Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 297South Africa
Wohlkinger and Others v Schoonbee and Others (2022/23317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 297 (26 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 February 2024
Headnotes
and I do not include all the grounds:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wohlkinger and Others v Schoonbee and Others (2022/23317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 297 (26 February 2024)
Wohlkinger and Others v Schoonbee and Others (2022/23317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 297 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2022/23317
1.REPORTABLE:
No
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
3.REVISED: No
26 March
In the matter between:
WOLFGANG
WOHLKINGER
First Applicant
RUI
MIGUEL DE FIGUEIREDO N.O
Second Applicant
TANYA
ROCHA
N.O
Third Applicant
obo LWWS
HOLDINGS TRUST (IT3059/2004)
THE UNKNOWN OCCUPIERS
OF UNIT 5
MONT
BLANC HEIGHTS
Fourth Applicant
and
CONRAD
LODEWYK SCHOONBEE N.O
First Respondent
ANGELA
DEBORAH SCHOONBEE N.O
Second Respondent
GERHARD
JOHANNES VISSER N.O
Third Respondent
obo BY DIE GROOT
DORINGBOOM
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 9894/2006)
IN RE:
CONRAD
LODEWYK SCHOONBEE N.O
First Applicant
ANGELA
DEBORAH SCHOONBEE N.O
Second Applicant
GERHARD
JOHANNES VISSER N.O
Third Applicant
obo BY DIE GROOT
DORINGBOOM
INVESTMENT
TRUST (IT 9894/2006)
and
WOLFGANG
WOHLKINGER
First Respondent
RUI
MIGUEL DE FIGUEIREDO N.O
Second
Respondent
TANYA
ROCHA
N.O
Third Respondent
obo LWWS
HOLDINGS TRUST (IT3059/2004)
THE UNKNOWN OCCUPIERS
OF UNIT 5
MONT
BLANC HEIGHTS
Fourth Respondent
EKHURULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Fifth
Respondent
This matter has been
heard on Microsoft Teams and is otherwise disposed of in terms of the
Directives of the Judge President of
this Division.
JUDGMENT
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE
TO APPEAL
DE BEER AJ
1.
On
21 November 2023 this court handed down its judgment evicting the
Applicants from
the immovable
property known as Unit […], M[..] B[…] H[…],
situated at corner S[…] and O[…] Streets,
B[…]
G[…], B[…] (“the property”). Furthermore,
interdicting and restraining the Applicants from
entering and/or
occupying the aforesaid property pursuant to them having vacated or
being ejected from the property.
2.
The
Applicants now applies for leave to appeal against the order and
judgment. This application is opposed by the Respondents
(Applicants
a
quo
).
The judgment against which leave to appeal is sought, is detailed and
I do not intend to regurgitate my reasoning and findings.
3.
The application for leave to appeal is
premised on grounds set out in the application for leave to appeal
dated 12 December 2023.
The grounds are repetitive in nature and
several grounds are duplicated. The following is my own summary and I
do not include all
the grounds:
3.1.
The court erred in granting the eviction
order.
3.2.
The court erred in dismissing the fact that
the Respondents had knowledge of the long lease upon acquiring the
immovable property,
thereby finding that there is no lease agreement
to which the Respondents are bound by, or a lease that justify the
Applicants
occupation of the property.
3.3.
The court erred in not having regard to the
pending review application before the Rental Tribunal.
3.4.
The court erred and misdirected itself in
not giving judicial recognition to the pending Section 381 (3)
investigations commissioned
by the Assistant Master of the High
Court.
3.5.
The court erred in disregarding the several
disputes of fact.
4.
The Respondents relied on the
rei
vindicatio
and only needs to prove
ownership and that the Applicants had no right to occupy.
5.
Section 4(8) of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction From and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE
Act”) stipulates
that if the court is satisfied that all the
requirements of this section have been complied with and no valid
defence has been
raised by the unlawful occupier, it must grant an
order for eviction.
6.
The Applicants’ only attack on the
eviction application
per se
was
premised on the fact that they had a right to occupation by virtue of
a long-term lease.
