Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 78South Africa
Abrahams N.O and Others v Geldenhuys N.O and Others (Reasons) (2025/001463) [2025] ZAWCHC 78; [2025] 2 All SA 388 (WCC) (5 March 2025)
Headnotes
where an order is sought essentially to compel specific performance of a contractual right to resolve a contractual dispute, the mandament is not available,[9] and there is no authority for an extension of the remedy to such cases.[10] The rights that flow from a contractual nexus between the parties are insufficient for the purposes of the mandament, as they are purely personal, and a spoliation order, in effect, would amount to an order of specific performance in proceedings in which a respondent is precluded from disproving the merits of the applicant's claim for possession.[11]
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAWCHC 78
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Abrahams N.O and Others v Geldenhuys N.O and Others (Reasons) (2025/001463) [2025] ZAWCHC 78; [2025] 2 All SA 388 (WCC) (5 March 2025)
Abrahams N.O and Others v Geldenhuys N.O and Others (Reasons) (2025/001463) [2025] ZAWCHC 78; [2025] 2 All SA 388 (WCC) (5 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2025_78.html
sino date 5 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case number: 2025-001463
In
the matter between:
MARK
ABRAHAMS N.O.
(in
his capacity as Chairman of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
First
applicant
ANDRE
NAUDE N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Second
applicant
CHRISTOPHER
MITCHELL N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Third
applicant
PATRICIA
SWART N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Fourth
applicant
WARREN
FOX N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Fifth
applicant
MELISSA
ROSSOUW N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Sixth
applicant
ANITA
ROSSOUW N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Seventh
applicant
GEORGE
KALLIGIANIS N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Squash Section of
the
Villager Football Club)
Eighth
applicant
and
PIET
GELDENHUYS N.O.
(in
his capacity as trustee for the time being of
Villager
Football Club)
First
respondent
ANTON
COOSNER N.O.
(in
his capacity as trustee for the time being of
Villager
Football Club)
Second
respondent
DYLAN
KEETING N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Third
respondent
GERARD
PEDERSEN N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Fourth
respondent
KIRK
GAINSFORD N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Fifth
respondent
PATRICK
MAILE N.O
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Sixth
respondent
AURELIA
FORBES N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Seventh
respondent
CRAIG
SEALE N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Eighth
respondent
ALAN
PAYNE N.O.
(in
his capacity as a member of the Club Committee
for
the time being)
Ninth
respondent
REASONS DELIVERED ON 5
MARCH 2025
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 31 January 2025 I granted an order in
the following terms in an urgent application “
to
restore the applicants’ possession of the squash facilities
”
at the Villager Football Club in Claremont:
1.1
The applicants’ non-compliance with the provisions of the
Uniform Rules
of Court relating to time periods, forms and service is
condoned, and this application is heard as one of urgency in terms of
Rule
6(12).
1.2
The application is dismissed on the basis that the applicants have
failed to
establish the type of possession entitling them to invoke
the
mandament van spolie
.
1.3
The applicants in their personal capacities, joint and severally, the
one paying,
the other to be absolved, shall pay the respondents’
costs on the scale as between party and party, including counsel’s
fees taxed on Scale B.
2.
The
respondents disputed the issue of urgency, but I was of the view
that, given the intervening December holiday period, the matter
was
sufficiently urgent to warrant a decision on the merits. It was
also clearly in the interest of the Club and its members
that some
clarity be given as to the applicants’ position in the
particular circumstances of the matter.
[1]
3.
As is
apparent from the order itself, I was of the view that the
mandament
van spolie
was not available to the applicants, given the nature of the
possession that they were seeking to protect.
[2]
These are the reasons for my conclusion in this respect.
The
underlying principles
4.
It is trite
that the purpose of the
mandament
van spolie
is to protect possession without having first to embark upon an
enquiry, for example, into the question of the ownership of the
person dispossessed. Possession is an important juristic fact because
it has legal consequences, one of which is that the party
dispossessed is afforded the remedy of the
mandament
in addition to remedies such as interdict or a possessory action.
[3]
5.
The
requirements for obtaining of a
mandament
van spolie
are
well-known:
[4]
“
The mandament
van spolie is directed at restoring possession to a party which has
been unlawfully dispossessed. It is a robust remedy
directed at
restoring the status quo ante, irrespective of the merits of any
underlying contest concerning entitlement to possession
of the object
or right in issue; peaceful and undisturbed possession of the thing
concerned and the unlawful despoilment thereof
are all that an
applicant for a mandament van spolie has to show.
”
6.
