Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 534South Africa
Moore v Van Goidsenhoven and Another (30515/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 534 (18 July 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Interim interdict – to provide details of rental agreements in respect of a property registered in the name of respondent – main action pending for transfer of property – additional claim that rental income be paid into trust – material disputes of fact – application refused.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Moore v Van Goidsenhoven and Another (30515/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 534 (18 July 2022)
Moore v Van Goidsenhoven and Another (30515/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 534 (18 July 2022)
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sino date 18 July 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 30515/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
18
JULY 2022
In
the matter between:
TREVOR
ALLEN MOORE
Applicant
and
ARLENE
VAN GOIDSENHOVEN
First Respondent
THE
CURRENT OCCUPIERS OF 26
BELLINGHAM
CRESCENT
Second
Respondent
Summary:
Interim interdict – to provide details of rental agreements in
respect of a property
registered in the name of respondent –
main action pending for transfer of property – additional claim
that rental
income be paid into trust – material disputes of
fact – application refused.
ORDER
The application
is refused, with costs.
JUDGMENT
This matter has
been heard by way of 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
The applicant,
Mr Moore (Trevor) and the first respondent, Ms Goidsenhoven (Arlene),
had previously been in a romantic relationship
with each other.
The relationship was of such a nature that one of the previous
attorneys described it at the time that the
property which forms the
subject matter of the current dispute between the parties was
acquired, as a “common law marriage”.
There is an
action pending between the parties pertaining to actual ownership of
an immovable property and in this application
Trevor is seeking an
order compelling Arlene to provide all particulars pertaining to
rental agreements she had entered into with
tenants of the property
over the last 12 months and also that all the rental income be paid
into an attorneys trust account.
[2]
The nature of the dispute concerning the
property:
2.1
Trevor pleaded in the main action that “…
during approximately January 2013 to
September 2013 … the plaintiff and the first defendant …
entered into a verbal
agreement … that the plaintiff would
purchase the Meyersdal and the Alrode South properties and pay the
purchase prices
with regard to these purchases to the respective
sellers. The Meyersdal and the Alrode South properties would be
registered
in the name of the first defendant as the nominee
alternatively agent of the plaintiff to hold same on behalf of the
plaintiff
… the plaintiff would remain the owner of the
properties and … the properties would be transferred by the
first defendant
to the plaintiff or his nominee upon the plaintiff’s
demand
”.
2.2
In the main action Trevor is the plaintiff
and Arlene is the first defendant.
2.3
Despite claiming in the particulars of
claim that he would always be the owner, Trevor alleged in his
founding affidavit in the
present application that “
at
the time when the said property was purchased, I started a new
business known as Bafana Diesel Depot. In an attempt to
protect
the investment, I decided to have the said property registered into
the name of the respondent
”.
The allegation containing this “protection” footwork by
claiming ownership only when it suits him or
when such ownership
would be safe from creditors, pertains to the Meyersdal property,
being the one in question.
2.4
For purposes of avoiding the reach of
section 1 of the Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1957, requiring sales
of land or cessions thereof
to be in writing, Trevor’s
advocate, Adv. S J van Rensburg SC, relied on
Dadabhay
v Dadabhay and Another
1981 (3) SA 1039
(A). In that matter it was considered that an agreement to hold
property as a nominee of another together with a subsequent
transfer
of the property could validly be concluded orally.
2.5
Arlene’s version is that, at the time
of the purchase of the property, Trevor was indebted to her for
monies lent and advanced
by her to him in the period leading up to
July 2013. In order to settle this indebtedness, Trevor agreed
to sell another
one of his properties (the “Bosworth property”)
and from the proceeds pay Arlene by purchasing a property for her and
by having it registered in her name. For the balance of the
debt, Trevor would pay monies over to Arlene into her bank account
to
enable her to refurbish and renovate the new property. There is
also a further factual dispute as to when the Bafana Diesel
Depot was
started, with a version by Trevor’s daughter, confirming
Arlene’s version, namely that this post-dated the
acquisition
of the property by some years.
2.6
In the particulars of claim in the main
action, Trevor pleaded that the relationship between him and Arlene
had ended in 2017 and
that it was an implied term of the oral
agreement on which he relies that, upon termination of the
relationship, transfer of the
property to him would take place.
He further pleaded that, in the alternative, he has subsequently
demanded such transfer,
alternatively that he demanded it by way of
the summons and the particulars of claim. The relief that
Trevor seeks is the
transfer of both the property in question and the
property in Alrode South. As an alternative, he claims that,
should Arlene
retain both properties, that he has an enrichment claim
against her to the value of R9, 5 million.
[3]
The current dispute and the evaluation
thereof:
3.1
In Trevor’s current application,
labelled by him the “interdict application”, he seeks the
following relief in
addition to costs.
“
1.
