Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 138South Africa
Gauteng Provincial Government : Department of Human Settlements and Others v Busha and Others (9074/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 138 (19 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 February 2024
Headnotes
in abeyance pending the matter presently before me.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gauteng Provincial Government : Department of Human Settlements and Others v Busha and Others (9074/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 138 (19 February 2024)
Gauteng Provincial Government : Department of Human Settlements and Others v Busha and Others (9074/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 138 (19 February 2024)
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sino date 19 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
Case No. 9074/2020
In the matter between:
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT: DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN
SETTLEMENTS
First Applicant
SIZAKELE
KHANGALE
Second Applicant
SYDWELL
KHANGALE
Third
Applicant
and
NKOSIWATI
BUSHA
First
Respondent
BUSISIWE
BERLINA BUSHA
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
CHIEF
SURVEYOR GENERAL
Fourth
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Fifth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
The applicant is the Gauteng Provincial Department of Human
Settlements (“the Department”). In 1998, the Department
acquired and developed a substantial tract of land in Lenasia, to the
south of Johannesburg, as a low cost housing project. The
terms of
the project were governed by the National Housing Subsidy Scheme
(“the Scheme”), which facilitated the construction
of a
large number of what are colloquially known as Reconstruction and
Development Plan – “RDP” – houses.
2
Broadly speaking, the
Scheme worked by allocating a subsidy to each of its beneficiaries.
The subsidy would then be used to pay
for the bulk of the cost of
acquiring land and constructing a house. The individual beneficiary
would contribute a small portion
of the cost of constructing the
house once they had been able to take occupation of it. Construction
projects were normally funded
by aggregating a number of qualifying
beneficiaries’ housing subsidies, and paying them over to a
developer who would construct
large housing projects to predetermined
specifications on land the Department acquired. This aggregation of
subsidies allowed the
developer and the state to benefit from
economies of scale, with the aim of building as many houses as
possible, and accordingly
benefitting as many beneficiaries as
possible, in one project. In this way, RDP houses were built at scale
in uniform style.
3
The Scheme generally
resulted in the transfer of ownership of a parcel of land and a house
constructed on it to each qualifying
beneficiary. This meant that
part of the development process involved the establishment of a
township and its subdivision into
erven of roughly similar size. Each
erf had a house erected on it. However, given the scale of these
construction projects –
which sometimes involved several
thousand units – things sometimes went wrong. A lack of
transparency in the housing allocation
process led to conflicts
between the state, subsidy applicants and others in need of housing,
and to the occupation of RDP units
without the state’s
permission (see, for example,
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
v Various Occupiers, Eden Park Extension 5
2014 (3) SA 23
(SCA)).
Sometimes, whether by mistake or malfeasance, the state gave RDP
units to people who were not entitled to them (see
Thubakgale v
Ekurhuleni Municipality
2022 (8) BCLR 985
(CC)).
4
In this case, the
Department approaches me to correct what it says is one of these
mistakes. The Department says that it erroneously
transferred
ownership of two RDP housing units, and the land on which they stand,
to the first and second respondents, the Bushas.
The Bushas applied
for, and received, a housing subsidy. In 1997 they were allocated an
RDP house at Erf 11602 Lenasia Extension
13. At around the same time,
however, the second and third applicants, the Khangales – who
were themselves RDP subsidy beneficiaries
– were also
allocated an RDP house, adjacent to the Bushas’ unit, that was
constructed on the same Erf. The Khangales
moved into their house in
December 1998, and the Bushas occupied their unit in February 1999.
5
Some fifteen years later,
in 2014, the whole of Erf 11602 – just under 646 square metres
of land – was transferred to
the Bushas. This included the land
upon which the Khangales’ house stood. The Department says that
was its error. It did
not intend to transfer the whole of Erf 11602
to the Bushas. It instead intended to subdivide the Erf into roughly
equal plots,
to transfer the plot on which the Khangales’ house
stands to the Khangales, and to transfer the plot on which the
Bushas’
house stands to the Bushas.
6
The third respondent, the
Registrar of Deeds, has refused to rectify what the Department says
was its mistake without an order of
court. Accordingly, the
Department approaches me under
section 6
of the
Deeds Registries Act
47 of 1937
, and asks that I cancel the deed under which the whole of
Erf 11602 was transferred to the Bushas. The effect of such an order
would be that registration of the Erf would revert to the Department,
which owned the Erf before it was transferred to the Bushas.
