Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 32South Africa
Burglar Alarm & Remote Control Services CC v Brits (8917/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 32 (7 February 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Burglar Alarm & Remote Control Services CC v Brits (8917/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 32 (7 February 2024)
Burglar Alarm & Remote Control Services CC v Brits (8917/2019) [2024] ZAWCHC 32 (7 February 2024)
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sino date 7 February 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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FLYNOTES:
PROPERTY – Acquisitive prescription –
Position
of fence
–
Fence
encroaching on defendant’s property for entire length in
triangular strip – Erection of fence clear evidence
of
belief of person regarding his rights to land enclosed –
Exercised physical possession and through plaintiff’s
employees on its behalf and made permanent improvements –
Plaintiff proving that it and its predecessors-in-title possessed
disputed strip of land openly, as owner, for 30-year period –
Plaintiff is declared to be the owner by acquisitive
prescription
–
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
number: 8917/2019
In
the matter between:
BURGLAR
ALARM & REMOTE CONTROL
SERVICES
CC
Plaintiff
and
WERNER
BRITS
Defendant
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
7 FEBRUARY 2024
(delivered electronically
via email)
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This is a dispute over a triangular strip of land along the common
boundary of the respective parties’
properties, visually marked
by a wire fence that does not follow the cadastral boundary. The
plaintiff alleges that it has
acquired ownership of the strip of land
– which is on its side of the fence - by way of acquisitive
prescription. The
defendant disagrees.
2.
Acquisitive prescription
is an original method of acquisition because the co-operation or
permission of the legal predecessor is
not required to acquire
ownership in this manner. A possessor acquires ownership
automatically and
ex
lege
the
moment it satisfies all the requirements
of
prescription. Ownership is not dependant on the property first being
registered in the acquirer's name in the Deeds Office.
[1]
3.
Acquisitive prescription is regulated by the Prescription Act 18 of
1943, as well as the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
. Since the parties’
respective erven were created in 1971, the 1943 Act has no
application. The 1969 Act which came into
operation on 1 December
1970 applies. Section 1 provides that "
... a person shall by
prescription become the owner of a thing which he has possessed
openly and as if he were the owner thereof
for an uninterrupted
period of thirty years or for a period which, together with any
periods for which such thing was so possessed
by his predecessors in
title, constitutes an uninterrupted period of thirty years
."
4.
The dispute arose around
22 March 2019.
Since the relevant period for acquisitive prescription
in terms of section 1 of the 1969 Act is 30 years, the question for
purposes of the declaratory order sought by the plaintiff is whether
the fence had been regarded as the boundary between the parties'
properties for 30 years prior to the service of the summons on the
defendant on 27 May
2019.
[2]
In other words, by the time the action was instituted, had the fence
had been regarded as the boundary for long enough to
have enabled the
plaintiff and its predecessors-in-title to have acquired ownership of
the strip of land between the fence and
the cadastral boundary by way
of acquisitive prescription?
5.
In his plea the defendant denies that the plaintiff acquired the land
in question by acquisitive prescription.
The defendant seeks, by way
of a counterclaim, an order that the plaintiff “
remove the
encroachment and make good the land upon which it encroaches”.
The question to be answered in relation to the counterclaim is
whether the fence had been regarded as the boundary for 30 years
prior to the delivery of the defendant's counterclaim on 27 June
2019. This is because the plaintiff is the party in possession
of the land (it being on the plaintiff’s side of the fence),
and in terms of section 4(1) of the 1969 Act, prescription ran
until
interrupted by service of legal process claiming ownership of the
land on the plaintiff.
6.
The relevant evidence
furnished by the parties is summarised below. The legal
principles underpinning the determination of
the dispute are
canvassed thereafter.
[3]
7.
The plaintiff called four witnesses, namely Mr Leon Nabal, Mrs Martha
Nabal, Mr Pieter Houterman, and
Mr Otto Steinhofel. The
defendant himself testified, and called tow further witnesses, namely
Mr Willen van der Merwe and
Mr Ferdinand Cronje.
The
parties’ respective properties
Overview
8.
The plaintiff and the defendant own adjoining properties on the
Breede River, just south of Malgas. The
properties are known,
respectively, as erven 4[...]6 and 4[...]0 Malagas, and are situated
on the Malgas/lnfanta road. The
bulk of each of the properties
lies to the south of the road, with smaller portions on the Breede
river to the north of the road.
9.
The dispute between the parties arises from the fact that there is a
difference between the real or actual
boundary between their
properties, and a barbed-wire fence which constitutes (and has, on
the evidence, done so for many years)
a visible, physical boundary
between them. The real or actual boundary (the cadastral boundary)
between the properties is an invisible
straight line between two
beacons which were surveyed in 1971 to mark the corners of the
properties.
10.
At the back of the two
properties the wire fence coincides with the cadastral boundary. The
fence starts at the rear corner beacon
between the properties, which
is marked by a railway sleeper. The fence then runs parallel and very
close to - within a few centimetres
of - a dwelling situated near the
back of erf 4[...]6, the plaintiff's property.
[4]
As the fence runs, which it does in a straight line, it deviates from
the cadastral boundary at a rate of about 16mm per
metre, and
continues to do so for approximately 150m until it terminates at a
fence post at the Malgas/lnfanta road.
11.
Where the fence ends at
the fence post, at the corner of a low stone entrance wall marking
the entrance to the plaintiff’s
property, it is about 2.5m from
the cadastral boundary. From the drawings and photographs
submitted into evidence, it is
evident that the stone entrance
wall
[5]
(erected by the
plaintiff, as well as the landscaping done by the plaintiff in front
of the wall) on the western side of the driveway
into the plaintiff’s
property is on the defendant’s side of the cadastral boundary,
and the fence post is on the western
end of the western entrance
wall. The fence continues on the other side of the road, terminating
near the Breede
river.
[6]
12.
The fence thus encroaches for its entirely length onto erf 4[...]0
(the defendant’s property), cutting a long, triangular
strip of
land from the erf 4[...]0. The encroachment is imperceptible at
first, but gradually becomes more pronounced as it continues
onto the
river side of the road.
Ownership
of the plaintiff’s property over the years
13.
The ownership of the parties’ respective properties over the
years is not disputed. The relevant title deeds and
land
surveyor’s diagrams were handed in as evidence.
14.
It is common cause that
the plaintiff's property (erf 4[...]6 Malagas) was formed by the
consolidation of two properties, namely
erf 4[...]1 and erf 4[...]4
Malagas. Erf 4[...]1 had been surveyed and subdivided from erf 4[…]2
in 1971. Prior to
1971, erf 4[...]1 did not exist as a separate
parcel of land.
[7]
15.
Regarding erf 4[...]1: the plaintiff led evidence on the successive
ownership of erf 4[...]1 over the years. Erf 4[...]1
was
registered in the name of Mr Jan Dawid Lourens in 1972 in terms of
deed of transfer T69[…]. In 1977 Mr Lourens sold
and
transferred the property to Mr Mervyn Lorraine Olivier.
