Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 37South Africa
Batlokwa Properties Investments (Pty) Ltd v Siqwana and Others (2020/28676) [2024] ZAGPJHC 37 (19 January 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Batlokwa Properties Investments (Pty) Ltd v Siqwana and Others (2020/28676) [2024] ZAGPJHC 37 (19 January 2024)
Batlokwa Properties Investments (Pty) Ltd v Siqwana and Others (2020/28676) [2024] ZAGPJHC 37 (19 January 2024)
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sino date 19 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2020/28676
In
the matter between:
BATLOKWA
PROPERTIES INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
LENEAR
NTOMBIYESIZWE SIQWANA
First
Respondent
ANY
OTHER ILLEGAL OCCUPIERS
Second Respondent
924
KLIPSPRUIT TOWNSHIP
PIMVILLE
SOWETO
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
Third
Respondent
MUNICIPALITY
JUDGMENT
KORF, AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by the applicant, BATLOKWA PROPERTY
INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD, for the eviction of the first respondent
(LENEAR NTOMBIYESIZWE SIQWANA) and second respondent (ALL OTHER
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS)
from the applicant’s immovable property
more fully described below. This application furthermore engages the
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY as the third
respondent.
[2]
This application is brought in terms of section 4(1) of the
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act, 19 of 1998 (the “PIE Act”). In essence, the
applicant
seeks orders for the eviction of the first and second
respondents from its property in Klipspruit, the determination of a
just
and equitable date for the occupiers to vacate the property, the
determination of a just and equitable date on which the eviction
order may be carried out (if necessary), authorising the Sheriff to
enforce the eviction order, and costs.
[3]
The first respondent opposes the application.
Background
[4]
The immovable property in question is a residential property
described
as Erf […] Township, Registration Division I.Q.
Province of Gauteng, situated in Soweto. In terms of a permit dated
16 March
1982, the right of occupation of the property was given to
EDNA SIQWANA and her dependants, SYLVIA, CYNTHIA, THELMA, PATRICIA,
ERIC and LENEAR. EDNA passed away on 22 July 1990.
[5]
The Deed of Transfer (T…/03) reveals that the City of
Johannesburg
sold the property to THANDI SYLVIA SIQWANA (Identity
Number 541101[…]) on 4 June 2003 for a purchase price of
R1,206.81.
Although this document is incomplete or its pages
disorganised, it appears that the transfer was registered by the
Registrar of
Deeds, Johannesburg during 2003, seemingly on 19
September 2003.
[6]
After the passing of THANDI SYLVIA SIQWANA (Identity Number
541101[…]),
ANDILE OSLER SIQWANA, WATSON SIQWANA and MBUYISELI
WELLCOME SIQWANA were appointed under Letters of Authority issued by
the Master
on 2 August 2013, in terms of
Section 18(3)
of the
Administration of Estates Act, 66 of 1965
. These appointees were
authorised,
inter alia
, to take control of the estate’s
assets, including the subject property, then seemingly valued at
R120,000.00, and to transfer
those to the heir(s) entitled thereto by
law.
[7]
According to the Deed of Transfer (T…/2020), the
transfer of the property from ANDILE OSLER SIQWANA, WATSON SIQWANA
and MBUYISELI
WELLCOME SIQWANA into the name of the applicant was
registered on 17 February 2020, pursuant to a sale concluded on 30
October
2019, against payment of the purchase consideration in the
sum of R600,000.00.
The
parties’ main contentions
[8]
The applicant contends that, despite an informal request by the
applicant
and a formal notice by the applicant’s attorney to
vacate the property within 31 days, the respondent remained in
unlawful
occupation. These events occurred shortly after the
applicant acquired ownership of the property when the applicant
gained knowledge
of the first and second respondents’
occupation.
[9]
The applicant states that the respondent occupiers do not pay monthly
rentals for their occupation and that the first respondent is letting
rooms in the property and collecting rentals for her benefit.
The
applicant wishes to occupy the property.
[10]
The applicant avers that it has no obligation to provide alternative
accommodation to the
respondents, and the respondents can return to
the place where they resided previously or move to alternative
accommodation.
