Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1309South Africa
Nigsa Property Investment (Pty) Ltd v Acting Sheriff for Randburg Southwest (16189/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1309 (10 December 2024)
Headnotes
by the Respondent who was demanding payment thereof. This amount is incorrectly bundled in the Proceeds of the Purchase price which are distributed to the bondholder, execution creditor and execution debtor;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nigsa Property Investment (Pty) Ltd v Acting Sheriff for Randburg Southwest (16189/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1309 (10 December 2024)
Nigsa Property Investment (Pty) Ltd v Acting Sheriff for Randburg Southwest (16189/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1309 (10 December 2024)
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sino date 10 December 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 16189/2012
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
Date:
10 December 2024
Signature:
K. La M Manamela
In
the matter between:
NIGSA
PROPERTY INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
Applicant/purchaser
and
THE
ACTING SHERIFF FOR RANDBURG SOUTHWEST
Respondent
In
re
:
SHACKLETON
CREDIT MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Execution Creditor
and
DESIREE
CHARMAINE MOODLEY
1
st
Judgment Debtor
LOGANATHAN
MOODLEY
2
nd
Judgment Debtor
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
This judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is
reflected herein and is submitted electronically to the parties/their
legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines by the Judge’s
secretary. The
date of the judgment is deemed to be 10 December 2024.
JUDGMENT
Khashane
Manamela, AJ
Introduction
[1]
These
proceedings
relate to
an
objection
envisaged
by
Rule
46(14)
[1]
of the Uniform Rules
of this Court. The
applicant,
as the person lodging the objection against
the
distribution plan (‘the plan’),
chose
to style the objection as a formal application. T
he
respondent
in
the application
is
the Sheriff of this Court for Randburg South West (‘the
sheriff’). The sheriff
(occupying
the position in an acting capacity at all material times)
was
responsible for the sale in execution in terms of Rule 46 of the
Uniform Rules of an immovable property described as Erf 2[...]
Northwold Extension 4 Township, Province of Gauteng, (‘the
property’) on 26 October 2023 to the applicant.
[2]
The applicant seeks that the Court directs the sheriff to amend the
plan, primarily,
to allow the applicant to receive – in its
capacity as the purchaser of the property – occupational rent
it paid to
the sheriff for ‘occupying’ the property prior
to the transfer of title to the property into the applicant’s
name. It is contended that this ‘right’ is derived from
the
conditions
of sale of the property, particularly those relating to the passing
of risk, profit and loss in respect of the property
to the purchaser
upon taking possession or occupation of the property. The material
conditions of sale are reflected in detail
below.
[2]
[3]
The matter was allocated to me by the office of the Deputy Judge
President on 08 August
2024. On the same date, accepting - at face
value that the objection has taken the form of a formal application -
I caused to be
issued directives to the parties as to the further
exchange of papers. The last of the papers, in the form of a replying
affidavit,
was filed on 22 August 2024. Thereafter, I directed (after
an agreement with the parties that there is no need for an physical
hearing or oral submissions) that the parties or their legal
representatives file written argument or heads of argument in
lieu
of oral submissions. This was in the Court’s quest to limit
costs of the proceedings. The last of the submissions is dated
13
September 2024. I am grateful to the legal representatives for the
comprehensive material filed in this regard.
Brief background
[4]
The brief background to this matter is as
appearing next.
Most of the issues in the
background to this matter are not in dispute
.
Where there is a
genuine
dispute this would be pointed out and the
relevant issue would appear under the parties’ respective
cases, discussed below.
[5]
As stated above, the current application arose from a sale in
execution of a judgment
by the sheriff
which took place on 26 October 2024. The
applicant was the successful bidder at the sale in execution or
auction and ultimate purchaser
of the property.
[6]
The applicant paid the deposit and the sheriff’s commission on
the date of the
auction. These were some of the requirements in terms
of the conditions of sale (‘the COS’)
which
served as of the agreement between the parties prior to the transfer
and registration of title in favour of the applicant
.
A guarantee for the balance of the purchase price was supplied on 13
May 2024. The other material conditions in accordance with
the COS,
included, that:
6.
RISK AND OCCUPATION
6.1
The purchaser shall be entitled to possession of the Property on the
signing of the sale conditions, payment of
the initial deposit and
the Sheriff's commission and thereafter, and the balance of the
purchase price being secured, as set out
hereinabove.
6.2
Should the purchaser receive possession of the Property, the purchase
[sc. purchaser] shall be liable for
occupational rental at the rate
of R10 000.00 (ten thousand rand) per month from date of occupation
to date of transfer.
6.3
Upon the purchaser taking possession (occupation), the Property shall
be at his sole risk, profit, risk and
loss off [sc. of] the
purchaser.
6.4 The
Execution Creditor and the Sheriff give no warranty that the
purchaser shall be able to obtain personal
and/or vacant occupation
of the Property or that the Property is unoccupied and any
proceedings to evict the occupiers shall be
undertaken by the
purchaser at his own cost and expense.
