Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 616South Africa
River Meadow Manor Properties (Pty) Ltd v Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (16638/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 616 (13 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## River Meadow Manor Properties (Pty) Ltd v Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (16638/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 616 (13 June 2024)
River Meadow Manor Properties (Pty) Ltd v Siyandasabelo Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others (16638/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 616 (13 June 2024)
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sino date 13 June 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 16638/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:13
June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
RIVER
MEADOW MANOR PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
and
SIYANDASABELO
TRADING (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
Second
Respondent
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE MUNICIPALITY
Third
Respondent
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF TWIN RIVERS
SECTIONAL
TITLE
SCHEME
Fourth
Respondent
CHRISLAINE
EQUESTRIAN (PTY)
LTD
Fifth Respondent
THE
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1.
The applicant, River Meadow Manor
Properties (Pty) Ltd, has applied to this Court for an order
authorising it to register a right
of way servitude over Portion
6[...] of the farm D[...] No 3[...] JR (D[...]). The first
respondent, Siyandasabelo Trading
(Pty) Ltd is the registered owner
of Unit 1 and 2 together with the exclusive use areas W1 and W2 in
the D[...] sectional title
scheme, under Title Deed S[...] (the
property).
2.
The application came before me on the
opposed roll on 13 May 2022 and was allocated for hearing on 14 May
2022. Although the
first respondent opposed the application, it
did not appear at the hearing notwithstanding notice of set down.
The
Court was nevertheless in a position to consider both the
answering affidavit and heads of argument delivered on its behalf.
The
other respondents, being the Registrar of Deeds, Pretoria,
the City of Tshwane Municipality, the Body Corporate of Twin Rivers
Sectional Title Scheme, Chrislaine Equestrian (Pty) Ltd (Chrislaine)
and the Industrial Development Corporation are not participating
in
these proceedings.
3.
The
applicant was previously the owner of D[...] and an adjacent property
known as ‘the Stables’.
[1]
The applicant grounds it right to register the servitude on an
agreement of sale which it concluded when selling the property
to the
first respondent. The alleged entitlement to register the
servitude arises from Clause 20 of the sale agreement, concluded
on
25 April 2019, which provides:
’
20.
On the Transfer Date a right of way servitude will be created over
the property in favour of the Stables, on the following
terms and
conditions:
20.1
The approximate route of the servitude is indicated by the letters A,
B, C, D on the attached Site Plan marked
Annexure B.
20.2 The parties
shall each pay 50% of the costs associated with the creation of the
servitude, including but not limited
to, the costs of preparation of
the servitude diagram approved by the Surveyor General and
registration of the servitude against
the title deeds of both
properties:
20.3 The value of
the servitude is agreed to be R100 (one hundred Rand);
20.4 There is no
consideration payable by the Seller to the Purchaser for the use of
the servitude;
20.5 The Seller, or
its successor in title shall be liable for the costs of building and
maintaining the road and bridge in
the servitude area;
20.6 It is
specifically recorded that the right of way servitude only grants
access to the Stables Property and that the Seller,
or its successor
in title, will not grant direct or indirect access to adjacent
properties over the servitude area.’
4.
Subsequent to the conclusion of the
agreement, the applicant sold the Stables to Chrislaine, resulting in
its joinder, which was
effected after the institution of the
proceedings. Chrislaine is not participating in the
proceedings. However, the
Court is informed in the answering
affidavit that Chrislaine is in dispute with the applicant about
whether Chrislaine is entitled
to cancel the agreement. That
dispute concerns the issue of access.
5.
The first respondent raises various
defences to the application in the answering affidavit and heads of
argument but it is only
necessary to deal briefly with some of them.
6.
First,
the first respondent disputes the applicant’s standing to
institute the application in view of its sale of the property
to
Chrislaine. The property was registered in the name of
Chrislaine on 21 April 2022. In my view the applicant
has
standing notwithstanding the change in ownership. The applicant
is seeking to enforce its contractual right against the
owner of the
property and the conclusion of the sale agreement between those
parties is not in dispute. There is no mention
in the answering
affidavit of any cession or other transfer of rights in the agreement
of sale of the Stables between the applicant
and Chrislaine, which is
attached to the answering affidavit. In argument, counsel
confirmed the absence of any such provision
in the agreement and
rather pointed to provisions that confirm the contrary. I do
not deal with these as they were not expressly
pleaded. The
very basis for the registration of the servitude as a limited real
right however, is the agreement between the
applicant and the first
respondent, and the applicant is entitled to enforce its agreement so
as to ensure that the servitude,
as agreed, is duly registered in the
deed of transfer.
