Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 54South Africa
Steenkamp v Jammine (23065/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 54 (24 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Steenkamp v Jammine (23065/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 54 (24 January 2022)
Steenkamp v Jammine (23065/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 54 (24 January 2022)
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sino date 24 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case No. 23065/2020 (Court a
quo)
Case No. A134/2021 (High
Court)
In
the matter between:
CATHARINA
MARIE PETRONELLA STEENKAMP
APPELLANT
And
CYNTHIA
AUDREY JAMMINE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
MAKWEYA
AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
The Appellant, Mrs Catharina Steenkamp, appeals against an order
granted by Magistrate Erasmus
on the 09 October 2020 relating to a
mandament van spolie that was brought on urgent basis by her in the
Pretoria Magistrates Court.
[2]
On 19 August 2020 Appellant was
granted the following order:
(i
)
That
the Respondent is to remove the palisade gate obstruction situated on
the right of way of the respective properties known as
Wishbone North
480 Band C Lynwood, Pretoria, also known as Erf 619 Portions 1 an2,
Lynwood, Pretoria.
(ii)
In the event of the Respondent
refusing to adhere to prayer 1 supra the sheriff is authorised
to
remove the obstructions as referred to in prayer1 supra, in order for
the Applicant to enjoy right of way;
(iii)
To order the Respondent to restore the
Applicant’s free, undisturbed and uninterrupted possession
of right
of way;
(iv)
To order the Respondent to pay the costs of this application on a
scale as between attorney and
own client as well costs of sheriff.
[3]
The application for a
rule nisi
was unopposed as it was
on ex-parte and it was granted as prayed for.
[4]
On 02 September 2020, the Respondent filed opposing papers where
after the matter was
heard on the 09 October 2020. On 09 October 2020
the parties argued the matter before Magistrate Erasmus and, after
hearing their
arguments, the Magistrate discharged the rule nisi with
costs against the Appellant, including costs for Counsel.
[5]
The Appellant filed a request for reasons for the orders on the 21
October 2020 and
same were given to her on the 4th November 2020 and
thereafter she noted an appeal on the 2 December 2020.
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
The grounds of appeal were
that:
·
The learned Magistrate erred
in failing to find that the Appellant was in peaceful and undisturbed
possession of her property;
·
The learned Magistrate erred
in failing to find that the Respondent disposed the Appellant’s
peaceful and undisturbed possession,
when the palisade and gate were
erected;
·
The learned Magistrate erred
in failing to find that the dispossession, namely the erecting of the
palisade and gate was unlawful.
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
[6]
The Applicant failed to prove on balance of probabilities that she
was in possession
of the Respondent’s drive way gate and that the
Respondent deprived her of the possession forcibly or wrongfully
against her consent.
ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION
·
Whether the court a quo was incorrect in finding that the Appellant
was not in peaceful and undisturbed
possession of the Respondent’s
driveway and thus discharging the rule nisi with costs order against
the Appellant.
·
Whether the court a quo was incorrect in ordering the Appellants to
pay the costs of the application
including the costs of Counsel.
SUBMISSIONS
BY THE PARTIES
Appellant’s version
[7]
The Appellant alleges that her property and the Respondent property
is adjacent to each
other and that, as a result, she used to reverse
to the Respondent’s driveway in order to make her way to the shared
driveway of
their complex. She has been utilising the Respondent’s
driveway for the past eight years until the Respondent constructed a
palisade
and gate.
[8]
She uses the Respondent’s driveway because she finds it difficult
to drive from her
garage to the shared driveway without any
assistance. Her husband is the one who normally assist her with
driving out of the complex.
[9]
The driveway of the Respondent’s property does not have any
servitude registered on
it. The servitude available is the shared
driveway which is the access point from their respective properties
to the main road. The
servitude is detailed by figure LKEFGH on the
diagram LG 10450/1999 referred to and noted in the Title Deeds of
both properties.
