Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 42South Africa
Melelwe v Songca and Others (03566/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 42 (19 January 2024)
Headnotes
by the Krugersdorp Municipality in respect of the Drakensberg Street property. However, it seems, the outstanding rates and taxes were never liquidated entirely. As at February 2015, when his last payment took place, the outstanding amounted to R2574.85. In short, Mr Melelwe never placed himself in a position to take transfer of the property.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Melelwe v Songca and Others (03566/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 42 (19 January 2024)
Melelwe v Songca and Others (03566/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 42 (19 January 2024)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANESBURG
### CASE NO. 03566/19
CASE NO. 03566/19
In the matter between:
MAGAGE
WILLIAM MELELWE
Applicant
and
SABELO
ENOCH SONGCA
First
Respondent
LEBOGANG
OLINDA SONGCA
Second
Respondent
BANYANA
CAROLINE MOKELA N.O.
Third
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth
Respondent
THE MASTER OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Fifth
Respondent
SB
GUARANTEE COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Sixth
Respondent
Coram:
Salmon AJ
Heard
on:
20 October 2023, (MS Teams)
Delivered
on:
January 2024
JUDGMENT
SALMON AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application in terms of which Mr
Magage William Melelwe seeks the setting aside of an agreement of
sale in respect of
immovable property, and consequent relief. The
orders sought are in the following terms: -
“
1.
Setting aside the agreement of sale entered
into between the First and Second Respondents as purchasers and the
Third Respondent
as seller.
2.
An order that the Fourth Respondent cancel the Deed of Transfer
number T447[….] in terms
of which the property was transported
from the Estate of the Late Oupa John Mabulala into the names of the
First and Second Respondents.
3.
An order that the Third Respondent sign all documents and do all
things necessary to transfer
the property into my name, failing which
the Sheriff, Krugersdorp is authorized to sign on behalf of the Third
Respondent.
4.
Ordering the Fifth Respondent to holding the finalization of the
estate of the Late Oupa John
Mabulala, Unique Reference
9922014EST001558/File No. 001558/2014 in obeyance pending
finalization of this application.”
[2]
The
Applicant resides at 17133 Drakensberg Street, Kagiso, Krugersdorp.
In 1998, shortly after he turned forty years of age, Mr
Melelwe
(together with his now late wife – they were married in
community of property)
[1]
entered
into a written agreement with the then-registered owner of that same
property, Mr Oupa John Mabulala, in terms of which
they purchased the
property.
[2]
At
that stage, it was vacant land. I refer to this agreement, where
appropriate, as the ‘first Deed of Sale’.
[3]
The
First and Second Respondents subsequently
[3]
entered
into an agreement also to purchase the Drakensberg Street
property, then from the Executrix of the estate of Mr Mabulala,
who
is his daughter and the Third Respondent. The First and Second
Respondents served a Notice of Intention to Oppose the application
but did not file affidavits or anything else. There was no appearance
on their behalf at the hearing.
[4]
The Third Respondent is the only child of
the late Oupa John Mabulala. At the time when he passed away, in
2006, Ms Mokela was thirty
one years of age. She, too, served a
Notice of Opposition to the application but has not delivered
affidavits or anything else.
There was no appearance on her behalf at
the hearing.
[5]
From what is to be gleaned from the
‘record’ on Caselines, neither the Fourth nor Fifth
Respondents have delivered any
documents, and therefore do not oppose
the relief sought in this application.
[6]
The Sixth Respondent was granted leave to
intervene in these proceedings. It is the guarantor, to Standard
Bank, of the obligations
upon Mr & Mrs Songca (the First
and Second Respondents) to make payments under a home loan granted by
the Bank to enable
them to purchase the Drakensberg Street property.
It is also the mortgagee in respect of a bond registered over the
property. It
opposes the relief sought and has filed an
opposing affidavit. My reference to ‘the Respondent’ in
what follows means
the Sixth Respondent.
