Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 193South Africa
Da Ribeira N.o and Others v Woudberg and Others (15203/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 193; 2023 (1) SA 530 (WCC) (23 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
23 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Da Ribeira N.o and Others v Woudberg and Others (15203/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 193; 2023 (1) SA 530 (WCC) (23 September 2022)
Da Ribeira N.o and Others v Woudberg and Others (15203/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 193; 2023 (1) SA 530 (WCC) (23 September 2022)
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sino date 23 September 2022
FLYNOTES:
WATER SERVITUDE
Property
– Servitude – Water – Piping of sloot –
Whether an implied term – Whether reasonably
necessary for
exercise of servitude – Matter for trial court and exception
dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Reportable
Case
No: 15203/2020
In
the matter between:
KIM
PEREIRA SERRAO DA RIBEIRA N.O.
First Plaintiff
RAIL
PEREIRA SERRAO DA RIBIERA N.O.
Second Plaintiff
SAMANTHA
PEREIRA SERRAO DA RIBIERA N.O.
Third Plaintiff
CHRISTINA
ELIZABETH LE ROUX
Fourth Plaintiff
and
WILLEM
PETRUS WOUDBERG
First Defendant
WERNER
JANSE VAN RENSBURG N.O.
Second Defendant
THE TRUSTEES FOR THE
TIME
BEING
OF THE ESLO TRUST
Third Defendant
THE TRUSTEES FOR THE
TIME
BEING
OF THE SONADOR TRUST
Fourth Defendant
EXECUTRIX ESTATE LATE
PETRONELLA
JANSE
VAN
RENSBURG
Fifth Defendant
COSMIC
GOLD TRADING 575 CC
Sixth Defendant
GERRIT
LE ROUX
Seventh Defendant
Coram:
De Wet AJ
Date
of Judgment: This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email.
The
date and time of handing down judgment is deemed to be 14h00 on 23
September 2022.
JUDGMENT
DE
WET AJ
Introduction:
1.
The first defendant raised two grounds of exception against the
particulars of
claim filed by the plaintiffs on the basis that it
does not disclose a cause of action, alternatively that it lacks
averments which
are necessary to sustain an action. In response, the
plaintiffs filed an application for leave to amend (“the
amendment application”),
which application includes a request
that a new cause of action for interdictory relief based on certain
sections of the National
Heritage Resources Act, 25 of 1999 (“the
NHRA”), be introduced. This application is opposed.
2.
At the core of this matter lies a dispute over whether the first
defendant, as
the holder of a servitude of
aquaeductus
, has
the ancillary right to pipe a water furrow known as the Molen River
sloot, on the properties of the plaintiffs, which properties
are the
servient tenements.
Background:
3.
The first to third plaintiffs are the trustees for the time being of
the Pereira
Serrao Da Ribeira Family Trust (“the PSDR Trust”)
who is the registered owner of the remainder of farm 134, Eden
District
Municipality Uniondale, Western Cape and the fourth
plaintiff is the owner of farm 3/134, Uniondale, Western Cape.
4.
The PSDR Trust bought the remainder of farm 134 in terms of a deed of
sale dated
1 June 2004 from the first defendant. In terms of an
addendum to the deed of sale, it was recorded that:
“
5.
Die koper bevestig dat hy daarvan bewus is dat die eienaars geregtig
is op water uit die stroom wat vloei
oor die eiendom, die reg het om
die verdelingspunte van die water van tyd tot tyd te inspekteer en
die bestaande pad tot op daardie
punt kan gebruik
[1]
.
8.
Die Verkoper is tans besig om die bestaande watervoor in pype om te
skep en sal die Koper sodra
dit voltooi is die kostes daarvan vergoed
soos reeds bespreek”
[2]
5.
According to the title deed of the remainder of farm 134, the PSDR
Trust’s
right to ownership is subject to an agreement
pertaining to water rights dated 25 March 1879 and a notarial deed
dated 1894. The
25 March 1879 agreement provided the following water
rights in respect of the “Molen River Water Courses”.
