make out his case
in the papers. There
is a serious dispute regarding the respondents’
occupation of the property. The applicant is not candid in the
founding affidavit
in respect of how the respondents came to be in
occupation of the property. The facts regarding the circumstances
under which the
respondents came to be in occupation of the property
are revealed by the respondents in their answering affidavit.
[26]
Those facts on how the respondents occupied
the property were either admitted or not disputed by the applicant.
It is my considered
view, therefore, that the issue of whether the
respondents are illegal occupants of the property is in dispute, and
thus a dispute
of fact arises in this regard.
# Counterclaim
Counterclaim
[27]
As alluded to earlier, the respondents seek
an interdict, pending the determination of their entitlement to
transfer, preserving
their occupation of the property until the issue
of their entitlement to transfer of the property has been determined.
[28]
The counter claim is premised on the
impugned agreement between the applicant and the respondents. The
applicant submitted that
fair accounting would require substantial
evidence, which cannot be decided upon application. I agree with the
applicant on this
aspect that substantial evidence is needed in this
regard.
[29]
I have already found that the respondents
have demonstrated the existence of a dispute of fact. I do not think
it would be proper
for this court to preclude the applicant from
exercising his rights to approach the courts for any relief relating
to this dispute.
Should the applicant try to evict the respondents
through unlawful means, the respondent will not be without a remedy.
I am, therefore,
not satisfied that the respondents have made a case
for interdictory relief.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[30]
Having found that a dispute of facts has
been established, it is a well-established principle of our law that
the court has the
discretion to decide whether to allow a referral
for oral evidence. The Court will therefore dismiss the application
if the applicant
should have realized when launching his application
that a serious dispute of fact, incapable of resolution on the
papers, was
bound to develop.
[31]
In these proceedings, the respondents
raised genuine disputes in their answering papers, which were
confirmed by the applicant,
but the applicant insisted on proceeding
with the application.
[32]
In
the case of
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
[6]
,
the Court held that where a dispute of fact is shown to exist,
however, the Court has discretion as to the future course of the
proceedings. If the dispute of fact cannot properly be determined by
viva
voce
evidence
under
rule 9
, the parties may be sent to trial in the ordinary way
(either on the affidavits as constituting the pleadings, or else with
a discretion
that pleadings
be
filed);
otherwise,
the
application
may
be
dismissed
with
costs,
particularly
when
the
applicant
should
have
realized
when
launching
his
application that a
serious
dispute of fact was bound to develop.
[33]
The applicant, among others, contradicted
itself regarding the payments he received from the respondents.
Further, the applicant
contends that the agreement that the
respondents rely on is void
ab initio
.
Whether the agreement was validly entered into or not cannot be
determined from the papers.
[34]
Having found that a dispute of fact exists,
it is now incumbent upon the Court to decide on the future course of
the proceedings.
The applicant has persisted with the order for
eviction whilst the respondents have submitted that the application
be dismissed,
alternatively that the matter be postponed
sine
die
for the determination of the
application for the enforceability of the agreement.
[35]
Rule 6(5)(g) of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides as follows:
“
Where
an application cannot properly be decided on affidavit the court may
dismiss the application or make such order as it deems
fit with a few
to ensuring adjust and expeditious decision. In particular, but
without affecting the generality of the foregoing,
it may direct that
oral evidence be heard on specified issues with a view to resolving
any dispute of fact and to that end may
order any deponent to appear
personally or grant leave for such deponent or any other person to be
subpoenaed to appear and be
examined and cross examined as a witness
or it may refer the matter to a trial with appropriate directions as
to pleadings or definition
of issues, or otherwise.”
[36]
It is my considered view that the applicant
in these proceedings ought to have realized that a serious dispute of
facts was bound
to develop, especially considering the fact that the
respondent took occupation of the property pursuant to the impugned
agreement
with the applicant.
Costs
[37]
I cannot find any reason why costs should
not follow the result.
Order
[38]
In the result, I make the following order:
(a)
The application is dismissed with costs, to
be taxed on Scale B
(b)
The counter application is dismissed with
costs, to be taxed on Scale B
KF
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
[1]
(53/84)
[1984] ZASCA 51; [1984] 2 ALL SA 366(A)
[2]
CCT
89/13)
[2014] ZASCA 11
; 2014(4) SA 124(CC); 2014 (7) BCLR (CC) (17
April 2014)
[3]
On
para 51
[4]
Caseline
008-8
[5]
(2008)
(3) SA 371
[6]
1949(3)
SA 1155(T)
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