Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 262South Africa
Pomona Energy Proprietary Limited v Van Der Berg and Others (2024-015638) [2024] ZAGPJHC 262 (12 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 March 2024
Headnotes
“Here the possession which must be proved is not possession in the ordinary sense of the term – that is, possession by a man who holds pro domino, and to assert his rights as owner. The whole question is discussed by Voet (41.2.3), and he called that kind of possession ‘natural possession’ as distinguished from juridical possession … But to this natural possession, as to all possession, two elements are essential, one physical, and the other mental. First there must be the physical control or
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Pomona Energy Proprietary Limited v Van Der Berg and Others (2024-015638) [2024] ZAGPJHC 262 (12 March 2024)
Pomona Energy Proprietary Limited v Van Der Berg and Others (2024-015638) [2024] ZAGPJHC 262 (12 March 2024)
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sino date 12 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1. REPORTABLE: No
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
Case
No: 2024-015638
In
the matter between:
POMONA ENERGY PROPRIETARY
LIMITED Applicant
and
BERNADETTE
VAN DER BERG
N.O.
First
Respondent
PHILIPPUS
CHRISTOFFEL WILLEM VAN DER BERG
N.O.
Second Respondent
BERNADETTE
VAN DER BERG
Third
Respondent
PHILIPPUS
CHRISTOFFEL WILLEM VAN DER BERG
Fourth Respondent
KOPANO
PROCUREMENT & SERVICES
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The applicant seeks by way of urgent spoliatory proceedings to be
immediately restored “
undisturbed possession of portion 1 of
Holdings 285 Pomona Estate Agricultural Holdings, Registration
Division I.R Province of Gauteng
”.
2.
A trust, of which the first and second respondents are the trustees,
permitted the applicant to take up occupation of the
site for the
purpose of conducting a business consisting of the sale of diesel and
the provision of parking facilities for logistic
companies. This was
pursuant to a contractual arrangement but the details of which are
not relevant for purposes of spoliatory
relief. There is some dispute
as to whether it is the applicant rather than a related entity that
was given occupation of the site
by the trust, but I will assume in
favour of the applicant that it was the applicant who was so afforded
occupation of the site.
3.
For reasons that will follow, it is important to appreciate that the
restoration that the applicant seeks is the undisturbed
possession of
the entire site.
4.
For the applicant to succeed, it would have to show that it was in
undisturbed possession of the site and that the respondents
deprived
it of that possession forcibly or wrongfully or against its consent.
5.
On 29 January 2024 the applicant’s chief executive officer, who
is the deponent to the founding affidavit, was denied
entry at the
gate to the site by a security guard acting upon the instructions of
the respondents. This precipitated these urgent
proceedings.
6.
I find that the spoliatory proceedings were initiated with sufficient
expedition to justify a hearing of the application
on the urgent
court roll.
7.
The requirements for a spoliation order are clear: an applicant must
prove that he was in peaceful and undisturbed possession
(occupation)
of the property and that the respondent deprived it of its possession
(occupation) forcibly or wrongfully or against
its consent.
8.
Bristowe J in
Burnham v Neumeyer
1917 TPD 630 at 633
is typically cited as authority:
“
Where
the applicant asks for spoliation he must make out not only a prima
facie case, but he must prove the facts necessary to justify
a final
order – that is, the things alleged to have been spoliated were
in his possession and they were removed from his
possession forcibly
or wrongfully or against his consent.”
9.
Greenberg JA in what is perhaps the
locus classicus
of
Nienaber v Stuckey
1946 AD 1049
at 1053 said as to the level
of the proof required:
“
Although
a spoliation order does not decide what, apart from possession, the
rights of the parties to the property spoliated were
before the act
of spoliation and merely orders that the status quo be restored, it
is to that extent a final order and the same
amount of proof is
required as for the granting of a final interdict, and not of a
temporary interdict.”
[1]
10.
What this
means is that if there are two
bona
fide
but
conflicting factual versions, the respondent’s version is
effectively to be preferred in terms of the usual
Plascon-Evans
rule.
[2]
11.
Before turning to the facts, something it to be said of the kind of
possession that is required and is protected by spoliation
proceedings.
12.
The full bench of the Transvaal Provincial Division in
Scholtz v
Faifer
1910 TPD 243
at 246 (in what has been described as an
‘authoritative expression of the law’ on the nature of
the possession of property
which the law requires the applicant has
to retain continuously in order to preserve his lien) as cited in
De
Jager v Harris N.O. and the Master
1957 (1) SA 171
(SWA) at 178I
– 179A, held:
“
Here
the possession which must be proved is not possession in the ordinary
sense of the term – that is, possession by a man
who holds
pro
domino
, and to assert his rights as owner. The whole
question is discussed by Voet (41.2.3), and he called that kind of
possession
‘natural possession’ as distinguished from
juridical possession … But to this natural possession,
as to
all possession, two elements are essential, one physical, and
the other mental. First there must be the physical control or
occupation – the detentio of the thing; and there must be the
animus possidendi – the intention of holding and exercising
that possession.”