The
mandament
’s
focus is thus on possession, not ownership or the right to possess.
It seeks to preserve the
status
quo ante
and
prevent resort to self-help. It is a remedy to preserve orderly
judicial process and does not secure substantive rights. To
succeed,
the applicant must prove two requirements:
[5]
6.1
First, peaceful and undisturbed possession at the time of
dispossession: Possession
is established by physical control and the
intention to possess.
6.2
Second,
unlawful deprivation of possession by the respondents: Spoliation
occurs when dispossession happens without the consent
of the
possessor, regardless of how it is effected (for example, by force,
deceit, or stealth).
[6]
7.
Although
the
mandament
van spolie
originally
protected only the physical possession of movable or immovable
property, the remedy has been extended to provide a remedy
to protect
so-called
"quasi-possession"
of
certain incorporeal rights, such as those of servitude.
[7]
It is, however, well settled that not all incorporeal rights can be
the subject of spoliation.
8.
The Supreme
Court of Appeal has confirmed
[8]
that the
mandament
van spolie
does
not have a catch-all function to protect the
quasi-possessio
of all
kinds of rights, irrespective of their nature. The
mandament
is not
the appropriate remedy where contractual rights are in dispute, or
where specific performance of contractual obligations
is claimed. Its
purpose is the protection of
quasi-possessio
of
certain rights.
9.
Consequently, the nature of the professed right, even if it
need not
be proved, must be determined (or the right must be characterised) to
establish whether its
quasi-possessio
is deserving of
protection by the
mandament.
Possession of mere personal
rights (or the exercise of personal rights) is not protected by the
mandament.
10.
The Supreme
Court of Appeal has thus held that where an order is sought
essentially to compel specific performance of a contractual
right to
resolve a contractual dispute, the
mandament
is not
available
,
[9]
and
there is no authority for an extension of the remedy to such
cases.
[10]
The rights
that flow from a contractual nexus between the parties are
insufficient for the purposes of the
mandament,
as they
are purely personal, and a spoliation order, in effect, would amount
to an order of specific performance in proceedings
in which a
respondent is precluded from disproving the merits of the applicant's
claim for possession.
[11]
11.
Moreover,
the
mandament
protects only possession, and not access.
[12]
12.
A
spoliation order is a final order, and the degree of proof and the
onus on the applicant remain unchanged:
[13]
“
Where a final
order is sought in an application and there are disputes of fact on
the papers, then the matter can be resolved on
the facts stated by
respondent together with the admitted facts in the applicant's
affidavits… In the first paragraph of
the headnote in the case
of Nienaber v Stuckey
1946
AD 1049
,
the test is set out as follows:
‘
Where the
applicant asks for a spoliation order he must make out not only a
prima facie case, but must satisfy the Court on the
admitted or
undisputed facts, by the same balance of probabilities as is required
in every civil suit, of the facts necessary for
his success in the
application
.’”
13.
For the
purposes of the present matter, it is further well settled that the
constitution of a voluntary association is a contract
entered into by
its members. The relationship between a voluntary association and its
members is thus contractual in nature.
[14]
The
applicants seek to protect personal rights
14.
There are many accusations and recriminations on the papers but the
background
to this matter is essentially common cause. It is
not in dispute that since 15 January 2025, the Club's squash
facilities
have been open and accessible to all members of the Club
in good standing.
15.
The applicants used to be members of the Club’s committee
(established
under the Club’s constitution as it stood at the
time) that managed the operations of the Club’s squash section,
until
they were suspended as Club members in November 2024, and
subsequently lost their respective memberships at the Club. The
applicants say that the act of spoliation occurred when the
respondents locked the squash facilities on 19 December 2024, and
refused to let the applicants have access thereto.
16.
The loss of
membership came about as follows. On 4 November 2024 a Special
General Meeting of the members of the Club was held,
at which a new
constitution was duly adopted. The applicants deny that the new
constitution was validly adopted. On
the same date, the Club's
executive committee took a decision to suspend the applicants'
respective memberships of the Club. On
19 December 2024 the executive
committee took a further decision not to renew the memberships of the
first to fourth applicants.
A further decision was taken by the
executive committee on 6 January 2025 not to renew the memberships of
the remaining applicants.
The validity of these decisions is in
dispute.
[15]
17.
It is common cause that the Club is a voluntary association and, in
terms of
the Club's constitution, only members of the Club are
entitled to the use of and access to the Club's facilities, including
the
squash facilities. Non-members do not enjoy such rights.
Consequently, when the applicants' respective memberships were
not
renewed, they lost any entitlement to the use of and access to the
Club's squash facilities.
