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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Turnbury House Properties (Pty) Ltd v Wallin and Another (18924/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 95 (18 May 2022)
Turnbury House Properties (Pty) Ltd v Wallin and Another (18924/2020)
[2022] ZAWCHC 95 (18 May 2022)
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sino date 18 May 2022
#
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 18924/2020
In
the matter between:
TURNBURY
HOUSE PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
BJORN
ANDERS
WALLIN
First respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Second respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 18 MAY 2022
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
The applicant wishes to enforce a servitude
to use a road over the first respondent’s property, for the
supply of water from
a borehole on the first respondent’s
property, and for the use of one third of the water sourced from
springs on the first
respondent’s property. The servitudes are
registered in the applicant’s favour against the property of
the first respondent.
2.
The applicant and the first respondent own
neighbouring farms in the Devon Valley near Stellenbosch. The first
respondent owns the
Remainder Portion 17 (a portion of Portion 5) of
the Farm Nooitgedacht No. 65. The applicant owns Portion 28 of the
same Farm.
Each of their title deeds contains servitudes in terms of
which the applicant may use a road running along the northern
boundary
of the first respondent's property, water from a borehole on
the first respondent's property
for
24 hours a week, and
one
third of the water sourced
from
springs on the first respondent’s
property.
The
applicant’s property
is
home to Mr and Mrs Harvie and their family.
3.
The applicant currently uses only a small portion
of the servitude road, but wishes to use all of it. The first
respondent refuses
to permit the applicant to use the road, which
requires some reconstruction, and has stopped providing the applicant
with water,
claiming that he previously (following the purchase of
the dominant tenement by the applicant) did so not because he was
obliged
to, but as
"as a form of
goodwill".
The applicant therefore
applies to enforce the rights (in relation to the road and to the
water) afforded
it
by the servitudes.
4.
The first respondent’s main defence
is the servitudes have been extinguished because the two properties
(that is, the property
of the applicant and that of the first
respondent) were previously owned by the same owner. The applicant’s
argument in this
respect is, briefly:
4.1.
The servitudes remain in the title deeds of
the respectively properties, so their existence and terms have been
prima facie
established.
4.2.
The first respondent would have to rectify
the title deeds, but he cannot show that he is able to do so because
he admits that the
servitudes were in the title deed of the entity
from which he and the applicant acquired their properties, and is in
his own title
deed.
4.3.
The first respondent does not allege or
prove that when he purchased and took transfer of his property, he
did not
bona fide
believe that the deed correctly reflected the position, and that its
terms contained a mistake which does not accord with the agreement
in
terms of which he purchased his property.
4.4.
The applicant, for its part, acquired its
property in the
bona fide
belief that the servitudes were extant. The first respondent has,
moreover, repeatedly acknowledged the servitudes through this
conduct
in the past.
5.
The first respondent contends as follows:
5.1.
The servitudes have been extinguished
because the two properties were previously owned by the same owner,
namely Turnbury Wine Farms
CC (“the CC”). The CC had sold
its properties to, respectively, the applicant and the first
respondent.
5.2.
The only way that the servitudes can be
revived is by agreement between the parties, the seller and the
purchaser. There was no
such agreement.
5.3.
The fact the servitudes remained in the
title deeds was merely a mistake by the conveyancer who attended to
the transfer at the
time.
6.
I shall deal with the parties’ contentions, and the legal
principles underlying those contentions, in the course of the
discussion below.
7.
As the applicant seeks final relief on
motion, the rule in
Plascon Evans
applies.
Insofar as there is a dispute of
fact, the first respondent’s version prevails, save insofar as
it is implausible or untenable
in the context of the facts as a whole
(
Plascon Evans Paints (Tvl) Ltd v Van
Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA
623
(A) at 634E-635C).
8.
Upon a consideration of the papers, there
are no genuine disputes of fact. The first respondent’s
defences are issues of law.
What the first respondent said
and did appears from what he wrote, and
from the papers.
The
applicant submits that caution
need
only be applied insofar as the first respondent makes allegations
concerning his understanding or mental state, insofar as
what he
alleges he thought or understood is at odds with what he said and
did, even though his internal reservations are scarcely
relevant. He
must be held to what he conveyed
by
his words and conduct. I agree with these submissions.
Basic
relevant legal principles
9.
A servitude is a limited real right that imposes a burden upon
the
property (in the present matter, immovable property) of another by
restricting the rights, powers and liberties of its owner
either in
favour of another person (a personal servitude) or in favour of the
owner of another immovable property (a praedial servitude,
as in the
present matter) (
Glaffer Investments (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Water
Affairs and Forestry
2000 (4) SA 822
at 828F).
10.
The most important manner in which a servitude is
established in our law is by way of registration thereof in the Deeds
Office against
the title deed of the servient property (
Worman
v Hughes and others
1948 (3) SA 495
(A)
at 502)
. The inclusion of a servitude in
the title deed is
prima facie
proof of its existence:
Eichelgruen v
Two Nine Eight South Ridge Road (Pty) Ltd
1976 (2) SA 678
(D) at 680C-D:
“…
the
registration of the servitude in the deed of transfer is
prima
facie
proof
of the existence of the servitude described in the deed and
that, until the deed is rectified, it remains the unassailable
judicial record of what the seller has sold and delivered to the
purchaser. See
Myers v. Van
Heerde and Others
,
1966
(2) SA 649
(C)
at
p. 654H. It is also clear that it is only permissible to amend a deed
of transfer on very limited grounds, and I agree with respect
with
what VAN ZYL, J., said in
Myers'
case,
supra
at
p. 655H, namely:
'The
deed speaks for itself and the only grounds upon which it can be
altered or added to are: (a) that there was no justa
causa for the execution of the deed, for example, because the
transfer was induced by fraud or because the contract, in execution
of which the deed was registered, was induced by fraud; and (b) that
the deed does not reflect truly the agreement entered
into by the
parties, for example, because the deed as registered does not truly
carry out, and is not a true record of the
contract entered into
by the parties or because the contract, in execution of which the
deed was registered, does not, on account
of mutual error, reflect
the true intentions of the parties and the deed in consequence does
not carry out the contract nor is
it a true record of the execution
of the contract.'
