Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 102South Africa
Dayal Consulting (Pty) Ltd v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...] M[...] B[...] H[...] and Others (2023/014196) [2025] ZAGPJHC 102 (3 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 August 2024
Headnotes
by the liquidators of Rapiprop 149 Pty Ltd (in liquidation) ('Rapiprop") at M[...] B[. .] properties consisting of 17 units in the Sectional Title Scheme known as M[...] B[. .].
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dayal Consulting (Pty) Ltd v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...] M[...] B[...] H[...] and Others (2023/014196) [2025] ZAGPJHC 102 (3 February 2025)
Dayal Consulting (Pty) Ltd v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...] M[...] B[...] H[...] and Others (2023/014196) [2025] ZAGPJHC 102 (3 February 2025)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 2023/014196
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES/NO
In
the matter between:
DAYAL
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF UNIT […]
M[...]
B[. .] HEIGHTS
First Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF UNIT 6[…]
M[...]
B[. .]
HEIGHTS
Second Respondent
RUI MIGUEL DE
FIGUEIREDO N.O.,
THE
TRUSTEE FOR THE TIME BEING
OF
THE LWWS HOLDING TRUST WITH
REGISTRATION
NUMBER IT3059/04(T)
Third Respondent
TANYA
ROCHA N.O.
THE
TRUSTEA FOR THE TIME BEING
OF
THE LWWS HOLDING TRUST WITH
REGISTRATION
NUMBER IT 3059/04(T)
Fourth Respondent
MARIA
DA CONCICAO DE FREITAS
VASCONCES
N.O., THE TRUSTEE
FOR
THE TIME BEING OF THE LWWS HOLDING
TRUST
WITH REGISTRATION NUMBER
IT
3059/04(T)
Fifth Respondent
MARIO
ALEXANDRE DE FIGUERIEDO ROCHA
Sixth Respondent
REVENUE
ASSET PROTECTION (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
REDLEX
297 (PTY) LTD
Eight Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Ninth Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van Aswegen AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1] The
First to Fourth, Sixth and Seventh Respondents (‘the
Respondents’) launched an Application for Leave
to Appeal
against the whole of the judgment and order evicting them and any
persons claiming right thereto and/or all those that
occupy the
properties, including their family servants and/or employees from the
immoveable properties being
UNIT […] AND UNIT 6[…]
M[...] B[. .] HEIGHTS
physically situated at
2[…] S[…]
STREET, B[…] G[…], B[…]
(“the
properties”).
[2] My
judgment, which was handed down on 7 August 2024, extensively deals
with not only my reasoning but also my findings.
[3] The
Respondents’ grounds for leave to appeal are set out in a
Notice dated 23 August 2024.
[4] The
said application is opposed by the Applicant.
[5] The
grounds for Leave to Appeal relied upon are summarized by me as
follows:
[5.1]
The Court erred in addressing the Head Lease and by prematurely
finding it to be invalid;
[5.2]
The Court erred and misdirected itself in not attaching sufficient
weight to the fact that the signing of the
resolution took place in
the presence of the co-trustee when Mr. Wurdeman appointed Ms. Tanya
Rocha as agent.
[5.3]
The Court erred in underestimating the significance of the auction
pack.
[5.4]
The Court erred in not fully applying the principle of
huur gaat
voor koop
.
[5.5]
The court erred and misdirected itself in not considering section
1(2) of the Formalities in Respect of Leases
of Land Act 18 of 1969,
particularly considering the Applicant's knowledge of the lease.
[5.6]
The court erred in not fully applying
dolus eventualis
in
relation to the Applicant’s knowledge of the lease;
[5.7]
The Court erred in overlooking the requirement for proper
cancellation of existing leases before an eviction order
can be
granted.
[5.8]
The Court erred in disregarding the several disputes of fact that
warranted a referral to oral evidence or trial;
[5.9]
The court erred in not sufficiently exploring the just and equitable
considerations in the context of the residential
nature of the units;
[5.10]. The
court erred in not conducting a more detailed examination of the
various lease agreements particularly the right of
first refusal and
deemed offer provisions in the Head Lease.
[5.11] The
Applicant’s
locus standi
to challenge the validity of
the head lease and its internal affairs should be reconsidered;
[5.12]. The
court erred in not exploring the video evidence.
[5.13] The
court erred by not further considering the impact of the pending
Section 381 inquiry into the conduct of the liquidators
on the
validity of the sale and the rights of the parties.
