Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1044South Africa
Ukoleko v Sheriff Pretoria South West S Ismail and Others (Reasons) (2024/095168) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1044 (17 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ukoleko v Sheriff Pretoria South West S Ismail and Others (Reasons) (2024/095168) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1044 (17 October 2024)
Ukoleko v Sheriff Pretoria South West S Ismail and Others (Reasons) (2024/095168) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1044 (17 October 2024)
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sino date 17 October 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-095168
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
Date:
17 October 2024
K.
La M Manamela
In
the matter between:
JUMAR
ROSTER UKOLEKO
Applicant
and
SHERIFF
PRETORIA SOUTH WEST, S ISMAIL
1
st
Respondent
MATAMELA
NELLY KGABI
2
nd
Respondent
EXECUTOR
OF THE ESTATE OF THE LATE SELAMUDI JACOB KGABI
3
rd
Respondent
LESOLE
MOKGATLE ATTORNEYS
4
th
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT
5
th
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, PRETORIA
6
th
Respondent
DATE
OF REASONS FOR ORDER GRANTED:
These reasons for order granted
were handed down or given electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by
email. The date and time thereof is
deemed to be 10h00 on
17 October 2024
.
REASONS
FOR ORDER GRANTED
KHASHANE
MANAMELA, AJ
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Mr Jumar Roster Ukoleko, launched this
application for urgent interdictory relief against the respondents.
The application
was opposed by the first (i.e. Sheriff Pretoria South
West) (“the Sheriff”); second (i.e. Ms Matamela Nelly
Kgabi)
(“Ms Kgabi”) and fourth (i.e. Lesole Mokgatle
Attorneys) (“LM Attorneys”) respondents. The third
respondent
was cited as the Executor of the Estate of the Late
Selamudi Jacob Kgabi (“the Executor”). No specific relief
was sought
against fifth respondent (i.e. Master of the High Court)
and sixth respondent (i.e. Registrar of Deeds, Pretoria). I refer to
the
first, second and fourth, being the respondents who opposed the
application, collectively, as the respondents. In some instances
I
distinguish between the respondents. LM Attorneys would in all
likelihood have acted for and on behalf of their clients, being
Ms
Kgabi, the Executor or both. But they were implicated and sued
directly. I deal with this aspect further when discussing the
costs
order which was sought and granted in the matter, towards the end.
[2]
The urgent application came before me on 03 September 2024.
Mr
TC Kwinda appeared for the applicant and Mr TA Modisenyane appeared
for the respondents.
I extemporaneously granted an order after
listening to oral submissions by counsel. The order granted appears
in paragraph [84]
below for ease of reference (“the Order”).
Both counsel had gratefully also filed written
submissions.
[3]
On 06 September 2024, the respondents’
attorneys requested reasons for the Order (“these Reasons”).
Subsequently,
an application for leave to appeal was also filed on
behalf of Ms Kgabi and LM Attorneys. But the leave to appeal has no
bearing
on these Reasons, set out next.
Brief
background
[4]
The dispute in the matter relates to an
immovable property situated at 1[...] K[...] Street, Atteridgeville,
Pretoria (“the
property”). The applicant and his family
occupied the property at all material times until their ejectment by
the Sheriff
on 20 August 2024. The applicant said the ejectment was
at the instance of Ms Kgabi and LM Attorneys. According to him the
ejectment
was unlawful. Around 22 August 2024 he brought this urgent
application seeking, among others, the restoration of his possession
of the property.
[5]
What appears – still under this
background – is common cause between the parties or has not
been effectively challenged
by the respondents. I only reflect those
aspects which I consider material for these Reasons. Further details
appear under other
parts dealing with self-explanatory aspects of the
matter or these Reasons.
[6]
Although no longer enthusiastically so, the
applicant claims to have purchased the property from the now deceased
Mr Selamudi Jacob
Kgabi (“the late Mr Kgabi”) in 2005 for
an amount of R140 000. He says he paid a deposit of R40 000. The
balance
he settled in what appears to have been installments; payment
of a deposit for a vehicle on behalf of the late Mr Kgabi, and
payment
of transfer costs. In total he says he paid R160 000. The
sale and purchase of the property was recorded in an affidavit
deposed
to by the late Mr Kgabi. As further proof or, perhaps,
consummation of the sale, he was given the original title deed to the
property.
No written sale agreement was concluded. The applicant
concedes that this was a mistake as it was contrary to the provisions
of
the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
. Consequently, the title to
the property was never transferred to the applicant. Mr Kgabi died on
09 August 2013.
[7]
The estate of the late
Mr Kgabi
was
reported to the Master and Mr Herculaas Frederick Venter was
appointed as the Executor. The liquidation and distribution account
is said to have been finalised in 2016, already. The applicant said
he was not aware of this and the respondents, retorted, that
he has
missed an opportunity to object to the account. Part B of the
application deals with the administration of the deceased
estate, in
particular the finalisation of the liquidation and distribution
amount by the Executor. The applicant said he is desirous
of proving
a claim in the estate for the property to be transferred to him.
[8]
From 2009, including when Mr Kgabi’s
was still alive, a legal battle ensued as to the ownership of the
property. The applicant
lost the battle at first instance before this
Division in 2012, including his attempt at leave to appeal the
outcome. There was
a further defeat when the Supreme Court of Appeal
dismissed his petition for leave to appeal in 2013. But he was not
perturbed
in remaining in occupation of the property.
[9]
In May 2023, Ms Kgabi, who was married to
the late Mr Kgabi in community of property, brought an eviction
application in the Pretoria
Magistrates Court against the applicant
and his fellow occupants of the property. The applicant -
unsuccessfully - opposed the
eviction. On 05 October 2023 an order
for his eviction was granted. He requested reasons for the order from
the presiding Magistrate
on 05 December 2023. An appeal was noted on
his behalf on 12 December 2023 whilst waiting for the reasons for the
eviction order.
[10]
On 07 August 2024 three people jumped over
the gate to the property and entered the premises. They informed the
applicant’s
wife that they bought the property and the
applicant and his family should vacate the property. The “intruders”
could
not provide proof of purchase of the property. The applicant’s
attempt to open a criminal case against the “intruders”
at the Atteridgeville police station was unsuccessful. On 08 August
2024 his attorneys also protested the “intrusion”
- in a
telephone call and subsequently a letter to LM Attorneys (then on
board for Ms Kgabi) - but in vain. The applicant rebuffed
the attempt
by the police to facilitate “a discussion” with the
“intruders,” as he felt that they (i.e.
his family and
him) were victims of harassment.
