Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 232South Africa
Aristonas (Pty) Ltd v Veltman (11104/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 232 (23 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
23 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Aristonas (Pty) Ltd v Veltman (11104/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 232 (23 August 2022)
Aristonas (Pty) Ltd v Veltman (11104/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 232 (23 August 2022)
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sino date 23 August 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 11104/2022
In
the matter between:
###
### ARISTONAS (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
ARISTONAS (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
WILLEM
VELTMAN
Respondent
##
## JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY: TUESDAY, 23 AUGUST 2022
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY: TUESDAY, 23 AUGUST 2022
NZIWENI
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for confirmation of a rule
nis
i,
granted on 01 July 2022. The rule operated as an interim interdict
restraining the respondent from removing the applicant’s
fence
and calling upon the respondent to show cause if any on the return
day, why the order should not be made absolute. The respondent
anticipated the return day to seek the order granted against it to be
set aside.
[2]
At the hearing on 29 July 2022, I confirmed the rule
nisi
with
an amendment and also informed the parties that reasons would be
provided in due course. The reasons now follow.
[3]
This case involves
a dispute between two neighbours whose
houses are very close to one another. It concerns a small area of
land in respect of which
a servitude was registered over an
encroaching area. The contentious piece of land is located between
the properties of the two
neighbours.
The
dispute
that the
neighbours are presently
embroiled
in, involves a fence which results in an encroachment onto and over
the servitude area.
[4]
Aristonas (PTY) LTD, a private company (the applicant), is the owner
of a residential
property situated in Green Point (“Ariston
property”).
Adjoining the applicant’s property is
the property belonging to the respondent (“Veltman property).
[5]
Both properties were initially owned by the respondent. In the
respondent’s
answering affidavit, it is averred that in 1996,
the respondent decided to extend the patio and the garden area on the
second floor
of the Veltman property. As a result of the extension,
there were two encroachments onto the Aristonas property.
[6]
When the Aristonas property was sold to the applicant, the applicant
did not object
to the encroachments. The parties then agreed that the
respondent would register servitudes over the encroaching areas, in
order
to regularise the encroachment. The encroachments were then
registered as
praedial
servitude areas, which were created in
favour of the Veltman’s [respondent’s] property.
[7]
In December 2016, the applicant erected a Clearvu fence to separate
its property [Aristonas
property] and the respondent’s
property. Insofar as the encroachments issue is concerned, it is
undisputed before this court
that the applicant's fence does intrude
in some way onto the Veltman property. The parties however, are at
polar opposites when
it comes to the extent of the encroachments.
[8]
It is common cause in this matter that the parties failed to discuss
the fence’s
construction before it was built. According to the
respondent, he only discovered t the existence of the fence in 2018,
when he
asked the applicant to remove the fence enclosing the braai
area. Pursuant to the communique written in 2018, requesting the
applicant
to remove the fence; the respondent learned that the
applicant never actually did so until June 2022.
[9]
It is stated in the applicant’s founding affidavit that, on 27
June 2022, the
respondent sent an email to the applicant stating that
the applicant had five days to remove the fence, failing which he
would
remove it at the applicant’s cost. When faced with
the communique of 27 June 2022, the applicant approached and
instructed
an attorney and a land surveyor. According to the
applicant, the land surveyor prepared an encroachment plan which
inter alia,
indicated that there was a minimal encroachment
onto the respondent’s property. Subsequent to the surveyor’s
report,
the applicant’s attorney wrote to the respondent
informing him that he does not have the authority to take the law
into his
own hands. The applicant then requested an undertaking from
the respondent that he would not remove the fence.
[10]
It is asserted on applicant’s behalf that when the respondent
failed to make the undertaking,
the applicant approached the court on
an urgent basis seeking an interim interdict to prohibit the
respondent from removing the
fence of the applicant. Applicant’s
counsel emphatically denied that the respondent seeks to forever
deprive the respondent
from accessing or enjoying his part of the
servitude.
The
respondent’s response to the applicant’s averments made
in the founding affidavit
.
[11]
The answering affidavit contends that the founding affidavit is a
contrived attempt to avoid
placing material facts before the court.
Furthermore, the respondent’s answer to the founding affidavit
alludes to the scale
of the encroachment, contending that the
encroachment constitutes a minor fraction and the effect of the
fence, which he claims
hinders the occupants of the Veltman property
from accessing or using the servitude area.
[12]
The respondent further argued before this court that he did not
consent to the erection of the
fence over the servitude area and has
a clear right to have it removed. The respondent also claimed that
the intrusion interferes
with the legitimate enjoyment of the
servitude.
