Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 16South Africa
Masilela and Another v Masilela and Others (70305/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 16 (15 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Masilela and Another v Masilela and Others (70305/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 16 (15 January 2024)
Masilela and Another v Masilela and Others (70305/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 16 (15 January 2024)
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sino date 15 January 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 70305/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2024-01-15
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
LINDI
RONSY
MASILELA
First Applicant
GERALD
MASILELA
Second Applicant
and
SIBUSISO
KOOS
MASILELA
First Respondent
ELIZABETH
KGELESWANE MASILELA
Second Respondent
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
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 email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 15 January 2024.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Introduction
[1]
In this matter I will for ease of reference refer to the applicants
as the applicants
cited in this application for rescission of the
eviction order and the respondents as only Mr Koos Masilela [referred
to as such
in the evidence], Koos Masilela’s mother has
passed away although still cited as a respondent. I do so with no
disrespect
intended but as both the applicants and respondents have
the surname Masilela referring to all the parties as the Masilela’s
muddles the water.
[2]
Mr Koos Masilela obtained an order evicting the applicants from Erf
7[...] M[...]
Township 9[...] M[...] Street Street [the property],
hence the application for rescission of this order together with a
consolidated
application to declare the transfer of the property to
Mr Koos Masilela unlawful; also seeking a declaration that the
applicants
are the lawful owners of the property.
[3]
I referred the matter to oral evidence because the applicants had a
written right
of leasehold and an approval application while Mr Koos
Masilela provided a deed of transfer.
[4]
The outcome of the applications all revolve around the question who
the lawful owner
or possessor of this property is with the right to
occupy the property.
The
evidence
[5]
Lindi Ronsy Masilela testified on behalf of the applicants. She has
been residing
on the property for 63 years. He father is Johannes
Masilela born in 1926 and he passed away on 2 July 2016. His wife,
and her
mother, was Mavis and her siblings were Intelligent, Nomsa
and Gerald. When the written leasehold was granted they were living
on the property together with her grandfather and a child called
Jabulani. The written leasehold reflects this, as well as, that
it
was granted on 14 December 1983 and will expire on 13 December 2083.
Mr Koos Masilela never lived there and is not family of
them. She
admitted that the property belonged to the Municipality and they
leased the property for 99 years.
[6]
Her father wanted to renovate and expand and the municipality gave
him the right to
do so by means of a building permit dated 9 October
1984. This building permit was also handed in as an exhibit
reflecting that
Johannes Masilela was granted permission to build on
the property.
[7]
She described how the property initially looked and how it was
expanded. She testified
that many significant events happened there
and that her older brother, as well as two grandchildren got married
at the property
and her father was buried from the property. The
property was never sold and they paid the water and electricity for
this property
to the municipality.
[8]
She had never met Mr Koos Masilela before and did not know him. She
saw him at the
funeral of her father and two weeks after the funeral.
He then for the first time claimed the property was his. They asked
for
documents to prove this but he never at any stage prior to court
proceedings provided them with any documents. She denied that he
confronted her at the property with a file containing documents. She
denied that Koos Masilela’s father had bought the property
from
her father in 1985 because he would have treated it as a family
affair and would have told him. If Mr Koos Masilela’s
father
bought the property, why did they not move in, but in any event Koos
Masilela could not have personal knowledge because
he was too young
when this averred transaction would have taken place.
[9]
Her father left a will and in this will the property is not
specifically bequeathed.
An executor has not been appointed by the
Master of the High Court because they consulted with attorneys and
they were advised
to first sort out this court case before the
executor is appointed. She did not know why in the will the property
is not specified.
[10]
A document was shown to her that was created on 9 June 2018 with a
heading Tshwane Owner Information
Report. It was put to her that Mr
Koos Masilela in terms of a redistribution agreement pursuant to his
father’s death owned
the property. In terms of this agreement
it was transferred from his mother to him. This document reflected
that on 26 June 2018
the property was registered in Mr Koos
Masilela’s and his wife’s names, to whom he is married in
community of property.
She frowned upon this document because it did
not show any history of previous owners and nothing on it showed it
was an official
document.
