Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1130South Africa
Masinga and Others v Selematsela and Others (13796/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1130 (14 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Masinga and Others v Selematsela and Others (13796/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1130 (14 November 2024)
Masinga and Others v Selematsela and Others (13796/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1130 (14 November 2024)
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sino date 14 November 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: 13796/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
14 November 2024
In
the matter between:
ESIE
MOKGADI CATHERINE
MASINGA
First Applicant
JACOBUS
ROI MOKGETHI SELEMATSELA
Second Applicant
LYDIA
CLARA MAODI
Third Applicant
and
TSHEPISO
JOHN
SELEMATSELA
First Respondent
ANNAH
MAZIBUKO
Second Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
SK HASSIM J
The characterisation
of this application
[1]
This is an application to amongst others
condone the late delivery of a Declaration.
Salient facts
[2]
The applicants, and the first to third
respondents are descendants of the late Mr Segope John Selematsela
(“the deceased”).
The applicants and the second
respondent are his children. The first respondent is the
deceased’s grandson and the
second applicant’s son.
The third respondent is described as a descendant of the deceased.
[3]
The deceased, who died on 12 July 2019, was
the owner of Erf No. 1[...] in Mamelodi (“the property”).
According
to the Windeed Property Search the first respondent
seemingly purchased the property on 5 July 2018. It was
transferred to
him on 17 October 2018. The applicants allege
that the sale was tainted by fraud.
The main application
[4]
During February - March 2020, the
applicants brought an application (“the main application”)
against the first and second
respondents (in this application) and
the Registrar of Deeds (“the Registrar”) the third
respondent, for the cancellation
of Title Deed No. T[...] for the
property, and for the Registrar to effect the cancellation. The
application was opposed
by the first and second respondents.
The referral of the
main application to trial and the late delivery of the Declaration
[5]
The main application was referred to trial
on 25 April 2023, and the applicants were ordered to deliver a
Declaration within twenty
days. They failed to do so.
[6]
The Declaration, which is dated 21 August
2023, was served on the respondents’ attorneys by e-mail on 22
August 2023. While
signed by an attorney, it was not signed by
counsel nor by a person with right of appearance in the High Court.
The defendants
were the following:
(a)
Tshepiso John Selematsela, the first defendant. (The first
respondent in the main application
and this application).
(b)
Annah Mazibuko, the second defendant. (The second respondent in
the main application and
in this application).
(c)
The Registrar of Deeds, the third defendant. (The third
respondent in the main application).
The Registrar is not a
party to this application.
(d)
Suzan Maratletle Masuku, the fourth defendant. She was not a
party to the main application.
(e)
The Master of the High Court (“the Master”), fifth
defendant. The Master too
had not been a party to the main
application.
[7]
The Declaration contained two claims: Claim
A was based on an alleged fraud on the part of the first respondent
which resulted in
the property being transferred to him. The
applicants seek to declare the transfer to the first respondent
invalid and for
the property to be transferred to the deceased
estate. Claim B was for the Master to issue to the first
applicant letters
of authority to administer the deceased estate on
the basis that the first applicant as an heir of the deceased is
entitled to
be appointed as executrix by reason of section 19 of the
Administration of Estates Act, Act No 66 of 1965. As appears
hereunder,
I am not prepared to decide the relief claimed in Claim
B. It is therefore not necessary for me to consider whether the
first
applicant has a right to seek appointment as executrix or
whether the Master is obliged to appoint her.
The first notice of
intention to amend the Declaration
[8]
On 5 September 2023, the respondents’
attorneys served a notice in terms of rule 30(2)(b) identifying three
irregular steps.
The first concerned the addition of Ms Suzan
Maratletle Masuku and the Master of the High Court, Pretoria as the
fourth and fifth
defendants respectively when they had not been
parties to the main application. The second that the
Declaration was not signed
by an advocate or a person with right of
appearance in the High Court. The third being the late delivery
of the Declaration
without an application for the extension of time
for the delivery of the Declaration, or for an application condoning
the late
delivery thereof.
The service of this
application and the relief claimed
[9]
On 29 September 2023, at 10h07 the
applicant’s attorney served on the first and second
respondents’ attorney a notice
of motion, dated and signed on
the same day, together with a founding affidavit (“this
application”) under the same
case number as the main
application. Apart from citing the first and second respondents
in the main application as respondents
in this application, they
added and cited Ms Suzan Maratletle Masuku as the third respondent
and the Master of the High Court as
the fourth respondent.
Whilst these two respondents had been cited as the third and fourth
defendants in the Declaration,
they were not respondents in the main
application.
[10]
The applicants seek the following relief in
the notice of motion in this application:
“
1
.…[ condonation for] the late delivery of the first to third
applicant’s Declaration.
2.
directing the fourth respondent to issue a letter of authority,
authorising the first applicant to administer
the deceased estate of
the late Segope John Selematsela.