”
11.
Servitudes are in principle of unlimited duration.
A servitude is terminated only in the following ways:
11.1. Expiry of the time
period for which the servitude was granted or the fulfilment of a
resolutive condition;
11.2. Agreement between
the parties; expropriation, abandonment or prescription;
11.3. The death of the
usufructury or the registration of a transfer of land free from a
usufruct on a sale in execution; or
11.4. Of particular
relevance in the present matter, merger, or the permanent
impossibility to exercise or enjoy the servitude;
12.
In relation to merger, there is some disagreement
in the case law and between academic writers as to whether the
termination of
a servitude upon merger is truly permanent. In terms
of the principle of
nulli res sua servit
a servitude is terminated when the dominant and servient properties
are owned by one person (see the discussion in Van der Merwe
Sakereg
(2ed, Butterworths) at pp 536-537).
13.
In Joubert
LAWSA
Vol. 24 (2ed, LexisNexis) at para 620 it is stated that
if
the merger was only intended to be of limited duration, the servitude
revives automatically when the property is again separated.
If, on
the other hand, the merger was intended to be permanent the servitude
should only revive on separation if it is expressly
reconstituted.
The view that a mere reference to the material deed which contained
the servitude is sufficient to revive the servitude
(with reference
to
Du Toit v Visser
1950 (2) SA 93
(C);
Myers v Van Heerde
1966 (2) SA 649
(C), and
Eichelgruen
supra
) is “unacceptable”
(with reference to Scholtens
1950
SALJ
220-223; De Villers
1977
THRHR
195, and Badenhorst
et al The Law of
Property in South Africa
(5ed) pp
337-368).
14.
In relation to the permanent inability to enjoy the servitude,
LAWSA
supra
at para 621 discusses the termination of a servitude as a
result of destruction:
A servitude is extinguished
when it becomes permanently impossible to exercise it, for example,
if the dominant or servient property
is totally destroyed.
15.
Examples of total destruction is where a
landed tenement is swept away by the sea, becomes permanently
inundated or is destroyed
by an earthquake, where the natural
condition of the servient tenement changes so radically that the
particular servitude can no
longer be exercised, for example, a
fountain which forms the basis of a servitude of
aquaductus
dries up permanently. A servitude is, however, not extinguished by
the destruction of a building on the dominant or servient tenement,
because if the building is rebuilt the servitude can again be
exercised, even if the period of prescription has run its course.
16.
I shall return to a discussion of these authorities in the context of
the facts
of this particular matter.
# The terms of the
servitudes
The terms of the
servitudes
17.
The content of the servitudes is common
cause. The applicant has attached, to its notice of motion and in
substantiation of the
relief sought, diagrams indicating the layout
of the properties and the points referred to in the servitudes. There
is no dispute
between the parties as to the correctness of what is
shown in the diagrams.
18.
The applicant’s title deed provides
that the applicant’s property enjoys the following servitudes
in relation to the
road and the borehole:
"SUBJECT
FURTHER
to and ENTITLED to the following
special conditions
...
1.
The Transferee
and his Successors in Title [i.e.,
the applicant] shall have the right to use the road running along the
boundary CDEFGHJ marked
up on diagram No 637611947.
2.
The Transferee and his Successors in
title [i.e., the applicant]
shall
have the right to the use of water
from a borehole situate on the remaining extent of the property
hereby transferred [i.e., the
first respondent’s property] and
situate at the spot marked M on Diagram No 6376/1947. The water so to
be used shall be conducted
along the existing three inch pipeline
running from the point M to N to E marked on said Diagram No
6376/1948. The pipeline shall
not go into the reservoir at point N
marked on the said Diagram, but shall bypass it so as to ensure the
Transferee and his Successors
in title [i.e., the applicant] a direct
and uninterrupted flow from the borehole at M marked on the said
diagram. The water out
of the borehole shall be supplied to the
Transferee and his Successors in title
[i.e.
,
the applicant
]
by means of the existing
pump
situate
at point
M.
The Transferors as owners of the
remaining extent of the property thereby transferred and their
Successors
in
title [i.e., the first respondent] shall be responsible
for the maintenance of the said
pump. The said pump shall be used exclusively for the benefit of the
Transferee and his Successors
in title of the land hereby transferred
[i.e., the applicant] for twenty-four (24) hours per week, namely
from 8:00 am to 8:00
pm on Sundays, and from 8:00 pm on Wednesdays to
8:00 am on Thursdays.
It
shall be the responsibility of the Transferors as owners of the
remaining extent and their Successors in title [i.e., the first
respondent] at their cost to maintain the supply of water by means of
the pump; the Transferee and his Successors in title [i.e.,
the
applicant], however, shall be responsible for one-seven (l /7
th
)
of the costs of the power per week.