[7]
In the hearing before me, only the
Applicant and the Sixth Respondent took part, represented by Mr SB
Vukeya and Ms S Van der Walt,
respectively.
THE BACKGROUND
FACTS
[8]
The Respondent raises no dispute in regard
to the Deed of Sale. It is dated (16 June 1998) and signed by all
parties to the agreement.
For all intents and purposes, it
constitutes a deed of alienation as contemplated by the
Alienation of
Land Act 68 of 1981
.
[9]
The
first Deed of Sale provides for a purchase price of R7000,00 and it
is common cause that this was duly paid by Mr Melelwe. It
also
provides that Mr Melelwe (as purchaser) would be responsible for
payment of rates and other municipal levies payable in respect
of the
property;
[4]
he
would pay the costs of registration of transfer including transfer
duty and deposits as required against his liability for rates,
taxes
and other charges;
[5]
that
transfer was to be effected within a reasonable time after compliance
with those obligations, and that the parties would sign
all documents
in order to register the transfer upon request from the nominated
conveyancers.
[6]
[10]
Over the subsequent several years, Mr
Melelwe made (sometimes regular, sometimes irregular) payments
against the Rates and Taxes
account held by the Krugersdorp
Municipality in respect of the Drakensberg Street property. However,
it seems, the outstanding
rates and taxes were never liquidated
entirely. As at February 2015, when his last payment took place, the
outstanding amounted
to R2574.85. In short, Mr Melelwe
never placed himself in a position to take transfer of the property.
[11]
It
is not clear when, but over time Mr Melelwe developed the Drakensberg
Street property by the addition of a residence. It is this
house that
he now lives in. There is a provision in the first Deed of Sale
that the purchasers may not, before registration
of the property in
their name, effect any improvements on or to the property or
effect any changes to existing improvements
on or to the property
without the seller’s prior written consent.
[7]
It
does not appear from the affidavits before me whether the
improvements effected by Mr Melelwe were indeed with the written
consent
of Mr Mabulala, but nothing turns on this for purposes of the
present adjudication.
[12]
Mr Mabulala passed away in December 2006.
This was before any transfer documents could be finalized and signed
between him and Mr
Melelwe. According to his Founding Affidavit,
Mr Melelwe approached Mr Mabulala’s family for assistance
but “
they were not will to assist
me and refused to give me the name and contact details of the
Executor of OUPA JOHN MABULALA’S
estate. I did not know what to
do, but I took comfort in the fact that I had a written agreement of
sale signed by OUPA JOHN MABULALA
and that I had paid the purchase
price.”
These allegations are not
the subject of any dispute.
[13]
As
it turned out, Mr Mabulala died intestate. His only child, the Third
Respondent, was appointed as Executrix; Letters of Executorship
were
issued by the Fifth Respondent on 22 January 2014. Not in this
capacity, but as Mr Mabulala’s daughter, two days before
her
appointment Ms Mokela had lodged an Inventory
[8]
with
the Master of the High Court listing the Drakensberg Street property
as an asset belonging to her late father, together with
(only)
household goods valued at R10 000,00. The Drakensberg
Street property - then with Mr Melelwe’s residence
an
improvement, funded by him - was given a nil value by Ms Mokela in
the Inventory.
[14]
The next Mr Melelwe knew was to receive a
letter from attorneys demanding that he vacate the property, on the
basis that the property
was registered in the name of the First and
Second Respondents. He subsequently was served with an application
for his eviction
issued out of the Kagiso Magistrates’ Court
under Case No. 1436/2018. That application is currently pending the
outcome of
the present proceedings.
[15]
The
papers in the application for eviction are not before me although
they have been uploaded to the Caselines file for this matter.
Nevertheless, Mr Melelwe alleges in his Founding Affidavit that,
according to the application for eviction, the First and Second
Respondent had purchased the property from the Estate of the late
Oupa John Mabulala.