16.
By 1978, erf 4[...]1 had
a structure on it near its south-western corner. The structure
comprised various rooms, and one of its
outer walls was close to and
parallel with the boundary of what is now the defendant's property,
erf 4[...]0. In February
1978 plans were approved to extend the
existing structure on
erf
4[...]1
to
include further living
areas. The extensions were to both the north and south ends of the
existing building. The plan showed
the edge of the house
to
be
parallel
to
the
boundary of the
property. The extensions were subsequently built, although it
is unclear exactly when that work took place.
The wall on the
north-western section of the extension, after it was built, protruded
over the cadastral boundary and into what
is now erf 4[...]0, by
7cm.
[8]
17.
In January 1989 Mr Olivier sold erf 4[...]1 to Mrs Martha Emmerencia
Nabal, and it was transferred into the latter's name on
20 March
1989. The evidence (tendered by the plaintiff) of Mrs Nabal and her
husband, Mr Leon Nabal, indicates that the extensions
to the existing
structure on erf 4[...]1 had been built well before 1989.
18.
The plaintiff purchased erf 4[...]1 from Mrs Nabal on 14 October
1992, and took transfer of it on 9 February 1993. The evidence
of the
plaintiff's sole member, Mr Otto Steinhofel, was that the building
was old, and that he renovated the interior.
19.
As regards erf 4[...]4, the evidence was as follows: erf 4[...]4 was
created as a portion of erf 4[...]7 in 1997. The plaintiff
purchased
erf 4[...]4 on 18 October 1999 from Mr Manfred Bleier and took
transfer of it on 9 March 2000.
20.
Erven 4[...]1 and 4[...]4 were thereafter consolidated to form erf
4[...]6 Malagas – the plaintiff’s property.
21.
As indicated earlier, erf 4[...]1 is divided by the Malgas/lnfanta
road. On the small portion closer to the Breede River, Mr
Steinhofel
installed a windmill (a “
windpomp
”) shortly after
the plaintiff took transfer. He also installed a telephone line, and
an electricity cable along the fence.
He testified that all the
telephone and water lines, as well as the electricity cable, ran to
the house along the western boundary
of the property, close to the
existing fence between the parties’ properties. On the
relevant photographs these service
cables are to be seen virtually
underneath the fence.
22.
From about 2003 or 2004
onwards Mr Steinhofel upgraded the property to render it suitable for
use as a guest farm. He constructed
cottages to the left of the
entrance into the property, erected paddock fencing, and planted an
avenue of olive trees next to and
on either side of the driveway
leading up to his homestead.
[9]
He also built stone walls on either side of the entrance to the
driveway –
reference has been made earlier to the fact that the entrance wall on
the western side of the driveway into the
plaintiff’s property
is on the defendant’s side of the cadastral boundary.
Ownership
of the defendant’s property over the years
23.
The defendant's property (erf 4[...]0 Malagas) was surveyed and
subdivided from erf 4[…]2 in 1971, at the same time as
erven
4[…]9 and 4[...]1.
24.
Erf 4[...]0 was transferred to Mr Jan Dawid Lourens in 1972 in terms
of deed of transfer T65[…]. In 1982 Mr Lourens sold
and
transferred the property to Mr Johannes Marthinus Swanepoel in terms
of deed of transfer T35[…]. In 1988 it was acquired
by Mr
Hendrik Johannes Abraham Walters, who sold it to Mr Gordon Quinton
Morgenrood in 1989, it being transferred to the latter
in 1990. Mr
Morgenrood's deceased estate sold erf 4[...]0 to Mr Charl Ernest
Hubner and Ms Jenny Dirce Steinbauer in March 2005.
It was
transferred into their names in July 2005.
25.
The defendant purchased erf 4[...]0 from Mr Hubner and Ms Steinbauer
on 10 December 2018, and it was registered in his
name on 18
February 2019.
The
wire fence between the properties, and the plaintiff’s evidence
in respect thereof
26.
As indicated, the disputed boundary is the boundary between erf
4[...]1 (now part of erf 4[...]6) and erf 4[...]0. Although
erf
4[...]1 no longer exists as such, it is practical in the context of
the dispute to refer to it, and not to erf 4[...]6.
27.
During a survey conducted
on 22 March 2019 by land surveyor Mr Pieter Houterman,
[10]
the beacons of Erf 4[...]0 were detected and/or replaced (“
opgespoor
en/or
herplaas”,
in Mr
Houterman’s words). He discovered that the wire fence
between erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1 did not follow the cadastral
boundary between
them.
28.
Mr Houterman further
determined the encroachment to be in the shape of a long, thin
triangle. The fence and the beacon coincided
at the back of the erven
(near the existing building on erf 4[...]1) but the fence gradually
deviated from the cadastral boundary
until it reached the municipal
road near the entrances to the erven about 150m away. At that point
the fence encroached about 2.5
metres into erf
4[...]0.
[11]
29.
The discovery of the non-alignment of the fence and the cadastral
boundary on 22 March 2019 led to the parties' dispute.
30.
The wire fence between erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1 is old and rusted.
It has several strands of wire (the original strands were
barbed) and
metal rods and wooden posts. Many of the metal rods are thin, while
others are more substantial Y or I droppers.
The wooden posts
are round poles, or “
latte”.
The fence was
evidently intended to be a permanent structure.
31.
As indicated earlier, the fence is attached to a railway sleeper
constitutes the common southern corner beacon between erven
4[...]0
and 4[...]1, behind the house on erf 4[...]1. It then runs parallel
to, and within a few centimetres of, the house, whereafter
it
continues to run up to the north-western entrance of erf 4[...]1 on
the Malgas/lnfanta road. It recommences on the other
side of the
road, terminating close to the Breede River. The two sections of the
fence are in a straight line.
32.
Mr Steinhofel testified on the plaintiff’s behalf that the
fence had never been moved after the plaintiff’s purchase
of
the property. It continued to exist in the same position it currently
occupies as when he had first visited erf 4[...]1 a few
months prior
to the plaintiff taking transfer. When he first visited the property,
the fence was rusted and looked old. Three photographs
which he took
of the driveway and the house, with the fence in view, were submitted
into evidence. They depict a straight
and sturdy, if rusted and
clearly old at certain junctures, fence.
33.
Mr Steinhofel accepted, at the time of the plaintiff’s purchase
of the property, that the wire fence was the boundary
of erven
4[...]0 and 4[...]1, and he regarded it as such. He repaired it from
time to time. On occasion, sheep had grazed in the
property and were
kept inside by the fence. Mr Steinhofel was, until March 2019,
unaware of any dispute about the boundary.
34.
The time period between
the plaintiff’s taking possession of the property (in 1991) and
the arising of the dispute with the
defendant (in 2019) is 28 years.