[11]
The applicant said that his attorneys were told by LM Attorneys that
the “intruders”
were in fact “security”
persons sent to the property. The names and purpose of the visit of
the alleged “security”
persons, though, were not
divulged. The respondents appear to have simply denied this.
[12]
In
their letter (of 08 August 2024) the applicant’s attorneys also
threatened the institution of this urgent application,
evidently to
no avail. On 20 August 2024 the Sheriff, escorted by the police,
removed the personal belongings of the applicant
and his family from
the property. The Sheriff, according to the applicant, said that he
was just executing a court order and any
appeal, or a notice of
appeal is trumped by the eviction court order. Contemporaneous
telephonic appeal to the office of the sheriff
was met with the same
response.
[1]
Relief
sought (and granted)
[13]
The relief sought by the applicant on an urgent basis in terms of
this application was
divided into Parts A and B. The Order granted
only dealt with Part A.
[14]
The Order granted was rephrased a number of times by the applicant’s
counsel with the involvement
of the Court, before being granted
extemporaneously in the terms appearing in paragraph [84] below. The
exchanges included when
altering the draft order regarding when
possession of the property should be restored to the applicant. The
period of “four
hours” initially suggested by the
applicant was extended to fourteen days to allow the new occupants a
reasonable opportunity
to vacate. This did not appear in the papers
but came from counsel for the respondents. He urged the Court to
allow the new occupants
a longer vacation period in the Order. I will
return to the “back and forth” activities in altering the
draft order
when dealing with the issue of costs towards the end of
these Reasons.
[15]
It is necessary to record that I also caused to be added to the Order
steps to be taken in the
prosecution of the appeal. The envisaged
steps appear under paragraph 5 of the Order. This was to avoid the
Order granted turning
into the proverbial albatross around the
respondents’ necks and, perhaps, being used to avoid traction
in the prosecution
of the pending appeal. I am mindful that according
to the respondents there is no appeal. More on this later on.
[16]
Part B of the application, as already mentioned, relates to the
furnishing of the liquidation
and distribution account in the estate
of the late Mr Kgabi, and an interdict against the transfer of title
to the property pending
the disposal of the appeal. Although, as
already hinted above, the proverbial horse may have already bolted in
this regard, this
part of the application would possibly be dealt
with in the ordinary course.
[17]
I will – immediately after reflecting the pertinent legal
principles to the issues in the
matter - deal with the submissions
made on behalf of the contending parties. This would also include the
respective party’s
case as borne by the papers before the
Court. I continue employing headings and subheadings along the lines
of the relief sought
to facilitate presentation of these Reasons for
the Order.
Applicable
legal principles
Spoliation
/ mandament van spolie
[18]
It is common cause between the parties that the application, or at
least the relief sought in
terms of Part A, is in the form of a
spoliation order.
[19]
A spoliation order is also known as a
mandament
van spolie
.
[2]
The order or remedy is available under circumstances, which include
the following:
[19.1] where, a
person has been - wholly or partly - deprived of his or her
possession of a movable or immovable property,
unlawfully, or
[19.2]
where, a person has been deprived of his or her
quasi
-possession
of other incorporeal rights, unlawfully.
[3]
[20]
‘Spoliation’ may be explained as ‘any illicit
deprivation of another of the
right of possession which [she or he]
has, whether in regard to movable or immovable property or even in
regard to a legal right’.
[4]
The following
dicta
from
the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
[5]
captures the nature and extent of the remedy accurately:
“
The mandament van
spolie (spoliation) is a remedy of ancient origin, based upon the
fundamental principle that persons should not
be permitted to take
the law into their own hands to seize property in the possession
of others without their consent. Spoliation
provides a remedy in such
a situation by requiring the status quo preceding the dispossession
to be restored by returning the property
'as a preliminary to any
enquiry or investigation into the merits of the dispute' as to
which of the parties is entitled to
possession. Thus a court hearing
a spoliation application does not require proof of a claimant's
existing right to property,
as opposed to their possession of it, in
order to grant relief. But what needs to be stressed is that the
mandament provides for
interim relief pending a final
determination of the parties' rights, and only to that extent is it
final. The contrary comment
of the full court in
Eskom
v Nikelo
[[2018]
ZAECMHC 48
]] is
clearly wrong. A spoliation order is thus no more than a precursor
to an action over the merits of the dispute.”
[6]
[footnotes omitted]
[21]
The principle underlying the remedy of mandament van spolie is
derived from the Latin maxim:
‘
spoliatus
ante
omnia restituendus est
’
meaning “the person who has been deprived of
his
or her possession must first be restored to his or her former
position before the merits of the case can be considered”.
[7]
This serves as preservation of public order as those who take the law
into their own hands are restrained from doing so and, thus,
induces
them to rather consider submission to the rule of law and
jurisdiction of the courts.
[8]
Effectively, resorting to self-help in order to regain lost
possession of a thing one is entitled to is discouraged in order
to
maintain peace and legal order in the community.
[9]
[22]
The protection offered by the remedy concerns a physical
manifestation of a right and not the
right, itself.
[10]
A
spoliation order seeks to redress a breach of the peace suggested by
the unlawful interference with the factual control or the
physical
manifestation of a right.
[11]
Therefore, the correct approach in this regard is to avoid an enquiry
into the impugned right of access or right of use forming
the subject
of the breach as this would amount to an investigation of the merits
of the matter, which is an antithesis of the spoliation
law.
[12]
[23]
Based on, primarily, the above, an applicant for a
mandament
van spolie
ought
to show that:
[13]
[23.1]
the applicant had peaceful and undisturbed possession of the material
thing,
[14]
and
[23.2]
the applicant was unlawfully deprived of such possession.
[15]
[24]
For reasons that would become clearer below, I consider it warranted
to belabour an issue or
two regarding the second requirement above,
namely, that the applicant ought to have been unlawfully deprived of
his or her peaceful
and undisturbed possession of the material thing.
I understand this to mean that there is no spoliation if the
applicant was lawfully
deprived of possession of the material
thing.
[16]
[25]
A valid defence in this regard may be that the respondent was
authorised in terms of a court
order or by a statutory provision to
effect the dispossession or disturbance of possession. A most
relevant example, for current
purposes that is, is where a messenger
of court or a deputy sheriff has acted upon the authority of a writ
of execution when attaching
the assets of a judgment debtor. Such
attachment or seizure will not be unlawful.
[17]
Other
valid
defences against spoliation claim are the following, that: (a)
the applicant did not enjoy peaceful and undisturbed possession
of
the particular thing when he or she was dispossessed; (b) there was
no unlawful dispossession and, thus, no spoliation; (c)
it is
impossible to restore possession, and (d) the respondent regained
possession of the thing within the limits of counter-spoliation.
