Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 379South Africa
MC Admin and Another v Mohlala [2023] ZAGPPHC 379; A326/2021 (1 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 June 2023
Headnotes
with costs;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## MC Admin and Another v Mohlala [2023] ZAGPPHC 379; A326/2021 (1 June 2023)
MC Admin and Another v Mohlala [2023] ZAGPPHC 379; A326/2021 (1 June 2023)
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sino date 1 June 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A326/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
1/6/2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
MC
ADMIN
First Appellant
EDGED
HOUSE BODY CORPORATE
Second Appellant
and
MAHLOBOSHANE
WIDAS MOHLALA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
1]
This is an appeal against the whole of the
judgment and order handed down by Phahlane (AJ) on 3 February 2021,
in which she granted
the following orders:
1.1
That
the respondent
[1]
is ordered to
reconnect the electricity supply to the applicant
[2]
with immediate effect;
1.2
The
first and second respondents
[3]
were to pay the attorney and client costs of the
application.
BACKGROUND
2]
On 27 January 2021 the respondent issued
out of the Division a spoliation application in terms of Rule 6(12).
The application was
served, by the Sheriff, on the appellants on 28
January 2021.
3]
The respondent alleged that he was the
owner of unit 1[...] E[...] H[...], L[...] Street, Kempton Park (the
premises) which he’d
rented out. He also alleged that his levy
account was up to date and that the unit is fitted with pre-paid
electricity and that
he pays this.
4]
Despite this being so, the appellants cut
the electricity to the premises on 20 January 2021 which the
respondent alleges amounts
to little more than spoliation and that
the demand to restore the electricity supply fell on deaf ears –
hence the urgent
application.
5]
What is quite apparent from the papers is
that there was an ongoing dispute between the parties regarding
monies allegedly owed
by the respondent to the appellants for repairs
to a water leak on the common property which affected the premises
and caused damage
not just to the premises, but several items
belonging to the tenant. As the dispute is not relevant for purposes
of the outcome
of this appeal, nothing more need be said regarding
this.
6]
Suffice to say that, by the time the
application was launched on 27 January 2021, the relationship between
the parties was no longer
cordial.
7]
The appellants filed an answering affidavit
in which they took several points
in
limine
:
7.1
that the court did not have jurisdiction as the amount allegedly
owing by the respondent
to the appellants falls within the
jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s Court;
7.2
that the electricity supply to respondent’s property was
restored on 26 January 2021
and thus, by the time the application was
issued, the issue had become moot and the relief therefore
academic.
8]
It is important to note that the respondent
elected not to file a replying affidavit.
9]
At the hearing, the court accepted the word
of counsel appearing for the respondent that the electricity had not
been reconnected.
After an exchange with the court, the respondent’s
counsel states:
“
There
is no electricity connected M’Lady and the attorneys of record
did not even confirm that. They did not tell us. They
should have
written a letter to say remove the matter from the roll, electricity
is connected. Then we will deal with the issue
of costs. Nothing.
They say we are opposing.”
10]
In granting the order, the court took into
account the existing dispute between the parties regarding alleged
monies owed by the
respondent, that the respondent was using prepaid
electricity, that the appellants had threatened to cut off
respondent’s
electricity and stated that:
“
I
have considered all the circumstances of this case and took into
account the fact that there is nothing before this court to suggest
that the respondents were entitled in law to cut electricity supply
to the applicant …”
and
“…
I
have also taken due regard to the attitude displayed by the
respondents whom being threatened with the matter being brought
before
court that they during that period, send an email to an
employee to have the electricity of the applicant be reconnected
because
the applicant has threatened to come to the high court …”
11]
In their Notice of Appeal, the appellants
raise several points of fact and law. In my view only two points
require discussion, as
the decision reached will dispose of the
appeal on those two alone. They are the following:
11.1
that the court
a quo
erred in granting a spoliation order
despite the electricity supply having been restored on 26 January
2021;
11.2
that the court a quo erred in disregarding the evidence regarding the
reconnection set out in the Answering
Affidavit and in accepting
respondent’s hearsay evidence from the bar.
12]
These two issues are, of course,
interrelated.
13]
It is trite that a court of appeal may only
interfere with the decision of a court
a
quo
if there was a misdirection or an
error of law –
in casu
there is both.
14]
Bearing in mind that a spoliation has in
mind the restoration of the status quo ante, the unlawful disturbance
of undisturbed possession
must exist as a fact at the time that the
court pronounces its judgment and order. Anything less is simply a
brutum fulmen
and at best, a waste of the court’s time and the parties’
money.
15]
In their Answering Affidavit the appellants
state the following:
“
1[...].
The Applicant issued out the Notice of motion on the 27
th
January 2021 out of the above Honourable Court, in which the
Respondents were duly served. The Applicant and as well as his
attorneys
of record were notified on the 26
th
January 2021 that the first Respondent has reconnected electricity to
the Applicant’s Unit on the same day, 26
th
January 2021. The copies of the email are attached hereto and marked
as annexure “MTN7”.”
16]
The email attached as MTN7 to the answering
affidavit is dated 26 January 2021 at 13:49 and states,
inter
alia
:
“
MC
Admin, did re-connect the electricity to Unit 1[...] 26 January 2021
at 13:30.”
17]
This was confirmed in another email of 28
January 2021 at 12:03 as follows:
“
Please
see below the electricity was re-connected: Sent: Tuesday 26 January
2021 13:49”
–
this with
reference to the email set out in paragraph 16
supra
.
18]
Thus it is clear that the day before the
application was issued, and 2 days before it was served on
appellants, the entire issue
had become moot. Given that the
application was heard on 2 February 2021, the electricity had been
restored some 6 days prior.
19]
It
must be emphasized that as no replying affidavit was filed the
evidence set out in paragraphs 16 and 17
supra
were uncontroverted. But instead of applying the well-traversed and
trite Plascon-Evans
[4]
rule, the
court chose to accept evidence from the bar. This it was not entitled
to do: firstly, that evidence is not evidence in
the true sense of
the word as it is not under oath; secondly it is hearsay; and thirdly
it amounts to no more than a trial by ambush.
20]
What the court should have done was to
disallow those submissions and apply the rule in Plascon-Evans. That
being so, it should
have been the end of applicant’s case and
the main relief should have been dismissed.
21]
Given this the appeal must succeed.
THE
ORDER
22]
In the result it is ordered that:
22.1
the appeal is upheld with costs;
22.2
the order of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following:
“
The application is
dismissed with costs.”
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
AGREE
C COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
AGREE
NL TSHOMBE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names are
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 1 June 2023.
Appearances:
For
1
st
& 2
nd
Appellant:
Adv K
Pooe
Instructed
by:
Ngoetjana
Attorneys Inc.
For Respondent:
Mr LE Thobejane
Instructed by:
Botha
Massyn and Thobejane Associated Attorneys
Date of hearing:
3 May 2023
[1]
The
present appellant (MC Admin)
[2]
The
present respondent (Mohlala)
[3]
The
2
nd
respondent was the Edged House Body Corporate (the Body Corp)
[4]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd 1984(3) SA 623 (A).
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