Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 467South Africa
Dial Africa Distributors (Pty) Ltd and Others v Cachalia and Others (2025/054245) [2025] ZAGPJHC 467 (9 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 May 2025
Headnotes
(clause 28). [5] Pursuant to the agreement of lease, the first applicant took occupation of the property for the use of a guest house “for
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dial Africa Distributors (Pty) Ltd and Others v Cachalia and Others (2025/054245) [2025] ZAGPJHC 467 (9 May 2025)
Dial Africa Distributors (Pty) Ltd and Others v Cachalia and Others (2025/054245) [2025] ZAGPJHC 467 (9 May 2025)
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sino date 9 May 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2025-054245 (GJ)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
DIAL
AFRICA DISTRIBUTORS (PTY) LTD
1
ST
APPLICANT
ISMIAL
YUSUF ABDI
2
ND
APPLICANT
AMED
ALI BASHIRI
3
RD
APPLICANT
ZAHRA
ALI BARRE
4
TH
APPLICANT
YUSUF
RUKIA ABDITADRR
5
TH
APPLICANT
OMAR
ABDIHAKIM MOHAMMED
6
TH
APPLICANT
and
YUSUF CACHALIA
NO
1
ST
RESPONDENT
AMINA MAMOOJEE
NO
2
ND
RESPONDENT
EMILE JOHN HONIBALL
NO
3
RD
RESPONDENT
SHERIFF JOHANNESBURG
WEST
4
TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
[1]
In this matter Dial Africa Distributors (Pty) Ltd
(“Dial Africa”) and five other applicants have brought an
urgent application
against Mr Ysuf Cachalia NO and three other
respondents. The first, second and third respondents (“the
respondents”)
are trustees of the Ysuf Amina Family Trust, the
owner of the property at Upper Unit, 1[…] A[…] S[…]
Street,
Mayfair, Johannesburg (“the premises” or “the
property”).
[2]
In substance, the applicants’ aim is to
obtain occupation and possession of the premises from which Dial
Africa and the occupiers
were evicted. The aim is to do so by the
present application to stay the execution of the writ of ejectment
dated 3 February 2025.
The writ of ejection was executed on 12 March
2025 and the applicants were evicted from the premises. The first
applicant seeks
an order reinstating the co-applicants in the
premises and that the current existing order be stayed, pending
finalization of the
rescission application, since there was no
alternative accommodation provided for by the respondents.
[3]
In support of the application, Mr Ismial Yusuf
Abdi (the 2
nd
applicant) made an affidavit setting out the circumstances giving
rise to the matter. The application was opposed and an answering
affidavit was filed on behalf of the respondents. The relevant facts
and issues, naturally, emanate from the affidavits before
court and
the arguments raised at the hearing. I shall now turn thereto.
[4]
Mr Abdi, the 2
nd
applicant, contends that he leased a commercial premises from the
respondent “under the auspices of the Yusuf Amina Family
Trust”
(“the Trust” or “lessor”). The contract of
lease between the lessor and the lessee (Dial Africa,
the first
applicant in this application) was placed before court as an annexure
to the founding papers. The salient terms
of the agreement are
referred to hereunder:
[a]
The leased premises is situate at Upper Unit, 1[…] A[…]
S[…] Street, M[…], Johannesburg.
[b]
The leased property will be for the use of a guest house (clause
1.4).
[c]
The lease period would be from 1 September 2023 to 30 August 2028
(clause 1.5).
[d]
The lessee shall use the leased premises for the permitted use and
may not make any other use thereof without the prior
written consent
of the lessor (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld)
(clause 6.1).
[e]
The lessee shall be liable for and shall immediately make good any
damage to the leased premises or the building, as the
case may be,
which is caused by any unlawful act or omission of the lessee, its
employees, agents or visitors. The onus shall be
on the lessee to
prove that any damage to the leased premises was not so caused
(clause 12.5).
[f]
In the event of any damage or destruction by the lessee and the
lessor exercising his right to cancel the lease, the lessee
shall be
liable for 2 months rental from date of vacation of the premises. The
lessor will make reasonable endeavour to find a
new tenant within 2
months (clause 12.8).
