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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 275
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## Geiger Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Crestar Printers & Publishers (Pty) Ltd (26037/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 275 (21 April 2022)
Geiger Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Crestar Printers & Publishers (Pty) Ltd (26037/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 275 (21 April 2022)
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sino date 21 April 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 26037/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE
:
21 APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
GEIGER
ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
CRESTAR
PRINTERS & PUBLISHERS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T (In Leave to Appeal)
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
[1]
Introduction
1.1
The respondent in the
main application, Crestar Printers & Publishers (Pty) Ltd
(Crestar) has, by its own admission, been in
occupation of Section 4
in a scheme known as Sunderland Ridge Ext 29 as well as the exclusive
use area known as Garden 3 in the
same scheme. It is a commercial
property in a light industrial area (the premises).
1.2
Crestar is a printing
and publication company and it has launched business rescue
proceedings some time ago. These have been kept
in abeyance since
February 2021. The business rescue proceedings also halted the
recovery by writ of execution of Crestar’s
principal creditor,
being the owner of the primary printing press which has been
installed at the premises.
1.3
Crestar’s
previous right of occupation of the premises terminated when its
lease agreement with the previous owner, Napaj
Property Investment
and Development (Pty) Ltd (Napaj) was cancelled due to Crestar’s
non-payment of rental, as long ago as
November 2019.
1.4
After hearing an
opposed motion on 8 March 2022, this court granted a written judgment
and an eviction order in favour of Geiger
Enterprise (Pty) Ltd
(Geiger) on the basis of it being the new owner of the premises,
having bought same from Napaj.
1.5
Based on concessions
made in open court during the hearing of the main application to the
effect that, should the court find against
Crestar, it would have to
vacate the premises immediately and that no extension of time need to
be granted, Geiger removed Crestar’s
equipment from the
premises after service of the eviction order. As this was done
without a writ or the intervention of the sheriff,
the urgent court
granted repossession of the premises whereafter Crestar launched the
present application for leave to appeal the
eviction order.
[2]
The application for leave to appeal
Seven points have been
raised in Crestar’s application for leave to appeal to a full
court of this division. I shall deal
with each of them as succinctly
as possible hereunder.
[3]
Failure to decide the existence or not of
sectional Title Plan SS331/2020 in the Scheme Known as Sunderland
Ridge Ext 29.
(paragraph 1.1 of the
notice of application for leave to appeal).
3.1
Crestar alleges that this court failed to decide
the point raised, namely the “
the
Respondent’s case was that such a plan
[Sectional
Title Plan No 331/2020]
does not exist
and the Applicant did not produce a copy of such a plan. Accordingly
the “best evidence” to which the
court referred in
paragraph 4.5 of its judgment, has not been produced
”
.
3.2
In paragraphs 4.3 and 4.4 of the judgment I
referred to the fact that the only basis upon which Crestar made the
allegation that
the sectional title scheme referred to in the title
deed and notarial session of exclusive use of the garden, did not
exist, was
a somewhat inconclusive “Windeed search”,
being a printout from a data search conducted by Crestar. Nothing
more was
produced to substantiate this denial of existence. It is
also not clear whether the point is now that there is no sectional
title
scheme in existence or merely that the plan to such a scheme
does not exist.
3.3
On the other hand, the “best evidence”
on which this court relied in paragraph 4.5 of the judgment, being
the target
of Crestar’s complaint, was an original title deed
which had been produced in court, which had been signed and stamped
by
the Registrar of Deeds, with title no ST 47106/2020 as well as a
Notarial Cession of Exclusive Use Rights, both referring to Sectional
Title Scheme “Sunderland Ridge Ext 29”.
3.4
At the hearing of the application for leave to
appeal, Adv Beaton SC, who appeared for Crestar, conceded that the
regime by which
immovable property was registered in South Africa is
a tightly regulated regime and that a title deed in respect of a
sectional
title property can only be issued and registered once a
sectional title scheme is in existence and has been registered by the
same
Registrar of Deeds. Adv Basson, appearing for Geiger, pointed
out that such a scheme can only be registered once a sectional plan
has in turn been approved by the Surveyor General’s office.
Both this concession and pointing out are a correct reflection
of the
state of our law. See in this regard Parts II and III of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
, and in particular
section 7
(Approval of draft sectional plans by the Surveyor- General),
Section
12
(Registration of Sectional Plans and opening of Sectional Title
Registers) and the effect of the division of a property into
sections,
capable of separate ownership as provided for in
section 13
(Effect of registration of section plans) of that Act.