3.
The proper maintenance of the
pipeline marked MNE on the said Diagram shall
be the sole responsibility of the
Transferee as owner of the land hereby conveyed and his Successors in
title [i.e., the applicant],
for which purpose he and his Successors
in title, shall be afforded the necessary right of access to and
egress from the land hereby
conveyed over the remaining extent as
held by the Transferors [i.e., the first respondent].
4.
The
Transferee and his Successors in
title [i.e., the applicant} undertakes whilst such water is being
supplied to him to exercise all
reasonable care with the pump at
point M
"
19.
The first respondent’s title deed
reflects the servitudes
in substantially
the same terms:
“…
the
Transferee and successors in title of Port. 28 [i.e., the applicant]
thereby
conveyed
has been granted.
(a)
The use of the orad [sic] on the
remainder held hereunder running along the boundary marked CDEFGHJ on
the diagram annexed to the
said Deed of Transfer.
(b)
The use of water from certain
borehole situate on the remainder the water to be led through an
existing 3 inch pipeline and the
exclusive
use of a pump situate at the
borehole for 24 hours per week at stated times with right of access
and egress for
maintenance
of the pipeline;
as will more fully appear
on reference to said Deed of
Transfer."
20.
Portion 28 (the applicant’s property)
was first registered separately in 1947, having been subdivided from
what is now the
first respondent’s property.
21.
It is common cause between the parties
that, in the 1980s, the previous owner of the first respondent’s
property abandoned
the borehole at point M and sank a new borehole at
point X as indicated on the diagrams attached to the notice of
motion.
22.
The applicant’s property is the
dominant property and the first respondent's property the servient
property in respect of
the following servitude registered in favour
of the applicant in the applicant’s property’s title deed
in relation
to the springs:
"SUBJECT to the
conditions referred to in Deed of Transfer No T 1088/1914 and to the
following special conditions contained
therein:
1.
The said Chapman and
Bosman and their successors in title
[i.e., the applicant] shall have the right of access to the springs
and Dam shown on the diagram
of Lot A for purpose of constructing (at
their own expense) a dam below the springs on the said Lot A and of
leading water therefrom
by means of pipes, furrows or otherwise from
and over the said Lot A to the remaining extent of taking soil and
material from the
ground for the maintenance of the said works.
2.
Two-thirds share of the water
arising from the Spring on Lot A shall belong to the said Chapman and
Bosman and their successors
and one-third share of the said water
shall belong to the said JA Bosman and as stated in the Deed of
Transfer No 2139 dated 8th
March
1938, this last mentioned one-third
share was sold with and attached to
the property thereby and now hereby conveyed.
"
23.
Lot A, to which reference is made in the
servitude, was depicted on a diagram in 1911, and in 1988 Portion 28
(now the applicant’s
property) was still part of Lot A.
24.
The first respondent's title deed reflects
this servitude in the same wording.
The
dealings between the CC, the first respondent and the applicant
25.
The CC purchased Portion 17 (part of which
is now the first respondent’s property) in 1997, at which stage
it was already
the owner of Portion 28 (now the applicant’s
property).
26.
The first respondent purchased his property
from the CC in 2008, and transfer was registered in August 2008. It
is clear from the
papers that the servitudes were in the CC's title
deed, that the first respondent
purchased
his property from the CC subject to all servitudes, and that his
title deed contains the servitudes. The deed of sale
provided that
“
the property is also sold subject
to all conditions and servitudes mentioned or referred to in Title
Deed and to all such other
conditions and servitudes which may exist
in regard thereto…
”
27.
The applicant, in turn, purchased its
property from the CC in August 2008, and transfer was registered in
January 2009. The deed
of sale provides, as was the case in respect
of the first respondent’s deed of sale, that “
the
property is also sold subject to all conditions and servitudes
mentioned or referred to in Title Deed and to all such other
conditions and servitudes which may exist in regard thereto…
”
28.
The first respondent and the applicant had
various dealings after the applicant had acquired its property from
the CC. Those dealings
occurred (a) after the applicant had taken
occupation
of its
property, (b) thereafter and over the years as neighbours, and (c)
finally when the first respondent cut off the applicant's
supply of
water.
29.
There is nothing on the papers to impugn
the sale from the CC to the first respondent. It appears further from
the founding and
replying affidavits that the applicant was concerned
about water rights, and purchased its
property
bona fide
in
the belief that its property enjoyed the servitude rights.
30.
After such purchase the first respondent
repeatedly referred to the servitudes
and
adopted
the
position
that
the applicant enjoyed
no
rights
greater
than
those set out in the servitude. This appears from email
correspondence sent by the first respondent on 9 November 2008, 11
November 2008,
12
November
2008,
24 November
2008
and 28 November
2008. For example, in early November 2008
the first respondent wrote to the applicant that in “
terms
of the deed you require a separate waterline from the borehole to
your property which is your responsibility to install and
maintain.
This old connection is redundant, and you will now need to install a
new connection. If you decide on this option, we
need to agree where
this line is laid, but it would be consistent with the terms of the
deed”
.
31.
On 1 December 2008 the first respondent
asked attorney De Jager of Van der Spuy Attorneys for an initial
impression of the deeds.
The advice was that the servitude probably
lapsed
due
to merger, and possibly
had
prescribed. In the meantime, however, the CC (which at that stage had
not yet passed transfer to the applicant) worked to ensure
that the
applicant would able to use the servitude, and various emails were
exchanged between the parties to trye to resolve the
issue.
