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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kgasi v Vilane and Another (23667/2015)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 708 (1 August 2024)
Kgasi v Vilane and Another (23667/2015)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 708 (1 August 2024)
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sino date 1 August 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 23667/2015
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒
3.
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
1
August 2024
WJ
du Plessis
In
the matter between:
MAKHENTSHI
NELSON KGASI
APPLICANT
and
MOHAMED
ALI VILANE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MOHAMED
ALI VILANE NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING, GAUTENG PROVINCE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
THE
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING, GAUTENG PROVINCE
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
#
# Background
Background
[1]
This is a
case about the entitlement to a house initially allocated in terms of
the Black (Urban Areas) Consolidation Act
[1]
(hereafter the Urban Areas Act) and various regulations promulgated
in terms of it, a lease registered in terms of the s6A of the
same
act, and later in terms of s 52(1) of the Black Communities
Development Act,
[2]
as well as
the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act
[3]
(hereafter the Conversion Act) and the Upgrading of Land Tenure
Rights Act
[4]
(hereafter the
ULTRA). The aftershock of these regulatory measures, promulgated as
part of the Apartheid government's grand scheme
of spatial apartheid,
greatly impacts family relations, causing great strife. This is one
such case.
[2]
The Applicant (hereafter referred to as “Mr Kgasi”),
seeks an order for an adjudication to be held by the
Third to Fifth
Respondents relating to the ownership of immovable property situated
at 5[…] M[…] Street, Zone […],
M[…],
Soweto, held in terms of Deed TL8587/1999. The property is currently
registered in the name of the First Respondent
(hereafter referred to
as “Mr Vilane”), and the Applicant’s deceased
mother, Wilhelmina Madibeng Vilane (hereafter
referred to as “the
deceased”). He was in a relationship with the deceased, who
passed away in 2003.
[3]
The Third
Respondent is the Director General of Housing (hereafter “the
DG”), Gauteng Province, cited in their capacity
as the officer
responsible for housing matters in terms of the Conversion of Certain
Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act,
[5]
(the “Conversion Act”) or under the Gauteng Housing
Act
[6]
(the “Gauteng
Housing Act”).
[4]
The Fourth Respondent is the MEC of Housing in Gauteng (hereafter
“the MEC”), cited in their representative
capacity as the
member of the Executive responsible in terms of the Conversion Act or
under the Gauteng Housing Act.
[5]
The Fifth Respondent is the Department of Housing (hereafter “the
Department”), a statutory body established
in terms of an Act
of Parliament to regulate housing matters. The Sixth Respondent is
the Registrar of Deeds, Johannesburg, responsible,
amongst other
things, for the registration of immovable properties.
[6]
Mr Kgasi seeks an order to set aside the purported decision and for
them to adjudicate on the matter and determine who
the true owner of
the house in question is after an investigation and a hearing in
terms of s 2 of the Conversion Act or the Regulations
in terms of the
Gauteng Housing Act.
#
# Background
Background
[7]
The house
in question has a long history. Situated in Zone […], M[…],
Soweto, it was initially allocated to Mr Kgasi’s
deceased
maternal grandmother, Motlalepule Bertha Kgasi (“Bertha”),
in terms of what was known as “the green
book system”,
formally leasehold in terms of Regulation 7 of Chapter 2 of the
Regulations Governing the Control and Supervision
of the Urban
Residential Areas and Related Matters GN 1036
[7]
(hereafter “R1036”). She obtained this right to reside in
the house on 16 July 1958. All her children and grandchildren
who
were alive at the time are listed on this permit. This was because,
during apartheid, if the name did not appear on the permit
or green
book, the police could arrest you. In the green book, the following
names are listed: the deceased and Mr Kgasi; Joyce
and Saul, the
children of the deceased daughter Emma; and Clement, the child of the
other deceased daughter Joyce.
