Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 355South Africa
Mcglashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2025] ZAGPJHC 355 (31 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 March 2025
Judgment
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## Mcglashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2025] ZAGPJHC 355 (31 March 2025)
Mcglashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2025] ZAGPJHC 355 (31 March 2025)
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sino date 31 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023/042194
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
TREVOR
JOHN MCGLASHAN N.O & OTHERS
Applicants
and
IVY
TSHILIMANDILA FHULUFHELO
First Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT: FIRST RESPONDENT’S
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
FRIEDMAN AJ:
[1]
On 11 October 2024, I handed down judgment
in this matter (“the merits judgment”) evicting the
applicant for leave to
appeal (who, for convenience, I shall describe
as “Ms Fhulufhelo” below) from a property owned by the
Deane Yates Trust
(“the Trust”). The eviction application
was brought by the trustees (“the Trustees”) who acquired
ownership
of the property on the death of Mr Deane Yeats (“the
deceased”).
[2]
In January 2025, Ms Fhulufhelo filed an
application for leave to appeal my order in the merits judgment,
together with an application
for condonation for the late filing of
the application for leave to appeal. The Trustees oppose the
application for leave to appeal,
but abide the condonation
application. The Trustees brought the eviction application as part of
the steps which they needed to
take pursuant to their decision to
terminate the Trust, which was established by the deceased to pursue
certain philanthropic imperatives.
[3]
It was common cause in the merits
proceedings that the Trustees validly decided to terminate the Trust
and dispose of the trust
property, and that Ms Fhulufhelo was
informed of this. Ms Fhulufhelo occupied the property in terms of a
lease agreement with the
Trustees, which the Trustees took over from
the deceased on his death. In terms of the lease agreement, Ms
Fhulufhelo had the right
of first refusal in the event that the
Trustees decided to sell the property. In this case, she attempted to
exercise that right,
after the Trustees received an offer to purchase
from a third party, but could not obtain a mortgage. As a result, the
Trustees
decided to sell the property to that third party, and
brought the eviction application to facilitate the sale.
[4]
In my view, Ms Fhulufhelo has no prospects
of overturning the order which I made in the merits judgment and so
leave to appeal must
be refused. Once that is so, there is no purpose
in paying any special attention to the condonation application.
Technically, the
condonation application should be refused because,
although the delay is explained (arguably adequately), the
application does
not demonstrate reasonable prospects of success in
the main proceedings (which, in this case, is the application for
leave to appeal).
However, since the Trustees abided the condonation
application and I do not wish to become bogged down in
technicalities, I intend
to grant condonation.
[5]
As for the application for leave to appeal,
Ms Fhulufhelo was, as she was in the merits proceedings, ill-served
by her legal representatives.
The answering affidavit in the merits
proceedings disclosed no defence to the eviction application. To make
matters worse, it gave
me no information relevant to ensuring that Ms
Fhulufhelo would not be unduly prejudiced by the eviction order (ie,
to enable me
to exercise a discretion as to the timeframe for
eviction, flowing from the requirements of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“the
PIE Act”)). Ironically, since this matter has now been delayed
for more than five months by the ill-fated application for leave to
appeal, I prioritised speed over comprehensiveness when handing
down
the merits judgment. I was aided in this by the fact that, in oral
argument, counsel for Ms Fhulufhelo conceded that the answering
affidavit disclosed no defence to the eviction application and
expressly placed on record that Ms Fhulufhelo no longer opposed
the
eviction application. Once that was so, no purpose was served in me
wasting the parties’ time by crafting a detailed
judgment on
the merits. It is important to note, though, that I did not decide
the eviction application from the premise that Ms
Fhulufhelo no
longer opposed the application. I return to this below.
[6]
Now, in the application for leave to
appeal, Ms Fhulufhelo is represented by a new attorney,
Mr
Paile
, who also served as her counsel.
He recorded in oral argument that he had drafted the application for
leave to appeal. Ms Fhulufhelo’s
founding affidavit in the
condonation application is, in large respects, a cut and paste from
the application for leave to appeal.
