Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 284South Africa
Marishane and Others v Marishane and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 284; 25793/2021 (8 May 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Declaratory relief
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Marishane and Others v Marishane and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 284; 25793/2021 (8 May 2023)
Marishane and Others v Marishane and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 284; 25793/2021 (8 May 2023)
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sino date 8 May 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: 25793/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
08/05/23
In the matter between:
PHAE PIET MARISHANE
1
st
Applicant
MAMEETSE SARAH
MARISHANE
2
nd
Applicant
MAMESWANE MASEMOLA
3
rd
Applicant
and
CATHERINE MAITE
MARISHANE
1
st
Respondent
CATHERINE MAITE
MARISHANE
2
nd
Respondent
LESHABA SEBOYA
EPHRAIM
3
rd
Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS PRETORIA
4
th
Respondent
THE CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
5
th
Respondent
THE MEC OF HUMAN
SETTLEMENTS GAUTENG PROVINCE
6
th
Respondent
Summary:
Declaratory relief
O
R D E R
1.
The application dated 17 May 2021 is dismissed with cost.
J U D G M E N T
VAN HEERDEN AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
2.
This is an application seeking a declarator that
the transfer of the subject property i.e. Erf [...], Section U,
Mamelodi to the
first and second respondents and all subsequent
transfers be declared null and void.
3.
This application accordingly seeks the following
relief:
3.1
That the property known as Erf [...], Section U,
Mamelodi, Pretoria, (the subject property), be declared as the
property of the
estate of the applicant’s deceased parents;
3.2
That the transfer of ownership of the
abovementioned property into the names of the applicants’ late
brother being Morwamokwena
Gilbert Marishane and the second
respondent be declared null and void;
3.3
That the sale of the abovementioned property by
the first and second respondents to the third respondent be declared
null and void
ab initio
;
3.4
That the Title Deed that was registered in the
name of the Third Respondent be declared null and void;
3.5
That the fourth respondent be ordered to
deregister the Title Deed;
3.6
That the fifth and sixth respondents be obligated
to conduct an inquiry on the subject property in accordance with
Section 2 of
the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leaseholds
or Ownership Act, 81 of 1988 or in the alternative in accordance with
the
resolution of housing disputes and the transfer of
residential properties; and
3.7
That the ownership of the property reverts back to
the sixth respondent pending the outcome of the aforementioned.
# BACKGROUND FACTS
BACKGROUND FACTS
4.
The applicants allege that the property was their
childhood home where they resided with their now deceased parents
being Malebe
Albert Marishane and Mamotabo Marishane, which property
was allegedly allocated to their parents in the 1960’s, for the
purposes
of a dwelling house.
5.
At the time of the first applicant’s
mother’s death in 1995, the full title of the property had not
yet been transferred
into her name, and as such the property was
still registered in the name of the fifth respondent i.e. the
municipality.
6.
During 2004, the property was transferred directly
from the municipality into the names of the second respondent and her
now deceased
husband, Morwamokwena Gilbert Marishane, being the
brother of the applicants.
7.
The applicants contend that during or about 2020,
preceding the applicants’ late brother’s death, the first
applicant
discovered that full title of the property had allegedly
been fraudulently registered in the name of the late brother.
8.
The applicants also stated that they are unsure as
to how their late brother obtained ownership of the property. The
brother passed
away on or about 13 March 2020, and after the death of
the applicants’ late brother, they were informed that their
late brother
was married in community of property to the second
respondent, and furthermore learned that the property was registered
into the
name of the second respondent.
9.
On the applicants’ conceded version, the
property was never transferred into the name of their parents. They
confirmed that
the property was transferred for the first time from
the municipality, into the name of their deceased brother and his
wife, being
the second respondent.
10.
On or about 22 October 2020, the third respondent
purchased the property from the second respondent, who acted in her
capacity as
executrix of the estate of the deceased brother, as well
in her capacity as owner of the property. Up to date hereof, the
third
respondent is unable to move into the subject property as a
result of the first applicant's continued occupation thereof.
# APPLICANTS’ FAILURE
TO PROVE THEIR CASE ON THE PAPERS
APPLICANTS’ FAILURE
TO PROVE THEIR CASE ON THE PAPERS
11.
The applicants failed to attach a will, nor did
they place any facts before this Court in proof of the submission
that they were
the lawful heirs of the subject property. The
applicants similarly failed to confirm whether their parents’
estates were
dealt with in terms of a will, alternatively by means of
intestate.
12.
The applicants’ entire case is based on the
alleged fact that the applicants were the purported lawful heirs of
the subject
property and due to purported fraud, that the transfer to
the respondents ought to be reversed. However, the applicants’
failure to prove that they were the lawful heirs is a ruinous flaw in
the applicants’ papers.
13.