18.
It does not assist the applicants to say that because they contest
the validity
of the new constitution and of the decisions to suspend
them and not to renew their memberships of the Club, they
"regard
themselves"
as members of the Club. They are, as a fact, no
longer members of the Club.
19.
The nub of
the matter is whether the· applicants have established, on the
basis of undisputed facts, that they were in possession
of the Club's
squash courts at the relevant time, that is, prior to being deprived
thereof because of the loss of their respective
memberships of the
Club.
[16]
20.
The applicants argue that they do not have to prove that they have a
right to
possession or that their possession was or will be lawful.
In the current matter this would mean that the disputes relating to
whether the applicants remain members of the Club are irrelevant for
the determination of the application.
21.
As a basic
statement of the law in relation to spoliation applications generally
this is undoubtedly correct,
[17]
but what the applicants seek to ignore is the nature of the
“possession” that they wish to protect in the particular
circumstances of this matter. They are asking the Court to
disregard the fact that the right of access to the Club's facilities
is an incident of membership and arises solely because of the
contract that exists between the Club and its members (that is, the
constitution).
22.
Consequently, the rights associated with membership (including
access to the Club's facilities) are purely contractual in nature.
The rights are personal in nature. What the applicants are
seeking is thus not the restoration of possession, but specific
performance of what they contend are their contractual rights. It is
clear from the authorities referred to above that such relief
falls
outside of the ambit of a spoliation order.
23.
The applicants argue that they have specifically pleaded a loss of
their physical
possession of the squash facilities. For this
reason, they say that the fact that an order restoring such
possession would
effectively restore their membership rights is
incidental and of no consequence.
24.
This is,
however, not the state of the law. The applicants are seeking
to disregard the contractual position of the parties,
and are asking
the Court to assume that they might have no contractual rights at all
to access the Club's squash courts, but are
nevertheless entitled to
claim the benefits of membership. The mere fact that the applicants
might or might not have had a right,
derived from a contract with the
Club, to make use of and even manage the Club's squash facilities as
part of a subcommittee under
the old constitution, does not amount to
possession for the purposes of establishing an entitlement to the
mandament
van spolie
because
the mere right to use property does not amount to possession:
[18]
“
The mere fact
that the applicant might or might not have had a right, derived from
a contract which it entered into with the respondent,
to make use of
the parking area in question, including the parking bays to be found
in the designated area, did not, in my view,
amount to a
'possession', as envisaged in the authorities, of such designated
area for the purposes of establishing an entitlement
to the mandament
van spolie. …
…
In the
present case the applicant asks for an order ordering the respondent
to supply water to him. The applicant has never had
possession of the
water. He cannot therefore found his claim on loss of physical
possession. However, it has been held that also
"the possession
of incorporeal rights is protected against spoliation" …
In truth
the mandament van spolie is not concerned with the
protection or restoration of rights at all. Its aim is to
restore the
factual possession of which the spoliatus has
been unlawfully deprived. The question of the unlawfulness of
the spoliatus'
possession is not enquired into at all . . .
…
If
the protection given by the mandament van spolie were to be held to
extend to the exercise of rights in the widest sense then
supposedly rights such as the right to performance of a
contractual obligation would have to be included - which would be
to
extend the remedy beyond its legitimate field of application and
usefulness
. …
It seems to me that,
superficially attractive as Mr Kuschke SC's forceful
argument may be in regard to the question of
spoliation, it amounts
to no more than an attempt by the applicant, under the guise of an
alleged spoliation, to enforce rights
which it claims to have in
terms of its contract with the respondent in relation to the
designated area.
It does not assist to seek to
disregard the contractual position of the parties and to assume, for
the purposes of the spoliation
argument, that the applicant might
have no contractual rights at all to occupy the designated area, but
yet be entitled to claim
the benefits of a spoliation order.
This to my mind only serves to confuse the true issue….
”
25.
The
position is clearly illustrated, too, by the discussion in
Blendrite
(Pty) Ltd and another v Moonisami and another
:
[19]
“
[19] The crisp
issue in both the court of first instance and on appeal in the
present matter is thus
whether the prior access to an email
address and company network and/or server amounted to
quasi-possession of an incorporeal which
qualified for protection by
a spoliation order
. The case most closely resembling the
present one is this court's decision in Telkom SA v Xsinet (Pty)
Ltd. In
that matter, the appellant disconnected the
respondent's telephone and bandwidth systems when a dispute arose as
to whether the
respondent owed money for a service. This court held
that the receipt of the telecommunications service arose from a
personal right
in contract. The use of the bandwidth and telephone
service was not an incident of possession of the premises from which
the respondent
operated. The appeal against the spoliation order
succeeded and the order was set aside.