6.1.
The long lease was not registered against
the title deed.
6.2.
Resultant,
the Applicants bore the
onus
and had to proof that the Respondents had sufficient knowledge of the
long-term lease when they acquired the property. The Applicants
had
to establish that the Respondents had the degree of knowledge of the
long-term lease which would render it legally binding.
[1]
Insufficient evidence was produced that would lead the court to
believe that the Respondents had knowledge of the said lease. The
Applicants failed to discharge this
onus
.
6.3.
The auction pack as referred to by the
Applicants was overridden by the express clause, clause 2.6 contained
in the sale agreement.
The said clause clearly stipulated that the
property is not subject to a lease.
6.4.
In addition, the auction pack clearly
stipulated that units sold individually are sold without any leases
in place.
6.5.
The Applicants’ representative in his
heads of argument submitted that the Respondents must first cancel
the agreement before
embarking on an eviction application. The case
authority is clear that it can be done upon application.
Notwithstanding the afore
and in this instance, cancelation is not
required, because the Applicants first had to establish knowledge of
the long lease for
it to binding on the Respondents and for the
principle of “
huur gaat voor koop
”
to apply.
6.6.
Regard being had to the defence
specifically raised by the Applicants to the eviction application,
the Court was satisfied that
all the requirements for the eviction
were met, and no valid defence had been raised by the unlawful
occupier.
7.
As
stated before, a long-term lease is not effective against a successor
of a lessor for longer than 10 years if it is not registered
or the
successor had no knowledge when he/she obtained the leased land.
[2]
By virtue of the fact that the long term-lease was not registered,
and the fact that Respondents had no knowledge of the lease
when they
acquired the property, there was no agreement to which the
Respondents were bound by. Accordingly, the legitimacy of
the lease
agreement determined by the Rental Tribunal, and the subsequent
review application had no bearing on the facts before
me. The
eviction application is not dependant on the Rental Tribunal’s
ruling.
8.
The
court’s disregard of the alleged section 381 enquiry is
premised on the inadmissible hearsay evidence tendered in the
answering affidavit with no reliance on section 3(1)(c) which could
not have been taken into consideration because of its lack
of
evidential value.
[3]
8.1.
The Clarification affidavit filed by the
Applicants was done without the permission of the court and there was
no formal application
to admit the same. It was therefore regarded as
pro non scripto.
8.2.
The Applicants tendered evidence to the
section 381 enquiry was unsupported because of the lack of
confirmatory affidavits by any
of the individuals referred to in the
answering affidavit.
8.3.
The
section 381 enquiry in terms of the Companies Act
[4]
is not a defence to the
rei
vindicatio.
It
is and remain an enquiry by the Master into the conduct of the
liquidator and has no bearing on the Respondents as the registered
owner or the right to occupation.
8.4.
Lastly, the order obtained by Cloete Murray
NO (Joint Liquidators) on 19 January 2023 before my sister, Justice
Janse van Nieuwenhuizen
militates against the assertions levelled
against the liquidators that sold the property.
9.
With
reference to
Soffiantini
v Mould
[5]
it was held:
“
If
by mere denial in general terms the respondent can defeat or delay an
applicant who comes to court on motion, then motion proceedings
are
worthless, for a respondent can always defeat or delay petitioners by
such a device.
It is necessary to make a
robust, common-sense approach to a dispute on motion as otherwise the
effective functioning of the court
can be hamstrung and circumvented
by the most simple and blatant stratagem.
The court must not
hesitate to decide an issue of fact on affidavit merely because it
may be difficult to do so, justice can be
defeated or seriously
impeded and delayed by an over-fastidious approach to a dispute
raised in the affidavits
.” (Own emphasis)
10.
It is an abused and often-utilised
stratagem by practitioners to argue that a dispute of fact exists
where there is none. On the
real issue in question i.e. the eviction,
there is no dispute of fact.
11.