Further, the applicants have failed to show in
their papers how the purported fraud took place, as save for a bold
allegation, no
facts and/or proof is placed before this Court. The
applicants’ contention that the property was transferred
through fraud
is, at best for the applicants, speculation.
14.
Save for the purported confession of the
applicants’ deceased brother, and a letter from the second
respondent (which is not
under oath and which is in any event
disputed by the third respondent), no facts or proof of the purported
fraud was submitted.
15.
In
these circumstances, the
Plascon-Evans
Rule
[1]
is relevant to the facts in relation to the allegations made by the
first applicant in his founding affidavit. According to
Plascon-Evans,
a
guide to determine which party’s version of the events should
prevail when disputes of facts are found in motion proceedings,
the
following:
“
when
factual disputes arise in circumstances where the Applicant seeks
final relief, the relief should be granted in favour of the
Applicant
only if the facts alleged by the Respondent in their Answering
Affidavit, read with the facts it has admitted to, justify
the order
prayed for.”
16.
Moreover, a denial by the respondent of a factual
allegation in the applicants founding affidavit must be real,
genuine, and
bona fide
before
it can be prohibitive to the applicant being granted final relief.
17.
In the
matter of
Islam
v Kabir
[2]
the Court touched on the
Plascon-Evans
Rule
and
found that:
“
When
in application proceedings where there is a dispute of facts which
has to be resolved on papers and on the basis of the principle
enunciated in the
Plascon-Evans
Paints matter
the
court can only reject the version of the Respondent if the absence of
bona fides is abundantly clear and manifest and substantially
beyond
question.”
18.
Accordingly, the applicants have clearly failed in
passing the test of
Plascon-Evans
.
19.
The
applicants have,
resorted to bold and sketchy allegations, without any substantiation
and have not attached any proof of the allegations
made.
# AUTHORITY
AUTHORITY
20.
In
Firstrand
Bank Ltd t/a Rand Merchant Bank and Another v The Master of the High
Court, Cape Town
[3]
,
the Court considered the effect of a fraudulent misrepresentation by
an attorney to the Master in an application to hold an enquiry
in
terms of section 417 and 418 of the Companies Act, 61 of 1973. The
Court held as follows at paragraphs [20] to [21]:
“
[20]
It is trite that the effect of fraud is far-reaching. In
Farley
(Aust) (Pty) Ltd v JR Alexander & Sons (Qld) (Pty) Ltd
[1946]
HCA 29
;
(1946) 75 CLR 487
the High court of Australia, per Williams
J, said this:
‘
Fraud
is conduct which vitiates every transaction known to the law. It even
vitiates a judgment of the Court. It is an insidious
disease,
and
if clearly proved
(own
emphasis added) spread to and infects the whole transaction.’
[21] And in
Lazarus
Estates Ltd v Beasley
[1956] 1 QB 702
(CA) at 712 one finds Lord
Denning’s well-known remarks:
‘
No
Court on this land will allow a person to keep an advantage which he
has obtained by fraud. No judgment of a court, no
order of a
Minister, can be allowed to stand if it has been obtained by fraud.
Fraud unravels everything. The Court
is careful not to find
fraud unless it is distinctly pleaded and proved; but once it is
proved, it vitiates judgments, contracts
and all transactions
whatsoever.’
21.
In the
Firstrand
Bank-matter (supra)
the fraud was
proven by the applicants and constituted a common cause fact.
It is for this reason that the Court found in
the applicants’
favour and ordered the transfer to be reversed.
22.
The present case however, differs substantially,
in that not only is the fraud disputed, but the fraud has not been
proven on the
papers at all, especially in circumstances where the
onus to do so is on the applicants, in motion proceedings.
23.
In
this regard, the Court in
Quartermark
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi and Another
[4]
had to deal with the question whether the first respondent has
established a case of fraudulent misrepresentation entitling her
to
cancel the two agreements. In paragraph 13, the Court held that:
“
I
deal first with the question whether Ms Mkhwanazi has established a
case of fraudulent misrepresentation entitling her to cancel
the two
agreements. It is trite that in motion proceedings affidavits
fulfil the dual role of pleadings and evidence.
[5]
They
serve to define not only the issues between the parties, but also to
place the essential evidence before the court.
[6]
They
must therefore contain the factual averments that are sufficient to
support the cause of action or defence sought to be made
out.
[7]
Furthermore,
an applicant must raise the issues as well as the evidence upon which
it relies to discharge the onus of proof resting
on it, in the
founding affidavit”
[8]
.
24.
In the
case of
Moseia
and Others The Master of the High Court: Pretoria and Others
[9]
,
one of the issues the Court wanted to determine was whether the third
and fourth respondents were considered as
bona
fide
purchasers
of the property that was fraudulently obtained by the
misrepresentation on the part of the second respondent, who then
later sold the property to the third and fourth respondents. The
Court in this instance held that in light of the third and fourth
respondents’ denial that they were aware of the fraudulent
conduct of the second respondent, the first applicant’s
bald
allegation that the third respondent knew about the fraud without any
facts and evidence to substantiate the allegation is
not sufficient
to prove the allegation.