[10] It
is common cause that the Respondent constructed the palisade and the
gate on the 25 July 2020.The
Appellant alleges that the Respondent
erected same without informing her about it and also that she
did not get a court order
to erect the said palisade and gate on her
property.
[11] She
was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the Respondent driveway
before the gate was constructed.
[12] She
therefore approached the High Court to set aside the judgment of the
court a quo which was handed
down on the 09 October 2020, discharging
the rule nisi which was granted in her favour.
Respondent’s version
[13] The
Respondent confirms that their properties are adjacent to each other.
She also stated that due to
several break-ins at her house she
decided to erect a security gate at her driveway. She did not need
permission from the Appellant
nor a court order to erect same on her
property and does not fall within the servitude area. She avers that
there is no right of
way on her property for anyone.
[14] The
fact that the Appellant from time to time used the driveway of the
Respondent does not amount to
undisturbed possession thereof as
alleged by the Appellant. The Appellant was never in possession of
the front entrance of the Respondent’s
property. There was no legal
right or arrangement that the Appellant will use the driveway.
[15] The
very essence of the remedy against spoliation is that the possession
enjoyed by the party who asks
for the spoliation order must be
established. The law is not concerned about the lawfulness of the
Appellant’s possession but the
Appellant must show that she was in
fact in possession at the time of being despoiled.
APPLICATION
OF THE LAW
[16] A
court of appeal is not at liberty to depart from the trial court’s
findings of fact and credibility,
unless they are vitiated by
irregularity, or unless an examination of the record reveals that
those findings are patently wrong.
[17] The
mandament van spolie is a possessory remedy. Spoliation is the
wrongful deprivation of another's
right of possession. Spoliation
orders are aimed at ensuring that no man takes the law into his own
hands.
[18] In
Malan and Another vs Green Valley Farm Portion 7 Holt Hill 434 CC and
Others
2007 (5) SA 114
(ECO),
the court found that the spoliation
order as a final order will ordinarily have three important results:
firstly, it is not sufficient
for te applicant merely to show a prima
facie case; he must prove his case on a balance of probabilities as
in any other civil case.
Secondly, it is an order having an effect of
a judgment; and thirdly, an order for costs should be made. The court
went on to say
that: " Spoliation is an extra-ordinary remedy in
that once the applicant has discharged the onus resting upon him and
no recognised
defence has been raised successfully, the court has no
discretion to refuse the ground of a spoliation order on the ground
of considerations
relating to the merits of the dispute between the
parties".
[19] In Ivanov
v North West Gambling Board
2012 (6) SA 67
(SCA) at 75 B - E,
the
Supreme Court of appeal observed that an applicant upon proof of two
requirements, he is entitled to a mandament van spolie restoring
the
status quo ante. The court noted that first is proof that the
applicant was in possession of the spoliated thing. In this regard,
the cause for possession is irrelevant hence that is why possession
by a thief is protected. The second requirement is the wrongful
deprivation of possession. The fact that possession is wrongful or
illegal is irrelevant, as that would go to the merits of the dispute.
The onus rests on the applicant to prove these two requirements.
Furthermore, when the proceedings are on affidavit the applicant
must
satisfy the court on the admitted or undisputed facts, by the same
balance of probabilities required in every civil suit, of
the facts
necessary
for his success in the application.
[20] The
remedy which the Appellant claimed in its application for
anti-spoliatory relief, a mandament van
spolie, was consistent with
what might have been expected, had it been asserting a defined right
of servitude access.
[21] It
is common cause that the Appellant did not have a defined servitude
right of access over the Respondent’s
property on her driveway. The
Appellant relied in her application for spoliatary relief on the
disturbance of what was contended
as her right of access via an
established route.
