Case Law[2023] ZASCA 17South Africa
Berzack v Huntrex 277 (Pty) Ltd and Others (210/2021) [2023] ZASCA 17; [2023] 2 All SA 1 (SCA); 2023 (6) SA 120 (SCA) (21 February 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
21 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – application for leave to appeal referred for argument in terms of s 17(1)(d) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – whether leave to appeal ought to be granted – property law – servitude – whether a garden servitude registered against the servient tenement for the benefit of the dominant tenement is a praedial or personal servitude of usus – whether such servitude is capable of registration in terms of s 66 of the Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937.
Judgment
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## Berzack v Huntrex 277 (Pty) Ltd and Others (210/2021) [2023] ZASCA 17; [2023] 2 All SA 1 (SCA); 2023 (6) SA 120 (SCA) (21 February 2023)
Berzack v Huntrex 277 (Pty) Ltd and Others (210/2021) [2023] ZASCA 17; [2023] 2 All SA 1 (SCA); 2023 (6) SA 120 (SCA) (21 February 2023)
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sino date 21 February 2023
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 210/2021
In the matter between:
MARGOT
BERZACK
APPLICANT
and
HUNTREX 277 (PTY)
LTD FIRST
RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS SECOND
RESPONDENT
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
MUNICIPALITY THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Berzack
v Huntrex 277 (Pty) Ltd and Others
(Case
no 210/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 17
(21 February 2023)
Coram:
PETSE AP, MOLEMELA and PLASKET JJA and NHLANGULELA
and GOOSEN AJJA
Heard:
3 November 2022
Delivered:
21 February 2023
Summary:
Appeal – application for leave to
appeal
referred for argument in terms of s
17(1)(
d
)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– whether leave to appeal
ought to be granted – property law – servitude –
whether a garden servitude registered
against the servient tenement
for the benefit of the dominant tenement is a praedial or personal
servitude of
usus
–
whether such servitude is capable of registration
in terms of
s 66
of the Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Meer J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The application for leave to appeal is granted.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs including the costs of two
counsel where so employed.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Nhlangulela AJA (Petse
AP and Molemela JA concurring):
[1]
This
is an application for leave to appeal referred to court for
argument
[1]
in terms of s
17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
[2]
(the
Superior Courts Act), and
, if successful, for the determination
of the appeal itself. It is a sequel to the refusal of leave by a
single judge, sitting in
the Western Cape Division of the High Court,
Cape Town (the high court). Leave is sought against the decision of
the high court
delivered on 10 December 2020 in terms of which a
praedial servitude registered against the immovable property of the
first respondent,
Huntrex
277 (Pty) Ltd (Huntrex 277),
in
favour of the immovable property of the applicant, Ms Margot Berzack,
was declared to be a personal servitude of
usus
.
The order entitled
Huntrex
277
to
demolish the wooden pole fence that exists on the servitude area; and
to construct its own wooden pole fence, fitted with a gate,
on the
eastern and western boundaries of the properties. Further, the second
respondent, the Registrar of Deeds, was directed to
rectify Huntrex
277’s title deed to reflect that the servitude in issue is not
a praedial servitude but a personal servitude
of
usus
.
[2]
The counter-application of Ms Berzack, in which
she sought the preservation of her praedial rights or the conferment
of such rights
by prescription in terms of s 6 of the Prescription
Act 68 of 1969 (the
Prescription Act), was
dismissed with costs by
the high court.
[3]
Only Huntrex 277 took part in this litigation. The
second respondent, the Registrar of Deeds, and third respondent, City
of Cape
Town, did not take part both in the high court and this
Court.
Admission of further
evidence
[4]
In
addition, Ms Berzack brought before us an application in terms of
s 19
(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act
[3
] for the
admission of the further evidence of Mr Richard James Somerset Moffat
(Mr Moffat) and Mrs Margaret Anne Boag (Mrs Boag)
in amplification of
her application for leave to appeal. Although this application was
initially opposed by Huntrex 277, it did
not persist with its
opposition before this Court. Thus, nothing more needs to be said
about this application, save to say that
in truth, these two
affidavits have no bearing on the merits of the envisaged appeal.
Rather, they were filed in order to bolster
Ms Berzack’s
application for leave to appeal.
Leave to appeal
application
[5]
The
fate of the application for leave is dependent on proof to the
satisfaction of this Court that the envisaged appeal would have
a
reasonable prospect of success or that there is some other compelling
reason
why
the appeal should be heard as envisaged in subsections 17(1)(
a
)(i)
and (ii) of the Superior Court Act,
[4]
respectively.
[6]
Regard
being had to the papers filed in support of the application for leave
and hearing argument by counsel, I am satisfied that
the application
for leave passes muster. The appeal raises important questions of
law, such as whether a servitude involving reservation
of rights of
access to use and enjoyment of a garden by Ms Berzack, registered
against the property of Huntrex 277, is a praedial
servitude or a
personal servitude of
usus
and,
therefore, hit by the prohibition located in s 66 of the
Deeds
Registries Act 47 of 1937 (Deeds Registries Act)
.
[5]
Background
[7]
The facts of this matter are not in dispute. Ms
Berzack is the owner of a residential property which is described as
the remainder
of erf 3[…], Constantia. Huntrex 277, too, is
the owner of the residential property described as erf 8[…], a
portion
of the original erf 3[…], Constantia. For convenience,
these residential properties will be referred to as the ‘Berzack
property’ and ‘Huntrex 277 property’ respectively.
The Huntrex 277
property is the subdivision carved out of the original erf 3[…],
which had been registered in the name of
Ms Berzack on 31 December
1970
.
At the time, erf 3[…] was an undivided
residential property measuring 8331m² in extent. After taking
occupation of the
property
from
Mr M M Liebman, Ms Berzack created a garden westward of the house and
to a point beyond which the property was unused and left
in its
natural vegetated state. She went on to delineate that point with a
wooden fence to cordon off the area of the property
that was in use
and to prevent vagrants from encroaching on it. She extended the
wooden fence eastward to the poolside patio to
establish a garden.
[8]
Troubled by issues of safety posed by the
undeveloped western side of the property, Ms Berzack took a decision
to subdivide the
property and sell the portion that lay unused. Ms
Berzack’s intention at the time was to align the subdivision
with the western
perimeter of the wooden fence. However, she was
prevented from doing so by a local use ordinance which imposed a
minimum erf size
of 4000m². In 1982, Ms Berzack subdivided erf
3[…] into two separate portions resulting in the Berzack
property being
reduced to 4320m². To keep the garden as part of
her property without contravening the land use regulations, Ms
Berzack was
compelled to reserve her rights to the garden, which had
fallen into the subdivided portion, by means of a servitude. Having
identified
a willing buyer, Mr A G Wellens, on 21 September
1983,
Ms Berzack transferred erf 8[…] to him,
subject to a praedial servitude which was duly endorsed and
registered against the
title deed of erf 8[…] in accordance
with the relevant provisions of the
Deeds Registries Act. The
terms
of the servitude were set out and incorporated in the deed of
transfer in favour of Mr Wellens.
[9]
Erf 8[…] was later transferred to two
successive other persons at different times. Ultimately, on 28
February 2017, the third
owner, Mr K W Sander, transferred the
property to Huntrex 277. At all material times relevant to the
transfers of the Huntrex
277 property, the praedial servitude that
was created by means of a contract concluded between Ms Berzack and
Mr Wellens was endorsed
on the successive title deeds. I set out
below the express terms of the servitude that is endorsed on the
title deed of the Huntrex
277 property:
‘
P.
