Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1881South Africa
J.M.K v W.A.S.B (046725/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1881 (9 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## J.M.K v W.A.S.B (046725/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1881 (9 November 2023)
J.M.K v W.A.S.B (046725/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1881 (9 November 2023)
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sino date 9 November 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NR: 046725/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
09 November 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
J[...]
M[...] K[...]
APPLICANT
and
W[...] A[...] S[...]
B[...]
RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be 09 November 2023.
JUDGMENT
MARUMOAGAE AJ
A
INTRODUCTION
[1]
In this application, the parties married each other out of community
of property with
the application of the accrual system in 2019, their
marriage still subsists. The Applicant brought this application on an
urgent
basis seeking an order for the Respondent to be evicted from
the immovable property, which for the better part of their short
marriage
was their matrimonial house. This property is owned by the
Applicant.
[2]
The Respondent opposes this application.
[3]
The court is required to determine whether the application is urgent.
Should the court
find that the application is urgent, it is required
to decide whether the Applicant can evict the Respondent from her
property
without complying with the procedure provided for in the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act
19 of 1998.
B
URGENCY
[4]
I heard the arguments on behalf of both parties on the question of
urgency and the
merits together.
[5]
On the one hand, the Applicant alleges that the urgency of this
application arises
from the imminent registration of the Applicant’s
house. The new owner should take occupation on the date of
registration
but will not be able to do so if the Respondent is still
occupying the property. The registration was to be effected within 5
or
7 days after the date this application was launched. The
Respondent refused to vacate the property despite being requested to
do
so on several occasions.
[6]
According to the Applicant, the Respondent continuously attempts to
frustrate the
sale of her house. She is worried that the Respondent
will still be occupying the house on the date of transfer, thereby
making
it difficult for the purchaser to be provided vacant
occupation.
[7]
The Applicant alleges that she informed the Respondent that the
property was sold
at the beginning of September 2023. Further, the
transfer was estimated to take place by the end of October 2023.
However, the
Respondent refused to vacate the house unless the
Applicant agreed to his demands. The Applicant alleges that if the
matter is
not heard on an urgent basis, she will not have substantial
redress in due course because the transfer was estimated to take
place
by 27 October 2023.
[8]
The court was referred to clause 3 of the offer to purchase. This
clause reads:
‘
[p]rovided
the Purchaser has paid all costs, signed all necessary bond and
transfer documents, delivered such guarantees as may
have been called
for and is not otherwise in breach of any of the provisions hereof,
the right of occupation of the property shall
be given to and taken
by the Purchaser at Midday on REGISTRATION OF TRANSFER. If the date
of occupation does not coincide with
date of transfer the party
enjoying the right of occupation whilst the property is registered in
the name of the other party shall,
in consideration thereof, and for
the period of such occupation, pay the seller rent of R 30 000.00
monthly in advance from
date of occupation’.
[9]
It was submitted that this clause should be interpreted as demanding
that the purchaser
should be provided vacant occupation within a
reasonable time. Further, should the seller not be provided a vacant
occupation on
the date of transfer, the deal may be called off,
thereby prejudicing the Applicant.
[10]
On the other hand, the Respondent alleges that this application is
not urgent because the offer
to purchase was signed on 30 July 2023.
The Applicant delayed in bringing this application and has not
provided an account of what
caused the delay.
[11]
The Respondent alleges further that it was only on 17 October 2023
that the Applicant’s
legal representative instructed the
transferring attorneys to lodge registration papers on 18 October
2023. It is alleged that
the transfer of the property was constructed
by the Applicant’s legal representative. Thus, the urgency is
self-created.
Further, the Applicant failed to explain why the
transfer was rushed in October while the agreement was signed in July
2023.
[12]
The Respondent alleges further that because the agreement required
guarantees made therein to
have been delivered 30 days after the
agreement was signed, the Applicant failed to demonstrate that the
bank guarantees for the
purchase price had been received by the
Applicant as the seller. The Respondent also alleges that the offer
to purchase agreement
neither made provision for vacant occupation
nor contained any warrantee that upon the date of transfer, the
property shall be
vacant and that the Respondent should be evicted
from the property.
[13]
The Respondent alleges further that the above-quoted clause does not
guarantee vacant occupation
of the property. There is also no
evidence that demonstrates that the purchaser insisted on a vacant
occupation. Further, there
is no evidence before the court that the
Applicant complied with the suspensive conditions contained in the
offer to purchase agreement.
It was submitted on behalf of the
Respondent that these factors demonstrate that some of the terms of
the agreement were not complied
with to justify this agreement being
used to establish urgency.
[14]
Rule 6(12)(b) of the Uniform Rules requires
the Applicant to set forth explicitly:
[14.1] the circumstances
that render the matter urgent; and
[14.2]
the reasons she claims that she cannot be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course.