3.5
When faced with the question on what basis, in
view of the provisions such as those referred to above, a title deed
issued by the
Registrar of Deeds should not have been accepted by
this court as the “best evidence” that a scheme and a
plan identified
as
SS 331/2020
existed, Adv Beaton SC responded that
the “title deed might be wrong”.
3.6
In paragraph 4.6 of the judgment, this court
relied on a “fresh” conveyancer’s certificate,
issued by a conveyancer
which confirmed the contents of title deed ST
47106/2020, reflecting Geiger as the owner of Sectional 4 “
as
shown and more fully described on Sectional Plan
SS 331/2020
”
.
A conveyancer, being also an admitted attorney and officer of the
court, has various statutory obligations when confirming ownership
and existence of a sectional title to the Registrar of Deeds in terms
of
section 15
B of the
Sectional Titles Act. The
contents of such a
certificate must also in all respects reflect the contents of the
records held by Deeds Office. In circumstances
where, as in the
present case, a separate certificate has been prepared by a
conveyancer for litigation purposes, no reasons have
been advanced
why the court should not have accepted same as corroboration.
3.7
The last point raised by Adv Beaton SC in this
regard is that, despite the fact that the aforementioned documents
and their compliance
with statutory provisions overwhelmingly point
to the existence of a sectional plan, a copy thereof had to have been
produced by
Geiger. He says once this had been produced, the point
would have been abandoned. No reference was made in this argument to
the
plans already annexed to the founding affidavit and referred to
in paragraph 4.4 hereunder. In the circumstances of this case, where
the Surveyor General had been satisfied as to the existence of a
plan, the Registrar of Deeds has been so satisfied, a conveyancer
had
confirmed the existence of registration of a unit in a scheme in
terms of a plan and where
Section 15
B(2) of the
Sectional Titles Act
does
not even in the circumstances where a plan has so been
identified consider it necessary “
to
annex a diagram to any sectional title deed under which a unit or an
undivided share … is held
”
,
then I find Crestar’s insistence on the production of a copy of
a plan by Geiger, merely in order to reply to Crestar’s
reliance on a tentative “Windeed Search”, untenable.
3.8
Adv Beaton SC correctly conceded that the
applicable standard of proof is that of a balance of probabilities. I
find no reasonable
prospect that another court would, on appeal, find
that it is more probable than not, that no sectional title scheme as
reflected
in records of the Deed Office exists. Accordingly this
point does not justify the granting of leave to appeal.
[4]
“
The court misconstrued the point
raised by the Respondent. It was the Respondent’s case …
that it did not occupy the
premises in respect of which the Applicant
asserted ownership since those did not exist
”
(paragraph 1.2 of the notice of application for
leave to appeal).
4.1
Crestar conceded that it still occupied the same
premises that it had rented from Napaj and that it had not moved from
it.
4.2
Crestar could also not deny that Napaj had sold
those premises to Geiger.
4.3
None of these three parties were in any doubt as
to the identity of which premises were being referred to. They were,
in addition
to the Deeds Office description, described and identified
by Crestar’s then Chief Financial Officer in the prior
litigation
referred to in paragraph 2.4 of the judgment.
4.4
Even the specific buildings (being numbers 6, 7
and 8 at the specific address) have been identified. This aspect has
been dealt
with in paragraph 2.5 of the judgment. In those portions
of the Surveyor General’s plans which have been annexed to the
founding
affidavit when the previous misdescription of the premises
in the lease agreement (which predated the title deed) had been
corrected,
these three buildings are listed as forming part of the
same
section 4
to which Crestar’s previous Chief Financial
Officer had referred to. This description accords with the Notice of
Motion.
4.5
The allegation of the purported “non-existence”
of the premises, is solely based on the denial of it constituting a
sectional title unit. This denial is again, based on Crestar’s
denial of the existence of a sectional title plan. The denial
of the
existence of the plan is in turn (only) based on an uncertified
printout from a commercial data capture facility which
is not
that of
the Deeds
Office.
The printout even contains the disclaimer: “
This
report contains information gathered from the Windeed database and we
do not make any representations about the accuracy of
the data
displayed …
”
.
4.6
This court found in paragraph 4.5 of the judgment
that reliance on evidence of this nature was contrary to the “best
evidence
rule”. Crestar contends that this court has not
sufficiently assessed the point raised by it and, has it done so, it
would
have found that Geiger “…
had
not established ownership of the premises occupied by the Respondent
and this is the finding that a court of appeal would probably
make
”
.