SUBJECT
FURTHER
to
the following conditions contained in said Deed of Transfer No. T.
3[…]/1983 imposed by MARGOT BERZACK in favour of herself
and
her successors in title as owner of the REMAINDER OF ERF 3[…]
CONSTANTIA, which conditions are as follows:
(a)
The property hereby transferred is subject to a servitude area 20
(TWENTY) meters
wide, The Western Boundary of which shall be parallel
to the boundary marked DE on Diagram N. 5253/1981 in favour of the
REMAINDER
OF ERF 3[…] CONSTANTIA, held by the said Transferor,
MARGOT BERZACK (born ILLMAN) married out of community of property to
Jeffrey Cyril Berzack, under Deed of Transfer No. 3[…] dated
31
st
December 1970.
(b)
The said servitude shall be subject to the follow [ing] terms and
conditions, namely:
(i)
No wall or fence of any description shall be erected on the servitude
boundary
except extension of existing type of fencing (wooden pole
fencing).
(ii)
The seller shall have the right to plant, control, care for and renew
the
existing garden situated
within the servitude area more fully described above.
(iii)
The seller shall have full rights of access to such servitude area in
fulfilment of the
rights hereby granted.
(The term of Seller shall
include her Successors-in-Title).’
I
pause here to observe that these conditions of title had survived all
three successive transfers from Mr Wellens without being
contested.
[10] Mr
Wellens filed an affidavit in support of Ms Berzack’s
opposition confirming, in essence, that the reservation
of the garden
as a praedial servitude upon the Huntrex 277 property was agreed to
between him and Ms Berzack. He stated further
that the agreement was
informed by common intention that the garden would remain on the
Huntrex 277 property for the sole and unfettered
use of Ms Berzack
and any subsequent successors-in-title of the remainder of erf 3[…],
Constantia.
[11]
As regards the counter-application,
Ms
Berzack
contended that her intention
and that of Mr Wellens could still be realized by rectification
,
if necessary, of clause P of the title deed of
Huntrex 277,
by
inserting appropriate terms as shown in bold letters below:
‘
P.
SUBJECT FURTHER to the following conditions contained in said Deed of
Transfer No.
T. 3[…]/1983 imposed by MARGOT BERZACK in favour
of herself and her successors in title as owner of the REMAINDER OF
ERF
3[…] CONSTANTIA, which conditions are as follows:
(a)
The property hereby transferred is subject to a servitude area 20
(TWENTY) meters
wide, The Western Boundary of which shall be parallel
to the boundary marked DE on Diagram No. 5253/1981 in favour of the
REMAINDER
OF ERF 3[…] CONSTANTIA, held by the said Transferor,
MARGOT BERZACK (born ILLMAN) married out of community of property to
Jeffrey Cyril Berzack, under Deed of Transfer No. 3[…] dated
31
st
December 1970.
(b)
The said servitude shall be subject to the following terms and
conditions, namely:
(i)
No wall or fence of any description shall be erected on the servitude
boundary
to enclose it
except
extension of existing type of fencing (wooden pole fencing)
on
its western side
.
(ii)
The seller shall have the
exclusive
right to plant, control,
care for and renew the existing garden situated within the servitude
area more fully described above.
(iii)
The seller shall have full
and exclusive
rights of access to
such servitude area in fulfilment of the rights hereby granted.
(The term of Seller shall
include her Successors-in-Title).’
[12]
Further alternative relief sought by Ms Berzack in the high court, in
the event of rectification not being successful,
was that a praedial
right that she had exercised and enjoyed for more than thirty years
be conferred on her and the Berzack property
in terms of
s 6
of the
Prescription Act
[6
]
by
virtue of acquisitive prescription.
[13]
The high court decided the main application on the issues of whether
the servitude articulated in clause P of the
title deed is praedial
or personal in nature and, if it is a personal servitude, whether the
wording of clause P is capable of
being rectified so that it may be
converted into a praedial servitude. After considering the elements
of a praedial servitude
[7]
and
finding that the element of
utilitas
[8]
was lacking, the high court came to the conclusion that clause P
established a personal servitude of
usus
which
could neither be rectified nor cured by acquisitive prescription, for
the reason that s 66 of the Deeds Act prohibited such
servitude from
being registered by the Registrar of Deeds.
[14] The high
court also found that it was appropriate that the title deed of the
Huntrex property be rectified by substituting
the original clause P
with a new clause that had been proposed by Huntrex 277, which reads:
‘
P.
SUBJECT
FURTHER
to
the following conditions imposed by the Transferor in favour of
herself personally, which conditions are as follows:
(a)
The property hereby transferred is subject to a servitude area 20
(twenty) metres
wide, the Western boundary of which shall be parallel
to the boundary marked DE on Diagram No. 5253/1981 of the Remainder
of Erf
3[…] Constantia, held by the said Transferor, Margaret
Berzack (born Illman) married out of community of property to Jeffrey
Cyril Berzack under Deed of Transfer No. 3[…] dated 31
st
December 1970.
(b)
The said servitude shall be subject to the following terms and
conditions, namely:
(i)
[deleted]
(ii)
The Transferor shall have the right to plant, control, care for and
renew the existing
garden situated within the servitude area more
fully described above.
(iii)
The Transferor shall have full rights of access to such servitude
area in fulfilment of
the rights hereby granted.
P
bis
:
SUBJECT FURTHER
to the following condition imposed by the
aforesaid Transferor in favour of the aforesaid Remainder of Erf 380
Constantia, namely,
that no wall or fence of any description shall be
erected on the aforesaid servitude area except extension of existing
type of
fencing (wooden pole fencing).’
[15] It is
worth noting that the rectification of the servitude on the terms
that were proposed by Huntrex 277 was designed
to convert the
original praedial servitude into a personal servitude.
Appeal
[16] The
appeal against the judgment of the high court is premised on two main
grounds. Firstly, it was submitted on
behalf of Ms Berzack that the
high court erred in interpreting the existing clause P on a narrow
ground that in the absence of
proof that the servitude inscribed in
the title deed served the element of
utilitas
; the servitude
was, therefore, personal in nature. It was contended on behalf of Ms
Berzack that the interpretation of the servitude
is not supported by
the plain language of the servitude, the intention of the relevant
parties when registering the servitude and
the subsequent conduct of
the various owners of the Huntrex property.
[17]
Secondly, it was contended that the high court erred in failing to
take into cognizance the fact that the existing
servitude enures in
favour of the Berzack property, and having economic potential that
effectively increases the size of the Berzack
property. Counsel
placed reliance on the interpretational tool espoused in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[9]
(
Endumeni
)
that: ‘the “inevitable point of departure is the language
of the provision itself”, read in context and having
regard to
the purpose of the preparation and the background to the preparation
and production of the document.’
[10]
Such an approach to the interpretation of contractual instruments,
including those creating servitudes, had been applied by this
Court
in
Kruger
v Joles Eiendom (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[11]
with reference to the dictum in
Kempenaars
v Jonker, Van der Berg and Havenga
,
[12]
where the following was said:
‘
It
is clear that incidents and the extent of the servitude must depend
on the circumstances under which it was created . . . I think
. . .
that much must depend on the circumstances under which the servitude
was created, and on the
causa
et origo servitutis
.’