[g]
Upon the expiration, earlier termination or cancellation of this
agreement, the lessee shall return the leased premises
to the lessor
in good order and condition, fair wear and tear excepted (clause 24).
[h]
The lessee shall not cede or encumber any of its rights in terms of
this agreement nor sublet the leased premises or any
part thereof to
any person nor surrender occupation of the leased premises or any
portion thereof to any person without the lessor’s
prior
written consent; such consent may be granted subject to such
conditions as the lessor may deem fit, including the amendment
of any
provisions of this agreement, which consent shall not be unreasonably
withheld (clause 28).
[5]
Pursuant to the agreement of lease, the first applicant took
occupation of the property for the use of a guest house “for
these purposes and no other purposes whatsoever”, clause 1.4.
[6]
First applicant breached the lease agreement by making other use
thereof without the prior written consent of the lessor
(clause 6.1).
[7]
The court order under case no 2024/072662 provided that any rights to
occupation and possession of the premises by the
first applicant be
duly terminated.
[8]
Pursuant hereto the trustees of the lessor (the 1
st
, 2
nd
and 3
rd
respondent in the proceedings) brought an
application for eviction of the lessee, Dial Africa, who was aware of
these eviction
proceedings since July 2024, having been duly served
by the sheriff as is apparent from the returns of service that form
part of
the papers in the present application. Dial Africa,
nonetheless, failed to oppose the proceedings, despite duly served
and informed.
[9]
The eviction order was granted on 24 October 2024. The order was
served on the first and second applicants as far back
as the 11
th
of November 2024 and the applicants were aware of the order. This
much is apparent from the sheriff’s return of service,
which
have been attached to the papers in the present application. The
eviction order provided as follows:
“
Having
heard counsel for the Applicants and having considered this matter,
judgment is granted against the Respondents in the following
terms:
1.1
The First Respondent and all those claiming occupation through
or under the First Respondent are evicted from Upper Unit 1[…]
A[…] S[…] Road, M[…], Johannesburg. The First
Respondent and all those claiming occupation through and under
the
First Respondent are ordered to vacate Upper Unit 1[…] A[…]
S[…] Road, M[…], Johannesburg by no
later than one (1)
month from the service of this order.
1.2
In the event of the First Respondent and all those claiming
occupation through and under the First Respondent failing to comply
with the order referred to in paragraph 1.1 above, then and in that
event, the Sheriff of the above Honourable Court or his lawful
deputy
is authorised, required and empowered to carry out the eviction order
on the 1
st
day after the expiry of the
period referred to in paragraph 1.1 above.”
[10]
A writ of ejection was sought and granted on 3 February 2025.
[11]
The applicants were evicted more than a month ago, on 12 March 2025.
[12]
The second applicant in the applicants’ founding affidavit
alleges that he had no knowledge of the eviction proceedings
and did
not receive any papers. This cannot be correct, for he later admits
that all processes were served on the first applicant’s
chosen
domicilium
address provided for in the terminated lease
agreement, which constitutes proper services under the Uniform Rules
of Court.
[13]
The second applicant alleges that proper service was not affected
upon the first applicant. The facts in this matter
demonstrate that
all papers in the eviction proceedings and up until the writ was
executed, were served upon the first applicant’s
chosen
domicilium
address. The sheriff’s returns of service
were attached as annexures and form part of these proceedings.
[14]
Against the background of these facts, the relief sought by the
applicants should be considered. The relief sought by
the applicants
is twofold.
[15]
The nature of the relief sought is an interim interdict.
[16]
Applicants failed to oppose the application whereby the order was
sought and obtained by the trustees of the Trust terminating
the
lease agreement with the first applicant. The first applicant
thereafter failed to oppose the pursuant application for the
applicants’ eviction from the premises, which eviction order
was granted on 24 October 2024. The writ of ejection was granted
on 3
February 2025. The applicants were ejected on 12 March 2025. The
first applicant (the lessee, Dial Africa) and the other applicants,
the occupiers, have now approached the court for urgent interim
relief, seeking suspension of the ejection order pending a rescission
application.
[17]
Dial Africa and the occupiers must first establish a prima facie
right to have any prospects of success in obtaining
interim relief.
In my view, the application falls flat at this first hurdle.