[6] On 14
March 2019 the Applicant purchased the two properties – units
[…] and 6[…] on an auction held
by the liquidators of
Rapiprop 149 Pty Ltd (in liquidation) ('Rapiprop") at M[...] B[.
.] properties consisting of 17 units
in the Sectional Title Scheme
known as M[...] B[. .].
[7] The
Applicant took transfer of the properties on the 9th of October 2020,
and they are now held by Sectional Deeds of
Transfer ST29433/2020 and
ST29436/2020 respectively.
[8] The
Applicant is accordingly the registered owner of the two units (the
Respondents acknowledge the Applicant’s
ownership of the units)
and is entitled to claim eviction if the Respondents had no right to
occupy the said units.
[9] If the
occupiers – the Respondents - had raised no valid defence in
law and if all the requirements of section 4(8)
of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction From and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(“PIE Act”) had been met
an eviction order had to follow.
[10] The
Respondents opposed the eviction application and claimed that a
long-term lease gave them the right to occupation
of these units.
[11] The
Respondents alleged that the Head Lease and the Sub-Leases are long
leases subject to Section 1(2) of the Formalities
in Respect of
Leases of Land Act 18 of 1969 ("the Act").
[12] In
terms of Section 1(2) of the Act no lease of land which is entered
into for a period of not less than ten years or
for the natural life
of the lessee or any other person mentioned in the lease, or which is
renewable from time to time at the will
of the lessee indefinitely or
for periods which together with the first period of the lease amount
in all to not less than ten
years, shall, if such lease be entered
into after the commencement of this Act is valid against a creditor
or successor under onerous
title of the lessor for a period longer
than ten years after having been entered into, unless-
(a)
it has been registered against the title
deeds of the leased land;
or
(b)
the aforesaid creditor or successor at the
time of the giving of credit or the entry into the transaction by
which he obtained
the leased land or a portion thereof or obtained a
real right in respect thereof as the case may be, knew of the lease.
[13] It is
common cause that the Head Lease and Sub-Leases were not registered
against the title deed of the land. The question
to be answered in
the absence of registration against the title deeds of the
properties, to give validity to the leases, is whether
the Applicant
at the time of purchasing the properties knew of the long leases.
[14]
Knowledge of a lease is insufficient. The Respondents had to prove
that the Applicant had actual factual knowledge of
a long lease which
would have endured und 2060 with a further option of 30 years of
renewal.
[15] It is
abundantly clear that although reference was made to an
apparent
Head Lease, the units were sold:
i)
without any leases in place and that
ii) the content
of paragraphs [15.1] to [15.7] here in below dictate against the
principle of
dolus eventualis
in relation to the Applicant’s
knowledge of the lease as the only requirement for the operation of
the doctrine is
actual knowledge
of the Applicant of the prior
personal right of the Respondents, which was not established and
proven by the Respondents:
[15.1] the
referral in the information pack to the sale of individual units with
no lease –
Units
to be sold individual mean without any leases in place."
(my underlining)
[15.2] The
interpretation of the written words in Clause 2.6 from the extract
from the Conditions of Sale – Annexure
A,
which were
confirmed by the parties who initialled the inserted written words.
“
TRANSACTION
DETAILS
", between the purchasers
and the liquidators of Rapiprop depicts in writing clearly that the
properties were
sold subject to no
lease.”
(my underlining)
[15.3]
Confirmation
by the attorneys, Messrs Van der Meer & Schoonbee, representing
the purchaser of another unit, namely unit […]
in M[...] B[.
.] Heights who wrote a letter dated 2
November
2021 to the trustees of LWWS Trust that the sale of the
properties
took place subject to no lease.
[15.4]
No claim for the Poison Pill lease had ever been formally lodged with
the liquidators of Rapiprop in accordance with
insolvency
proceedings despite the effective date of liquidation of Rapiprop
being 18 June 2018.
[15.5]
LWWS Trust did not made any attempt to prove the claim of the LWWS
lease through due process;
[15.6]
LWWS Trust did not object to the draft Liquidation and Distribution
Account of Rapiprop which disregarded the said
claim.
[15.7]
Clause 10.2 of the Head Lease with the LWWS Trust which states:
…
will
have no right to cancel the lease and/or Head Lease or any parts of
this agreement
" (my underlining)
is clearly
indicative of the illogicality and absurdity of the said lease, where
it states that the lessor will have no right to
cancel the lease
agreement. This clause is clearly designed to procure occupation in
perpetuity at the expense of the creditors
and the
bona fide
purchaser.