32.
The first respondent notified the
conveyancer attending to the transfer during December 2008 of the
advice he had received from
attorney De Jager, and also conveyed the
advice to the applicant.
33.
On 13 January 2009 the applicant took
transfer from the CC. Even though the first respondent had told the
conveyancer about the
advice he had received from attorney De Jager,
the conveyancer nevertheless included the servitude in the
applicant’s title
deed.
34.
After the transfer, the first respondent
and several attorneys representing him, reverted to confirming
the existence of the servitudes:
34.1.
Herold Gie Attorneys in April 2009: they
would convey a proposal from which it appeared that the first
respondent had accepted that
the applicant was entitled to water.
34.2.
The first respondent himself in December
2011, when the applicant repainted the entrance pillars: “
Can
you please inform your client [i.e., the applicant] that right of
access does not mean right to interfere with the property
of the
landowner.
”
34.3.
Bemadt Vukic Potash & Getz in July
2012: “
At present, our clients
intended to put up a gate on his property, which will in no way
restrict your client’s right of way
over the property, as your
client will be given remote/codes in respect thereof. … In
addition thereto our clients intend
to build speed bumps, which will
also in no way effect (sic) your client’s right of access to
the property.
”
34.4.
The first respondent in August 2014: “
Since
we are not changing or inhibiting your client’s access to his
property we believe we are entitled to proceed with the
fending
.”
34.5.
Herold Gie in November
2014: “
In
previous discussions with my client [i.e., the first respondent] he
indicated that he had no intention of preventing your client
gaining
access to his property and that the new gate to the servitude road
would be accessed in the same way as the current gate”
.
34.6.
The first respondent in
March
2018
(when he told
the Department
of
Water
affairs
that the applicant
must
pay for
water
it sourced on his property): “
If
this [the water account] refer (sic) to farm 28/65 then it is Mr
Harvie. If it is 17/65 then it is me
”.
34.7.
Basson Blackburn in February 2020:
"…
our client confirms the
existence
of the servitude
set
out and contained in the relevant deeds".
# The first respondent’s
defence of merger and no revival
The first respondent’s
defence of merger and no revival
35.
The first respondent’s main defence
is that because the CC owned both properties before selling them to
the applicant and
the first respondent,
"the
servitudes no longer exist".
Related
to that is his allegation
that
the servitudes did not revive.
36.
I have referred earlier to the fact the
case law and the academic writers are not in agreement in relation to
the revival of a servitude
when, after having been owned by one
owner, the relevant properties are again sold to different owners.
The first respondent’s
counsel has detailed the opinion on the
subject of various writers, including Van der Merwe
Sakereg
p 382, Lee & Honoré
Family,
Things and Succession
p 322, para 434.
I have also referred to
Scholtens
and
De Villiers
above, referred to in
LAWSA op cit
.
Scholtens doubted the correctness of
Du
Toit v Visser supra
, whilst De Villiers
criticised the judgment of
Eichelgruen
supra
. All of these writers are of
essentially of the view that those decisions were wrong in deviating
from the maxim
nulli res sua servit
.
Badenhorst
op cit
does
not criticise the judgments, but merely refer to the differing
opinions.
37.
In
Du Toit v
Visser supra
at 102-104 this Court (the
Honourable Ogilvie-Thomson presiding) held as follows in holding that
a right of foot passage registered
against the relevant properties’
title deeds (such as the servitudes in the present matter) had not
terminated as a result
of a previous merger:
“
In Salmon
v Lamb's Executor and Naidoo
(1906, E.D.C. 351)
… the
decision - proceeding exclusively upon the common law and, amidst a
sharp conflict of authority, preferring the view
advanced in Voet 8
- 6 - 3 and 19 - 1 - 6 … reached the conclusion that a
servitude extinguished by merger does
not (in the absence of a
re-imposition of the servitude) revive on a subsequent severance of
the praedium serviens and praedium
dominans.
It
is however important to notice that the servitude considered
in Salmon's case (supra), having been acquired by
prescription, was not registered. In the present case the servitude
in issue was not only originally duly registered, but to-day,
after
severance of the dominant and servient praedia, remains - in the
manner detailed earlier in this judgment - duly recorded
(and of
apparent full force and effect) in the Deeds Registry
.
That a previously existing servitude is susceptible of being revived
upon subsequent severance of the praedia is recognised
by
all authorities. The Roman law required express revival: nominatim
imponenda is the phrase used in Digest 8
- 2 - 30,
while van der Keessel in his Dictata (see 1906, E.D.C. p.
368 in fine) uses the word 'expresse'. Voet (8
-
6 - 3) speaks of a pact (pacto speciale) which Hoskyn translates
as a 'special agreement' to revive, but in dealing
with the case of
the heir Voet also alludes with approval to
tacit
agreements
to that effect.
The
question is what our law requires in order to bring about an express
revival of a previously existing servitude which was duly
registered:
as I have already pointed out, there was no registration
in Salmon's case; and thät decision can therefore
not
be accepted as decisive of the enquiry
.
I incline to the view
that, having regard to modern concepts of registration in the Deeds
Registry,
it would under our law constitute sufficient revival of
a previously existing and duly registered servitude if, upon
severance of
the praedia, the transfer deed conveying
the
former servient tenement were to incorporate (even if only by
reference) the servitude as one of the conditions to which -
according to the Deeds Registry - the transferee becomes subject; and
if that be so, the conclusion would properly follow that in
the
present case the servitude was revived when Stolpinsky transferred
the servient tenements away by means of transfers which,
by
reference, continued to incorporate the above-cited 'Registration of
Servitude' condition.