(That) the respondents (that is Arlene and the “current”
occupiers of the
Property) … provide full details
relating to the rental agreement in relation to (the property),
together with copies
of any and all rental agreements and proof of
payments for the last 12 months.
2.
(That) the rental income relating to (the property) … be paid
into the
trust account of DLBM Inc … Pending the finalization
of the action instituted under case number 32079/2018
”
.
3.2
It is trite that, in order to obtain an
interim interdict, an applicant has to satisfy the following
requirements: the existence
of a
prima
facie
right, a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
and only the ultimate relief is granted,
that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of the relief and that the applicant
has no other satisfactory remedy.
I shall deal with each of
these requirements hereunder.
3.3
The relief that Trevor seeks in this
application is not foreshadowed in the pending action. Therein,
as pointed out above,
he seeks transfer of the properties or, as an
alternative, payment of what he contends the values thereof are.
Nothing is
pleaded, even on his version, in respect of the “fruits”
of the properties while Arlene held the properties of which
he claims
ownership prior to his demands of transfer. Nothing has keen
pleaded in respect of the duties, obligations or costs
in respect of
the maintenance, upkeep or even renovation or improvement of the
properties. The lastmentioned is not even
pleaded as part of
the alternative enrichment claim. Insofar as Trevor seeks to
now prevent Arlene from retaining the proceeds
of the letting of the
one property, the ultimate entitlement to such proceeds does not form
part of the main action and neither
does a duty to account for such
proceeds. Even if an owner of a property may generally be
entitled to the use of such property
(or the “fruits”
thereof) no such
prima facie
right has been established (or pleaded) prior to the determination of
ownership.
3.4
The apprehension of irreparable harm has
also been overstated. Firstly, the allegation of non-payment of
levies and taxes
has been met by the production of an account from
the local authority which indicate a current and not arrears
account. Any
other fear of sale or bonding of the property has
already been met by a previous order of this court by Kollapen J on
11 April
2018, already interdicting Arlene from selling or
encumbering the property. I therefore find that the argument
presented
on behalf of Arlene with reliance on
LF
Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1969 (2) SA 256
(C) at 267, is correct to the effect that,
objectively speaking, no reasonable person, faced with these facts,
would apprehend
the probability of irreparable harm.
3.5
Whilst on the topic of the previous order
interdicting the sale or encumbering of the property, it was argued
on behalf of Trevor,
that this already confirms the existence of a
prima facie
right. I am of a different view. The previous order
merely kept the subject matter of litigation (
res
litigiosa
) intact. It simply
maintained the status quo in respect of the property pending the
finalization of the action. This
is in accordance with the
primary nature of interim interdicts. See, Joubert (red),
The
Law of South Africa (LAWSA)
, Vol 5
(3ed) paragraph 13.
3.6
Considering the balance of convenience,
Arlene has stated that she uses the rental generated from the
property to meet the expenses
related to it and to meet general
maintenance requirements. The ultimately determined owner of
the property would be prejudiced
if the rental income is not utilised
in this fashion and I find no balance of convenience favouring the
placing of these funds
unutilised in an attorney’s trust
account. Insofar as a portion of the balance of the rental
income may in the interim
be retained or used by Arlene, Trevor has
not sufficiently made out a case that, should he be successful, he
would not be able
to recover that portion. Neither a balance of
convenience nor any irreparable harm had been established in this
regard.
3.7
Regarding the issue of an alternative
remedy, should Trevor make out a case for an entitlement to the
rental income in the main
action, he has all the procedural remedies
available to him to claim discovery or further particulars in respect
thereof in the
trial action. An interdict prematurely calling
for a final interdict in the form of accounting and furnishing of
copies and
the like is inappropriate in my view. As Arlene’s
counsel succinctly put it in Heads of Argument filed on her behalf
“
there would be no difficulty in
proving the quantum of a claim, should a claim related to the rental
…
” be proved in due
course.
3.8
In conclusion I find that Trevor has not
satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict or for the relief
sought by him.
[4]
Costs
Ordinarily, costs should follow the
event. I find no cogent reason to depart from that principle in
this case, particularly
in view of the that Trevor’s case has
been insufficiently pleaded in the main action pertaining to the
issue of rental income
and, even if it had, the principal relief
claimed by him, namely the furnishing of documents or particulars,
could procedurally
have been obtained in the main action.
[5]
Order
The application is refused, with
costs.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 28
April 2022
Judgment delivered: 18
July 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellant:
Adv
S J van Rensburg
SC
Attorney
for Appellant:
DLBM Attorneys Inc, Pretoria
For
Respondents:
Mr
J S Liebenberg
Attorneys
for Respondents:
Allan
Levin & Associates, Johannesburg
c/o Friedland Hart
Solomon & Nicolson
Attorneys, Pretoria
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