[7]
Further, the COS included that the purchaser would obtain the
prescribed valid electrical
installation certificate of compliance
and test report.
[8]
The property was registered in the name of
the applicant on 27 June 2024. On 03 July 2024 the sheriff prepared a
distribution plan
in respect of the sale and execution of the
property. The plan, among others, reflected the following: (a)
purchase price of the
property in the amount of R857 000; (b)
10% deposit payable by the purchaser in the amount of R85 700;
(c) the sheriff's
commission of R25 355 (without value added
tax). Further, the plan reflected the balance of the purchase price
received including
interest as at 27 June 2024 and occupational rent
paid by the applicant, as the purchaser, in the amount of R80 000.
Also, the
plan reflected payments made from the funds received to
Standard Bank, ostensibly as the mortgage bondholder, the plaintiff
or
judgment creditor, as cited above, and to defendants or judgment
debtors, also as cited above.
[9]
The applicant lodged an objection in terms of Rule 46(14)(d)
[3]
against the plan. The objection is dated 10 July 2024. The objection
(in its entirety, save for formal headings and endings), states
the
following:
The applicant did
not take occupation of the property on the date of the sale
1. In terms of the
liquidation and distribution account, the applicant has paid an
amount of R80 000.00 (Eighty Thousand Rand) in
respect of
occupational rent. This is correct, however, it was paid under
protest as the transfer was being withheld by the Respondent
who was
demanding payment thereof. This amount is incorrectly bundled in the
Proceeds of the Purchase price which are distributed
to the
bondholder, execution creditor and execution debtor;
2. The
applicant/purchaser
did not enjoy occupation of the Property from
the date of purchase until the date of the registration of the
Property in the name
of the applicant/purchaser and as such, should
not have been liable to make payment of the R80 000.00 in the first
place
;
3. The
applicant/purchaser, on the date of the sale, noted that the property
was not permanently occupied but was used by unknown
vagrants without
any permission from the registered owner or anybody else for the
purpose of taking drugs which resulted in damage
to the property
being caused;
4. The
applicant/purchaser thus placed a security guard at the property to
prevent further damage occurring to the property. This
security guard
did not prevent the respondent, the execution creditor or the
execution debtor from accessing the property and only
ensured that no
persons used the property for illegal purposes in that time;
5. The purchaser did not
take beneficial occupation of the property until 01 June 2024 and as
such ought to be reimbursed the R80
000.00 paid towards occupational
rental;
6. The
applicant/purchaser is entitled to and in fact often required to
prevent further damage to the property from the date of
sale to
ensure that it is transferred to him in the same condition as when it
was bought on the day of the auction as if there
is further damage to
the property, the applicant/purchaser shall have no claim against the
sheriff or the registered owner for
the damage incurred between these
dates. In this regard we refer to clause 6.6 of the conditions of
sale wherein it states “
Neither the sheriff nor the
Execution Creditor shall be responsible for any defect in respect of
the property
which may exist thereafter
” [own
emphasis];
7. The
applicant/purchaser, took reasonable steps to prevent further harm to
the property by incurring costs to place security at
the property and
should not be burdened with the additional costs of occupational
rental;
8. Rule 46(13)(a)
specifically states, “All moneys in respect of the
purchase
price
of the immovable property sold in execution shall be paid
to the sheriff” [own emphasis] and Rule 46(13)(c) states “No
amount of the
purchase money
shall be paid out until the
provisions of subrule (14) have been complied with” [own
emphasis]. No mention is made in the
rules that occupational rent
shall be distributed to either the judgment debtor or the judgment
creditor.
9. Consequently, the
sheriff has erred by bundling this under the heading “PROCEEDS
OF SALE” as this is not a proceed
of the sale and should be
dealt with and distinguished therefrom. As this amount should never
have been paid by the purchaser,
the distribution account should be
amended such that this amount should be refunded to the
applicant/purchaser.
In the alternative
10. In the alternative
and even if it is found that the applicant/purchaser did take
occupation of the property on the date of the
sale, which remains
denied, this does not entitle the sheriff to include these in the
“Proceeds of Sale” and award
these funds to the execution
creditor and/or execution debtor as has been done in the distribution
account. Rule 46(13)(a) specifically
states, “
All moneys in
respect of
the purchase price
of the immovable
property sold in execution shall be paid to the sheriff
”
[own emphasis] and Rule 46(13)(c) states “
No amount of the
purchase money
shall be paid out until the
provisions of subrule (14) have been complied with
” [own
emphasis].
11. No mention is made in
the rules that occupational rent shall be distributed to either the
judgment debtor or the judgment creditor.
Clause 6.3 of the
Conditions of Sale indicates that, “
Upon the purchaser
taking possession (occupation), the Property shall be at his sole
risk,
profit
, risk and loss off the purchaser
”
[own emphasis]. In the circumstances, even if the purchaser had taken
occupation and possession of the property on the date
of occupation,
profit, loss and risk passed to the applicant/purchaser. The
applicant/purchaser is then entitled to all profits
obtained from the
property from the date he took occupation and consequently, is
entitled to all rental income received.