Evaluation
Failure
to make full and proper disclosure of facts
[13]
In the respondent’s answering affidavit it is averred that the
applicant failed to make
a full and proper disclosure of all material
facts. According to the respondent, the applicant in so doing
influenced the court
decision in granting the
ex parte
relief
by misleading the court in believing that the dispute between the
parties concerns a mere fence that has been erected along
the common
boundary line. Whereas, according to the respondent, the matter
involves an encroachment of a servitude. Counsel on
behalf of the
applicant contended that the underlying dispute about the fence is
not before this court.
[14]
It bears mentioning that, for purposes of this application that the
applicant did not need to
demonstrate that there was an encroachment
on the servitude in the original application. I cannot see how the
disclosure about
the existence of the servitude and an encroachment
thereupon might have influenced the first court in coming to its
decision, had
it known about the encroachment on the servitude. In
this application it is not material, as the information was not going
to influence
the court in reaching its. It is settled now that the
disclosure that is required must at all times be material facts to
the matter
(See
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W)
at 348 E-349A).
The
issue before the court
[15]
It can be readily seen that,
whether the
encroachment should be removed or remain in place, is not the
issue to be determined by this court. The issue in contention also
does not involve a boundary dispute between neighbouring property
owners.
[16]
The main contention brought by the applicant before the court was to
seek a relief preventing
the respondent from taking the law into his
own hand by removing the fence or encroachment which was erected by
the applicant without
its consent. The paramount question is whether
the applicant has satisfied the requirements for a final order.
Another issue which
arose during the hearing for determination was
whether the draft order proposed by the applicant can be granted even
if it is not
similar to the prayer on the motion of notice.
Has
the applicant satisfied the requirements for the final relief?
[17]
The remedy sought by the applicant is a final interdict. It is
established now that the requirements
for a final interdict are (a) a
clear right; (b) an injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended; and (c) the lack of an
adequate alternative remedy.
In
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
, Innes CJ opined:
“
The requisites for
the right to claim an interdict are well-known; a clear right, injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended,
and the absence of
similar protection by any other ordinary remedy. Now the right of the
applicant is perfectly clear. He is a
possessor; he is in actual
occupation of the land and holds it for himself. And he is entitled
to be protected against any person
who against his will forcibly
ousts him from such possession.”
Clear
right
[18]
The interdict which is sought by the applicant will restrain the
respondent from accessing certain
parts of its servitude. There can
thus be no doubt that the encroachment of the respondent’s
servitude effectively infringes
upon the right of the respondent to
the free enjoyment of his property. In certain circumstances, though
the encroacher might be
guilty of an encroachment, the removal of the
encroachment cannot happen without permission of the encroacher or
without the sanction of a court order.
The
landowner can demand the removal of the encroachment from the
encroacher, however, if however the encroacher refuses, the landowner
cannot forcefully remove the encroachment. Instead it should approach
a court and seek justice and redress if the parties cannot
resolve
the impasse amicably.
[19]
On the respondent’s own version, the encroachment is not just a
minor encroachment, therefore,
the respondent is not allowed to take
the law into his own hands. The proper remedy for the respondent is
to apply to the court
for an order for removal of the encroachment
and restoring the land to its original condition.
[20]
The respondent contends that if the rule
nisi
is confirmed, it
would be deprived from its right to exercise the servitude. I
disagree. I do not get the impression that the applicant
has brought
this application to justify a continued existence of the encroachment
on the servitude area.
[21]
In any event, the applicant’s application merely seeks to
restrain the respondent from
taking the law into his own hands.
Consequently, for purposes of this particular application, insofar as
the encroachment is concerned;
it is not necessary to consider the
merits and demerits of the encroachment.
[22]
It is established that the applicant must prove on a balance of
probabilities the right which
it seeks to protect. In other words,
the applicant has to show that he has a clear right to ask the court
for the relief he is
seeking. The question which aptly begs is, what
right does the applicant have in the matter. What is apparent
from the facts
of this matter is that, the applicant has established
a legal right that he is an owner of the fence and that the fence is
partly
erected on his property. It bears mentioning that the
respondent did not seek any court order to force the applicant to
remove
the fence. Clearly, the applicant has a legal interest in the
land and fence in question.
In the context of
this case, the respondent
is not allowed to take the law into his own hands.
[23]
I was thus satisfied that the applicant satisfied this particular
requirement.
Injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended.