[13]
[18] In
argument, it was submitted on behalf of Ms Berzack that regard being
had to the language used, clause P should
be read in the context in
which it appears in the title deed, the purpose of the servitude and
the background circumstances giving
rise to the creation of the
servitude. That exercise begins with the conception of the garden by
Ms Berzack and the subsequent
negotiations that culminated in the
sale of the property to Mr Wellens in 1983. It was submitted that it
was wrong of the high
court to adopt a sequestered approach by
excising different aspects of the same servitude, preserving as
praedial P(b)(i) and then
severing it from P(b)(ii) and (iii), which
form an integral part thereof. It was submitted further that the
erroneous deletion
of the words ‘her successors-in-title’
and P(b)(i) and substitution thereof with a newly worded and
self-standing paragraph
P
bis,
resulted in the removal of all
the servitudal features of the garden and benefits due to the Berzack
property.
[19]
Huntrex 277 supports the judgment of the high court on the basis that
clause P(b)(i) embodied a praedial servitude
as contended for on
behalf of Ms Berzack, which is typically regarded as servitude
irregulars
.
Such a clause, Huntrex 277 argued, should be interpreted in the same
way as clauses P(b)(ii) and (iii), i.e. personal servitude,
and
not the other way. Therefore, the clauses being interpreted
purposively and contextually, and as a whole, are personal to Ms
Berzack. It was also contended on behalf of
Huntrex
277
that clause P(b)(i) is severable from
the personal servitude of
usus
embodied in clause P(b)(ii) and (iii) despite the
fact that they appear in the same principal clause.
[20]
These submissions were premised on the approach to interpretation of
a building contract by separation of its parts
as applied in
Bondev
Midrand (Pty) Ltd v Puling and Another;
Bondev
Midrand (Pty) Limited v Ramokgopa
(
Bondev
)
[14]
They were also premised on the Roman-Dutch law foundations of
servitudes, it being contended on behalf of Huntrex 277 that in the
absence of the element of
utilitas
in
clause P of the existing servitude, the garden servitude is
quintessentially not one of the recognized traditional rural
servitudes
of a right of way or access to drinking water on land
belonging to another person. Relying on this, it was argued that the
existing
servitude is by definition a personal servitude of
usus
whose
registration is hit by the prohibition in
section 66
of the
Deeds
Registries Act.  
;
Issues
[21] The main
issues for determination on appeal are whether the terms of clause P
amount to a praedial or personal
servitude of
usus
; and,
depending on the nature of servitude that is created in clause P,
whether such servitude is capable of being registered in
terms of
s
66
of the
Deeds Registries Act. The
determination of two secondary
issues, namely, rectification and prescription, depend on the outcome
of the determination of the
main issues.
Interpretation of
contract of servitude
[22] The
interpretation of clause P lies at the heart of this matter. Both
parties submitted as much. To the extent
that the high court did not
interpret clause P with regard to the grammatical meaning of the
words used therein in light of the
context, purpose and the
background circumstances under which the servitude creating contract
was made between Ms Berzack and Mr
Wellens in 1983, it erred. It
applied a narrow and sequestered method of interpretation,
misconstrued the meaning of
utilitas
, excised the aspects of
what a praedial servitude was, which resulted in a constrained
meaning given to each of those subclauses
and mischaracterising the
praedial servitude as a personal servitude of
usus
.
Immediately the servitude was so construed, an opportunity was missed
to unravel the
causa et origo
of the contract that was
concluded between Ms Berzack and Mr Wellens in 1983. The process of
separating and excising the aspects
of clause P is an isolationist
approach to interpreting a contract that is not consonant with what
this Court propounded in
Endumeni
. Nor do I agree with counsel
for Huntrex 277 that the approach applied by this Court in
Bondev
finds application in this case.
[23] There,
it was held that although the conditions in a title deed of land
transferred by Bondev to each of the respondents
entitling Bondev to
claim re-transfer against payments of the original purchase price if
neither the transferee nor their successors-in-title
erect a dwelling
thereon within a certain period gave rise to both a real right (to
have a dwelling erected) and a personal right
(to claim re-transfer).
Each of those rights were interpreted as they stood on the building
contract. They were not denuded of
their inherent characteristics by
excision and word alteration processes that we have seen in this
case. To the extent that only
the right to claim re-transfer was
susceptible to prescription in terms of the provisions of
s 11
(d)
of the
Prescription Act, those
rights were found not to be
inextricably wound up together, but were capable of separate
existence. Therefore,
Bondev
does not support the argument
advanced on behalf of Huntrex 277. In this case, we are dealing with
one composite contract creating
a praedial servitude in accordance
with what the parties had intended at the outset.
[24] The
meaning of clause P, read as a whole, shows that the element of
utilitas
is present. The Huntrex 277 property has been serving
the Berzack property continuously for a period spanning more than
thirty
years. The right to the garden is reserved on the servient
land and it enures in favour of the Berzack property, serving the
pursuit
of Ms Berzack’s personal pleasure or caprice.
Subclauses P, P(a) and P(b)(i) demonstrate this fact. In the same
way, the
ancillary clauses in P(b)(ii) and (iii), read together with
other subclauses, describe the manner of access to the servitudal
area.
The fact that the servitudal rights are enjoyed by the owner of
the dominant tenement is a natural feature of the praedial right.
That the servitude as described in clause P increases the economic
potential of the Berzack property is not in dispute. Just as
the
argument advanced on behalf of Ms Berzack that the modern praedial
servitude of view is similar in substance to the garden
servitude has
not been contradicted. That said, I have no doubt in my mind that, on
the facts of this case, the intention expressed
in writing by Ms
Berzack and Mr Wellens in 1983 was that the garden should be reserved
on the Huntrex 277 property for the former’s
benefit and
subsequent successors-in-title of the Berzack property in perpetuity,
hence the registration of the servitude.
[25]
The finding made by the high court that clause P does not meet the
definition of
utilitas
is
erroneous. In
Willoughby’s
Consolidated Co Ltd v Copthall Stores Ltd
,
[15]
this Court stated that in the absence of an ambiguity in the
words used in a servitude-creating contract, the golden rule
applies
in favour of a praedial servitude having been proved by the person
who claims the existence thereof. In such event, as
stated in
Northview
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Lurie
,
[16]
‘
there
is a presumption of fact arising from registration’
[17]
and
the
presumption against the existence of a real servitude does not arise.
[26]
The adjunct to the attack against the recognition of a garden
servitude simply on the basis that it is not one
of the traditional
servitudes does not have a legal basis. The correct position in our
law is that there is no exhaustive list
of real servitudes. On this
score, what the Constitutional Court said in
City
of Tshwane v Link Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
[18]
(
Link
Africa
)
is instructive. The Court said:
‘
In
modern South African law, types of rights and restrictions found in
traditional servitudes have been relaxed. This relaxation
has been so
extensive “that their number is “practically unlimited”
although certain general requirements have
to be fulfilled”. To
determine whether a right in property is a servitude is often a
matter of judicial policy. It depends
in part on whether the nature
of the right is capable of being recognised as a real right:
“
The
essence of a servitude is therefore, that it confers “a real
right [to use and enjoyment of the property of another]”,
and
it is this direct relationship between the holder of the servitude
and the property to which it relates that distinguishes
it from a
mere contractual right against the owner of the property.”
The
crucial point is this: the common law on servitudes illustrates that
property rights have dimension, colour and complexity far
beyond any
barefaced general proposition about ownership. Servitudes limit the
rights of ownership and place certain burdens on
property by
affording power of use and enjoyment to another. That has been the
case for thousands of years, for our law of servitudes,
both
consensual and non-consensual, is derived from the Roman law.’
