Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 3South Africa
Section 99 Claridge Court Shareblock (Pty) Ltd v Pino's General Trading CC and Others (3692/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 January 2025)
Headnotes
s 41 of the repealed Act (which is similarly worded to s 2(7) of the Act) does not ‘detract from the powers enjoyed by the owner of a section to institute proceedings where his own rights whether of ownership - in his unit or otherwise are infringed’.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Section 99 Claridge Court Shareblock (Pty) Ltd v Pino's General Trading CC and Others (3692/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 January 2025)
Section 99 Claridge Court Shareblock (Pty) Ltd v Pino's General Trading CC and Others (3692/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 3 (17 January 2025)
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sino date 17 January 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
Case No: 3692/2024
In
the matter between:
SECTION
99 CLARIDGE COURT SHAREBLOCK (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT (Registration Number:
-2006/34994/07)
and
PINO’S
GENERAL TRADING CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
CLARIDGE
BODY CORPORATE
SECOND
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
THIRD
RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order
is made
:
1.
The application is
dismissed
.
2.
The applicant is to pay the
first
respondent’s costs, which are to be taxed on scale B.
JUDGMENT
DAYAL
AJ
[1]
The applicant is the owner of certain sectional title units in the
scheme known as Claridge Court
situated at [...] A[...] L[...]
Street, Durban.
[2]
The applicant carries on business under the name and style of
“Egagasini”, a restaurant
and entertainment venue, from
sections 99 and 173 of the scheme. Section (unit) 99 is part of the
applicant’s underground
entertainment area.
[3]
The first respondent carries on business as “Ace Butchery”
from sections 103 and 104
of the scheme.
[4]
The second respondent is the Claridge Body Corporate, and the third
respondent is the Ethekwini
Municipality.
[5]
It is common cause that the first respondent has illegally erected a
structure (a boundary wall)
on the void common property identified in
the sectional title plan of the scheme that is annexed to the
founding affidavit.
[6]
According to the applicant, the impugned boundary wall severely
restricts ventilation to its patrons,
who can number in the hundreds
over its weekend trading hours.
[7]
The applicant seeks a final order in the form of a mandatory
interdict, to direct the first respondent
to demolish and remove the
unlawful structure failing which the sheriff is authorised to do so
and recover the costs from the first
respondent.
[8]
The first respondent has opposed the application. The second and
third respondents have not opposed
the application. The Chairman of
the second respondent has put up a confirmatory affidavit in the
applicant’s founding papers.
[9]
Neither party alleges any material disputes of fact or seek for the
matter to be referred for
oral evidence or trial, and both have
elected to argue the application on the papers as they stand. The
interdict sought by the
applicant can be granted only if the facts as
stated by the first respondent, together with the admitted facts in
the applicant’s
affidavits, justify the granting thereof.
[1]
The applicant’s
locus standi
[10]
The first respondent has challenged the applicant’s locus
standi on the basis of s 7 read with
s 9
of the
Sectional Titles
Schemes Management Act
[2]
(“the
Act”). The first respondent also relies on
Spilhaus
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mobile Telephone Networks
(Pty) Ltd and Another
[3]
which although dealing with similarly worded sections of the now
repealed Sectional Titles Act,
[4]
remains applicable.
[11]
The applicant has alleged locus standi based upon the following
grounds:
(a)
the applicant is the owner of commercial unit 99;
(b)
the impugned boundary wall directly impacts the applicant’s
business;
(c)
consequently, the applicant has a direct and substantial interest;
(d)
the void common property was designed and used to allow ventilation
to the underground entertainment
area;
(e)
the underground lounge relies on the louvres that feed fresh air to
it, and other mechanical ventilations
are not sufficient to suck in
and out the breath of patrons when the place is packed to capacity
over weekends; and
(f)
the first respondent’s conduct in erecting the illegal
structure has resulted in extensive
damage to the applicant’s
premises.
[12] Mr
Mjoli
, for the applicant, argued that from a reading of the
applicant’s founding affidavit it bases its locus on the fact
that
the impugned structure is affecting its rights of use of unit
99.
[13]
The first respondent challenges the above argument on the following
grounds:
(a)
that the applicant is operating illegally from the premises; and
(b)
that the applicant has in fact caused the ventilation problem by
closing off the entire parking
entrance with glass doors which
severely hinder ventilation.
[14]
In
Oribel
Properties 13 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Blue Dot Properties 271 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
,
[5]
the Supreme Court of Appeal relying on CG Van der Merwe
Sectional
Titles, Share Blocks and Time-sharing
,
held that s 41 of the repealed Act (which is similarly worded to s
2(7) of the Act) does not ‘detract from the powers enjoyed
by
the owner of a section to institute proceedings where his own rights
whether of ownership - in his unit or otherwise are infringed’.
[15]
The applicant’s case is that the illegal structure on the void
common property is interfering with
its rights of use of unit 99.
[16] I
accordingly find that the applicant has the requisite locus standi to
have instituted the application in
its own name.