In the
present case however there are certain additional features which, in
my judgment, serve to indicate that the servitude was
in fact revived
upon severance of the praedia. …
Read
in the light of Stolpinsky's actions in regard to his transfers of
Lots 3 B and 3 C in 1920, the circumstance that those conveyances
contained, by reference, a perpetuation of the previously existing
servitude conditions must, in my judgment, be regarded as an
express
revival of the servitude upon severance of the praedia. Such
revival is, in my view, also confirmed by the subsequent
history of
these properties
.
”
(My emphasis.)
38.
In
Myers v Van
Heerde supra
(the Honourable Justice
Van Zyl presiding) at 654F-655H this Court essentially followed the
view expressed in
Du Toit v Visser
in refusing to set aside the servitude endorsement upon a deed of
transfer, although it shifted the emphasis slightly:
“
I
do not think that the learned Judge [in Du Toit v Visser], when he
wrote the passages italicised by me in the above quotation,
intended
to convey more than that the transfer deed had executed and correctly
recorded the execution of the agreement which
had been come to
by the parties and which had given rise to the registration of the
servitude. Where merger of the dominant and
servient tenements has
taken place the servitude is not, upon the severance of ownership,
revived by the act of incorporating the
servitude condition - by
reference or otherwise - in the deed of transfer conveying either of
the tenements to the new owner.
The
act of registration is part of the execution of the agreement of
sale. It is in fact the formal judicial delivery of the
property
sold. If it is the dominant tenement that has been sold, the
registration of the servitude condition is the formal judicial
delivery of the servitude enjoyed by the dominant tenement over the
servient tenement. If it is the servient tenement that has
been sold
the registration of the servitude condition is the formal judicial
act of delivering the property subjected to rights
of third parties,
viz. that the servient tenement is delivered subject to the rights
which, in terms of the servitude condition,
the owner of the dominant
tenement may exercise over the servient tenement. The record of this
formal delivery, registered in the
Deeds Office, is notice to the
world and speaks for itself.
It
is, until amended, the judicial record of what the seller has sold
and delivered to the purchaser. It may of course be amended
if the
delivery, i.e. the registration, was induced by fraud or if the
contract in execution of which the delivery was made was
induced by
fraud or if, through justus error, more or less was transferred
than was agreed upon. …
The registration of
the deed of transfer is not another agreement concerning the property
sold. It is a judicial recording of the
final execution of the
agreement of sale entered into between the parties and the symbolic
delivery of the property. (I have
spoken here of sale because the
present case has to do with sale. …
…
The
authorities relied upon by the applicant have, except for du
Toit's case, to do with the contract severing the dominant
and
servient tenements. They have no application to a deed of transfer
which states that a servitude is registered against the
property
transferred by the deed.
The
deed speaks for itself and the only grounds upon which it can be
altered or added to are: (a) that there was no justa
causa for the execution of the deed, for example, because the
transfer was induced by fraud or because the contract, in execution
of which the deed was registered, was induced by fraud; and (b) that
the deed does not reflect truly the agreement entered
into by the
parties, for example, because the deed as registered does not truly
carry out, and is not a true record of the contract
entered into by
the parties or because the contract, in execution of which the deed
was registered, does not, on account of mutual
error, reflect the
true intentions of the parties and the deed in consequence does not
carry out the contract nor is it a true
record of the execution of
the contract
.” (My emphasis.)
39.
These
dicta
are, to my mind, squarely of application in the particular
circumstances of the present case, given the content of the deeds of
sale and the title deeds, as well as the parties’ conduct
following the purchase of their respective properties.
40.
I am not convinced that these authorities
were clearly wrong and am not willing to depart from them (
see
Camps Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association v
Harrison
2011 (4) SA 42
(CC) at para
[28]: “
The
doctrine of precedent not only binds lower courts, but also binds
courts of final jurisdiction to their own decisions. These
courts can
depart from a previous decision of their own only when satisfied that
that decision is clearly wrong.
”
).
41.
In the premises, I agree with the
applicant’s counsel’s submission that the first
respondent’s allegations
do
not establish a defence. The registration of the servitude in both
the applicant's and the first respondent's title deeds
"is
prima facie proof of the existence of the servitude described in the
deed"
(
Eichelgruen
supra, with reference to Myers
1966 (2)
SA 649
(C))
.
Importantly,
"until the deed is rectified",
it remains unassailable.
42.
The first respondent has not
counter-applied for the rectification of the deeds, or instituted an
action for rectification. He alleges
in his answering papers that his
deed
"stands to be corrected",
but he has not yet done so
.
Where
the law requires a written document, a respondent raising
rectification must counter-apply therefor (
Gratia
(Pty)
Ltd
v DE Claasen (Pty) Ltd
1980 (1) 816
(AD) at 824B-C). It does not suffice for the first respondent to
allege, as he does, that he has instructed his attorneys
"to
prepare the necessary documentation to have these servitudes
...
removed from my Title Deed".
The
servitude stipulates rights in favour of the applicant, and any
application to remove the servitude would have to be on notice
to the
applicant.
43.
Nor does it suffice, for the purposes of
rectification, to allege speculatively (as the first respondent does)
that the title deeds
contain
"obvious
mistakes by the conveyancers
".