[8]
Mr Kgasi states that he was raised by his grandmother and has lived
on the property since he was five months old. Bertha
passed away on
June 6, 1996. She had lived on the property until then.
[9]
Mr Vilane stated that he and the deceased were married. They met
around 1963 in Hillbrow, where the deceased was employed.
She worked
as a domestic worker and resided with her employer. She came to the
house on her day off. Mr Vilane states that they
married on 10
September 1975 and attaches a marriage certificate as proof, stamped
by the Bantu Affairs commissioner. He states
that the reason the
death certificates show that she died unmarried is because there were
no computers to capture the date of black
married persons. The court
accepts the validity of the certificate as proof of the marriage.
[10]
In the 1980s, when the deceased lost her job, she moved back into the
house with Mr Vilane. At Bertha's invitation, they
erected a shack on
the property. Mr Vilane lived there until the deceased passed away in
2003.
[11]
Mr Vilane states that on 10 July 1981, he, the deceased and Bertha
went to the local municipal offices to obtain a lodgers
permit for
him and the deceased to indicate that he was living on the property
with Bertha’s consent. Mr Vilane produced
a permit issued in
1981, on which he appears as the permit holder with his wife, the
deceased. The permit initially read “lodger’s
permit”,
but “lodger” is crossed out and “accommodation”
is written next to it. The permit states
that it is issued in terms
of Regulation 20 of Chapter 2 of R1036 regulations. At the bottom,
next to “name of site/residential
permit holder”, it is
signed “Bertha Kgasi”.
[12]
Mr Vilane states that by that time, he and the deceased had taken
over most of the house's affairs, including paying
rent to the
council. Around 1984, Bertha suggested that the deceased, as the last
born and the only child alive, and Mr Vilane
should buy the house. On
10 November 1984, Mr Vilane signed the deed of sale with the West
Rand Development Board. Hereafter, he
extended the house and built an
extra room. The deed of sale indicates that it is sold in terms of s
6A of the Urban Areas Act.
[13]
Around 1998, the deceased lodged a claim with the Housing Transfer
Bureau to become the registered owner of the property.
As she was
married in community of property, Mr Vilane also had to be on the
claim form. Once identified and the marriage certificate
produced,
the claim form was completed. Mr Kgasi says he was not informed of
the process back then, nor was anyone staying in the
house or listed
in the green book. He first learned about this after his mother
passed away.
[14]
Around this time, a dispute arose between Mr Vilane and Mr Kgasi, and
the deceased obtained an eviction order to evict
Mr Kgasi from the
property on 5 October 1998. On 23 February 1999, the property was
registered in the names of Mr Vilane and the
deceased, in terms of
the Conversion Act. It indicates that it is a certificate of
registered right of leasehold in favour of Mr
Vilane and the deceased
in terms of s 52(1) of the Black Communities Development Act read
with s 4 and 5 of the Conversion Act.
[15]
After the deceased's passing in 2003, Mr Vilane invited Mr Kgasi back
into the property as he had no permanent place
of residence. The
peace was short-lived, as, according to Mr Vilane, Mr Kgasi tried to
have him forcefully removed from the property,
demanding the house.
[16]
Mr Kgasi avers that after the deceased passed away, Mr Vilane started
harassing him to leave the property. Mr Kgasi learned
that Mr Vilane
had a girlfriend who wanted to stay in the house, but Mr Kgasi
refused. This is when Mr Vilane called the police
and wanted to evict
Mr Kgasi. Mr Vilane applied for a protection order against Mr Kgasi.
Mr Kgasi, in turn, went to court to file
a complaint about keeping
the peace. In between this, in 2010, Mr Vilane approached the WITS
law clinic to assist him in writing
a letter to Mr Kgasi informing
him that he was the registered co-owner of the property.
[17]
Mr Vilane eventually applied for an eviction order in the
Magistrate’s court in 2013, stating that Mr Kgasi was
an
unlawful occupier. The eviction was defended, and on 6 August 2015,
Mr Kgasi and his immediate family were ordered to vacate
the
property. He did not.