[18]
Dispossession may have been justified by virtue of being effected in
terms of a court order or a statute or with the applicant’s
consent.
[19]
[26]
To conclude on this topic, it is necessary to point out that the
following conduct also amounts
to spoliation: (a) gaining possession
of a thing through means of trickery;
[20]
(b) gaining possession of a thing by a messenger of the court in
terms of an invalid writ of execution;
[21]
(c) eviction of persons from premises by state officials without
strict compliance with applicable statutory powers,
[22]
and
(d) causing illegal occupants to surrender possession of their
informal dwellings under duress.
[23]
There are no further
permissible
defences due to the absolute nature of the rule
spoliatus
ante
omnia restituendus est
(defined
in [21] above).
[24]
[27]
The remedy only offers temporary relief, as the respondent may
subsequently seek restoration
of his or her possession, for example,
through a
rei
vindicatio
.
[25]
In
this matter the applicant sought restoration pending an appeal he is
pursing against the eviction order. But the respondents
said there is
no pending appeal.
Civil
cases appeals in the Magistrates Courts
[28]
Rule 51 of the Magistrates Court Rules
[26]
is pertinent to the issues in the application or at least from the
applicant’s perspective. It reads as follows in the material
part, including its caption:
51 Appeals in
civil cases
(1) Upon a request in
writing by any party within 10 days after judgment and before noting
an appeal the judicial officer shall
within 15 days hand to the
registrar or clerk of the court a judgment in writing which shall
become part of the record showing
—
(a)
the
facts he or she found to be proved; and
(b)
his
or her reasons for judgment.
(2) The registrar or
clerk of the court shall on receipt from the judicial officer of a
judgment in writing supply to the party
applying therefor a copy of
such judgment and shall endorse on the original minutes of record the
date on which the copy of such
judgment was so supplied.
(3) An appeal may be
noted by the delivery of notice within 20 days after the date of a
judgment appealed against or within 20 days
after the registrar or
clerk of the court has supplied a copy of the judgment in writing to
the party applying therefor.
…
.
(8)
(a)
Upon
the delivery of a notice of appeal the relevant judicial officer
shall within 15 days thereafter hand to the registrar
or clerk of the
court a statement in writing showing (so far as may be necessary
having regard to any judgment in writing already
handed in by him or
her) —
(i) the
facts he or she found to be proved;
(ii) the
grounds upon which he or she arrived at any finding of fact specified
in the notice of appeal as appealed
against; and
(iii) his
or her reasons for any ruling of law or for the admission or
rejection of any evidence so specified as
appealed against.
…
(9) A party noting an
appeal or a cross-appeal shall prosecute the same within such time as
may be prescribed by rule of the court
of appeal and, in default of
such prosecution, the appeal or cross-appeal shall be deemed to have
lapsed, unless the court of appeal
shall see fit to make an order to
the contrary.”
[29]
Sections 83
and
84
of the
Magistrates' Courts Act 32 of 1944
are
also relevant for current purposes.
Section 83
, together with its
caption, reads as follows:
Appeal
from magistrate’s court.
—
Subject
to the provisions of
section 82
, a party to any civil suit or
proceeding in a court may appeal to the provincial or local division
of the Supreme Court having
jurisdiction to hear the appeal, against—
(
a
) any judgment
of the nature described in
section 48
;
(
b
) any rule or
order made in such suit or proceeding and having the effect of a
final judgment, including any order under Chapter
IX and
any order as to costs;
(
c
) any decision
overruling an exception, when the parties concerned consent to such
an appeal before proceeding further in an action
or when it is
appealed from in conjunction with the principal case, or when it
includes an order as to costs.
And
section 84
, also
together with its caption, reads as follows:
84 Time, manner and conditions of appeal
Every party so appealing shall do so within the period and in the manner prescribed bythe rules; but the court of appeal may in any case
extend such period.
Civil
appeals from the Magistrates Courts
[30]
In the High Court appeals from the Magistrates’ Courts are
governed by Uniform
Rule 50
[27]
which reads in the material part, together with its caption:
50 Civil appeals
from magistrates’ courts
(1) An appeal to the
court against the decision of a magistrate in a civil matter shall be
prosecuted within 60 days after the noting
of such appeal, and unless
so prosecuted it shall be deemed to have lapsed.
(2) The prosecution of an
appeal shall
ipso facto
operate as the prosecution
of any cross-appeal which has been duly noted.”
[31]
An appeal from the Magistrates’ Court, therefore, is governed
by the rules of the Magistrates’
Courts and the High Court to
which it is destined. At the former court (i.e. the Magistrates'
Court) an appeal may be noted in
terms of its rules, whereas the High
Court is where the appeal is prosecuted in terms of the Uniform Rule
of Court.
[28]
The noting of an
appeal lays a foundation to the High Court’s proceedings, but
it remains a step to be taken in the Magistrates’
Court, to be
followed by the prosecution of the appeal in the High Court.
[29]
[32]
The applicant heavily relied on the following provisions from section
18 of the Superior Courts
Act.
[30]
[33]
The process of issuance and execution of a warrant by the
Magistrates’ Court is also relevant.
I say more below. Firstly,
Rule 36, governing the “process
in
execution” appears more relevant. It reads as follows in the
material part:
“
(1)
The process for the execution of any judgment … for ejectment
shall be by warrant
issued and signed by the registrar or clerk of the court and
addressed to the sheriff.
(2) A process issued
under subrule (1) may be sued out by any person in whose favour any
such judgment shall have been given,
if such judgment is not then
satisfied, stayed or suspended.
[underlining added]
[34]
Further, section 78 of the Magistrates Courts Act deals with
execution or suspension of execution
of judgment, including an
ejectment or eviction order. It reads as follows in the material
part:
“
Where
an appeal has been noted …,
the
court may direct
either that the
judgment shall be carried into execution or that execution thereof
shall be suspended pending the decision upon
the appeal … The
direction shall be made upon such terms, if any, as the court may
determine as to security for the due
performance of any judgment
which may be given upon the appeal ….”
[underlining added]
[35]
In
Jones
and Buckle
the
learned author commented on section 78, including as follows. The
noting of an appeal automatically suspend execution of a judgment
unless either of the parties to a pending appeal approaches the court
(on application) for either to seek execution
[31]
or suspension of execution, as the case may be, pending the intended
appeal.
[32]
The default
position exists in terms of the common law and is the corollary of an
appeal coming into operation.
[33]
[36]
Therefore, generally, in terms of the common law execution of a
judgment or order is automatically
suspended when an appeal is
noted.
