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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Isaac v Isaac and Others (D6418/2022)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 2 (14 January 2025)
Isaac v Isaac and Others (D6418/2022)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 2 (14 January 2025)
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sino date 14 January 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NUMBER
:
D6418/2022
In
the matter between
:
LOGASHINI
ISAAC
APPLICANT
and
PRESHNEE
ISAAC
FIRST RESPONDENT
NADARAJ
NARAIMSN GOVENDER
SECOND
RESPONDENT
SERENA
GOVENDER
THIRD RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The late
filing of the Second and Third Respondent's head
s
of argument is
condoned
.
There is no
order as to costs in respect of the condonation applicat
i
on
.
2.
The Applicant,
Logashini Isaac is given leave to intervene in the main application
under case number D6418/2022 and is granted leave
to join as
the
Second
Applicant
in
the
main
application.
3.
The founding
affidavit of the Applicant in the intervention application
,
Logashini
Isaac
,
dated
19 February 2024
,
shall stand as
a supplementary
founding
affidavit in the main application
.
4.
The
Second
and
Third
Respondents
in
the
intervention
application
,
being
the
First
and
Second
Respondents
in
the
main
application
,
shall be
entitled, within 15 days of the granting of this order,
t
o
deliver a supplementary
answering
affidavit, dealing with the facts and allegations contained
in the
aforesaid
supplementary
founding
affidavit.
5.
The Applicant
(then being the Second Applicant in the main application) shall
deliver her reply
,
if any, within
10 days of delivery of the aforesaid supplementary answering
affidavit.
6.
The costs of
the intervention application shall be costs in the cause of the main
application
.
JUDGMENT
BOND
AJ
[1]
There is an
idiom which states
'
good
walls make for good neighbours
'
.
What may happen when the good walls become bad, is still to be seen
.
[2]
In this
application the Applicant seeks leave to intervene in pending motion
proceedings between the First Respondent (as Applicant
therein) and
the Second and Third Respondents (as First and Second Respondents
therein)
.
[3]
Relief
is
also
sought
permitting
the
founding
affidavit
in
this
intervention
application to stand as a supplementary founding affidavit in the
main application
.
[4]
The
Second
and
Third
Respondents
heads
of
argument
were
de
l
ivered
out
of time and
were accompanied
by an
application for condonation
.
Condonation
was not opposed
and
was
granted
in
the
interest
of
having
the
matter
fully
ventilated
.
[5]
The main
application concerns itself with the abatement of nuisance relating
to a common boundary wall
,
the passage of
water and the accumulation of soil against on the Second and Third
Respondent
'
s
side of the boundary wall
.
The Applicant
in this
intervention
application
is
the
owner
of
immovable
property
which
neighbours
the Second and
Third Respondent
'
s
property.
[6]
The Applicant
avers that she is the registered owner of 3[...] B[...] Way
,
Scottsburgh
,
and her
sister
,
the
First Respondent (who is the only Applicant in the main application)
,
resides there.
There can be no contention that these facts are not true.
[7]
The Applicant
goes on to explain the basic terms of an agreement which is said to
exist between herself and the First Respondent
relating to the
ownership of their property
,
which the
Applicant states is held in her name
,
partly as
nominee for the First Respondent. This also is a fact which cannot
earnestly be contested by the Second and Third Respondents.
The First
Respondent
,
being the
Applicant
i
n
the main application
,
unsurprisingly
,
does not
oppose the matter
.
[8]
In their
answering affidavit
,
the Second and
Third Respondents
oppose the
matter on various grounds
.
Amongst
others, they make assumptions regarding what disclosu
r
es
were made to various regulatory authorities by the Applicant when she
purchased the property
,
they challenge
the commissioning of the Applicant
'
s
affidavit and raise various defences pertaining to the underlying
dispute
,
which
undoubtably w
i
ll
be argued at the hearing of the main application
.
[9]
A
chief
complaint
by
the
Second
and
Third
Respondents
re
l
ates
to
the allegation
that the
present
application is
an abuse of the court process
a
n
d
should
not
be tolerated
.