[9]
A
‘Search Works’ Deeds Office report annexed to Mr
Melelwe’s affidavit shows that the purchase date was 5
September
2017,
[10]
with
registration in the name of Mr Songca being effected at the Deeds
Office on 27 November 2017.
[16]
It appears from the Respondent’s
Affidavit that Standard Bank granted Mr & Mrs Songca a loan to
purchase the property
on or about 22 September 2017, in terms of
which it advanced them R445 985,00. On the same date, the
Respondent guaranteed
to Standard Bank the due and punctual payment
of all sums due by Mr & Mrs Songca pursuant to the Home Loan
Agreement, and as
security, a mortgage bond was registered over the
property in favour of the Respondent.
[17]
I hereinafter refer to the agreement
between Ms Mokela N.O. and the Songcas as the ‘second Deed of
Sale’.
THE PARTIES’
POSITIONS
[18]
In addition to the contention that the
second Deed of Sale ought to be set aside, as the property was
already sold to the Applicant,
Mr Vukeya’s submissions
went further:
·
The sale of the property to Mr Songca is
invalid for failure to comply with the provisions of the Estates Act;
and
·
The Third Respondent will be unduly
enriched if the sale is condoned.
[19]
The
enrichment aspect was not earnestly advanced by Mr Vukeya. The
invalidity based on the failure to comply with the Estates Act
was,
though. Mr Vukeya relied on section 29 of the Estates Act in
submitting that the Third Respondent failed to cause a
notice to be
published
[11]
calling
upon all persons having claims to lodge such claims with the
executor; and also failed, before effecting the transfer, to
lodge
with the registration officer a certificate by Fourth Respondent that
no objection to the transfer exists. He also submitted
that the Third
Respondent, as Executrix, further failed to lodge, advertise and lay
for inspection the liquidation and distribution
account as required
by section 36 of the Estates Act - and that this would have given the
Applicant an opportunity to lodge an
objection to the account.
[20]
The
problem with Mr Vukeya’s submissions concerning the Estates Act
is that they contemplate factual issues (and contentions
arising
therefrom) not addressed in the papers at all. True, the Applicant’s
attorneys obtained a copy of the Master’s
file purportedly in
relation to the estate of the late Mr Mabulala; and the documents it
contained were annexed to the Founding
Affidavit. Those annexures do
not include such notices, advertisements or accounts. However, it
would be manifestly unfair to the
Respondents to accord the
submissions cogency
[12]
when
the Respondents had not been alerted to the points.
[13]
For
example, Ms Mokela may well have wished to say something about the
allegations, but as they were not raised in the Founding
Affidavit,
how was she to know? Does the absence of a document from the Master’s
file alone indicate its absolute non-existence?
Or, that what a
document is intended to memorialize never took place because the
document is not in the file? I do not think the
contention can go
this far.
[21]
Mr Melelwe’s allegation in his
affidavit that it appears from the documents that the estate has not
been finalised, however,
is not disputed.
[22]
Mr Vukeya also requested the Court to draw
an adverse inference against Ms Mokela, flowing from her recordal of
the value of the
immovable property as nil in the statutory Inventory
she submitted to the Master. In other words: that her conduct was
malicious
and intended to mislead the Master. Mr Vukeya’s
submission was based, notably, on the premise that the Third
Respondent was aware at the time that the property belonged to the
Applicant. I decline to draw the inference.
[23]
Whilst
one may raise eyebrows at the nil value for a property on which
stands an inhabited residence (sold a few years later for
over four
hundred thousand rands), drawing an inference of fraudulent conduct
requires something more. As a general proposition,
drawing adverse
inferences depends on the facts and circumstances of the case
[14]
and,
apart from anything else, the
factual
premise
for the Applicant’s contention as advanced by his Counsel
[15]
is
not something raised in the Founding Affidavit. Again, where Ms
Mokela is not given the chance to answer the allegation, she
could
not be said to have avoided doing so and thereby invoking the
possibility of an adverse inference. Put differently, had Mr
Melelwe
alleged, with some factual platform, that she
in
fact
was aware, her failure to address the averment may indeed have raised
the probability of an adverse inference.
