Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 92South Africa
Mouton and Others v Du Plessis and Others (4180/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 92 (24 March 2022)
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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## Mouton and Others v Du Plessis and Others (4180/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 92 (24 March 2022)
Mouton and Others v Du Plessis and Others (4180/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 92 (24 March 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 4180/2021
In
the application for leave to appeal between:
BENJAMIN
MOUTON
First applicant
GERTRUIDA
DOROTHEA MOUTON
Second applicant
ROBI
PARKS (PTY)
LTD
Third applicant
and
ANTOINETTE
DU PLESSIS
First respondent
PETRUS
GESPARUS DU PLESSIS
Second respondent
SWARTLAND
MUNICIPALITY
Third respondent
In
re
the eviction application between
:
ANTOINETTE
DU PLESSIS
Applicant
and
BENJAMIN
MOUTO
N
First respondent
GERTRUIDA
DOROTHEA MOUTON
Second respondent
SWARTLAND
MUNICIPALITY
Third respondent
ROBI
PARKS (PTY)
LTD
Fourth respondent
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
DELIVERED
ON 24 MARCH 2022
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 7 February 2022 I granted an order in
the following terms in an eviction application:
1.1.
The counter-application is dismissed.
1.2.
The first, second and fourth respondents
(“the respondents”) are to vacate the property known as
ERF [....] YZERFONTEIN
,
situated at
[....] VERSVELD STREET
,
YZERFONTEIN
,
WESTERN CAPE
(“the premises”) by no later than
Monday,
28 March 2022
.
1.3.
In the event of the respondents failing to
vacate the premises by
Monday, 28 March
2022
, then the Sheriff of this Court is
directed and authorized to evict the respondents from the premises.
1.4.
The Sheriff is authorized and directed to
employ the services of the South African Police Service to assist
him, if it is necessary
to do so, to remove the respondents from the
premises.
1.5.
The respondents are to pay the costs of the
main application and the counter-application jointly and severally,
the one paying,
the other to be absolved, on the scale as between
attorney and client.
2.
I gave full reasons for the order on 21
February 2022.
3.
The respondents in the eviction application
(to whom I shall now refer as the applicants) have now brought an
application for leave
to appeal against the order granted against
them.
4.
They seem to have conflated this
application for leave to appeal with another application for leave to
appeal, against an order
(an interdict) granted by the Honourable
Justice Ndita on 27 January 2022 under case number 8319/2022.
5.
The situation is nevertheless unclear
because the applicants refer to an “Appeal A” as being
against the order of 27
January 2022, but thereafter refer to “Appeal
A” as being against the order in the eviction application that
I handed
down on 7 February 2022, and “Appeal B’ against
the reasons that I handed down on 21 February 2022.
6.
Be that as it may, I can for obvious
reasons not consider an application for leave to appeal under case
number 8319/2021, as the
matter did not serve before me and I did not
give judgment therein. I have requested that the court file relating
to that matter
be furnished to the Honourable Justice Ndita for
determination in so far as the applicants intend to apply for leave
against the
order that she granted. The parties are to liaise with
her registrar to make arrangements for the hearing of any such
application
for leave to appeal.
The application for
leave to appeal under case number 4180/2021
7.
This is the application for eviction upon
which I gave judgment. I point out that Mr Du Plessis, now cited as
the third respondent
in this application for leave to appeal, was not
a party to the eviction application. The applicants do not explain
why he has
been “joined” as respondent in the application
for leave to appeal.
8.
As stated, I have given detailed reasons
for the order that I had made and do not intend to repeat them. I
shall comment on certain
aspects of the application for leave to
appeal. Nothing new has come to light in the course of the oral
argument presented to me.
“
Appeal
A”: Prospects of success
9.
Under this heading, in paragraph 1.1 of the
application for leave to appeal, the applicants refer to matters that
clearly pertain
to case number 8319/2021. They are thus irrelevant
for present purposes.
10.
In paragraph 1.2(a) and (b) of the
application for leave to appeal, the applicants traverse their
previous argument regarding the
sale agreement purportedly concluded
following the exercise of the option, which I found to have
constituted a counter-offer that
had never been accepted in writing.