[11]
The witness was also confronted with a form that the mother of Mr
Koos Masilela had supposedly
taken to the municipality to be declared
indigent so as not to pay rates and taxes to the municipality for
this property. This
was apparently done in 2005. She denied that this
document proved anything because there was no stamp and no signature
on this
document.
[12]
Mr Koos Masilela testified that his father passed away in 2016 and
there was no will. After two
months of grieving he took his mother to
an attorney to help with the estate. The attorney informed him of
this property and he
was surprised because he did not know of it. He
asked why they did not take possession of the property in 1985 and he
was told
that the applicants refused them possession. He also
testified that it was a state of emergency in 1985. He testified that
the
property had been bought by his father. He did not have that
title deed and did not know for how much the property was bought.
[13]
With the consent of his family a redistribution agreement was drafted
wherein he and his wife
would inherit this property. He relied on a
deed of transfer in the names of S K Masilela and E K Masilela as
proof that he was
the owner of this property. The deed reflected that
it was a donation from his unmarried mother.
[14]
He approached the applicants but saw it was the funeral and did not
proceed to confront them
about the property. He then again went to
the applicants at the property but was treated badly and insulted by
being told that
he was a Zimbabwean Masilela. He had a file with
public documents proving his ownership including the title deed, and
wanted to
show them that he was the owner of the property. But they
were aggressive and he left. He then went to see an attorney.
[15]
In cross-examination he stated that his mother wanted to be noted as
being indigent so that she
could receive a discount on paying water
and electricity because she was at that stage a pensioner. When
confronted with the fact
that she was only 50 years old in 2005 he
said that in fact she was not a pensioner but was ill as she was a
diabetic and asthmatic.
When confronted with that his father as the
owner of the property should have applied for a discount on the
payment of water and
electricity he answered that in fact his mother
was the owner of the property.
[16]
When asked what documents he had in the file when he wanted to prove
ownership to the applicant
when visiting the property, he said it was
not the title deed but the computer printout before court. This
document was however
dated 2018 whereas he was at the property with
this document in 2016. He then said it must have been the same
document but one
dated 2016 but he did not know where this document
was.
[17]
When confronted with why his father would buy the property in 1985
and never claim ownership
he for the first time testified that his
father had engaged SANCO to obtain possession of the property but was
never successful.
Locus
standi
[18]
On behalf of Mr Koos Masilela a point
in limine
was taken that
the applicants did not have
locus standi
because only an
executor of the estate of the late applicants’ father would
have
locus standi.
This argument is rejected. The eviction
order was granted against the applicants, consequently they have
locus standi
to bring the rescission of that order. Not in
substantive or procedural law can a party against whom an order was
granted have
no right to approach a court to set it aside. This
argument has no merit and such an argument clearly infringes section
34 of the
Constitution.
[19]
In
Firm-O-Seal CC v Prinsloo & Van Eeden Inc. and Another
(483/22)
[2023] ZASCA 107
(27 June 2023) the Supreme Court of
Appeal in par [6] found as follows:
“
Locus
standi in iudicio
is
an access mechanism controlled by the court itself.
Generally,
the requirements for
locus
standi
are
these: the plaintiff must have an adequate interest in the subject
matter of the litigation, usually described as a direct
interest in
the relief sought; the interest must not be too remote; the interest
must be actual, not abstract or academic; and,
it must be a current
interest and not a hypothetical one. Standing is thus not just a
procedural question, it is also a question
of substance, concerning
as it does the sufficiency of a litigant’s interest in the
proceedings. The sufficiency of
the interest depends on the
particular facts in any given situation. The real enquiry being
whether the events constitute
a wrong as against the litigant
[footnotes omitted].”
Being
in possession of a property for 60 years and still residing in the
property most certainly clothe the applicants with an adequate
interest and eviction would constitute a wrong against the
applicants. The applicants have standing.
Non-joinder
[20]
Closely linked to the
locus standi
argument was the argument
that the Master of the High Court should have been joined. This
argument too is rejected. The fact that
the estate has not been
reported was explained, but in any event, it does not affect the
question this Court needs to decide. If
the estate is not yet with
the Master what interest will the Master have in this matter? This
argument is unmeritorious and needs
no further address.