If Mr Steinhofel's evidence is accepted (and there is in my view no
reason why it should not be),
then the question arises whether the
fence had been regarded as the boundary between erven 4[...]0 and
4[...]1 from April/May 1989.
[12]
If so, it would amount to a period of 30 years, the requisite period
for the purposes of acquisitive prescription.
35.
The evidence of Mr Leon
Nabal
[13]
was that the same
fence was there when he had first visited erf 4[...]1 in January
1989. It was not new, but it was “
sturdy”.
Mr Nabal confirmed that
the fence had commenced at the railway sleeper and had run close
along the side of the house, and that it
had then continued in a
straight line down to the Breede River, broken only by the
Malgas/lnfanta road.
36.
He testified that when he
wanted to extend the jetty on the river edge of erf 4[...]1 he looked
for the corner beacon on the riverside
portion of erf 4[...]1 with
the help of the local shopkeeper, and found a peg which he believed
to be the beacon (and which the
local shopkeeper informed him was the
beacon) buried in the ground exactly in line with, and in the ground
below, the
fence.
Mr Nabal testified that when he returned
[14]
to erf 4[...]1 about month prior to the trial, the fence was where it
had always been. He said that he told Mr Steinhofel
about the
peg which was in line with the fence, and excavated it to show to Mr
Steinhofel. Mr Nabal identified this peg
as
a 12mm peg on one of the photographs tendered into evidence.
37.
Mr Steinhofel testified how, after the dispute arose, one of the
plaintiff's labourers (one “Nathi”) had informed
him that
there was another peg in addition to the true beacon which had been
unearthed by Mr Houterman. Nathi then dug and found
the same peg
which Mr Nabal had found more than 25 years before. Mr Steinhofel
confirmed that it was the same peg which Mr Nabal
had pointed it out
to him when he had recently visited the property.
38.
Mrs Nabal's evidence was that she had also recently visited erf
4[...]1, and that the fence appeared to be the same as the fence
which had existed between even 4[...]1 and 4[...]0 when she had owned
the former. She testified that her children had played
in the
garden bounded by the fence. Mr and Mrs Nabal both testified
that they had always regarded the fences around erf 4[...]1
as the
property's boundaries. No-one had ever suggested to them that the
fences were not its boundaries.
The
defendant’s pleaded case, and an assessment of the evidence
39.
The defendant’s
pleaded case
[15]
is based on
five contentions, namely that:
39.1.
at the time of the consolidation of erven
4[...]1 and 4[...]4 the
land surveyor (who was Mr Houterman) pointed out the true beacons
between erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1, and
the plaintiff was thus aware
thereof, alternatively, should reasonably have been aware thereof;
39.2.
any fencing near or along the boundary
between erven 4[...]0 and
4[...]1 was old paddock fencing in place before 15 October 1971;
39.3.
alternatively, the plaintiff or Mr Steinhofel
erected the fence
during or about 2010;
39.4.
the plaintiff concealed the true beacons;
and
39.5.
as a result, the defendant and his predecessors-in-title
were unaware
of the encroachment and did not know where the true beacons were.
40.
I shall return to these contentions after briefly setting out the
evidence led on the defendant’s behalf.
41.
Although the defendant
did give evidence, he could not give any evidence regarding the
purpose or the positioning of the fence prior
to March 2019.
[16]
He relied in that respect on the evidence of Mr Francois van der
Merwe and Mr Ferdi
Cronje.
42.
Mr van der Merwe testified that he had stayed on the plaintiff's
property while he worked as a security officer for the plaintiff
from
about 2005 or 2006 to about 2006 or 2007. When he arrived at the
property, the stone entrance walls had already been built,
as had two
cottages and the paddock fencing.
43.
Mr van der Merwe said that the driveway and the fence looked similar
to those depicted on some of the recent photographs tendered
into
evidence on behalf of each of the parties. The avenue of olive trees
was planted along the entrance way during the time that
Mr van der
Merwe stayed there. He testified that thereafter, but for the size of
the olive trees, the driveway looked similar to
what it looks like on
a recent photograph showing the driveway and trees leading up to the
house. He testified that the olive trees
were on the left-hand side
of the fence as you drove into the property (that is, on the driveway
side of the fence) as shown in
the photograph. Mr van der Merwe
said that the fence started behind the house, that it ran alongside
the house, more or less
parallel to it and within a few centimetres
of it, and that it thereafter continued to run in a straight line
towards the road
and the river.
44.
Despite his evidence that the fence had continued to run in a
straight line, Mr van der Merwe testified that the fence had ended
up
somewhere near the middle of the stone wall entrance way, and not
where it currently ends, namely at a fence post at the edge
of the
stone wall. Where Mr van der Merwe placed the fence was about 1.5m or
2m from where it currently ends. The imaginary
cadastral
boundary line would have run along the other end of the stone wall
about 2.5 metres away.
45.
Mr van der Merwe also testified that there was a fence that ran
“
right up against”
the windmill on the river side
of the road, and that that portion of the fence and the fence on the
other side of the road lined
up in a straight line. Mr van der
Merwe testified that he once had to “
work through the fence”
to replace rubbers on the windmill. He did not know whether
there was a fence along the line where there is currently a fence
on
the river-side portion. He said that it was too overgrown at that
time for him to have known whether there was a fence there.
46.
Mr van der Merwe testified that he did not know if the fence had been
moved and that he did not move it, but he also testified
that he
presumed it had been moved, based on the photographs he has seen: as
indicated, he testified that the fence did not run
along the line it
currently does to end where it currently ends. He conceded,
however, that he had had no reason to give
any consideration to the
fence at the time he lived on the property, that he had been on the
property for only 2 or 3 years, and
that he had not gone and looked
at the fence again since leaving the property. His evidence was
based on what he saw on the
photographs used in evidence.
Although he had driven past the property many times subsequently, he
had not noticed that there
had been any change in the fence.
47.
I agree with counsel for the plaintiff’s criticisms of Mr van
der Merwe’s evidence. He refused to acknowledge
that he
could be mistaken, and remained adamant on the two points that he
apparently believed would assist the defendant, namely
where the
fence ended, and the alleged existence of a fence close to the
windmill. He attempted to suggest that the fence
had originally
been along or close to the cadastral boundary.
48.
There are many
improbabilities in his version. First, it was improbable, as Mr van
der Merwe conceded, that the windmill would have
been erected
[17]
virtually on top of a fence.
49.
Second, in about 1990 Mr Leon Nabal had observed that the fence on
the river side had been exactly in line with the peg which
he saw
again in April 2023, and the fence on the river side had lined up
exactly with the fence on the other side of the road.
If Mr Nabal is
to be believed (there is no reason not to) then the fence to the
south of the road was moved after the Nabals had
left the property.
No reason for this was, however, provided, and none seems to exist:
why would the fence have been moved
closer to the plaintiff’s
entrance way? Mr Steinhofel would have had no incentive to move the
fence closer to his driveway.