[10]
25.
The
present facts are poignantly similar in respect of the bold solitary
allegation that the third respondent was aware of the fraud.
The
applicants simply state that the third respondent was invited to
various meetings with the assistance of SANCO.
[11]
26.
The applicants however failed to take the Court
into their confidence by giving any further information of these
purported calls
to meetings, nor are there any affidavits attached in
support of this bold allegation.
27.
By virtue of the
Moseia
-judgment
supra
,
together with the third respondent’s positive denial, the third
respondent cannot be regarded as anything but a
bona
fide
third party purchaser.
28.
Further
to the above, our law provides for an abstract theory of transfer
which was explained in
Quartermark
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi and Another
[12]
as follows at paragraph [24]:
“
This
court, in
Legator
Ms Kenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
[13]
confirmed
that the abstract theory of transfer applies to movable as well as
immovable property. According to that theory
the validity of
the transfer is not dependent upon the validity of the underlying
transaction.
[14]
However,
the passing of ownership only takes place when there has been
delivery effect by registration of transfer coupled with
what Brand
JA, writing for the court in
Legator
McKenna
,
referred to as a ‘real agreement’. The learned
judge explained that ‘the essential elements of the real
agreement are an intention on the part of the transferor to transfer
ownership and the intention of the transfer to become owner
of the
property.
[15]
29.
On the strength of the aforesaid authority and
since the purported fraud was not proven by the applicants, the
second respondent
in her capacity as representative of the deceased
estate and owner of the property had at all relevant times the
intention to transfer
the property to the third respondent whom, on
his part, in his personal capacity had the necessary intention to
become the owner
of the subject property.
30.
In this regard, not only has the applicants failed
to prove their entitlement to the alleged inheritance, but they have
further
failed to prove the purported fraud.
31.
In summary, the applicants have accordingly failed
to make out a case for the relief sought on the following basis:
31.1
On their own version the immovable property was
never transferred into the names of their deceased parents;
31.2
They failed to produce evidence or even allege if
their parents died testate or intestate;
31.3
The only evidence before Court was that the
subject property was transferred from the municipality to the
deceased brother and the
second applicant by virtue of the Title
Deed;
31.4
No evidence regarding any alleged fraud was put
before Court;
31.5
It is apparent that the third respondent is a
bona
fide
third party who lawfully purchased
the subject property from the second respondent, or from the deceased
estate.
32.
The application should, as a result, fail.
# COSTS
COSTS
33.
It is
trite in our law that the purpose of costs is to indemnify a party
who has had to bring court proceedings to obtain relief
or to
insulate a party that has been unnecessarily dragged to Court against
the expenses incurred from the legal proceedings.
[16]
34.
There
are some general rules that are applicable to the granting of costs,
the most pertinent ones here being that the successful
party is
entitled to their costs, that the successful party is determined by
looking at the substance of the judgment and not merely
its form.
[17]
35.
The third respondent opposed the application on
good grounds and in circumstances where the applicants have failed to
make out a
proper case for the relief claimed against the third
respondent, costs should follow the result.
# ORDER
ORDER
36.
The application is dismissed with costs.
DJ VAN HEERDEN
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date of hearing: 6
February 2023
Date of judgment: 8 May
2023
APPEARANCES
For the applicant:
Adv AE Malange
Instructed by:
GW Mashele Attorneys
For the respondents:
Adv J Schoeman
Instructed by:
Van der Walt Attorneys
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (Tvl) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 620
[2]
(CA
280/2010) [2011] ZAECGHC 9 (11 April 2011)
[3]
Case
no: 679/13 (11 November 2013, ZAWCHC, 2013, 173
[4]
(768/2012)
[2013] ZASCA 150
(01/11/2013)
[5]
Transnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
2006
(1) SA 591
(SCA) para 28
[6]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 323F-G;
MEC
for Health, Gauteng v 3P Consulting (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 542
(SCA) at para 28
[7]
Lecuona
v Property Emporium CC and Others
2003
(4) SDA 207 (C)
[8]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd
at
323J-324A
[9]
(36201/2018)
[2021] ZAGPPHC 37 (26 January 2021)
[10]
At
para 46
[11]
At
para 4, 16 of the Founding Affidavit
[12]
2014
(3) SA 96
SCA
[13]
Legator
Mckenna I
nc
and another v Shea and Others
2010
(1) SA 35
(SCA) para’s 20-22
[14]
Ibid
para 20
[15]
Ibid
para 22
[16]
Texas
Co (SA) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1926
AD 467
[17]
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
Vol
2, Van Loggerenberg, p D4-7, [Service 11, 2019], [Juta : Claremont]
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