The first respondent acknowledges
(a)
that the servitudes
were
"brought forward into the title
deed of the
CC"; (b) that he
purchased in terms of a deed of sale which expressly provided
that he would
take transfer subject to existing
servitudes; and (c) that the servitudes are in his and the
applicant's title deeds. The first
respondent was required
to adduce evidence either from the
conveyancers who registered three transactions (the CC's title deeds
when it acquired the two
properties, the first respondent’s
title deed, and the applicant's title deed) to show that all of these
deeds contained
mistakes. If he could not provide evidence from those
conveyancers, he was required to explain why, and at least obtain
evidence
from
another conveyancer who has investigated
the transactions
and
all available transfer documentation
and
who is in a position to comment on it.
44.
The facts do not support the inference that
the conveyancer who registered the applicant’s title deed made
a mistake. The
conveyancer who transferred the applicant's
property
knew
attorney
De
Jager's advice, would have taken instructions from the CC, and
nevertheless
included
the servitude in the applicant's title deed. The better inference is
that the CC intended
to
include the servitudes in the title deeds. In any event, the
conveyancer did not depose to an affidavit in these proceedings
admitting that a mistake had been made.
45.
It is not in dispute that the additional
source of water is valuable to the applicant's property, as was
demonstrated by the Harvies’
concern about water when they
purchased. The applicant further explains that the servitude road is
the natural, more
amenable
way to
access
its
property, and
that
it
needs
the
servitude
road
to
access
and
maintain
the
dam
on
the
applicant's
property,
remove invasive plants as well as reeds and slit from time to time.
It is not disputed that the servitude road sits well
below the main
part of the first respondent’s property so that it is not
ordinarily visible from the largest part of his
property, and it does
not affect the amenity of his property.
46.
The first respondent disputes the
allegations about the applicant's need for the road. The dispute need
not be resolved. there are
good reasons for both the water and road
elements of the servitude, which would negate the inclusion of the
servitude by the conveyancers
as a “mistake”. The
principal defence proceeded with in argument was, moreover, the
defence of merger, and thus that
the servitude has been terminated.
47.
The first respondent contends that the term
of the deed of sale by way of which
he
agreed to purchase his property from the CC which provides that he
purchased the property
subject
to servitudes is pre-printed, and therefore is somehow of less force.
This is not correct. On the contrary, the reason such
provisions are
pre-printed
is
because of their importance. That a provision is pre-printed
does not make it less binding.
48.
What
is
noteworthy, rather, is
that
when
called
upon
to
dispel
the
applicant
's
prima
facie
proof of the servitude
by
way of the title deeds, the first
respondent
does
not allege that when he purchased his property and took transfer of
it from the CC he
"did not
bona.fide believe that the deed of transfer correctly reflected the
position" (Eichelgruen supra
at
680)
,
or
that
"there
was no iusta causa for the execution of the deed, for example,
because the transfer [from the CC to him] was induced
by fraud or because
the contract,
in execution of which the
deed was registered,
was induced
by fraud" (Myers v Van Heerde
supra
at 655H)
.
In the circumstances, I am of the view
that the first respondent did not overcome the evidentiary burden on
him, accepting his argument
in relation to the words “
shall
be prima facie evidence
” as
interpreted in the realm of criminal law, namely that an evidentiary
burden only, and not a legal burden, is imposed
upon an accused (and
by analogy, on the first respondent in the present matter).
49.
Even
were
the first respondent
to
have done so, there
can
be
no rectification
where
there
would
be prejudice
to
"people,
who
at
the
time
of
their
acquisition
of
their rights were unaware of the
error in the registered deed of transfer"
(
Myers
supra
at 656H). The time at which the
applicant acquired its rights was when it concluded its deed of sale
with the CC, on 9 August 2008.
At that stage, the applicant
was not aware of any controversy
in relation to the servitudes.
50.
In all of these circumstances, I am of the
view, on the authority of
Du Toit v
Visser supr
a and
Myers
v Van Heerde supra
, that the servitudes
exist and are enforceable despite the fact that the applicant’s
and the first respondent’s properties
were previously owned by
the same owner.
The
borehole servitude
51.
The first respondent contend that the
borehole servitude was in any event terminated by destruction,
because the borehole had collapsed
and does not produce water. He
refers to Van der Merwe
op cit
p 381: “’
n Serwituut verval
indien die uitoefening daarvan ontmoontlik word; by ondergang van die
heersnde of dienende erf as gevolg van
oorstromings, aardbewings of
brande; indien die natuurlike gesteldheid van die erf waarvan die
betrokke serwituut afhanklik is
verlore gaan, soos wanneer ‘n
fontein waarop ;n serwituut van waterhaling gevestig is, opdroog of
wanneer ‘n muur waarvan
‘n serwituut van inankering of
stut afhanklik is, verkrummel.
”
52.
I have earlier referred to what
LAWSA
says on the subject.
53.
The applicant seeks specific performance of
the servitude, by permitting it to continue to use water in
accordance with servitude,
albeit not from a borehole at the
particular point referred to in the servitude, but from the first
respondent’s new borehole.
54.
In making an order for specific performance
in the face of a change of circumstances, the background principle is
that the change
of circumstances must not make the enforcement sought
unconscientious or inequitable (
Rex v
Milne and Erleigh
1951 (1) SA 791
at
873G).
55.
There is no
numerus
clausus
of praedial servitudes (
Cillie
v Geldenhuys
[2008] ZASCA 54
;
2009 (2) SA 325
(SCA) at
332G-H).