[11]
In the answering affidavit, the first respondent states,
inter
alia
, that:
a)
Her late biological mother occupied the property in terms of a
permit. The names of the first respondent and
her siblings are
reflected in the permit.
b)
After the passing of their biological mother in 1990, “
Sylvia
”
was granted “
the title deed on our behalf without our
consent or knowledge
”. After Sylvia’s passing on 8
February 2002 (she died intestate), ANDILE OSLER SIQWANA, WATSON
SIQWANA and MBUYISELI
WELLCOME SIQWANA of the property above were
appointed as executors of her estate by the Master of the High Court.
c)
Sylvia committed fraud in that she did not own the property but that
it belonged to the first respondent and
her siblings, including the
late Sylvia. The same applies to the late Sylvia’s children,
who sold the property to the applicant:
“…
they could
not transfer the rights which they did not have or which were
unlawful
…”
d)
The first respondent intends to challenge the transfer of the
property from her late sister to the applicant.
e)
The applicant is not approaching the court with clean hands because,
around March 2020, the applicant demolished
a part of the building.
The applicant allegedly stated that he (it) had purchased the
property.
f)
The first respondent occupied the house because she had nowhere to
go. She cannot afford to rent or buy
alternative accommodation, and
she cannot be left homeless because of the prior unlawful
transaction.
g)
An eviction order will affect her constitutional right to housing,
and she will be homeless together with her
family members. She is 60
years of age, a householder, and the household leader and her family
depend on her. She stays with children
aged 17, 16, 12 and 7 (as on
12 August 2021, when deposed to the answering affidavit). She
receives a pension grant, child support,
and “
R1,200 per
month from tenants staying in the shacks
”. The children are
attending school in the proximity of the premises.
Issues
[12]
In the applicant’s practice note dated 13 January 2023
(Caselines 011-11 to 13),
the issues are defined as follows:
a)
Whether or not the applicant is the lawful owner of the property in
question.
b)
Whether or not the first respondent is an unlawful occupier as
defined in the PIE Act; and,
c)
If so, is it just and equitable to grant an eviction order?
[13]
In the first respondent’s Heads of Argument, the issues are
defined as follows:
a)
Whether the Applicant has a clear and lawful title to the property.
b)
Whether the title deed was obtained fraudulently.
c)
Whether the first respondent is in unlawful occupation of the
property; and,
d)
If the first respondent’s occupation is unlawful, whether it is
just and equitable to evict the respondents
and the determination of
the date for them to vacate the property.
[14]
According to the Joint Practice Note, the issue for determination is
whether or not the occupants are in
unlawful occupation.
[15]
As indicated below, the court raised and debated the effective
service of the section 4(2) Notice on the
first and second
respondents with the parties’ representatives. In addition, the
first respondent’s main argument related
to a just and
equitable date for the respondents to vacate the property. The issues
regarding the alleged fraud and the disputed
lawfulness of the
applicant’s title of the property were effectively conceded.
The first respondent’s representative
confirmed that the first
respondent had not instituted any proceedings to challenge the
validity of the applicant’s ownership.
Therefore, the
question of effective service on the respondent accordingly emerged
as the main issue for determination.
Litigation
History
[16]
For reasons that shall appear later, I must deal with the papers as
they appear from the
Caselines record.
[17]
The Notice
of Motion (dated 3 August 2020
[1]
)
in the instant application was issued on 1 October 2020 and served by
the Sheriff on the first and second respondents on 9 October
2020 and
the third respondent on 7 October 2020. It attached the founding
affidavit of SAMUEL KGOTSITSILE SEDUMENI, deposed on
3 August
2020.
[2]
[18]
The electronic court file further includes a Notice of Motion dated
28 October 2020, styled
“
EX-PARTE APPLICATION IN TERMS OF
SECTION 4(4)
” (seemingly intended to have referred to
section 4(2)). This Notice of Motion indicates that on 22 April 2021,
the applicant
will seek an order authorising it to provide a notice
to the respondents as envisaged by sections 4(2), 4(3), and 4(4) of
the PIE
Act. The Sheriff’s returns of service reflect that this
ex-parte
application was served on the first and second
respondents on 1 March 2021. A “NOTICE OF SET DOWN FOR HEARING”
was
served on the first and second respondents on 23 March 2021.
[19]
The Notice
of Motion in the
ex-parte
application referred to above further states that the affidavit of Mr
SEDUMENI will be used to support the application. An affidavit
deposed by Mr. SEDUMENI follows the Notice of Motion.
[3]
The certificate of the Commissioner of Oaths
[4]
reads that the Founding Affidavit was signed and sworn to on the
“
11
th
November 2020
”.
Below the stamp of the Commissioner of Oaths appears “
10/11/2020
”
in manuscript.
[20]
According
to paragraph 5.1 of this affidavit, the deponent states that “…
[M]y
further advice from my attorneys of record is that we should bring an
Ex-Parte application and that such application complies
with Section
4(2) of the PIE Act. And
(sic)
marked
as
Annexure
BP6
…
”.
