Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 362South Africa
Du Plessis v A to Z Boerdery CC and Others (A2023/116427) [2025] ZAGPJHC 362 (4 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 April 2025
Headnotes
with no order as to costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Du Plessis v A to Z Boerdery CC and Others (A2023/116427) [2025] ZAGPJHC 362 (4 April 2025)
Du Plessis v A to Z Boerdery CC and Others (A2023/116427) [2025] ZAGPJHC 362 (4 April 2025)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: A2023-116427
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
4
Apil 2025
In
the matter between:
PIERRE
DU PLESSIS
Appellant
and
A
TO Z BOERDERY CC
First
Respondent
MARCO
SCHOEMAN
Second
Respondent
WILMARIE
CORNE SCHOEMAN
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DU PLESSIS J (with whom
MEADEN AJ agrees)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and cost order of the Regional
Court, Vanderbijlpark, which granted an application
in favour of the
respondents under the mandament van spolie. The central issue on
appeal is whether the Regional Court had jurisdiction
to adjudicate
the dispute and whether the magistrate correctly applied the legal
principles governing spoliation. There was no
appearance for the
respondent. The appeal proceeded unopposed.
[2]
The dispute arises from an agreement between the parties concerning
the sale and rental of certain movable property, specifically
trucks
and trailers. The respondents alleged that on 7 February 2023, the
Appellant unlawfully repossessed the vehicles at Diesel
Brothers,
Richards Bay, without due process.
[3]
The respondents approached the Regional Court seeking relief under
the mandament van spolie, contending that they had
been in peaceful
and undisturbed possession of the vehicles and had been unlawfully
deprived thereof.
[4]
The Regional Court ruled in favour of the respondents, holding that
jurisdiction was conferred by an Acknowledgment of
Debt signed
between the parties, where the parties consented to the jurisdiction
of the Magistrate Courts "to any action arising
from the
document" and that the debtor "consents to the judgment in
terms of Section 57 and Section 58 of the Magistrate
Court Act 32 of
1944, should he or it fails to make payment timeously". The
magistrate found that the "Acknowledgement
of Debt is in respect
of the subject matter of this Application, the vehicles". Costs
were awarded on an attorney-client scale.
[5]
The Appellant seeks to have the judgment set aside on several
grounds. Firstly, it is submitted that the mandament van
spolie is a
remedy intended to address unlawful dispossession and is not
applicable to contractual disputes and, therefore, the
reliance on
the acknowledgement of debt that relates to contractual disputes is
erroneous. Secondly, the Appellant contends that
the market value of
the vehicles in question exceeded the monetary jurisdiction of the
Regional Court, thereby rendering it incompetent
to adjudicate the
matter. Thirdly, the Appellant submits that the costs order was
improperly granted.
Legal
framework
[6]
The mandament van spolie is a possessory remedy, where the applicant
must prove that they were in peaceful possession
and that the
respondent unlawfully deprived them of the possession.
[7]
It is not concerned with
ownership or contractual rights. In
FirstRand
Ltd t/a Rand Merchant Bank v Scholtz NO,
[1]
the Supreme Court of
Appeal confirmed that a spoliation application cannot be based on
contractual disputes.
[8]
Jurisdiction in
spoliation cases is determined by the market value of the
dispossessed property, as set out in Amler's Precedents
of Pleadings
with reference to section 30(1) of the Magistrates Courts Act.
[2]
[9]
The Regional Court's monetary jurisdiction is R400 000. Where the
market value of spoliated goods exceeds this threshold,
the court
lacks jurisdiction. From the record, the value of the dispossessed
property far exceeded R400 000.
[10]
The magistrate could not rely on the Acknowledgment of Debt to
establish jurisdiction. The Acknowledgment of Debt was
irrelevant to
determining jurisdiction in a spoliation claim, which is a
processionary remedy, not a contractual remedy. The court's
reliance
on contractual consent to jurisdiction was misplaced and legally
incorrect.
[11]
The Appellant provided evidence that the market value of the
dispossessed vehicles exceeded R2 325 000, far exceeding
R400
000 monetary jurisdictional limit of the Regional Court. The
respondents did not refute this evidence and merely provided
an
opinion rather than independent valuation proof.
[12]
In line with
Amler's
Precedents of Pleadings
,
[3]
jurisdiction for spoliation is based on market value, not contract.
Therefore, the Regional Court lacked jurisdiction to hear the
case.
The order, therefore, in my view, should be set aside.
Cost
order
[13]
The magistrate awarded
costs against the Appellant, presumably because cost followed the
results. Since costs is in the discretion
of the court, the test for
interference with a costs order is whether the lower court applied
incorrect legal principles.
[4]
I
am of the view that had the magistrate not misapplied the
jurisdictional test, the respondent would not have been successful
in
the court a quo, and a cost order would not follow. Therefore, the
cost order should be set aside.
Order
1.
The appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2.
The order of the learned Magistrate PM Ngindo,
handed down on 15 June 2023 under RC 160/2023 in the Regional Court
for the Regional
Division of Gauteng held at Vanderbijlpark, is
dismissed with costs.
3.
As far as effect was given to the order of 15 June
2023 of the learned Magistrate PM Ngindo under RC 160/2023 in the
Regional Court
for the Regional Division of Gauteng held at
Vanderbijlpark, it is replaced with the following order:
a.
That the Respondents are ordered to, within 10
(TEN) days of this order being served on their attorneys of record,
DAVID MEY &
PARTNERS, return the Appellant's vehicles, as
follows:
i.AFRIT
TUBMASTER LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…]
and VIN Number: A[…];
ii.AFRIT
TUBMASTER LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…]
and VIN Number: 1[…];
iii.AFRIT
TUBMASTER LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…]
and VIN Number: A[…];
iv.AFRIT
TUBMASTER LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…]
and VIN Number: 1[…]
v.AFRIT
LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…]; VIN
Number: A[…];
vi.AFRIT
LINK SIDE TIPPER TRAILER with Registration Number: B[…] with
VIN Number: A[…];
vii.VOLVO
TRUCK (HORSE) with Registration Number: J[…]; with VIN Number:
Y[…]; and
viii.SCANIA
TRUCK (HORSE) with Registration Number: D[…] with VIN Number:
9[…].
b.
Should the Respondents fail and/or refuse to
comply with prayers as set out in 3 (a)(i)-(viii) above that the
sheriff is authorized
and permitted to remove the vehicles and
trailers from the Respondents' possession with the assistance of the
South African Police
Service.
WJ DU PLESSIS
Judge of the High Court,
Gauteng Divison
Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
20 March 2025
Date
of judgment:
4 April 2025.
For
the applicant:
W Coetzee instructed
by Riaan du Plessis Attorneys.
For
the respondent:
No
appearance
[1]
2008 (2) SA 503 (SCA).
[2]
Act
32
of 1944.
[3]
Page 350.
[4]
Van
Zyl v Steyn
[2022]
ZAGPPHC 302.
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