[24]
The Applicant’s contention that the
property was already sold to Mr Melelwe, however, is on a different
footing. I revert
to it shortly. It ties in with one of the
submissions made on behalf of the Respondent and which I now review.
[25]
The Respondent filed an affidavit in
which it is averred that:
·
The Sixth Respondent is the holder of a
mortgage bond over the property to secure the obligations of the
First and Second Respondents
in terms of the home loan agreement with
the Standard Bank (which it has guaranteed);
·
It was not aware of the agreement of sale
between the Applicant and the Late Oupa John Mabulala;
·
Absent
a finding of invalidity in relation to Title Deed T44784/2017 or the
underlying agreement
[16]
which
gave rise to the registration thereof, an order for cancellation
would be without just cause.
·
It was also not aware of any fact that
could legally invalidate the underlying sale agreement which resulted
in the transfer and
registration of the property in the name of the
First and Second Respondents; and
·
It was not aware of any defect that could
invalidate the Loan Agreement and Mortgage Bond.
[26]
In
light of the Mortgage Bond, in particular, Ms Van der Walt submitted
that the Respondent (therefore) has a stronger right over
the
property than the Applicant and even third parties. She also
submitted that there appears no intention on the part of the
Applicant to take transfer of the property into his name. Further,
that, anyway, any claim he had against the estate of the deceased
Mr
Mabulala has prescribed, though when pressed Ms Van der Walt did not
pursue this prescription point.
[17]
DISCUSSION
[27]
It is so, that (as submitted by Ms Van der
Walt) a mere deed of alienation does not effect the passing of
ownership of immovable
property from one to another. This is achieved
only by registration of the transfer at the Deeds Office, and the
title deed then
serves as proof of ownership. However, as anticipated
in the Respondent’s affidavit (and see, particularly the
passage in
the third bulleted sub-paragraph [25] above), registration
of transfer in and of itself is not unassailable - and nor is it the
final answer.
[28]
The
abstract system of transfer of ownership has been part of our law
since it was introduced in 1941
[18]
and
was affirmed to be the applicable system by Brand JA in
Legator
McKenna.
[19]
It
is not necessary to review the principles in its regard; this has
happened in many decisions several of which are reviewed in
the
Moore
case,
[20]
LAWSA,
and in the comprehensive survey undertaken by LJ van der Merwe AJ in
the
Knox
N.O.
case
[21]
-
for a few examples. The essence of this system is that, once
registration of transfer occurs, ownership has passed -
notwithstanding
that the underlying contract may be invalid - due to
want of compliance with some formality, for instance.
[29]
However,
this is not the end of the story; as LJ van der Merwe points out
[22]
“
the
abstract theory does not and cannot serve as a guarantee of
ownership.”
Indeed,
as Brand JA made clear in
Legator
McKenna
,
[23]
it
is all about the “real agreement”: “
Although
the abstract theory does not require a valid underlying contract, eg
sale, ownership will not pass – despite registration
of
transfer – if there is a defect in the real agreement.”
As
LJ van der Merwe AJ added
[24]
“
This
implies that the transferor must be legally competent to transfer the
property, the transferee must be legally competent to
acquire the
property, and that the golden rule of the law of property, that no
one can transfer more rights than he himself has,
also applies to the
real agreement.”
[30]
It
is the
“
real
agreement” in the context of the second Deed of Sale which
cannot pass muster. At common law, essentially,
[25]
ownership
in property (movable or immovable) passes when the following integers
are satisfied:
a.
The ‘thing’ must be capable of
being held in private ownership;
b.
The
transferor must be capable of transferring ownership - the maxim
nemo
plus iuris ad alium transferee potest, quam ipse haberet
[26]
features
here;
c.
The transferee must be capable of acquiring
ownership;
d.
There must be the requisite intention,
directly as to the passing of ownership, of both transferor and
transferee;
e.