12. In the absence of
anything to the contrary in the Rules and the Conditions of Sale,
there is no reason why the sheriff/respondent
should award that this
money be paid to the bondholder, the execution creditor or the
execution debtor. The Rules expressly limit
the distribution by the
sheriff to “the purchase price”. The execution creditor
and execution debtor having washed
their hands of the property
following the sale and alleged occupation by the applicant/purchaser
in terms of risk to the property
cannot then benefit from the rental
income. The Conditions of Sale expressly provide that the property
shall be at the applicant’s
sole profit from when he takes
occupation which includes any rental income.
13. Consequently, if it
is found that the applicant/purchaser did take occupation of the
property before the transfer took place
on the date of the sale as
alleged by the respondent and/or execution creditor and/or execution
debtor, the distribution account
should be amended such that the
occupational rental shall be payable to the party who held the risk,
profit and loss in the property
which according the conditions of
sale is the applicant.
Other errors with the
Distribution Account
14. It is stated in the
distribution account that the “Proceeds of Sale to be paid on
the 04 July 2024”. The Distribution
account is only dated 03
July 2024 in terms. In terms of Rule 46(13)(c) “
No amount of
the purchase money shall be paid out until the provisions of subrule
(14) have been complied with.
” It is impossible that the
provisions of Subrule 14 have been complied with an as such this date
needs to be removed or amended.
WHEREFORE
the Distribution account should be
amended such that the Applicant/Purchaser, should be reimbursed R80
000.00 for occupational rental
that should not have been paid
alternatively, that the applicant/purchaser being the party holding
risk, profit and loss of the
property from date of occupation shall
be awarded R80 000.00 in occupational interest collected by the
respondent. Finally, the
date for payment of the distribution should
be amended to be in line with the timelines set out in the Uniform
Rule of Court.
TAKE
FURTHER NOTICE THAT
should the
respondent fail to amend the distribution account within 5 days of
receipt hereof, the applicant shall bring this objection
before a
judge for review in terms of Rule 46(14)(d)(ii) and Rule 46(14)(e) in
the form of a substantive application supported
by an affidavit by
the Applicant/Purchaser.
TAKE
FURTHER NOTICE THAT
in terms of Rule
46(14)(e), the judge on review shall hear and determine the matter in
dispute and may amend or confirm the plan
of distribution or may make
such order including an order as to costs as he or she deems
appropriate.
TAKE
FURTHER NOTICE THAT
should the
applicant be forced to take the matter on review, the applicant will
seek a cost order against the respondent and or
any party in
opposition thereto.
[10]
Evidently, the sheriff did not accede to the request or the terms of
the objection. This application
ensued and was
issued
on 23 July 2024.
It is opposed by the
sheriff.
Applicant’s
case (including submissions)
[11]
The applicant is a private company based in Randburg, Johannesburg.
At all material times, the applicant was
represented by its
director Mr Vincent
Okafor. He also deposed to the affidavits
in
that capacity
.
[12]
Although, strictly speaking, the relief
sought by the applicant ought to be as set out in the four corners of
the objection, quoted
in its entirety above, the
applicant
seeks the following relief
in terms of
the notice of motion
to
the application
, including costs:
1.
The Applicant is not liable to pay
occupational rent and the distribution account of the sheriff should
be amended to reflect that
all money paid by the applicant to the
sheriff in respect of occupational rent shall be refunded to the
applicant;
2.
In the alternative to Prayer 1, the
respondent is not authorised to distribute occupational rental
received and as such the distribution
account should be amended to
exclude the occupational rental in toto and should be refunded to the
applicant who has paid the occupational
rental;
3.
In the alternative to prayer 1 & 2,
that the risk, loss and profit transferred to the applicant on the
day that he took occupation
and as such, all rental income received
from the sheriff has been received for his benefit and consequently
the Distribution account
should be amended to reflect that all rental
income received by the sheriff should be paid to the
applicant/purchaser …
[13]
The sheriff, as the respondent in the
proceedings, asserts that the applicant appears to have strayed from
the applicant’s
case as set out in the objection. But, the
sheriff - to her credit - appear to have, nevertheless, dealt with or
addressed the
material issues as raised in the founding affidavit. I
do not consider it necessary to deal with the discrepancies that may
exist
between the objection and the notice of motion or even the
application itself. All I can say is that the issues requiring
determination
to dispose of the dispute between the parties would be
comprehensively dealt with - to the extent deemed necessary - by the
Court.
[14]
As already appearing above, at some stage the sheriff required the
applicant to pay occupational
rental in terms of the COS as the
applicant was considered to have taken possession of the property.
The full amount paid as reflected
in the plan, referred to above, is
R80 000.
The applicant says it was
forced to pay the occupational rental amount to the sheriff before
the sheriff would transfer the property
to the applicant. The
applicant made the payment(s) ‘under protest’,
it
is argued.