Condonation
for the late filing of the rescission application
[21]
In the heads of argument of behalf of the respondent not any
reasoning is set out as to why condonation
should not be granted
excepting for bold statements that the applicants did not bring their
case within a reasonable time and failed
to provide an acceptable
explanation for the delay.
[22]
The horse had already bolted in this matter. The fact that the matter
was referred to oral evidence
implies that condonation was granted
otherwise the matter could not have been heard. But in any event, the
applicants set out good
reasons for the 5-month period before
bringing this rescission application. They did not do nothing for 5
months, they within 20
days after the eviction order was granted
launched an application to stay the eviction order and declare the
registration of the
property into Koos Masilela and his wife’s
names unlawful. Upon investigation they realised that they could not
let the eviction
order stand and then also launched the rescission
application in terms of Rule 42(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
This had to
be done because an order granted has to be obeyed until
set aside. I am satisfied that the applicants have shown good cause
and
furnished sufficient explanation for the delay in bringing the
rescission application. The consolidation order also negates against
any argument that there was an unreasonable delay. In as far as it is
may be necessary, condonation is granted.
Reasons
for the decision
[23]
As a starting point this Court must keep in mind that Section 25(1)
of the Constitution is clear
that no person may be deprived of their
property. I also accept that for the applicants and Mr Koos Masilela
occupation and ownership
of the property is an issue of paramount
importance.
[24]
The applicants had to on a preponderance of probabilities prove that
they still have a right
to occupation in terms of the 99-year
leasehold granted to their father and that the property had not been
sold to Koos Masilela’s
mother or father.
[25]
The written 99-year leasehold was presented to Court. In terms of
this agreement the Municipality
owns the property and the applicants’
father had a right, with the occupants [the applicants as cited in
the lease] to lease
there till 2083. The question to be answered is
whether the title deed in the names of Koos Masilela and his wife
upsets this lease
agreement depriving them of further occupation of
this property.
[26]
It is trite that ownership in general trumps possession of immovable
property. A title deed will
also constitute proof of ownership. I am
however unconvinced from the evidence led and the real evidence
handed in that in this
matter the title deed indeed proves ownership.
It is undisputed that this long lease exists and has not been
terminated. It is
common cause that Mr Koos Masilela was aware that
the applicants were occupying this property and his parents were
aware that the
applicants were occupying this property since at least
1985. Mr Koos Masilela’s own legal representative put it to Ms
Masilela
in cross-examination that in fact the municipality was the
owner of the property rendering the version of Mr Koos Masilela that
his father or mother bought the property from her father untenable;
he was not the owner, the municipality was. There is no evidence
that
the municipality sold the property to Koos Masilela’s father or
mother.
[27]
Mr Koos Masilela did not make a good impression on the court because
he in cross-examination
changed his version on multiple material
issues whereas Ms Masilela was a credible witness and made
concessions were she did not
know the answer, for example she did not
know why the property was not mentioned in the will.
[28]
Mr Koos Masilela was initially adamant that his father bought the
property from the applicants’
father. This material fact
changed to his mother having bought the property. This material
contradiction was necessitated because
he was confronted with why the
mother would be asked to be declared indigent for paying water and
electricity if the father owned
the property. He pertinently
testified that his mother was a pensioner and therefore she
approached the municipality but when confronted
with her age he
adapted his evidence to her being ill, not a pensioner. He testified
in chief that he had the title deed with him
when he wanted to advise
the applicants that he is the owner of the property. In
cross-examination he testified he did not have
the title deed, but
had a computer printout which he presented to court. This document
was however dated 2018 rendering it impossible
to have been in his
possession in 2016. Mr Koos Masilela was not a reliable witness.
[29]
It is furthermore highly improbable that when a person buys a
property that you will simply leave
people in occupation from 1985 to
2016 without them paying rent, taking occupation yourself, or
evicting the applicants. It was
also never denied that the applicants
paid the water and electricity until 2016. The state of emergency in
1985 understandably
would have impacted on the parents of Mr Koos
Masilela to take action against the applicants, but the state of
emergency did not
last until 2016 and this reason is on probabilities
rejected. For the first time in cross-examination did he testify that
his father
also engaged SANCO to help to evict the applicants. This
was never put to the applicants’ witness and this reason is
rejected
as an afterthought or embellishment to provide a further
reason for this 30-year period that no action was taken.