[34]
And, without
invoking the provision of section 78 the order or judgment “cannot
be carried out and no effect can be
given thereto”, pending the
appeal.
[35]
[37]
It is also opined by the learned author in
Jones
and Buckle
that
“[i]f execution, by some oversight, is allowed to proceed, such
execution is a nullity”.
[36]
Applicant’s
case and submissions
[38]
A greater part of the material appearing above, as background to the
matter, forms part of the
applicant’s case to the extent that
it is common cause between the parties or not dispositively disputed
by the respondents.
[39]
The applicant’s case – further from what appears above -
is that his eviction is
unlawful and constitutes spoliation as he is
appealing the outcome of the eviction proceedings. He lodged –
on 5 December
2023 - with the relevant Magistrate or Presiding
Officer who granted the eviction order granted on 5 October 2023 a
request for
reasons for the eviction order. He subsequently, on 12
December 2023, noted an appeal by serving a notice to this effect on
LM
Attorneys, then acting for Ms Kgabi. He attributed part of the
delay in the appeal process to the withdrawal of his erstwhile
attorneys
of record and retaining his current attorneys. But LM
Attorneys have been fully aware of the appeal and, thus, proceeded
with his
“unlawful eviction” from the property, despite
such knowledge.
[40]
Further submissions on behalf of the applicant are to the following
effect: (a) the execution
of the eviction order is impermissible
pending finalisation of the appeal; (b) the applicant has filed a
notice in terms of Rule
51(1)
[37]
(for the furnishing of reasons for the eviction order by the
Magistrate) and a notice of appeal against the eviction order; (c)
the respondents have acted arbitrarily, contrary to the Constitution
and unlawfully in executing the eviction order as same is
suspended,
and (d) the execution of the order despite the appeal is contrary to
section 18
[38]
of the Superior
Courts Act.
[41]
It is submitted on behalf of the applicant that section 18(1) of the
Superior Courts Act reiterate
the common law position of the ordinary
effect of the appeal process, namely the suspension of an order
appealed against. Case
law is also said to support the position that
it is illegal to execute an order “whilst leave to appeal is
pending”.
This is grounded upon the apprehension of irreparable
harm, the submission concluded.
[42]
Irreparable harm would ensue should execution of the eviction order
have been allowed to prevail.
The applicant may subsequently succeed
with his appeal but without recourse. I must add that in some
instances the applicant referred
to leave to appeal as opposed to
appeal, but nothing turned on this.
[43]
In as far as urgency is concerned it was submitted that the
respondents and LM Attorneys resorted
to self-help to exclude the
applicant from the protection of the law. The status
quo
ought
to be restored as the applicant would not be afforded substantive
remedy in the ordinary course.
[44]
Also, it is submitted on behalf of the applicant that whilst aware of
the existence of the intended
appeal the best the respondents could
have done was to bring an application for leave to execute the
eviction order pending the
outcome of the appeal. As stated above,
the applicant or on his behalf relies on section 18 of the Superior
Courts Act regarding
the suspension of the operation or execution of
a decision which is subject of an appeal or leave to appeal. It is
submitted the
provision is an enactment of the common law on the
suspension of court orders sought to be appealed against. This may be
so, but
the applicable provision is section 78 of the Magistrates
Courts Act.
[39]
[45]
It is further pointed out that the current application does not
concern the merits of the appeal,
but whether on the issues before
the Court there is an appeal pending and, if so, whether the
respondents were entitled to execute
the eviction order in the face
of the pending appeal.
[40]
I
agreed. Overall, the restoration to the applicant of undisturbed
possession is the only remedy available to the applicant.
[46]
The applicant also submitted that he had met the requirements for an
interim interdict and authorities
are cited which according to the
applicant support this contention, including
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and another
.
[41]
I also agreed with this submission.
[47]
Regarding the requirements for a
mandament
van spolie
,
it is asserted on behalf of the applicant that the current
application takes that form. It is stated that the applicant and his
family have been in peaceful occupation of the property for nineteen
years. Reliance was placed upon the authority of
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
.
[42]
And, it was pointed out that, no one is entitled to self-help.
[43]
[48]
The matter is urgent and there is no room to allege self-created
urgency, the submission went.
Spoliation applications are inherently
urgent.
[49]
On the issue of costs the applicant sought a punitive costs order
against the respondents. With
regard to LM Attorneys an alternative
costs order of
de bonis propriis
was also sought. It was
submitted that LM Attorneys were well aware of the pending appeal as
they were served with the relevant
documents regarding the appeal,
but yet instructed the Sheriff to execute the eviction order. I have
more to say on the issue of
costs and I do so towards the end of
these Reasons under a self-explanatory subheading.
Respondents’
case and submissions
[50]
Ms Kgabi deposed to the answering affidavit. She confirmed her
marriage in community of property
to the late Mr Kgabi. She asserted
that the property formed part of the joint estate between her and the
late Mr Kgabi. Following
his death, the title to the property
devolved in terms of a will and testament solely to her in 2017. She
said that the administration
of the deceased estate was finalised 8
years ago. This, no doubt, will have a bearing on Part B of the
application.
[51]
The respondents bemoaned the fact that the applicant’s case is
based on spoliation whilst
he has been properly evicted and granted
prior notice. By and large the respondents make common cause with the
issues in the background
regarding the historical litigation
involving the property.
[52]
The respondents said that the eviction order granted the applicant an
opportunity to vacate the
premises – four months later - on 7
February 2024. He, nevertheless, refused to vacate and appealed the
eviction order after
an ordinate delay. His grounds of appeal are
also contrary to case law. Also, the appeal is “defective”,
“hopelessly
defective”, the respondents contend. This
application amounts to relitigating the same issues which previously
came before
the Courts and were finally determined. It is not urgent,
meritless and constitutes an abuse of the process of this Court and
deserves
to be dismissed with costs.
[53]
Regarding urgency, the following are some of the averments and/or
submissions for the respondents.
The applicant knew about the
eviction order since October 2023, but “did nothing to prevent
his eviction by bringing an appeal
or any application to court”.
He has indicated through his “failure to bring an appeal within
the prescribed timeframe
that he has acquiesced in the execution
order”. Applicant’s own delay is the source of the
alleged urgency and, thus,
the applicant is the architect of his own
misfortune. Also, the timelines for the exchange of documents were
unreasonably truncated
and did not afford the respondents ample time
to consult, prepare and deliver an answering affidavit.
[54]
Further submissions included the following. The applicant was
lawfully evicted by the Sheriff.
Also, the Sheriff was merely
doing his work and did not deserve to be entangled in this
litigation. I also return to this
aspect when dealing with the costs
order granted. The applicant was not in a peaceful and undisturbed
possession of the property.
