Case Law[2023] ZASCA 164South Africa
Percy Mosuetsa v Derrick Mosuetsa and Others (746/2022) [2023] ZASCA 164 (1 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – order of court not appealed or rescinded – application to stay execution – issue res judicata unless set aside on appeal or by rescission – application to stay not competent.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Percy Mosuetsa v Derrick Mosuetsa and Others (746/2022) [2023] ZASCA 164 (1 December 2023)
Percy Mosuetsa v Derrick Mosuetsa and Others (746/2022) [2023] ZASCA 164 (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 746/2022
In
the matter
between:
PERCY
SULI MOSUETSA
APPELLANT
And
DERRICK
THABO MOSUETSA FIRST
RESPONDENT
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, SOUTH
GAUTENG,
JOHANNESBURG
SECOND
RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
THIRD
RESPONDENT
GARY
SEFAKO MOSUETSA FOURTH
RESPONDENT
TSHEPO
REUBEN MOSUETSA
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Percy Mosuetsa v Derrick Mosuetsa and Others
(746/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 164
(1 December 2023)
Coram:
GORVEN, HUGHES, MATOJANE and WEINER JJA and CHETTY AJA
Heard:
Matter disposed of without oral hearing in terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
Delivered:
1 December 2023
Summary:
Civil procedure – order of court not appealed or rescinded –
application to stay execution
– issue
res judicata
unless set aside on appeal or by rescission – application to
stay not competent.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Makume J, Meyer J and Randera AJ concurring, sitting as court of
appeal):
1
The appeal is reinstated.
2
The appeal is dismissed with no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Hughes
JA (Gorven, Matojane and Weiner JJA and Chetty AJA
concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against the decision of the full court of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (per Makume
J, Meyer J and Randera AJ concurring) delivered on 28 July 2021. This
Court granted special leave to appeal that decision on 29 July 2022,
which appeal was allowed to lapse. Before this Court is an
application for
reinstatement of that appeal
and further prosecution thereof.
[2]
As alluded to above, special leave to appeal was granted by this
Court. The record
was not filed on 1 November 2022 as was required.
The appellant, Percy Suli Mosuetsa (Percy) submits that he only
discovered on
13 February 2023 that the appeal had lapsed. He
attributed this to the withdrawal of his attorney. He sought the
assistance of
Legal Aid which was granted. Coupled with the closure
period over the festive season, it was Legal Aid who delayed in
prosecuting
his appeal.
[3]
This Court’s approach in granting condonation has long been
settled. In
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining and Development Company
Ltd and Others,
Ponnan JA held that factors relevant to the discretion to grant or
refuse condonation include ‘the degree of non-compliance,
the
explanation therefor, the importance of the case, a respondent’s
interest in the finality of the judgment of the court
below, the
convenience of this court and the avoidance of unnecessary delay in
the administration of justice’.
[1]
[4]
The appellant made out a case as set out above. In addition, in the
interests of justice
and for the sake of finality, it is appropriate
for this Court to reinstate the appeal.
[5]
I now turn to deal with the merits of the appeal. Percy, in an
application to the
Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg (the
high court), sought that the
second respondent, the Master of the High Court, South Gauteng,
Johannesburg, (the Master) remove his
half-brother, Derrick Thabo
Mosuetsa (Derrick), the first respondent, as the Master’s
appointed representative of the deceased
estates of their parents,
Mrs Sibongile Mosuetsa and Mr Solomon Mosuetsa. Ancillary to the
aforesaid relief, Percy also required
that the Registrar of Deeds,
Johannesburg (the third respondent) be ordered to reverse or prevent
the transfer of ownership of
the property described as 1369 Kgoposto
Street, Molapo, Soweto (the property) into the name of Derrick. The
pertinent relief was
that the relevant Sheriff of the court be
interdicted from giving effect to the warrant of ejectment granted
against Percy and
those who occupied the property.
[6]
Fundamental to this appeal is the fact that a previous order of court
was granted
by Kgomo J based on a finding that Derrick is the owner
of the property. On that basis, he obtained an order evicting Percy
from
the property. It was this order which prompted the application
by Percy which led to the present appeal. I briefly set out the
underlying circumstances hereinafter.
[7]
Mrs Sibongile Mosuetsa and Mr Solomon Mosuetsa were married to each
other in community
of property in 1968. Mrs Mosuetsa came into the
marriage with a child (Percy) from a previous relationship. Three
children were
born to Mrs and Mr Mosuetsa, the eldest being Derrick.
Mrs Mosuetsa passed away on 5 July 2003. On 21 February 2008,
Derrick
received letters of authority from the Master authorising him
to take control of the assets in the estate of his late mother.
During
Mr Mosuetsa’s lifetime, and by way of a donation
affidavit dated 14 October 2007, Mr Mosuetsa donated the property to
Derrick.
Percy had been residing on the property since 1995. Mr
Mosuetsa died on 20 December 2011. The Master issued letters of
authority
in favour of Derrick on 12 April 2012 authorising him to
take control of the assets in the estate of his late father, Mr
Mosuetsa.
[8]
On 14 November 2012, the Master accepted that the donation made to
Derrick of the
property during the lifetime of Mr Mosuetsa meant that
the property did not fall into his estate. That decision of the
Master has
not been reviewed and set aside. Nor did the present
application attempt to do so. On the very same day,
ownership
of the property was transferred to Derrick and his wife by the
Registrar of Deeds, Johannesburg. This led to the application
in the
high court to evict Percy from the property. On 10 October 2013,
Kgomo J granted the following order:
‘
1.