[15]
The
circumstances which, according to the applicant, led it to take
possession or occupation of the property are set out in the
objection, quoted above,
[4]
but
they appear as follows in the founding affidavit:
5.5
During the course of the transfer process I needed access to the
property in order to obtain the electrical
compliance certificates
and obtain funding from financial institutions who naturally need to
assess the property before they will
grant a loan and supply
guarantees. There are thus express conditions in the conditions of
sale which naturally require me to access
the property. When
accessing the property, I noted that the property was being used by
teenagers as a place to consume alcohol
and take drugs which resulted
in the inevitable damage to the property taking place as the property
was otherwise vacant.
5.6 As
a result of this damage, I needed to do repairs to the property
before the electrical compliance certificate
would be granted. I
further needed to ensure that the property was not used for the
purposes of taking drugs such that it would
be damaged other wise I
would suffer the losses from those damages as per the express
provision in the agreement exempting the
judgement creditor from
liability for any defects to the property which occur after the
property was sold but before it was transferred.
5.7 I
thus attended to the necessary repairs to the property so that an
electrical compliance certificate could
be issued and I placed a
security guard at the property at the applicant’s cost in order
to ensure that the property was
not vandalised further and a
financial institution would be willing and able to extend a bond to
secure the remainder of the purchase
price.
5.8 I
did not prevent the execution debtors, creditors or bondholder from
occupying the property. In fact, had
they occupied the property this
would have been better for me and the applicant as I would then not
have had to incur the cost
of a security guard. The security guard
was simply placed there as the conditions of sale made it clear that
the respondent and
the execution creditor would not take any
responsibility for damage caused to the property after the sale but
before the transfer
took place.
5.9 In
the light of the circumstances that were transpiring, the applicant
was forced to place a security guard
on the property to mitigate
further damage to the property being caused by vagrants.
5.10 During the
course of the transfer process, the attorneys for the judgement
creditor became aware that the applicant had
placed a security guard
at the property and demanded that the applicant pay occupational
rental. I refused their demands.
5.11 The respondent
refused to affect [sc. effect] transfer of the property to the
applicant until the applicant made payment
of the occupational rent
despite the fact that payment of occupational rent was not required
in order for me to demand transfer
of the property in terms of clause
6.9 of the contract.
5.12
Eventually, I relented and paid the occupational rental demanded
under protest in order to speed up the transfer as I
was incurring
penalty interest for every day that the transfer was delayed despite
the fact that it was the first respondent unreasonable
refusal to
affect [sc. effect] transfer of the property which was causing the
delay and not me.
[5]
[16]
I
hasten to point out what I consider – with respect - to be
inaccuracies in the statements, quoted above, from the applicant’s
founding affidavit. The applicant’s case refers to during ‘the
transfer process’ or ‘the transfer of the
property”
and also that the applicant wanted ‘to speed up the transfer’
by making payments of the occupational
rental, done ‘under
protest’. On the applicant’s own version the guarantees
for the balance of the purchase price
were only furnished
on
13 May 2024.
[6]
My
understanding of the COS and the transfer process is that the
guarantee or securing of the balance of the purchase price was
a
pre-condition for the transfer of the property. This would mean that
until when the applicant has furnished the guarantee there
was no
transfer process, unless the sheriff has waived the requirement.
Therefore, the period which can accurately be labelled
‘during
the transfer process’ is post 13 May 2024. Any delay in the
transfer of the property or speeding up of the
process would have
been between the aforesaid period and 27 June 2024 when the transfer
took place. It is actually pointed out
by counsel for the sheriff in
his submissions that, in fact, the guarantee or balance of the
purchase price was due and payable
within a period of 14 days from
the date of auction, meaning that this condition should have been met
as far back as 26 November
2023. The applicant failed to comply. The
applicant only complied after steps were taken against it including a
letter of demand
by the sheriff in December 2023; the applicant being
placed on terms to comply with the COS during January 2024 and,
ultimately,
activities being undertaken during April 2024 geared
towards formal court proceedings in terms of Rule 46(11) of the
Uniform Rules
to cancel the sale in execution. According to the
sheriff the applicant only secured the balance of the purchase price
six months
after the due date. Therefore, I immediately hasten to
mention that the applicant’s assertion that he paid R80 000
to
speed up the transfer process or avoid delays is improbable. It is
submitted on the applicant’s version that it was charged
occupational rental in the amount of R10 000 per month for 8 months.
But nothing would turn on this for purposes of the outcome
of this
application.
[17]
The applicant’s case is that it did not take ‘beneficial
occupation’ of the
property until 01 June 2024 and, thus, it
was not liable to pay occupational rental.
[7]
The applicant’s case gets slightly modified,
in
other parts of the founding affidavit,
to
the effect that even if it took ‘occupation and possession’
(as opposed to the earlier ‘beneficial occupation’)
of
the property before 01 June 2024, it should have benefitted from the
same rental it paid as the risk, profit and loss had transferred
to
the applicant on the date it took occupation of the property.
