Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 309South Africa
Nkomo and Others v Chaka and Others (010996/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 309 (27 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkomo and Others v Chaka and Others (010996/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 309 (27 March 2024)
Nkomo and Others v Chaka and Others (010996/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 309 (27 March 2024)
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sino date 27 March 2024
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 010996/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
27 March 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
YVONNE
TSHAKA NKOMO
First Applicant
ROBERT
NKOMO
Second Applicant
DAPHNE
PULENG
NGWENYA
Third Applicant
and
VICTORIA
CHAKA
First Respondent
FLOYD
CHAKA
Second Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
HOD
LOCAL GOVERNMENT HOUSING GAUTENG
Fourth Respondent
PROVINCIAL
REGISTRAR
OF
DEEDS
Fifth Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The applicants seek a declaratory order to the effect that the
registration
of Erf 1[...], Diepsloot Township, Registration Division
IQ, Province of Gauteng (“the property”) in the name of
the
first respondent, Mokgadi Victoria Chaka be set aside.
[2]
The applicants, simultaneously, seek an order that the property be
registered
in the names of the first, second and third applicants and
the fourth respondent. The fifth respondent, which is the Registrar
of Deed, is requested, so the relief continues, to register the
property accordingly.
[3]
The first respondent filed an intention to oppose the relief that the
applicants
are seeking. Notwithstanding such notice of opposition,
the first respondent stated that she does not oppose the relief in
question.
[4]
It is necessary to reproduce the relevant paragraph in the answering
affidavit
which unequivocally indicates that the relief is not
opposed which reads as follows:
“
It
is common cause that Erf 1[...] is a family property whose house
number 8[...] L[...] Street (previously known as Botsheleng),
Zone 1,
Diepkloof, Soweto, Johannesburg, Deeds Office description Erf 1[...],
Diepkloof, Registration Division IQ, Province of
Gauteng, is a family
house.”
[5]
The first
respondent continues in her answering affidavit and to the extent
that is relevant for the relief that the applicants
are seeking as
follows
[1]
:
“
Abuse
of Process
The
prayers sought by the applicant are unnecessary for the Honourable
Court to even entertain for the mere fact that, at no stage
has the
First Respondent or the Second Respondent opposed any application to
register or to include the names of the First Respondent
and her
daughter.”
[6]
It is
common
[2]
cause between the
parties that the property is a family home which was registered to
the parties’ late father in accordance
with the permit system
operated by the previous Apartheid Government to regulate houses in
the black township.
[7]
After 1994
all permissions and certificates of occupation were upgraded to full
ownership. The first respondent secured the registration
of the
property in her name to the exclusion of the other two siblings or
their descendants
[3]
.
[8]
It is further common cause or not disputed that the property is
currently registered
in the name of the first respondent only.
[9]
For some reason the second respondent is listed in the current
certificate of
occupation. It is not in dispute that the second
respondent, being the first respondent’s son, cannot be
included in the
title deed since his mother is still alive and is
entitled to be included in the title deed as co-owner.
The
law and analysis
[10]
The law pertaining to intestate succession is clear. When the
father’s siblings passed
away without a will, he died
intestate. The Intestate Act, 81 of 1987,provides that if one
dies without a valid will, one
‘s estate devolve according to
the intestate Succession Act. This would in this particular case
entail that one’s estate
would be divided amongst one’s
surviving children – who are the children of their late’s
father.
[11]
In the circumstances all three siblings are by virtue of the
intestate succession co-owners in
equal shares. The third respondent
as the only biological child of the late sibling is also entitled to
inherit as contemplated
by the Intestate Succession Act as alluded.
[12]
However, the second applicant, being the husband of the first
applicant, cannot in my view be
included in the title deed since he
is not a sibling albeit that he is married in community of property
with one of the siblings,
the first applicant.
[13]
Similarly, the second respondent, being the child of the first
respondent, cannot be included
in the title deed given the fact that
his mother is still alive and will be included in the title deed.
[14]
The initial relief that the applicants were seeking was to include
also the name of the second
applicant in the title deed. However,
during oral submissions it was conceded by the applicants’
representative that the
second applicant would not be included in the
relief that the property must also be registered in his name
notwithstanding his
marriage in community of property with the first
applicant.
[15]
It is now
trite that a court is competent to grant an order that is just and
equitable in terms of section 172 (1)(b) of the
Constitution even if
there is no declaration of constitutional invalidity in terms of
section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution since
a just and equitable
remedy does not hinge on the declaration of invalidity
[4]
.
On this score the facts of this particular case calls for a further
additional order that is ancillary to the main relief albeit
not
prayed for by the applicants.
[16]
The further order that I contemplate pertains to the additional
relief that the first respondent
is prohibited from occupying a
lion’s share of the immovable property. It was not in
dispute that the first respondent
is currently occupying the property
with her son and daughter in law and thereby occupying a large
share of the immovable
property as if she were a sole owner thereof.
[17]
For all these reasons, it is just and equitable to grant the
additional order to take into account
the co-ownership of the
immovable property.
[18]
What remains is the ancillary relief that the fifth respondent should
register the property in
the name of the first applicant, the third
applicant and the first respondent despite an absence of a return of
service on the
fifth respondent.
[19]
In my view the failure to serve the fifth respondent with the
application is not fatal for the
relief sought since the fifth
respondent would not have opposed the relief given its statutory duty
to register the immovable property
in any event.
[20]
I turn now to the issue of costs. I am alive to the fact that this is
a family dispute and any
order of costs against any of the litigants
would have a negative effect on the already fragile relationship
amongst the siblings.
In my view the fact that this is a family
dispute militates against following the normal rule that costs should
follow the event.
Order
[21]
In the result I make the following order:
1.
The fifth respondent is ordered to register the property described as
Erf 1[...], Diepkloof
Township, Registration Division IQ, Province of
Gauteng, in the names of the first applicant, the third applicant and
the first
respondent in equal shares as co-owners of the immovable
property.
2.
The fifth respondent is also ordered to amend the registration in the
name of the first
respondent to reflect that she is not a sole owner
of the property but only a co-owner as directed above.
3.
The first respondent is also prohibited from behaving as if she
is the sole owner
of the immovable property and must not occupy more
that her proportional share of the immovable property without an
express agreement
with the other co-owners.
4.
Each party is to pay his/her own costs..
R
B MKHABELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
27 March 2024
.
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANTS:
L Mbanjwa
INSTRUCTED
BY:
L
Mbanjwa attorneys
COUNSEL FOR
RESPONDENTS:
Adv TL
Mahasha
INSTRUCTED BY:
Mahasha attorneys
inc
DATE OF THE
HEARING:
18 September 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27 March 2024
[1]
The
first respondent reiterated her stance of not opposing the relief
that the applicants are seeking in her heads of argument
and oral
submissions.
[2]
The first applicant and the first respondent are
siblings. The third applicant is the only biological child of the
sibling’s brother, the late Andrew Chaka.
[3]
The third respondent being the only biological child of
the one of the two siblings’ brother, is legally entitled
to
take the place of her late father and thereby be registered as
co-owner of the property.
[4]
Head of Department Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoer skool Ermelo and Another
2010 (2) SA 415
(CC) at para 97 per
Moseneke DCJ.
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