3.
No costs order.”
[11]
An application for condonation is an
interlocutory application (or incidental to the main proceedings) and
in terms of the provisions
of rule 6 (11) should be brought on
notice, as opposed to a notice of motion. This application
against the Master of the
High Court constitutes an “application”
as defined in rule 1 of the Court Rules. In my view, while the
condonation
application is incidental to the action. The relief
claimed against the Master is not. The applicants claim
substantive
relief and plead a cause of action not pleaded in the
main application. In my view, the relief against the Master
should
have been claimed in a new application issued by the Registrar
under a new case number.
The second notice of
intention to amend the Declaration
[12]
At 12h42 on 29 September 2023, being
approximately two hours after the notice of motion was served on the
respondents’ attorneys,
the applicants’ attorneys served
a notice of intention to amend the Declaration (“the first
notice of amendment”).
The first notice of intention of
amendment effectively withdrew the action against the third
defendant, Ms Suzan Maratletle Masuku
and the fifth defendant, the
Master by deleting:
(a)
their names in the heading to the
Declaration;
(b)
paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Declaration
which contained their citation; and
(c)
claim B which contained the relief against
the Master.
[13]
The first notice of amendment was not
served on the Master.
[14]
What remained of the Declaration was the
claim for the agreement of sale between the deceased and the first
respondent to be declared
invalid, for the title deed for the
property to be cancelled by the Registrar of Deeds, and for the
property to be transferred
to the deceased estate, alternatively for
the payment of R422 484.00 by the first and second respondents
(the first and second
defendants in the action).
[15]
Essentially, the relief claimed in this
application is the relief claimed under Claim B in the Declaration,
and it is claimed together
with an order condoning the late delivery
of the Declaration or the extension of time for the delivery thereof.
The withdrawal of the
first notice of intention to amend the Declaration and the service of
a second notice of intention to amend
the Declaration
[16]
On 1 November 2023, the applicants withdrew
the first notice of intention to amend. On the same day, and
probably simultaneously
therewith, they served a notice of amendment
(“the second notice of amendment”) with the identical
content as the first
notice of intention to amend. The amended
pages to the Declaration were served on 27 November 2023.
The failure to serve
the notices of intention to amend on the Master and the failure to
timeously service this application and the
notice of set down on the
Master
[17]
Neither the first notice of amendment nor
the second notice of amendment appears to have been served on the
Master. And whilst
this application was served on the first to
third respondents’ attorney on 29 September 2023, it was not
served on the Master
of the High Court until 7 May 2024, which was
five court days before the application was set down for hearing on
the unopposed
motion court roll of 14 May 2024.
[18]
The notice of set down was served by email
on the respondents’ attorneys on 24 April 2024. However,
the notice of set
down, and this application, were served on the
Master on 7 May 2024, with the result that the application was
enrolled for hearing
on the fifth day after the application was
served. Accordingly, as far as the relief claimed against the
Master is concerned
the application was prematurely enrolled.
Consequently, I am not inclined to grant the relief sought against
the Master in
paragraph 2 of the notice of motion in this
application.
The condonation
application
[19]
The relief in paragraph 1 of the notice of
motion is for the late delivery of the Declaration to be condoned.
The respondents
have not opposed this application. The
requirements for condonation or an extension of time are trite, and I
do not intend
repeating them here.
[20]
The Declaration was served three months
late due to a lack of funds. The applicants’ attorneys
were placed in funds
during August 2023. The Declaration was
drafted during the week commencing 19 August 2023 and served on the
respondents’
attorneys on 21 August 2023. In my view the
applicants have given a satisfactory explanation for the delay.
[21]
The applicants’ case for the
cancellation of the transfer of the property to the first respondent
is fraud. I am satisfied
that the applicants’ action is
not unfounded and that there are reasonable prospects of success on
the merits. After
all, the court hearing the main application
did not dismiss it for lack of merit. The main application
appears to have been
referred to trial because there were disputes of
fact on the papers. The applicants have established good cause
for the late
delivery of the Declaration. Furthermore, in my
view the interests of justice dictate that condonation should be
granted.
It does not appear from the papers whether the
deceased left a will; the indications are that he did not. If
this is the
case, then the deceased’s children are the
intestate heirs. In my view, it is in the interests of justice
that the
first respondent’s rights to the property and the
rights, if any, of the deceased’s heirs are established.
[22]
Consequently, I am inclined to condone the
applicants’ failure to timeously deliver the Declaration.
[23]
In the result I make the following order:
(a)
The applicants’ failure to deliver
the Declaration within 20 days of the court order of 25 April 2023 is
condoned.
(b)
Prayer 2 of the notice of motion signed and
dated 29 September 2023 is postponed sine die.
(c)
There shall be no order as to costs.
S K Hassim
Judgeof the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Applicant’s
Counsel: Adv L
Lebona
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 14 November 2024
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