“
Further, that the
water courses of Molen River the under-mentioned have shares as …,
viz.
C.L. du Plessis five days
viz. Monday morn to Sat morn.
J.P van Tonder five days
viz. Wednesday morn to Sat morn.
JIP van Jaarsveld four
days viz. Saturday morn to Wed morn.
Also
that a stream of water (one inch in diameter) shall be allowed to
flow for drinking purposes during the times in which CL du
Plessis &
JP van Tonder have the use of the Molen River water courses, each for
the other.
Further,
that the Molen River water courses shall be cleaned twice during the
course of each year, viz. on the 1
st
day of April, &
on the 1
st
day of October, each shareholder to contribute
equal assistance.
Further
that CL du Plessis is to have the right of making a water course (for
the Molen River water) through the grounds of JP van
Tonder (at
Mealie Hoek) for irrigation of the lower lands”.
[3]
6.
The 1894 notarial deed recorded the following agreements pertaining
water rights:
“
The following
rights which “Keyter … secured from … [J.P.] van
Tonder [the PSDR Trust’s predecessor in
title]”, in order
for him “better to enable him to enjoy” the water use
rights obtained from C L du Plessis:
“
[The right to a
furrow along the Southern Boundary of [Van Tonder’s] properly
[viz. Lot D Molen River] [in accordance with
the conditions
stipulated in an arbitration award, viz.:] …
…
“
(1) [K]eyter shall
have the full right at all times to a free right of way along the
sluit, and will further have the right, four
feet on each side of the
sluit to excavate material for repairing the said sluit.”
(2) [K]eyter shall be
bound to keep in good order the drifts where the present road crosses
the said sluit twice, to enable [JP
van Tonder] to cross with his
wagon and oxen …””
[4]
7.
The
plaintiffs issued a summons on 20 October 2020 pursuant to an urgent
application for interdictory relief under case no. 8446/2020
[5]
,
claiming the following declaratory relief:
7.1. An
order declaring that the first defendant does not have a right to
pipe the Molen River sloot in terms
of the deed of sale, the 25 March
1879 Water Servitude Agreement and the 1894 Notarial Deed;
7.2. An
order declaring that the first to fourth defendants do not have the
right to pipe the Molen River Sloot
in terms of the 25 March 1879
Water Servitude Agreement.
8.
Only the first defendant filed a notice of intention to defend and
later, on
2 February 2021, an exception in terms of rule 23(4). The
exception was first enrolled for hearing on 5 May 2021, not allocated
and postponed to 9 November 2021. On 4 November 2021 the
plaintiffs filed the amendment application in terms of rule 28(1).
The exception and the further conduct in relation to the amendment
application were regulated in an order postponing the matter
to 15
February 2022. It is common cause that the proposed
amendment was not the reason for the exception not
being allocated on
9 November 2021.
9.
The plaintiffs failed to file heads of
argument in terms of practice directive 50(3) of this division in
respect of the amendment
application. Despite this fact, Mr van
Staden SC, on behalf of the first defendant, requested that the
matter not be struck from
the roll for non-compliance and that the
court proceed to hear both matters: the exception and the amendment
application. I conceded
to his request but point out that the
plaintiffs’ failure to comply with the applicable practice
directives hampered the
proper ventilation of the issues in dispute.
After hearing argument, the matter stood down for the parties to try
and mediate
their disputes.
10.
The court was advised during June 2022 that
the parties failed to settle the matter and it was requested that
both parties be allowed
to file further heads of argument given the
limited court time that was available for argument on the previous
occasion and the
plaintiffs’ failure to file heads of argument
in respect of the amendment application. Both parties subsequently
filed further
heads of argument.
The
amendment application:
11.
In a
nutshell, the proposed amendments to claims 1 and 2, which introduces
allegations that the plaintiffs would be prejudiced if
piping is
installed in the sloot, were as a result of the exception filed by
the first defendant. The plaintiffs’ further
request to
add a new claim 3 for interdictory relief in the event of the
plaintiffs failing to obtain the declaratory relief sought
in claims
1 and 2.
