Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 40South Africa
Leloba Plant Hire and Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Mashishi and Others (045305/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 40 (24 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Leloba Plant Hire and Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Mashishi and Others (045305/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 40 (24 January 2024)
Leloba Plant Hire and Logistics (Pty) Ltd v Mashishi and Others (045305/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 40 (24 January 2024)
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sino date 24 January 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No.
045305/2023
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: 10/01/2024
JULIAN
YENDE
24
JANUARY 2024
In
the matter between:
LELOBA
PLANT HIRE & LOGISTICS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
THANDI
GRATITUDE MASHISHI
First Respondent
AMATHABETHE
KA DUDUKANE PROJECTS CC
Second
Respondent
JPS
TOURS CC t/a JPS TOURS
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YENDE
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant is LELOBA PLANT HIRE & LOGISTICS (PTY) LTD, a
private company with limited
liability incorporated in terms of the
laws of the Republic of South Africa, and more specifically
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
, with registration business address at 3[...] L[...]
Avenue, Newlands, Menlyn, Gauteng Province.
[2]
The First Respondent is T[...] G[...] M[...], an adult person with
full
legal capacity, presently appointed as director and/or member of
the Second Respondent, residing at 3[...] V[...] V[...] Street,
Lombardi East, Shere Agricultural Holding, Pretoria East, Gauteng
Province.
[3]
The Second Respondent is AMATHABETHE KA DUDUKANE PROJECTS CC
,
a close corporation with registration CK2010/ 060828/23, incorporated
in terms of the company Laws of the Republic of South Africa,
with
business address at
3[...] V[...] V[...] Street, Lombardi
East, Shere Agricultural Holding, Pretoria East, Gauteng Province.
[4]
The Third Respondent is JPS TOURS CC t/a as
JPS TOURS, a close corporation with registration 1999/055715/23,
incorporated in terms
of the company Laws of the Republic of South
Africa, and more specifically the
Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984
,
with registered business address at Postal Box 2[...], G[...],
0[...], Limpopo Province.
[5]
This matter concerns an opposed application
for
rei vindicatio
in respect of three buses leased by the applicant to the third
Respondent, which the first respondent allegedly effected change
of
ownership into her personal name without the competent authority of
the Applicant. Only the first and second respondents opposed
this
application. To give crisp perspective to this judgment I consider it
prudent to give a brief genealogy of the parties herein
as well as
the genesis of the is litigation.
[6]
There is a relationship of consanguinity
and affinity between the parties in this litigation. The director of
the applicant is the
father of one Mr Mpako “Neo”
Mashishi who is married to the first respondent, making the director
of applicant a father
in-law of the first respondent. The first
respondent is also the sole director of the second respondent. The
first respondent and
the director of the third respondent are united
by ties of consanguinity as father and daughter, thus the director of
the third
respondent is the father in-law of Mr Mpako Neo Mashishi.
The Factual matrix.
[7]
The
“family/ extended family” as mentioned
supra
,
are involved in the transportation business. Late in 2019 the
third respondent had secured a scholar transportation contract
with
the Limpopo Department of Education to transport school children
between the school and their place of abode. Conditional
to this
scholar transportation tender/contract was proof of ownership of
buses. The third respondent did not own the required buses
as a
result the third respondent and applicant entering into the lease
agreement authorizing the transfer of the required buses
to the third
respondent for the duration of the lease agreement
[1]
.
[8]
It
is apposite to mention that the third respondent took possession of
the buses and operated same as agreed, and commenced the
business
operation of transporting scholars in terms of the awarded scholar
transportation tender. It is important to restate
the relevant
clause(s) of the lease agreement that facilitated and authorized the
change of owner ship of the three buses from
the applicant to the
third respondent. The relevant clause(s) are the following
[2]
;
[1]
“
1.1The LESSOR hereby lets,
and the LESSEE hereby hires, the BUSES for a period of 3 (Three)
years commencing on the 16 day of January
2020 and terminating on the
31 day of December 2022, notwithstanding the date of the signing of
this agreement;
[2]
1.2 On the expiry of the said period
of 3 (Three) years, if the LESSEE does not off hire the buses, the
lease shall continue to
operate on a month to month basis, both
parties being obliged and entitled to give the other two calendar
months’ notice
of termination of the lease during the further
period, unless the lease is extended by agreement between the
parties;
CONDITIONS OF
AGREEMENT
[3]
2.1
The OWNER shall change ownership of the buses into JPS Tours during
the period of this contract/agreement of 36 months,
thereafter the
LESSEE (JPS TOURS) will have to be re-registered back to the owner
(Leloba Plant Hire and Logistics) The 4 X Mercedes
bens buses will be
changed ownership as agreed….
