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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 567
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## Balepye Communal Property Association v Director-General of the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (2024-064900)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 567 (21 June 2024)
Balepye Communal Property Association v Director-General of the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development and Others (2024-064900)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 567 (21 June 2024)
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sino date 21 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
2024-064900
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
21 June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BALEPYE
COMMUNAL PROPERTY ASSOCIATION
Applicant
And
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
First
Respondent
DOROTHY
KGOAHLA
Second
Respondent
GIVEN
MAENETJA
Third Respondent
BENJAMIN
MAENETJA
Fourth
Respondent
SOLLY
MALATJI
Fifth
Respondent
CLIFFORD
MAENETJA
Sixth
Respondent
This matter was
heard virtually (Ms teams) and disposed of in terms of the
directives issued by the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
[1]
The Applicant is a communal property association as defined in the
Communal Property Associations Act, 28 of 1996
registered as such
with the
Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural
Development
("the Department”) with
an adopted Constitution annexed to the founding affidavit as Annexure
“IK1”. The
Applicant was incorporated on or about 26 July
2009.
[2]
The Applicant approached Court for an order that the Second to Fifth
Respondents be interdicted from convening and/or holding
a meeting,
purportedly by the Applicant, for and on behalf of the Executive
Committee of the Applicant and/or Members of the Applicant
on 23 June
2024 at Bulamahlo Day Care Centre or any other place; and further be
interdicted from convening or holding any other
meetings on behalf of
the Applicant and/or its Members whether it be a public or general
meeting.
[3]
The application is opposed by the Second and Fourth Respondents who
appeared in court without any legal representation and affirmed
that
they were in a position to represent themselves. The other
Respondents did not participate in the proceedings. No recourse
is
sought against the First Respondent which is cited in the papers
merely due to the fact that it might have an interest in this
application.
[4]
The Second and Fourth Respondents have, in opposing the application,
raised a number of points
in
limine
coupled with
defences on the merits. Lack of urgency has been raised as one of the
points
in limine
. Due to the outcome that is finally reached
in this judgment, the various
in limine
points raised are not
addressed. However, since this application is in the urgent court,
the point on urgency requires determination.
[5]
This matter is urgent. This is so because the meeting in question is
to take place on Sunday 23 June 2024, that is, within three
days from
the hearing of the application. It means that a determination of the
application should be made before that date. In
order for a matter to
be heard in urgent court, the Applicant must show that it will not
obtain substantial redress in due course.
[1]
The relief sought by the Applicant in the papers is to interdict and
prohibit the Respondents from conducting any meeting under
the
auspice or name of the Applicant. It is common cause that a meeting
under the auspice of the Applicant is scheduled to take
place on
Sunday 23 June 2024. It is, thus, obvious that should the meeting
proceed on Sunday the Applicant will not obtain substantial
redress
in due course.
[6]
It is apparent from the papers that the urgency complained of is not
self-created. It is common cause that the date for the
meeting of 23
June 2024 was set at the meeting held by the community on 1 June
2024. The uncontroverted evidence of the Applicant’s
deponent
is that he became aware of the meeting on 4 June 2024. He avers
further that he immediately approached the Department
for assistance
in an attempt to stop the meeting but received no response. He,
thereafter, approached the Respondents with a request
that they
provide an undertaking that the meeting will not proceed but received
a response indicating that such an undertaking
will not be provided.
It was only then that on 12 June 2024 that the Applicant approached
court for relief.
[7]
The interdictory relief sought by the Applicant is final in nature.
The relief is sought to secure a permanent cessation
of the
alleged unlawful conduct of the Respondents. The Applicant seeks the
Court to stop the Respondents from distributing notices
pertaining to
the meeting scheduled to be held on 23 June 2024 and/or from
conducting any meeting on 23 June 2024 or any meeting
under the
auspice or name of the Applicant. Such relief if granted, is without
a limitation to time, it is final.
[8]
There are three requisites for the grant of a final interdict, all of
which must be present and established by the Applicant
at the same
time. The said requirements are: (a) a clear right on the part of the
applicant; (b) an injury actually committed or
reasonably
apprehended; and (c) the absence of any other satisfactory remedy.