On the basis as set out earlier in this paragraph, I find no
reasonable prospect of that happening.
[5]
Negative inference resulting from the timing of
raising the defence of a lien
(paragraph
2.1 of the notice of application for leave to appeal).
5.1
The argument was that it would be reasonable for
an adjudicator of facts to expect someone faced with the onslaught of
an eviction
application, to raise the shield of a lien in excess of
R8 million at the first possible instance. Crestar countered that it
could
not have raised this shield before because it had been
contractually prevented from doing so by virtue of the terms of its
lease
agreement with Napaj and therefore no negative inference could
be drawn from the timing of raising a lien. Adv Basson pointed out
that a lien diminishes the value and benefits of enjoyment of the
property by a new owner. This would have been of particular concern
for Geiger who had bought the property for R15 million and who might
be faced with a claim by an erstwhile tenant of more than
half that
amount. One would have expected the lien to have featured at the time
of the new owner’s very first request to
vacate the premises.
5.2
Crestar’s argument that it could only
attempt to resurrect its shield of protection from its contractual
death during the
present litigation only resulted in this court
applying careful scrutiny thereto. This is what was stated in
paragraph 5.1 of the
judgment. Upon a reading of the judgment, it is
clear that the perceived negative inference went no further than
that.
5.3
The enforcement of the lien insofar as it may
exist and the veracity, merits or lack thereof were fully considered,
irrespective
of the timing issue. It was in the end not rejected due
to the timing of when it was raised, but due to the lack of merit or
proof
of the requirements for such a lien. There are therefore no
grounds upon which leave to appeal should be granted in this regard.
[6]
The issue of prescription
(paragraph
2.2 of the notice of application for leave to appeal).
Although the issue of
prescription was referred to in passing in paragraphs 5.3 and 5.4 of
the judgment, no finding of prescription
had been made and,
consequently, no decision in this regard exists which could be
susceptible to an appeal.
[7]
The availability of a lien to only a bona fide
occupier
7.1
Crestar stated in the notice of application for
leave to appeal that this court erred in finding that a lien is only
available to
a
bona fide
occupier. Crestar further stated that “
existing
law is to the contrary
”
.
7.2
In argument, Adv Beaton SC conceded that the
statement that existing law is to the contrary is incorrect. The
existing law is divided
on the point as to whether a
mala
fide
occupier may also exercise a lien.
7.3
The cases affording a
mala
fide
occupier also a lien vary in their
application, depending on the facts of each case. It was for this
reason that, after referring
to the availability of a lien limited to
a
bona fide
occupier
(only) in paragraph 5.4 of the judgment and the contractual death of
a lien in paragraph 5.5 of the judgment, this court
went on to
consider the consequences of the lien, insofar as it may otherwise
exist (from paragraph 5.6 of the judgment).
7.4
It is therefore, both on the facts of this case
and the way they have been considered in the judgment, not necessary
that the legal
issue of whether a
mala
fide
possessor can acquire a lien or
not or whether a contractually precluded lien (which may be personal
in nature) may be resurrected
against subsequent purchasers (which
may be the raising of a real right), need to be determined on appeal.
Crestar was not non-suited
on either of these grounds.
[8]
Tendered removal of improvements
(paragraph 2.4 of the notice of application for
leave to appeal).
8.1
The allegation made by Crestar is that this court
erred in having found that Geiger had tendered the removal of all
improvements
while the tender did not include the upgraded electrical
system.
8.2
The contention is not correct. The tender was
initially for the removal of all items. This was referred to in
paragraph 5.6 of the
judgment. Geiger has conceded that the
electrical installation might be difficult or even impossible to
remove. The consequence
hereof was dealt with in paragraph 5.6 of the
judgment.
8.3
In the circumstances where the contention relied
on as a ground for the application for leave to appeal is factually
incorrect,
Crestar is then not entitled to leave to appeal in respect
of this point.
[9]
The usefulness of the electrical upgrade
9.1
It is common cause that when Crestar rented the
property, it was fully functional and no electrical upgrade was
necessary or contemplated.
It was only Crestar who, for purposes of
running its large printing machines, wanted to upgrade or amend the
electrical installation.
This was initially funded ½ : ½
by Napaj and Crestar, but later Napaj had been fully recompensed by
Crestar due to
the fact that it was Crestar and not Napaj who wanted
these amendments done.