[18]
The terminated commercial lease was in respect of a property for the
use of a guest house. The nature of a guest house
is that guests are
housed and that occupation of such property is not intended for
permanent residency. The fundamental and insurmountable
problem for
the applicants is that their application is based on the proposition
that the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”)
applies to
the present application. Applying the principles laid down in
Stay
At South Point Properties (Pty) Ltd v Mqulwana and Others
2024 (2) SA
640
SCA
, I find that PIE does not apply in the present instance.
In such event, para [18] of the judgment is instructive and
applicable:
“
[18]
It follows that PIE did not apply to the respondents’
occupation of the property. The
appellant was thus entitled to
evict the respondents in reliance upon the rei vindication. The High
Court’s refusal to order
the respondents’ eviction was
therefore in error. Accordingly, the appeal must be upheld.”
That
being so, the applicants have failed to establish a prima facie
right. Or, for that matter, any right at all.
[19]
The first applicant and the occupiers have also failed to protect
their rights, if they have any rights at all, timeously.
The
chronology of the facts set out above, speaks loudly on this point.
[20]
The inaction of the first applicant and the occupiers will, in my
view, flounder in their required application for condonation
for not
bringing the application for rescission within a reasonable time.
[21]
The writ of ejection of 3 February 2025 was obtained to give effect
to the eviction order. The applicants have been ejected
on 12 March
2025, a month before this urgent application was brought. The
eviction order has been executed. Consequently, the relief
sought by
the applicants to stay execution, is moot. An execution which has
already been completed, cannot be stayed.
[22]
Applicants claim for re-instatement in the premises, is also bound to
fail. Over and above all the other reasons already
referred to, the
premises are currently undergoing repairs and renovations caused by
the damage done to the premises by the applicants.
The premises are
currently not habitable or fit for occupation. The repairs and
renovations are scheduled to be completed by 20
October 2025. Given
the history of this matter, the question arises whether the legal
processes protecting and enforcing the contesting
rights and
obligations of occupiers and owners have now not run its course. The
principle of finality expressed in the maxim
interest rei publicae
ut sit finis litium
(it is in the public interest that litigation
be brought to finality) is of long standing in our law. In
Zondi v
MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs, and Others
2006 (3) SA
1
(CC)
at para [28] the Constitutional Court held that it is in
the public interest that litigation should be brought to finality,
because
the “parties must be assured that once an order of
Court has been made, it is final and they can arrange their affairs
in
accordance with that order.” See also
Freedom Stationary
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Hassom and Others
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA)
at p 465 A to C and the authorities referred to therein. In
Van
Wyk
the Constitutional Court held at para [31]:
“
There
is an important principle involved here. An inordinate delay induces
a reasonable belief that the order had become unassailable.
This is a
belief that the hospital entertained and it was reasonable for it to
do so. It waited for some time before it took steps
to recover its
costs. A litigant is entitled to have closure on litigation. The
principle of finality in litigation is intended
to allow parties to
get on with their lives. After an inordinate delay a litigant is
entitled to assume that the losing party has
accepted the finality of
the order and does not intend to pursue the matter any further. To
grant condonation after such an inordinate
delay and in the absence
of a reasonable explanation, would undermine the principle of
finality and cannot be in the interest of
justice.”
[23]
In my view the applicants have failed to make out a prima facie right
to interim relief. In such event, the other considerations
for
interim relief do not even arise. But, in any event, the balance of
convenience in my view favours the respondents. The premises
are in
the process of being renovated, whereas the first applicant can only
rely on its rights to occupation on the basis of a
valid lease with
the lessor, which lease had been terminated by court order. The order
was not appealed and that issue is
res judicata
. The
occupiers’ rights can only arise through that of the first
applicant, which right was terminated by virtue of a court
order.
[24]
I find that the applicants have not made out a case for the relief
they seek.
[25]
There is no reason why costs should not follow the event.
[26]
In consequence, the following order is made:
“
The
application is dismissed, with costs.”
AP JOUBERT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
25 April 2025
Delivered
on:
9 May 2025
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
Adv. O Pheelwane
Instructed
by:
Ngobeni Hlayisani Attorneys
For
the 1
st
- 3
rd
Respondent:
Adv. M Coovadia
Instructed
by:
Essy Attorneys Inc
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