[18]
Mr Kgasi avers that he stays on the property with his customary wife.
He states that at 56 years old, this is the only
home he knows. He
does not have another place to stay. He never suspected that the
property was registered in anyone's name, and
he assumed that the
property was still held under the late Bertha in terms of the green
book.
[19]
Mr Kgasi believes the house should have been given to him or at least
to the deceased. Mr Vilane was always gainfully
employed but failed
to buy his own property. The property was obtained with a subsidy
from the Department of Housing. Mr Kgasi
does not trust Mr Vilane –
he fears the property might be sold to a third party.
[20]
Mr Kgasi states that the decision to convert the property to
ownership in the name of Mr Vilane and the deceased should
be
reviewed because there was misrepresentation when making the
decision. He brings the review on the following grounds:
i. It is unclear
whether there was an inquiry with an adjudication before the transfer
of the house. It is unknown what information
was before the
Department, and if they knew who stayed in the property, why they
were never informed about their rights to claim.
ii. The property
was possibly obtained fraudulently, as the Department was not
informed of other potential claimants. The
matter should be
adjudicated or re-adjudicated to determine who should qualify to be
the property owner.
iii. The
department's criteria for allocating the house are whether the
claimant is listed in the green book, on the permit,
or the 99-year
lease. Mr Vilane does not appear on any of these. However, all the
children and grandchildren of Ms Kgasi, who are
still alive, qualify.
With this knowledge, the Department might have made a different
decision.
iv. It is just and
equitable that the matter be referred back to be adjudicated upon so
that the interests of all the parties
can be considered.
#
# Respondent’s case
Respondent’s case
[21]
Mr Vilane objects to the application on various grounds. Firstly, he
states that the fact that neither the Housing Transfer
Bureau, who
made the decision nor the City of Johannesburg, the successor in
title of the West Rand Development Board and previous
owner of the
property, are joined makes the application fatally defective. For
reasons that will become apparent later, it is not
necessary to
decide on this.
[22]
Secondly, they raise the issue that 16 years have passed since the
Housing Transfer Bureau's decision, and they have
yet to ask for
condonation. This is an inordinate and unreasonable time and will
prejudice Mr Vilane, who has occupied the property
since 1981 and has
been co-owner since 1999. It is unnecessary to decide on this for
reasons that will become apparent later.
[23]
Thirdly,
the claim to set aside has prescribed in terms of
s 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
. The property being registered in 1999
means that that was when Mr Kgasi was deprived of his rights to the
property. The problems
surrounding prescription in these instances
have been dealt with in
Sebatana
v Mangena
[8]
and will not be repeated here. Again, this argument is not applicable
due to the reasoning below.
[24] Regarding
the merits, Mr Vilane argues that the property was awarded in terms
of
s 2
of the Conversion Act. In terms of this and the criteria for
eligibility for ownership of a previously Council-owned property,
they comply. This is because the original permit holder relinquished
her rights to the property, and Mr Vilane and the deceased
purchased
the property from the Council in 1984, paying rent since 1981, when
they became lodgers on the property. By the time
of the transfer of
the property around 1998, the deceased’s period of occupation
exceeded that of Mr Kgasi. Furthermore,
the deceased’s rights
to the property flowed from her mother, who was alive and consented
to Mr Kgasi residing on the property
until she evicted him in 1998.
Mr Kgasi is not an heir of the property as the deceased’s
estate had a market value of R46
000, and thus, in terms of intestate
succession, Mr Vilane inherited the entire half share of the joint
estate.
[25]
Mr Vilane claims that the Department of Housing did announce that
interested parties were invited to make submissions
for ownership of
previously Council-owned houses. In any event, he argues, since Mr
Kgasi’s rights flowed through his mother,
and because she was
living at the time, Mr Kgasi was not an interested party at the time.
