Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 651South Africa
Giovaninoni v Kritznger N.O and Others (065931/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 651 (11 July 2024)
Headnotes
the remedy is available to any person who has control of a thing and exercises such control in his own interest or as agent for another.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Giovaninoni v Kritznger N.O and Others (065931/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 651 (11 July 2024)
Giovaninoni v Kritznger N.O and Others (065931/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 651 (11 July 2024)
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sino date 11 July 2024
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THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
HIGH COURT DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
no: 065931
/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 July 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
LISA
DOROTHY GIOVANINONI
Applicant
And
FOURIE
MATTHYS KRITZNGER N.O
First
Respondent
FOURIE
MATTHYS KRITZNGER
Second Respondent
LAURENZO
MASSIMO GIOVANNONI
Third Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Fourt Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKHOBA,
J
[1]
This is an application in which the applicant seeks an order based on
the
mandament van spolie
, restoring her possession of her
residence and the use of the storage facility.
[2]
The applicant seeks further an interim
interdict preventing the first to third respondent’s from
entering or instructing others to enter her residence without prior
consent. In addition the applicant seeks an interim interdict
preventing the sale of the immovable property situated at Erf 1[...]
V[...] D[...] H[...] Ext 1, Potchefstroom from being alienated,
pending proceedings in terms of section 2(3) of the Will Act, to be
instituted within 30 days.
[3]
Furthermore the applicant seeks an order from the deceased estate for
her maintenance pending
the winding up of the deceased’s
estate.
[4]
The applicant is the widow of the deceased who died on 19 April 2024.
The first and second respondent
is the executor of the deceased
estate, cited in his nominal capacity and in his personal capacity.
[5]
The third respondent is the son of the deceased, born from a previous
marriage. The fourth respondent
is the master of the High Court.
[6]
The applicant contends that the application is urgent because she has
been unlawfully deprived
of access to her primary residence on 7 June
2023 by the first and second respondents.
[7]
She further submits that she is in need of maintenance. The immovable
property has been listed
for sale on 13 June 2024 and she also has a
right to the property and the court should urgently intervene to
protect her rights.
[8]
The Respondents submit that the applicant
voluntarily vacated the property that belongs to the deceased
estate
between 18 May 2024 and 27 May 2024.
[9]
It is submitted further that the applicant failed to explain the
delay of 4 weeks, that is when
the respondent sent the letter to the
applicant and the date 14 June 2024 when this application was brought
by the applicants.
[10]
It is argued by the respondents further that the application is not
urgent and the applicant also failed
to attach a certificate of
urgency. The other beneficiaries or creditors of the estate have not
been joined. Failure to join such
other parties makes this
application defective and as such must be dismissed.
[11]
The third point
in limine
raised is that the applicant has no
clear right to seek the relief and she still has to approach the
court to establish any right.
[12]
In reply to the non-joinder the applicant submits that, the applicant
is not seeking relief against the beneficiaries
of the deceased
estate nor against the creditors.
[13]
It was contended on behalf of the applicant that, the applicant has a
clear right of possession and was living
with other family members
while recovering from injuries sustained in the motor vehicle
collision where her husband (deceased)
died.
[14]
The applicant contends further that the first respondent directed the
managing agents of the estate to terminate
the applicant’s
access to the premises without informing the applicant thereof.
[15]
The historical principle underlying the
madament
van spolie
were
laid down in the judgment of Innes CJ in
Nino
v De Lange
[1]
.
[16]
In order to obtain redress under and evoke the remedy of the
Mandament
van Spolie
the Applicant is required to allege and prove that he was in peaceful
and undisturbed possession of property or a right
[2]
and that he was unlawfully deprived of possession of the property or
the right by another.
[17]
The true purpose of the
mandament van spolie
is not the
protection and vindication of rights in general, but rather the
restoration of the
status quo ante.
[18]
An applicant must not only allege peaceful and undisturbed
possession, but he must prove it.
[3]
[19]
Possession is an important jurisdictional fact because it has legal
consequences, one of which is that the
party dispossessed is afforded
the remedy of the
Mandament
van Spolie.
[4]
[20]
In discharging the onus of proving possession, an applicant is
required to establish the nature of its possession
and as pointed out
by Addleson J in
Bennett
Pringle
[5]
where
the court held that the remedy is available to any person who has
control of a thing and exercises such control in his own
interest or
as agent for another.