50.
Third, the fence would have had to have been moved back into the
exact position it had been when the Nabals had owned the plaintiff’s
property, because that was how Mr Nabal saw and remembered it.
51.
Fourth, if the fence ran parallel to the house and carried on
straight, then it ends up where it currently ends up (as Mr
Steinhofel,
Mr Nabal, and Mr Houterman all testified). It does
not end up where Mr van der Merwe suggested it did.
52.
Fifth, if the fence terminated where Mr van der Merwe says it
terminated in about the middle of the stone wall, then the fence
would have had to have deviated significantly somewhere close to the
stone entranceway. This is, however, inconsistent with Mr
van der
Merwe's testimony that the fence had been straight.
53.
Sixth, if the fence ran straight from the windmill through the middle
of the stone entranceway wall, it would have ended up
somewhere on
the hillside of erf 4[...]0, and not at the railway sleeper at the
back of the plaintiff’s property as it does.
54.
Seventh, on Mr van der Merwe’s version the fence would
have been on the wrong side of many of the olive trees planted on the
right-hand side of the plaintiff’s driveway. It is improbable
that Mr Steinhofel (or any landowner) would knowingly have
planted
his avenue of trees on neighbouring land.
55.
Eighth, the stone wall at the entrance way would have been built
beyond the apparent boundary of the plaintiff’s property,
and
would have continued for a metre or more along the boundary of erf
4[...]0, which is also improbable.
56.
Ninth, Mr van der Merwe's evidence of having to climb through a fence
to work on the windmill is unlikely given that the fence
was (on his
version) only on one side of the windmill, and it therefore would
have accessible (bushes notwithstanding) from another
side.
57.
Notably, Mr van der Merwe's evidence did not coincide with the
defendant's case either (to the extent that the defendant suggested
that the fence originally ran to the real north-east beacon). From
the defendant's perspective as it became clear over the course
of the
trial (namely that the fence had been the real boundary fence but had
been moved) Mr van der Merwe would therefore have
had to have been
mistaken about where the fence ended up in relation to the stone
wall, and where it ran in relation to the windmill.
58.
The answer to Mr van der
Merwe's evidence was provided when a photograph was put to him during
cross-examination, which appeared
to show (and which Mr Ferdinand
Cronje
[18]
later acknowledged
it showed) the fence post during the floods of 2008 in the position
in which it currently is.
59.
Mr van der Merwe's evidence was also contradicted by the concessions
eventually made by Mr Cronje, albeit that the latter was
an
unimpressive witness who changed versions when the shoe pinched.
Again, I agree with the plaintiff’s counsel’s
criticisms
of Mr Cronje’s evidence. He was a former employee of Mr
Steinhofel's (having eventually been dismissed) and appeared
antagonistic towards him. Mr Cronje had worked on the plaintiff’s
property on two occasions, from about 2010 or 2011 for
about 3 years,
and again (after about 2 years away) for about 4 years.
60.
Mr Cronje testified in
chief that the fence post at the stone wall at the Malgas/lnfanta
road had been in the same position as Mr
van der Merwe had testified.
He also testified that, like Mr van der Merwe, he too had had to
climb over or through a wire fence
to work on the windmill. He then
testified (still in chief) that he had been instructed by Mr
Steinhofel to move the fence into
the property of erf 4[...]0 so that
the service lines and cables running to the house on erf 4[...]1 were
within the fence. According
to Mr Cronje, the service lines (whose
location he denied knowing) would have run on erf 4[...]0's side of
the fence if it had
not been moved. He testified that when the
defendant had accidentally damaged the electrical cable
[19]
to Mr Steinhofel's house the cable had been located 2m into the
defendant’s property. Mr Cronje was requested to repair
the cable.
61.
It became unnecessary to
consider the improbability of Mr Steinhofel having run the services
to his house on the defendant’s
side of the fence because,
after Mr Cronje had seen the photograph of the fence post in the 2008
flood,
[20]
his evidence
changed. Although he vacillated from time to time, his evidence
during cross-examination culminated in the concession
that the fence
post’s current position is where it has always stood. He
testified that he never moved the fence anywhere
near the house, and
he never moved the fence anywhere else.
62.
Mr Cronje testified (in the end) that he might have taken out a few
fence poles but that was only so that holes could be dug
for new
trees, and that he had taken care to replace the fence poles in the
same place. He therefore confirmed that where the fence
currently
runs is where it has always run. His evidence that the electrical
cable which he had repaired had been 2m on the defendant’s
side
of the fence was contradicted by the defendant, since it was clear
from the defendant’s evidence that the cable had
been on the
cadastral boundary, on erf 4[...]1's side of the fence: the
defendant testified that work had to be done on both
sides of the
fence so as to repair the cable.
63.
It is useful to return to the defendant’s five pleaded
contentions against the background of the evidence set out above.
64.
As to the defendant’s first contention (that at the time of the
consolidation of erven 4[...]1 and 4[...]4 the land surveyor
had
pointed out the true beacons between erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1), both
Mr Houterman and Mr Steinhofel testified that this never
occurred.
There is no reason to disbelieve them. I agree in any event
with the plaintiff’s argument that, even had
the contention
been correct, it would not have mattered provided that the plaintiff
continued to possess the land up to the fence
in the manner required
for acquisitive prescription.
65.
The defendant's second (any fencing near or along the boundary
between erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1 was old paddock fencing in
place
before 15 October 1971) and third (the plaintiff or Mr Steinhofel
erected the fence during or about 2010) contentions are
mutually
exclusive, albeit that they are couched in the alternative.
There was no evidence to support the second contention,
and it is
inconsistent with the presence of the well constructed fence Mr
and Mrs Nabal saw when they visited the property
in early 1989. Also,
it would have been highly coincidental that the paddock fencing just
happened to follow, almost exactly, the
actual boundary. The present
fence was clearly intended to be a permanent boundary fence.
66.
Similarly, no evidence was adduced to support the third contention;
and it is inconsistent with the evidence of Mr and Mrs Nabal,
as well
as Mr Steinhofel. It is also inconsistent with the expert opinion of
Mr Houterman, namely that the fence had existed for
more than 30
years.
67.
The defendant's fourth contention is that the plaintiff concealed the
true beacons. He provided nothing in support of this allegation,
which was in any event refuted by the evidence. It would also have
been legally irrelevant, provided the plaintiff possessed the
strip
of land openly and as if it were the owner thereof.
68.
The defendant's fifth
contention depends on proof of the factual allegation underpinning
the fourth contention, namely that the
plaintiff concealed the true
beacons. Assuming, however, the correctness of the defendant's
factual allegation, his fifth contention
is that the plaintiff's
concealment of the true beacons caused him and his
predecessors-in-title “
to
be uninformed of such encroachment”
and
to have “
no
knowledge as to the true
beacons”.
