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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2025] ZAWCHC 276
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## Body Corporate of Mooiverwacht Scheme No SS61/1988 v Swart (2025/050045)
[2025] ZAWCHC 276 (2 July 2025)
Body Corporate of Mooiverwacht Scheme No SS61/1988 v Swart (2025/050045)
[2025] ZAWCHC 276 (2 July 2025)
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sino date 2 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 2025-050045
In the matter between
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF MOOIVERWACHT
APPLICANT
SCHEME NO. SS61/1988
AND
IRVIN
JOHNSON SWART
RESPONDENT
Heard:
27 June 2025
Delivered:
02 July 2025
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
ORDER:
(a) The rule
nisi
issued on 9 April 2025 and lapsed on 11 June 2025 is revived and
extended to the date to be arranged in accordance with clause
(b) of
this order.
(b) Within 5 court days
of this order, the parties shall arrange a date suitable to both in
consultation with the Registrar responsible
for the semi-urgent roll
as the return date for the rule
nisi.
(c) No cost order is
made.
[1] This is an opposed
urgent application for the revival of a rule
nisi
which was
discharged on the return date, 11 June 2025. The rule
nisi
was
issued on an
ex parte
basis on 9 April 2025. It was discharged
due to non-enrollment of the matter for hearing. The applicant prayed
that the rule be
revived pending enrolment and finalization of the
return date therein on the semi-urgent or opposed roll or as
anticipated by the
respondent.
[2] The rule operated as
an interim interdict pending the finalization of action proceedings
between the parties, and prohibited
the respondent and/or his agents,
employees, contractors and the like, from accessing or making ingress
onto the applicant’s
property; effecting any demolition or
building works on or to the border between the applicant’s
property and that of the
respondent and that the respondent and/or
his agents, employees, contractors and the like, were compelled to
restore the boundary
wall between the parties’ properties and
parts already demolished on 9 April 2025 and to cease with the
removal of trees
belonging to the applicant.
[3] The parties were
engaged in settlement negotiations which failed on 17 June 2025. When
the negotiations failed, the respondent
proceeded to prepare
foundations and to build supporting pillars for the intended boundary
wall for which the respondent has approved
building plans. The
respondent advised the applicants of what he was doing and was
advised that the applicant intended bringing
this application and out
of respect for the court process he temporarily held further
construction over. There are action proceedings
currently pending
between the parties wherein the applicant claimed applicant’s
encroachment on his property, and the applicant
has a counterclaim of
acquisitive prescription in respect of the alleged encroachment. As
things stand, the respondent’s
approach is that he is building
a boundary wall which can be moved in due course, on his property,
and in terms of approved building
plans. The respondent demolished
the boundary wall which was the subject of the pending litigation.
The respondent’s reason
was that he did so after he was advised
by the City of Cape Town that his building plans were approved, that
his actions were not
unlawful or
mala fide
and that the wall
was situated on his property, and that the wall was erected by the
applicant unlawfully and without any building
plans.
[4] Rule 27(4) of the
Uniform Rules of Court provides as follows:
“
27
Extension of time and removal of bar and condonation
(4) After a rule
nisi
has been discharged by default of appearance by the applicant,
the court or a judge may revive the rule and direct that the rule
so
revived need not be served again.”
A
rule nisi
is an unusual indulgence to the applicant. It permits a court, at the
instance of unchallenged and untested averments of an applicant,
the
exception to condemn a respondent in their absence and without being
heard. It is an indulgence that pierces at the heart of
the sacred
principle of a court hearing the other side before deciding on an
issue. The rule allows the court to run against the
general grain of
fairness in the judicial process. Amongst others, it is for this
reason that the rule should be strictly temporary
and for a fixed
limited duration (
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Walsh
and Others
2009 (1) SACR 603
(T);
Does the life of a rule
nisi automatically extend on postponement of return date?
Sinazo
Ntshangase, De Rebus, May 1st, 2019, DR 10). It is solely the duty of
the applicant, on the return day, to bring to the
attention of the
court the existence of the rule to enable the court to make an
appropriate order to avoid the rule lapsing. The
applicant
omitted
to deal with the life of the rule on the return date.
[5] The hearing of an
application for the revival of a lapsed rule is not the right time to
show cause why the rule should not have
been made or should not be
made final. The time for such is the return or anticipated date. The
revival is limited to whether the
rule should be brought to life
again, to become active. Where a respondent, like in the present
case, has already filed opposing
papers, it is natural that they
would strive to have the issues crystallised in the rule itself,
adjudicated upon in the revival
application. This confuses issues.
The revival is at the discretion of the judge hearing the
application. The reasons for the default
of appearance or failure for
enrollment, the nature of the issues between the parties, the need to
maintain the status quo, prejudice
against any of the parties and the
interests of justice are some of the factors to consider.
[6] I for one, frown upon
legal practitioners throwing mud at each other or involving
themselves in what I call character assassination
of the other in
order to look good, including on the reasons why a rule lapsed.
Whilst there is a need to highlight and even address
dereliction of
duty or even sheer incompetence, we should never lose sight of the
fact that legal representatives act on the complex
paradox of the
duality of instructions and legal advice. A litigation strategy which
seemed simple, cost effective and achievable,
like the pursuit of
settlement out of court in a pending case, may suddenly and with the
change of heart of the other side, with
the benefit of hindsight,
appear complex, costly and beyond reach. In this matter there is
pending litigation involving the extent
of the two adjacent
properties of the parties, which litigation was initiated by the
respondent in action proceedings. The respondent
is aware that the
boundary is contested. The respondent proceeded to act in accordance
with his view of the boundary, and this
necessitated the applicant to
approach the courts to secure the rule. It may be so that the issue
by the Municipality to the respondent,
of approved plans for the
boundary wall may have fortified his views and change of heart on
settlement, but it did not resolve
the live disputes between the
parties. The two disputes are still live. The second dispute is
whether the respondent should be
stopped from proceeding with the
construction of the wall pending the determination on the boundary.
The first dispute is the correct
substantive boundary between the
parties. It is in the interests of justice that the two disputes, in
the absence of settlement
by the parties, be resolved by the courts.
The respondent was well within his rights to have a change of heart
during the settlement
negotiations after the return date, but he
cannot be heard to complain when such change brings about
consequences in the litigation
strategy of his adversary. Ordinarily
the applicant sought an indulgence from the court and would be liable
for the costs. However,
the respondent, in elevating the approved
plans to resolution of the dispute, and his hardened attitude to what
should be a simple
flow of process, cannot go unnoticed and without
any significance. For these reasons the order was made:
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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