Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 273South Africa
Smith v Kyaligonza (22/19414) [2024] ZAGPJHC 273 (14 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Smith v Kyaligonza (22/19414) [2024] ZAGPJHC 273 (14 March 2024)
Smith v Kyaligonza (22/19414) [2024] ZAGPJHC 273 (14 March 2024)
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sino date 14 March 2024
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 22/19414
1.REPORTABLE:
2.EPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
3.REVISED.
14 March 2024
In
the application to compel between:
SMITH,
RUTH
Applicant
and
KYALIGONZA,
ANTHONY
Respondent
In
re:
SMITH,
RUTH
Applicant
and
KYALIGONZA,
ANTHONY
First
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
Second Respondent
MUNICIPALITY
JUDGMENT
DEN
HARTOG AJ
1.
This is an interlocutory application that came before me on 7 March
2024 in terms of which the Applicant sought an order
in the following
terms:
1.1. Ordering the
Respondent to grant a land surveyor and/or town planner duly
appointed by the Applicant, access to the Respondent’s
property
for the purpose of
inter alia
, taking the necessary
measurements and inspecting the building structure/s on the
Respondent’s property, which would enable
the land surveyor
and/or town planner to compile an expert report.
1.2. Ordering the
Respondent to give the land surveyor and/or town planner access to
the Respondent’s property within
a period of fifteen (15)
calendar days from the date of granting of this order.
1.3. Ordering the
Respondent to pay the costs of this application on an attorney and
own client scale.
2.
The original main application brought by the present Applicant sought
a demolition order of certain buildings and structures
erected by the
Respondent on Erf 3[…], G[…] T[…], Gauteng, with
street address situate at 5[…] G[…]
E[…] R[…],
G[…], Johannesburg.
`
3.
The Second Respondent in this matter is the CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY, but has played no part in any
of the two
applications.
4.
The motivation for the demolition relief sought in the main
application transpires from building work that the First Respondent
commenced on his property.
5.
These building works commenced during or about February 2017 with the
Applicant suspecting that the works were illegal
in that they were
being carried out in an extremely close proximity to the boundary
wall between their respective properties.
6.
The Applicant also raises certain aesthetic problems with the
building works.
7.
The Applicant then commenced with an investigation and established
that no building plans had been submitted
to and/or approved by the
Second Respondent and launched an application for the demolition of
the illegal building works.
8.
The application was initially heard by default and an order was
granted in terms the notice of motion as sought by the
Applicant.
This order was subsequently rescinded by the First Respondent and
eventually an answering affidavit was filed by the
First Respondent.
9.
In the answering affidavit, the First Respondent alleges
inter
alia
:
9.1. “
I am
advised that even if I had encroached and/or constructed structures
outside the approved municipal plans, the municipality
would have
afforded me an opportunity to apply and/or comply with the By-laws…
”
9.2. “
I am
further aware that prior to the approval of the building plans, the
municipality attended to my property and conducted an inspection.
On
the strength of this, the allegations of encroachment are baseless…
”
9.3. “
Upon
completion of the boundary wall, I proceeded with construction work
to renovate the whole property and to rebuild the house.