[3]
).
[9]
It is apposite to observe that the Lease
Agreement was duly signed by the parties to the agreement on the 16
January 2020 and accordingly
remains valid for the duration of the
lease contract.
Factual Matrix.
[10]
I
now turn to the applicant’s germane submissions. The applicant
averred that in terms of the duly signed Lease Agreement
the third
respondent was at all material times fully aware that upon the
completion of the lease contract, ownership of the buses
would have
to revert to the applicant, as had been agreed between the parties in
terms of the Lease Agreement
[4]
.
[11]
The
applicant alleges that on 18 July 2022 the first respondent
unlawfully effected the change of ownership of two buses into her
personal name and later on the 16 March 2023 also unlawfully effected
change of a third bus into her personal name with the knowledge
and
the authority of the applicant
[5]
.
[12]
The
applicant averred that the first respondent has effectively stolen
his buses, at the time when buses where held by the third
respondent
pursuant the legal dictates of the lease agreement between the
applicant and the third respondent. That there exists
no
bona
fide
and legal underlying cause for the transfer of the buses from the
third respondent to the first respondent. That in terms
of the
duly signed lease agreement the third respondent was never authorized
to transfer the ownership of the buses into the name
of the first
respondent
[6]
.
[13]
The
applicant averred that as a sole director of the applicant, he never
authorized nor requested the first respondent to approach
the third
respondent to obtain the ownership documents of the buses, let alone
authorized the transfer of the ownership of the
buses into the name
of the first respondent
[7]
. The
applicant further averred that his son Mr Mpako “Neo”
Mashishi was stunned by the conduct of the first respondent
and that
he was unaware of the reason why the first respondent effected change
of ownership of the buses into her personal name
[8]
.
The applicant denied that he ever authorized his son who was not even
a director nor a shareholder of the applicant to change
the ownership
of the busses into the first respondent’s personal name
[9]
.
[14]
I now turn to the first respondent’s
apposite submissions. The first respondent contends that, this
application is a knee-jerk
reaction following an urgent spoliation
application which was brought by the first respondent against her
estranged husband, Mr
Mpako Mashishi, being the controlling mind
behind the applicant. The spoliation application succeeded, and the
first respondent’s
possession of the buses in question was
restored on the 14 April 2023 pursuant to an order to that effect.
[15]
The first respondent alleges that the buses
in question are used by the first and second respondents to execute
Government tenders
to transport minor children to school, the first
respondent being the director and the shareholder of the second
respondent.
[16]
The first respondent contends that the
applicant, her father-in-law is simply a
front
and that the
controlling
mind behind
the applicant is her
husband. It is further contended by the first respondent that her
husband being the controlling mind of the
applicant, clearly gave her
tacit or implied, if not expressed,
permission
to transfer the buses
into her name.
[17]
The first respondent alleges that the
applicant’s son closed the proverbial taps on her and the
children born of their marriage
since January 2023, clearly conveying
his dissatisfaction with the fact that the first respondent wants a
divorce. Part of his
process was to dispossess the first respondent,
alternatively the second respondent, of buses used to give execution
to a Government
tender.
Evaluation.
[18]
It is apt to observe that both the
applicant and the third respondent are a private company with limited
liability. Ostensibly
a competent authority to execute action
must be contained in the form of a company’s resolution and /or
a mandate to perform
such an act. A Lease Agreement was entered
into between the applicant and the third respondent with regard to
the buses.
The facts in this application are in fact common cause.
Having said that, the need to delve into the facts beyond what I have
adumbrated
supra
as
I would under a different set of circumstances ordinarily do, does
not exist. I have decided not to refer the matter for
oral
evidence but to deal with the crisp issue being the legal competency
of Mr Mpako “Neo” Mashishi to effect the
change of title
of ownership of the three buses to the first respondent.
[19]
The applicant disputed that he ever
authorized his son who is not even its member nor a shareholder to
dispose of the buses in the
manner alleged by the first respondent.
[20]
The first respondent’s defense that
her husband being the controlling mind of the applicant, clearly gave
her tacit or implied,
if not expressed, permission to transfer the
buses into her name lacks legal basis in the absence of a
declarator
of alter ego
on the part of Mr
Mpako “Neo” Mashishi in respect of the applicant. For
such a declaration, substantive evidence is
required to be led.