#
# Discussion of the legal
principles involved
Discussion of the legal
principles involved
[26]
Spatial Apartheid depended on a myriad of regulations that supported
discriminatory practices regarding who may live
where and in terms of
what rights. Rights to property in urban areas were highly regulated.
Johannesburg, as in many other cities,
black people’s rights to
reside in the urban areas were based on permit systems, where
occupiers of urban properties depended
on state permission to reside
in these areas. As will be shown, during the 1980s, there was a
legislative drive to upgrade these
permits to long-term leases. In
the dying days of Apartheid at the end of the 1980s and beginning of
the 1990s, legislation was
promulgated to upgrade certain rights to
ownership. This history is reflected in the facts before the court on
a personal level.
[27]
Site
permits, residential permits, and certificates to occupy land in
Soweto were mostly granted under the R1036 regulations –
the
Regulations Governing the Control and Supervision of Urban
Residential Areas.
[9]
These were
issued in terms of s 38(8)(a) of the Urban Areas Act.
[28]
These
regulations provided for various permits that regulated rights to
land in urban areas. These rights remained personal in nature,
as
they were based on contractual relationships between the local
authority and the individual.
[10]
The most prominent categories were:
i. Regulation 6
site permits authorised the holders to lease an undeveloped site and
erect a dwelling on it, which required
a building permit. The holder
and their dependents were given exclusive use and occupation of such
a site. This permit could be
transferred by means of a lease or
alienation to another qualified person, subject to the Minister’s
approval.
ii. Regulation 7
residential permits authorise the holder to lease a Council dwelling
against payment of rent and levies.
Bertha had this permit. In terms
of Regulation 7(1), Mr Kgasi was a tenant (dependant) who had a right
of occupation (until 1984).
iii. Regulation 8
certificate to occupation applied to dwellings sold by the Council to
a qualified person. This was not a
sale of freehold property but
rather a sale of a contractual right of occupation against the
Council.
iv. Regulation 20
Lodger’s permits authorised the holder and his dependants named
on the permit to lease a part of a
dwelling. These permits were
reserved for lodgers who were not dependent on the registered
occupier (such as Mr Vilane and the
deceased). The registered
occupier's unmarried sons, daughters, widows, and unmarried
grandchildren did not need to apply for these
permits. These permits
could not be transferred.
[29]
The permit
or certificate could be transferred under certain conditions.
[11]
However, the permits and certificates lapsed on the holder's death,
although the dependant or heir had a preference in the allotment
of
the site or dwelling.
[12]
[30]
In 1978, the Urban Areas Act (sections 6A, 6B, and 6C) allowed for
the registration of 99-year leasehold rights over
property in black
urban areas. S 6A is applicable in this case and states:
(1)(a) Notwithstanding
the provisions of this Act or of any other law to the contrary, an
administration board may in respect of
land acquired by it under
section 12 of the Black Affairs Administration Act, 1971 (Act 45 of
1971), or of which it is the registered
owner, upon application made
to it in the prescribed manner and on the conditions prescribed
generally or approved by the Minister
in any particular case, grant
in the prescribed manner in respect of any surveyed site situated on
such land, a right of leasehold
for a period of ninety-nine years to
a qualified person.
[…]
(5) Registration under
subsection (4) of a right of leasehold shall, in addition to the
right of occupation, have the effect of
vesting in the holder of the
right of leasehold-
(a)
subject to the provisions of any law relating to the erection,
alteration or demolition of buildings, the right
to erect on the
surveyed site in question any building for residential purposes or
for the purposes of conducting therein any profession
or business, as
the case may be, or to alter or demolish any building thereon, and to
enjoy, in accordance with the regulations
and any conditions
prescribed generally or any conditions approved by the Minister in
any particular case and endorsed against
the entry in the register
relating to the site in question, the right of occupation of any
building on the site, whether erected
before or after registration;
(b) the
right to encumber, by means of a mortgage, the right of leasehold;
and
(c) the
right to dispose of the right of leasehold to any qualified person,
which shall include the right to let or
bequeath the site to a
qualified person: Provided that where such right is bequeathed
to or devolves upon a person who is
not qualified to hold the right,
only the net proceeds of any sale of the right shall be transferred
to such person.
