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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mohlala v Mashamaite and Others (2022/059691)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 607 (4 July 2024)
Mohlala v Mashamaite and Others (2022/059691)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 607 (4 July 2024)
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sino date 4 July 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
4 July 2024
Case
No.
2022/059691
In
the matter between:
THOBEDI
COLLINS MOHLALA
Applicant
and
LAWRENCE
MASHAMAITE
First Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
The
applicant, Mr. Mohlala, purchased ERF 6[…] W[…] M[…]
Zone 2[…], T[…], from the first respondent,
Mr.
Mashamaite. The purchase agreement was concluded on 30 June 2001. The
purchase price was R8000. The price was payable in instalments.
The
first instalment, apparently paid on signature of the agreement, was
R4000. The balance of the price was to be settled in monthly
instalments of R500. The final instalment was paid on 28 February
2002. Mr. Mohlala was in occupation of the property at the time
the
purchase agreement was concluded and remained in occupation
thereafter. In 2002, he improved the property by constructing seven
rooms which he let out to tenants. He continued to reside at the
property until 17 November 2022.
2
Sometime in 2016 or 2017 (the parties do not give a
precise date) the property was further improved by the construction
of a state-subsidised
house. That triggered the dispute which is
presently before me. Although it is not clear from the papers who was
supposed to benefit
from the housing subsidy used to construct the
house (and presumably to buy the land), the subsidy beneficiary was
likely Mr. Mashamaite.
It is a fair inference from the papers that
the state allocated the land to him. He had then sold the property in
its unimproved
condition, and felt short-changed when, a decade and a
half after he did so, the state finally constructed a house on it.
3
Once the subsidised house was built, Mr. Mashamaite
asserted that he still owned the property, and sought to evict Mr.
Mohlala from
it. On 15 March 2022, the Tembisa Magistrates’
Court stayed Mr. Mashamaite’s eviction application for two
months, directing
the parties to approach the High Court for “an
appropriate order”. Although the Magistrate’s reasons are
not
a model of clarity, it appears that the Magistrate took the view
that he had no jurisdiction to decide the central issues in the
case.
He identified those issues as whether there was a sale agreement
between the parties, and whether, if there was, it was valid.
4
On 29 April 2022, in the urgent court of this division,
Mr. Mashamaite obtained an order for Mr. Mohlala’s eviction
from the
property. The order appears to have been granted under
section 5 of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful
Occupation
of, Land Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”).
Section 5 authorises the urgent interim removal of an unlawful
occupier pending
the outcome of an application for a final eviction
order if the jurisdictional requirements set out in section 5 are
met. The 29
April 2022 order is, on its face, final rather than
interim. Mr. Mohlala says he was not given notice of the proceedings
that led
to it being granted. If, despite appearances, the section 5
order was interim in nature, the eviction proceedings in which it was
granted do not appear to have been finalised.
5
It was, to put it mildly, unfortunate that an urgent
eviction order under section 5 of the PIE Act was granted at all in a
case
like this. The circumstances in which the order was obtained
underscore, in my view, the need for a court to approach applications
under section 5 of the PIE Act with circumspection, and to act under
that provision only once the court is satisfied that the relevant
jurisdictional requirements have been met. It seems clear to me that
those requirements were absent in this case, if only because
the
eviction order was not executed until 17 November 2022, around six
and a half months after it was granted. Be that as it may,
since the
29 April 2022 order is not at issue before me, I need say no more
about it.
6
On 6 December 2022, undeterred by his exclusion from
the property, Mr. Mohlala instituted the application now before me.
In it,
he seeks a declaration that he owns the property, pursuant to
the 30 June 2001 sale agreement; an order directing the second
respondent,
the Municipality, to amend its records to reflect his
ownership; and an order directing the third respondent, the Registrar
of
Deeds, to register the property in his name.
The
validity of the sale agreement
7
The fact of the sale agreement is not seriously
disputed. Mr. Mohlala annexes to his founding papers three affidavits
in which the
material terms of the sale agreement are recorded by Mr.
Mashamaite. The affidavits were commissioned at the Tembisa Police
Station.
Annexed to the third affidavit is a schedule purporting to
record the payment of each of the instalments due under the
agreement.
That schedule is signed by Mr. Mohlala and Mr. Mashamaite.