I must place
that I only worked on the existing foundation, no additional
structures were built. Simply put I maintained the existing
building
plan…
”
9.4. “
The
construction work and renovations to my property were completed
around the year 2022 and no illegal structures were added, the
house
remains a single structure with a few additions and alterations as
detailed in the plan attached hereinabove…
”
9.5. “
In
approaching this Honourable Court, the Applicant in paragraph 30 of
her founding affidavit, alleges that I have erected several
rooms and
structures at the property, which structures were at close proximity
to the boundary wall. I deny these allegations as
baseless,
uninformed and is without merit…
”
9.6. “
In
amplification of the denial, I place that the Applicant never took
time to come over to my property and raise these issues with
me, and
measure the alleged distance she complains about…
”
9.7. “
I
reiterate that the renovations already completed at my property do
not constitute several structures as suggested, no new structures
were added, only the cottage was demolished and a new wall erected
where it used to be, no encroachment towards the boundary wall
as
suggested by the Applicant exists…
”
9.8. “
I
seek to proceed to further add that the renovations, concluded at my
property have not resulted in several numerous structures
but rather,
one complete structure. This Honourable Court is invited to note that
there is one structure, not several structures
as alleged…
”
9.9. “
Following
from the plan and the evidence I have adduced, I submit the
Applicant’s case has no merit, on the fact that the
structure
at my property is approved by the municipality…
”
9.10. “…
There is no encroachment to the Applicant’s property…
”
9.11. “…
There
are no illegal structures at my property, I have a valid building
plan in relation to the structures build at my property,
that has
been approved by the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality…
”
9.12. “
No
additional structures were added, I only made renovations to the
existing structure and extended the existing structure, all
this was
done in line with approved building plan…
”
9.13. “…
save to deny that no building works were done close to the
boundary wall, and that the municipality would not have approved the
plans if ever they were encroaching on any neighbour including the
Applicant…
”
9.14. “…
I only renovated my property. I did not commence a new structure
from the ground up. The allegation that I have built close to the
boundary wall is untrue as I built on top of the previous foundation
and did not move my property any closer to the wall. The positioning
of my property has not changed and is still as it was before the
renovations were undertaken…
”
9.15. “…
The entertainment area is nowhere closer to the Applicant’s
property and these are simply unsubstantiated allegations…
”
9.16. “…
There
are no illegal building works
…”
9.17. “…
My
building plans have been approved by the requisite entity with such
authority and no illegal structures exist at my property
to warrant a
demolition…
”
10.
The aforesaid allegations prompted the present application, the
Applicant alleging that she is not in a position to respond
to these
allegations as she has no access to the property and requires the
appointment of a town planner to do the necessary measurements
to
enable her to draft and file a replying affidavit.
The
First Respondent’s contentions
11.
The First Respondent contends that the main application was premised
on the fact:
11.1. that there
were no building plans; and
11.2. ancillary to
that, there was an encroachment.
12.
The production of the building plans annexed to the answering
affidavit as annexure “FA4” resolves the matter
in that
the First Respondent now has building plans, which was the
Applicant’s main cause of complaint and consequently the
Applicant should withdraw her application.
13.
The First Respondent rejects the Applicant’s contention that
her case is premised on illegal structures and that
the allegation of
illegality is linked to the lack of building plans. The First
Respondent further contends that by the presentation
of an
approved building plan, the causa for the application falls away.
Applicant’s
contention
14.
The Applicant contends that the production of approved building plans
does not mean that the structures are now legal,
but it is for the
First Respondent to show that the construction work was done in
accordance with the approved building plans.
For this contention the
Applicant relies on the allegations in her founding affidavit, namely
that:
14.1. there were no
building plans at the time of the launching of the application (this
is common cause);
14.2. the
motivation for the investigation to establish whether there are
building plans was as a result of a suspicion that
certain by-laws
and provisions, title deeds etc. had not been complied with and
consequently the structures were illegal;
14.3. there was a
direct encroachment into the borderlines of the structures; and
14.4. according to
a due diligence report by Urban Ideas Development Planners (Pty)
Limited:
“
1.5.2
Some amendments and additions have not been approved between the time
stamps of 2015 and 2022.
”
15.
I interpose to deal with this report in that the First
Respondent alleges that this report constitutes new material
introduced in a replying affidavit and does not form part of the
Applicant's original cause of action.
16.
In my view this is a presentation of facts supporting the founding
affidavit wherein the suspicion is raised that there
has been
non-compliance with by-laws and/or regulations.
17.
The First Respondent in any event had other remedies at his disposal
to deal with this contention and did not utilise
them.
18.
Although the First Respondent did not raise as an issue my power to
grant an order as sought in these interlocutory proceedings
by the
Applicant, I raised the issue with counsel for the Applicant. Counsel
for the Applicant pointed out that Rule 36 of the
Uniform Rules of
Court applies merely to actions and not to applications.
19.
Counsel for the Applicant however pointed out that in term of Section
173 of the Constitution, No 108 of 1996 confers
inherent powers on
the High Court to protect and regulate their own process, and to
develop the common law, taking into account
the interest of justice.
20.