[19]
[27] In this
case the features of the garden servitude with which we are concerned
meet the distinctive characteristics
of a praedial servitude, not a
personal servitude, as shown in
Link Africa
, where the
following was said:
‘
A
praedial servitude is one where there are at least two pieces of land
implicated. The servitude confers benefits on one piece
of land, the
dominant tenement, while imposing corresponding burdens on the other,
the servient tenement. A praedial servitude
vests in the owner of the
dominant land. But neither its benefit nor its burden can be detached
from the land. These are passed
from one land owner to the next.
By
contrast, a personal servitude is a real right that attaches to the
burdened land, but is also always connected to an individual.
He or
she holds the right to use and enjoy another’s property. That
right is non-transferable: it cannot be passed on to
another.
However, personal servitudes are always enforceable against the owner
of the property burdened by it – even when
that owner
changes.’
[20]
[28]
On the contrary, the description of a personal servitude of
usus
makes
it plain that the garden servitude in this case is not a personal
servitude of
usus
.
The authorities state that in the case of a personal servitude of
usus
involving
a piece of land
,
the
usuary of land may take fruit, vegetables and other produce for the
household’s needs, leaving the remaining produce to
the
landowner who may enter and gather it. With regard to using a house,
the usuary may occupy it with his or her family, servants
and guests,
and may let out part of the house, provided he or she remains in
occupation.
[21]
[29] For the
aforementioned reasons, I am driven to the conclusion that the
meaning of the original clause
P is that it bears the hallmarks
of a praedial servitude, not a personal servitude of
usus
. The
servitude of the kind spelt out in the original clause P does not fit
the description of a personal servitude of
usus
, but points to
it being a praedial servitude not only when viewed in line with the
common intention of the parties but also when
interpreted
purposively, contextually and having regard to the background to its
preparation and production. In the event, the
registration of the
servitude by the Registrar of Deeds cannot be faulted.
[30] The
order authorising Huntrex 277 to demolish the existing wooden pole
fence and erect its fence on the servitudal
area, thereby restricting
access by Ms Berzack to the garden ought not to have been granted.
Rectification and
prescription
[31] The
conclusion reached above that clause P constitutes a praedial
servitude undercuts the submission that s 66
of the Deeds Act
prohibits registration of the servitude. Similarly, there will be no
need to decide the appeal based on rectification
and prescription.
Suffice it to say that the judgment and order of the high court
cannot stand. And the costs of the appeal should
follow the result.
[32]
Before concluding, I need only to say that I have read the judgment
authored by my colleagues, Plasket JA and Goosen
AJA. While I agree
that the permanent advantage derived from a feature or attribute of
the servient tenement is not to be confused
with the concept of
utility, I disagree with the proposition that there is no feature or
attribute of the servient tenement which
can be said to provide an
advantage to the dominant tenement. An obvious concomitant of the
garden servitude is that the servient
tenement entitles the dominant
tenement to a view of the grounds. The servitutal rights created
indirectly serve as a guarantee
that no structure can be constructed
on the grounds designated as the garden area. In this fashion, the
dominant tenement’s
poolside entertainment area will always be
an area with a view as it is and will always be adjacent to a section
of vacant land.
That a view adds
utilitas
and
enhances the value of residential property is incontrovertible.
The fact that in tending the garden, Ms Berzack is, in
the process,
able to pursue her personal pleasure or caprice does not detract from
the advantages alluded to. The argument
that the servitude area
was identified in order to circumvent area restrictions imposed
by the applicable town planning scheme
is a red-herring, in my view,
and is above all belied by the facts emerging from the record.
Order
[33] In the
result, the following order is made:
1
The application for leave to appeal is granted.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs including the costs of two
counsel where so employed.’
__________________
Z M
NHLANGULELA
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Plasket
JA and Goosen AJA
[34]
We are unable to agree with the order that our colleague, Nhlangulela
AJA, proposes. We only agree with him that
leave to appeal should be
granted in respect of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4 and part of paragraph 8
of the order of the high court, and
that the appeal should be upheld
to that extent. For the rest, we would dismiss the application for
leave to appeal with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
[35]
This matter turns ultimately on whether the servitude in question is
a praedial servitude or personal servitude
of
usus
. The
implications of a finding that the servitude is a praedial servitude
are that it accrues to successors in title to the current
owner, Ms
Berzack, and will burden the servient tenement in perpetuity. If,
however, the servitude is a personal servitude, it
accrues only to Ms
Berzack while she owns the dominant tenement. The consequences that
flow from the decision as to the nature
of the servitude are thus
far-reaching and of immense importance, not least to the owners of
the servient tenement and their successors
in title. The high court
found that the servitude was a personal servitude of
usus
and
granted all the relief claimed by Huntrex.
[36]
The effect of the judgment of Nhlangulela AJA is that it recognises
as a praedial servitude the right to develop
and maintain a garden
upon a servient tenement. As such it marks a significant development
of the scope of presently recognised
praedial servitudes at common
law. For reasons which we elucidate below, the development is
premised upon a misapplication of the
principles of law which govern
the field of servitudes.
[37]
When Ms Berzack sub-divided erf 380, Constantia, she sold part of it,
now known as erf 8[…] Constantia,
to Mr A G Wellens on 21
September 1983. A servitude was embodied in the deed of transfer and
subsequently registered in her favour.
The servitude, contained in
clause P of the deed of transfer, reads as follows:
‘
SUBJECT FURTHER
to the following conditions imposed by the Transferor in favour of
himself and his successors in title as owner of the REMAINDER
of ERF
3[…] Constantia, which conditions are as follows:
(a) The
property hereby transferred is subject to a servitude area 20
(twenty) metres wide, the Western boundary
of which shall be parallel
to the boundary marked DE on Diagram No. 5253/1981 in favour of the
Remainder of ERF 3[…] CONSTANTIA,
held by the said Transferor,
MARGOT BERZACK (born ILLMAN) married out of community of property to
Jeffrey Cyril Berzack under Deed
of Transfer No. 3[…] dated
31
st
December 1970.
(b) The
said servitude shall be subject to the following terms and conditions
namely:
(i)
no wall or fence of any description shall be erected on the servitude
boundary except extension
of existing type of fencing (wooden pole
fencing).
(ii)
The Seller shall have the right to plant, control, care for and renew
the existing garden situated
within the servitude area more fully
described above.
(iii) The
Seller shall have full rights of access to such servitude area in
fulfilment of the rights hereby granted.
(the term SELLER shall
include her Successors in Title).’
[38]
When Huntrex purchased erf 8[…] from Mr K W Sander in 2017,
the deed of transfer referred, in clause P,
to the sale being subject
to ‘the following conditions contained in the said Deed of
Transfer No. T.3[…]/1983 imposed
by MARGOT BERZACK in favour
of herself and her successors in title as owner of the REMAINDER OF
ERF 3[…], CONSTANTIA’.
It then recorded, in clauses P(a)
and P(b), the terms of the servitude as agreed by Ms Berzack and Mr
Wellens in 1983.
[39]
Erf 3[…] and erf 8[…] lie on an east to west line
bounded along their northern boundary by Alphen
Drive and along their
southern boundary by Peter Cloete Avenue. The servitude area extends
for 20 metres westward from the westerly
boundary of erf 3[…].
One wooden fence crosses the area.