Even if
the fifth contention is true (that the defendant and his
predecessors-in-title were unaware of the encroachment and did
not
know where the true beacons were), this does not help him. This is
because a lack of knowledge on the part of the true owner
is
irrelevant: an owner's inability to know that his property is being
occupied by another is no defence to a claim of acquisitive
prescription.
[21]
69.
The defendant's real case - as it emerged during the trial - was that
the fence had been moved in about 2010. The suggestion
that the fence
could have been moved was made to Mr Nabal during cross-examination.
He responded that he believed he would
have noticed even if the fence
had been moved only a little way. Subsequently, during the
cross-examination of Mr Steinhofel, it
was pertinently put to him
that the fence had been moved by Mr Cronje. Mr Steinhofel
denied this. This case had not
been foreshadowed in either the
pre-litigation correspondence from the defendant's attorney, or the
defendant's plea or counterclaim.
70.
The parties have, to a limited extent, presented mutually destructive
versions. Given the retraction by Mr Cronje, the only
evidence
inconsistent with the plaintiff's case was Mr van der Merwe's
evidence regarding the north-west fence post.
71.
The approach when
determining which of two mutually destructive versions should be
accepted was restated in
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Group
Ltd
and
another v
Martell
et
Cie and
others:
[22]
“…
To
come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make
findings on (a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses;
(b)
their reliability; and (c) the probabilities. As to (a), the court's
finding on the credibility of a particular witness will
depend on its
impression about the veracity of the witness. That in turn will
depend on a variety of subsidiary factors, not necessarily
in order
of importance, such as (i) the witness' candour and demeanour in the
witness-box, (ii) his bias, latent and blatant, (iii)
internal
contradictions in his evidence, (iv) external contradictions with
what was pleaded or put on his behalf, or with established
fact or
with his own extracurial statements or actions, (v) the probability
or improbability of particular aspects of his version,
(vi) the
calibre and cogency of his performance compared to that of other
witnesses testifying about the same incident or events.
As to
(b), a witness' reliability will depend, apart from the factors
mentioned under (a)(ii), (iv) and (v) above, on (i) the opportunities
he had to experience or observe the event in question and (ii) the
quality, integrity and independence of his recall thereof. As
to (c),
this necessitates an analysis and evaluation of the probability or
improbability of each party's version on each of the
disputed issues.
In the light of its assessment of (a), (b) and (c), the court will
then, as a final step, determine whether the
party burdened with the
onus of proof has succeeded in discharging it. The hard case, which
will doubtless be the rare one, occurs
when a court's credibility
findings compel it in one direction and its evaluation of the general
probabilities in another. The
more convincing the former, the less
convincing will be the latter. But when all factors are equipoised
probabilities
prevail.
”
72.
In
Body
Corporate of Dumbarton Oaks v Faiga
[23]
the trial court was
admonished for having ignored the probabilities and for not having
had regard to the expert evidence regarding
the probabilities:
“
The occurrence,
Joubert AJ found
...
was
unexpected and remains unexplained. It was not maintenance-related.
The undisputed expert evidence is that such 'once-off occurrence'
is
highly improbable and 'very, very unlikely' ....
…
. The Judge's
failure to decide the case without regard to the wider probabilities
is a clear misdirection and entitles us to reassess
Mrs Shiloane's
evidence. It was also wrong of the Judge to consider that a
non-acceptance of her evidence of necessity requires
a finding that
she is a deliberate liar and perjurer.... That is an emotional
approach. In
a
civil
trial the question is whether her evidence is, on the probabilities
correct. Few witnesses whose evidence is not accepted
can be
described as deliberate liars and perjurers .... In view of the
technical evidence recited earlier, Mrs Shiloane's evidence
is
inherently improbable ....
…
. In my
judgment the Court
a
quo
should have held that the plaintiff had failed to prove on
a
balance
of probabilities that the cause of the incident was as described by
Mrs Shiloane.”
73.
It is clear from these
dicta
that the probabilities are
paramount.
74.
The present matter is not
a case where all factors are equipoised. I have indicated above
that Mr Van der Merwe's evidence
was implausible and contradictory.
The probabilities are stacked against it. By his own admission he had
not had any regard for
the fence while he worked at the plaintiff’s
property up until 2008, and he had not had any reason to think about
it until
recently. That his evidence was echoed in similar terms by
Mr Cronje (who, as far as credibility is concerned, did not make a
favourable
impression at all)
[24]
adds to the conclusion that it was rehearsed.
75.
In this case the
probabilities weigh heavily in the plaintiff's favour. In any
event, to succeed in establishing its version,
the plaintiff need not
prove that
its
version
is
the
only
possibility or
the
only reasonable
possibility, but only that it is
the
most readily apparent and acceptable conclusion.
[25]
Did
the plaintiff satisfy the requirements of acquisitive prescription?
76.
The plaintiff must prove four elements to establish that it has
become the owner of the strip of land:
76.1.
possession of the strip of land by it and
previous owners of erf
4[...]1;
76.2.
openly;
76.3.
as owners; and
76.4.
for an uninterrupted period of thirty years.
77.
It was held
[26]
that a plaintiff
prima
facie
satisfies
the requirements of
nec
vi, nec clam, nec precario
by
“
proving
peaceable and open occupation adversely to and, therefore, to the
exclusion of the right of the true owner for thirty years”
.
[27]
78.
Once a person
establishes the requirements for acquisitive prescription, he
establishes his ownership of the thing in question.
The former
owner cannot defeat the
claim by alleging an absence of negligence on his part, or by
alleging it was impossible for him to have
known that part of his
property was being occupied by another, or by alleging that because
of ignorance on is part he did not exercise
his rights of ownership
over the property in question.
[28]
79.
I turn to the individual requirements in the context of the evidence.
Possession
80.
The possession required
to establish ownership of land through acquisitive prescription is
possessio
civilis,
being
the physical control of the property
(detentio)
accompanied
by the intention of an owner
(animus
domini)
.
[29]
81.
The mental element of
possessio
civilis
(that
is, the “
intention
of an owner”)
is
expressed by the requirement of the 1969 Act that physical control be
exercised “
as
if he were the owner”
.
[30]
That aspect is considered separately below, under the requirement “as
owners”.
82.
Detentio
does
not require continual physical occupation. A person has
detentio
even if
he leaves the property but can resume occupation at any time. What is
required is that the person should exhibit the power
at his will to
deal with the property as he likes, and to exclude others.
[31]
The test for physical possession “
is
whether
a
reasonable
person would draw the inference that the occupation and use in
question established occupation of the unit claimed”.
[32]
83.
That the plaintiff (or
persons on its behalf) might not have walked over every inch of the
land (or even over any of it) does not
affect its right to rely on
prescription: “
It
is not necessary that every part of the area be occupied or used; in
some circumstances use of every square foot of an area would
be
impracticable, and the test is whether there
was
such use of the part or parts of the ground as amounts, for practical
purposes, to possession of the whole.”
[33]
84.