The
Department then intends to divide the Erf between the Khangales and
the Bushas and transfer to each of them the portion to
which they
were originally entitled.
7
The Bushas resist the
application fiercely. They say that they were always entitled to the
whole Erf. The real mistake, they say,
was the construction of the
Khangales’ dwelling on their land, not the transfer of the Erf
to the Bushas. The Bushas have
brought an application to evict the
Khangales from the Erf. That application has been held in abeyance
pending the matter presently
before me.
8
In an effort to defend
what they say is their title to their half of Erf 11602, the
Khangales brought an application to reverse
what they called the
unlawful consolidation of Erf 11602 in the Bushas’ name. That
application failed before Thobane AJ,
on the basis that there had
never been such a consolidation, and so it was impossible to reverse
it. I think Thobane AJ was right
to reach that conclusion. The true
situation was, as I have said, that the whole Erf was transferred to
the Bushas. Even though
the Khangales occupy half of it, the
Khangales have never had title to any part of the Erf.
9
The question before me,
then, is whether I should exercise my powers under
section 6
of the
Deeds Registries Act to
cancel the transfer of the property to the
Bushas.
Section 6
grants me an implicit but apparently wide-ranging
power to cancel deeds registered against immovable property (see
Kuzwayo v Representative of the Executor in the Estate of the Late
Masile
[2011] 2 All SA 599
(SCA), paragraph 26).
10
However far that power
extends, at its very core must be the power – and, in an
appropriate case, the duty – to cancel
deeds registered by
mistake. South Africa operates a negative system of deeds
registration. That means that the deeds register
is not conclusive
evidence of its own correctness. In other words, the register may be
corrected where there is legal cause to
do so. This is to be
contrasted with positive systems of deeds registration, where the
registration and the existence of an ownership
right are more or less
the same thing.
11
In South Africa, ownership
of a particular plot of land is only valid if it is lawfully
acquired. Ordinarily, ownership passes from
one person to another on
the implementation of what is known as the “real agreement”.
The real agreement is embodied
in the giving and receiving of
possession of a thing with a mutual intention to transfer ownership
of it. In
Commissioner of Customs and Excise v Randles Brothers
1941 AD 369
, at 398, it was held that “[o]wnership of movable
property does not in our law pass by the making of a contract. It
passes
when delivery of possession is given accompanied by an
intention on the part of the transferor to transfer ownership and on
the
part of the transferee to receive it. If it is delivered in
pursuance of a contract of sale, the ownership may pass at the time
of delivery or it may not. Conditions may occur in the contract of
sale which will delay or, if they are not fulfilled, altogether
prevent the passing of ownership . . . whether or not an intention to
transfer ownership by delivery exists is a question of fact,
not of
law.”
12
This “abstract”
theory of transfer – that a change in ownership of a thing does
not depend on the validity of
an underlying contract, but upon the
overriding intention of the parties to pass ownership while
transferring possession –
also applies to immovable property,
such as land (see
Legator McKenna Inc v Shea
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA) paragraphs 21 and 22). Ownership passes when land is registered
in the name of the transferee pursuant to the transferor’s
intention to pass ownership, and the transferee’s intention to
receive it. For the purposes of passing land ownership, possession
is
transferred symbolically by the registration of a deed. But
registration without the intention to pass ownership has no legal
consequence.
13
It follows from all of
this that the mere registration of Erf 11602 in the Bushas’
names was not enough, in itself, to secure
their ownership of it.
What was required, in addition, was the Department’s intention
to transfer ownership of the whole
Erf exclusively to the Bushas.
14
Although the Bushas claim
that this was the Department’s intent all along, the undisputed
facts tell a different story. The
developer of the Erf, acting on the
Department’s instructions, built two housing units on the Erf.
The Department approved
the Khangales’ housing subsidy, used it
to build one of the two houses constructed on the Erf, and then gave
them possession
of that house. The Erf is unusually large. On the
Bushas’ own version, the developer told them that the Erf was
too big to
have just one house constructed on it. The Bushas are
unable to point to any single-dwelling plots of a similar size
anywhere else
in the township (it was originally said, in the Bushas’
answering affidavit, that there were such plots, but the Department,
in reply, confirmed that the plots to which the Bushas adverted were
at best around two thirds the size of Erf 11602).