[31]
Black persons could thus acquire a registered real right to
state-owned property. The holders' rights were still derived
from the
state. The Deed of Sale of 1984, signed by Mr Vilane, was such a
leasehold. The granting of this lease had the effect
of replacing the
Regulation 7 permit.
[32]
In 1986, the Black Communities Development Act in s 52(1) provided
that
A
board, local authority, township developer or the State may, subject
to the provisions of section 57D(i) in the case of a board
or local
authority, in respect of land of which the board or local authority
is the registered owner or which vests in the board
or local
authority or which has been made available to such board or local
authority in terms of the provisions of section 34 (9);
(ii) in the case of a
township developer, in respect of land of which it is the registered
owner or made available to such developer
in terms of the provisions
of section 34 (9); and
(iii) in the case of the
State, in respect of land owned by or vested in it, on application
made to it in the prescribed manner
and on the conditions prescribed
generally or approved by the Minister in any particular case, or
contained in conditions of title
or township conditions contemplated
in section 57B, grant to a competent person in the prescribed manner
in respect of any leasehold
site situated on such land, a right of
leasehold for a period of 99 years calculated as from the date of the
granting thereof:
Provided that where such a right of leasehold is in
terms of this Act transferred to another competent person in terms of
this
Act, the currency shall be for a like period of 99 years,
calculated as from the date of such transfer.
[33]
The “Certificate of Registered Right of Leasehold”
registered in the name of Mr Vilane and the deceased,
which is the
Deed that he attaches to prove his ownership, is such a right. This
replaced the previous leasehold with a leasehold
registered on 23
February 1999. Mr Kgasi’s name does not appear on this
certificate.
[34]
Having established that this right flows from the Black Development
Act, it is necessary to look at the process of converting
certain
rights in property in terms of the Conversion Act.
[35]
The Conversion Act was enacted (commencing 1 January 1989) to convert
specific categories of tenure into more meaningful
forms of
title—first leasehold and then full title. The occupational
rights provided by the various permits were converted
in specific
ways. In 1996, in terms of a resolution signed by the Premier of
Gauteng Provincial Government, the member of the Executive
Council:
Housing and Land Affairs was designated as a competent authority for
the administration of the Conversion Act in terms
of s 234(c)(ii) of
the Interim Constitution. This meant that the properties managed by
the Housing Bureau now fall under the supervision
of the Fourth,
Fifth and Sixth Respondents.
[36]
The
Conversion Act repealed R1036 regulations and transferred the
occupational rights held in terms of regulations 6 and 8 into
leasehold or ownership. However, Regulation 7 permits were to remain
rented properties in terms of s 6 of the Conversion Act, until
the
municipality changed the relationship with the tenants. As Jajbhay J
put it in
Nzimande
v Nzimande,
[13]
the rights conferred by these permits were retained and are protected
by s 6 of the Conversion Act.
[37]
Even if the
above-mentioned s 6A and s 52(1) leaseholds replaced the Regulation 7
permit, it is important to pause here for a moment
and ask whether s
2 of the Conversion Act
[14]
applies to the upgrade of Regulation 7 permits because it has
implications for the relief Mr Kgasi seeks.
[38]
Toho v
Diepmeadow City Council
[15]
clarified that specific properties were “affected sites”
as per the definition in the Conversion Act. Only these “affected
sites” trigger the application of s 2 of the Conversion Act.
These sites are property held in terms of the site permit in
terms of
Regulation 6, the certificate to occupy in terms of Regulation 8;
trading site permits in terms of Chapter 3 of the regulations
and
tenure under a local authority’s permit granting rights, which
were similar to the three previously mentioned rights.