The terms of a particular
servitude must thus be interpreted in order to give it content. In
interpreting, the court considers context,
purpose and what is
sensible and business-like in a unitary exercise (
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para [18]). The manner in which parties who are
subject to an obligation discharged it - that is, their subsequent
conduct
- also falls to be taken into account (
Comwezi
Security Services (Pty) Ltd v Cape Empowerment Trust Ltd
[2012] ZASCA 126
paras [12]-[13]).
56.
In this case, the servitude, the provisions
of which have been quoted above, refers to “
the
right to the use of water from a borehole situate on the remaining
extent of the property hereby transferred [the first respondent’s
property] and situate at the spot marked M on Diagram No 6376/1947.”
57.
The subject of the servitude is not “the”
borehole. The subject of the servitude is the use of water sourced
from underground
the first respondent’s property. The purpose
of the servitude is to provide the applicant’s property with a
direct
and uninterrupted flow of water sourced from underground water
on the first respondent’s property. The business-like
construction
of the terms of the servitude requires that its purpose
be given effect.
58.
The examples of destruction given in
LAWSA
and Van der Merwe
op cit
in illustration of the principle show that destruction extinguishes a
servitude where (1) the destruction is a permanent consequence
of
vis
maior
, and (2) the
vis
maior
event entirely destroys the
subject of the servitude (though not necessarily the entire servient
tenement). Where, however, the
destruction so occasioned can be
remedied, the servitude is not extinguished. Where the subject of the
servitude itself is not
entirely destroyed, then the servitude is not
extinguished.
59.
The sort of remediable circumstances which
do not extinguish a servitude have as their correlative the sort of
circumstances which
permit an owner of a servient tenement to
relocate the servitude. In that regard, the Supreme Court of Appeal
has recognised that
a servient owner may relocate a servitude at its
cost, outside of “
the strict terms
of the grant”
, where
circumstances have changed, and the dominant owner suffers no
prejudice (see
Linvestment CC v
Hammersley
[2008] ZASCA 1
;
2008 (3) SA 283
(SCA)).
60.
The source of this finding is the
Roman-Dutch principle that “
the
owner of the servient tenement may not do anything by which the use
of the servitude is rendered less useful or convenient.
He may
therefore not change the condition of the property, nor transfer the
exercise of the servitude to or impose it upon any
part of the
property other than that on which it was originally laid.
Nevertheless, when the original institution has become more
burdensome to him, or hinders him in carrying out any necessary or
useful repair, he may offer to those entitled to the right of
servitude another equally good and convenient for their exercise, at
his cost; an offer so made cannot be refused” (see
Linvestment
CC v Hammersley supra
para [24])
.
61.
I agree with the applicant’s
submission that it would be anomalous to find that the law has
developed as set out above to
permit the owner of servient tenement
to relocate a servitude, but not the owner of a dominant tenement
where circumstances beyond
the control of both have changed.
62.
Servitudes are in principle perpetual.
Boreholes, on the other hand, are not indefinite. Particular
boreholes, by their inherent
nature, do not always provide a supply
of water in perpetuity, because they may collapse or dry up, but that
is not to say that
a farm on which a borehole is situated will not
yield a supply of underground water which may be extracted from other
boreholes
(see
Flemming v Kommissaris
Van Binnelandse Inkomste
[1994] ZASCA 142
;
1995 (1) SA
574
(A)
).
63.
The present matter is, in fact, a case in
point: As mentioned earlier, in the 1980’s the previous owner
of the first respondent’s
property abandoned the borehole on at
point M and sunk a new borehole at point X. In February 2020, the
first respondent suffered
problems with the pump in the borehole at
point X. The pump fell into the borehole and then, the first
respondent alleges, he became
aware that the borehole at point X
might have collapsed. He proceeded to drill a new borehole at point H
(also shown on the uncontentious
diagrams attached to the notice of
motion).
64.
Boreholes also differ from springs. People
drill boreholes in order to access groundwater. When one borehole
fails, another can
be drilled, whilst springs occur naturally. The
drying up of a spring thus does not stand on the same footing as the
collapse of
a borehole. The right to source water from underground a
property bv way of a borehole differs from the right to source water
appearing
on the surface, in that the owner of a property subject to
a borehole servitude may have to suffer the drilling of a borehole to
meet the purpose of the servitude (and that would be the difference
between the servitudes included in the title deeds in relation
to the
borehole and the springs on the first respondent’s property).
65.
Boreholes are more comparable to buildings
than they are to entire properties, or to springs, because they are
man-made. Where buildings
are destroyed, servitudes over them are not
usually extinguished (
Van der Walt
Servitudes
p 557)
. The reason is buildings are able to
be rebuilt, and the servient owner is permitted to do so.
66.
It is clear from the papers that, from the
time that the first respondent acquired his property from the CC in
2008, and until February
2020, the first respondent provided the
applicant with water from the borehole situated not at point M, but
at point X. The first
respondent alleges that he has supplied water
from the borehole at point X not because the servitude obliged him to
do so, but
as a sign of goodwill.
67.
This allegation is implausible, because, as
shown earlier, the record of the dealings between the two neighbours
indicates that
the first respondent acknowledged the existence of the
servitudes on various occasions, albeit that he tried to get rid of
his
obligations under the servitudes. The only inference from the
papers is that the first respondent supplied the water because he
realised that the servitude obliged him to do so. The parties’
subsequent conduct therefore supports the interpretation of
the
servitude to impose a burden on the first respondent’s property
by way of boreholes drilled to replace the borehole at
point M, being
the boreholes at point X, and now at point H.