He was an unlawful occupier who was
lawfully evicted. He lacked rights from the beginning and, therefore,
there are no rights to
be restored. The respondents also argued that
the applicant has failed to indicate that he would not obtain
substantial redress
in the ordinary course, considering he has a
“plethora of recourses at its [sic] disposal”. The
applicant is estopped
from pursuing the appeal with no prospects, but
solely aimed at delaying and defeating the rights of Ms Kgabi to the
property.
Issues
which required determination
[55]
From the above I deduced the following as issues requiring
determination for a disposal of this
urgent application:
[55.1] whether the
matter or at least Part A of the application was urgent;
[55.2] whether the
relief sought was in the form of a
mandament
van spolie
and, if so, whether the
requirements for the remedy have been met, namely:
[55.2.1] was the
applicant deprived of his possession of the property, unlawfully?
[55.2.2] linked to the
above, was there an appeal process pending before the
Magistrates
Court?
[55.3] is the
applicant relitigating the same issues where the Courts have already
made final determination?
[55.4] whether a
punitive costs order should be granted against the respondents,
including, in the alternative, a
de bonis propriis
costs order
against LM Attorneys, and
[55.4] did it
matter that the applicant was an unlawful occupier or lacked rights
from the beginning?
[56]
The issues stated in [55] above may not necessarily offer an accurate
and/or sufficient description
of the issues pertinent to the disposal
of the matter. But they have been generated to guide the discussion
in these Reasons for
the Order granted. In the end, the Court is
satisfied that all the issues requiring its attention would be
addressed in the discussion
to follow. In some instances the issues
are dealt with together.
Mandament van
spolie and requirements thereof (applied)
[57]
There is no doubt that the relief sought by the applicant in Part A
of his application was in
the form of a
mandament
van spolie.
The
nature and requirements of the remedy are outlined above.
[44]
The applicant naturally asserted that he has met the requirements.
The respondents, on the other hand, denied this and even argued
that
the remedy is inapplicable. Obviously, these Reasons being for the
Order already made, I found in favour of the applicant
on a case
based on the remedy. I turn, next, to discuss why I granted
a
spoliation order
.
[58]
For the spoliation order made to have been correct, the applicant
ought to have established that
he was,
wholly or
partly, deprived by the respondents of his possession of the property
and that the deprivation was effected by the respondents
unlawfully.
[59]
There is no doubt that the applicant was deprived of his possession
of the property. This much
was common cause between the parties. If
not common cause, the facts are daunting for any valid contrary view.
There is no valid
ground to deny that the applicant was in possession
of the property. This is not the same as saying his possession was
lawful.
The
principle
underlying the remedy of
mandament
van spolie
oust
an enquiry into the merits of
possession
for purposes of restoration of possession to an applicant.
[45]
The superior purpose served is preservation of public or legal order
through restraint of any form of “self-help”.
[46]
The next question or part of the determination is whether the
applicant was unlawfully deprived of his possession of the property.
[60]
From the principles of the remedy above, it is clear that a
remediable deprivation ought to have
taken place unlawfully or in an
“illicit” manner
for
it to constitute
‘spoliation’.
[47]
What the remedy, essentially, seeks to guard against is the
unlawful interference with the possession or factual control
of
property.
[48]
Again, it ought to be emphasised – with respect - an enquiry
into lawfulness or absence thereof does not extend to
the right of
use or possession of the property by the applicant. Such an enquiry
amounts to an impermissible investigation of the
merits of the
matter, inimical to law on or principles of spoliation.
[49]
[61]
In this matter the applicant said he was unlawfully deprived of
possession of the property or
dwelling, because despite the eviction
order granted by the Magistrates Court in October 2023, he launched
an appeal against the
order. The respondents ought to have waited for
the appeal to finalise or to have taken the requisite steps in terms
of law necessary
for authority to execute the eviction order whilst
the appeal is pending. The respondent’s case in this regard was
that there
is no appeal and/or, generically, that the deprivation was
lawfully executed.
[62]
I agreed with the applicant. The law is to the effect that where
there is an appeal process,
execution of the eviction or ejectment
order, without any complementary order of the Court is improper and,
in fact, unlawful.
[50]
A
complementary order would be one granting authority to the
respondents to execute the eviction order pending appeal in terms
of
section 78 of the Magistrates Courts Act.
[51]
[63]
The unlawfulness or lawfulness of the deprivation may be
determined on the following two-step
basis. First, whether there was
a valid appeal process? But an answer in the negative to this
question wouldn’t fully dispose
of the issue of “unlawfulness”,
hence the second step. The second step requires the existence of a
lawful process of
eviction or ejectment. Rule 36 requires the
existence of a warrant of ejectment issued and signed by the
registrar or clerk of
the court.
[52]
I start with the first leg of this enquiry or determination: was
there a valid appeal process or not?
Unlawful
deprivation: was
there a pending appeal process?
[64]
Three steps or activities are pertinent in response to the question
whether there was a pending
appeal process: (a) the granting of the
eviction or ejectment order; (b) the request for reasons of judgment
or order from the
Magistrate, and (c) the noting of an appeal by the
applicant.
[65]
Granting
of the eviction or ejectment order
.
It is common cause between the parties that on 05 October 2023 an
order for eviction of the applicant and other unlawful occupiers
of
the property was granted. The applicant and anyone occupying the
property had to vacate the property by no later than 31 January
2024.
[53]
[66]
Request
for reasons of judgment or order from the Magistrate
.
Following the granting of the order on 05 October 2023 the applicant
and/or anyone disgruntled by the order had ten days to request
reasons in terms of Rule 51(1) of the Magistrates Courts Rules.
[54]
It is common cause or cannot be
bona
fide
disputed
that the applicant requested reasons for the eviction order on 05
December 2023.
[55]
Clearly,
this was way beyond the stipulated ten-day period and, therefore, in
non-compliance with Rule 51(1). But the
time
limit, as generally with any time limits in terms of the Magistrates
Courts Rules, may be extended by consent between the parties
or by
the court,
[56]
whether before
or even after it has expired.
[57]
Also,
the court may “take cognizance of the fact that a request in
terms of the subrule had been filed out of time: it need
not leave
the question of the lateness of the request to be dealt with by the
court of appeal”.
[58]
I
understand this to mean that non-compliance doesn’t
ipso
facto
nullify
the nascent process of appeal. Once requested, the Magistrate or
judicial
officer has 15 days to hand to the registrar or clerk of the court a
written judgment evincing “the facts he or she
found to be
proved” and “his or her reasons for judgment”
(“Reasons for Judgment”). It is common
cause that the
Reasons for Judgment were not yet received when the Order was granted
in this matter.