However, the
unregistered statutory leases that came into being with the
promulgation of the Conversion Act do not fall under the
definition
of “affected site”, such as the residential permits under
Regulation 7, hostel permits in terms of Regulation
5, and permits
for the occupation of a site in terms of chapter 3 of the
regulations.
[16]
S 6(1)(a) of
the Conversion Act not only converted the permit into a statutory
lease but also excluded these rights from the definition
of “affected
site” and thus from s 2 of the Conversion Act. If this matter
dealt only with the “green book”
permit – the
Regulation 7 permit in the name of Bertha - then no inquiry was
needed before the upgrading, as these rights
are not upgraded in
terms s 2 of the Conversion Act.
[39]
In the
Toho
case, Stegman J also clarified that this statutory leasehold did not
preclude a permit holder from acquiring a leasehold on the
premises.
Such a leaseholder remained free to apply for the grant of a
leasehold in terms of the Black Communities Development
Act.
[17]
This is precisely what happened in this case, with the clear
indication on the lease that it should be read with ss 4
[18]
and 5
[19]
of the Conversion
Act, replacing the Regulation 7 permit.
[40]
Most of the
cases relied on by Mr Kgasi do not deal with Bertha's type of
leasehold. For instance,
Nzimande
v Nzimande
[20]
dealt with a Regulation 8 certificate to occupy that was ceded to the
deceased husband’s brother, even though the customary
law wife
had been staying on the property with the deceased. The reason for
this was because of the intestate inheritance laws
that precluded
women from inheriting. An enquiry was later held in terms of s 2 of
the Conversion Act, and the property was then
transferred to the
wife. The brother-in-law appealed this and argued that the appeal
panel was restricted to only consider the
holders listed on the
certificate. Jajbhay J disagreed and gave a purposive interpretation,
stating
“
The purpose
intended [by the Conversion Act] is to guarantee a fair and impartial
enquiry into the contentions of the contending
parties, as to who
would ultimately qualify to acquire ownership of the house. The
content of the right relied upon by the appellant
must be determined
before the Director-General can pronounce on the legality thereof.
The content of this right is really the values
and practices the
right is designed to support.”
[41]
While the court agrees with this judgement, Mr Kgasi's case differs
from the
Nzimande
case because the s 2 Conversion process
was
applicable in that case.
[42]
Likewise,
the
Shai
v Makena Family
[21]
case referred to also dealt with a Regulation 8 certificate to occupy
and the lack of process followed in terms of s 2 of the Conversion
case.
[43]
As did the
Supreme Court of Appeal case of
Kwashaba
v Ratshitanga,
[22]
which dealt with a
Regulation 8 certificate to occupy and a subsequent leasehold in
terms of s 6A of the Urban Act and the division
of the property upon
divorce. Interestingly, in that case, the applicants argued that the
property is a “family house”
and was never intended to be
the exclusive property of the first applicant, as the leasehold that
was upgraded was held on behalf
of the family. The automatic transfer
of the property was set aside on the basis that the occupants of the
property who lived there
should have been considered for ownership,
as the transfer of the house was subject to a family agreement
restricting the rights
of owners.
[23]
[44]
It is not
too clear from the papers, but it seems like Mr Vilane’s
leasehold rights got upgraded in terms of s 2 of the ULTRA
that was
promulgated to convert all registered leaseholds into ownership
automatically
[24]
when the
township register was opened. If this was the case, which I presume
it was, then in terms of ULTRA, no similar adjudication
process as in
s 2 of the Conversion Act was required.
[25]
Here,
Rahube
v Rahube
[26]
also does not help Mr Kgasi because
Rahube
deals with the discriminatory effect such exclusion had on women.
There is no challenge about the constitutionality or not of s
2(1) of
the ULTRA in cases such as these were before me.
[45]
On
provincial level, in Gauteng, the Gauteng Housing Act
[27]
in s 24A provides that
24A.