The
requirements for a final interdict
[17]
The requirements for a final interdict are usually stated as:
[6]
(a)
a clear right;
(b)
an injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended; and
(c)
the lack of an adequate alternative remedy.
[18] In
order to succeed in obtaining the remedy of an interdict against the
first respondent, the applicant bears
the onus to establish a clear
right and as such, in order to establish a clear right, the applicant
has to prove on a balance of
probability the right which it seeks to
protect. Whether that right is clearly established is a matter of
evidence.
[19]
The applicant alleges a clear right in the founding affidavit as
follows:
‘
The
First Respondent’s conduct of erecting a structure on common
property, without permission from the Second Respondent,
is unlawful.
Thereafter the Applicant has a clear right to the relief sought.’
[20]
The first respondent’s reply thereto (in its answering
affidavit) is as follows:
‘…
illegality
is not a basis to derive a clear right… The Clear right is not
adequately established and the first requirement
of the final relief
sought falls short for want of substance.’
[21]
The applicant does not deal with that allegation, and its replying
affidavit is silent thereon.
[22]
The first respondent has also alleged that the applicant is not
operating its business lawfully. It goes
on further to allege that
the garage has not been demarcated for business purposes and is
clearly in contravention of the third
respondent’s adopted Land
Use Scheme. In other words, the applicant has approached court with
unclean hands.
[23]
The applicant does not deal with the legality of its business
operations in the founding affidavit at all.
It also fails to deal
with the allegations of illegality made by the first respondent in
its replying affidavit and only asserts
that it is irrelevant and
requires no further elaboration.
[24]
The applicant puts up no evidence on the papers to contradict the
allegations made by the first respondent
that it (the applicant) is
in fact operating illegally.
[25]
To
borrow
from
Van Reenen J in
Die
Dros (Pty) Ltd and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
:
[7]
‘
It
is trite law that the affidavits in motion proceedings serve to
define not only the issues between the parties, but also to place
the
essential evidence before the Court (see
Swissborough Diamond
Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
1999 (2) SA 279
(W) at 323G) for the benefit of
not only the Court but also the parties. The affidavits in motion
proceedings must contain factual
averments that are sufficient to
support the cause of action on which the relief that is being sought
is based. Facts may be either
primary or secondary. Primary facts are
those capable of being used for the drawing of inferences as to the
existence or non-existence
of other facts. Such further facts, in
relation to primary facts, are called secondary facts. (See
Willcox
and Others v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1960 (4) SA 599
(A)
at 602A;
Reynolds NO v Mecklenberg (Pty) Ltd
1996 (1) SA 75
(W) at 78I.) Secondary facts, in the absence of the primary facts on
which they are based, are nothing more than a deponent's own
conclusions (see
Radebe and Others v Eastern Transvaal Development
Board
1988 (2) SA 785
(A) at 793C - E) and accordingly do not
constitute evidential material capable of supporting a cause of
action.’
[26] A
case must be made out in the founding papers:
‘
Holding
parties to pleadings is not pedantry. It is an integral part of the
principle of legal certainty, which is an element of
the rule of law,
one of the values on which our Constitution is founded. Every party
contemplating a constitutional challenge should
know the requirements
it needs to satisfy and every other party likely to be affected by
the relief sought must know precisely
the case it is expected to
meet.’
[8]
[27]
I am of the view that the
applicant has failed to establish a
clear right on a balance of
probability
on
the papers, as it has simply either ignored or failed to deal with
material
allegations made by the first
respondent which clearly challenged the applicant’s assertion
of a clear right.
[28]
I need not consider any of the other requirements for a final
interdict on the basis that if the
applicant
fails to establish a clear right, then its case must fail.
[29]
In the
circumstances
the application must
accordingly be dismissed.
[30]
There is no reason to depart from the principle that costs should
follow the result. Mr
Cassan
, on
behalf
of the first respondent, correctly
in my view, elected to remain bound by the prayer in the answering
affidavit relating to costs.
Order
[31]
In the result I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is to pay the first respondent’s costs, which are
to be taxed on scale
B.
DAYAL
AJ
Case
information
Date
of hearing:
12
December 2024
Date
of judgment:
17
January 2025
For the applicant:
Mr T S Mjoli
Instructed by:
S T MJOLI ATTORNEYS
(Ref: T. Mjoli)
For the first
respondent:
Adv S A Cassan
Instructed by:
BIRBAL &
ASSOCIATES
(Ref: A. Birbal)
For the second and
third respondents:
No appearances
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-G.
[2]
Sectional
Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011.
[3]
Spilhaus
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mobile Telephone Networks
(Pty) Ltd and Another
[2019] ZACC 16; 2019 (4) SA 406 (CC).
[4]
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
.
[5]
Oribel
Properties 13 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Blue Dot Properties 271 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2010] ZASCA 78
;
[2010] 4 All SA 282
(SCA) para 24.
[6]
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
2017
(1) SA 613
(CC) para 8.
[7]
Die
Dros (Pty) Ltd and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
2003 (4) SA 207
(C) para 28.
[8]
SATAWU
and Another v Garvas and Others
2013 (1) SA 83
(CC) para 114.
sino noindex
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