[8]
[18]
The applicant also says that the sheriff in terms of the Uniform
Rules of this Court is not authorised
to distribute funds received as
occupational rental, as the authority is circumscribed and expressly
limited to the distribution
of the ‘purchase price’.
[19]
The applicant contends that when it paid the R80 000 under protest it
contemporaneously informed
the sheriff that it would object to the
distribution account or plan if the money was not refunded after the
transfer. This is
because according to the sheriff the applicant took
occupation of the property immediately after the auction on 26
October 2023.
This is denied by the applicant. The sheriff bears the
burden of proof in this regard, it is submitted on behalf of the
applicant.
The sheriff ought to have provided evidence that the
alleged occupation took place.
[20]
According to the applicant it did not take ‘beneficial
occupation’ of the property
on 26 October 2023 or at any time
before 01 June 2024. As an alternative to this assertion, the
applicant says that it is entitled
to the occupational rental of
R80 000 paid as it bore all risk over the property and was
entitled to all benefits over
the property (including rental)
from the date of occupation.
[21]
The other leg of the applicant’s objection, as already hinted,
is that the sheriff is not
authorised to collect or distribute
occupational rental in terms of the Rules of this Court or the COS.
Therefore, collection and
distribution of the rental to the judgment
debtor, as borne by the distribution plan, is
ultra vires
.
[22]
In reference to conditions or clauses 6.1 and 6.2 of the COS, it is
submitted on behalf of the
applicant that, there is an
interchangeable use of the words ‘possession’ and
‘occupation’ in clause 6.2.
This is so, despite the often
distinct use of the words. Ultimately, it is argued on behalf of the
applicant that, naturally, the
purchaser ought to be in both
possession and occupation of the property to be liable for
occupational rental.
[23]
The applicant says that, as prescribed in clause 6.1 of the COS, it
was only entitled to obtain
possession of the property after it had,
among others, secured the balance of the purchase price by delivering
the guarantees.
As this only took place on 13 May 2024 it was
impossible for the applicant to have taken possession prior to that
date.
[24]
Further, that had the applicant intended (read ‘truly
considered itself’, being the
applicant’s words) to take
occupation and possession of the property for its benefit it would
have secured a tenant for that
purposes as it did on 01 June 2024.
Prior to that date, all the applicant did – instead of taking
possession of the property
– was to take reasonable steps
expected of a reasonably diligent businessman (probably in reference
to the applicant’s
director) to protect the investment in
compliance with the COS. The applicant bore all losses and risks
relating to damage to or
defect of the property post the auction.
[25]
In the end, the applicant prayed that it is entitled to the refund of
the occupational rent it
paid and other ancillary relief as fully set
out above.
Sheriff’s
(i.e. respondent’s) case (including submissions)
[26]
The sheriff says the terms or conditions in
the COS are a replica of those contained in Form 21 to the Uniform
Rules of this Court.
I understand this to mean that the applicant has
no cause to be concerned as the material terms are used on a regular
basis or
widely.
[27]
As indicated above, the sheriff is concerned that the applicant's
case appearing to have expanded
in the application from what it was
in the objection. The sheriff points out that nothing was mentioned
in the objection about
the applicant undertaking ‘full time’
repairs and construction work at the property. The sheriff, adds
that, the applicant
also actively marketed the property through
estate agents. This is not denied by the applicant although it is
stated that the marketing
was done online. It is argued on behalf of
the sheriff that this accords with the meaning of the words
‘occupation’
and ‘possession’ often used
interchangeably.
[9]
[28]
The sheriff, further, refers to authorities for the assertion that
the word ‘occupation’
ought to be interpreted in
reference to the context in which it is used. Further, that to
‘occupy’ does not only mean
to reside in a property, but
also includes presence at a property for other reasons such as
carrying on a trade.
[29]
It is the sheriff's case that the applicant has been in occupation or
possession of the property
since the auction by placing a security
guard at the property to avoid it vandalised by vagrants; by
attending to extensive restoration
and repair work at the property;
successfully marketing the property during a period of about three
months, and causing a family
to move into the premises prior to
registration of the property. It is argued on behalf of the sheriff
that the aforesaid considered
either conjunctively or separately
reflect(s) that the applicant was in absolute control of access to
the property. He (probably
in reference to the applicant’s
director) did not intend to occupy it personally but to secure it by
placing security guard
at the property and to attend to the
construction or renovation works. These notwithstanding the applicant
not informing either
the sheriff or the execution creditor of his
aforesaid actions. Should the applicant not have intended to take
possession or occupy
the property, it could have secured permission
from either the sheriff or the execution creditor to do so.
[30]
It is also argued on behalf of the sheriff that placing a security
guard over a property signifies
absolute control and possession
and/or occupation of the said property as the person who does that
regulates access to the property.