Transfer of ownership postulates delivery
(in the case of movable) and registration in the case of immovables);
f.
Payment must be effected, unless credit is
agreed.
[31]
It
seems to me that the Executrix (the Third Respondent) was not in a
position to enter into an agreement to transfer ownership
of the
Drakensberg Street property, any more than would Mr Mabulala have
been, were he to be still alive. Could it be said that
Ms Makola N.O.
had a true
animus
contrahendi
when, as a matter of fact, an unimpugned deed of alienation had
already bound the Drakensberg Street property to someone
else? It is
not necessary to investigate this avenue, for it seems to me
equally apposite (and determinative) that at least
one import of the
first Deed of Sale was to encumber Mr Mabulala with an obligation to
do what was required in order for Mr Melelwe
to bring about transfer
of the property’s ownership (to himself) when once he was in a
position to do so.
[27]
Absent
release of that obligation – for example, by cancellation of
the first Deed of Sale, Mr Mabulala was not free to dispose
of the
Drakensberg Street property to third parties, and nor –
accordingly - was the Executrix of his estate.
[32]
Therefore, the real agreement underlying
the second Deed of Sale was incompetent to achieve its objective. Ms
Makola N.O. could
not have agreed to sell to the Songcas the
property.
[33]
But, Ms Van der Walt submitted, Mr Melelwe
had shown no intention of having transfer effected. I am doubtful of
the legal conclusion
of the submission, if any, for there is neither
imperative nor obligation found in the first Deed of Sale in terms of
which Mr
Melelwe had to take transfer within a certain time
framework. Ms Van der Walt did not cite authority for the proposition
that it
must be inferred that Mr Melelwe is thus to be deprived of
any right he may have, and I have not come across any.
[34]
That apart, this was not raised in the
affidavit lodged by the Respondent. Again, it may be unfair to give
it cogency in the absence
of a pointed challenge which Mr Melelwe
could answer.
[35]
But, even so, what of it? Mr Melelwe was
aware of his position in that he could not take transfer until the
outstanding rates and
taxes had been liquidated, and he had been
making sporadic payments to that end. He was enjoying undisturbed
possession; he paid
for the land, paid for the buildings on it, was
recorded in the Municipal records as being responsible for the rates
and taxes,
and for a long period of time had not needed at any stage
to show or prove his title.
[36]
I therefore conclude that Mr Melelwe is
entitled to have the second Deed of Sale set aside, together with the
consequent relief
of cancellation of the Deed of Transfer into the
names of the First and Second Respondents.
[37]
However, the relief sought in prayer 3 is
problematic. Mr Melelwe is not axiomatically entitled to transfer; he
is, though, when
once he owes no rates and taxes in respect of the
Drakensberg Street property. The details in this regard were not
ventilated before
me. I therefore propose to grant Mr Melelwe leave
to approach the Court again for such relief, on the same papers but
supplemented
where applicable, if necessary. The relief in prayer 4
will be granted.
[38]
There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result.
[39]
I therefore make the following order:
a.
The agreement of sale between the First and
Second Respondents, as purchasers, and the Third Respondent, as
seller, in respect of
ERF 1[…] Kagiso Extension 12, is set
aside;
b.
The Registrar of Deeds, Johannesburg, is
directed to cancel the Deed of Transfer number T44[…] in terms
of which the said
property was transferred from the Estate of the
late Oupa John Mabulala in to the names of the First and Second
Respondents and
to rectify the Deeds Register so as to reflect the
said Estate as registered owner of the property;
c.
Magage William Melelwe is granted leave,
upon settlement and/or payment by him or on his behalf, of the
Municipal rates and taxes
which accrued in respect of the said
property as if the agreement of sale between the First and Second
Respondents, as purchasers,
and the Third Respondent, as seller, had
not taken place, to approach the Court upon the same papers,
supplemented where applicable,
for an order directing the Third
Respondent to sign all documents and do all things necessary to
effect transfer of the said property
into his name, failing which the
Sheriff, Krugersdorp is authorised to do so;
d.