[2]
While
the servitude, once registered, is incidental to and passes with
ownership of the dominant land to which it is attached,
[3]
it was constituted by way of the sale agreement between the applicant
and the first respondent and on the information before me,
the
applicant retains a right to register the servitude.
7.
The first respondent pleads that the
agreement, on this issue, is void for vagueness. I disagree and
note that the argument
was not persisted with in the written
submissions. On the information before me, the servitude area is
reasonably capable of ascertainment.
The servitude area is referred
to in the sale agreement and depicted on a diagram Annexure B.
It relates to an existing road.
Indeed, prior to
registration of transfer of the property, the servitude was surveyed
and a servitude diagram (3281/2019 was prepared
by a land surveyor (G
Putter) and approved by the Surveyor-General on 25 November 2019.
The property was merely transferred
and registered without lodging
the servitude registration application. It does however warrant
mention that after the hearing
I requested further submissions from
the parties due to a variance between the referencing to the
servitude in the sale agreement
and the diagram. I received no
submissions from the respondent. I am satisfied that the
variance does not alter my
view on the matter, but the relief I grant
– while intended by the notice of motion – is in amended
terms proposed
by the applicant that will prevent confusion arising
in due course.
8.
A further issue the respondent raises is
that it must unlawfully construct a road. That is not factually
correct. There
is an existing gravel road.
9.
The first respondent submits that the
servitude is prohibited, illegal and unenforceable because it is
located within a 1:50 and
1:100 year flood line. In this
regard, the Olifantspruit divides Doornpoort and the Stables and a
bridge is required to cross
it. An old low water bridge
constructed by a previous owner in 2005 was damaged and collapsed
during heavy rains in 2019.
The applicant started
construction on a new steel bridge in April 2020 which was designed
to be above the flood line.
However, when the new bridge was
close to completion, the Department of Environmental Affairs stopped
the works due to non-compliance
with the National Environmental
Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA). The applicant explains that
it was initially unaware of
the authorisation requirement but has
since submitted an application in terms of NEMA.
10.
The
first respondent contends in its heads of argument that this is a
dispute that cannot be resolved in motion proceedings involving
as it
does a dispute of fact.
[4]
In my view, the submission conflates the legality of a servitude with
the legality of bridge construction. The
applicant could not
refer me to any prohibition on the servitude itself and conceded that
environmental authorisation is required
before a bridge can lawfully
be constructed. Indeed, other authorisations under law may also
be required. That
cannot, in my view, render the
servitude invalid, unlawful or prohibited.
11.
In
my view, the applicant is entitled to the relief it seeks and to its
costs. Inasmuch as costs have been incurred after
the
introduction of the amended
Rule
67A(3)(c), I am of the view that scale B should be applied.
[5]
The case is not without complexity and arose in context of a plethora
of interrelated litigation.
12.
I make the following order:
12.1.
The applicant is granted leave to register
the right of way servitude as set out in the Servitude Diagram
3281/2019 and recorded
as ‘The figure ABCDa mid River bEFGA
representing 776 square meters of land being a right of way
servitude’ over Portion
6[...] of the farm D[...] No 3[...] JP,
against or on title deed S[...];
12.2.
The first respondent shall pay 50% of the
costs of registration of the servitude;
12.3.
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the
costs of the application on Scale B, where applicable.
SJ
COWEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
Counsel
for applicants:
Adv
C R F De Villiers instructed by Deneys Zeederberg Attorneys
Counsel
for respondents:
No
appearance
Date
heard:
14
May 2024
Date
of Judgment:
13
June 2024
[1]
The formal description being Portion 144, a portion of Portion 1 of
the Farm Doornkloof 391 JR (the Stables).
[2]
Eichelgruen
v Two Nine Eight South Ridge Road (Pty) Ltd
1976(2)
SA D&CLD at 680C-F.
[3]
LAWSA
Servitudes
Para 545: ‘A praedial servitude is a limited real right
which a person in the capacity as owner of one
tenement (
praedium
dominans
)
holds over another tenement (
praedium
serviens
).
The servitude is incidental to and passes with the ownership of the
dominant land to which it is inseparably attached
and burdens the
servient land, irrespective of the identity of the owner.
[4]
With
reference to
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
2009(2) SA 277 (SCA) at para 26.
[5]
Mashava
v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2024]
ZAGPJHC 387.
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