Transfer of residential properties.-
(1) The Department is
authorised to adjudicate on disputed cases that emerge from Housing
Bureaus established for the transfer of
residential properties, by
Premier's Directives in terms of section 171 of the Local Government
Ordinance, 1939 (Ordinance No.
17 of 1939)
and disputed cases that
emerged from the transfer of residential properties in terms of the
Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold
or Ownership Act, 1988
(Act No. 81 of 1988).
[own emphasis]
[…]
[46]
The Province's Department of Housing is thus tasked with dealing with
disputes arising from transferring residential
properties under the
Conversion Act. It does not state anything about an inquiry before
upgrading the rights.
[47]
Considering all this, the fact that s 2 of the Conversion Act is not
applicable, that the upgrade in terms of s 2 of
the ULTRA does not
require a decision to be made before upgrading, and that the Gauteng
legislation only deals with adjudicating
disputes
and not
making decisions, there was no “decision” made. It
follows that there is then also no decision to review. The
application must thus fail.
[48]
This does
not mean that the court does not also sympathise with Mr Kgasi’s
argument that this is the only house he has known
since birth. It is
not clear what legal right he relies on to stake his claim. For
instance, he does not contend that it is a “family
home”,
[28]
and that he might, therefore, have certain entitlements recognised by
law that need to be considered. Family agreements are often
recognised and endorsed on title deeds, and the Conversion Act, in s
2(3)(a), also alludes to that. However, living in the house
does not
automatically grant Mr Kgasi a legal title to the house, especially
not in the absence of proof of some family agreement
or family
practice.
[49]
For
example, a family house is based on certain norms or customs that
need to be proven if the claim is a right in the family property.
Shai v
Makena Family
[29]
is an example of this. Examples of norms related to the family house
include:
[30]
i. All family
members have access to the family property instead of one person
owning freehold land to the exclusion of others.
Registration of the
property into an individual name is often not performed by the family
but through a system of adjudication
and automatic upgrading through
various pieces of legislation.
ii. A custodian is
usually in charge of the house and responsible for its upkeep.
Succession usually relates to this role
rather than to the
inheritance of an object.
iii. Family members
(male and female) can access the property, provided they follow the
family norms. Even non-family members
are often welcomed in the
family home as they adhere to the family norms.
iv. Such familial
ownership also means that the house often cannot merely pass on
inheritance to the next individual heir.
v. Family
membership is maintained by participating in family affairs, events,
and ceremonies. Once physically and socially
removed from the family,
you risk your access to the property, too.
[50]
These remarks are made
obiter
, by example of what a claim to
the family property would entail. It is
obiter
, since the
relief sought is to review and set aside the decision to award the
house, not to declare who has the rights to the property.
[51]
To summarise, the leasehold replaced the Regulation 7 permit, and
such leasehold follows the upgrading process in s 2
of the ULTRA, not
s 2 of the Conversion Act. S 2 of the ULTRA does not involve a
“decision” like s 2 of the Conversion
Act. Thus, there is
no decision to review, and for that reason, the application must be
dismissed.
[52]
The parties addressed me regarding costs. The applicant felt that
since both parties relied on public interest law firms
to present
them in court, there should be no order regarding costs. The
respondent argued that the application was incorrectly
before the
court; Mr Kgasi should have challenged the eviction application and
not brought this application to frustrate the respondent
from
asserting his rights. I agree with the applicant on the issue of
costs.
#
# Order
Order
[53]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. I make no order
as to costs.
WJ
DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines and sending
it to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr M Motaung, attorney
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid SA (Soweto Justice Centre)
Counsel
for the respondent:
Mr Mtukushe
Instructed
by:
WITS law clinic
Date
of the hearing
20 May 2024
Date
of judgment:
01 August 2024
[1]
25
of 1945.
[2]
4 of 1984.
[3]
81 of 1988.
[4]
112
of 1991.
[5]
81 of 1988.