[15]
In
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[1]
paras 6, it was stated that:
‘…
the
procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not there for taking. An applicant
has to set forth explicitly the circumstances which he
avers render
the matter urgent. More importantly, the Applicant must state the
reasons why he claims that he cannot be afforded
substantial redress
at a hearing in due course. The question of whether a matter is
sufficiently urgent to be enrolled and heard
as an urgent application
is underpinned by the issue of absence of substantial redress in an
application in due course. The rules
allow the court to come to the
assistance of a litigant because if the latter were to wait for the
normal course laid down by the
rules it will not obtain substantial
redress.
[16]
The alleged urgency is based on the date of transfer of the
Applicant’s house into the
name of the purchaser. It is
interesting to note that there is nothing provided to the court that
seems to suggest that the purchaser
is anxious to have the property
transferred into their name. There is no evidence placed before the
court that suggests that the
purchaser exerted pressure on the
Applicant to transfer the property within a ‘reasonable time’
as alleged, failing
which they will not go through with the sale.
[17]
It is not clear why the Respondent was not told before the offer to
purchase agreement was signed
that the property would be sold to
afford him an opportunity to seek alternative accommodation. There is
also no explanation, given
the fact that the offer to purchase was
signed on 30 July 2023, why the Respondent was not immediately
informed that the house
has been sold.
[18]
According to the Applicant, the Respondent was only informed in
September 2023 that the property
was sold. Given the fact that the
offer to purchase agreement had already been signed on 30 July 2023,
why did the Applicant wait
until the end of October 2023 to institute
an urgent application when it was clear from September 2023 that the
Respondent did
not intend to vacate the property?
[19]
I agree with the Respondent that the urgency is self-created. The
fact that the Applicant desires
the matter to be resolved urgently
does not render the matter urgent. Put differently, the fact that the
Applicant wants the Respondent
to urgently vacate the property so
that the property can be sold to allow her to effectively cut ties
with the Respondent and relocate
to her new undisclosed residence
without having to worry about the upkeeping of the property does not
render the matter urgent.
[20]
The Applicant’s sense of urgency to finalise this matter is
clearly demonstrated by her
general approach. She made it clear that
she approached this court because she could not wait for the order of
the magistrate’s
court in the domestic violence case to be
issued. Apparently, there is a possibility that the Respondent can be
ordered to vacate
the Applicant’s property by the Magistrate’s
Court. The Applicant appears to have pressured her legal
representatives
to find a quick solution to her dilemma. She needs to
sell the property because she has relocated to the Western Cape.
Unfortunately,
this is not the basis upon which cases can be heard on
an urgent basis by this court.
[21]
Most importantly, she clearly wants a clean break from the
Respondent. Given the parties' ongoing
divorce proceedings, the
Applicant cannot be faulted for wanting a clean break from the
Respondent, but that cannot be done at
the expense of this court and
its processes given the heavy roll with which the court is
confronted. An urgent court is not a court
of convenience but a court
that is designed specifically to come to the rescue of litigants who
cannot, objectively speaking based
on a seriously prejudicial or
threatening event, wait to be heard in the ordinary course. This is
not a court that is designed
to come to the rescue of impatient
litigants.
[22]
There is nowhere in the offer-to-purchase agreement where the
purchaser is guaranteed a vacant
occupation. Clause three of the
agreement cannot be interpreted as entitling the purchaser to vacant
occupation. If this was the
intended outcome, the parties should have
explicitly stated this in the agreement. It may well be that the
Applicant is obliged
to provide the purchaser control of the property
on the date of registration, but this does not necessarily refer to
vacant occupation.
The fact that there was no clause in the agreement
that explicitly dealt with the issue of vacant occupation makes it
difficult
for the Applicant to rely on vacant occupation as a ground
to establish urgency.
[23]
Considering that there is no evidence suggesting that the purchaser
is in a hurry to effect the
transfer and to gain occupation, it is
not clear why would the Applicant not get substantial redress if this
application is heard
in due course. I am not convinced that there is
an absence of substantial redress in due course. In my view, the
Applicant failed
to demonstrate that she requires immediate
assistance from this court, and that if this application is not heard
earlier than it
would be in due course, any order that she might be
granted at a later stage will be by then no longer be capable of
providing
her with the legal protection she requires.
C
CONCLUSION
[24]
Given the fact that the Applicant failed to satisfy the requirement
of urgency, sadly the merits
of this application cannot be
entertained and decided in this judgment.
I
am of the view that the relief sought by the Applicant does not
necessitate this court’s urgent attention.
[25]
The rule of practice is that costs follow the
results.
D
ORDER
[26]
In the result, I make the following order:
[26.1] The application is
struck from the roll.
[26.2] The applicant is
ordered to pay the costs of this application.
C MARUMOAGAE AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Adv T
Ellerbeck
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Dawie
Beyers Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
Adv AJ
Schoeman
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Shapiro
& Haasbroek Inc
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
01
November 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
09
November 2023
[1]
(11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011) para 6.
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