Occupation can be
established merely by showing, as in the present matter, that the
land in question formed part of and was treated
for all practical
purposes as a single physical entity. It was incorporated into erf
4[...]1 by way of the fence, which constitutes
use adverse to the
true owner.
[34]
This
establishes at least
prima
facie
proof
of possession. An observer at any time while the fence was in
position would have formed the impression that the strip
of land was
part of the plaintiff’s property.
[35]
85.
It is clear from the
evidence that the plaintiff has exercised physical possession of the
strip of land since purchasing erf 4[...]1
through Mr Steinhofel, and
through the plaintiff’s employees on its behalf. The plaintiff
also made permanent improvements
to the strip by planting trees,
moving rocks, and laying down pipes for services. That is the conduct
of someone who holds the
land in question as if he were the
owner.
[36]
86.
The defendant did not advance any evidence of his own in relation to
his own use and possession of the land, and was unable
to gainsay the
plaintiff's evidence.
Possessing
“openly”
87.
This requirement in
section 1 of the 1969 Act corresponds with the
"nec
clam"
requirement
of the 1943
Act.
It was defined for the purposes of the 1943 Act as “
so
patent that the owner, with the exercise of reasonable care, would
have observed it”.
[37]
88.
The plaintiff’s
counsel referred in argument to Carey Miller’s observation that
the practical effect of this
dictum
“
is to require
the claimant to establish that the nature of his possession was such
that
a
reasonable
man would have been aware of it”.
[38]
In the present case, the
strip of land was enclosed by a fence and physically formed part of
erf 4[...]1. Owners of erf 4[...]0
could not help but to have been
aware of this. The plaintiff and its predecessors-in-title never hid
their claim to the area.
Possessing
"as if the owner"
89.
The plaintiff and its
predecessors-in-title were required to have held the strip of land
“
as
owner”.
This
is the correlative of the requirements “
nec
vi”
and
“
nec
precario”
[39]
of the 1943 Act.
The test is objective: “
The
test to be applied is whether a reasonable person would infer from
the circumstances of the claimant's possession that the property
was
held 'as if by the owner'. There must be sufficient acts of ownership
by the claimant to support such an inference .... there
is no fixed
or final set of appropriate fact situations. The right of ownership
can be manifested in a variety of ways.”
[40]
90.
The mental state of
possessing as if one is the owner covers both the
bona
fide
possessor
and the
mala
fide
possessor,
[41]
and possession in the
bona
fide
but
mistaken belief that one is the owner suffices.
[42]
91.
Possession even in the
knowledge that one is not the owner is sufficient, provided one
occupies the land as owner or with the intention
of keeping it for
oneself. As long as the possessor does not manifest a recognition of
the true owner's rights, it does not matter
that the possessor knows
that he or she is not the owner.
[43]
92.
Returning to
Carey-Miller:
[44]
“
The
right of ownership can be manifested in a variety of ways. An obvious
situation which would satisfy the requirement of
possession as owner is
that in which the
possessor
has used the land of another on the basis of a genuine mistake as to
the boundary … In such a case the fact that
the land was not
identified as a separate unit, but was
simply
treated by the claimant on the assumption that it was part of his
land, would probably be conclusive
of
the
requirement
of
possession
‘
as
if
he
were
owner’.
”
93.
The presence of the fence is significant, given the objective test.
The fence embraces, on one side, the strip of land
to which the
plaintiff lays claim. It incorporates, on the other side, the strip
into the remainder of the plaintiff’s property,
making it an
indivisible whole as a matter of appearance. Fences are by
definition used by property owners generally to mark
property
boundaries across which access is controlled, restricted or prevented
- this is a matter of everyday knowledge and experience.
The
erection of a fence is clear evidence of the belief of a person
regarding his or her rights to the land enclosed.
94.
In the present matter, for so long as the fence was in existence the
plaintiff and its predecessors have held the strip of land
“as
owner”.
The area is indistinguishable from the rest of
erf 4[...]1, and there is no reason why anyone would have
distinguished between the
sliver and the rest of erf 4[...]1.
Objectively, everyone would have regarded the fence as the outer
extent of their property.
Neither the Nabals nor the plaintiff
ever recognised the rights of the owners of erf 4[...]0 to the strip
of land.
95.
As regards the
animus
element, Mr Steinhofel's evidence on
behalf of the plaintiff was clear. Nobody ever suggested (prior
to the arising of the
dispute) that the fence was not the boundary.
Mr Steinhofel did not regard the strip of land in dispute as being in
any way different
from the rest of erf 4[...]1. He regarded it as
part of the plaintiff's property, and the plaintiff held it as the
owner.
Possessing for
30 years
96.
The land is to
have been held for an undisturbed period of thirty years: “
...
the required continuity of occupation need not be absolute
continuity, for it is enough if the right is exercised from time
to
time as occasion requires and with reasonable continuity”.
[45]
97.
As regards proof,
“…
In
practice the claimant need do no more than demonstrate that
possession - including that of predecessors in title insofar as this
is relevant - endured for the thirty-year period to a sufficient
degree to justify the conclusion ... that the exercise of rights
of
ownership was continuous. It will then be up to the defendant, who
challenges the claim, to establish that possession was not
continuous
- either in the general sense, or by reason of the specific
disturbance of continuity through the interruption or suspension
of
possession'
.
[46]
98.
The defendant cannot deny that the wire fence (or one in a
substantially identical position) has been in position since at least
January 1989, and probably well before then. Nobody disputed that the
fence served as the boundary between the two properties from
at least
January 1989 until March 2019. Prior to the plaintiff's
purchase of erf 4[...]1 ownership up to the fence was exercised
by
its predecessor in title, Mrs Nabal, and before her it would have
been exercised by Olivier.
99.
One may infer from the fact that the fence commences at the common
beacon at the back of erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1 that it was
intended
to be a boundary fence. This inference becomes all the more
compelling given that the fence was clearly intended to be
a
permanent structure, and given that it almost exactly followed the
actual boundary line at its commencement and for some considerable
distance thereafter. That the fence was intended to be the
boundary becomes clear when one considers that it followed a direct
line to another beacon (a peg in the ground, of similar size of
various other pegs used by land surveyors). No other reason for
the
erection of a fence along this presents itself.
100.
Further support for the conclusion that the fence was intended to be,
and was regarded
by all concerned, as the boundary between erven
4[...]0 and 4[...]1 is the fact that there used to be parallel tracks
on either
side of
the fence. The one track led to the building on
erf 4[...]1 (the photographs show that the track ran along the same
route as the current driveway to the house), and the other to erf
4[…]9, towards the “rear” boundary with erf
4[...]1. This indicates not only that the fence was in position, but
also that it was regarded at the dividing line between the
erven
prior to 1989.
101.