8
In his answering affidavit, Mr. Mashamaite flatly
denies that he entered into the sale agreement. He also denies that
he received
the payments due under it. However, Mr. Mashamaite does
not address the three affidavits or the annexure upon which Mr.
Mohlala
relies. He does not even suggest that they were forged. On
any fair analysis, Mr. Mashamaite does no more than meet Mr.
Mohlala’s
case based on those documents with a series of bare
denials. As counsel for Mr. Mashamaite was constrained to accept
before me,
those denials are so vague, far-fetched and untenable that
they must be rejected. The affidavits and the annexure may safely be
accepted as genuine. It follows that Mr. Mashamaite’s assertion
that he never entered into the agreement they embody is plainly
false.
9
The real issue between the parties is in fact whether
the documents that embody the sale agreement are a “deed of
alienation”
for the purposes of
section 2
(1) of the
Alienation
of Land Act 68 of 1981
. That provision states that “no
alienation of land . . . shall . . . be of any force or effect unless
it is contained in
a deed of alienation signed by the parties thereto
or by their agents acting on their written authority”. The Act
defines
“deed of alienation” as “a document or
documents under which land is alienated”. This obviously allows
for a situation in which several documents read together constitute a
valid deed. If the documents upon which Mr. Mohlala relies
are a
valid deed, then the sale agreement is, on its face, enforceable. If
the documents are not a valid deed, then the sale agreement
could
never have served as a basis on which Mr. Mohlala acquired ownership
of the property.
10
In
Cooper NO v Curro Heights Properties (Pty) Ltd
2023 (5) SA 402
(SCA) at paragraph 16, Meyer JA, relying on a long
line of authority, held that a valid deed of alienation under section
2 (1)
is one in which the whole contract – “its material
terms” – is reduced to writing. Depending on the
circumstances,
the material terms may extend well beyond the
essentials of the contract – the parties, the price and the
thing sold –
to any other term that “materially affects
the rights and obligations of the parties” to the particular
agreement at
issue.
11
It seems to me that, read together, the three
affidavits and the annexure upon which Mr. Mohlala relies constitute
a “deed
of alienation” in this sense. They contain the
essentials of the contract, and they record the time and manner of
payment
of each of the instalments. They confirm that the property
was “handed over” to Mr. Mohlala on 28 February 2002. The
schedule of instalments annexed to the third affidavit was signed by
both parties. Neither party identifies in their papers any
other
material term that was not recorded in the affidavits and the
annexure.
12
There is a further complication. Because it is an
instalment sale agreement, the deed of alienation ought also to have
complied
with section 6 of the Act, which prescribes the content of
instalment sale agreements for the sale of land. It is common cause,
though, that the deed leaves out several of the terms that section 6
prescribes. The main point of debate at the hearing was accordingly
whether, assuming that they constituted a valid deed of alienation
under section 2 (1), the documents on which Mr. Mohlala relies
were
nonetheless void for non-compliance with section 6 of the Act.
13
If any of the terms identified in section 6 were a
material part of the agreement between Mr. Mohlala and Mr. Mashamaite
that had
failed to find their way into the deed, then the deed would
of course be void. But that would not be because of non-compliance
with section 6, but because, contrary to section 2 (1), material
terms agreed between the parties had not been reduced to writing.
It
was not suggested that any of the terms set out in section 6 were of
that nature. That leaves the question of whether section
6 voids a
deed of alienation merely because the deed fails to contain all the
terms prescribed in section 6, notwithstanding that
those terms were
not material to the parties’ rights and obligations under the
agreement.
14
In this respect, I agree with the decision of Kairinos
AJ in
Chetty v ERF 311 Southcrest CC
2020 (3) SA 181
(GJ), in
which it was held that non-compliance with section 6 of the Act does
not in itself render a deed of alienation void from
the outset, but
merely voidable at the election of the purchaser. The purpose of
section 6 is to protect the interests of the purchaser.
Assessed in
light of that purpose, the effect of section 6 cannot be to void a
deed of alienation a purchaser wishes to enforce
merely because the
deed leaves out a term that section 6 prescribes, but which is not
material to the agreement between the parties.
15
It follows from all this that the deed of alienation on
which Mr. Mohlala relies is a valid one for the purposes of the Act.
The
deed complies with section 2 (1) of the Act. The absence from the
deed of some of the terms prescribed in section 6 does not render
the
deed void, because the excluded terms were never material to the
agreement struck between Mr. Mohlala and Mr. Mashamaite.
