Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 90South Africa
Moloto N.O and Others v Liebman and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 90; 23251/2021 (9 February 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Moloto N.O and Others v Liebman and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 90; 23251/2021 (9 February 2023)
Moloto N.O and Others v Liebman and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 90; 23251/2021 (9 February 2023)
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sino date 9 February 2023
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 23251/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/ NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
09/02/2023
In
the matter between:
# MICHAEL
LEBOGANG MOLOTO N.OFirst
Applicant
MICHAEL
LEBOGANG MOLOTO N.O
First
Applicant
#
# MALEBO
RIAN ELIAS MOLOTO N.O.Second
Applicant
MALEBO
RIAN ELIAS MOLOTO N.O.
Second
Applicant
#
# MABATHO
SHIRLEY MOTIMELE N.OThird
Applicant
MABATHO
SHIRLEY MOTIMELE N.O
Third
Applicant
and
# BRADLEY
BRETT LIEBMANFirst
Respondent
BRADLEY
BRETT LIEBMAN
First
Respondent
ANDREA
LIEBMAN
Second
Respondent
# ALL THE OTHER UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS
ALL THE OTHER UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS
(Of
[....] W[....] V[....]
L[....]) Third
Respondent
# EMFULENI
LOCAL MUNICIPALITYFourth
Respondent
EMFULENI
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for the eviction of
the first, to the third respondents from the premises [....] W[....]
V[....] L[....]
in terms of the provisions of section 4(1) of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of
1988. The application is opposed by the First and Second
Respondents who are husband and wife.
# THE FACTS
THE FACTS
[2]
The applicants are the appointed
liquidators of a company called Villa Rivage (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation), the alleged owner of the
property concerned. The
company itself has, as its directors, the father and sisters of the
first respondent who placed it in voluntary
liquidation.
The
first
respondent,
an
erstwhile
co
-director
of
the company, has been engaged in several
litigations with his father and sisters and had,
inter
alia,
unsuccessfully sought to
interdict the liquidation of the company and to have the appointment
of the applicants as liquidators
set
aside. The court had found that the first respondent had no
locus
standi
and dismissed his application
for an interdict with costs.
[3]
While he was still a co-director of the
company with his faher, the first respondent lived on the property
with his wife since 2007
on their return from the United States of
America, where they had been living. He was removed as a director of
the company, but
had continued to date to live on the property.
[4]
The applicants have listed primarily the
following grounds for the relief sought;
4.1
the first and second and those who reside
on the property through and under them, the third respondents, have
no legal right to
occupy the property;
4.2
despite the company being in the final
stages of liquidation and despite having been given notice to vacate
the property, the respondents
have simply refused to do so;
4.3
there exists no lease agreement or any form
of agreement between the respondents and the company entitling the
respondents
to
be in occupation of and reside on the
property.
[5]
At the initial hearing of this matter in
March 2021, the first and the second respondents raised a point in
limine
that
the applicants had failed to serve a notice in terms of Rule 41 A -
a point that was dismissed
by
the
court.
However,
the
court
struck
the
matter
of
the roll when the first and second respondents raised a further point
in
limine
that
the applicants had not given a property notice in terms of the
section 4(2) of the PIE Act. There has since been an order granted
and the in terms of the said section and thus compliance with the
Act.
FIRST
AND SECOND RESPONDENTS' POINTS IN
LIM/NE
[6]
The first and second respondents have
raised three points in
limine;
the
first being that the applicants have proceeded by issuing a notice of
motion and served same without a date for the hearing
and premised on
the basis that the date of hearing will be determined by the
Registrar. The respondents contend that this was a
fatal defect for
non -
compliance
with the Rules of the court.
[7]
In response the applicants state that the
notice of motion was issued during the lockdown period and rely on
the directives of the
Judge President that the issuing of court
process be done on caselines. It was not possible to obtain a date of
hearing and that
as a result a practice was developed to issue and
serve the notice without a date of hearing and for the applicants to
apply for
date of hearing once all papers had been filed or once the
dies for entry of opposition had expired without the respondents
filling
any opposition. There can be no defect, let alone a fatal one
where, in response to the state of disaster, a directive is issued
causing a deviation to facilitate the continuity of in court
processes.
[8]
The respondents had challenged the
locus
standi
of the first applicant, the
director of a company called Bahlanka, but have since abandoned,
wisely so, this point in
limine
as
the first applicant was appointed
as
joint
liquidator
and did not
require
authorisation
of
his company to institute these proceedings.
[9]
The third point in
limine
raised by the respondents pertains to a
disputed ownership of the company and an alleged discrepancy in the
description of the property
in the title deed and on the applicants'
papers. The respondents
in
this regard appear to
suggest
that
the company is not the owner of the property and /or that the
property is not the same as that from which their eviction is
sought.
[10]
It is correct that there is a typographical
error in the Title Deed registration number of the property. The
respondents are clearly
clutching at straws in their objections and
contentions in this regards. Firstly, as an erstwhile director of the
company the first
respondent has first-hand knowledge that the
company is the registered owner of the property. To suggest otherwise
or that the
property described is not the same as that from which
these eviction proceedings relate is simply disingenuous.