[40]
This fence was the catalyst that led to this application. Because it
could not contain the dogs belonging to Mr
and Ms Bain, the members
of Huntrex who reside on erf 8[…], they wished to remove it
and replace it with what they called
a ‘visually permeable’
fence that they had commissioned an architect to design.
[41]
Mr and Ms Bains sought Ms Berzack’s permission to remove the
old fence and construct the new fence. She refused.
As a result, they
began to research the position that pertained to the servitude area.
When they discovered the extent of the right
that Ms Berzack claimed
– and the prejudice it caused to Huntrex as owner – they
launched the application in the high
court with the aim of rectifying
the situation.
[42]
In their notice of motion, they sought orders to the effect that they
could remove the fence then in place and
construct a new one (prayers
1-4); that it be declared that Ms Berzack’s servitude was only
a personal servitude of
usus
over erf 8[…] which ceased
to have effect on her death; that it was not capable of being
registered in the title deeds as
a praedial servitude in favour of Ms
Berzack and her successors-in-title (prayers 4-7); and that the
Master – the second
respondent, who took no part in the
proceedings in the high court or in this court – be directed to
rectify the deed of transfer
(prayer 8).
[43]
The central issue in this application for leave to appeal is what the
true nature of the servitude is. This involves
the interpretation of
the servitude-creating instrument. But, as van der Walt has said, the
interpretation of a servitude created
by the juristic act of the
parties, as opposed to legislation or the common law, is not simply a
matter of ascertaining the intention
of the parties through giving
meaning to the words that they chose. In some instances, ‘the
law will override the clearly
stated intention of the parties to a
servitude-creating contract if the contract conflicts with certain
peremptory principles of
property law’, the underlying reason
being that ‘contracting parties are not allowed to create real
rights in land
at will’.
[22]
[44]
Furthermore, since a servitude is a limitation on the right of
ownership of land, the common law recognises a presumption
that land
is free of a servitude, unless the contrary is established.
[23]
This presumption has
three implications. They are:
[24]
‘
Firstly, it is
presumed that property (particularly land) is free of servitudes and
therefore the existence of a servitude has to
be proved by the person
who claims to hold it. Logically speaking this presumption precedes
interpretation of a servitude-creating
contract (the presumption is
rebutted as soon as the servitude is proved) and therefore the
presumption will seldom compete with
interpretation of the contract.
Secondly, once the existence of a servitude has been proved, the
in
favorem libertatis
principle means that the contract from which the servitude originates
must be interpreted strictly so as to impose the least cumbersome
burden on the servient property. In this case, the presumption gives
effect to an underlying property principle that directs that
interpretation of the contract. The logic is again that the servitude
limits ownership, that ownership must be protected against
unnecessary restrictions, and that the contract must therefore be
interpreted restrictively so as to protect freedom of ownership.
Thirdly, in the same vein, if the existence of a servitude has been
proved but it is unclear whether the servitude is praedial
or
personal, the presumption favours a personal servitude because that
usually imposes a lesser burden on the servient land. Interpretation
therefore again takes place under the guidance of a property
principle.’
[45]
The approach to the interpretation of servitudes was set out
authoritatively by Innes CJ in
Willoughby’s
Consolidated Co Ltd v Copthall Stores Ltd
[25]
as follows:
‘
Whether a
contractual right amounts in any given case to servitude –
whether it is real or only personal – depends upon
the
intention of the parties to be gathered from the terms of the
contract construed in the light of the relevant circumstances.
In
case of doubt the presumption will always be against a servitude, the
onus
is upon the person affirming the existence of one to prove it.’
[46]
The presumption that Innes CJ spoke of was described by Cloete JA in
Kruger v
Joles Eiendomme (Pty) Ltd and Another
[26]
as ‘the
well-established rule of construction that because a servitude is a
limitation of ownership, it must be accorded an
interpretation which
least encumbers the servient tenement’. The rule applies not
only to whether the servient tenement is
burdened with a servitude
but also, if it is, to whether it is praedial or personal. This was
explained by Corbett J in
Jonordon
Investment (Pty) Ltd v De Aar Drankwinkel (Edms) Bpk
[27]
when he held that ‘where
it is doubtful whether a servitutal burden placed on land was
intended to be for the benefit of another
property and, therefore,
praedial and perpetual or for the benefit of a particular person and,
therefore, personal and limited
in its duration, the latter
interpretation must be adopted as being the one which places the
lesser burden upon the subject-matter
of the servitude’.
[47]
Two observations concerning the approach to the interpretation of
servitudes are necessary. First, Nestadt J, in
Lorentz
v Melle and Others
[28]
made the point that the
registration of rights in land does not ipso facto ‘render the
rights of a servitutal character’
because it may have been that
‘only personal rights were created and that registration should
not have taken place’.
In other words, the nature and character
of the right created must be analysed. Secondly, the intention of the
parties as expressed
in their agreement has its limits. Nestadt J,
with reference to the passage cited above in the
Willoughby’s
Consolidated
case,
expressed those limits thus:
[29]
‘
I would add that I
do not read the passage and authorities quoted as meaning that the
parties’ intention (as gathered from
the terms of the contract)
is the sole criterion in deciding the issue. If a contractual right
is of such a nature that it is incapable
of constituting a servitude
then obviously the intention of the parties (as expressed) to do so
is irrelevant.’
[48]
Apart from the issue of interpretation, there are limits imposed by
principles and provisions of property law that
seek to restrict the
unbounded creation of praedial servitudes, given their perpetual
character and their drastic effect of restricting
the rights, powers
and liberties of owners of property. One such limit is
s 66
of the
Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937
. It provides:
‘
No personal
servitude of
usufruct
,
usus
or
habitation
purporting to extend beyond the lifetime of the person in whose
favour it is created shall be registered, nor may transfer or cession
of such personal servitude to any person other than the owner of the
land encumbered thereby, be registered.’
[49]
We turn now to the servitude. The wording of clause P pulls, at
times, in different directions but that notwithstanding,
it seems to
us that the type of servitude contemplated by the parties is
nonetheless evident. It is important to bear in mind that
the
character of the servitude, rather than what the parties who created
it chose to call it, is decisive.
[50]
In clause P’s introductory recordal, it is stated that the
servitude set out in the remainder of the clause
was ‘imposed’
by Ms Berzack in favour of herself as owner of erf 3[…], and
her successors in title. Clause P(a)
then identifies the servitude
area, and in doing so refers to the ‘property hereby
transferred’ as being ‘subject
to a servitude area’.
It also identifies the property in favour of which the servitude
operates.
[51]
The servitude area in favour of Ms Berzack and her successors in
title having thus been identified, clause P(b)
defines the rights
that the servitude grants. The operative provisions are clauses
P(b)(ii) and (iii), as clause P(b)(i) only concerns
the fence and has
no bearing on the character of the servitude. Clause P(b)(ii) defines
the servitutal right that ‘the Seller’
obtained (or, in
the words of the recordal, ‘imposed’ on the owner of erf
8[…]) as the right to ‘plant,
control, care for and
renew’ the garden in the servitude area. In other words, the
servitude gave Ms Berzac the use of the
servitude area in order to
garden. Clause P(b)(iii) adds little, as all it does is emphasise
that Ms Berzack and her successors
in title have a right of access to
the servitude area in order to garden.