In my view the fact that Rule 36 of the Uniform Rules of Court merely
applies to actions, does not preclude me from granting
an order in
these terms. As stated however, the First Respondent did not raise
this as an issue in any way.
21.
I also deal with Section 14 of the National Building Regulations and
Building Standards Act, No 103 of 1977 in terms of
which a
certificate of occupancy is to be issued to the owner of the building
in which an erection has taken place, which certificate
of occupancy
shall provide therefore that the renovations and alterations are in
accordance with the approved building plans.
22.
This section goes further to make it an offence for somebody to
occupy such premises unless a certificate of occupancy
has been
issued.
23.
The First Respondent has failed to present any such certificate of
occupancy.
24.
Upon questioning the First Respondent’s counsel as to what the
objection is against an inspection in light of the
allegation that
all the building works have been concluded in terms of the approved
building plans, counsel responded that there
was no obligation on the
First Respondent to allow such an inspection and that the Applicant
had never engaged with him. In fact,
the Applicant had approached the
Court by default behind the First Respondent’s back and
consequently there is no obligation
on the First Respondent to engage
with the Applicant.
25.
In addition, it is stated in the papers that the Applicant is a
difficult neighbour and the First Respondent does not
want his
privacy to be violated by the Applicant going through the property.
CONCLUSION
26.
In my view, the Applicant has not shifted the goal posts. The
Applicant could not at the outset commence with an application
based
on the fact that the buildings had not been erected in accordance
with approved building plans, because there were simply
no building
plans.
27.
As submitted by counsel for the First Respondent, the application was
brought on a two-pronged approach, namely:
27.1. there were no
approved building plans; and
27.2. there was an
encroachment of the Applicant’s property in that the buildings
were to close to the boundary line.
28.
I furthermore find that the Applicant clearly commenced with
investigations and instituted the main application as a result
of her
suspicions that there had been non-compliance with by-laws and/or
regulations, the inference being that because the structures
were
illegal, there would be no building plans. Her investigations then
established that there had indeed been no approved building
plan.
29.
It is only when the application was launched, that the First
Respondent hurriedly approached the Second Respondent for
the
approval of building plans.
30.
On the evidence presented by the Applicant together with the town
planner’s report, I am of the view that the Applicant
has
established
prima facie
that there has been non-compliance
with the approved building plans and is entitled to have the property
inspected. This view is
strengthened by the Respondent’s
failure to put up an occupancy certificate.
31.
I have considered the various arguments and I am of the view that an
independent town planner be appointed in these proceedings.
32.
Counsel for the Applicant impressed upon me to grant a punitive cost
order due to the First Respondent’s obstructive
conduct. I am
of the view that costs are to be reserved for argument at the hearing
of the main application.
33.
Once a town planner has conducted his inspection, the proof will be
in the pudding of that report and the Court dealing
with the main
application will be in a much better position to adjudicate whether
the costs of this application are to be borne
by the First Respondent
and on what particular scale it is to be born.
34.
I make the following order:
34.1. The First
Respondent is ordered to grant a land surveyor and/or town planner
duly appointed by the South African Association
of Consulting
Professional Planners to the First Respondent’s property for
the purpose of
inter alia
, taking the necessary measurements
and inspecting the building structure/s on the First Respondent’s
property, which will
enable the said land surveyor and/or town
planner to compile a report.
34.2. Ordering the
First Respondent to give the land surveyor and/or town planner access
to his property within a period of
fifteen (15) calendar days from
being provided proof of his appointment by the South African
Association of Consulting Professional
Planners.
34.3. Costs of the
application are reserved.
A
P DEN HARTOG
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter on
Caselines. The date of the
judgment is deemed to be 14 March 2024
HEARING
DATE:
7 MARCH 2024
DELIVERED:
14 MARCH 2024
Counsel
for the Applicant:
N Lombard
Attorneys
for the Applicant
Bregman Moodley Attorneys
Inc
Ref: S Moodley/BB/PMS118
Counsel
for the Respondent: B
Ndlovu
Attorneys
for the Respondent
Precious Muleya Attorneys
Ref:
adv/civ/resc/kyaligonza
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