The
test to be applied in an application for leave to appeal is set out
in
section
17(1)(a)
of
the
Superior Courts
Act
10
of 2013
which
provides that:
“
(1)
Leave to appeal
may only be
given
where the judge or
judges concerned are of the opinion that-
(a)
(i) the appeal
would
have a reasonable
prospect of success
; or
(ii)
there is some
other
compelling reason
why
the appeal should be heard, including conflicting judgments on the
matter under consideration;”
(own emphasis)
12.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal set out the application for a test to grant
leave to appeal
in
Cook
v Morrisson and Another
[6]
as
follows:
“
[8]
The existence of reasonable prospects of success is a necessary but
insufficient precondition for the granting of special leave.
Something more, by way of special circumstances, is needed.
These may include that the appeal raises a substantial point of
law;
or that the prospects of success are so strong that a refusal of
leave would result in a manifest denial of justice; or that
the
matter is of very great importance to the parties or to the public.
This is not a closed list (Westinghouse Brake &
Equipment
(Pty) Ltd v Bilger Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1986
(2) SA 555
(A)
at
564H – 565E; Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria v Moabi
2017
(2) SACR 384
(SCA)
([2017] ZASCA 85) para 21).”
13.
In
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhita
[7]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal emphasised the application for the test for
leave to appeal and found as follows in paragraphs [16]
to [18]:
“
[16] Once
again it is necessary to say that
leave
to appeal
,
especially to this court,
must
not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable prospect of
success
.
Section
17(1)(a)
of
the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes
it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge
concerned is of the opinion that the
appeal would have
a reasonable prospect of success
;
or there is some other compelling reason why it should be heard.
[17] An
applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect
or realistic chance of
success on appeal.
A mere possibility of success, an arguable
case or one that is not hopeless, is not enough.
There
must be a sound, rational basis to conclude that there is a
reasonable prospect of success on appeal
.
[18] In
this case the requirements of 17(1)(a) of the
Superior
Courts Act
were
simply
not met. The uncontradicted evidence is that the medical staff at BOH
were negligent and caused the plaintiff to suffer harm.
The special
plea was plainly unmeritorious
.
Leave to appeal should have been refused. In the result, scarce
public resources were expended: a hopeless appeal was prosecuted
at
the expense of the Eastern Cape Department of Health and ultimately,
taxpayers; and valuable court time and resources were taken
up in the
hearing of the appeal
.
Moreover, the issue for decision did not warrant the costs of two
counsel.”
(own emphasis)
14.
The
above legal principles enunciated, emphasise, that the requirement
for a successful leave to appeal is more than a mere possibility
that
another judge
might
come
to a different conclusion. The test is whether there is a
reasonable prospect of success that another judge
would
come
to a different conclusion.
15.
The
workload in the judiciary is ever increasing and a judge who
considers any application for leave to appeal, has a judicial duty
to
ensure that unmerited appeals do not become part of the workload of a
Full Court of this division and/or the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
Appeals without merits should simply not be granted leave to appeal.
16.
Regard being had to the afore, I am of the
firm view and persuasion that another court would not come to a
different conclusion
and that there is no compelling reason to grant
leave to appeal.
ORDER
1.
The Applicants leave to appeal is
dismissed.
2.
The Applicants, jointly and severally, the
one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered to pay the
Respondents costs.
DE
BEER AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
:
For the First to Fourth
Applicants: Mr. T Dunn
Instructed by:
TJC Dunn Attorneys
For the Respondents:
Adv. CJC Nel
Instructed by:
Van Der Meer & Schoonbee Attorneys
Date of Hearing:
26 March 2024 – Microsoft
Teams
Date of Judgment:
26 March
2024
[1]
Grant
and Another v Stonestreet and Others
1968
(4) SA 1
(A) at 16H-17A, 20.
[2]
Section 1(2)
of the Formalities in respect of the Leases of Land Act
18 of 1969.
[3]
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
.
[4]
Act 61 of 1973.
[5]
1956 (4) SA 150
(at 154 G-H).
[6]
2019
(5) SA 51
(SCA).
[7]
2016
JDR 2214 (SCA).
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