[52]
The only indications that a praedial servitude was in the
contemplation of the parties are the reference to successors
in title
to Ms Berzack and the identification in clause P(a) of two
properties, one that is subject to a servitude area and one
in whose
favour the servitude area operates. These factors must be seen in the
context of the servitude as a whole, particularly:
the statement in
the recordal that it was ‘imposed’ by Ms Berzack in
favour of herself and her successors in title,
as opposed to being
‘imposed’ over the servient tenement in favour of the
dominant tenement; the statement in clauses
P(b)(ii) and (iii) that
‘the Seller’ obtained the rights listed therein; and the
fact that the only purpose in referring
to the two properties in
clause P(a) was to identify the servitude area.
[53]
As against these limited indicators that a praedial servitude may
have been intended, there are two strong indicators
that a personal
servitude was intended. First, on the first sale of erf 8[…],
the terms of the servitude were ‘imposed’
in favour Ms
Berzack ‘as owner’ of erf 3[…]. Secondly, the
nature of the rights in clauses P(b)(ii) and (iii)
are, by their
nature, personal to Ms Berzack. They indicate that the intention of
the parties was to create a personal servitude
– ‘a
limited real right that imposes a burden on the servient tenement . .
. for the benefit of a particular person’
[30]
–
for no reason
other than enabling Ms Berzack to enjoy gardening in the servitude
area. As stated above, in the case of uncertainty,
the authorities
are clear: the servitude must be held to be a personal servitude
rather than a praedial servitude.
[54]
We turn now to a more precise characterisation of the rights created
by clause P(b)(ii). The personal servitude
of
usus
is defined as follows by
van der Walt:
[31]
‘
The personal
servitude of use (
usus
,
bruick
in Roman-Dutch law) is similar to but narrower than
usufruct
.
The beneficiary of a servitude of use (referred to as a “usuary”)
can, like the usufructuary, use the property of
another person, for
her lifetime or for the specified term of the servitude, for her own
benefit or for the benefit of her family,
provided that the substance
of the property is preserved and returned to the owner when the
servitude is terminated.’
Put in slightly different
terms, the servitude of
usus
‘
entitles the
usuary to use the usuary property but not to appropriate its
fruits’.
[32]
[55]
Ms Berzack, in her answering affidavit stated that one of the
‘unavoidable consequences’ of her
sub-dividing her
property and selling part of it had been that ‘a significant
portion’ of her garden fell within the
portion that was to be
sold. She wished to protect for her benefit and that of successors in
title, ‘the exclusive right
to use, access and tend to that
portion of the garden by creating [a] servitude over the Huntrex
property at the same time as selling
and transferring it’. When
Ms Berzack’s stated intention is matched with clauses P(b)(ii)
and (iii), there can be little
doubt that she sought to, and did,
create a right of use for herself. It seems clear to us that the
servitude thus created falls
squarely into the definition of the
personal servitude of
usus
.
[56]
Van der Walt states that ‘the nature and content of a
servitude’ depends only to an extent on the intention
of the
parties who created it because ‘the law will not give effect to
the intention of the parties if they intended to do
something that is
not possible according to the principles of property law’, such
as creating ‘a personal servitude
that is transferable or
perpetual’.
[33]
As
s 66
of the
Deeds
Registries Act prohibits
the registration of a personal servitude of
usus
that purports to extend
beyond the lifetime of the person who created it, Ms Berzack was not
legally capable of ‘imposing’
the servitude on the
purchaser of her property in favour of herself and her successors in
title. That has the result that, irrespective
of what the servitude
says or what Ms Berzack intended, the servitude expires on her death.
The import and effect of
s 66
of the
Deeds Registries Act cannot
be
ignored. It reflects a legislative purpose to bolster the common law
impediments to the extension of perpetual restrictions
on the
ownership of property. Its effect is that once a servitude bears the
hallmarks of a personal servitude, it precludes registration.
[57]
We note that Nhlangulela AJA accepts that the rights created by the
registered servitude were intended to enable
‘the pursuit of Ms
Berzack’s personal pleasure or caprice’ – the
essence of a personal servitude –
and that clauses P(a) and (b)
confirm this.
[34]
He concludes, however,
that the requirement of
utilitas
is met by the enhancement
in value which accrues to the dominant tenement, and the beneficial
acquisition of a ‘view’
of the garden. We deal with this
hereunder.
[58]
Having concluded from an interpretation of the servitude and from the
nature of the rights created, that a personal
servitude of
usus
was, in fact, created, we
now approach the issue from a different angle. We turn now to
consider the essential requirements for
the creation of a praedial
servitude and whether the servitude at issue meets those
requirements. There are five general requirements.
These embody
certain principles which characterise the servitude as praedial, ie
as perpetual constraints upon the rights of ownership
of the servient
tenement whilst conferring real rights that attach to the dominant
tenement.
[35]
Only two of these need be
considered.
[59]
The first is that the servient tenement must be capable of serving
the dominant tenement on a permanent basis,
and therefore that the
use made of the servient tenement must be based on some permanent
feature or attribute of the servient land.
This requirement is
expressed in the principle of perpetual cause. It was stated in
Lorentz
that it is ‘the
essence of a praedial servitude that it burdens the land to which it
relates and that it provides some permanent
advantage to the dominant
land, as distinct from serving the personal benefit of the owner
thereof’.
[36]
[60]
The advantage provided by the servient tenement to the dominant
tenement must derive from a feature or attribute
of the servient
tenement which is permanent. In
Lorentz
,
[37]
this was expressed in a
citation from Hahlo and Kahn
[38]
who wrote:
‘
The old example of
the Roman law, which was duly repeated in the Romanistic literature,
was that one cannot have a praedial servitude
to pluck fruit or to
stroll or to have dinner on another's land. On the other hand, the
use made of the servient land must be based
on some permanent
attribute or feature of it. This is expressed in the requirement of
the existence of a
causa
perpetua.
’
[61]
The second is that the servient tenement must provide some utility or
benefit to the dominant landowner, as owner,
and must not merely
serve that owner’s personal pleasure or caprice.
[39]
This requirement is
embodied in the principle of
utilitas.
We have already pointed
to the fact that the main judgment, correctly in our view, recognises
that the servitutal rights created
by the clause in the title deed
served Ms Berzack’s personal pleasure and caprice. The
servitude was created to enable her
to enhance her personal pleasure
derived from gardening, rather than to exercise dominium over her
property and enjoy all the elements
of that dominium.
[62]
While we accept that the principle of
utilitas
may be met by enhancement
in value of, or the advancement of the economic, industrial or
commercial potential of a dominant tenement
to which a servitude over
a servient tenement attaches,
[40]
the enhancement must flow
from the right which is conferred by the servitude. A right of way,
or a right to draw water from a stream
or to lead water over a
servient tenement no doubt may facilitate the use, and therefore
value, of a dominant tenement otherwise
deprived of such services. So
too, a restrictive condition imposing limitations on the right to
trade upon a servient tenement
may protect the value that attaches to
such rights as vest in a dominant tenement. These are the types of
value enhancement envisaged
as fulfilling the
utilitas
requirement.
Non
constat
the
‘increased market value’ which might ensue from a
beautiful garden developed upon a servient tenement, establishes
utility as required by the common law. In any event, even if it is
assumed that some market value benefit may flow from the gardening
activities of Ms Berzack, such ‘utility’ cannot alter the
fact that the rights were reserved by her in pursuit of her
personal
pleasure and enjoyment.
[63]
The assertion by Nhlangulela AJA that additional utility is to be
found in the fact that the servitude will also
ensure a view of the
garden, which will attach to the dominant tenement, merits comment.