[6]
12.
The first defendant filed an opposing affidavit to the amendment
application, to which the plaintiffs
did not reply.
13.
It is trite that the primary object of allowing an amendment is to
obtain a proper ventilation
of the dispute between the parties in
order for justice to be done. A court hearing an application for an
amendment has a discretion
whether or not to grant an amendment. The
general approach, as set out in Moolman v Estate Moolman
1927 CPD 27
at para 29, is to allow amendments unless the application is
mala
fide
or would cause an injustice to the other side which cannot
be compensated by costs.
14.
I will deal with the proposed amendments in respect of claims 1 and 2
in conjunction with the
exceptions raised and separately from the
proposed introduction of claim 3.
General
approach of the courts when exceptions are raised:
15.
Rule
18(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that every pleading
shall contain a clear and concise statement of the material
facts
upon which a pleader relies for his/her or its claim with sufficient
particularity to enable the opposite party to plead
thereto. An
exception is a legal objection. Even if an exception is dismissed,
the point can be re-argued at the trial.
[7]
16.
It
is well established that an exception provides a useful mechanism for
weeding out cases without legal merit.
[8]
Thus,
an exception founded upon the contention that a summons discloses no
cause of action, or that a plea lacks averments necessary
to sustain
a defence, is designed to obtain a decision on a point of law which
will dispose of the case in whole or in part, and
avoid the leading
of unnecessary evidence at the trial.
17.
To
succeed an excipient has the duty to persuade the Court that on every
interpretation which the pleading in question can reasonably
bear, no
cause of action or defence is disclosed. Failing this, the exception
ought not to be upheld.
[9]
18.
Where
an exception is taken, the Court must look at the pleading excepted
to as it stands:
[10]
no
fact outside those stated in the pleading can be brought into issue
except in the case of inconsistency
[11]
and
no reference may be made to any other document.
[12]
In
the recent decision of Naidoo and Another v Dube Transport Corp &
Others
2022 (3) SA 390
(SCA) it was reaffirmed that the court must
accept the factual averments in the particulars of claim as truthful,
unless manifestly
false and cannot go beyond the pleadings. I can
consequently not take into consideration the allegations contained in
the affidavits
filed in respect of the amendment application when
determining the exceptions.
19.
An
exception should further be dealt with in a sensible and not
over-technical manner.
[13]
20.
The definition of cause of action was stated in
the matter of McKenzie v Farmer’s Co-operative Meat Industries
Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23 as “..every fact which it would be
necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed, in order to
support his right
to judgment of the court. It does not comprise
every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove each fact, but
every fact which
is necessary to be proved” and has been
applied on innumerable occasions and need not be restated.
The
exceptions:
21.
The first ground of exception is that the averments contained in
paragraphs 27.1.1 to 27.1.3 of
the particulars of claim, do not
justify a finding that the deed of sale, and more particularly the
addendum thereto, are not valid
and binding.
22.
The second
ground of exception is against the averment that the piping of the
Molen Rivier sloot would violate a condition of the
servitude
agreement or notarial deed as there is no legal basis for such
averment in light of the common law position that “anyone
who
has a right of water-leading can either put a pipe in the channel or
do anything else as he pleases, whereby he may take the
water more
freely, provided that he does not worsen the passage of water for the
owner or for other users of the channel”
[14]
.
In this regard the plaintiffs averred in paras 27.2 and 27.3 as
follows:
“
27.2
The proposed piping of the Molen River sloot would destroy the
furrow, thus violating a condition of the 1879 Water
Servitude
Agreement that a one-inch stream of water be allowed to flow for
drinking purposes during the time in which the successors
in title of
C.L. du Plessis and J.P. van Tonder have the use of the Molen River
water courses.