[21]
It is also trite that a possessor who alleges that he or she has been
dispossessed should act within a reasonable
time to have possession
restored otherwise the application will be refused.
[6]
[22]
In my view it is clear that the applicant was in possession of the
immovable property, and it is not a requirement
that she should have
been in the house always.
[7]
[23]
She did explain in her affidavit that she was temporarily absent from
her house when she discovered that
she no longer had access. The same
happened to the storage.
[24]
In my view the applicant is correct when she submits that it was not
necessary to join creditors, the ex-wife
of the deceased and the
deceased’s daughter, because they do not have substantial
interest in the matter.
[8]
[25]
It is further my respectful view that the first and second
respondents chose to take the law into his own
hands by directing the
managing agent of the estate in which the property is situated to
terminate applicant’s access to
the house as well as preventing
the applicant to access the storage facility.
[26]
The mere fact that the applicant has removed some of her items from
the house does not justify the actions
taken by the respondents.
[27]
In my view the matter is urgent and meets the requirements set up in
Rule 6(12).
[9]
[28]
It appears from the papers that the second respondent is disbursing
the money in the estate without the permission
of the fourth
respondent.
[29]
Such conduct by the second responded shows that he is reckless in
dealing with the assets of the estate.
This conduct by the second
respondent justifies an adverse cost order against him.
[30]
I make the following order:
30.1
The first to third respondents are ordered to forthwith
restore to the applicants full possession and access to
the premises
situated at Erf V[...] D[...] H[...] Ext 17, by handing over to the
applicant’s attorneys of record all keys
to the said premises,
and by instructing the managing agent to restore the applicant’s
access to the estate and the storage
facility.
30.2
The first and second respondent is ordered to permit the applicant,
or anyone instructed by her to remove
her belongings from the storage
unit at Potch Storage, unit 138, on 48 hours’ written notice;
30.3
That pending an action to be instituted within 30 days in terms of
Section 2(3) of the Wills Act, to declared
amendments to the Will of
the late Renzo Giovannoni as valid; the first to third respondents be
interdicted and restrained as follows:
30.3.1
That the first and second respondent be interdicted and restrained
from alienating the property situated at Erf 1[...] V[...]
D[...]
H[...] Ext 17;
30.3.2
That the first to third respondents be interdicted and restrained
from entering the premises or instructing or allowing anyone
else to
enter the premises, without the applicant’s prior written
consent.
[31]
The issue of maintenance of the applicant is referred to the
Maintenance Court.
[32]
The second respondent is to pay the costs of this application on
Scale B.
MAKHOBA
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
AND RESERVED JUDGMENT: 27 JUNE 2024
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN ON: 11 JULY 2024
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
A. Coertze (instructed by) Chambers Attorneys Incorporated
For
the Respondent:
Adv Z Schoeman
(instructed by) Stopforth Swanepoel & Brewis Inc.
[1]
1906 TS 120
par 122 where the court held that “It is a
fundamental principle that no man is allowed take the law into his
own hands;
no one is permitted to dispose another forcibly or
wrongfully and against his consent of the possession of property,
whether
movable. If he does so, the court will summarily restore the
status quo ante and will do that as a preliminary to any enquiry or
investigation into the merits of their dispute.
[2]
Impala
Water Users Association v Lourens NO 2008 (2) SA 495 (SCA).
[3]
Impala
Water Users Association v Lourens NO
[2004] 2 All SA 476
SA.
[4]
Shoprite
Checkers Ltd v Pangaborne Properties 1994 (1) SA 616 (W).
[5]
Bennett
Pringle (Pty) Ltd v Adelaide Municipality
1977 (1) SA 230
(E) at
232H-233H.
[6]
Le
Riche v PSP Properties CC 2005 (3) SA189 (C).
[7]
Bennett
Pringle (Pty) Ltd v Adelaide Municipality
1977 (1) SA 230
(E) at
233, as also referred to in God Never Fails Revival Church v
Mgandela and Another (2188/2019) [2019] ZA ECMHC 62 (22 October
2019).
[8]
Henri
Viljoen (Pty) Ltd v Awerbuch Brothers
1953 (2) SA 151
(0) at 169H.
[9]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
and others (11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (September 2011
at Par 5
and 6.
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