Reference to a
previous application seeking to refer issue
s
in the main
application
to
oral evidence
(which
was
dismissed)
is
also made
.
[10]
T
he
Second
and
Third
Respondents
also
take
issue
with
both
the
introduction
of further
evidence in
the main application as well as the existence
of a pending
action wh
i
ch
,
on face value
,
seems to seek
,
at least in
part
,
similar
relief to th
a
t
of
t
he
main
appl
i
cation
.
[11]
In bo
t
h
oral argument
,
and the Second
and Third Respondents heads of argument
,
criticism
is
levied
against
the
Applicant
for
failing
to
state
that
she
has
a direct and
substantial interest in the main application. The Second and Third
Respondents, also suggest that the current application
is to cure the
point of law raised by them in the main application, that the First
Respondent (as Applicant in the main application)
does not have the
necessary locus standi to institute the main application.
[12]
I am not
certain that I agree with the latter contention
,
but that is
not a finding I need to make
.
What
is
interesting
however
,
is
that
the
Second
and
Third
Respondents
,
in this
intervention application, deny that the Applicant has a direct and
substantial interest in the main application. This seems
to
contradict the locus standi defence raised in the main application.
[13]
During oral
argument, I canvased with counsel for the Second and Third
Respondents
as
to
whether
her
contention
was
that
there
was
no
direct
and
substantial
interest
,
or
rather
that
the
Applicant
had
failed
to
use
those
words
expressly.
[14]
I find no
merit whatsoever in the submission that the words
'
direct
and substantial interest' must be included in the affidavit. The
finding of whether the Applicant has a direct and substantial
interest in the main application is a legal conclusion which the
court must draw from the primary facts presented
.
I am fortified
in this view as, conversely, if the Applicant had merely stated that
she has a direct and substantial interest without
alleging any
material facts in support thereof, her submissions
,
at best
,
would be
insufficient. This view is supported by the dicta in
Radebe
and Others v Eastern Transvaal Development Board
1988
(2) SA 785
(A) at 793.
[15]
On the
material
facts
before
me, the
Applicant
does
have
a
direct
and
substantial
interest
in the main
application.
I
say
this
for
two
reasons
.
(a)
The
first
of
which
is
deduced
from
the
Second
and
Third
Respondents
'
version
in relation to
the First Respondent (as Applicant in the main application) not
having locus
standi
therein
.
At
paragraph
3
.
2
of
the
Second
and
Third
Respondents'
answering affidavit in the main application (them being the First and
Second Respondents
respectively
in
the
main
application)
,
it
is
expressly
averred
that
the Applicant
therein (the First Respondent herein) is not the owner of the
property and therefore does not have the requisite locus
standi
.
Therefore, the
Applicant
,
as
registered
owner of the
property
,
must
have a direct and substantial interest in the matter
.
(b)
Secondly, and
as a matter of common cause fact, the Applicant is the owner of the
property which shares the boundary wall with the
Second and Third
Respondents. It can be noted that much is made
,
by the Second
and Third Respondents, of the arrangement between the Applicant and
the First Respondent, but I do not believe that
anything turns on
this.
[16]
The Applicant has conceded that, at least in part, the present
application has the effect of obviating any
issue arising in relation
to the Applicant not being a party to the main application. The
Second and Third Respondents object to
this and submit that the
Applicant (and Second Applicant to be) in the main application should
not be permitted to correct the
technical issue raised by the Second
and Third Respondents in the main application.
[17]
I disagree
.
The prejudice
which the Second and Third Respondents may suffer is not a
consideration which falls into the equation for intervention
.
Even
i
f
the Second and
Third
Respondents
are correct in their submissions relating to locus standi, there can
be no argument to suggest that a party must be
deprived of
intervening
in
proceedings where that party has shown a direct and substantial
interest, merely because it will defeat a technical defence raised
by
the other party
.