27.3
The First Defendant’s failure to comply with his obligations
under the 1879 Water Servitude Agreement
and/or the 1894 Notarial
Deed to maintain the Molen River sloot prohibits him from relying on
any alleged reduction in the efficacy
of the sloot in support of his
claim.”
23.
The second ground of exception also raise the issue that the
plaintiffs did not allege, having
regard to the common law position,
that the laying of the pipe as envisaged, will worsen the passage of
water for other users or
that the plaintiffs will be prejudiced by
it.
24.
In response to the exception, the plaintiffs seek leave to supplement
para 27 of the particulars
of claim by adding the following
sub-paragraphs:
“
27.4. The
Plaintiffs will suffer prejudice if a pipe is installed in the
furrow, inasmuch as –
27.4.1. their
existing right to draw water from any section along the Molen River
Sloot on their respective farm portions
for drinking purposes when
the owners of the highest and intervening farms take their water
turns, as expressly provided in the
25 March 1979 agreement, would be
frustrated or unduly limited;
27.4.2. the laying
of a pipe in the Molen River Sloot would change the nature of the
plaintiffs’ joint maintenance obligations
detailed at paragraph
19 above and result in a more onerous financial burden….
34.3
…the piping of the Molen River Sloot will prejudice the
Plaintiffs in the manner
detailed at paragraph 27.4 above”
25.
The aforesaid amendments were objected to on
inter alia
the
basis that even if the aforesaid amendments are allowed, the
particulars of claim would still fail to disclose a cause of action
based on the main ground of exception set out below, alternatively
would still lack averments necessary to sustain a cause of action
as
the plaintiffs do not set out why and how their existing right to
draw water would be frustrated and unduly limited, and how
the nature
of the joint maintenance mandate would result in a more onerous
financial burden.
The
first ground of exception:
26.
The first defendant contends that the contents of the addendum to the
deed of sale and more particularly,
paragraphs 5 and 8 thereof,
whilst not clear in every respect, is sufficient to establish a valid
and enforceable agreement to
pipe the Molen River sloot.
27.
During
argument, the plaintiffs abandoned reliance on the grounds set out in
paras 27.1.1 and 27.1.2
[15]
of
the particulars of claim and only persisted with the averment
contained in para 27.1.3
[16]
read with paras 27.2.and 27.3, in support of the contention that para
8 of the addendum to the deed of sale is not a binding contractual
term.
28.
It was further contended that the addendum was not valid and binding
as it is contrary to the
express terms of the servitude agreement and
that if the first defendant is allowed to pipe the sloot, the furrow
will be destroyed
as alleged in para 27.2 and the joint maintenance
obligation unilaterally altered as alleged in para 27.3.
29.
The first defendant contends that the plaintiffs, in para 27.2, has
failed to plead primary facts
in support of the inference that the
condition that ‘
a stream of water (one-inch in diameter)
shall be allowed to flow for drinking purposes during the times in
which C L du Plessis
and Mr J P van Tonder have the use of the Molen
River water courses’
will be violated by the piping and
that the plaintiffs furthermore do not explain why a one-inch stream
of water cannot be allowed
to flow for drinking purposes if a pipe is
installed.
30.
The further complaint by the first defendant is that the averment in
para 27.3 of the particulars
of claim, that the first defendant’s
failure to comply with his obligation under the 1879 Water Servitude
to maintain the
Molen River Sloot, prohibits him from relying on any
reduction in the efficacy of the sloot in support of his claim, is
not supported
by factual allegations, especially in light of the fact
that he is only one of the parties who has a maintenance obligation.
31.
In response to the aforesaid complaints the plaintiffs’ counsel
argued that the averments
were not merely conclusions, that the
pleadings should be read as a whole, and that the exception should
only be upheld if
on every interpretation which
the pleading in question can reasonably bear, no cause of action or
defence is disclosed.
32.
