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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 89
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## Mabathoana and Another v Mothibedi and Others (72834/15)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 89 (29 January 2024)
Mabathoana and Another v Mothibedi and Others (72834/15)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 89 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 72834/15
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
DATE:
29 JANUARY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MAKAFANE
CYRIL MABATHOANA
First Applicant
(Identity
number: 6[...])
ZANELE
DESIREE MOBATHOANA
Second Applicant
(Identity
number: 8[...])
And
REVELATION
TSHENOLO MOTHIBEDI
First Respondent
ALL
THE UNIDENTIFIED ILLEGAL OCCUPANTS
Second Respondent
OF
6[...] M[...] STREET, KENSINGTON
GAUTENG
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
Third Respondent
MUNICIPALITY
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
and for
hand-down is deemed to be
29 JANUARY 2024.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI,
J
[1]
This is an application launched by Makafane Cyril Mabathoana, the
First Applicant
and Zanele Desiree Mabathoana, the Second Applicant
(“the Applicants”) who seek an order declaring Revelation
Tshenolo
Mothibedi, the First Respondent, in contempt of the Court
Order under the above case number which was handed down by Msimeki J
on 27 October 2015 (“the contempt application”). Pursuant
to the contempt order, if granted, the Applicants further
seek an
order committing the First Respondent to immediate imprisonment for a
period of six (6) months alternatively a period the
Court deems fit,
and that a warrant of committal be issued and authorised for the
immediate arrest of the First Respondent by the
Sheriff, with the
assistance of the South African Police Services, for direct committal
to prison for the stated period. The Sheriff
and the South African
Police Services be ordered to execute the warrant of committal within
24 hours after receipt of the Writ
and hand the First Respondent over
to the relevant prison authorities for her incarceration.
[2]
Moreover, the Applicants seek an order directing that the execution
of the Warrant
of Ejectment marked annexure “MCM3” be
authorised against ‘All the unidentified illegal occupants of
6[...] M[...]
Street, Kensington, Gauteng, the Second Respondent,
within 30 days after service of this Court Order as contemplated in
the regulations
of the
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
. The First
Respondent be ordered to pay the costs as between attorney and
client, including the Sheriff’s fees.
[3]
The contempt application was enrolled on the unopposed motion court
roll of 23 January
2024 and was postponed to the unopposed motion
court roll of 25 January 2024 with a request that the Applicants’
counsel
furnish the Court with short heads of argument. The matter
was argued unopposed on 25 January 2024. During argument in Court,
the
Applicants’ counsel sought to abandon the relief for the
order to declare the First Respondent in contempt of the Court Order
issued by Msimeki J, and proceeded only with the relief for the
eviction of the Second Respondent from the property.
[4]
The contempt application emanates from an eviction application that
was previously
launched under the same case number by the Trustee of
the Insolvent Estate of Ernest Boyence (“the Trustee”),
for the
ejectment of the Occupiers of the Property known as 6[...]
M[...] Street, Kesington, Gauteng (“the eviction application”).
In that matter, Msimeki J granted an order for the eviction of the
Occupiers of the Property known as 6[...] M[...] Street, Kesington,
Gauteng and any other occupiers of the property formally known as the
REMAINING EXTENT OF ERVEN 2[...]6 AND 2[...]8, KESINGTON
TOWNSHIP
REGISTRATION DIVISION I.R., GAUTENG PROVINCE HELD BY TITLE DEED
T[...] better known as 6[...] M[...] STREET KESINGTON,
JOHANNESBURG,
GAUTENG (“the Occupiers of the Property”). Pursuant to
Msimeki J’s Court Order, the Trustee, with
the assistance of
the Sheriff evicted the Occupiers of the Property who re-occupied the
property with the assistance of the community.
Several other attempts
were undertaken by the Trustee to evict the Occupiers of the Property
from the said property without success.
[5]
In the mean while the property was sold by the Trustee to a company
called Investwise
Initiatives (Pty) Ltd (“Investwise”).
Investwise in turn sold the property onwards to another buyer. From
the copies
of the Windeed and the Deed of Transfer attached to the
contempt application, it is apparent that the property is registered
in
the names of the Applicants and they are now the lawful owners.
According to the Applicants they bought the property from a company
called Easy Life Prop (Pty) Ltd. The Applicants, as such, have locus
standi to launch this application on the ground that they
are the
lawful owners of the property in question. It, however, appears that
the Applicants are unable to take possession of the
property because
the First Respondent, without providing any proof thereof, claims to
be the lawful owner of the property and refuses
to vacate the
property. The Applicants contend that they have tried several avenues
to evict the Respondents from the property
without success, hence the
present application.
[6]
The contempt application launched by the Applicants is, however,
flawed in many respects.
The Applicants found their case on the Court
Order of Msimeki J that was granted on 27 October 2015. The Court
Order is annexed
to the Applicants’ founding affidavit as
Annexure “MCM2”. The main flaw is that the parties cited
in the Court
Order are not the same parties cited in the contempt
application. The Applicant in the Court Order is the Trustee and the
Applicants
are not cited, at all, in that Court Order, which means
that they were not litigants in the eviction application. They can,
therefore,
not rely on the Court Order without having been
substituted as the Applicants in place of the Trustee who is the
person who instituted
that application, or being joined as applicants
in the eviction application. The First and Second Respondents in the
contempt application
are also not cited as parties in the eviction
application (Court Order) which means they were not litigants in the
eviction application.
The order in the eviction application was
granted against ‘the occupiers of the property’ whereas
in the contempt application
the order is sought against ‘the
unidentified illegal occupants’.
[7]
Based on the aforementioned, the Applicants acted correctly in
abandoning the relief
of contempt and commission against the First
Respondent. The relief the Applicants sought against the First
Respondent, for contempt
and committal, would not have succeeded
because the First Respondent was not a party to the eviction
application. She was not specifically
mentioned by name. What the
Applicant want to use as evidence to tie her by name to the eviction
application is the allegation
in the supporting affidavit deposed to
by the Trustee, that the property has been hijacked by the First
Respondent, who is not
the previous owner. She was lawfully evicted
and has reoccupied the property unlawfully and is renting out rooms
to tenants and
collecting the rent money illegally. The allegation in
the supporting affidavit does not form part of the evidence proffered
in
the eviction application. The supporting affidavit forms part of
the contempt application papers. This, therefore, would not have
entitled the Applicants to the relief they sought against the First
Respondent.
[8]
The relief sought against the Second Respondent for an order
authorising the execution
of the warrant of ejectment issued pursuant
to the Court Order granted by Msimeki J, can, also, not succeed.
This, as already stated,
is so because in that application (the
eviction application) the order was granted against ‘the
occupiers of the property’
whereas in the contempt application
the order is sought against ‘the unidentified illegal
occupants’. In order for
the Court Order to operate against the
unidentified illegal occupants, they should have first been joined to
the proceedings in
the eviction application. This having not been
done, they cannot have been expected to comply with the eviction
application.
[9]
Over and above that, since the Applicants have not been substituted
to continue with
the application launched by the Trustee, they cannot
continue to use the same case number in the contempt application as
that which
was used in the eviction application. What the Applicants,
as the current owners of the property, should have done, was to have
applied to be joined as applicants in the eviction application, or at
the very least to have launched a fresh application for the
eviction
of the Respondents.
[10]
In the circumstances the application falls to be dismissed.
E
M KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 25 January 2024
Date
of judgment: 29 January 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants: Adv. T Manda instructed by Ngomane
Attorneys
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