[5]
The problem with this affidavit is manifest: the statement in
paragraph 5.1 alone indicates that the affidavit, as mentioned
earlier,
envisaged an
ex-parte
application to be instituted. Further, Annexure BP6
[6]
is not an application of any nature (as is suggested by paragraph 5.1
of the affidavit) but a “…
NOTICE
IN TERMS OF SECTION 4(2)
…”
of the PIE Act, dated 28 October 2020
[7]
.
Consequently, the affidavit on pages 001-32 to 001-35, although
following on the last page of the Notice of Motion in the
ex-parte
application, could not and did not serve the purpose intended by the
ex-parte
Notice of Motion.
[21]
A further
affidavit
[8]
by Mr SEDUMENI,
also deposed on 10 November 2020, follows the abovementioned
affidavit. Paragraph 4.1 makes it plain that the application
(relevant to that second affidavit) “…
is
for the authorisation of a notice of proceedings contemplated by
sections 4(2) and 4(5) of the PIE ACT
…”.
Strangely, the deponent states in paragraph 4.2 that “…
simultaneously
with this application
…”
the applicant will launch an eviction application. This statement is
wrong in that, as on 10 November 2020, the
Sheriff had already, on 7
and 9 October 2020, served the eviction application on the
respondents. Thus, the affidavit in support
of the
ex-parte
application is, in fact, that which appears on pages 001-52 to 001-58
and not the affidavit on pages 001-32 to 001-35.
[22]
The papers in the
ex-parte
application, as they appear on
pages 001-28 to 001-79, exceed 50 pages. These same papers are
attached to the index of the
ex-parte
application under
section 009.
[23]
On 22 April 2021, WINDELL J granted the relief sought in terms of the
ex-parte
application. The order provided that the applicant
was authorised to give notice of the intended eviction application,
and “…
the applicant is directed to serve the section
4(2) notice (which is attached hereto and marked as annexure “BP6”)
with
a copy of the order on the first respondent and other persons
holding occupation through the first applicant…
”,
and on the third respondent. The order further provides that if the
applicant cannot set the matter down for hearing on
1 July 2021, the
applicant is permitted to set the matter down on a future date to be
arranged with the registrar on the same papers.
I point out that the
order, as it appears on Caselines pages 015-5 to 015-6, is not
accompanied by and does not annex a notice
marked as ‘
annexure
BP6
”’. A further copy of the order appears on 009-39
to 009-40, which is similarly not accompanied by any notice marked
as
aforesaid.
[24]
Notices of set down for the hearing of the eviction application on 1
July 2021 were served
on the first respondent on 21 June 2021, and a
further notice of set down for the hearing on 25 August 2021 was
served on her on
21 July 2021.
[25]
The First Respondent caused opposition to be noted on 17 August 2021.
The first respondent’s
answering affidavit was delivered on 5
August 2021, and the applicant’s reply, dated 7 September 2021,
was delivered on an
unknown date.
[26]
Concerning the third respondent, the Sheriff issued a return of
service on 30 April 2021
of documents described as “…
NOTICE
IN TERMS OF
SECTION 4(2)
OF THE
PREVENTION OF ILLEGAL EVICTION FROM
AND UNLAWFUL OCCUPATION OF LAND ACT 19 OF 1998
, FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT &
ANNEXURES & COURT ORDER DATED 22/04/21…
”.
[27]
A further
Sheriff’s return of service in respect of the first
respondent
[9]
states that on 3
June 2021, the following documents were served: “…
A
copy of the EX-PARTE APPLICATION I.T.O. SECTION 4(2) AND COURT ORDER
SSECTION4(4)
(sic)…”. The Sheriff’s return of service regarding
the second respondent contains the exact description of the
papers
served as quoted herein.
Analysis
[28]
Section 4(2) of the PIE Act is peremptory. It requires unlawful
occupiers facing eviction
to be given at least 14 days “
written
and effective notice
” of the date on which proceedings for
their eviction will be heard. An unlawful occupier is entitled to
this notice separately
from, and in addition to, the ordinary service
of the application papers or combined summons that institute the
eviction proceedings
(
Cape Killarney Property Investments v
Mahamba
[2001] 4 All SA 479
(A), paragraphs 13 and 14). The
notice’s form and manner of service must be approved by a court
(see
Cape Killarney
, paragraphs 11 and 16).
[29]
The first question is whether the returns of service can be
interpreted to the effect that
the section 4(2) notice, as authorised
and directed by the order of WINDELL J, was served by the Sheriff.