Prima facie
, the addendum clearly records that the first
defendant was in the process of piping the Molen River sloot, to at
least the first
to third plaintiffs’ knowledge, and that the
PSDR Trust undertook to compensate the first defendant for the costs
in this
respect once completed. Whether it was the intention of the
parties at the time of entering into the written agreement to amend
the servitude agreement (which according to the plaintiffs expressly
limits or circumscribes the rights and obligations of the
servitude
holder), is of course a completely different question to which I will
return later and is not dealt with by the plaintiffs
in the
particulars of claim.
33.
The deed of
sale and addendum thereto, were concluded between the PSDR Trust and
the first defendant. On what basis the first defendant
can rely on
the addendum to bind the fourth plaintiff and the other parties to
the servitude agreement, although raised during
argument, is not set
out in the particulars of claim.
[17]
34.
The plaintiffs, whether the amendments requested in respect of claims
1 and 2 are granted or not,
have in my view failed to plead facts to
support the legal conclusion they request the court to draw in
respect of the validity
of the addendum to the deed of sale. To
simply allege that the furrow would be destroyed does not suffice.
Even if it is accepted
that piping the furrow would unilaterally
change the method of conveying the water as contemplated in the
servitude agreement,
why this would render the addendum void and
unenforceable, is similarly not set out in the particulars of claim.
It does not assist
the plaintiffs to argue that the first defendant
can call for further particulars for trial in this regard as it is
the duty of
the plaintiffs to set out all the facts on which they
rely to sustain the cause of action. They did not.
35.
Insofar as it was contended that the
addendum to the deed of sale is vague and ambiguous and hence cannot
be enforced, this was
also not pleaded.
36.
In the circumstances the first ground of exception is upheld.
The
second ground of exception:
37.
This brings me to the main ground of exception: whether the first
defendant, as the holder of
a servitude of
aquaeductus
, has
the implied ancillary right to pipe the furrow along which water is
led given the legal position that the interests of the
servitude
holder enjoy preference over the conflicting interests of the
servient owner.
38.
The plaintiffs dispute in the particulars of claim that this
particular servitude agreement contains
an implied term that the
servitude holder may pipe the sloot to exercise the right. It is the
plaintiffs’ case that the express
words of the servitude
agreement preclude or limit the first defendant’s implied right
to pipe the sloot. To decide whether
the first defendant has such
right is matter of interpretation.
39.
It was held in the well-known matter of Natal Joint Municipal Pension
Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18 that:
“Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the
words used in a document, be it legislation,
some other statutory
instrument, or contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading the particular provision or provisions
in the light of the
document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into existence. Whatever the nature of
the document, consideration
must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules
of grammar and syntax, the context
in which the provision appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known
to those responsible for its
production. Where more than one meaning
is possible each possibility must be weighted in light of all these
factors. The process
is objective, not subjective. A sensible meaning
is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or
undermines the apparent purpose of the document…the
inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself,
read in context and having regard to the purpose of the
provision and the background to the preparation and production of the
document”.
40.
In the
matter of Glaffer Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of
Water Affairs and Forestry and Another 200
0 (4) SA 822
(T), Van
Dijkhorst J confirmed that the position in our law is that a
servitude must be interpreted according to its ordinary grammatical
meaning and by having regard to the surrounding circumstances
prevailing when the servitude was granted. It must further be
interpreted
restrictively.
[18]
41.
In the matter of Braude v Clanwilliam Municipality 1954(4) SA 669 (A)
the issue was whether the
laying of a pipe-line was “work of a
kind different from that contemplated by the parties” when they
entered into an
agreement during the 1920’s. The court of
appeal found that “it cannot be said, when an entirely
different method of
conveying water is substituted for the method
contemplated by the parties, that that substitution is the same as
‘maintaining
the new furrow in a proper state of repair’
within the meaning of clause 5 of the 1922 agreement”.
42.