68.
In these circumstances, I agree with the
submissions made on the applicant’s behalf that the correct,
business-like and sensible
interpretation of the servitude, which
accords with its purpose and the conduct of the parties, is that it
affords the applicant
the right to the use of water sourced from
underground the first respondent’s property, by way of a
borehole situated on
such property at point M, and boreholes
subsequently drilled to replace the borehole at point M. The
servitude is perpetual, even
if the boreholes are not indefinite. The
collapse of the borehole at X (the change in circumstances) does not
permanently impair
the applicant’s ability to source water from
the first respondent’s property.
69.
In the premises, I find that the borehole
servitude has not been terminated as a result of destruction.
Prescription
in relation to the road
70.
The other defence raised
by the first respondent in the papers
concerns the road. The first respondent alleges that, aside from the
small portion of the
road, the applicant and its predecessors did not
use the road for more than thirty years. This defence was not pressed
in oral
argument.
71.
Be that as it may, a praedial servitude
such as a right of way is indivisible in nature and cannot
be partially acquired
or lost (
Joles
Eiendom (Pty) Ltd v Kruger
2007 (5) SA
222
(C) at paras [19] and [24] (the judgment was overturned on appeal
but not on this point)).
For
a right of way to be extinguished by prescription, the owner of the
servient tenement must show that the owner of the dominant
tenement
has not exercised any of the rights inherent
in the right of way for a continuous period
of thirty years.
72.
It is common cause that the applicant has
used a part of the road, and therefore prescription
is not a defence.
Conclusion
73.
In all of these circumstances, the applicant has made out a
case for the relief sought.
Costs
74.
There is no reason to depart from the
general rule in relation to costs, namely that costs should follow
the event.
75.
The applicant contends that the first
respondent’s conduct has been objectively vexatious. The record
shows that he has
disregarded advice he did
not like in the face of the terms and conditions of his deed of sale
and the relevant title deeds, as
well as the advice received from
various sets of attorneys, namely that he is bound by the servitude.
76.
In the circumstances, I agree that an award
on the attorney and client scale is warranted on the basis of the
extended meaning of
“vexatious” referred to
Johannesburg
City Council v Television and Electrical Distributors (Pty) Ltd and
another
1997 (1) SA 157
(A) at 177D: “
…
in appropriate circumstances
the conduct of a litigant may be adjudged ‘vexatious’
within the extended meaning that
has been placed upon this terms in a
number of decisions, that is, when such conduct has resulted in
‘unnecessary trouble
and expense which the other side ought not
to bear (In re Alluvial Creek
1929 CPD 532
at 535)
.”
Order
:
The following order is
granted:
77.
The first respondent is directed, within 60
ordinary days of the grant of this order:
77.1.
To permit the applicant to exercise its
servitude right to use the road running along the boundary CDEFGHJ
situated on the Remainder
of Portion 17 (a portion of Portion 5) of
the Farm Nooitgedacht No. 65 in the Municipality and Division of
Stellenbosch (the first
respondent’s property”) marked on
Diagram No. 6376/1947 attached to the applicant’s notice of
motion as NOM1.
77.2.
To permit the applicant to construct a road
not exceeding three metres in width in a reserved area with a width
of five metres measured
from the boundary of the first respondent’s
property and parallel to the boundary, adjacent to the boundary and
on the first
respondent’s property from point E, via points F,
G, and H to point J as shown on Diagram No. 6376/1947 attached to the
applicant’s
notice of motion as NOM1.
77.3.
To permit the applicant to exercise its
servitude right to use the water from the borehole situated on the
first respondent’s
property at the point marked X,
alternatively H, on the orthophoto annexed to the applicant’s
notice of motion as NOM3, on
the basis that:
77.3.1.
The water so used shall be conducted along
a three-inch pipeline which shall afford the applicant and direct and
uninterrupted flow
from the borehole for supply by way of a pump used
exclusively for the benefit of the applicant and its
successors-in-title for
24 hours per week from 8 am to 8 pm on
Sundays and from 8 pm on Wednesdays to 8 am on Thursdays.
77.3.2.
The first respondent shall be responsible
for the maintenance of the pump.
77.3.3.
The applicant shall be responsible for
one-seventh of the costs of the power required to operate the pump
per week.
77.3.4.
The proper maintenance of the pipeline
shall be the responsibility of the applicant, and the first
respondent shall permit the applicant
reasonable access to the first
respondent’s property and the pipeline to that end, failing
which the first respondent shall
maintain the pipeline insofar as it
runs over the first respondent’s property.
77.3.5.
The applicant shall exercise all reasonable
care with the pump.
77.4.
To permit the applicant to exercise its
servitude right of access to the springs on the first respondent’s
property shown
by the letters P, Q, and R on the diagram attached to
the applicant’s notice of motion as NOM2 for the purposes of
leading
water therefrom by means of pipes, furrows or otherwise over
the first respondent’s property to the applicant’s
property,
on the basis that a two-third share of the water arising
from the spring shall belong to the first respondent and one-third to
the applicant.
78.
The first respondent shall pay the costs of
this application on the scale as between attorney and client.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting judge of the
High Court
HEARING
DATE:
16 February 2022
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the applicant:
R. G. Patrick, instructed by Fairbridges Wertheim
Becker Attorneys.
Counsel
for the first respondent:
A. M. Heunis, instructed by Dykes, Van
Heerden Attorneys
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