In the first instance, there was no evidence
before the court about
the nature of this ‘view’. The record contains only
general assertions that the garden is directly
adjacent to a pool
area on the dominant tenement and that it serves to enhance the
visual appreciation of the area. More importantly,
the utility in a
view, if it is to serve as a basis for recognition of a praedial
servitude, requires more than the mere assertion
of the existence of
a ‘view’. The reason is this: a view lies across or over
an adjacent property. If it is to attach
as of right to a dominant
tenement, it must necessarily do so by restricting the use to which
the servient tenement may be put
insofar as such use would obstruct
or destroy the ‘view’ across the servient land. This
difficult conundrum has been
the subject of numerous disputes before
our courts, mostly in the context of challenges to the lawful use of
property which serves
to ‘detract’ from the value of an
adjacent, neighbouring property.
[41]
[64]
Our law does not recognise a natural entitlement, based upon the mere
ownership of land, to enjoy a view across
adjacent land. The
authorities also do not, as a general entitlement, recognise the
protection of value in a property by imposing
upon the owner of
adjacent land restrictions on the lawful use of such land. The
circumstances in which this may occur are not
germane to this case.
The point is made to demonstrate that the ‘utility’ of a
view of the garden can, in the context
of this case, serve no more
than to assert the ‘value’ of the garden itself.
[65]
How would the
utilitas
requirement be affected if a successor
in title had no interest in gardening? Let us assume that they simply
abandoned the cultivation
and care of the garden in the servitude
area, allowing it to become a rodent infested eye-sore. Could it
still be said in these
circumstances that the value of the dominant
tenement has been enhanced by the servitude? In our view, the obvious
answer is ‘no’.
In similar vein it could not be said that
the servient tenement has continued to provide a permanent advantage
or perpetual cause
to the dominant tenement in the absence of the
maintenance and renewal of the garden. This example also highlights,
it seems to
us, the personal nature of the rights claimed by Ms
Berzack.
[66]
It must be emphasised that the permanent advantage derived from a
feature or attribute of the servient tenement
is not to be confused
with the concept of utility. The requirements are interlinked, but
they are not co-extensive. In this case
there is no feature or
attribute of the servient tenement which can be said to provide an
advantage to the dominant tenement. The
fact that it is contiguous is
of no moment. That serves only to meet the requirement of
vicinitas.
There is no evidence that the portion of land used for the
development and cultivation of a garden offers some peculiar facility
for the development of such a garden. The service that the servient
tenement provides consists of no more than the space upon which
a
garden has been developed. Indeed, the expedient of a servitude and
the servitude area was identified in order to circumvent
area
restrictions that applied to sub-divisions of land, in terms of the
applicable town planning scheme.
[67]
One final point warrants emphasis, and that is the entirely
subjective and value-laden-aesthetic of what constitutes
a ‘garden’
which would serve to enhance market or economic value of the dominant
tenement. The fact that Ms Berzack
may have created a garden which
satisfies the sensibilities of a particular segment of society is no
basis to infer intrinsic advantage
provided by the servient tenement
to the dominant tenement. This is particularly so in the light of the
fact that the ‘advantage’
conferred by the servient land
constitutes a permanent diminution of the rights of dominium
exercised by the owner of the servient
tenement.
[68]
In our view, for the reasons set out above, the servitutal rights
conferred by the terms of the agreement do not
meet two of the
essential requirements for recognition as a praedial servitude. It
is, as indicated above, no more than a servitude
of
usus
,
which is personal to Ms Berzack. It follows that in respect of the
principal issue, namely whether the servitude is praedial or
personal
in nature, and the remedial consequences that flowed therefrom, there
is no prospect of success on appeal. The high court’s
conclusion is correct that clauses P(b)(ii) and (iii) operate as a
personal servitude of
usus
in favour of Ms Berzack; that they
will cease to have force or effect on her death; and they are not
capable of operating or being
registered as a praedial servitude and
ought not to have been registered as such. The result is that
paragraphs 5, 6 and 7 of the
high court’s order were correctly
granted. As we shall explain, paragraph 8 – the rectification
of clause P to bring
it into conformity with
s 66
of the
Deeds
Registries Act – requires
limited amendment, only in relation
to the fence.
[69]
As regards paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the high court order, we agree
that no basis was established for the relief
granted by the high
court. These paragraphs concern the fence, its demolition and the
construction of a new fence. Clause P(b)(i)
provides that ‘no
wall or fence of any description shall be erected on the servitude
boundary except extension of existing
type of fencing (wooden pole
fencing)’. Simply stated, clause P(b)(i), although not a model
of the legal drafter’s
art, clearly prohibits the construction
of a fence on the servitude boundary except to the extent that it is
an extension of the
existing fence and is constructed of wooden
poles.
[70]
We can see no basis upon which clause P(b)(i) can be interpreted to
mean that the owner of the servient tenement
may demolish the
existing fence and then construct a new fence on the boundary of the
servitude area. That being so, there was
no basis for the granting of
paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the order. There was also no basis for
the rectification of the clause
P of the deed of transfer by deleting
clause P(b)(i). Paragraph 8 of the order will have to be
amended to that extent. As
that does not qualify as substantial
success, there will be no costs order in favour of Ms Berzack in that
regard.
[71]
We conclude that except for paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the order of
the high court, which deal with the fence,
and the deletion of clause
P(b)(i) in the rectified servitude, which also relates to the fence,
there are no reasonable prospects
of success on appeal. We would
grant leave to appeal in relation to those paragraphs, as well as
paragraph 10 which deals with
costs, uphold the appeal and set aside
those paragraphs of the order of the high court. For the rest, we
would dismiss the application
for leave to appeal with costs,
including the costs of two counsel. It would, in the light of Ms
Berzack’s partial success
be necessary to re-visit the costs
order of the high court.
[72]
We would accordingly make the following order.
1
Leave to appeal is granted in respect of paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4, 8 and
10 of the high
court’s order.
2
The appeal against paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the high court’s
order is upheld
with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
3
Paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the high court’s order are set aide
and replaced with
the following order:
‘
Prayers 1, 2, 3
and 4 of the notice of motion are dismissed with costs, including the
costs of two counsel.’
4
The appeal against paragraph 8 of the high court’s order is
upheld to the limited
extent set out in paragraph 5 below.
5
Paragraph 8 of the high court’s order is amended by the
insertion in the rectified
clause P of the deed of transfer, at
clause P(b)(i), of the following words:
‘
No wall or fence
of any description shall be erected on the servitude boundary except
extension of existing type of fencing (wooden
pole fencing)’.
6
The application for leave to appeal is otherwise dismissed with costs
including the
costs of two counsel.
____________________
C PLASKET
JUDGE OF APPEAL
_____________________
G GOOSEN
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
J
G Dickerson SC (with S G Fuller)
Instructed
by:
Dorrington
Jessop Incorporated, Cape Town
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
S
P Rosenberg SC (with T Tyler)
Instructed
by:
Lamprecht
Attorneys, Cape Town
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
the second respondent:
Abides
the decision of the Court
For
the third respondent
Abides
the decision of the Court
[1]
The
order of this Court granted on 11 May 2021 reads:
‘
1.
The
application
for leave to appeal is referred for oral argument in terms of
s
17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
.
. .’
[2]
Section
17(2)
(d)
reads:
‘
The
judges considering an application referred to in paragraph (b) may
dispose of the application without the hearing of oral
argument, but
may, if they are of the opinion that the circumstances so require,
order that it be argued before them at a time
and place appointed,
and may, whether or not they have so ordered, grant or refuse the
application or refer it to the court for
consideration.