[20] In the present
matter, the prior use of the email address and server was not an
incident of possession of movable or immovable
property on the part
of the first respondent. This was not even alleged. The first
respondent did not possess any movable or immovable
property in
relation to his erstwhile use of the server or email address.
Any
entitlement to use the server and email address is wrapped up in the
contested issue of whether the first respondent remains
a director of
Blendrite, and might relate to the terms of his contract of
employment. It is a personal right enforceable, if at
all, against
Blendrite
. I can see no basis for distinguishing the
present matter from that of Telkom, by which we are bound unless
we are of the
view that it is clearly wrong and requires to be set
right. For the reasons aforesaid that decision is consonant with
prior jurisprudence
and correct. The first respondent's prior use did
not amount to quasi-possession of incorporeal property. It is
therefore not protectable
by way of the mandament. As such, the
court of first instance erred in granting spoliatory relief.
”
26.
In the present matter, the applicants’ use and possession (or
control,
as they put it) of the squash facilities are “
wrapped
up in the contested issue
” of whether their memberships of
the Club were validly terminated. These are personal rights,
enforceable, if at all,
against the Club.
27.
As
indicated, too, the
mandament
protects
possession, not access.
[20]
The applicants are, in truth, seeking to have their access to the
squash facilities restored. The fact that they wish
to have
access because they – as they argue – need to perform
various administrative and maintenance services in relation
to the
squash facilities at the Club – does not change the position.
It therefore does not assist them to argue, as
they do, that they
require restoration of control of (“
and
not so much access to
”)
the squash facilities.
The
applicants shared access to the facilities with all members of the
Club
28.
There is a further hurdle in the applicants’ way.
29.
To be
protected by the
mandament
possession
need not be exclusive,
[21]
but
it has been held
[22]
that
where multiple parties have access, the nature of the possession is
watered down to such an extent that it ceases to be the
kind of
possession that is required for purposes of the
mandament
.
30.
This is so
because the real purpose of the
mandament
is to
prevent breaches of the peace.
[23]
If someone is in exclusive possession and exercises such possession,
then deprivation thereof may lead to a breach of the peace
but no
such breach would in the ordinary course of events take place where a
large number of persons have access, rather than possession,
of the
property in question.
31.
The
remarks in
De
Beer v Zimbali Estate Management Association
[24]
are apposite in the present matter in relation to the rights of
access by members of the Club:
“
Although
possession can be shared, the cases relating to the joint possession
of keys, illustrate that the access to keys for two
or more real
possessors is intended to be to the exclusion of others. If the
alleged possession by applicant to the whole of the
Zimbali estate,
was to be to the exclusion of the real owners I would have more
sympathy for her
.”
32.
It is common cause that all members of the Club, in particular
members of the
Club's squash section have access to the Club's squash
facilities. The applicants do not allege that they ever had exclusive
use
of or access to the Club's squash facilities.
33.
Viewed in
its proper context, the applicants’ situation in the present
matter is manifestly not one in which the
mandament
can come to their rescue. The applicants have not established
the requisite possession entitling them to relief by way of
the
mandament
van spolie:
[25]
Conclusion
34.
In essence, this application relates to a dispute about the control
of the squash
section of the Club. It is not about regaining
possession of the Club's squash facilities. What the applicants
are
seeking is the restoration of their membership rights and the
incidents of membership, with the privileges and benefits that such
a
position would afford them. They seek to enforce rights which
they claim to have in terms of a contract (whether the new
or the old
constitution) with the Club in relation to the Club's squash
facilities.
35.
These rights, in my view, form part of the category of “possession”
that cannot be obtained through the mechanism of the
mandament van
spolie.
On the authorities referred to above, the
applicants are as a matter of law not entitled to a spoliation order
to enforce
what is in truth a dispute about whether the applicants
are entitled to specific performance of their alleged contractual
rights.
Costs
36.
There was no reason why costs should not follow the result.
37.
Each of the parties sought costs on the scale as between attorney and
client
(the applicants essentially because they had attempted,
unsuccessfully, to negotiate with the respondents prior to the
institution
of this application, and the respondents because they
regarded the case as being without merit from the outset), but I did
not
regard the matter as justifying punitive costs. In the
exercise of my discretion under Rule 67A I was of the view that the
applicants should pay the respondents’ costs on a party and
party scale, with counsel’s fees taxed on Scale B.
Order
38.