[2]
[9]
It need also be stated that it is trite that where a final order is
sought in an application the applicant’s case must
stand on the
allegations alluded to in the founding affidavit, and admitted by the
respondent, if not, the application for relief
must fail. The general
rule, as enunciated by the Court in
Plascon-Evans
,
[3]
is that an applicant who seeks final relief on notice of motion
proceedings must, in the event of a dispute of fact, accept the
version set up by his or her opponent unless the latter’s
allegations are, in the opinion of the court, not such to raise
a
real, genuine or
bona
fide
dispute
of fact or are so far- fetched or clearly untenable that the court is
justified in rejecting them merely on the papers.
[10]
Before the requirements for a final interdict can be discussed, it is
necessary to determine whether the Applicant has established
a
nexus
between the Respondents and the conduct complained about, that is,
the act of convening the meeting of 23 June 2024. For the reasons
that follow hereunder, it does not appear that the Applicant has been
able to establish, in these papers, that the Respondents
are
responsible for convening the meeting as alleged.
[11]
The Applicant seeks to interdict the Respondents and prohibit them
from conducting or convening a meeting under the auspice
of the
Applicant. For this assertion, the Applicant relies on notices that
are circulating in the community informing about the
intended
meeting. The said notices are attached to the founding affidavit as
“PR3”, “PR4” and “PR5”.
The
contention is that: in Annexures “PR3” and “PR4”
the Fourth Respondent is referred to as a contact
person in his
capacity as “
The Administrator
” with his contact
number mentioned there; in Annexure “PR5” the purpose of
the meeting is stated as to elect
the executive committee of the
Applicant; and, in Annexure “PR4” the names of the
Respondents appear and are referred
to as “
the top five
line-up”
. This is the sum total of the evidence that
the Applicant adduces in its contention that the Respondents are
responsible
for convening the meeting under the auspice of the
Applicant.
[12]
The Second and Fourth Respondents concede that a community meeting is
to be held on 23 June 2024, they, however, dispute the
Applicant’s
allegation that they are responsible for convening that meeting. They
argue that the fact that their names are
mentioned in the notices
does not mean that the meeting is convened by them or that they
intend to conduct a meeting under the
auspice of the Applicant. They
in that regard argue that they have been wrongly cited as the
Respondents in the papers.
[13]
Besides the evidence pertaining to the notices that the Applicant
avers are circulating in the community, there is no other
evidence
that indicates that the Respondents are responsible for convening the
meeting. As stated, the Second and Fourth Respondents
deny that they
are responsible for convening the meeting. They are aware that such a
meeting is to take place because a decision
was made by the community
at an earlier meeting that was held on 1 June 2024. The meeting of 1
June 2024, according to the Second
and Fourth Respondents, is one of
a series of meetings which commenced in October 2023 where the
election of new committee members
was an issue on the agenda. The
Second Respondent in particular averred that the names stated in
Annexure “PR4”
are intended to be
elected as office-bearers in the positions next to their names and
not that they are responsible for convening
the meeting.
The
Applicant in its replying affidavit seems to agree to this averment
made by the Second Respondent.
[14]
The Applicant seeks final relief on motion proceedings, as already
indicated, and due to the dispute of fact that has arisen,
the
Plascon-Evans
rule must apply. On the reading of the papers in
their entirety, it cannot be said that the dispute raised by the
Second and Fourth
Respondents is not real and genuine, or that their
version raises such obvious fictitious dispute of facts, or is
palpably implausible,
or far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the
court is justified in rejecting that version on the basis that it
stands to be
rejected. And, on that basis alone the application
should be dismissed.
[15]
As regards the other Respondents, that is the Third, Fifth and Sixth
Respondents, even though they did not appear before court,
the
evidence adduced by the Applicant does not establish the fact that
they are responsible for convening the meeting. As such,
the
Applicant’s case against them does not stand, as well.
[16]
Consequently, the application is dismissed.
KUBUSHI
J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
M.M.W. Van Zyl SC
Brooklyn
Advocates’ Chambers
Pretoria
E-mail:
tokkie@law.co.za
Mobile:
082 575 6053
Tel:
(012) 452 8747
Instructed
by:
Veneziano
Attorneys
E-mail:
venezianoattorneys@gmail.com
Tel:
(012) 809 3464
For
the defendant:
Dorothy
Kgoahla (in-person)
Benjamin
Maenetja (in-person)
[1]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others (11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011) at
para 7.
[2]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo 1914AD 221 at 227.
[3]
Plascon-Evans Paints (TVL) Ltd. v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd.
(53/84)
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984] 2 All SA 366
(A);
1984 (3) SA 623
(A).
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