The present case bears
similarities to the one set out in
Margaret
Loretta de Haan v Cranberry Bush Property Investments (Pty) Ltd
,
[47]
in which the Court held
[48]
that “..
the
wire fence was erected in1948, it physically separates the properties
from one another and was not moved or replaced from at
least 1972 up
and until the present dispute arose. … In my view it may
reasonable by presumed that the De Klerks regarded
the fence as the
boundary of their property. If that is the case, then then
clearly possessed the disputed land openly and
peacefully”
.
102.
There was, moreover, no particular benefit to be gained from
deviating from the actual
boundary. The sliver of land between the
fence and the cadastral boundary was, and still is, not valuable. It
is highly improbably
that the owner of 4[...]1 would have paid to use
it in the manner that it has been used over the years.
Conclusion
103.
The case is to be decided
on the probabilities. The question is whether the plaintiff's
predecessors in title occupied the
strip of land as of right. Their
state of mind is to be inferred from the facts.
[49]
104.
As to the drawing of
inferences, the approach in civil cases is as follows: “
Now
it is trite law that, in general, in finding facts and making
inferences in a civil case, the Court may go upon a mere
preponderance
of probability, even although its so doing does not
exclude every reasonable doubt
....
in finding facts or making inferences in a civil case, it seems to me
that one may, as Wigmore conveys in his work Evidence
(3rd ed., para.
32), by balancing probabilities select a conclusion which seems to be
the more natural, or plausible, conclusion
from amongst several
conceivable ones, even though that conclusion be not the only
reasonable one.”
[50]
105.
As indicated, on the available evidence it may reasonably be
inferred that the plaintiff's predecessors-in-title regarded the
fence
as the boundary. The existence of the old fence is evidence of
possession and control of the land. It is also evidence of an
intention
to exclude the world at large from the full extent of the
property bounded by the fence. The fact that the fence has not been
moved
since 1989 (at the latest) is also evidence that the possession
and control in question have remained undisturbed during all these
years. The defendant did not call any of the previous owners of
erf 4[...]0, and he did not explain why he had not done so.
Their evidence would presumably not have helped his case.
106.
On this issue, each of
parties raised the failure of the other to call certain witnesses
(the defendant criticised the plaintiff
for failing to call Nathi,
the plaintiff’s labourer) and requested the Court to draw an
adverse inference therefrom.
It has been held
[51]
that when “
a
witness is equally available to both parties, but not called to
give
evidence,
it is logically possible to draw an adverse inference against
both. The party on whom the onus rests has no greater
obligation
to call a witness, but may find that a failure to call a witness
creates the risk of the onus proving decisive. In
the present
matter the appellant did not have an opportunity equal to the
respondents to call this witness. The adverse inference
drawn by the
trial court against the appellant was unjustified in the
circumstances.
An
adverse inference in any event does not operate to destroy a case
otherwise proved, which is what the appellant managed
to do
”
.
107.
In the present case I am satisfied that the
prima facie
discharge of the onus by the plaintiff has not been disturbed, and
that the plaintiff has proved, on a balance of probabilities,
that it
and its predecessors-in-title have possessed the disputed strip of
land openly, as owner, for a 30-year period. It
is not
necessary to rely on an adverse inference against either party.
108.
The plaintiff knew of no claim to ownership to the strip of land on
its side of the fence
by any owner of erf 4[...]0 until the defendant
made his claim in March 2019. Nobody else was ever previously made
aware of any
disagreement regarding the boundary. The defendant did
not adduce any evidence of such a claim. All of the evidence
points
to the fact that the plaintiff's and the defendant's
predecessors in title accepted the fence as being the boundary
between their
properties.
109.
The
animus
of Mrs
Nabal's predecessors is also to be inferred from the presence of the
fence. They would have regarded the fence as the
boundary of
their property, and they would thus have held all the land up to the
fence as owners
thereof.
The defendant did not suggest that there had existed an agreement
about the positioning of the fence in terms of
which the owners of
erf 4[...]1 were allowed to occupy the strip of land by way of any
form of revocable permission. On the contrary,
such suggestion would
be in conflict with the defendant's contentions as set out in his
pleadings. Even if, however, there had
originally been such an
agreement, there can on the evidence be no suggestion that subsequent
owners
(the
Nabals or the plaintiff) ever knew about it.
[52]
The evidential duty to raise a precarious consent rested on the
defendant,
[53]
because the
plaintiff "
satisfies
prima facie these requirements (for prescription) by proving
peaceable and open occupation adversely to and, therefore,
to the
exclusion of the rights of the true owner for thirty years
".
[54]
110.
Thus, the mere fact that
the fence has been in position between the properties since some time
before 1989
[55]
establishes
inferentially that the strip of land was
"occupied"
by the
various owners of erf 4[...]1
"openly",
and
"as
owners".
111.
Upon a holistic
consideration of the evidence, I am satisfied that there are no
considerations in the present matter which excuse
the defendant and
his predecessors from the ordinary consequences of prescription. They
could see the fence. They would have known
that ordinary property
owners regard fences as boundaries. Accordingly, even if
hardship were a consideration in the present
proceedings (which it is
not), the order which is sought is not unfair to the
defendant. I do not
regard the provisions of section 25
[56]
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, as being
helpful to the defendant in the particular circumstances of
this
matter, despite his counsel’s invocation of the provision.
112.
It is accordingly ordered as follows:
112.1.
The plaintiff is declared to be the owner, by acquisitive
prescription, of the land between the cadastral boundary between
erven 4[...]0 and 4[...]1 Malagas and the “existing fence”
as shown on the contour and detail plan, drawing number E420M_tp,
dated April 2019 / May 2022, by Bekker and Houterman Land Surveyors.
112.2.
The defendant’s claim in reconvention is dismissed.
112.3.
The defendant shall pay the plaintiff’s costs in relation
to
the latter’s claim and the defendant’s claim in
reconvention, which costs shall include the qualifying fees of Mr
Pieter Houterman, land surveyor.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff:
Mr
D. Melunsky SC, instructed by Michael Ward Attorney
For
the defendant:
Mr
E. Janse van Rensburg, instructed by Johann Viljoen &
Associates
[1]
Cillie
v Geldenhuys
[2008] ZASCA 54
;
2009
(2) SA 325
(SCA) at para
[13]
.
[2]
None
of the factors postponing the running of prescription –
referred to in section 3 of the 1969 Act – is present.
[3]
Counsel
for each of the parties provided heads of argument and helpful oral
argument, for which the Court expresses its appreciation.
[4]
The
position of the dwelling on erf 4[...]6 makes it impossible for a
fence to run exactly on the cadastral boundary, because
a corner of
the dwelling protrudes about 7cm into erf 4[...]0 at a point about
25m down along the boundary.
[5]
The
plaintiff’s property is also known as Diepkloof Farm, which is
the name inscribed on one of the entrance walls.
[6]
It
is not entirely clear from the counterclaim whether the defendant
seeks an order also in relation to the portion of the fence
on the
river side of the properties, but the case was approached on the
basis that the entire length of the fence (on both sides
of the
road) was in issue for purposes of
prescription.