[31]
The sheriff points out that the applicant could have rented out the
property for more than the
occupational rental paid and, thus,
exercised to its benefit the right to hold the property for profit
and loss. The sheriff also
points out that the applicant did exactly
this by causing the Khumalo family to be in occupation of the
property including occupation
as at 28 May 2024. This, it is pointed
out, is the essence of the clause in the COS referring to the passing
of risk, profit and
loss in respect of the property.
[32]
The sheriff rejects, as untenable, the applicant’s assertions
regarding the collection
of the occupational rent for the benefit of
the purchaser (who assumed risk and possessed the property for profit
and loss) and
the alleged lack of authority on the part of the
sheriff to levy and distribute occupational rental.
Applicable legal
principles
[33]
This is a review premised on Uniform Rule
46(14) which reads as follows:
(a)
After
conclusion of the sale, but before preparation by the sheriff of a
plan of distribution, the execution creditor or his
or her attorney
shall provide the sheriff with a certificate of all money paid by the
judgment debtor to the execution creditor or his
or her attorney after the issue of the writ of execution.
(b)
(i)
Within 10 days after the date of registration of the transfer, the
sheriff shall have prepared a plan of distribution of the
proceeds in
order of preference and must forward a copy of such plan to the
registrar and to all other sheriffs appointed in that
district.
(ii) Immediately
thereafter the said sheriff shall give notice to all parties who have
lodged writs and to the execution debtor
that the plan of
distribution will lie for inspection at his or her office and the
office of the registrar for 15 days from a date
mentioned, and unless
such parties signify in writing their agreement to the plan, such
plan will so lie for inspection.
(c)
After
deduction from the proceeds of the costs and charges of execution,
the following shall be the order of preference:
(i) Claims
of preferent creditors ranking in priority in their legal order of
preference; and thereafter
(ii) Claims
of other creditors whose writs have been lodged with the sheriff in
the order of preference appearing from sections
96, and 98A
to 103 (inclusive) of the Insolvency Act, 1936 (Act No. 24 of
1936).
(d)
Any
interested person objecting to the plan must —
(i) before
the expiry of the period referred to in paragraph
(b)
(ii),
give notice in writing to the sheriff and all other interested
persons of the particulars of the objection; and
(ii) within
10 days after the expiry of the period referred to in
paragraph
(b)
(ii),
bring such objection before a judge for review upon 10 days notice to
the sheriff and the said persons.
(e)
The
judge on review shall hear and determine the matter in dispute and
may amend or confirm the plan of distribution or may make
such order
including an order as to costs as he or she deems appropriate.
(f)
If
—
(i) no
objection is lodged to such plan; or
(ii) the
interested parties signify their concurrence therein; or
(iii) the
plan is confirmed or amended on review,
the sheriff shall, on
production of a certificate from the conveyancer that transfer has
been given to the purchaser, pay out in
accordance with the plan of
distribution.
[34]
What Rule 46(14) provides for is a review of an objection by any
interested person against a
distribution plan.
[10]
It is sufficient that the rule is complied with substantially.
[11]
[35]
The review is to be determined by a judge sitting otherwise than in
open court, which is a judge
in chambers.
[12]
Issues for
determination
[36]
From what appears above, I consider the following to be issues
dispositive of the determination
of this matter:
[36.1] whether the
applicant is liable to pay occupational rent?
[36.2] whether the
occupational rent should be refunded to the applicant?
[36.3] is the
sheriff authorised to distribute occupational rent received?
[36.4] whether the
risk, loss and profit transferred to the applicant on the day that it
took occupation, includes rental
income
[37]
Some of the issues or questions, such as the first and second
questions above, do overlap and
will be dealt with conjunctively.
Whether the
applicant is liable to pay occupational rent and whether the
occupational rent paid ought to be refunded to the
applicant?
[38]
There is no dispute between the parties about the conclusion of the
agreement in the form of
the Conditions of Sale (i.e. the COS) on 26
October 2024. The source of the current dispute is located in clauses
6.1 to 6.3 of
the COS.
[13]
[39]
The clauses allow a purchaser to gain or take possession or
occupation of the property prior
to the transfer of title. The words
‘possession’ and ‘occupation are both used in the
aforementioned clauses.
For example, the word ‘possession’
is used in clause 6.1 in the sense that the purchaser is ‘entitled
to possession
of the Property’ upon fulfilment of some
pre-conditions. In clause 6.3 the words appear together and seem to
be given identical
or similar meaning.
[40]
The word ‘possession’ is explained in
RC
Claassen and M Claassen,
Dictionary
of Legal Words and Phrases
,
[14]
among others, as follows:
Is a compound of a
physical situation and of a mental state, ie, of the physical holding
or detention of a corporeal thing by a
person and of the mental state
of that person towards the thing. In other words, it is the physical
detention of a corporeal thing
by a person, whether with or without
any claim or right, with the intention of holding it as his own, to
which the law has given
its sanction by interposing certain legal
remedies or interdicts for its protection, should it be interfered
with by other people.
But it is essential to the existence
of
possession
that there should at one
time or another have been both such detention or occupation and such
intention present together at one
and the same time.