The First Respondent and all persons who occupy the property known as
ERF 1369 MOLAPO TOWNSHIP, SOWETO, GAUTENG, SITUATE[D] AT
1369
KGOPUTSO STREET MOLAPO, SOWETO (“the property”) under and
by virtue of the First Respondent’s occupancy
of the property,
is and are hereby evicted from the property by the 30
th
of
November 2013.
2.
In the event of the First Respondent and all persons who occupy the
property under or by virtue of the First Respondent’s
occupancy
of the property failing and/or refusing to vacate the property within
the period stipulated in paragraph 1 above, that
the Sheriff is
hereby authorised to forthwith enter upon the property and evict the
First Respondent and all those who occupy the
property under and by
virtue of the First Respondent’s occupancy of the property.
3.
An interdict is hereby issued against the First Respondent and all
persons who occupy the property under and by virtue of the
First
Respondent’s occupancy, preventing and restraining them from
moving back in to the property after eviction.
4.
The First Respondent is to pay the costs of this application.’
[9]
Essentially, the Kgomo J order directed that Percy and all persons
who occupied the
property were to be evicted and were to vacate the
property by no later than 30 November 2013. Further, the order
directed that
Percy was interdicted from returning to the property
after being evicted. In the full court judgment, the court stated
that Kgomo
J granted the order that he did ‘on the basis that
the appellant [Derrick] was the undisputed owner of the property’.
This order, by Kgomo J has not been challenged and remains extant. It
is binding until it has either been rescinded or set aside
on appeal.
[10]
The Constitutional Court, in
Municipal
Manager OR Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni,
[2]
reaffirmed
that a court order is binding until it is set aside by a competent
court, and that this necessitates compliance, regardless
of whether
or not the party against whom the order is granted believes it to be
a nullity. This principle gives effect to
s 165(5) of the
Constitution
of
the Republic of South Africa:
‘
An
order or decision issued by a court binds all persons to whom and
organs of state to which it applies.’
[11]
This Court, in
MEC
for the Department of Public Works, Eastern Cape and Another v Ikamva
Architects CC
,
similarly
developed the principle that an order of a court of law stands until
set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. An
order that it
should not be put into effect is not competent without a case being
made out that there are prospects that it will
be set aside by
rescission or on appeal.
[3]
Until that is done, the court order must be obeyed even if it may be
wrong; there is a presumption that the judgment is correct.
[4]
As such, the order of Kgomo J, based as it is on the ownership of
Derrick, is decisive of that issue. This applies equally to
administrative action, such as the decision of the Master to
recognise the validity of the donation and the corresponding decision
that the property did not fall into the estate of Mr Mosuetsa.
[5]
This also disposes of the relief sought in several other applications
brought before the high court (the interlocutory orders)
to reopen
the estates of Mr and Mrs Mosuetsa and to appoint a new
representative. The property does not fall into the estates and
the
entire motivation for the estates being reopened was based on the
contention that the property had not been appropriately dealt
with.
[12]
In an earlier decision of this Court,
Firestone South Africa
(Pty) Ltd v Gentiruco AG
(
Firestone
)
,
the
Appellate Division pronounced on the position above as follows:
'The
general principle, now well established in our law, is that, once a
court has duly pronounced a final judgment or order, it
has itself no
authority to correct, alter, or supplement it. The reason is that it
thereupon becomes
functus
officio
:
its jurisdiction in the case having been fully and finally exercised,
its authority over the subject-matter has ceased.'
[6]
[13]
As enunciated in the cases above, and in terms of the principles set
out in
Oudekraal
and
Firestone,
the order of Kgomo J
stands until rescinded or set aside on appeal. All the interlocutory
orders that followed in the high court
are a nullity as, factually,
Kgomo J’s order has pronounced a final judgment on the issue.
There is accordingly no basis
to interfere with the order granted by
the full court.
[14]
Consequently, the following order issues:
1
The appeal is reinstated.
2
The appeal is dismissed with no order as to costs.
___________________
W
HUGHES
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant: Heads of Argument prepared by NL Skibi
Instructed
by: Legal Aid
South Africa, Johannesburg
Legal
Aid South Africa, Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent: Heads of Argument prepared by ARG Mundell
SC
Instructed
by: Carvalho Incorporated, Johannesburg
Lovius
Block Incorporated, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Dengetenge
Holdings
v
Southern Sphere Mining and Development Company Ltd and Others
[2013] ZASCA 5
;
[2013] 2 All SA 251
(SCA) para 11.
[2]
Municipal
Manager OR Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni
[2022]
ZACC 3
;
[2022] 5 BLLR 393
(CC); (2022) 43 ILJ 1019 (CC);
2022 (10)
BCLR 1254
(CC);
2023 (4) SA 421
(CC) para 23-24;
Department
of Transport v Tasima
(Pty)
Ltd
[2016] ZACC 39
;
2017 (1) BCLR 1
(CC);
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC) para 182.
[3]
MEC for
the Department of Public Works, Eastern Cape and Another v Ikamva
Architects CC
[2022] ZASCA 184
;
[2023] 1 All SA 579
(SCA);
2023 (2) SA 514
(SCA)
para 34.
[4]
Ibid
.
[5]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[2004] ZASCA 48
;
[2004] 3 All SA 1
(SCA) para 31.
[6]
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Gentiruco
AG
1977
(4) SA 298
(A) at 306F-G.
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