[18]
In regard to
the loss of any technical defence raised by the Second and Third
Respondents
in
the main application, a parallel can be drawn to the considerations
of prejudice in amendment applications, where it has been
held in
South
British Insurance
Co
Ltd
v Glisson
1963
(1) SA 289
(D) at 294B-C that:
'
.
.
.
the
fact
that
the
amendment
may
cause
the
respondent
to
lose
his
case
against
the
applicant is not of itself
"
prejudice
"
of the sort
which will dissuade the Court from granting it'
.
[19]
I have
considered the existence of the pending action proceedings as well as
the
judgment
of
Sipunzi
AJ
(dealing
with
the
application
brought
to
refer
the
main
application to a hearing of oral evidence) and find that the
existence of both has no bearing
on
the
current
application.
A
defence
of
lis
alibi
pendens
,
whether
raised
in the main
application
or
in the action
,
does not find
application
in
the curren
t
matter
and is best
debated
at
either or both of those proceedings.
[20]
Overall
,
I hold the
view that it is ultimately in the interests of just
i
ce
that the parties be entitled to ventilate their case at the hearing
of the main application
.
While there
may be a time and place for technical objections, surely
,
the court
hearing the main application must consider the case on its merits
,
and rule on
the t
r
ue
material disputes between the parties to see that justice is done
.
[21]
Accordingly,
the Applicant is given leave to intervene in the main application
.
[22]
I
t
therefore follows that the Applicant
,
being the new
party in the main application be permitted to have her version placed
before the court. While I do acknowledge that
the delivery of further
affidavits does disrupt the flow of proceedings in the main
application and carries with it the likelihood
to create an unwieldly
set of papers at the eventual hearing
,
on balance the
interests of justice are best served by perm
i
tting
a proper ventilation of the issues at the cost of additional pages
i
n
an already voluminous application.
[23]
As to costs, I
am of the view that the application ought to have never been opposed
.
The grounds
for opposition set out in the answering affidavit are not convincing
,
to say the
least. This being said however
,
the Applicant
(who is represented by the same attorneys as the Applicant in the
main application) is seem
i
ngly
,
at least in
part
,
attempting to
guard against that as a possible technical ruling
i
n
the future
.
[24]
In the
circumstances
,
the costs of
the intervention application shall be costs in the
c
a
use
of the
main
application
.
Order
[25]
In the result
,
the order
which I make is as follows
:
1.
The late
filing of the Second
and Third
Respondent's
heads of
argument is condoned
.
There is no
order as to costs in respect of the condonation application
.
2.
The Applicant,
Logashini Isaac is given leave to intervene
i
n
the main application under case number 06418/2022 and is granted
leave
to
join as the Second Applicant in the main application
.
3.
The founding
affidavit of the Applicant in the intervention
application
,
Logashini
Isaac, dated 19 February 2024
,
shall stand as
a supplementary
founding
affidavit in the main application.
4.
The Second and
Third Respondents in the intervention
application,
being the
First and Second Respondents in the main application
,
shall be
entitled, within 15 days of the granting of this order, to deliver a
supplementary answering affidavit
,
dealing
with
the
facts
and
allegations contained
in the aforesaid supplementary founding affidavit.
5.
The Applicant
(then being the Second Applicant in the main
application)
shall deliver
her reply
,
if
any
,
within
10 days of delivery of the aforesaid supplementary answering
affidavit.
6.
The costs of
the intervention application shall be costs in the cause of the main
application
.
BOND AJ
HEARD
ON
:
10
DECEMBER 2024
DELIVERED
ON
:
14
JAUNUARY 2025
PARTIES
:
APPLICANT:
Mr
E Mizrachi
Instructed
by
Henwood
Britter
&Caney
2nd
Floor
.
Clifton
Place
19
Hurst Grove
,
Musgrave
Durban
1
ST
RESPONDENT
:
No
Appearance
2
ND
AND 3
RD
RESPONDENT
:
Ms
D Deodhutt
Instructed
by
:
Singh
&
Gharbaharan
130
Scott Street
Scottburgh
c/o
S Ramrachia Singh & Associates
6
Stanhope Crescent
Westville
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