In this application, insufficient evidence was put forward by the
first respondent no direct nexus was
alleged nor proven in respect of
Mr Mpako Mashishi and the applicant.
[21]
The first respondent has failed to bring a
substantive application and / or a declaratory action with regard to
the allegations
of
alter ego
on the conduct of the Mr Mpako “Neo” Mashishi in respect
of the applicant. To prove that he held the legal competency
to
authorize the transfer of the buses to her.
[22]
I found no legal authority to the effect that a person who is not a
member of a company
with limited liability like the applicant can
willy-nilly dispose of the company assets without the underlying
legal authority
and/or company resolution to do so.
[23]
As adumbrate
supra
the applicant and the third respondent
had deemed it meet to enter into a Lease Agreement in respect of the
three buses in order
to facilitate the change of ownership of the
three buses from the applicant to the third respondent and clause(s)
1.1 dealt with
the period in terms of which the buses would be leased
to the third respondent and clause(s) 2.1 being a conditional clause
dealt
specifically with what should happen at the end of the lease
agreement. In other words, at the end of the lease the three buses’
ownership title would return to the applicant. It appears form the
lease agreement that the transfer of ownership in the buses
was
temporary for the duration of the lease agreement. At the end
of the lease agreement, the third respondent was obliged
to transfer
the ownership back to the applicant. The lease agreement did not
authorize the third respondent to transfer ownership
of the buses to
any third party.
[24]
The first respondent has dismally failed to demonstrate in law
how it is and/or was
permissible for her to acquire the title of
ownership of the busses without the authority of the applicant
including that of the
third respondent as envisaged in the Lease
Agreement.
[25]
The first respondent does not dispute the fact that the
applicant and the third respondent
had entered into a Lease Agreement
regarding the buses in question and there is no averment by the first
respondent to the effect
that she acquired the ownership of the buses
in terms of the lease agreement through the third respondent.
[26]
The applicant does not dispute the E-Natis documents, which the first
respondent relies
on as being the
prima facie
owner of the
buses. It disputed the legal threshold in terms of which the first
respondent acquired the ownership of the buses
in question. In other
words, no competent legal authority was bestowed on Mr Mpako “Neo”
Mashishi to dispose of the
applicant’s three buses in the
manner he did. Conversely, it logically follows that the first
respond could not acquire legal
title of ownership in respect of the
three buses in the manner she did.
Applicable Legal
framework.
[27]
It is trite that the jurisdictional facts which an applicant
seeking to obtain vindicatory relief has to show are: (i)
that the
applicant is the owner of the property (movable or immovable) see,
Goudini Chrome (Pty) Ltd v MCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[10]
;
and (ii) that the respondent is in possession of that property see
Chetty v Naidoo
[11]
.
[28]
In respect of the
rei
vindicatio
,
Jansen JA stated the following in
Chetty
v Naidoo
:
[12]
“
It is inherent in
the nature of ownership that possession of the
res
should
normally be with the owner, and it follows that no other person may
withhold it from the owner unless he is vested with
some right
enforceable against the owner (e.g., a right of retention or a
contractual right).
The owner, in instituting a
rei
vindicatio
, need, therefore, do no more than allege and
prove that he is the owner and that the defendant is holding the
res
– the
onus
being on the defendant to
allege and establish any right to continue to hold against the owner
…. But if he goes beyond alleging merely his ownership and the
defendant being in possession …, other considerations
come
into play. If he concedes in his particulars of claim that the
defendant has an existing right to hold (e.g., by conceding
a lease
or a hire-purchase agreement, without also alleging that it has been
terminated..) his statement of claim obviously discloses
no cause of
action. If he does not concede an existing right to hold, but,
nevertheless, says that a right to hold now would have
existed but
for a termination which has taken place, then
ex facie
the
statement of claim he must at least prove the termination, which
might, in the case of a contract, also entail proof of the
terms of
the contract.” [Emphasis added.]
[29]
The right to ownership has been described as the most comprehensive
right a person can have in respect of a
res,
see Gien v Gien
[13]
.
[30]
In BLC Plant Company (Pty) Ltd v Maluti-A-Phofung Local
Municipality,
[14]
Mathebula J
referred to
Gien
and stated further that:
“
This right is
enshrined in section 25(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Africa Act 108 of 1996. In matters of this
nature for an owner
to succeed in his action, he must prove on a balance of probabilities
the following viz: - ownership, the property
is still in existence
and clearly identifiable and lastly that the defendant has possession
or detention of it.