Mr
Paile
acknowledged that he had drafted
that affidavit too. The stance taken in the application for leave to
appeal and condonation application
is that Ms Fhulufhelo’s
counsel (who represented her in the merits proceedings but lost his
brief when Ms Fhulufhelo replaced
her instructing attorney, Mr
Mamabolo, with
Mr Paile
)
should not have placed on record that Ms Fhulufhelo no longer opposed
the eviction application.
Mr Paile’s
argument was, in essence, that Ms Fhulufhelo filed an answering
affidavit which made clear that she opposed the eviction application.
In that context, his argument was that Ms Fhulufhelo’s counsel
had no right (and implicitly no mandate) to withdraw her opposition.
[7]
The difficulty which I had, which I put to
Mr Paile
in argument, was that there was no evidence presented to suggest that
Ms Fhulufhelo’s counsel exceeded his mandate during
oral
argument. Of course, there may be cases where concessions made by
counsel are not binding on his or her client or the court.
The most
obvious example is of concessions of law. I do not intend to rehash
the authorities on that – it is well-accepted
that, for reasons
of logic, courts cannot be obliged to accept incorrect concessions of
law. Furthermore, it may happen from time-to-time
that counsel makes
a far-reaching concession as to the merits of a matter, which
prejudices his or her client and which was done
without permission
(see, for example,
Ras v Liquor
Licensing Board, Area No 11, Kimberley
1966 (2) SA 232
(CC) (in particular, at 237)). In those cases, it may
be appropriate to allow the client to disavow the concession.
[8]
The question of the extent to which a party
to litigation is bound by concessions made by his or her legal
representatives is not
straightforward. The decision of the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
MEC for Economic
Affairs, Environment and Tourism, Eastern Cape v Kruizenga
2010 (4) SA 112
(SCA) gives a detailed explanation of some of the
complexities – admittedly, though, in the slightly different
context of
the application of rule 37. The main reason why the issue
is not straightforward is that there is some indication in the
caselaw
that a legal representative has no implied mandate to settle
a case. This is what triggered a debate about ostensible authority
in
Kruizenga
and the extent to which a client may be bound by a legal
representative’s abandonment of opposition. The context in the
present case is different because there is no suggestion that the
Trustees placed any reliance on counsel’s concession (made,
as
it was, for the first time in oral argument).
[9]
One of the grounds of the application for
leave to appeal is that I erred “in finding that [counsel’s]
concession during
the hearing that [Ms Fhulufhelo] had no valid
defence to the eviction application was merited as his concession is
not evidence”.
[10]
Mr Paile’s
argument
was essentially that counsel’s concession was a concession of
law. I could understand that submission if it was framed
accurately –
ie, if counsel had stopped at saying that the answering affidavit
disclosed no valid defence. Even then, I am
not convinced that the
concession would simply be a concession of law. A submission by
counsel that the answering affidavit discloses
no valid defence comes
awfully close, especially in civil litigation where courts are bound
by the pleadings and attitude of the
parties as to what is and is not
in dispute, to a full-blown concession that the application must
succeed. In any event, the Trustees’
attorneys took the effort
of uploading the transcription of the argument in the merits
proceedings to Caselines. I therefore was
able to take
Mr
Paile
to the words used by Ms
Fhulufhelo’s counsel – ie, that Ms Fhulufhelo no longer
opposed the application – during
argument in the merits
proceedings.
Mr Paile
accepted,
if I understood him correctly, that this was not simply a concession
of law. And so he was constrained to fall back on
his different
argument that Ms Fhulufhelo’s counsel had no mandate to abandon
her opposition to the application. This, in
turn, has the potential
to raise the question of the circumstances in which someone in Ms
Fhulufhelo’s position can disavow
the purported (and
prejudicial) exercise of a mandate by her legal representative.
[11]
It is not necessary in this application to
get into any of these complexities. As the merits judgment makes
clear, I did not decide
the eviction application on the basis that Ms
Fhulufhelo had withdrawn her opposition to the application. I simply
remarked that
Ms Fhulufhelo’s counsel correctly conceded in
argument that her answering affidavit disclosed no valid defence to
the eviction
application. I did not consider myself (or Ms
Fhulufhelo) to be bound by that concession. By remarking that
counsel’s concession
was “quite properly” made, I
was expressing agreement with his concession.