[30]
The rules
governing the interpretation of documents may be summarised with
reference to the
Supreme
Court of Appeal’s seminal judgment by Wallis JA in the case of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[10]
,
which
was endorsed as follows in
Capitec
Bank Holdings and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd
and Others:
[11]
‘
Our
analysis must commence with the provisions of the subscription
agreement that have relevance for deciding whether Capitec Holdings’
consent was indeed required. The much-cited passages from Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (Endumeni)
offer
guidance as to how to approach the interpretation of the words used
in a document. It is the language used, understood in
the context in
which it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the provision
that constitutes the unitary exercise of interpretation.
I would only
add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not be used in
a mechanical fashion. It is the relationship
between the words used,
the concepts expressed by those words and the place of the contested
provision within the scheme of the
agreement (or instrument) as a
whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to which a coherent
and salient interpretation
is determined. As Endumeni emphasised,
citing well-known cases, “[t]he inevitable point of departure
is the language of the
provision itself.
”’
[31]
Applied to
the application at hand, one considers the language used, which must
be given its ordinary grammatical meaning unless
this results in
absurdity, repugnancy, or inconsistency with the rest of the
document. The language used must be understood in
the context in
which it is used and regarding the purpose of the provision of the
document.
[12]
[32]
On the face of these returns of service relevant to the first and
second respondents, it
appears that the documents served by the
Sheriff on 2 June 2021 comprised the
ex-parte
application in
terms of section 4(2) and the order of court in terms of section 4(4)
of the PIE Act. Notably, neither return mentions
the service of the
Notice (whether as an annexure to the order or otherwise).
[33]
On a plain reading of these returns of service, the Sheriff served “…
A copy of the EX-PARTE APPLICATION I.T.O. SECTION 4(2)…
”
and not a Notice in terms of Section 4(2). This express reference to
the “APPLICATION”, as opposed to the Notice
that the
applicant was directed to serve, is instructive. These returns
further omit any reference to the Notice as an annexure
to the order.
To read a reference to the said Notice into the wording of the
returns of service would be impermissible.
[34]
Further, counsel for the applicant was unable to direct my attention
to any document or
evidence filed on Caselines showing that the
Notice, as envisaged by order of WINDELL J, was attached to the
“
COURT ORDER SSECTION4(4)
(sic)…”, to which
the said returns of service referred.
[35]
The first respondent’s representative did not concede that the
Sheriff had served
the Notice envisaged by the order on the first
respondent. It was further contended that the applicant bore the onus
to demonstrate
compliance with the provisions of section 4(2) and the
order requiring service of the said Notice. I agree with the
latter
contention.
[36]
The foregoing accordingly warrants a finding that the applicant
failed to satisfy the requirements
of section 4(2) of the PIE Act and
paragraph 2 read with paragraph 1 of the order granted by WINDELL J.
The application is not
ripe for hearing.
Conclusion
[37]
The defects in the applicant’s case
do not render the application fatally defective and can be remedied.
A dismissal of the
application would cause grave prejudice on the
applicant’s part.
[38]
In my view, it is in the interest of
justice to allow the applicant to rectify the shortcomings in its
case. Accordingly, the matter
ought to be postponed
sine
die
.
Costs
[39]
Ordinarily, the party causing a
postponement of a hearing should bear the costs occasioned thereby.
This is not a rule cast in stone.
There may be circumstances that
justify a different outcome concerning costs. It is trite law that a
court has broad discretion
when making cost orders. I note the
prima
facie
strength of the applicant’s
case, the concessions made by the first respondent’s
representative, and the fact that
the first respondent has not taken
any steps to challenge the applicant’s title. Further, the
first respondent did not rely
on the grounds that gave rise to the
postponement of the matter. In addition, pending the matter's
finalisation, the respondents
likely enjoy occupation of the
property.
[40]
I believe that each party should pay its
own costs occasioned by the postponement of the matter.
Order
[1]
The application is postponed
sine
die
.
[2]
Each party shall pay its own costs.
___________________________
C. A. C. KORF
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
19 JANUARY 2024
For the Applicant : Adv Z
Kalashi insructed by Mathubatuba Attorneys
For the Respondent : P
Setlhodi instructed by the Soweto Justice Centre
Matter heard: 13 April
2023
[1]
Caselines
001-4.
[2]
Caselines
001-11.
[3]
Caselines 001-32 to 001-35.
[4]
Caselines
001-35.
[5]
Caselines
001-34.
[6]
Caselines
001-45 to 51.
[7]
Caselines
001-49.
[8]
Caselines 001-52 to 001-58.
[9]
Caselines 009-41.
[10]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) par [18].
[11]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA) para 25.
[12]
Macingwane
v Masekwameng and Others
(Case
no 626/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 174
, para 22.
sino noindex
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