This right is carefully protected by the
courts
.” [my emphasis.]
[31]
In the context of the lease agreement where the transfer of ownership
in the buses was only temporarily,
the applicant “retained”
ownership in the buses as such, the applicant is entitled to
institute the
rei vindicatio
. The third respondent’s
inaction to oppose the application and the file an opposing affidavit
supports the foregoing. It
follows then that the applicant’s
contention was not gainsaid in any manner.
[32]
In conclusion, I am satisfied that the applicant has met the
jurisdictional requirements of rei vindicatio. For
the reasons
adumbrated
supra,
I find that the first and second and
respondents have not discharged the onus of proving a legal and
lawful ownership of the three
busses
.
I find that the
applicant has not authorised the transfer of the three buses to the
first respondent. The applicant and the third
respondent had entered
into a valid lease agreement in terms of how the transfer of title of
ownership of the buses had to be facilitated
and how the title of
ownership to the said buses had to revert to the applicant at the end
of the Lease Agreement.
[33]
The defence by the first respondent to the effect that
her
husband being the controlling mind of the applicant, clearly gave her
tacit or implied, if not expressed, permission to transfer
the buses
into her name is rejected as same had not been proven in terms of the
required legal precepts. It is not a
bona
fide
real and good defense.
[34]
Consequently, I am constrained to make the following order;
Order
[1]
The First and /or Second Respondent is directed to restore to
the applicant the possession of the buses identified
as Mercedes-Benz
buses, registration number FHW 402 L; FHW 392 L and Mercedes- Benz
Panorama registration number F[...] 3[...]
[...];
[2] The
First Respondent is directed to restore and transfer the ownership
title of the aforementioned buses to
the Applicant within 14
(Fourteen) days of the granting of this order, and to sign all the
necessary documents to give effect to
the transfer of ownership title
of the aforementioned buses;
[3]
The sheriff of this Court or his/her Deputy is authorized to take
possession of the aforesaid buses, in the event
that the First
respondent and/or the Second Respondent refuses, fail to comply with
the Order at Paragraph 2 above, restore possession
of the buses to
the applicant ;
[4]
The Sheriff of this Court or his/her Deputy is authorized to sign all
the necessary documents to effect the restoration and
transfer of the
ownership title of the aforesaid buses to the applicant, in the event
that the first respondent and/or second respondent
refuses and/fail
to comply with the Order at paragraph 2 above, and restore ownership
title of the buses to the Applicant;
[5] The
First and/or Second Respondent is directed to pay the cost of this
application on a party and party scale,
jointly and severally liable.
J
YENDE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This
judgment was prepared by
YENDE AJ.
It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and uploaded on Caselines
electronic
platform and by publication of the judgment to the South African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down
is deemed
24
January 2024.
Appearances:
Advocate for
Applicant:
Adv.
ME MANALA
Email:
manlae@law.co.za
Instructed by:
MANALA
@ Co Inc. Attorneys.
thato@manala-inc.co.za
Advocate for
Respondent(s):
Adv.
F W BOTES SC
Email:
fwbotes@law.co.za
Adv.
Bernette Bergenthuin
Email:
bernette@clubadvocates.co.za
Instructed by:
ARTHUR
CHANNON Attorneys
c/o
DE JAGER Attorneys
Email:
arthur@channonattorneys.co.za
Heard:
25
October 2023
Delivered:
24
January 2024
[1]
(Caselines
paginated pages. 02-4 to 02-05.-Founding affidavit pgs. 1-5)
DELE ATT REF TO CASE )
[2]
(FA1 –Lease agreement /Caselines paginated pgs. 03-1 to 03-4)
[3]
Ibid
(pgs. 03-2)
[4]
Ibid (pgs.03-2
[5]
(
Founding
affidavit paragraph 35)
[6]
(
Founding
affidavit paragraph 81)
[7]
(Founding affidavit paragraph 39)
[8]
(Founding
affidavit paragraph 41)
[9]
(Founding
affidavit paragraph 42)
[10]
1993 1 All (SA) 259 (A), 1993 (1) SA77 (A) p.82C.
[11]
1974 All (SA) 304 (A) ,
1974 (3) SA 13
p 20b-g.
[12]
Ibid
p20b-g
[13]
1979 (2) SA 1113
(T) at 1120 C.
[14]
[2018]
ZAFSHC at para 4.
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