[16] The
Respondents had to establish a personal right over the properties.
This I found the Respondents had failed to do
as:
[16.1] a
long lease was not registered against the title deeds and
[16.2]
actual knowledge at the time of acquiring the property was not
established.
[17] The
version of the Respondents that a purchaser would purchase properties
at an insolvency auction sale subject to a
lease running to 2060 with
an option to renew until 2090 and with an entrenched no-cancellation
clause is implausible and any argument
of a
prima facie
case
on the Respondents' behalf cannot be sustained.
[18] The
existence of the LWWS lease and its operation was furthermore not
supported by any material evidence. Such evidence
would have
strengthened the doctrine of knowledge. The absence of any banking
records, rental payments and third-party acknowledgement
since 2009
is indicative of the unavoidable conclusion that the lease was
created post-fact to prejudice the creditors of Rapiprop.
[19] I
also considered, as it was raised by the Applicant, the validity of
the LWWS Lease signed on 15 November 2009 by the
Sixth Respondent (a
trustee) and the Fourth Respondent who gave herself out and signed as
a trustee of LWWS Holdings Trust. It
is evident that the Fourth
Respondent only became a trustee in May of 2012 - some three years
after signing the Poison Pill Lease.
An act of signing and concluding
a lease as a trustee prior to the written authority by the Master,
cannot be resuscitated by subsequent
ratification either by the
Master or the Trustee after receipt of the necessary authority.
[20] The
Wurdeman resolution also did not aid the Fourth Respondent. It is
evident that Mr. Wurdeman, in his personal capacity,
nominated
constituted and appointed the Fourth respondent, as an agent to act
on his behalf with the power of attorney to be his
lawful agent in
his name, place and stead to attend and generally act on his behalf
at all meetings, all administrative functions,
all contractual
agreements on his behalf in respect of such powers as vested in him
as a trustee. Mr. Pereira did not grant the
Fourth Respondent any
authorization at all. The resolution is accordingly not one that can
bind the LWWS Trust. The presence of
a co-trustee at the time of
granting the said resolution does not alter the fact that the Fourth
Respondent was merely an agent
of Mr. Wurdeman and not a trustee.
[21] Ms.
Tanya Rocha accordingly had no authority to bind the LWWS Holdings
Trust at the said time. The LWWS lease could thus
not have been
validly concluded in 2009 as the Respondents purport to rely on it.
It follows that the RAPS lease is also a nullity
leaving the
Respondents completely stripped of a
bona fide
defence in law.
No one can give rights which he himself does not have.
[22] The
Respondents' reliance upon the LWWS Head Lease of 2009 and the
huur
gaat voor koop
doctrine, namely that the LWWS lease of 2009
trumps the real rights of that of the Applicant as the registered
owner armed with
the title deeds, is therefore without merit.
[23] The
court cannot accept any defence based on the LWWS Head Lease or the
RAPS lease raised by the Respondents in this
matter over and above
that the properties were purchased subject to no leases.
[24] In
respect of Mr. Mario Rocha – the Sixth Respondent’s
report to the Master’s Office Pretoria for an
investigation
into the conduct of the liquidators in terms of Section 381 of the
Companies Act it is clear that:
[24.1] the
Sixth Respondent is not a creditor of Rapiprop and
[24.2]
that the Sixth Respondent has no standing to request such an enquiry;
[24.3] a
section 381 enquiry has no bearing on the Applicant as registered
owners of the units or the right to occupation.
[25]
Furthermore more than five years have elapsed since the appointment
of the liquidators and over four years since the
sale of Rapiprop's
units by the liquidators. The First and Final Liquidation,
Distribution and Contribution Account of Rapiprop
was published in
2021, and no objection thereto was filed of record.
[26] In
assessing the various leases I dealt with:
[26.1] the
invalidity of the LWWS Lease,
[26.2] the
lack of registration of the long leases and
[26.3] the
actual knowledge of the existence of long leases.
The above said
issues were raised by the Applicant and the Respondents and had to be
considered in detail to assess whether the
Respondents had succeeded
in proving a personal right and a
bona fide
defence. In
dealing with the LWWS Lease I had to make a finding on the signature
thereof by the Fourth Respondent who in 2009 was
not a trustee but an
agent of Mr. Wurdeman. I had arrived at the conclusion that the
Fourth Respondent’s signature as a trustee
when she was in fact
not a trustee was not only against the law but could also not be
rectified after the fact. No declaratory
relief was granted despite
the court having formed a definite view on the validity of the LWWS
lease.