Remedy
16
It remains, however, for me to consider whether this
means that I can, without more, declare Mr. Mohlala to be the owner
of the
property. There is no evidence before me that Mr. Mashamaite
in fact owned the land at the time he purported to sell it, other
than a municipal account in Mr. Mashamaite’s name, and the fact
that the parties agree that Mr. Mashmaite owned the property
at the
point of purchase. I have not seen a title deed evidencing Mr.
Mashamaite’s ownership of the property, apparently
because
title deeds for the state subsidised houses constructed at Winnie
Mandela have not yet been issued.
17
In a perfect world, I would have been content to draw
the inference, merely on the basis that neither the Registrar of
Deeds nor
the Municipality have responded to this application, that
they are satisfied that Mr. Mashamaite had the rights of ownership he
purported to alienate to Mr. Mohlala in the sale agreement. Modern
bureaucracy being what it is, however, I cannot realistically
be
confident that either the Registrar or the Municipality regard this
case as anything more than a private dispute between Mr.
Mohlala and
Mr. Mashamaite in which they play no role, and to which they need not
apply their minds.
18
Because of the involvement of the state in making the
property available and constructing a house on it, I do not think
that is
the correct approach in this case. I know that Mr. Mashamaite
was allocated the property under the terms of the national housing
subsidy scheme, but I do not know what rights that allocation gave
him at the time when he sold the property to Mr. Mohlala. If
Mr.
Mashamaite did not in fact have the right to alienate the land
allocated to him at the point he entered into the sale agreement
with
Mr. Mohlala, then the Municipality or the Registrar should, given the
opportunity, be able to say so.
19
Moreover,
section 10A
of the
Housing Act 107 of 1997
states that it is a condition of every housing subsidy that a
"dwelling or serviced site” acquired under the subsidy
will not be alienated within eight years of its acquisition, unless
the property has first been offered for sale back to the relevant
provincial housing department that allocated the site or dwelling to
the subsidy beneficiary. The offer must be for a price not
exceeding
the value of the subsidy used to purchase and develop the site or
dwelling. The parties accept that this did not happen
before Mr.
Mashamaite sold the property to Mr. Mohlala. At first blush, it seems
to me that non-compliance with
section 10A
does not void the sale,
but rather gives the provincial government a right of recourse
against the seller – in this case
Mr. Mashamaite. Nonetheless,
I think that it is necessary that the provincial government be given
an opportunity to raise any objections
it may have to the relief Mr.
Mohlala seeks. The MEC may also be able to shed light on what rights
Mr. Mashamaite actually had
at the point the sale agreement was
entered into.
Order
20
For all these reasons –
20.1 The MEC for Human
Settlements (Gauteng) is joined as the fourth respondent in these
proceedings.
20.2 A
rule nisi
is
issued calling on the second, third and fourth respondents to show
cause, at 10am on Thursday 8 August 2024 or as soon thereafter
as
counsel may be heard, why the following order should not be granted –
“
1. It is declared that
annexures TCM 1, TCM 2 and TCM 3 to the applicant’s founding
affidavit constitute a valid deed
of alienation for the purposes of
section 2
(1) of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
.
2. It is declared that the applicant,
Thobedi Collins Mohlala, is the owner of the property situated at ERF
6[...] W[...] M[...],
Zone 2[...], T[...], Gauteng Province (“the
property”).
3. The second respondent, the
Ekurhuleni Municipality, is directed forthwith to amend its records
to reflect the applicant
as the owner of the property.
4. The third respondent, the
Registrar of Deeds, is directed forthwith to register the property in
the applicant’s name.”
20.3 The applicant’s attorney is
directed, by no later than 11 July 2024, to serve –
20.3.1 a copy of this judgment on the
second to fourth respondents, and to draw those respondents’
attention to the
rule nisi
it contains; and
20.3.2 a copy the application papers
on the fourth respondent.
20.4 The registrar of this court is
directed forthwith to draw the second to fourth respondents’
attention to this judgment,
and the
rule nisi
it contains.
20.5 The costs of the application to
date are reserved.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it 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 4 July 2024.
HEARD
ON:
30 May 2024
DECIDED
ON:
4 July 2024
For
the Applicant:
MV Sehunane
Instructed by Sehunane Attorneys Inc
For
the First Respondent:
Sithi and Thabela Attorneys
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