[underlining
added]
[41]
I understand the above authority to be saying that at some stage
possession would be accompanied
by occupation. This accords with
interchangeable use in
clauses
6.1 to 6.3 of the COS of the words
‘possession’ and ‘occupation’. They can mean
the same thing. It is argued
on behalf of the applicant that often
the words are used distinctively. According to the applicant a
purchaser ought to be in both
possession and occupation of the
property to be liable for occupational rental.
[42]
Overall, it is my view that although the words ‘possession’
and ‘occupation’
may bear the same meaning or in some
instances distinct meaning, in the impugned clauses of the COS they
are used interchangeably.
Therefore, there is no need to further
decipher the meaning of the words.
[43]
Also, the applicant import other words into the COS such as
‘
beneficial
occupation’ to advance its argument that it was not in
beneficial occupation until 01 June 2024 and, that it only
placed a
security guard and did not occupy the property. There is no room for
this approach in modern interpretation.
[15]
[44]
On the applicant’s own version it placed the security guard at
the
property to prevent its destruction by
vagrants. This alone could amount to occupation, but it would have
been unfair to determine
this against a purchaser whose sole purpose
was to protect the property. But in this matter the applicant says it
also attended
to effect restoration and/or repair work of the
property. This step alone constitutes occupation of the property. If
ever there
was a need to perfect possession of the property denoted
by placing a guard, the construction work confirmed that the
applicant
did more and occupied the property. I conclude that the
applicant was indeed in occupation of the property.
[45]
The second leg of the determination under this part is the date when
the applicant took occupation
of the property. According to the
sheriff, this was immediately after the auction on 26 October 2023,
hence the charge of R80 000.
This would have been for eight months
when calculated until 27 June 2024 when the title to the property
passed onto the applicant.
The applicant concedes that it occupied
for at least one month by allowing a certain family to move in by 01
June 2024.
[46]
The applicant says the sheriff bears the burden of proof in this
regard. I do not agree. The
applicant
ought to make out a case on the papers for the Court to interfere
with the sheriff's plan of distribution, otherwise the
application or
objection would fail.
[16]
The
applicant asserts that a particular position exists not only in the
objection but also in this application: that it is entitled
to the
repayment of the R80 000 it paid as the money is not due and
payable. The following extract from
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
is very authoritative in this regard:
‘
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities’.
It is well established that if the material facts are in dispute and
there is no request for the hearing of oral evidence, a final
order
will only be granted on notice of motion if the facts as stated by
the respondent together with the facts alleged by the
applicant that
are admitted by the respondent, justify such an order
unless,
of course, the court is satisfied that the respondent’s version
consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises
fictitious
disputes of fact, is so far-fetched or so clearly untenable or so
palpably implausible as to warrant its rejection merely
on the
papers.
If in
such a case the court is satisfied as to the inherent credibility of
the applicant’s factual averment, it may proceed
on the basis
of the correctness thereof and include this fact among those upon
which it determines whether the applicant is entitled
to the final
relief sought.
[17]
[underlining
added and footnotes omitted]
[47]
Other than the issue of the location of the duty to prove date of
occupation, there seem to be
a dispute of fact in this regard. The
applicant says it did not beneficially occupy the property before 01
June 2024, but only
placed a guard on some undisclosed date, whilst
the sheriff is of the view that occupation followed immediately after
the auction.
The procedure provided by Rule 46(14) is clearly not
meant to decide matters where there is a dispute of fact. It should
have been
clear to the applicant that there is a dispute not likely
to be resolved on affidavit regarding the occupation of the property.
The authorities above do not require that a respondent (i.e. the
sheriff for current purposes) in the matter should be saddled
with
the onus to establish the basis for the relief sought by the
applicant. Even if the matter takes the form of a review of an
objection the subject matter sought to be reviewed by the applicant
in this matter is such that the application should fail as
the
applicant has not established that it should be refunded the R80 000
as it was not liable for occupational rent.
Is the sheriff
authorised to distribute occupational rental received?
[48]
Another issue to be dealt with in terms of the objection or
application is whether the amount
levied as occupational rent can be
distributed by the sheriff. The applicant disputes – as
incorrect –
the
fact that the
amount is ‘bundled’
as part of the proceeds of sale or purchase price and distributed to
the bondholder, execution creditor
and execution debtor.
[49]
The applicant’s case in this regard is also that the Uniform
Rule does not
authorise the sheriff to
distribute funds received as occupational rental, as the authority is
expressly limited to the distribution
of the ‘purchase price’.
I do not see anything in the Rule as prohibiting the sheriff to
handle (i.e. levy and distribute)
occupational rent in the manner the
sheriff did. Even if this was so, the applicant would not qualify as
an interest bearer in
respect of the material issue, as I have
already ruled that the applicant is not entitled to a refund.
Therefore, this part of
the relief will also be refused.