[22]
Although the Appellant’s Counsel contended that the palisade and
the gate of the Respondent erected,
encroached on the line ED that
indicate the eastern border of 1 meter-wide on the registered
servitude of right of way. It is clear
from the trial court documents
that the Respondent’s palisade and gate were not erected on the
registered servitude but on her
property. Further to that on the
index bundle 2 on Caseline SO54, page 89 of 003-90, photo ‘AA15’
it also shows that the space
from the Respondent’s palisade gate to
the other end of boundary wall is 5.5-metre-wide. The palisade gate
of the Respondent is
11metre and the distance from the Appellant’s
gate to the main entrance gate of the complex is 45 metre which
grants the Appellant
enough space to turn around without entering the
Respondent’s drive way.
[23] In
De Beer v Zimbali Estate Management Association (Pty) Ltd and Another
2007 (3) SA 254
(N) (11 May 2006)
at paras 41 and 54 the court
considered mandament van spolie with regard to access to premises and
found that it is there to protect
possession not access. The court
found that such possession must be exclusive in the sense of being to
the exclusion of others. For
someone to exercise physical control of
premises, the key to such premises must however, be the only key to
the building. The above
does not apply if the owner or someone else
holds a duplicate key.
[24]
In this matter the Appellant did not rely on a defined or registered
right of way. The Appellant’s
alleged right of access over the
Respondent’s property is by reason of necessity to reverse into her
driveway in order to avoid
to reverse to the main gate
.
It was the Appellant’s opinion to have been dispossessed of the
right to enter the Respondent’s driveway. It is however disputed
by
the Respondent that the Appellant was ever in possession of the front
entrance of her driveway.
[25] The
Appellant’s counsel submitted in her heads of argument that the
palisade and the gate created a
situation where the Appellant could
no longer turn her vehicle around in the drive way and accordingly
restricting the Appellant’s
possession of her property.
[26]
The Respondent’s Counsel submitted that the Appellant rather used
the driveway of the respondent in
order to turn around in order to
avoid reversing up to the shared driveway. It cannot be said the
Appellant was ever in possession
of the driveway of the respondent’s
front entrance of her property. The fact that the Appellant from time
to time used the front
entrance of the respondent’s property does
not amount to undisturbed possession. Inconvenience cannot be
misconstrued to mean dispossession.
The possession which must be
proved is not possession in the Juridical sense. It may be enough if
possession by the Appellant was
with the intention of securing some
benefit for herself, accompanied by the physical element of corpus or
detention. The physical
element implies physical control rather than
physical apprehension.
[27] The
magistrate was correct in finding that the Appellant was not in
peaceful and undisturbed possession
of the Respondent’s driveway
when she utilised it to reverse into before the constructed gate and
that it was not despoiled. This
view finds support in the fact that
the Respondent was exclusively in possession of the entrance to her
yard which the appellants
demanded from her.
[28] I
concur with the court a quo that the Appellant was never in
possession of the Respondent’s driveway
and she was never
dispossessed by the Respondent.
[29] In
light thereof, I am satisfied that the magistrate was correct in
finding that the Appellant was not
unlawfully deprived of her
possession when the Respondent constructed the gate. As stated above,
the question of lawfulness was irrelevant
but however the important
element is possession. Consequently, the Magistrate was absolutely
correct in discharging the interim order.
[30] In
the result, the following order is made:
30.1. That the appeal is
dismissed;
30.2. That the appellants are
ordered to pay the costs.
T.R
MAKWEYA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
agree and it is so ordered.
M.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Appellant:
Adv. DR. du Toit
Brooklyn Chambers
Room 50
Tel: 082 745
8011
Instructed by:
Hanses Incorporated
369 Tram Street
Nieuw Muckleneuk.,
Pretoria
Counsel
for Respondent: Adv.
Ellis
Circle Chambers
1
st
Floor, Office 115
Cbellies9@gmail.com
Tel:082
902 3239
Instructed
by:
Terry Mahon Attorneys
91 Dennis Road,
ATholl
c/o Jacobson &
Levy
215 Orient Street
Arcadia
Pretoria.
Date of hearing: 20 July 2021
JUDGMENT ELECTRONICALLY
TRANSMITTED TO THE PARTIES ON THE 24
th
JANAURY 2022
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