[12]
One could imagine a situation in which
counsel, in open court, recorded that his or her client no longer
persisted in opposing a
matter. If the judge intended to take action
based on that recordal – for instance, by deciding not to make
a ruling on contested
issues and to make an order by agreement (for
example) – one would reasonably expect the judge to ensure that
counsel’s
statement reflected the true intention of the client.
So, one would expect the judge at least to take steps to be sure that
the
instruction came expressly from the client via the attorney,
perhaps by standing the matter down or, in appropriate cases,
requiring
a statement in writing. But, in this case, I did not go
down that road. I simply took the concession of Ms Fhulufhelo’s
counsel
as corroboration of my own view of the merits.
[13]
This proposed ground of appeal does not,
therefore, have any impact on the order which I made – even if
Ms Fhulufhelo’s
counsel did not make the concession, I would
still have found that the answering affidavit disclosed no valid
defence.
[14]
The Trustees came to own the property where
Ms Fhulufhelo lives because it used to be owned by the deceased. In
his will, the deceased
established the Trust, and made clear that the
property would be transferred to the Trust on his death (if it had
not already been
transferred to the Trust in his lifetime). His will
recorded that Ms Fhulufhelo occupied the property and instructed that
“on
the transfer of the properties the occupants remain in the
properties
subject to the existing
leases
with the intention that the
occupants should become as economically independent as possible”
(my underlining).
[15]
It must be recalled that, when the deceased
made his will, he intended for the Trust to pursue philanthropic
purposes. He had very
generously allowed Ms Fhulufhelo to live in the
property for a very low rental (R200 per month) and his will was
clearly dealing
with the position immediately after his death. No
doubt he would have hoped that, more than ten years later, Ms
Fhulufhelo would
be able to afford a home or to rent a decent
property on commercial terms. But we need not speculate because it
seems clear from
the context (which I take to be the rest of the will
and the Trust Deed) that all the deceased had in mind was that, since
the
new owner of the property (ie the Trust) was established with
philanthropic purposes, Ms Fhulufhelo should be allowed to continue
occupying the property in terms of the very generous lease agreement,
with the intention that she become as economically independent
as
possible. In other words, the deceased wished Ms Fhulufhelo to
continue to benefit from the generous lease agreement which he
concluded with her, by extending its application beyond his death.
But, just as he himself would have been entitled to terminate
the
lease agreement if his circumstances changed in the future, the
Trustees undoubtedly could do so too. To me, therefore, the
meaning
of this clause of the will is indisputable.
[16]
In her answering affidavit, Ms Fhulufhelo
alleged that she was a beneficiary of the Trust and was entitled to
live in the property
in terms of the will. The answering affidavit is
drafted poorly and so it is not always possible to understand what it
is trying
to convey. But it would seem that Ms Fhulufhelo’s
stance was that she was a beneficiary of the Trust which was designed
to
assist residents of Alexandra township and that this somehow gave
her a right to live in the property forever. Elsewhere in the
same
answering affidavit, though, Ms Fhulufhelo did seem to accept that
her right to occupation was subject to the lease agreement
which she
had concluded with the deceased and which, in terms of his will, was
assigned to the Trustees on his death. The point
though, is that the
answering affidavit was, regrettably, incoherent and made no attempt
to explain how, and in terms of what provisions
of the Trust Deed or
the will, Ms Fhulufhelo was entitled to remain indefinitely in the
property.
[17]
Mr Paile
attempted,
when he came on the scene, to cure the defects in the answering
affidavit. In the application for leave to appeal, the
arguments have
been refined.
Mr Paile
seeks to rely on the wording which I have reproduced in paragraph
[14]
above. His argument is that this
clause, properly interpreted, means that Ms Fhulufhelo is entitled to
remain in occupation of the
property until she is economically
independent. His further argument is that, on the basis of the facts
set out in the answering
affidavit (including that Ms Fhulufhelo
attempted to exercise her right of first refusal to purchase the
property in the event
of the Trustees wishing to sell it), Ms
Fhulufhelo is clearly not economically independent.
[18]
I have grave doubts as to whether this
submission can competently be raised for the first time in the
application for leave to appeal,
having not been pleaded in the
answering affidavit. Since affidavits are pleadings in motion court,
Ms Fhulufhelo needed to plead
this defence clearly, to enable the
Trustees to respond to it. This is not merely a technical point. Had
Ms Fhulufhelo pleaded
that she was not economically independent,
despite being employed as a nurse and earning R15 000 a month
(nett) (which was
the evidence before me), the Trustees might have
wished to adduce evidence to contest that notion.