15
Accordingly, there can be
no serious dispute that, even though it transferred the whole of Erf
11602 to the Bushas, the Department
never intended to do so. It
committed an administrative error. What the Department really
intended to do was to subdivide the Erf
into roughly equal portions,
and transfer one portion each to the Khangales and to the Bushas. The
absence of any intent to transfer
the whole Erf to the Bushas means
that there was never a real agreement to transfer the Erf, and
ownership never truly passed to
the Bushas. The correct position in
law is that the Department still owns the Erf, and the deeds registry
must be corrected to
reflect that reality.
16
For all these reasons, the
application must succeed and the deed transferring Erf 11602 to the
Bushas must be cancelled.
17
The Department also asks
that it be exempted from producing a rates clearance certificate
under
section 118
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32
of 2000
to facilitate the retransfer of the Erf. But the Department
is already exempted from producing such a certificate by operation of
law, because
section 118
(4) of the Act dispenses with the need to
produce a certificate in the case of “a transfer from the
national government,
a provincial government or a municipality of a
residential property which was financed with funds or loans made
available by the
national government, a provincial government or a
municipality”. Interpreted purposively,
section 118
(4) must
also apply to any retransfers necessary to convey a property to the
person originally intended to benefit from it. The
mere cancellation
of the deed ought also, in theory, be enough to facilitate the
retransfer of the property without the production
of a clearance
certificate. The Department also asks that I declare that the Erf was
erroneously registered in the Bushas’
names and that I direct
the Bushas to sign such documents as may be necessary to effect the
retransfer of Erf 1106 to it. Again,
this is not strictly necessary.
The effect of my order cancelling the deed will be that, legally
speaking, the transfer never happened.
18
Nonetheless, transfer of
land, even when authorised by court order, is a notoriously
bureaucratic affair. I would rather risk superfluity
in my order than
set the parties up for future administrative wrangling. This dispute
has been twenty years in the making. The
sooner the Department’s
original intent is given effect to, the better for everyone involved.
I will accordingly grant the
ancillary relief the Department seeks.
19
I think each party must
pay their own costs. It is true that the Bushas have snatched at a
bargain that was never really theirs
for the taking, and that their
opposition to this application was wholly untenable. However, the
fundamental cause of this dispute
was the Department’s error. I
do not think it would be right to make the Bushas pay for what is, at
bottom, the Department’s
ineffectual implementation of a
housing project meant to benefit the Khangales, the Bushas and other
poor and vulnerable people
in need of housing assistance. It also
strikes me that the Department has never really explained how the
error it asks me to correct
occurred. It is successful in this
application only because the situation on the ground is wholly
inconsistent with any other explanation.
There are limits to the
criticism that can fairly be directed at the Bushas in these
circumstances.
20
Accordingly –
20.1
It is declared that Erf 11602 Lenasia Extension 13,
Registration Division IQ, Gauteng, was erroneously registered in
the
names of the first and second respondents.
20.2
The Deed of Transfer number T23451/2014, registered against
Erf 11602 Lenasia Extension 13, Registration Division IQ,
Gauteng, is
cancelled.
20.3
The first and second respondents are directed to sign all such
documents as may be necessary to register Erf 11602 Lenasia
Extension
13, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng, in the first applicant’s
name.
20.4
In the event that the first and second respondents fail or
refuse to comply with the order in paragraph 20.3, the Sheriff
of
this Court is authorised to sign the necessary documents on their
behalf.
20.5
The first applicant is exempted from producing a rates
clearance certificate in order to transfer Erf 11602 Lenasia
Extension 13, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng back into its name.
20.6
Each party will pay their own costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives
by email, by uploading to the electronic file of this
matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment to the South
African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 19 February 2024.
HEARD
ON:
13 February 2024
DECIDED
ON:
19 February 2024
For
the Applicants:
N Kakaza
Instructed
by
Raborifi R Inc
For
the First and
O Mudimeli
Second
Respondents:
Instucted by
Legal Aid South Africa
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