In my view, with reference to the express
wording of the servitude agreement and the authorities referred to,
it can be argued that
the parties to the servitude agreement had not
anticipated the furrow being piped. The servitude agreement, for
example, refers
to “a stream of water for drinking purposes”
and further makes provision for bi-annual maintenance of the furrow
for
which the first defendant was afforded the free right of way
along the sloot and the right to excavate material four feet on each
side of the furrow, for repairing the sloot. It further imposes a
joint maintenance obligation, which is atypical to servitudes
of this
nature.
43.
Bearing in
mind that the servitude holder has full and effective use of the
servitude, it was argued by the first defendant, with
reliance on
Zeeman v De Wet
2012 (6) SA 1
(SCA), in the further submissions
filed, that peremptory principles are not amenable to consensual
amendment and will outweigh
even clearly and precisely formulated
contractual provisions to the contrary
[19]
.
44.
I agree with Mr Van Staden SC that it is implied that the servitude
holder acquires, together
with the servitude, all the entitlements
without which the servitude cannot be exercised, provided that those
ancillary entitlements
do not burden the servient property unduly. In
other words: the servitude holder must be placed in a position to
exercise the servitude
effectively. I also agree that the principle
that the servitude holder must be enabled to exercise the servitude
effectively cannot
be evaded or suspended completely, since doing so
would undermine the viability of having a servitude in the first
place. It follows
that the servitude holder is therefore entitled to
undertake all actions that are reasonably necessary for the proper
exercise
of the servitude and that there is a baseline of necessary
entitlements below which the servitude is not feasible and cannot
exist.
I however cannot agree that implied rights of the servitude
holder cannot be amended by consensus. In the Zeeman matter the court
considered the principle of efficacy in light of the amendment by the
parties of the servitude agreement in respect of the common
law
maintenance obligations on the servitude holder. As in the case of
Zeeman, the trial court in this matter will have to consider
whether
it is indeed necessary for the efficacy of the servitude to pipe the
sloot and what impact, if any, it will have on the
parties’
joint maintenance obligation as set out in the servitude agreement.
45.
That the piping of the sloot will change the nature of the
maintenance obligation as set out in
the servitude agreement cannot
be disputed. Whether it would place a bigger financial burden on the
servient tenement will similarly
have to be determined by the trial
court. The same applies to the question as to how the first defendant
plans to ensure that the
one-inch stream will be maintained, whether
the furrow would remain intact, whether the pipes will be above the
ground or underground
or next to or in the furrow.
46.
Only the trial court, after hearing
evidence, will be able to determine whether, on the wording of the
servitude agreement, the
implied right asserted by the first
defendant had been established and if so, whether it was limited by
the express wording of
the servitude agreement as pleaded by the
plaintiffs. The Constitutional Court, in the matter of University of
Johannesburg v Auckland
Park Theological Seminary and Another
2021
(6) SA 1
(CC) reiterated that in many scenarios words alone ring
hollow and that “context gives life and meaning to what is said
or
written”.
47.
The second ground of exception is
consequently dismissed.
The
proposed claim 3:
48.
The plaintiffs request leave to introduce a claim 3 in terms whereof
they seek an order prohibiting
the first to fourth defendants from
carrying out any work with a view to piping the Molen River sloot
until such time as the latter
have obtained a permit under section 48
of the NHRS which authorises the alteration and/or demolition of the
sloot.
49.
This new claim is predicated on the court refusing the declaratory
relief sought in claims 1 and
2 that the defendants do not have the
right to pipe the sloot.
50.
With
reference to a vast number of authorities it appears that an interim
interdict is normally (some say always), claimed by way
of an
application “pending the outcome of an action or application
instituted or to be instituted; pending the final determination
of
the application; or as an adjunct to a rule nisi calling upon the
respondent to show cause upon the return day why the interim
interdict should not remain in force pending the outcome of the main
application or action”.
[20]
[21]
The first defendant
contends that the plaintiffs have employed the incorrect procedure
and that the new claim should not be allowed
on this basis.
51.