[19]
But I am willing to leave that deficiency
aside for present purposes. As I raised with
Mr
Paile
in argument, his proposed
interpretation of the clause summarised in paragraph [14]
above is untenable.
[20]
The first problem with his interpretation
is that it renders the phrase “subject to the lease agreement”
meaningless.
His interpretation requires ignoring those words, and
simply reading the clause as providing that, on the transfer of the
properties
to the Trustees, “the occupants remain in the
properties with the intention that the occupants should become as
economically
independent as possible”. That does not strike me
as a permissible reading, in the light of our well-accepted law on
the
proper interpretation of documents such as wills.
[21]
An equally important problem with
Mr
Paile’s
interpretation is that
Mr
Paile
could not answer me when I asked
the simple question: does this mean that the Trustees are obliged to
retain the property in perpetuity
(or at least until Ms Fhulufhelo is
economically independent) so they can continue to lease it to her?
This could be the only implication
of
Mr
Paile’s
interpretation. This is
because there is no commercially plausible way for the Trustees to
sell the property subject to the right
of occupation which
Mr
Paile
argues that Ms Fhulufhelo enjoys.
The only way for the Trustees to sell the property, on his
construction, would be to make any
sale conditional on the buyer
taking up the lease with Ms Fhulufhelo on the terms which she says
apply – ie, an indefinite
right of occupation at a nominal
rental (R200 per month, subject to agreed escalations) until she is
“economically independent”.
Self-evidently, the Trustees
would be rather unlikely to find such a buyer, leaving them with no
choice but to retain the property.
[22]
The Trust Deed confers on the Trustees the
“sole, absolute and unfettered discretion to terminate the
Trust” if the
Trustees are of the opinion that circumstances
have arisen to warrant its termination. Importantly, clause 17 of the
Trust Deed
provides for a precise formula, applicable on termination,
of what is to happen to the remaining capital and income that has
accrued
to the Trust. The Trust Deed provides that the remaining
capital and income should be distributed to one of three named
educational
institutions or a non-profit organisation with similar
objectives. It then expressly says that no capital or income shall be
paid
to any individual, organisation, institution or company that
fails to meet the stated criteria. Clause 17 therefore discloses a
clear intention that, on the termination of the Trustees, the trust
property is to be liquidated and any remaining capital or income
accrued to the Trust should be distributed in terms of the rule
described above.
[23]
Mr Paile’s
construction
of the deceased’s will is inconsistent with clause 17 of the
Trust Deed and the absolute discretion vesting in
the Trustees to
terminate the Trust. Mr Paile’s interpretation of the
deceased’s will would prevent the Trustees from
terminating the
Trust and distributing the trust assets as intended by the deceased.
[24]
All of this is a long way of saying that
the will must clearly be interpreted as meaning that, on the
acquisition by the Trust of
the property, Ms Fhulufhelo’s right
of occupation was preserved, in terms of the existing lease
agreement. It follows that
the right of the Trustees to seek Ms
Fhulufhelo’s eviction must be determined by the existing lease
agreement. The lease
agreement confers the right on each party to
terminate the agreement on three months’ notice. The Trustees
say that they
terminated the lease agreement because they gave Ms
Fhulufhelo a fair opportunity to purchase the property (as she was
entitled
to try to do) but she was unable to do so. Once that became
clear, and given the decision to terminate the Trust and liquidate
its assets, the only remaining option was to sell the property to a
third party. There is nothing in Ms Fhulufhelo’s answering
affidavit, or even in the application for leave to appeal, which
explains why the lease agreement does not entitle the Trustees
to
proceed in this way.
[25]
It follows that I was, in my view, correct
to grant the eviction application and I do not consider Ms Fhulufhelo
to have any prospects
of success on appeal. In this regard, I should
point out that, in the discussion above, I have been extremely
generous to Ms Fhulufhelo
(especially taking into account that I do
not consider her to have been well-served by any of her legal
representatives since the
inception of this matter) in my framing of
the issues. Any appeal court seized of this matter will have the full
record before
it; most notably the answering affidavit. As soon as
that is so, it will be apparent to the appeal court that the
arguments advanced
by
Mr Paile
are inconsistent with the contents of the answering affidavit and
that the answering affidavit disclosed no defence. On this narrow
basis, the appeal court would be unable to uphold the arguments now
advanced for the first time. So even if I considered the new
argument
based on the “economically independent” premise to be
arguable, the appeal court would be unable to entertain
it.