[7]
A
report dated 3 December 1969 regarding the proposed subdivision and
the difficulty in finding beacons, prepared land surveyor
H. J.
Smal, was handed in, but does not take matters much further for the
purposes of the relief sought in this action.
[8]
See
footnote 4 above.
[9]
One
of the lines of trees therefore falls within the disputed strip of
land.
[10]
Called
by the plaintiff as expert witness.
[11]
The extent of the
encroachment appears
from
a·diagram prepared after the survey by Mr Houterman (drawing
number E420M_tp), which depicts both the “
existing
fence”
and
the
cadastral
boundary. It also shows
the
extent to
which
the north-western wall of the building on erf 4[...]1
crosses the cadastral
boundary. The
drawing was attached to the summary of Mr Houterman’s expert
evidence under Rule 36(9).
[12]
Mrs
Nabal took transfer of the property during March 1989.
[13]
Mrs
Nabal’s husband.
[14]
During
April 2023.
[15]
The
defendant's case was initially (as set out in a letter from his
attorney to the plaintiff's attorney in May 2019) that Mr
Steinhofel
had been told about the position of the boundary pegs in 1997; that
his employees had illegally deposited building
rubble in the river;
and that he erected an illegal fence onto erf
4[…]9.
It is not necessary to consider the allegations of unlawful conduct
as they are irrelevant to the present
dispute.
[16]
The
defendant took transfer of the property in February 2019.
[17]
Mr
Steinhofel erected the windmill after the plaintiff had taken
transfer of the property.
[18]
A
witness called on the defendant’s behalf.
[19]
An
incident also referred to by the defendant and Mr Steinhofel.
[20]
The
2008 photograph which was also shown to Mr van der Merwe.
[21]
Pienaar
v Rabie
1983
(3) SA 126 (A).
[22]
2003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) at para [5].
[23]
[1998] ZASCA 101
;
1999
(1) SA 975
(SCA) at 978I-980H.
[24]
I
say this being aware of the distinction between credibility and the
probabilities as highlighted in
Dumbarton
Oaks
.
[25]
AA
Onderlinge Assuransie-Assosiasie Bpk v De Beer
1982
(2) SA
603
(A) at 614E-H.
[26]
With
reference to the 1943 Act, but requirements in the 1969 Act do not
differ materially from those posed in the 1943 Act
(Cillie
v Geldenhuys
[2008] ZASCA 54
;
2009
(2) SA 325
(SCA) at para
[8]
).
[27]
City
of Cape Town v Abelsohn's Estate
1947
(3) SA 315
(C) at 326, quoted with approval in
Bisschop
v Stafford
1974
(1) SA 1
(A) at 9E.
[28]
See
Pienaar
v Rabie
1983
(3) SA 126 (A).
[29]
Joles
Eiendom (Pty) Ltd v Kruger and another
2007
(5) SA 222
(C) at para [28].
[30]
D.
Carey-Miller
The
Acquisition and Protection of Ownership
(Juta
& Co., 1986) p. 66.
[31]
Ex
parte Van der Horst: In re Estate Herold
1978
(1) SA 299
(T) at 301FG.
[32]
Welgemoed
v Coetzer and others
1946
TPD 701
at 723.
[33]
Morkels
Transport (Pty) Ltd v Melrose Foods (Pty) Ltd and another
1972
(2) SA 464
(W) at 467H-468A.
[34]
See
Pienaar
v Rabie
1983
(3) SA 126
(A);
Payn
v Estate Rennie and another
1960
(4) SA 261 (N).
[35]
Ex
parte Van der Horst: In re Estate Herold
1978
(1) SA 299
(T) at 300H-301A.
[36]
Joles
Eiendom (Pty) Ltd v Kruger and another
2007
(5) SA 222
(C) para
[31].
[37]
Smith
&
others
v Martin's Executor Dative
(1899)
16 SC 148
at 151; and see
Bisschop
v Stafford
1974
(3) SA 1
(A)
at 8A.
[38]
D.
Carey-Miller
The
Acquisition and Protection of Ownership
(Juta
& Co., 1986) pp 163-164, with reference to
Briers
v Wilson and others
1952
(3) SA 423
(C) at 433D.
[39]
See
Smith
and others v Martin’s Executor Dative
16
S.C. 148
at p. 151.
[40]
D.
Carey-Miller
The
Acquisition and Protection of Ownership
(Juta
& Co., 1986) p. 171.
[41]
Morgenster
1711 (Pty) Ltd v De Kock and others
2012
(3) SA 59
(WCC) at para [14].
[42]
Morkels
Transport (Pty) Ltd v Melrose Foods (Pty) Ltd
1972
(2) SA 464
(W) at 474B.
[43]
Campbell
v Pietermaritzburg City Council
1966
(2) SA 674
(N) at 680B-C; and see
Welgemoed
v Coetzer and others
1946
TPD 701.
[44]
Op
cit
at
pp 73-74.
[45]
Welgemoed
v Coetzer and others
1946
TPD 701
at 720.
[46]
Carey
Miller
op
cit
at
p. 177, and see
Ex
parte Van der Horst: In re Estate Herold
1978
(1) SA 299
(T) at 301C-D.
[47]
Unreported
decision of this Court (per Manca AJ) under case number 18595/2007,
delivered on 8 October 2008.
[48]
At
paras [50]-[51].
[49]
See
Bisschop
v Stafford
1974
(3) SA 1
(A) at 9H-10C.
[50]
Govan
v Skidmore
1952
(1) SA 732
(N) at 734A-B-D.
[51]
In
Raliphaswa
v Mugivhi and others
[2008] ZASCA 17
;
2008
(4) SA 154
(SCA) at para
[15]
. Emphasis supplied.
[52]
Compare
City
of Cape Town v Abelsohn's Estate
1947
(3) SA 315 (C).
[53]
See
also
Margaret
Loretta de Haan v Cranberry Bush Property Investments (Pty) Ltd
(unreported
decision of this Court (per Manca AJ) under case number 18595/2007,
delivered on 8 October 2008) at paras [52]-[56].
[54]
City
of Cape Town v Abelsohn's Estate
1947
(3) SA 315
(C) at 326. See
Bisschop
v Stafford
1974
(3) SA 1
(A) at 9D-H:
"There
is much to be said for the proposition - it would relieve a claimant
of the burden of proving a negative which he
in many cases could not
establish simply because the passage of time has made it
impossible
."
[55]
The
Nabals’ evidence as regards the existence of the fence and how
they regarded it when taking transfer of the property
and
thereafter, distinguishes the present matter from the facts
considered in
Morgenster
1711 (Pty) Ltd v De Kock and others
2012
(3) SA 59
(WCC) at paras [22]-[24], and para [38].
[56]
Section
25 provides that “
no
one may be deprived of property except in term of law of general
application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation of
property
”
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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