9.2
Geiger’s new proposed tenant does not need
nor insist on these electrical installations effected by Crestar,
hence the tender
for the removal.
9.3
The fact that the electrical installations
effected by Crestar cannot be removed and that it cost Crestar R4,1
million to install
them, does not automatically equate to the
installation having increased the value of the premises. The
installation may not be
“useful” in the full sense of the
word. The fact that it may be capable of being used does not mean
that it might not
come with adverse consequences. It might carry a
too high voltage or wattage, it might be more expensive to run, it
might require
more maintenance or it might not be suitable to the
specific requirements of Geiger’s proposed new tenant.
9.4
Crestar furnished no particularity substantiating
its allegation of usefullness. More importantly, no particularity was
furnished
as to what extent the alleged usefulness would have
increased the value of the premises (if at all). In paragraph 7 of
its answering
affidavit, Crestar alleged that its claim is for an
“enrichment lien” yet Adv Beaton SC had to concede,
during the
argument relating to this point during the application for
leave to appeal, that no attempt had been made to value the property
or the enhanced installation. Apart from pure argument, no evidence
had been placed before the court indicating by what amount
Geiger had
allegedly been enriched, if at all. This aspect, which resulted in
the lien, even if it existed, not being upheld, has
been dealt with
in paragraphs 5.9, 5.10 and 5.11 of the judgment.
9.5
Based on the lack of evidence produced by the
party seeking to enforce an enrichment claim by remaining rent-free
in a commercial
property, I find no reasonable prospect that a court
of appeal would be “
likely to
differ on this aspect
”
(as put by
Crestar in its notice of application for leave to appeal).
[10]
Crestar has not in its notice of application for
leave to appeal contended that the question whether a contractually
precluded lien
could be “resurrected” against a
subsequent title holder is one which would qualify as a “compelling
reason”
as contemplated in
Section 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. In any event, on the facts of this case, I am
of the view that it is not such a reason.
[11]
Costs
As already stated before,
during the argument of the main application, the timing of vacating
the premises came up, should the court
find against Crestar. The
court was not informed at the time whether the large printing machine
had already been removed by the
owner thereof and how long the
process of vacating the premises might take. The court was also
mindful of the preceding litigation
prompted by the fact that Geiger
had a prospective long-term tenant which it was fearful of losing and
to which it wished to urgently
grant occupation of the premises. The
response then given by Adv Beaton SC was that, should the court find
against Crestar, no
further extension of occupation need to be given.
This was dealt with in paragraph 7 of the judgment. Since the order
had been
served however, the premises had not been vacated, despite
Geiger’s best efforts to have this implemented. During the
argument
of this matter and the debate about vacation of the premises
not having taken place, Adv Beaton, SC on behalf of Crestar (and
without
any apparent input from Crestar or its attorney) indicated
that a condition of the granting of leave to appeal (should it be
ordered)
could be that Crestar pay the amount of monthly rental
previously tendered. However, that amount had previously only
been
paid for two months whereafter Crestar again defaulted. No
answers could also be given to the court as to what would happen
should
a business rescue practitioner be appointed nor was anything
tendered in respect of the arrears. This tender of monthly payments,
if it was in fact a tender, appears to be a transparent attempt to
remain in the premises at all costs. I consider this approach
to be a
factor to be considered in the exercise of a court’s discretion
in relation to the issue of costs. Another factor
to be considered in
respect of the scale of costs to be awarded, is the manner in which a
party conducts its litigation. It was
at all times clear that the
issue of the identity of the premises is nothing but a red herring
and a cynical approach to litigation,
if not a downright attempt at
abusing the process of the court. The arguments referred to in
paragraphs [2] and [3] above illustrate
this. As a final underlining
of this inappropriate approach to litigation, Crestar yet again
refused to tell the court what the
description of the premises it
occupies is, if not that reflected in Geiger’s title deed. At
no stage did Crestar abandon
this line of argument, in fact, it
formed the more persistent and substantial part of the basis upon
which it sought leave to appeal.
Exercising this court’s
discretion, I find that the same scale of costs as in the main
application, would be justified in
these circumstances.
[12]
Order
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney
and client.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 19 April
2022
Judgment delivered: 21
April 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Adv
J G Basson
Attorney
for Applicant:
DP
du Plessis Inc., Pretoria
For
Respondent:
Adv R G Beaton SC
Attorneys
for Respondent:
Jaffer Inc., Attorney, Pretoria
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