[67]
Noting
of an appeal by the applicant.
The applicant noted an appeal on 12 December 2023.
[59]
A prospective appellant has twenty days either from date of
a
judgment appealed against or from date of supply of the judgment or
reasons for judgment or order to note an appeal by the delivery
of
notice.
[60]
The applicant in
this matter
noted
an appeal, even without
Reasons
for Judgment
.
This may not have been necessary when the
Reasons
for Judgment were still awaited, but it was done.
[68]
As mentioned above, the
Reasons
for Judgment remained outstanding at the hearing of this matter
.
It
is necessary to point out that the magistrate “is not entitled
to refuse to react to a request brought in terms of [Rule
51(3)] on
the ground that it does not comply with local practice in a
particular magistrate's court.
[61]
I
didn’t hear anything to this end, but I am just aiming towards
completeness. Therefore, the magistrate remains obliged
to furnish
reasons upon request.
[62]
[69]
Bearing the above in mind, I found that there was a pending appeal
process and, thus, the execution
of the eviction order was suspended
in terms of the common law, absent any order for authority to execute
same amidst the pending
appeal, as envisaged by section 78 of the
Magistrates Courts Act
.
[63]
In the interests of justice I added the part of the order dealing
with the supply of the
Reasons
for Judgment in a quest to give traction to the process stalled by
the absence of the
the
Reasons
for Judgment.
[64]
This means
that the eviction of the applicant could not have been lawful and,
therefore, was unlawful deprivation of possession
of the property.
Unlawful deprivation:
was there a valid warrant of ejectment?
[70]
The finding that
there was unlawful deprivation of possession
of the property due to execution of the eviction order despite the
appeal put paid
to the respondents’ defence that the
deprivation or eviction was lawful. But for completeness I will deal
with a further
ground or basis on which the eviction was unlawful.
[71]
I mentioned above that Rule 36 of the Magistrates Court Rules governs
the process
for
execution of any judgment, including a judgment for ejectment of an
occupier of a dwelling or property.
[65]
The rule employs peremptory language (in the use of the word “shall”)
to prescribe that the ejectment be effected by
way of warrant.
[66]
Further, that the warrant ought to have been issued and signed by the
registrar or clerk of the court and addressed to the sheriff.
[67]
[72]
The papers before the Court when the Order was made did not include
any warrant. The applicant
had included a copy of the ejectment or
eviction order.
[68]
The
applicant – I specifically remember oral submission by counsel
for the applicant on this – contended that there
was no warrant
of eviction. Despite the sheriff being cited as one of the
respondents, no such warrant had been produced when the
Order was
made. The Court accepted that no such warrant existed and, therefore,
the execution of the order or judgment for eviction
was carried out
not only without a valid warrant, but without a warrant at all. It is
not due to lack of diligence – I must
mention with respect –
that there is no reference to “warrant” or “writ”
of ejectment in the respondents’
papers before the Court. The
respondents were aware that the eviction or ejectment of the
applicant was without a warrant of ejectment.
[73]
In the matter of
White
& Tucker v Rudolph
,
[69]
evidently an authority with time-tested durability, it was held that
gaining possession of a thing by a messenger of the court
in terms of
an invalid writ of execution constituted spoliation.
[70]
This touches on another issue. With the finding of the Court above,
being that there was a pending appeal process no valid warrant
would
have been possible to issue for the eviction of the applicant.
So,
whether a warrant existed or not had no bearing on the matter.
However, from a procedural point of view the applicant would
have
been saddled with the prior task of applying for the warrant to be
set aside due to non-compliance in its issuing. But, as
matters
stand, the eviction is unlawful as it was effected without a valid
warrant.
Was
applicant relitigating the same issue(s) where
the Courts have made final determination?
[74]
The respondents’ defence included that the applicant was
rehashing issue(s) that has/have
been finally determined by the
Courts. This is in reference to the unsuccessful litigation by the
applicant in an attempt to secure
or protect a valid title to the
property on the basis of his alleged sale agreement with the late Mr
Kgabi, discussed above.
[71]
[75]
But, this argument has no merit as the applicant is only relying on
an appeal arising from the
litigation (i.e. the eviction proceedings)
by one or more of the respondents in this matter. He came to Court
simply because his
possession of the property (not title or ownership
thereof) has been disturbed. There is clearly no “re-litigation”
demonstrated here.
Does
it matter that the applicant was an unlawful occupier or lacked
rights from the beginning?
[76]
A further defence or aspect in the defence argument is that the
applicant lacked rights from
the beginning. With respect this misses
the whole
raison
d'être
of the remedy of
mandament
van spolie
.
[72]
Crisply put the remedy protects even possession of a thing by a
thief.
[77]
Also, the reference to “right” misplaces the focus onto
the merits of the remedy.
This is incorrect. As stated above, the
authorities hold that the protection offered by the remedy concerns a
physical manifestation
of a right and not the right, itself.
[73]
A
spoliation order seeks to redress a breach of the peace suggested by
the unlawful interference with the factual control or the
physical
manifestation of a right.
[74]
Whether
the matter or at least in Part A thereof was urgent and the
requirements for an interdict
[78]
I agreed with the applicant’s view that spoliation applications
are inherently urgent.
But clichés aside there is independent
urgency manifested by the facts of this matter. The applicant was in
possession of
the property irrespective of whether he had a valid
right to do so or not. His possession was disturbed, unlawfully so,
as I have
found on 03 September 2024 when I granted the Order. This
was a few days after the Sheriff on 20 August 2024 had unlawfully
evicted
the applicant. The relief sought was indeed urgent. I was
also satisfied that the requirements for an interdict were met.
[75]
Conclusion
and costs order granted
[79]
For these Reasons I granted the Order. As part of the Order I granted
a costs order that “the
1
st
to 4
th
respondents be ordered to pay the costs of this application”.
[80]
The applicant had sought a punitive costs order against the
respondents, including, in the alternative,
a
de bonis propriis
costs order against LM Attorneys, cited as the fourth respondent.
The Executor, cited as the third respondent, did not enter the
lists.
The application was opposed by the Sheriff; Ms Kgabi and LM
Attorneys, as the first, second and fourth respondents, respectively.
[81]
There were no specific grounds stated in the application or raised
during the hearing on why
the Executor, notwithstanding his absence
and lack of participation in the proceedings - including in
activities which precipitated
the proceedings - ought to be mulcted
with costs. It follows that the order I granted was erroneous in this
respect.