Whether the risk,
loss and profit transferred to the applicant on the day that it took
occupation, include rental income
[50]
This issue arises from the applicant’s interpretation of clause
6.3 of the COS. The applicant’s
case in this regard is that in
terms of the clause upon taking possession or occupation of the
property it was entitled to the
‘profit’ in the same way
that it bore the ‘sole risk’ and ‘loss’ as
envisaged by the clause.
The applicant considers the occupational
rent to constitute ‘profit’ contemplated by the clause.
[51]
I find – with respect – the applicant’s assertions
to be a form of a circuitous
argument. The applicant needed to have
paid the occupational rent, in the first place, to be entitled to any
profit and loss with
regard to the property. Without the payment the
applicant loses the qualification or position and thus will not be
entitled to
anything at all. Payment of the occupational rent was the
sine
qua non
(i.e. ‘
indispensable
condition
(or:
prerequisite
)’)
[18]
of access to any profit arising from possession of the property. I
agree with the sheriff that the latter refers, for example,
to the
fact that the applicant could have rented out the property for an
amount which was more than the occupational rental it
paid. The
applicant was aware of this option as it did with the Khumalo family.
Therefore, this part of the objection or application
will also be
refused.
Conclusion and
costs
[52]
The application has fallen on all its legs. Liability as to costs
would follow this outcome.
The sheriff, as with the applicant, sought
costs on the attorney and client scale. It labelled the objection
spurious. I agree.
The objection and the application are actually
vindictive. The applicant simply did not have any prospects to
reclaim the R80 000
paid as occupational rent. The applicant was
irritated by what happened which led to the sheriff forcing payment
of the occupational
rental amount. The applicant resorted to using
the law – at all cost - to get its own back. This type of
conduct or approach
contribute to the abuse of the systems of this
Court. A punitive costs order is warranted and will be ordered.
Further, the sheriff
as an officer of this Court did nothing but what
she was in law entitled to do. She mustn’t find herself out of
pocket in
defending spurious and vindictive litigation. Costs will be
awarded at the scale of attorney and client against the applicant.
Order
[53]
In the result, I make the order, that:
a)
the application is refused and the objection is set aside, and
b)
the applicant shall be liable to payment of the costs of the
application and/or
the objection on the scale of attorney and client.
Khashane La M.
Manamela
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Date
of Last Written Submissions
(submitted
in lieu of a Hearing)
: 13 September
2024
Date
of Judgment
: 10
December 2024
Legal representatives
(in
the preparation of heads of argument)
For
the Applicant
: Mr
Dawson
Applicant’s
Attorneys
: Naude Dawson
Inc, Pretoria
For
the Respondent
: Mr CGVO
Sevenster
Instructed
by
: Vezi &
De Beer Inc, Pretoria
[1]
Par
[33] below for a reading of Rule 46(14) in the material part.
[2]
Par
[6] below for a reading of
the
material conditions of sale of the property.
[3]
Par
[33] below for a reading of Rule 46(14)(d).
[4]
Par [9]
above.
[5]
Founding
Affidavit (‘FA’) pars 5.5 to 5.12, CaseLines 019-11 to
019-13.
[6]
Par
[6] above.
[7]
FA
par 3.2, CaseLines 019-8.
[8]
FA
par 3.4, CaseLines 019-8.
[9]
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker and another
2003
(1) SA 113
(SCA) [15].
[10]
Klagbruns
Inc v Adjunkbalju, Bronkhorstspruit
1979
(2) SA 169
(T) at 170C.
[11]
DE
van
Loggerenberg,
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
(Service
23, Jutastat e-publications May 2024)
RS
23, 2024
(‘
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
’)
at RS 22, 2023, D1 Rule 46-21.
[12]
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
at RS 22, 2023, D1 Rule 46-21. See also Andries Charl Cilliers,
Cheryl Loots and Hendrik Christoffel Nel
Herbstein
and Van Winsen: Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court of Appeal of South Africa
(5th
edn, Juta/Jutastat e-publications 2009) RS 23, 2024
at
ch37-p1078.
[13]
Par
[6] above for a reading of the material clauses from the COS.
[14]
RC Claassen and M
Claassen,
Dictionary
of Legal Words and Phrases
(LexisNexis,
2024) ‘
Claassen’s
Dictionary of Legal Words
’).
[15]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) [18] Wallis JA set out the principles of
interpretation as follows: ‘
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light
of the document as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration must
be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of
grammar and syntax; the context in which
the provision appears; the
apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known to
those responsible for its production.
Where more than one meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process
is objective not subjective. A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results
or undermines the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation. In a contractual context it is to
make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact
made. The ‘inevitable point of departure is the language of
the provision itself’, read
in context and having regard
to the purpose of the provision and the background to the
preparation and production of the document.’
[footnotes
omitted].
[16]
Management
Committee, Leather Provident Fund v Padayachee
1966 (3) SA 624
(N) at
625G.
[17]
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
at
RS
23, 2024, D1 Rule 6-34.
[18]
VG Hiemstra and HL
Gonin,
Trilingual
Legal Dictionary
(3rd
edn, Juta 1992).
sino noindex
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