The Master of the High Court, Johannesburg,
is directed to pend the finalisation of the Estate of the Late Oupa
John Mabulala, Unique
Reference 9922014 EST001558/File Number:
001558/2014 until the transfer contemplated in (c) above is completed
or until the Court
orders otherwise.
e.
The Sixth Respondent is ordered to pay the
Applicant’s costs on the scale of party and party, to include
the costs of Counsel.
_______________________
SALMON AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing:
20 October 2023
Date Judgment
Delivered:
January 2024
For the
Applicant:
Adv. SB Vukeya
Instructed
by:
Nemakanga Attorneys
First to Fifth
Respondents:
not represented.
For Sixth
Respondent:
Adv. S Van
Der Walt
Instructed
by:
VBD Inc.
[1]
In what follows, for convenience, I refer to simply to Mr Melelwe.
Nothing turns on the fact that his wife passed away in 2002.
[2]
For convenience I will refer to this as the “Drakensberg
Street property”.
[3]
That is, in 2017.
[4]
Clause 2.2 of the Deed of Sale.
[5]
Clause 5 of the Deed of Sale.
[6]
Clause 7 of the Deed of Sale.
[7]
Clause 6.1 of the Deed of Sale.
[8]
In terms of
section 9
of the
Administration of Estates Act 1965
–
hereinafter, the “Estates Act”.
[9]
This is not disputed.
The
agreement in terms of which the Songcas purchased the property is
not before the Court, but the aforementioned undisputed
fact
notwithstanding, it seems to have been accepted by the parties (as
indeed it must be) that the seller was Ms Mokela in her
capacity as
Executrix.
[10]
The Home Loan Agreement with Standard Bank reflects the date as 1
September 2017. Nothing turns on this.
[11]
In
the Government Gazette and in at least one newspaper circulating in
the area in which the deceased ordinarily resided at the
time of his
death.
[12]
Cf.
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union and Others
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC) paras [61] - [65];
Dexion
Europe Ltd v Universal Storage Systems (Pty) Ltd
2003 (1) SA 31
(SCA) paragraph [15].
[13]
These are not legal points arising from the undisputed facts.
[14]
Pexmart
Cc And Others v H Mocke Construction (Pty) Ltd And Another
2019 (3) SA 117
(SCA) at paragraph [69]
[15]
Namely, that she
was
aware at the time that the property
belonged
to the Applicant.
[16]
As shall be seen, herein lies the rub.
[17]
This
may have been wise given that it is not disputed that Mr Melelwe
only became aware of the potential problem when served with
the
attorney’s letter to vacate the premises, shortly after which
he launched the present proceedings, whilst the prescription
point
was not raised in the Respondent’s answering affidavit. It is
trite that a point such as prescription must be pleaded,
at least
because there might be an answer.
[18]
Commissioner
of Customs & Excise v Randles, Brothers and Hudson Ltd
1941 AD 369
[19]
Legator
McKenna, Inc and Another v Shea
2010 (1) SA 35
SCA
[20]
Absa
Ltd v Moore and Another
2016 (3) SA 97
(SCA) at paragraph [36]
et
seq
.
[21]
Knox
N.O. v Mofokeng and Others
2013 (4) SA 46
GSJ, and the various annotated cases.
[22]
Knox
N.O
.
at paragraph [22].
[23]
Legator
McKenna
,
paragraph [22].
[24]
Knox
N.O
.
at paragraph [19].
[25]
See, generally, LAWSA, Land Administration, Volume 25(1) 3rd Ed
paragraph [40], Things, Volume 27 paragraph [209].
The online edition is referenced.
[26]
“No one can transfer more rights to another than he himself
has.” Hiemstra’s
Trilingual
Dictionary
Juta, 1992.
[27]
This is a residual obligation upon a seller. See, in general, LAWSA,
Sale, Volume 36 3rd Edition at paragraphs 267
et
seq
.
sino noindex
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