# THE RESPONDENTS' DEFENCES
THE RESPONDENTS' DEFENCES
[11]
The first and second respondent deny that
they are in unlawful occupation of the property. In particular, the
first respondent alleges
that he has been living on the property
since 2007 and that payment of municipality rates and taxes and other
expenses were made
by the company as part of his benefits. He
contends that he is employed by the company, despite it being in
liquidation. He has
attached no proof of this allegation. While not
disputing that the applicant's allegation that the respondents do not
have a lease
agreement with the company entitling them to be in
occupation of the property, in their heads of arguments the
respondents contend
that they have a month to month rental agreement
-
an allegation
they have not substantiated, but merely meant to dispute the
applicants' allegation that they (respondents) are not
maintaining
the property, nor paying for municipal services. The applicants have
attached proof in the form of photos of the property
depicting its
poor state of neglect as well as a municipality account showing an
outstanding amount in the order of R134 000 -00
owing to the
municipality.
[12]
The respondents have filed a
thirty-six-page affidavit a great part whereof purports to establish
that his removal by his father
and sisters as a director of the
company was fraudulent and unlawful. These allegations were dealt
with in previous hearings of
the matters between him and his father
and were dismissed by the courts which also found that he had no
legal standing to interdict
the voluntary liquidation of the company.
[13]
Of relevance and has to be considered in
the present proceedings is the respondents' allegation that they
would be left homeless
were the eviction order be granted. The
respondents allege ill-health and the Covid 19 pandemic,
inter
alia,
and lack of alternative
accommodation
as
reasons
why
the
eviction
order
should
not
be
granted. A further allegation is made of a man who is elderly and has
lives on the property for many years. The latter allegation
has been
refuted by the applicants who have attached an affidavit of the same
man denying that he still resides on the property.
[14]
The respondents have not attached any proof
of their ill-health, which the first applicant has denied. The State
of disaster has
come and gone and offers no refuge for the
respondents.
[15]
The respondents' allegation that they will
not be able to find alternative accommodation is contradicted by the
first respondent
who describes himself as a businessman. Furthermore,
the applicants have referred this court to pending proceedings for
the sequestration
of the estate of the first respondent. The court
was specifically referred to an averment by the first respondent that
his estate
is not insolvent and that he has sufficient movable assets
he can sell to settle the debt giving rise to his sought
sequestration.
The first respondent seemingly has those assets over
and above his alleged movable assets costing hundreds of thousands of
rands
that were removed from the property by the Sheriff at the
instance of the applicants. The movables were removed by the
applicant
in the process of the liquidation of the company. Despite
their protest, the respondents
had
not
been
able
to
produce
proof
of
ownership
of
those assets concerned, including a motor vehicle.
# PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY IN
EVICTION PROCEEDINGS
PURPOSE OF THE INQUIRY IN
EVICTION PROCEEDINGS
[16]
The enquiry the court is enjoined to make
in eviction proceedings is whether it will in the end be just to
grant the sought eviction
order. It is incumbent on the respondents
to bring all the facts in support of their resistance of the
application for their eviction.
The respondents' alleged inability to
obtain alternative accommodation is hard to believe on the
afore-going facts. In fact, the
evidence, including that of the
respondents, demonstrates the opposite of the destitution they
allege. The respondents cannot seek
to invoke the provisions of
section 26 of the Constitution in the circumstances.
[17]
In its inquiry, the court ought to consider
the circumstances of the applicants either. In the present matter the
applicants have
a duty to discharge their mandate as liquidators of
the company. Whatever their reason is/was for the voluntary
sequestration of
the company, the directors would be looking forward
to the completion of the process. Instead, they have for years had to
engage
in endless litigation brought by the first respondent who has,
in any event, been repeatedly unsuccessful.
# CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION
[18]
I am satisfied by the evidence that the
company is the owner of the property concerned in these proceedings;
that the respondents
have not demonstrated any entitlement
or right to continue to reside or occupy
the property. The first respondent's efforts to assert his co
-ownership of the company
have previously been determined by two
courts to be without merit. The directors of the company are entitled
to liquidate their
company without undue and unwarranted hindrance by
the first respondent. The applicants, the first of whom has already
passed on,
are obliged to finalise the liquidation procedure and the
first respondent has once again been obstructive. On the evidence
before
me, the application
ought
to succeed.
# COSTS
COSTS
[19]
It is the general principle that costs
follow the outcome of the proceedings.
#
# ORDER
ORDER
[20]
Consequent upon the findings in this
judgment, the following order is made:
1.
That
the
first,
second,
and
third
respondents,
and
all other unlawful occupiers
holding title through or under them, at the
property situated at Portion 17, portion of portion 31 of the Farm
K[….] , [….]
, Emfuleni Local Municipality, held under
Deed Number [....] , also known as [....] W[....] V[....] L[....]
("the property")
be
hereby ordered to vacate the property by no later than 31 March 2023.
2.
In the event that the first, second and
third respondent fail to comply with prayer (1) above, that the
Sheriff of this court or
his lawful deputy be authorized to evict the
first, second and third respondents.
3.
Should the first, second and third
respondents regain access or take possession of the property after
having vacated same and/or
after being evicted from the property by
the Sheriff as per prayer (2) hereof, the order for eviction granted
herein may be executed
and carried out again and for such purpose,
the Sheriff of this court and his lawfully appointed deputy are
authorised and directed
to gain forthwith evict the first, second and
third respondents and all other unlawful occupants.
4.
The first and second Respondent are ordered
to pay the cost.
M
P N MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS: ADV N
NORTJE TEL: 083 6457014
EMAIL:
nadia@clubadvocates.co.za
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT: ADVM SILVER TEL:
082 574 7000
EMAIL:
marc@advocatesilver.co.za
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES ON 09 FEBRUARY 2023.
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