In response the plaintiffs contended that despite the wording of the
new claim 3, it is not an
interim interdict but rather final relief
that is being sought and that it is not an immutable rule that
interdictory relief must
be claimed by way of application. Whilst
there may conceivable be factual situations which would justify
departing from the general
approach, this is not such a situation.
52.
The plaintiffs are further seeking
declaratory relief in circumstances where no dispute has arisen. The
primary function of the
court is to adjudicate competing claims and
not to address a mere hope of a right or anxiety about future
litigation. This
issue was dealt with in Family Benefit
Friendly Society v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and Another
[1995]
1 All SA 557
(T), as follows:
“
There
must be a right or obligation which becomes the object of enquiry. It
may be existing, future or contingent but it must be
more tangible
than the mere hope of a right or mere anxiety about a possible
obligation. The word “contingent” (Afrikaans:
“voorwaardelik”) is not used in a broad and vague sense,
but (as the Afrikaans text indicates) in the narrow sense
of
“conditional”. The word “contingent” is used
as opposed to “vested”. The rights and obligations
to be
enquired into are either vested (present and future) or conditional
(contingent).”
53.
On the issue of convenience and the contentions that to refuse the
introduction of this claim
would result in further litigation, I
point out that it is crystal clear that question whether the
defendants have the right to
pipe the sloot, is a separate issue to
whether the sloot is a structure as contemplated in section 1 and
34(1) of the NHRA which
is of cultural significance. The fear that
the sloot, if the defendants are allowed to pipe, will be destroyed
or damaged irreparably
as a heritage site, is also a separate issue
to whether the defendants have the right in terms of the servitude of
aquaeductus
to pipe the sloot. If claims 1 and 2 are dismissed
and the defendants proceed to take steps to pipe the sloot, without
the necessary
permit that is according to the plaintiffs required, it
can approach the court for appropriate relief. I agree with the first
defendant
that the plaintiffs should in such anticipated application,
at the very least, join the South African Heritage Resources Agency
who has an interest in the relief the plaintiffs allege they are
entitled to.
54.
In the circumstances, the plaintiffs request to amend the particulars
of claim by the inclusion
of paragraphs 37 to 45 and the inclusion of
claim 3, is refused.
55.
The amendment application was filed in response to the exceptions
raised by the first defendant.
The opposition to the amendment
application was inextricably linked to the exceptions raised and the
first defendant successfully
opposed the introduction of claim 3. I
see no reason why the plaintiffs should not be ordered to pay the
costs of the amendment
application. The first defendant further
raised important and complicated legal issues in the exception which
justifies in
my opinion the employment of senior counsel.
56.
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The plaintiffs are granted leave to amend claims 1 and 2 of the
particulars of claim and are to pay the
costs of the amendment
application, including the costs of senior counsel;
2.
The first ground of exception raised by the first defendant is
upheld. The plaintiffs are granted leave
to amend their particulars
of claim within 15 days of this order;
3.
The second ground of exception is dismissed;
4.
The plaintiffs are ordered to pay 50 % of the costs of the exception,
including 50% of the wasted costs
occasioned by the postponement on 5
May 2021 and 9 November 2021, including the costs of senior counsel.
A De Wet
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel for Excipient /
First Defendant: Adv. WH Van Staden SC
Attorneys for the
Plaintiff:
Feenstra Inc (per Roelof Feenstra)
Email:
roelof@feenstrainc.co.za
Counsel for the
Respondents:
Adv. L Ferreira
Attorneys for the
Respondents:
Smiedt & Associates (per A Smiedt)
Email:
alan@smiedtlaw.co.za
;
loren@smiedtlaw.co.za
;
[1]
Claus
e
5 records that the purchaser is aware of the sellers right to water
from the stream that flows over the property, to inspect
the
divisions points from time to time and to use the existing road up
to such point – this accord with the terms of the
servitude
agreement.
[2]
Loosely
translated
clause 8 stipulates that the seller (the first defendant) was at
that time busy transforming or changing the existing
water furrow to
pipes and that the purchaser (the PSDR Trust), shall compensate the
seller when completed, for such costs as
discussed.