[26]
Mr Paile
has
attempted to put forward a case in the application for leave to
appeal which improves on the job done in the answering affidavit.
But
his attempt to do so was substantially undermined by a series of
unsustainable arguments which he advanced in the proceedings
before
me. The majority of the grounds in the application for leave to
appeal were based on the flawed premise that the Trustees
had made
out their case for eviction in reply.
Mr
Paile
argued that, by not attaching the
deceased’s will and the trust deed to their founding affidavit,
the Trustees did not make
out a case for eviction in their founding
papers as they were required to do. The application for leave to
appeal goes so far as
to accuse the Trustees of “deliberate
malicious intent not to disclose to the Honourable Court in their
founding affidavit
a copy of the Trust Deed and the existence of, and
copy of, Mr Deane Yates’ last will and testament”.
[27]
This is a serious and unwarranted
accusation. The Trustees pleaded a clear case in the founding
affidavit. They explained that they
had decided to terminate the
Trust, and had informed Ms Fhulufhelo of this, to enable her to
exercise her right of first refusal
once they received an offer from
a third party to purchase the property. When she could not, they
informed her that they needed
to terminate her lease, to enable them
to sell the property and distribute the trust assets. That is a
complete cause of action
with all of the necessary averments to
sustain a claim for eviction. It was only when Ms Fhulufhelo alleged
in her answering affidavit
that she was a beneficiary of the Trust
(which is unsustainable on the wording of the Trust Deed) that the
Trustees annexed the
Trust Deed in reply. But, as I suggested to
Mr
Paile
, this has nothing to do with
making out a case in for the first time in a replying affidavit.
[28]
The necessary allegations were made in the
founding affidavit. If Ms Fhulufhelo had denied that the Trustees had
validly decided
to terminate the Trust, or validly terminated the
lease agreement, then it could well have been decided that, on the
basis of
Plascon-Evans
,
the application had to be dismissed (depending, of course, on the
basis of the denials and the cogency of the allegations supporting
them). But Ms Fhulufhelo did not deny that the Trustees had the
discretion to terminate the Trust and had legitimately decided
to do
so. In essence, the Trustees took a chance that, when alleging in the
founding affidavit that they had validly decided to
terminate the
Trust, Ms Fhulufhelo would not deny it. They were entitled to take
that chance, given that the contention appears
to be objectively
unassailable. As it happens, Ms Fhulufhelo did not dispute the
Trustees’ right to terminate the Trust and
liquidate the trust
property. Therefore, those allegations became common cause, and the
Trustees did not need to rely on the Trust
Deed as evidence of their
version. In fact, this is amply demonstrated by the fact that the
Trustees annexed the Trust Deed to
their replying affidavit for an
entirely different purpose – ie, to demonstrate that Ms
Fhulufhelo was wrong when she said
that she was a beneficiary of the
Trust.
[29]
Once all of this is so, it is simply not
sustainable to say that the Trustees somehow failed to make out a
case in the founding
affidavit by failing to attach the Trust Deed or
the will. The case for eviction was based on the terms of the lease
agreement,
which were pleaded in full, and not the will or the Trust
Deed. It was only Ms Fhulufhelo who attempted to bring the latter
into
play by virtue of her ill-conceived defence in the answering
affidavit.
[30]
The reason I have gone into all of this, is
because, during the merits proceedings,
Mr
Garvey
, who appeared for the Trustees,
argued for a punitive costs order. I addressed this briefly in the
merits judgment. The argument
was based on the notion that Ms
Fhulufhelo had litigated unreasonably by abusing the rules of court
and civil procedure to enable
her to stay in occupation for longer.
For the reasons given in the merits judgment, I was not willing to go
so far as to make a
punitive costs order, even though there were
various indicators that, objectively, the opposition to the eviction
application was
an abuse of process.