’
[3]
Section
19
(b)
reads:
‘
The
Supreme Court of Appeal or a Division exercising appeal jurisdiction
may, in addition to any power as may specifically be
provided for in
any other law . . . receive further evidence.’
[4]
Subsections
17(1)(
a
)(i)
and (ii) read:
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges
concerned are of the opinion that —
(a)(i) the
appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there
is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on
the matter under consideration;
[5]
Section 66
reads:
‘
No
personal servitude of
usufruct
,
usus
or
habitatio
purporting
to extend beyond the lifetime of the person in whose favour it is
created shall be registered, nor may a transfer or
cession of such
personal servitude to any person other than the owner of the land
encumbered thereby, be registered.’
[6]
Section
6
reads:
‘
.
. ., a person shall acquire a servitude by prescription if he has
openly and as though he were entitled to do so, exercised
the rights
and powers which a person who has a right to servitude is entitled
to exercise, for an uninterrupted period of thirty
years or, in the
case of a praedial servitude, for a period which, together with any
periods for which such rights and powers
were so exercised by his
predecessors in title, constitutes an uninterrupted period of thirty
years.’
[7]
24
Lawsa
2 ed
para 546,
the
elements are listed as follows: ‘(a) there must be two
tenements belonging to different owners; (b) the two tenements
must
be in close proximity to each other (
vicinitas
);
(c) the servient tenement must be capable of serving the dominant
tenement on a permanent basis
(perpetual
cause); (d) the servient tenement must enhance the utility of the
dominant tenement (
utilitas
);
(e)
n
o
positive obligation may be imposed on the owner of the servient
tenement
(passivity);
and (f) praedial servitudes are indivisible.’
[8]
24
Lawsa
2 ed
para 549,
utilitas
is
described as follows: ‘A praedial servitude must offer some
permanent advantage or benefit to the owner of the dominant
land
qua
owner
and must not merely serve his or her personal pleasure or caprice.
This is known as the requirement of
utilitas
(utility).
It has already been intimated that utility is a fundamental
requirement embodying both vicinity and permanent purpose
. . . The
strict view that benefit to the dominant tenement must take the form
of some sort of agricultural advantage, was already
relaxed in
Roman-Dutch law. Voet states that where additional benefits
accompany the pleasurable pursuits of a particular person,
such
servitude can validly be constituted as a praedial servitude.
Examples are a servitude of view (
prospectus
)
which simultaneously guarantees a free and useful supply of light .
. . In present day law it is accepted that the utility requirement
is not only satisfied if the particular servitude is of direct
agricultural utility to the dominant tenement but also if it
increases its economic, industrial or professional potential.’
[9]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
(
Endumeni
).
[10]
Ibid
para
18.
[11]
Kruger
v
Joles Eiendom (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008]
ZASCA 138; [2009] 1 All SA 553 (SCA); 2009 (3) SA 5 (SCA).
[12]
Kempenaars
v Jonker, Van der Berg and Havenga
1898
5 OR 223.
[13]
Footnote 11 para 6.
[14]
Bondev, Midrand (Pty)
Limited v Puling and Another; Bondev Midrand (Pty) Limited v
Ramokgopa
[2017]
ZASCA 141
;
2017 (6) SA 373
(SCA) (
Bondev
)
,
paras 19 and 20
:
‘
But
that is a far cry from the circumstances in the present cases. The
burden created by the first clause, namely the obligation
to build a
dwelling on the property, is binding on the transferees (the
respondents) and their successors in title. The latter
have no right
under the second clause to bring that restriction to an end. All
clause two provides is that in the event of a
failure to build a
dwelling in the requisite time the appellant, as the transferor, can
recover the land against the payment
of the purchase price if it so
chooses. This is akin to providing the appellant with an option to
purchase which is essentially
a personal right. But the appellant is
not obliged to demand or claim re-transfer of the land and the
obligation to build will
remain extant as long as the respondents
retain their ownership. Thus the restriction upon ownership created
by clause 1 remains
binding and will not be terminated should the
appellant elect not to seek retransfer. The two clauses read
together therefore
do not constitute what Streicher JA referred to
as “a composite whole” restricting the respondents’
use of
the property.
In the circumstances,
the first clause of this condition must be regarded as providing a
real right and a restriction upon the
ownership of the property of
the respondents and their successors in title. On the other hand,
the second clause under which
the appellant has the election to
claim re-transfer of the property, creates no more than a personal
right akin to an option
to purchase which is not inseparably bound
up with the first clause. As the appellants sought to enforce the
second clause, the
issue then becomes whether the debt which is the
subject of such a claim has prescribed.’
[15]
Willoughby’s
Consolidated Co Ltd v Copthall Stores Ltd
1918
AD 1
at 16.
[16]
Northview
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Lurie
1951
(3) SA 688 (A).
[17]
Ibid at 689.
## [18]City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Link Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others[2015]
ZACC 29; 2015 (6) SA 440 (CC); 2015 (11) BCLR 1265 (CC) (Link
Africa).
[18]
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Link Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2015]
ZACC 29; 2015 (6) SA 440 (CC); 2015 (11) BCLR 1265 (CC) (
Link
Africa
).
[19]
Ibid para 138 - 139.
[20]
Ibid paras 136 - 137.
[21]
See,
in this regard:
F
du Bois
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
9
ed (2007) in Chapter 23.
[22]
A J
van der Walt
The
Law of Servitudes
(2016)
at 189 (Van der Walt).
[23]
Van
der Walt at 192.
[24]
Van
der Walt at 193-194.
[25]
Willoughby’s
Consolidated Co Ltd v Copthall Stores Ltd
1918
AD 1
at 16.
[26]
Kruger
v Joles Eiendomme (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008]
ZASCA 138
;
2009 (3) SA 5
(SCA) para 8.
[27]
Jonordon
Investment (Pty) Ltd v De Aar Drankwinkel (Edms) Bpk
1969
(2) SA 117
(C) at 126A-B.
[28]
Lorentz
v Melle and Others
1978
(3) SA 1044
(T) at 1049H (
Lorentz
).
[29]
At
1050G-H.
[30]
Du
Bois (ed)
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
(9
ed) (2007) at 604 (Du Bois).
[31]
Van
der Walt at 488.
[32]
Du
Bois at 610.
[33]
Van
der Walt at 217.
[34]
See
para 24 of Nhlangulela AJA’s judgment.
[35]
Du
Bois at 593-596.
[36]
Lorentz
at
1049G.
[37]
Lorentz
at
1052C.
[38]
Hahlo and Kahn,
The Union of South Africa; The Development of its Laws and Constitution
(1960)
at 602.
[39]
Du
Bois at 594. See also
Briers
v Wilson and Others
1952
(3) SA 423
(C) at 433H-434F;
Bisschop
v Stafford
1974
(3) SA 1
(A) at 11F-12A.
[40]
Hollman
and Another v Estate Latre
1970
(3) SA 638
(A) at 644F-645B.
[41]
Paola
v Jeeva NO and Others
[2003] ZASCA 100
;
2004
(1) SA 396
(SCA);
Clark
v Faraday
2004
(4) SA 564
(C);
Muller
NO and Others v City of Cape Town and Another
2006
(5) SA 415
(C);
True
Motives 84 (Pty) Ltd v Madhi (Ethikwini Municipality as Amicus
Curiae)
2009
(4) SA 153
(SCA).
sino noindex
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