13.
The cases recognise that exclusive control or possession is not
necessary, including for spoliatory proceedings. See,
for example,
Nienaber v Stuckey above and Painter v Strauss
above at
314 C.
14.
The
applicant’s counsel relied particularly on
Bennett
Pringle (Pty) Ltd v Adelaide Municipality
1977
(1) SA 230
(E), in which terms such as “control”, “use”
and “enjoyment” and the holding of the property
were
considered.
[3]
This case
is particularly instructive as it demonstrates that what an applicant
would be required to establish by way of
possession need not be
possession to a greater degree than that which it enjoyed when
operating under the contractual arrangement
pursuant to which it was
afforded occupation of the site as that was the sort of possession
envisaged as sufficient by the parties
when the applicant took
occupation of the site pursuant to that contractual arrangement.
15.
As the judgment points out,
“
the
question of ‘possession’ is one of degree. Where what is
encompassed by possession (in this case to run the abattoir)
requires
little in the way of positive physical action by the possessor, the
person who gave him such right and he now invades
it cannot justify
his conduct on the ground that there was very little positive
physical activity by the possessor. The enquiry
must be whether the
conduct of the possessor – minimal as it might be – shows
that he did
exercise
rights or carry out activities consistent with the transfer to him of
control of the premises
;
and whether he did so with the intention of securing some benefit to
himself
”.
[4]
16.
The applicant’s counsel submitted that this was authority for
the proposition, if I understood his argument correctly,
that any
form of possession, minimal as it may be, would be sufficient for
protection by way of spoliatory proceedings. In my view,
this is an
over-reading of
Bennett Pringle
. Rather the kind of possession
that would be protected by way of spoliatory proceedings is that
possession which was consistent
with the transfer to the possessor of
control of the property. In some instances, but not all, this may be
minimal. But in the
present instance the kind of possession that the
applicant had as at 29 January 2024 must be consistent with the
transfer of control
of the site to the applicant for the purpose of
the sale of diesel and the provision of parking facilities for
logistic companies.
17.
Also to
consider, in determining the kind of possession that the applicant
had as at 29 January 2024 when it was denied any further
access to
the site, is the degree of control that one or other of the parties
had in relation to the site, particularly by way
of access. In
MMAC
Access Scaffolding CC v Xstrata South Africa (Pty) Ltd
2010
JDR 105 (GNP) it was held that where a person needs to rely upon
another in order to obtain access, this cannot constitute
possession
or control. But the specific circumstances and facts of each case
need to be considered as this criterion is not necessarily
decisive.
[5]
18.
The respondents contend that the applicant had effectively abandoned
the site and had not controlled the site since 8
December 2023. That
is when the respondents first denied the applicant access to the
site. After various demands made by the applicant’s
attorneys,
the applicant was permitted to continue to access the premises. There
appears to have been a similar incident on 21
December 2023 when the
respondents again denied access to the applicant and again after some
letter-writing, access to the site
by the applicant’s
representatives was restored by the respondents.
19.
On 29 January 2024, the respondents again denied access to the site
by the applicant’s representatives, but this
time did not allow
the applicant’s representatives to return. That precipitated
these urgent proceedings.
20.
It is fair to say from the applicant’s own version that the
applicant’s conduct of the diesel depot and parking
facility
for logistic companies, whatever it may have been before December
2023, had become sporadic, at best. The respondents
contend for a
gradual abandonment of the site, commencing on 8 December 2023. The
respondents contend that when they denied any
further access to the
applicant’s representatives on 29 January 2024, the applicant
had effectively abandoned the site entirely.
21.
The applicant deny that it abandoned the premises, and that it
intended to resume full-scale business operations, and
so that when
the respondents denied its representatives access on 29 January
2024, that constituted spoliation.
22.
The following facts are common cause or not seriously disputed.
23.
The respondents with what appears to be relative ease were able to
instruct the security guards that were regulating access
to the site.
This is apparent from the respondents having instructed the security
guards to deny access to the applicant on 8 December
2023, again on
21 December 2024, and then again on 29 January 2024. While until
mid-January 2024 the security guards may have been
paid by the
applicant, those security guards nonetheless appear to have taken
instructions from the respondents rather than the
applicant. Then
from mid-January 2024 it appears that the security guards refused to
take any further instructions from the applicant,
apparently as they
had not been paid.
24.
The respondents control access of trucks to the site. The applicant
complains that the respondents denied access to the
site of trucks
that were making diesel deliveries. The applicant in its founding
affidavit describes how on 21 December 2023 the
respondents prevented
one of their diesel deliveries from being off-loaded at the site.
25.
The applicant describes an incident where the third respondent
arrived at the site and without the applicant’s consent
took
away 100 litres of diesel. The respondents deny that this was without
consent, but what is relevant for present purposes is
the ease with
which the respondents could enter the site and effectively do as they
please.
26.
