Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 644South Africa
N.M v P.M and Others (22/1716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 644 (9 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 July 2024
Headnotes
by Certificate of Registration Title no. T55168/1999 and for an
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## N.M v P.M and Others (22/1716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 644 (9 July 2024)
N.M v P.M and Others (22/1716) [2024] ZAGPJHC 644 (9 July 2024)
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sino date 9 July 2024
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED.
Case
No: 22/1716
In the matter between:
N[...]
C[...]
M[...]
Applicant
and
P[...]
M[...]
M[...]
First Respondent
K[...]
A[...]
M[...]
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
BARNES AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant and the First Respondent were
married in community of property in 2004. There are divorce
proceedings currently pending
between them.
[2]
The Second Respondent is the First
Respondent’s mother.
[3]
The application pertains to an immovable
property described as Erf 7[…] M[…] Extension 1[…],
situated in Gauteng
(“
the
Property
”).
[4]
The Property was purchased by the First and
Second Respondents in 2000 and is owned jointly by them.
[5]
The Applicant seeks orders declaring that
she and the First Respondent are the true and lawful owners of the
Property and transferring
the Second Respondent’s share of the
Property to herself.
[6]
The relief sought by the Applicant is
framed in her Notice of Motion in the following terms:
“
1.
That pending the finalisation of divorce proceedings under case no:
1730/2020 instituted by the Applicant against the First
Respondent,
for inter alia an order that the Applicant and First Respondent be
declared the true and lawful owners of the immovable
property
described as Erf 7[…] M[…] Extension 1[…]
Township, Registration Division I.Q, The Province of Gauteng
in
Extent 423 as will appear from General Plan S G no. 2606/1999 and
held by Certificate of Registration Title no. T55168/1999
and for an
order that the mentioned property be transferred into the names of
the Applicant and the First Respondent.
2.
That the Third Respondent be and is hereby directed to endorse its
records so as to reflect the terms of the order as set
out in
paragraph 1.
”
[7]
In
her founding affidavit, the Applicant states that the application is
one for “
interim
interdictory”
relief and that “
the
object of the application is to preserve the integrity of the
aforementioned property pending the divorce proceedings, for the
declaratory order declaring the Applicant and the First Respondent as
the true and lawful owners of the aforementioned property
with
further ancillary relief that the property be transferred back into
our names.”
[8]
The Applicant’s characterisation of
the application is fundamentally incorrect. The application is not
one for interim interdictory
relief at all. No interdict is sought,
whether interim or otherwise. Nor is the application one to “preserve
the integrity
of the Property” whether pending the divorce
proceedings or at all.
[9]
Instead, what is sought is final relief
declaring the Applicant and the First Respondent to be the lawful
owners of the Property
and transferring the Second Respondent’s
50% share of the Property to the Applicant.
The Merits
[10]
The Applicant seeks her relief on the basis
of the following averments made in her Founding Affidavit:
a.
During or about 2000, the Second Respondent
loaned the First Respondent the sum of R40 000.00 towards the
purchase of the Property.
b.
A term and condition of the loan was that
the “
Second Respondent would be
included in the title deed
”.
c.
The First Respondent repaid the loan to the
Second Respondent in full and with interest.
d.
Subsequent to the re-payment of the loan,
it was agreed that the Second Respondent’s name would be
removed from the title
deed and replaced with the Applicant’s
name.
e.
The Applicant and the First Respondent gave
instructions to Baloyi Attorneys to attend to the “amendment”
of the title
deed, but for some inexplicable reason this was not
done.
[11]
The Applicant then makes the following
averments in her founding affidavit, without further substantiation:
a.
“
I submit that I am entitled to
the half share of the Property by virtue of my marriage with the
First Respondent
.” and
b.
“
The Second Respondent has no
claim in the property
.”
[12]
In their answering affidavit, the First and
Second Respondents aver that they took out a joint home loan with
Nedbank in the year
2000 and that the Property was registered in both
their names. They aver further that the joint home loan was
later transferred
from Nedbank to Standard Bank under the same terms
and conditions. These averments are not denied by the Applicant.
[13]
As far as the loan from the Second
Respondent to the First Respondent is concerned, the respondents
contend that the sum of R 40 000.00
was lent and advanced
from the Second Respondent to the First Respondent not as a
contribution to the purchase price of the Property
but for the
purchase of a caravan by the First Respondent. The Respondents deny
that it was a term and condition of the loan that
the Second
Respondent be “included in the title deed”.
[14]
The First Respondent contends that he and
the Applicant approached Baloyi Attorneys with the intention of
“adding” the
Applicant to the title deed (as opposed to
removing the Second Respondent’s name from the title deed) but
this was never
followed through.
[15]
It is apparent from the above that the
Applicant’s factual averments pertaining to the loan are
disputed by the Respondents.
Even if they were not disputed, the
Applicants factual averments, on their own terms, disclose no basis
in law for her claim to
50% of the Property. Even if it was a term
and condition of the loan agreement that the Second Respondent’s
name would “
be added to the title
deed
” it does not follow that
consequent upon the re-payment of the loan, the Second Respondent
would lose ownership of her share
of the Property.
[16]
The Applicant apparently fails to
understand or appreciate the nature of the transfer of ownership in
law.
[17]
As
Mr Gwala, counsel for the respondents, correctly submitted, it is now
trite that the abstract theory applies to the passing of
ownership of
property in our law. In terms of this theory there are two
requirements for the passing of ownership: delivery (which
in the
case of immovable property is effected by registration of transfer in
the deeds office) and a real agreement between the
parties. The
essential elements of the real agreement are an intention on the part
of the transferor to transfer ownership and
an intention of the
transferee to become the owner of the property.
[1]
[18]
There is no suggestion in this case that
there was any defect in the real agreement between the First and
Second Respondents. Both
parties were legally competent to acquire
the Property after securing the joint bond from the bank. The
Property was accordingly
validly transferred to the First and Second
Respondents and is currently owned by them in equal half shares. The
conclusion of
a loan agreement, as pleaded by the Applicant, even if
accepted as correct, has no impact on the First and Second
Respondent’s
ownership of the property.
[19]
Moreover, the Applicant has failed to put
up any written agreement, signed by the parties, which would meet the
requirements of
the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
. This, in my
view, is also fatal to the application. In the absence of any written
deed of alienation in relation to the Second
Respondent’s share
of the property, I cannot find that there is a basis to declare that
that share is owned by the Applicant.
[20]
The fact that the Applicant is married to
the First Respondent in community of property quite clearly does not
entitle her to a
half share of the Property as she appears to contend
in her founding affidavit. What the marriage entitles her to,
at most,
is half of the First Respondent’s half share in the
Property, that is, a 25% share of the Property.
[21]
In the result there is no basis for the
relief sought by the Applicant and the application stands to be
dismissed with costs.
[22]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
Order
1.
The Application is dismissed with costs.
BARNES AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Heard:
12 February 2024
Judgment:
9 July 2024
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv W Ndlovu
Instructed by Peter Zwane
Attorneys
Respondent:
Adv M Gwala
Instructed by Baloyi
Incorporated Attorneys
[1]
See
in this regard
Legator
McKenna Inc and Another v Shea and Others
2010 (1) SA 35
(SCA), especially at para 22 thereof.
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