[82]
Regrettably, at all material times and the patching up of the draft
order in the urgent court,
the error crept in. It is something which
- in my respectful view - is capable of resolution by an Order in
terms of Uniform Rule
42.
[76]
But the cost order may even be academic if the Executor has lodged an
account years ago with no prospects of further assets in
the estate.
Also, in his official capacity the Executor represents the interests
of the main respondent Ms Kgabi whose primary
interests the
opposition to the application sought to advance. She may, in fact,
have been advancing the interests of the estate.
Therefore, the costs
order if not varied in terms of Rule 42(1) or other provision of the
law may not be feasible against the Executor.
[83]
This brings me to the first respondent, namely, the Sheriff. As an
officer of the Court and acting
not in the advancement of personal
interests but execution of the orders/judgments of the Court
ordinarily a sheriff should not
be held liable for costs of
litigation. But in this proceedings, although I have been on an
unfixed stance on this, the situation
is different. The Sheriff when
sued made common cause with the second and fourth respondents in the
matter and opposed the relief
sought by the applicant. There is no
explanation by the Sheriff of this stance and, therefore, this part
of the costs order is
uneventful. The same logic applies to the role
played by LM Attorneys, the position they took in the litigation and
the ultimate
order granted.
Order
[84]
In the premises, I made the Order on 03 September 2024, that:
1.
This application is heard as one of urgency on an urgent basis
in
accordance with Rule 6 (12), the requirements of the Uniform Rules of
Court in respect of notice, service and time periods being
dispensed
with the applicant’s departure therefrom being condoned.
2.
The Court condones the abridged manner of service on the
respondent(s)
by email, WhatsApp or other social media account of the
respondents given the urgency of the matter.
3.
The applicant and his family is restored possession of the property
commonly known as
1[…] K[…] STREET,
ATTERIDGEVILLE, PRETORIA AND GAUTENG PROVINCE
on Friday, the
20
th
day of September
2024 before 12h00.
4.
That the 1
st
respondent is ordered and directed to restore
to the applicant undisturbed possession of the said property.
5.
That The applicant shall take steps mentioned below towards,
final
determination of the appeal noted by the applicant under case number:
A2024/093672.
5.1
the Honourable Magistrate Munyai of Atteridgeville Magistrate Court
is requested
to provide written judgement and reasons in terms of the
applicant’s notice in terms of Rule 51 (1) of the Magistrate
Court
which was served and filed within a period of twenty (20) days
from the date of service by the 1
st
respondent.
5.2
The applicant shall serve and file supplemented Notice to Appeal
together with
affidavit explaining the delay, if any, and why such
delay should be overlooked and/or condoned by the Court.
5.3
The applicant is to serve and file appeal record within thirty (30)
days from
the date of filing of the supplemented notice of appeal.
6.
That the 2
nd
to 4
th
respondents are ordered and
directed not to interfere, call and/or harass the applicants and his
family.
7.
That the 4
th
respondent be ordered and interdicted from
sending any person in his employ to the forementioned premises unless
so directed by
the court in accordance with the rules of court.
8.
That the 1
st
to 4
th
respondents be ordered to
pay the costs of this application
Khashane La M.
Manamela
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date
of Hearing and Order
: 03 September
2024
Date
of Request for Reasons for the Order :
06 September
2024
Date
of Reasons for the Oder
: 17 October 2024
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant
:
Mr TC Kwinda
Instructed
by
:
Makhafola & Verster Inc, PTA
For
the Respondents
:
Mr TA Modisenyane
Instructed
by
:
Mgiba Kgabi Inc, Pretoria
[1]
Annexure “U21” to founding affidavit (“FA”),
on CaseLines: 02-209 to 02-210.
[2]
CG
Van der Merwe Things in
The
Law of South Africa (‘LAWSA’) (Volume 27, Second Edition
LexisNexis
2014
)
(“
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol
27)”)
94.
[3]
Van
der Merwe,
Things
in
LAWSA
(Vol
27)
94.
[4]
Nino
Bonino v De Lange
1906
TS 120
at 122 where the observation is as follows: “…
spoliation is any illicit depravation of another of the right of
possession which he has, whether in regard to movable or immovable
property or even in regard to a legal right [accessed through
the
link:
https://lawblogsa.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/nino-bonino-v-de-lange.doc].
See also
Van
Eck & Van Rensburg v Etna Stores
1947 2 SA 984 (A)1000,
1947 3 All SA 143
(A) 152. See further Van der Merwe,
Things
in
LAWSA
(Vol
27) 94.
[5]
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386 (SCA).
[6]
Eskom v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386 (SCA)
[8].
[7]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 93, 111 and the authorities cited there.
[8]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 93.
[9]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 93. See also
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security and others
2014 (5) SA 112
(CC) [10]-[12].
[10]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 103.
[11]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 103.
[12]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 103. See also
Eskom
v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386 (SCA)
[8], quoted in par [20] above.
[13]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108. See also
Chopper
Worx (Pty) Ltd v WRC Consultation
Services (Pty) Ltd
2008 (6) SA 497 (C)
[16]-[21].
[14]
When
establishing
that he or she was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the
thing, the applicant ought to show that she or he
had factual
control of the thing, which control was accompanied by an intention
to derive some benefit from the material thing.
See
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108
[15]
An act of spoliation ought to be established on the part of the
respondents, being an
illicit
deprivation of the applicant’s possession of the impugned
thing or disturbance of such possession without the consent
and
against the will of the possessed applicant. See
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108;
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
2008 (3) SA 371 (SCA)
[27].
[16]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108.
[17]
White
& Tucker v Rudolph
1879
K 115 [available through the link:
https://www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZATransvHCRpKotze/1879/17.pdf]
at 122-123;
Surtee’s Silk
Store (Pty) Ltd and others v Community Development Board
and another
1977 (4) SA 269 (W);
Kleinsakeontwikkelingskorporasie
Bpk v Santambank Bpk
1988 (3) SA 266
(C) 275B-E. See also
Van der Merwe, Things
in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108.
[18]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 109.
[19]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 109.
[20]
Dönges
NO v Dadoo
1950 (2) SA 321 (A)
331. See also
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108
.
[21]
White
& Tucker v Rudolph
1879
K 115 at 122-123. See also
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108.
[22]
George
Municipality v Vena
1989 (2) SA 263 (A);
Rikhotso
v Northcliff Ceramics (Pty) Ltd and others
1997 (1) SA 526 (W)
531-532;
Minister
of Finance and others v Ramos
1998 (4) SA 1096 (C)
1101F-H. See further
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108.
[23]
Ntshwaqela
and others v Chairman, Western Cape Regional Services Council
and others
1988 (3) SA 218 (C)
225D-G. See also
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108
.