It also appears from the affidavits that it is not only the security
guards but also the employees generally on site that
were prepared to
take instructions from the respondents. The respondents state that
from mid-January 2024 the applicant no longer
had any employees on
site as they had resigned, apparently because of non-payment. The
applicant denies certain aspects of this
version but what is relevant
for present purposes is that there is at least a factual dispute as
to what extent the applicant controlled
its staff or even had any
staff on the premises.
27.
The electricity to the site was disconnected, apparently because of
non-payment by the applicant, and so the electrical
fencing
surrounding the site was no longer operational.
28.
to its founding affidavit and his wife, had access to the premises
and could, and did, at least occasionally, come and
go. What this
demonstrates is intermittent access by the applicant’s
representatives. But this is not by itself sufficient
to demonstrate,
at least for purposes of final relief, that the applicant exercised
control over the site.
29.
When regard
is had to these facts, there is a
bona
fide
factual dispute whether the applicant retained the sort of possession
envisaged as sufficient by the parties in this particular
instance
for conducting from the site the business as a diesel depot and
parking facilities for logistic companies. To put it differently,
when regard is that to these facts, it cannot be said that
respondents’ contended for overall factual version that the
applicant
was not in possession as at 29 January 2024 is so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that it is to be rejected merely on
the papers.
[6]
30.
Taking the
facts as stated by the respondents, together with the admitted facts
in the applicant’s affidavits,
[7]
it cannot be found that the applicant enjoyed the kind of control
when the dispossession took place on 29 January 2024 that the
parties
envisaged as sufficient when the applicant initially assumed and
exercised occupation of the site for purposes of its business
in
terms of their contractual arrangement. While the applicant may
initially have had this kind of control, such as being able
to
instruct its security guards and employees, there is a genuine
factual dispute whether that control still persisted as at 29
January
2024.
31.
Controlling access is not, in every instance, a
sine qua non
for a person to be in possession of the site from which it conducts
its business. Whether control of access is required is matter
specific. In this matter, the kind of control that was envisaged by
the parties when the applicant took possession of the site
was that
it would control access to the site, and so it is that kind of
control or possession – one that entails controlling
the access
to the site – that the parties envisaged as sufficient when the
applicant initially assumed and exercised occupation
of the site for
purposes of its business in terms of their contractual arrangement.
There is a genuine dispute of fact that the
applicant had such
control of access as at 29 January 2024.
32.
It is common cause that the applicant had until 29 January 2024
intermittent access to the site and that at all times
the applicant
retained, and still has, keys to an office situated on the site in
which the applicant stored its documents. So,
the applicant contends,
it has possession to at least that extent and therefore is entitled
to the spoliatory relief that it seeks.
And so, the applicant’s
counsel submits, this “possession”, as minimal as it may
be is, and relying on
Bennett Pringle
above, is sufficient to
warrant protection by way of the spoliation.
33.
But, as I have already explained, it is not minimal protection that
is protected by spoliatory relief in this instance
but that kind of
possession which would have been regarded as sufficient when the
applicant took occupation of the site for purposes
of its business.
And, as I have found, there is a serious factual dispute whether that
kind of occupation existed as at 29 January
2024.
34.
But assuming that the kind of ‘possession’, or perhaps
more aptly described ‘access’ that the
applicant enjoyed
(being intermittent access to the site and to the office) but
was then denied on 29 January 2024 is capable
of protection by way of
spoliatory proceedings, in the present instance the applicant does
not seek the restoration of that form
of ‘possession’ or
‘access’. This appears from the formulation of the relief
by the applicant in
its notice of motion, which I have set out
at the beginning of this judgment. The applicant seeks restoration of
undisturbed possession
of the entire site. And there is a
bona
fide
dispute of fact whether the applicant had possession of the
entire site as at 29 January 2024.
35.
At least for purposes of this application this intermittent ‘access’
to the site and the retention of the
office keys is not synonymous
with control and therefore undisturbed possession of the entire site.
36. The following
order is made:
36.1.
the application is dismissed; and
36.2.
the applicant is to pay the respondents’ costs.
Gilbert AJ
Date of
hearing:
28 February 2024
Date further submissions
received: 6 March 2024
Date of judgment:
12 March 2024
Appearance
for the applicant:
Mr J Dorning (attorney)
Instructed
by:
MJD Law Inc
Counsel
for the respondents:
Mr S Viljoen
Instructed
by:
Pienaar Kemp Inc
[1]
See too
Painter
v Strauss
1951 (3) SA 307
(O) at 312 A-C.
[2]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Limited v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Limited
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634 E-G.
[3]
At 232H – 233H.
[4]
At 237 B-D. My emphasis.
[5]
See the many decisions dealing with whether it can be said that an
occupant of a home in a sectional title complex or a gated
residential community can be said to be in occupation of his or her
home in circumstances where a security company engaged by
the body
corporate or the homeowners association, as the case may be,
controls access to the residential facility through boomed
entrances.
[6]
Botha
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
2009
(1) SA 277
(SCA) at para 4, with reference to
Plascon-Evans
Paints
above at 634 E – 635 C.
[7]
Plascon-Evans
at
634 E-G, as reaffirmed in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at 290 D-G.
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