[27] In
respect of the cancelation of the said LWWS lease same was canvassed
in my judgment. The Respondents furthermore had
to first establish
actual factual knowledge of the long lease for cancellation to come
into play and for the principle of “
huur gaat voor koop
”
to apply.
[28] The
Respondents in their answering affidavit referred to video evidence
however the court was never presented with such
evidence, nor did the
Respondents seek leave to present the evidence. If this evidence was
material and essential to establish
and confirm the Respondents’
personal right the Respondents lack in presenting the evidence speak
for itself.
[29] The
Applicant as registered owner of the units also has the
locus
standi
to challenge the validity and the actual knowledge of the
long leases as these defences raised by the Respondents need to be
proved
by them for them to successfully avoid an eviction order.
[30] I am
further of the firm view that there are no disputes of fact raised on
the papers, to the contrary the issue of facts
on the affidavits were
clear, crisp and the court was able to assess the eviction
application without difficulty. It is well-known
that legal
practitioners often argue that a dispute of fact exists where there
is none.
[31]
.
The test to be applied in an Application for Leave to Appeal is set
out in section
17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
which provides that:
"(
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;
[32]
The test in an application for leave to appeal prior to the
Superior
Courts Act was
whether
there were reasonable prospects that
another court may come to a different conclusion.
Section 17
(1)
(a) has raised the proverbial bar for an Applicant in an application
for leave to appeal. The test whether an appeal has any
prospect of
success should be applied in accordance with the specific wording of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The question that this court has
to answer is whether another court
would
come to a different
conclusion. This implies a certainty. It has to be established in an
application for leave to appeal whether
another court, being
presented with the same issues
will
come to another decision.
(my underlining)
[33]
Bertelsmann J, correctly pointed out in
The Mont Chevaux Trust
v
Tina Goosen & 18 Others 2014 JDR 2325 (LCC) at para 6
:
'It
is
clear that
the
threshold
for
granting
leave to appeal against a judgment of a
High
Court
has
been
raised in the
new A
c
t
.
The former
test whether
leave
to appeal
should be granted
was
a reasonable
prospect that
another
court might come to a
different
conclusion
,
see Van Heerden v Cronwright
&
Others
1985 (2)
SA
342 (T) at 343H
.
The use of
the
word
"would" in the new statute indicates a measure of certainty
that
another
court will
differ
from the court
whose judgment
is
sought to be appealed against
.'
[34]
In
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhita
2016 JDR 2214 (SCA)
the Supreme Court of Appeal emphasised the application for the test
for leave to appeal and found as follows
in paragraphs [16] to [18]:
"[16]
Once again it is necessary to say that
leave to appeal,
especially to this court,
must not be granted
unless there truly is a reasonable prospect
of
success.
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge
concerned is of the opinion that the
appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success;
or there is some other
compelling reason why it should be heard.
[17]
An applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic
chance of
success on appeal.
A mere possibility of success, an
arguable case or one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must
be a sound, rational basis
to conclude that there is a reasonable
prospect of success on appeal.
[18] In
this case the requirements of 17(1)(a) of the
Superior Courts Act
were
simply not met. The uncontradicted evidence is that the medical
staff at BOH were negligent and caused the plaintiff to suffer harm.
The special plea was plainly unmeritorious.
Leave to appeal
should have been refused. In the result, scarce public resources were
expended: a hopeless appeal was prosecuted
at the expense of the
Eastern Cape Department of Health and ultimately, taxpayers; and
valuable court time and resources were taken
up in the hearing of the
appeal.
Moreover, the issue for decision did notwarrant
the costs of two counsel." (my emphasis)
[35]
Leave to Appeal should accordingly be refused if an appeal has no
prospect of success.
[36]
I am of the firm view and persuasion that another court would not
come to a different conclusion and there is no compelling
reason to
grant leave to appeal.
ORDER
(1)
The First to Fourth, Sixth and Seventh
Respondents’ Leave to Appeal is refused;
(2)
The First to Fourth, Sixth and Seventh
Respondents are ordered to the pay the Applicant’s costs,
jointly and severally, the
one paying the other to be absolved.
S VAN ASWEGEN
ACTING JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicant: Adv T Lautré
Instructed
by Kaveer Guiness Inc
For
the Respondent: Mr T Dunn
Instructed
by TJC Dunn AttorneysDate of hearing: 24 January 2025
Judgment
delivered: 3 February 2025
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