[24]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 111.
[25]
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 111.
Rei
vindicatio
refers
to a remedy which entitles an
owner
“to reclaim possession of her or his property”. See LTC
Harms,
Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings
(10
th
ed LexisNexis 2024) 383.
[26]
Rules ‘Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the
Magistrates’ Courts of South Africa’.
[27]
The ‘Uniform Rules” are the “Rules regulating the
conduct of the proceedings of the several provincial and
local
divisions of the Supreme Court of South Africa”.
[28]
DE
Van
Loggerenberg,
Jones
and Buckle: Civil Practice of the Magistrates' Courts in South
Africa,
Volumes
I: The Act & Volume II: The Rules (10th edn Juta 2024)
(“
Jones
and Buckle
”)
at RS 35, 2024 Rule-p1; DE Van Loggerenberg,
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
,
Volume 2 Uniform Rules (Part D Rules)
(Juta
Service 23, 2024) (“
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
”
)
at
RS
22, 2023, D1 Rule 50-3.
[29]
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
RS 22, 2023, D1 Rule 50-3.
[30]
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Section 18(1)
-(2) of this
legislation reads: “
(1) Subject
to subsections
(2)
and (3),
and unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders
otherwise, the operation and execution of a decision
which is the
subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is
suspended pending the decision of the application
or appeal.
(2) Subject to
subsection
(3)
, unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders
otherwise, the operation and execution of a decision that is an
interlocutory
order not having the effect of a final judgment, which
is the subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an
appeal,
is not suspended pending the decision of the application or
appeal.
”
[31]
Jones
and Buckle
at
RS
16, 2018 Act-p559: “In view of the automatic suspension
of execution upon the noting of an appeal an application
that
execution be suspended is unnecessary.”
See also
Woudstra
v Jekison
1968
(1) SA 453 (T)
.
[32]
Nel
v Le Roux NO and others
2006
(3) SA 56
(SE) at 59F;
Jones
and Buckle
RS
16, 2018 Act-p557.
[33]
Jones
and Buckle
RS
16, 2018 Act-p557-559.
[34]
Jones
and Buckle
RS
16, 2018 Act-p557.
[35]
Jones
and Buckle
RS
16, 2018 Act-p557.
[36]
Jones
and Buckle
RS
16, 2018 Act-p557.
[37]
See par [28] above for a reading of
Rule 51(1)
on appeals
in
civil cases in the Magistrates Courts.
[38]
See par [32] above for a reading
s 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act.
[39]
Par [34] above for a reading of
s 78.
[40]
Eskom v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386 (SCA)
[8];
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 93, 111. See further pars [20]-[21] above.
[41]
City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and another
2016
(6) SA 279
(CC) [49]-[77].
[42]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019
(5) SA 386
(SCA) [8].
[43]
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) [10]-[12];
Ivanov
v North West Gambling and others
2020
(6) 67 (SCA) [59].
[44]
Pars [18]-[27] above.
[45]
Pars [20]-[22], [45] above.
[46]
Par [21] above.
[47]
Par [20] above.
[48]
Pars [21]-[22] above.
[49]
Par [22] above.
[50]
Pars [34]-[36] above.
[51]
Par [34] above for a reading of s 78 of the Magistrates Courts Act.
[52]
Par [33] above for a reading of the material part of Rule 36 of the
Magistrates Court Rules.
[53]
Eviction
Order, annexure “U12” to FA on CaseLines 02-181 to
02-182.
[54]
Par [28] above.
[55]
Request for Reasons
,
annexure “U13” to FA on CaseLines 02-183.
[56]
Rule 60(5)(a), which reads as follows: “
(a)
Any
time limit prescribed by these rules, except the period prescribed
in rule 51(3) and (6), may at any time,
whether
before or after the expiry of the period limited, be extended -
(i) by the written consent of the opposite party;
and (ii) if
such consent is refused, then by the court on application and on
such terms as to costs and otherwise as it
may deem fit
”.
See also
Snyman
v Crouse en 'n ander
1980 (4) SA 42
(O
)
at
45F-G;
Jones
and Buckle
RS
35, 2024 Rule-p51-3.
[57]
Vleissentraal
v Dittmar
1980
(1) SA 918
(O) 921-912;
Manyasha
v Minister of Law and Order
[1998] ZASCA 112
;
1999
(2) SA 179
(SCA) at 190I. See also
Jones
and Buckle
RS 34, 2023 Rule-p60-3.
[58]
Snyman
v Crouse
1980
(4) SA 42
(O) at 46E;
Jones
and Buckle
RS 35, 2024 Rule-p51-3.
[59]
Rule
51(1). See
Request
for Reasons
,
annexure “U14” to FA on CaseLines 02-184 to 02-186.
[60]
Rule
51(3).
[61]
Priem v
Hilton Stuart Trust and another
1994
(4) SA 255
(E) at 255I-259C. See also
Jones
and Buckle
RS
35, 2024 Rule-p51-3.
[62]
Priem v
Hilton Stuart Trust
1994
(4) SA 255
(E) at 258H-259C. See also
Jones
and Buckle
RS
35, 2024 Rule-p51-3.
[63]
Par [34] above for a reading of s 78 and pars [35]-[36], [44], [62]
above for a discussion of the provision.
[64]
Par [15] above.
[65]
Par [33] above.
[66]
Ibid.
[67]
Pars [33], [63] above.
[68]
Eviction
Order, annexure “U12” to FA on CaseLines 02-181 to
02-182.
[69]
White
& Tucker v Rudolph
1879
K 115.
[70]
White
& Tucker v Rudolph
1879
K 115 126. See further
Van
der Merwe, Things in
LAWSA
(Vol 27) 108.
[71]
Pars [8]-[9] above.
[72]
Pars [18]-[27] above.
[73]
Par [22] above.
[74]
Ibid
.
[75]
Par [46] above, including the authorities cited there.
[76]
Uniform Rule
42
provides: “(1) The court may, in addition to any other powers
it may have,
mero
motu
or
upon the application of any party affected, rescind or vary:
(a)
An
order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the
absence of any party affected thereby;
(b)
an
order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity, or a patent error
or omission, but only to the extent of such ambiguity,
error or
omission;
(c)
an
order or judgment granted as the result of a mistake common to the
parties. (2) Any party desiring any relief under this
rule shall
make application therefor upon notice to all parties whose interests
may be affected by any variation sought. (3)
The court shall not
make any order rescinding or varying any order or judgment unless
satisfied that all parties whose interests
may be affected have
notice of the order proposed.”
sino noindex
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