[3]
Para 19 of the particulars of claim.
[4]
Para 23 of the particulars of claim.
[5]
According to para 29 of the particulars of claim,
the first to fourth defendants undertook in the urgent application
before Saldana J, to remove the piping and restore the relevant
section of the sloot to its previous condition and refrain from
taking further steps to pipe the sloot pending the plaintiffs’
institution of proceedings for final relief.
[6]
In
terms of the proposed
new
claim 3 under the heading: Interdictory relief pursuant to section
34(1) of the Nation Heritage Resources Act, the plaintiffs
seek an
order “prohibiting the First to Fourth Defendants from
carrying out any work with a view to piping the Molen River
Sloot
until such time as they have obtained a permit under section 48 of
the NHRA which authorizes the alteration and/or demolition
thereof.”
[7]
See Maize Board v Tiger Oats Ltd 2002
(5) 365 (SCA) at 373 B-D
[8]
Telmatrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at 465; H v Fetal Assessment
Centre
2015 (2) SA 193
(CC) at 199 B
[9]
Theunissen
v Transvaalse Lewendehawe Koöp Bpk
1988 (2) SA 493
(A) at
500E-F
[10]
Salzmann
v Holmes
1914 AD 152
at 156; Minister of Safety and Security v
Hamilton
2001 (3) SA 50
(SCA) at 52G-H
[11]
Cassim’s
Estate v Bayat and Jadwat 1930 (2) PH F81 (N); Soma v Marulane NO
1975 (3) SA 53 (T)
[12]
Wellington
Court Shareblock v Johannesburg City Council
1995 (3) SA 827
(A) at
833F and 834D; Dilworth v Reichard
[2002] 4 All SA 677
(W) at 681j –
682a
[13]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at 465 (H)
[14]
Voet 8.4.16 – Ganes’ translation read with
the comments by Van der Walt, Servitudes, page 224, para
3.3 where
he states that: “(T)he wording of a servitude creating
contract is interpreted within a framework of property
principles
that are partly peremptory, which means that effect can only be
given to the intention of the parties to a servitude
grant insofar
as the servitude they intend to create is permissible in terms of
property principles. One of these principles
determines that the
interest of the servitude holder enjoy preference of those of the
servient owner”
[15]
These paragraphs stated that the addendum is not valid and binding
as it was not initialled by the PSDR Trust’s
representative,
the first defendant or the witnesses and it is undated and does not
refer to the deed of sale.
[16]
“27.1.3 Paragraph 8 of the Addendum is not of the
nature of a binding contractual term.”
[17]
I do however point out that whether a valid and binding addendum was
entered into, will be of little or no import
if it is determined
that the first defendant has the implied right to pipe the sloot on
the basis as set out in the second ground
of exception.
[18]
In Murray v Schneider 1958(1) SA 587 (A) the meaning of
the word “domestic” in the phrase “water
for
domestic purposes” and whether it was anticipated that
domestic use would include water for the swimming bath were
at
issue. The court considered the prevailing circumstances at the time
the agreement was entered into between the parties and
applied the
judgment of Cliffside Flats (Pty.) v Bantry Rocks (Pty.) Ltd.,
1944
AD 106
at 117 where Feetham, J. A., confirmed with reference to a
servitude agreement that amongst the relevant facts are the
circumstances
existing at the time of the creation of the servitude.
[19]
Reference was also made to an article by Johan Scott
dealing with the
Zeeman
v De Wet
-case
called Aquaeductus en sommige gevolge van goeie buurmanskap (2013)
and the comments by Van der Walt, the Law of Servitudes,
pages 190 –
191.
[20]
Lawsa (2
nd
Edidtion) Vol 11, para 402;
[21]
Also
see:
Prest,
The Law and Practice of Interdicts, pages 5 and 213 and Herbstein &
Van Winsen, The Civil Practice of the High Courts
of South Africa
(Vol 2) page 1478.
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