Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 384South Africa
Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC t/a Van Hobbs Dry Cleaners v Dey Street Properties (Pty) Ltd (25461/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 384 (6 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC t/a Van Hobbs Dry Cleaners v Dey Street Properties (Pty) Ltd (25461/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 384 (6 June 2022)
Salentias Travel and Hospitality CC t/a Van Hobbs Dry Cleaners v Dey Street Properties (Pty) Ltd (25461/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 384 (6 June 2022)
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sino date 6 June 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 25461/2
021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
REVISED
Heard on: 9 May 2022
Delivered on: 6 June
2022
In the matter between:
SALENTIAS TRAVEL AND
HOSPITALITY CC
Applicant
t/a
VAN HOBBS DRY
CLEANERS
and
DEY STREET PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
In re
DEY STREET PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
SALENTIAS
TRAVEL AND HOSPITALITY CC
Respondent
t/a
VAN HOBBS DRY
CLEANERS
JUDGMENT
VUMA, AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks leave to appeal to the Full bench of the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria,
alternatively
the
Supreme Court against
the whole judgment and order, including
the costs order granted by me, as handed down on 22 March 2022, on
the grounds that I
erred both in fact and in
law and in one or more
of the respects to appear below-herein.
[2]
It is trite that an application
for
leave to appeal a decision from a single Judge of the High Court is
regulated by Rule 49 of the Uniform Rules of Court. The
substantive
law pertaining to application for leave to appeal is dealt with in
section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[3]
The
grounds of appeal are found in the applicant’s Application for
Leave to Appeal.
[4]
Of note the applicant argues,
inter alia
, the following
points:
4.1
That the Judge erred by not finding that a valid lease agreement is
currently in existence between the applicant
and the respondent; and
4.2
That the Judge erred in not finding that there is a clear dispute of
fact
in re inter alia
, ownership of the property/ shop in
dispute;
4.3
That the Judge erred by not finding that the
respondent repudiated the lapsed lease agreement by not concluding
a
new lease agreement with it and thus making it not necessary for the
applicant to perform thereafter.
[5]
The respondent opposes the application on the basis that the
applicant’s grounds
of appeal,
inter alia
, that the
Court erred in finding firstly, that there was no extant lease
agreement between the parties; and secondly, that there
is no
material dispute of fact raised on the papers, are mutually
destructive propositions.
[6]
The respondent contends that either by implication or expressly the
applicant accepts
that it bore the onus to prove its right to occupy
the shop thus entitling it to a right to retain possession of the
shop.
In re
the applicant’s contention of a dispute of
fact, the applicant argues that such contention in itself is a muted
concession
by the applicant that it has not passed the onus, hence
its hope that through the Plascon-Evans Rule, its version should be
accepted.
The respondent thus argues that the applicant’s
reliance of the subsistence of a lease agreement between the parties
by solely
relying on extracts from its annexures to its various
affidavits is impermissible in law.
[7]
The respondent thus argues
that there is no reasonable prospect that another court
would come to
a different conclusion from that of this Court.
[8]
The principles governing the question whether leave to appeal should
be granted are
well established in our law. Such principles have
their origin in the common law and they entail a determination as to
whether
reasonable prospects of success exist that another court,
considering the same facts and the law, may arrive to a different
conclusion
to that of the court whose judgment is being impugned. The
principles now find expression in section 17 of the Superior Court
Act
10 of 2013
[9]
It has also been generally accepted that the use of the word "would"
in
section 17 of the Superior Court Act added a further consideration
that the bar for the test had been raised with regards to the
merits
of the proposed leave to appeal before relief can be granted. The
Superior Court Act widened the scope in which leave to
appeal may be
granted to include a determination of whether "there is some
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard."
[10]
In my view, considering both the parties’
arguments and the impugned judgment, the applicant has failed to make
out a case
for leave to appeal. Neither has it shown on what basis
there are prospects of success on appeal or that there are any
compelling
reasons why the appeal should be heard. Furthermore, I am
not persuaded that another court would come to a different
conclusion.
[11]
It is for the above reasons that I dismissed
the application for leave to appeal with costs.
Livhuwani
Vuma
Acting
Judge
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
ALA
Heard on: 9 May 2022
ALA
Judgment handed down on: 6 June 2022
Appearances
For
1
st
and 2
nd
Applicant: Adv. P.R. Du Toit
Instructed
by: Rudman and Associates Inc.
For
Respondent: Adv. A.W. Pullinger
Instructed
by: Millers Attorneys
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