[6]
6 of 1998.
[7]
GG
2096 of 1968-06-14.
[8]
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 246 from para 136.
[9]
GN R1036 of 14 June 1968.
[10]
Olivier, N. "Property rights in urban areas." (1988)
SAPR/SAPL
at p 27.
[11]
Regulation 9.
[12]
Regulation 17(2).
[13]
2005
(1) SA 83 (W).
[14]
2.
Inquiry as to rights of leasehold.—
(1) The Director-General
shall conduct an inquiry in the prescribed manner in respect of
affected sites within his province in
order to determine who shall
be declared to have been granted a right of leasehold or, in the
case where the affected sites are
situate in a formalized township
for which a township register has been opened, ownership with regard
to such sites.
(2) Before the
commencement of such inquiry the Director-General shall, after
satisfying himself as to the identity of the affected
site and of
the person appearing from the records of the local authority
concerned to be the occupier of that site, and, in respect
of
premises referred to in section 52 (5) of the principal Act, is in
possession of an aerial photograph or plan of the premises
concerned, certified as provided in section 52 (5)
(a) of that Act, publish
a notice indicating that such inquiry is to be conducted.
[…]
(4) At the conclusion of
the inquiry and after having considered any relevant claim or
objection, the Director-General shall,
if he is satisfied that the
person concerned is, subject to the provisions of subsection (3), in
respect of the site concerned—
[…]
(b) the holder of rights
which in the opinion of the Director-General are similar to the
rights of the holder of a site permit,
certificate or trading site
permit, determine whom he intends to declare to have been granted a
right of leasehold or, in the
case where that site is situate in a
formalized township for which a township register has been opened,
ownership in respect
of the site concerned.
[15]
1993
(3) SA 679
(W).
[16]
At 693.
[17]
At 694.
[18]
4.
Granting of leasehold or ownership.—
(1) The Director-General
shall, upon the expiry of the period specified for appeal under
section 3 (1) or, in the case of such
appeal, on the confirmation,
variation or substitution of the determination referred to in
section 2 (4), in the prescribed manner
declare the person concerned
to have been granted—
(a) a right of leasehold
in respect of the affected site concerned under section 52 (1) of
the principal Act [it being the Black
Communities Development Act],
whereupon that person shall be deemed for all purposes to have been
granted a right of leasehold
under the said section 52 (1).
[19]
5.
Registration of leasehold or transfer of ownership.—
(1) Whenever the
Director-General has made a declaration—
(a) in terms of section
4 (1) (a), he shall lodge such declaration and every deed and other
document necessary for the registration
of the right of leasehold
concerned with the registrar concerned, who shall—
(i) for the purposes of
registration, accept that the particulars contained in the
declaration are correct; and
(ii) without the
production of any certificate to the effect that the levies or
charges in respect of the affected site concerned
have been paid to
the local authority, register the right of leasehold in favour of
the person mentioned in the declaration.
[20]
2005
(1) SA 83
(W).
[21]
2013 JDR 0608 (GNP).
[22]
[2016]
ZAGPJHC 70.
[23]
Para
18.
[24]
Ndaba
v Thonga
[2020] ZAGPJHC 404.
[25]
I
do not comment on the constitutionality of this differentiated
procedure, as this is not before me.
[26]
[2018]
ZACC 42.
[27]
6
of 1998.
[28]
See
Shomang
v Motsose N.O.
2022 (5) SA 602
(GP) from para 42 onwards.
[29]
2013 JDR 0608 (GNP).
[30]
Kingwill,
R. (2008). “Custom-building freehold title: the impact of
family values on historical ownership in the Eastern
Cape” in
Land,
Power and Custom: Controversies generated by South Africa’s
Communal Land Rights Act
,
198. See also case studies and discussion in RA Kingwill
The
Map is Not the Territory – Law and Custom in ‘African
Freehold’: A South African Case Study
(PhD
thesis University of the Western Cape 2013).
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