For these reasons, I granted the order
referred to at the outset.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances
:
For
the applicants
:
Mr C. Bosch, instructed by De Klerk & Van Gend Inc. Attorneys
For
the respondents
: Ms
M. Adhikari, instructed by Werksmans Attorneys
[1]
See
t
he
app
roach
in
Tau
Mining Contractors (Pty) Ltd v Aveng Moolmans (Pty) Ltd and another
[2024]
ZANCHC 103
(1 November 2024) at para [23].
[2]
In
the answering papers the respondent disputed the applicants’
locus
standi
,
because they were no longer members of the Club. The issue of
standing is interlinked with whether the applicants were
entitled to
invoke the
mandament
at all, and I therefore do not deal with it separately.
[3]
Shoprite
Checkers Ltd v Pangbourne Properties (Pty) Ltd
1994 (1) SA 616
(W) at 619E-F.
[4]
Van
Rhyn and others NNO v Fleurbaix Farm (Pty) Ltd
2013 (5) SA 521
(WCC) at para [7].
[5]
On a balance
of probabilities. See
Yeko
v Qana
1973 (4) SA 735
(A) at 739E-G.
[6]
Stocks
Housing (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Chief Executive Director, Department of
Education and Culture Services, and others
1996 (4) SA 231
(C) at 240B-D.
[7]
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
1989
(1) SA 508
(A) at 514D-516E.
[8]
See,
for example,
First
Rand Ltd t/a Rand Merchant Bank and another v Scholtz NO and others
2008
(2) SA 503
(SCA) at para [13].
[9]
Telkom
SA Ltd v Xsinet (Pty) Ltd
2003
(5) SA 309
(SCA) at para [14]; and see
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019
(5) SA 386
(SCA) at paras (14) and [22].
[10]
Telkom
SA Ltd v Xsinet (Pty) Ltd supra
at
para [14].
[11]
Eskom
Holdings supra
at para [22].
[12]
De
Beer v Zimbali Estate Management Association (Pty) Ltd and another
2007 (3) SA 254
(N) at para [54].
[13]
Chopper
Worx (Pty) Ltd and another v WRC Consultation Services (Pty) Ltd
2008
(6) SA 497
(C) at para [12].
[14]
Natal
Rugby Union v Gould
1999 (1) SA 423
(SCA) at 440F-G: “
The union is
a voluntary association. On long standing authority the constitution
of such a body is a contract entered
into by its members.
Whether Parkinson's having remained chairman vitiated his election
must therefore be determined by reference
to the terms of that
contract.”
See
also
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II (RF) NPC v
Singh and others
2019 (4) SA 471
(SCA) at para [19].
[15]
I express no view
on the merits of the applicants’ loss of membership
because it
is not necessary and, in any event, is an issue for another forum,
such as a court considering an application for
judicial review,
should the applicants decide to launch such an application in due
course.
[16]
Pangbourne
Properties supra
at
621I-J and 623E-F.
[17]
The
applicants rely upon
I
vanov
v North West Gambling Board and others
2012
(6) SA 67
(SCA) at para {25] (involving the seizure of gambling
machines and equipment);
Yeko
v Qana
1973
(4) SA 735
(A) at 739E-F (involving the possession and occupation of
business premises (with movables) from which the respondent had been
trading);
Mutale
and another v Forte and others
[2021]
ZAGPJHC 573 (19 October 2021) at paras [12]-[13] (involving the
occupation of residential property); and
Lottering
v Palm
2008
(2) SA 553
(O) at 555J-556A (involving the respondent’s
building of a wall on a portion of land in the applicant’s
possession).
[18]
See
the discussion in
Pangbourne
Properties supra
at 622C-623G. Emphasis added.
[19]
2021 (5) SA 61
(SCA) at paras [19]-[20]. Emphasis added.
[20]
De
Beer supra
at para [54].
[21]
Pangbourne
supra
at 620E-F.
[22]
See
De
Beer supra
at para [54].
[23]
See
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security and others
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) at para [12].
[24]
De
Beer supra
at para [56].
[25]
Pangbourne
Properties supra
at 623F-G.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Abrahams and Others v De Wet (Appeal) (A249/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 187 (30 April 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 187High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Abrahams v City of Cape Town (25026/2011) [2025] ZAWCHC 173 (22 April 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 173High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Abrahams v Muslim Judicial Council (MJC) [SA] and Others (1986/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 52 (22 February 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 52High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Abrahams v S (A188/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 147 (20 May 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 147High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Strydom N.O and Others v Le Roux (A07/25) [2025] ZAWCHC 509 (3 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 509High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar