Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 258South Africa
Parch Properties 72 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Summervale Lifestyle Estate Owner's Association (Leave to Appeal) (2025/040657) [2025] ZAWCHC 258 (20 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Parch Properties 72 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Summervale Lifestyle Estate Owner's Association (Leave to Appeal) (2025/040657) [2025] ZAWCHC 258 (20 June 2025)
Parch Properties 72 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Summervale Lifestyle Estate Owner's Association (Leave to Appeal) (2025/040657) [2025] ZAWCHC 258 (20 June 2025)
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sino date 20 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NUMBER: 2025-040657
In
the matter between
PARCH
PROPERTIES 72 (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
THE
TENANTS RESIDING IN SUMMERVALE
SECOND APPLICANT
GARDENS
LISTED IN ANNEXURE ‘FA2’
and
THE
SUMMERVALE LIFESTYLE ESTATE
RESPONDENT
OWNER’S
ASSOCIATION
JUDGMENT
Leave to appeal
Date
of hearing: 19 June 2025
Date
of judgment: 20 June 2025
BHOOPCHAND
AJ:
[1]
The Applicants apply for leave to appeal the judgment
of this Court
delivered on 6 May 2025. The grounds of appeal are too numerous to
mention. The Court acknowledges the Applicant’s
recital of
rules and the caselaw applicable to applications for leave to
appeal. The Respondents oppose the application.
[2]
The Applicants reminded the Court that paragraph
20 of the founding
affidavit was the nub of the application. Paragraph 20 relates to the
history of the alleged ‘quasi-possession’
of the
Respondent’s facilities and property for a prolonged period.
The situation changed five months before the institution
of the
application when the First Applicant and the Respondent concluded a
written facilities agreement. The Applicant submitted
that the
content of the paragraph was common cause.
[3]
The Applicant then referred the Court to paragraphs
7 and 11 of
the judgment and submitted that the content turned the law on its
head. Paragraph 7 referred to the judgment
of Adhikari AJ concerning
the membership of the First Applicant in the Respondent. Had the
First Applicant prevailed in that application,
it would have been
entitled to continue using the Respondent’s facilities. The
Applicants were obliged to agree with the
Respondent to ensure
further usage of the Respondent’s property and facilities.
continuity of usage. Adhikari AJ dismissed
the application, which is
on appeal to the SCA. The Court pointed out that the Applicant’s
use of the Respondent’s
facilities was contractual and
personal, and the
mandament
did not apply.
[4]
Paragraph
11 of the judgment is a factual account of the
Applicant’s position. They have not lost any right of
access to
their own landlocked properties. The Court does not understand how
the content of these paragraphs changes the law. The
mandament
is not
the appropriate remedy where contractual rights are in dispute, or
where specific performance of contractual obligations
is claimed,
although certain quasi-possessory rights are protected.
[1]
The Court was obliged to follow the dictum in the Abrahams decision.
[5]
The Applicant referred to an extract from LAWSA
which acknowledged
that Courts accept that the mandament should not be used to protect
personal rights which can be enforced by
contractual claims for
specific performance. The Applicant relied on the content, which
stated that it is not the right, but the
physical manifestation of
the rights which is protected. The unlawful interference with such
factual control establishes the breach
of the peace, which is
redressed by a spoliation order. Therefore, the better view is that
one should not enquire into the right
of use or a right of access
that had been breached, for this smacks of an investigation of the
merits of the case, which is not
countenanced in spoliation law. The
Applicant submitted that the contract is irrelevant. The merits issue
is for another
Court to decide.
[6]
The Respondent submitted that the judgment is correct.
The Applicants
premised their application on the facilities they enjoyed under the
contract. They were trying to enforce a contract
that had expired.
They had been denied their alleged membership in the Respondent. The
Abrahams
case confirms the principle that the law protects
possession, not access.
[7]
The Applicant wants to protect quasi-possession.
In
Abrahams
,
the Court referred to applicants who were seeking to disregard the
contractual position of the parties, and were asking the Court
to
assume that they might have no contractual rights at all to access a
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
does not amount to
possession to establish an entitlement to the
mandament van
spolie
. The mere right to use property does not amount to
possession.
[8]
The Applicants contend that the facilities use
agreement was an
interim measure to maintain the status quo, and the Court erred in
characterising the Applicants' possessory rights
as contractual. The
submission is surprising considering that the Applicants averred in
the founding affidavit that the parties
failed to reach an agreement
with the Respondent over a new facilities agreement. The new
agreement differed radically from the
old agreement, and the
Respondent refused to agree to a renewal of the old agreement. The
issue between the parties was over the
terms of the contract, not
over any possession or quasi-possession. (para 26 FA).
[9]
The Court has carefully considered the Applicant's
grounds for leave
to appeal. Section 17 raises the threshold for obtaining leave to
appeal a Court’s judgment. The Court
is nevertheless persuaded
that another Court would come to a different conclusion and that the
issues relating to contracts and
quasi-possession in the peculiar
circumstances of the facts of this case are compelling reasons why
the appeal should be heard.
ORDER
In
the premises, the Court makes the following order:
1. The
Applicants are granted leave to appeal the whole of the judgment to
the Full Bench of this division.
BHOOPCHAND
AJ
Acting
judge
High
Court
Western
Cape Division
Judgment was handed down
and delivered to the parties by e-mail on 20 June 2025
Applicant’s
Counsel: A
Ferreira
Instructed by
Boy Louw Inc
Respondent’s
Counsel: P van Eeden SC
Instructed by Marais
Muller Hendricks Inc
[1]
Abrahams
N.O and Others v Geldenhuys N.O and Others
(Reasons) (2025/001463)
[2025] ZAWCHC 78
(5 March 2025) at para 8
(Abrahams)
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