[30]
None of the other documents handed in by Mr Koos Masilela negate the
version of the applicants.
They are unofficial computer printouts not
setting out the history of the transfer of this property. There is no
evidence to contradict
the evidence on behalf of the applicants that
the 99-year lease is in existence and gives them a right to
occupation. The background
to the title deed reflecting ownership in
untenable; there is no evidence of transfer of ownership from the
municipality to the
parent or parents of Mr Koos Masilela. There is
no proof or evidence from the transfer of ownership from the father
of the applicants
to the parents of Mr Koos Masilela. There is no
evidence as to what amount the property was sold for. I accept that
with the passing
of Mr Koos Masilela’s mother her evidence is
lacking, but with immovable property there will be a paper trail. It
matters
not that the long lease was not registered because Mr Koos
Masilela and his parents knew of their occupation for 30 years. The
argument that their occupational rights were not converted into
leaseholds in terms of The Conversion of Certain Rights to Leasehold
Act
[1]
does not negate their
right to occupation in terms of the leasehold they in fact have. The
fact that the applicants’ father
did not in his will bequeath
the property does not support only the inference that it did not
belong to him, it also supports the
inference that he could not
bequeath it because it belonged to the Municipality and his
children’s right to occupation being
safe till 2083. This is
fortified by the Form 3 whereby the applicants’ father in1997
applied for the conversion of his right
to leasehold to a sale of the
property by the city council with transfer at no cost to the
applicants’ father.
I
accordingly find that the applicants have proven that they have a
right to occupation.
The
rescission of the eviction order.
[31]
I am satisfied that had the Court been appraised of all the facts in
this matter the eviction
order would not have been granted and was
granted erroneously in the absence of the applicants. In terms of
Rule 42(1) the eviction
order is set aside with costs.
Declaration
sought that the registration and transfer of the property to Koos
Masilela was unlawful and is to be set aside.
[32]
It follows that due to the untenable issues addressed above the
transfer and registration of
the property to Mr Koos Masilela must be
set aside. This follows from the finding that the municipality was
the owner of the property
but seemingly it was directly transferred
from the leaseholder to the father or mother of Mr Koos Masilela,
albeit with no proof.
The Form 3 from the City Council confirms
that in 1997 it was still the owner of this property. I am satisfied
that this property
could not be sold as averred or indeed was sold as
averred.
[33]
The applicants are not seeking a review, it follows from the oral
evidence led that the transfer
and registration was unlawful in the
circumstances.
Acquisitive
prescription
[34]
On behalf of the applicants it was submitted that the applicants had
been in occupation for 30
years and therefore are the owners by means
of acquisitive prescription.
[35]
Acquisitive prescription was however not addressed in the
applications. No evidence was
led thereon, for example, the
intention to own versus possess, excepting for attaching the Form 3.
In view thereof I am not prepared
to grant such a request; no such
order was sought.
[36]
With the transfer and registration set aside the applicants are to
remain in occupation.
They have remedies in terms of two Acts
to obtain ownership. Likewise the respondent can obtain proof
that the municipality
had sold the property and to whom.
[37]
I make the following orders:
[37.1]
The eviction order granted on 3 September 2019 is rescinded and set
aside. The first respondent is to carry the costs.
[37.2]
The transfer and registration of the property, Erf 7[...], 9[...]
M[...] Street Mamelodi to the respondents by means
of Title Deed
T[...] is set aside. The Registrar of the Deeds office is ordered to
set it aside.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO:
70305/2018
HEARD
ON:
26
AND 27 OCTOBER 2023
FOR
THE APPLICANTS:
ADV.
B. LUKHELE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MaMyeni
Mazibuko Attorneys
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
MR.
T. PILLAY
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Pillay
Thesigan Inc.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
15
January 2024
[1]
81
of 1988
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