I have dealt with this issue in detail in the reasons given.
11.
In paragraph 1.2(c) the applicants
erroneously state that I found that a valid and binding agreement to
purchase was concluded.
This is not the case – I found that no
valid agreement had been concluded.
12.
Paragraph 1(2)(c)(i) sets out an
interpretation of certain of the provisions of the lease. I dealt
with these in my reasons. This
rest of the paragraph, as well as
paragraphs 1(2)(ii), (iii) and (iv), relates to the application under
case number 8319/2021.
13.
Paragraph 1(2)(c)(v) refers to the transfer
process followed after the purported exercise of the option. I have
explained in my
reasons why no valid agreement of sale had come into
existence. The subsequent conduct of the parties under a mistaken
premise
does not change the situation.
14.
As regards paragraphs 1(2)(vi) to (x), read
with paragraphs 1.1.1 and 1.2, I explained in my reasons why, even
had a valid agreement
come into existence, the first respondent (Mrs
Du Plessis) was entitled to cancel it. This was because of the
failure to deliver
a guarantee for the payment of the purpose price.
The provision of a certificate of compliance was not relevant at that
stage,
as it would have been due only prior to transfer taking place.
In any event, the alleged report by Mr Izak Schrader referred to
by
the applicants did not form part of the papers before me. It might
have been included in the application under case number 8139/2021.
15.
I have explained why the applicants qualify
as unlawful occupiers under PIE, and thus that the Act is applicable.
The sublease,
whether “non-existent” or not, does not
change the position as regards the first and second applicants as
natural persons
who resided at the property. The submissions in
paragraph 1.3 of the application for leave to appeal have no merit.
16.
As regards paragraph 1.4, I dismissed the
counter-application for the reasons stated previously. Given the
finding that no binding
agreement of sale had come into existence,
the counter-application for specific performance had to fail.
17.
Paragraphs 1.4(a) and (b) seem to relate to
the application under case number 8319/2021 which interdicted the
applicants’
catering business at the property. So do the rest
of the submissions set out on pages 13, 14 and 15 of the application
for leave
to appeal. As mentioned, I did not grant the relief against
which leave to appeal is sought in that regard.
18.
Insofar as the submissions under this
heading related to the eviction application, I am of the view that
there is no reasonable
prospect of success on appeal.
Appeal
B against the reasons given
19.
As regards paragraph 1 and 2 of the
application for leave to appeal under this heading, it is clear from
the papers that although
Robi Parks was the lessee, the first and
second applicants in fact occupied the property. Whether this was
done under a sublease
or under some other arrangement is irrelevant,
and even if this statement in the reasons is incorrect, it does not
take the applicants’
complaints anywhere.
20.
I have explained why, as a matter of law,
the guarantee would have been due within a reasonable period. It was
precisely because
the option did not cater for a specified time
period. The submission in paragraph 4 of the application for leave to
appeal has
no merit.
21.
As regards paragraphs 5, 6 and 7 of the
application for leave to appeal under this heading, the reasons
provided set out the bases
for my findings in respect of the validity
of the agreement of sale, as well as the first respondent’s
right to cancel any
such agreement had it in fact come into
existence. I have also explained why the PIE Act cannot be ignored in
the circumstances
in which the first and second applicants occupied
the property.
Further
allegations set out in the application for leave to appeal
22.
The allegations set out on pages 23 to 25
of the application for leave to appeal either constitute evidence
that did not serve before
me at the hearing of the eviction
application, or submissions in support of the counter-application.
They do not indicate a basis
for a successful application for leave
to appeal.
Conclusion
23.
In all of these circumstances, I am of the
view that there is no reasonable prospect of success on appeal in the
eviction application
under case number 4180/2021.
Order
24.
The following order is granted:
24.1.
Leave to appeal is refused.
24.2.
The applicants in the application for leave
to appeal are to pay the first and second respondents’ costs,
the one paying,
the other to be absolved.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
HEARING DATE:
1 February 2022
Appearances
:
The
applicants in person
For
the first and second respondents
: L.
Wilkin, instructed by Von Lieres, Cooper & Barlow
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