[24]
Gleaning from the papers, it becomes apparent that the respondent did
not threaten the applicant
with legal action but, has instead
threatened him with the removal of the fence. A threat to remove a
fence without consent from
the owner of the fence amounts to a threat
to cause damage to the fence which may cause damage to the property.
Clearly, the respondent,
as a disgruntled neighbour, took an
aggressive stance towards the erection of the fence. In essence the
respondent threatened to
take the law into its own hands, instead of
referring the encroachment dispute to court.
[25]
The papers of the applicant evinces that the applicant took the
threat of the respondent to remove
the fence very seriously. The
Applicant then sought an undertaking from the respondent that he was
not going to take the law into
his own hands. According to the
applicant, when the undertaking was not forthcoming from the
respondent; it was forced to approach
the court seeking an interdict
restraining such threatened conduct.
[26]
In general, a legal wrong cannot be remedied by resorting to taking
the law into your own hands.
Evidently, the respondent’s threat
to take the law into its own hands and to send people to remove the
fence, was a good
enough reason to fear and reasonably apprehend that
such action won’t be void of harm. Thus, the threatened and
imminent
invasion of the applicant’s right in the property
constituted proof of reasonably apprehended injury. As a result I am
convinced
that the fear was justified and well grounded. It was
incumbent upon the applicant to protect its clear right, from a
conduct which
had a potential of falling afoul of the law. At the
same time, preventing the respondent from conducting itself in a
manner that
involves a violation of the law.
Lack
of adequate remedy
[27]
The question which begs is whether there is another alternative for
the applicant to avert harm.
[28]
In the light of the fact that the
respondent’s threat to take the law into his own
hands and remove the encroachment itself, and
the respondent’s failure to make an
undertaking not to take any
steps towards the
removal of the fence; the applicant was forced to
apply to court for an interdict prohibiting
such threatened conduct.
[29]
Moreover, despite several negotiations, before the commencement of
the hearing the parties could
not reach agreement. Clearly, there is
no other alternative relief available to the applicant other than an
interdict, to provide
the applicant with the necessary protection.
[30]
From the aforegoing it is evident that the applicant has made out a
case to justify the court
in granting a final interdict to restrain
the respondent from taking the law into his own hand.
Reconsideration
of the order granted during the original court
[31]
What remains to be considered is the reconsideration of the initial
court order. In granting
the final order; this court engrafted
additions to the order issued in the absence of the respondent, by
appending the words ‘without
a court order’.
[32]
During the hearing of this application, it was strenuously argued on
behalf of the respondent
that the court cannot amend the order which
was granted by the original court. The case law is replete with
authorities that state
that, if an order is granted during urgent
proceedings in the absence of a party affected by it, ; in terms of
Rule 6 (12) of the
Uniform Rule of the Court, the court is free to
reconsider the order initially granted in the widest sense, (See
ISDN
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v CSDN Solutions CC
and others
1996
(4) SA 484
(W) at 486H-487A-C;
Oosthuizen v MIJS
2009 (6) SA
266at
269B-G;).
[33]
In the case at hand, an interim interdict was issued
ex
parte
in order to maintain the
status quo
before
both parties can be heard. The respondent anticipated the return date
and set the matter down seeking the setting aside
of the
ex parte
relief granted against it. Additionally, the respondent set the
application down for hearing and filed an answering affidavit.
[34]
Having considered both versions proffered by the parties during the
hearing, the court was of
the view that the original order in its
current form was going to be prejudicial to the respondent, hence the
amendment was added.
[35]
In my view, in considering the purpose of Rule 6 (12) (
c
),
there is no question that the circumstances of this matter fall
squarely within the ambit of Rule 6 (12) (
c
). It is an
important factor to consider that, the notice which was filed by the
respondent on 27 July 2022, to anticipate the return
date, is headed
‘notice in terms of Rule 6(8) and
Rule 6(12) (
c
)’.
Keeping in mind that the respondent’s notice in terms of Rule 6
(8) is read with the provisions of Rule 6 (12) (c);
it is rather odd
that the respondent would object to the court reconsidering the
original order. Clearly, the notice filed by the
respondent reaffirms
that the provisions of Rule 6 (12) (
c)
are fully applicable in
this matter.
[36]
It is for these aforegoing reasons that I concluded the way I did on
29 July 2022.
CN
NZIWENI
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Appearances
Counsel
for the Applicant
Adv C Fehr
Instructed
by
Erleigh & Associates Inc.
D Erleigh
Counsel
for Respondent
:
Adv S
Fuller
Instructed
by
Slabbert Venter Yanoutsos
Ms Burger
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