[31]
Now, having seen all of the papers
supporting the application for leave to appeal, I would have been
willing to make a punitive
costs order. There is no way to avoid the
conclusion that Ms Fhulufhelo has bought herself more than three
months of continued
occupation of the property (she was meant to
leave by 31 December 2024) by bringing the ill-fated application for
leave to appeal.
In real terms, she has now occupied the property
unlawfully for two years and two months because the eviction
application was brought
in April 2023, after the lease agreement was
cancelled and Ms Fhulufhelo was given until 31 January 2023 to
vacate.
[32]
The discussion above does not do full
justice to the way in which the application for leave to appeal and
condonation application
advance submissions which are simply
indefensible by a reasonable lawyer. The complexity, though, is that
it is patently obvious
to any reasonable reader of the papers that Ms
Fhulufhelo is not responsible for the irresponsible submissions
contained in them.
She scraped together what resources she could to
procure some form of legal representation and then relied on her
lawyers to assist
her. I accept that this could be said of many
litigants in this country, and I also accept that the default
position in our courts
– which could almost be described as a
form of fiction – is that litigants must be assumed to endorse
the conduct of
their legal representatives other than in exceptional
circumstances. However, in this case, the series of unsustainable
arguments
were all clearly legal arguments. Ms Fhulufhelo could not
have been expected to appreciate, for example, that the argument
about
making out a case in reply (and accusing the Trustees of
malicious intent in apparently doing so) was irresponsible and
defective.
I would not have been comfortable penalising her with a
punitive cost order in these circumstances.
[33]
That potentially brought into play the
possibility of a costs order
de bonis
propriis
. I raised this with
Mr
Garvey
because it would go without
saying that, if I were even to contemplate such an order, I would
need to postpone the hearing to enable
Mr
Paile
to make submissions on the issue.
That would cause further delay.
Mr
Garvey
took an instruction and recorded
that the Trustees urgently wish to acquire possession of the property
and did not wish to delay
matters further by embarking on an inquiry
into the possibility of a punitive costs order,
de
bonis propriis
, being made. Ms
Fhulufhelo cannot entirely escape the consequences of having occupied
the property for what is now more than two
years since she was
obliged to vacate, without a lawful basis to do so. For this reason,
and because the Trustees made it clear
that they do not seek any form
of punitive costs order, I am satisfied that it is appropriate simply
to dismiss the application
for leave to appeal with costs.
Order
[34]
It is unusual, in an application for leave
to appeal, for the Court to make any order other than granting or
refusing the application
(and dealing with costs). Here, though, the
PIE Act is applicable, and it would not be appropriate for me to
leave any ambiguity
in relation to when Ms Fhulufhelo should vacate
the property. The fact that this application for leave to appeal is
defective does
not mask the fact that Ms Fhulufhelo is not a wealthy
person, and stands to lose the home in which she has lived for
roughly fifteen
years. I am, though, mindful of how long the Trustees
have waited to obtain the eviction order. In the circumstances, I
consider
it fair for Ms Fhulufhelo to vacate the property by
5pm
on 30 April 2025
.
[35]
I therefore make the following order:
(1)
The application for condonation brought
under the above-mentioned case number in respect of the application
for leave to appeal
is granted.
(2)
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs.
(3)
The applicant for leave to appeal (ie, the
first respondent in the main application, Ms Fhulufhelo), and all
persons who occupy
2[...] C[...] M[...], O[...] Road, B[...] V[...],
Johannesburg (“the property”) with the permission of,
and/or at the
behest of and/or through Ms Fhulufhelo, are ordered to
vacate the property by no later than 5pm on
30
April 2025
.
(4)
In the event that the persons described in
paragraph 3 of this order have not vacated the property by 5pm on 30
April 2025, the
Sheriff of Court is authorised to remove the persons
described in paragraph 3 above from the property at any date from
1
May 2025
onwards, if necessary by
obtaining the assistance of the South African Police Service.
ADRIAN FRIEDMAN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
DATE
OF HEARING
:
27
MARCH 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:
31
MARCH 2025
For
the Applicant
:
Mr
ET Paile, Attorney with right of appearance
For
the Respondents
(save for the City of Johannesburg, which did not
participate in the application for leave to appeal):
Mr
C Garvey, instructed by Cuthbertson and Palmeira Attorneys Inc
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