Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 868South Africa
Wongel Amagnoch Church Tembisa Branch v Gospel Life International Church and Others (2024/095052) [2024] ZAGPJHC 868 (5 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Wongel Amagnoch Church Tembisa Branch v Gospel Life International Church and Others (2024/095052) [2024] ZAGPJHC 868 (5 September 2024)
Wongel Amagnoch Church Tembisa Branch v Gospel Life International Church and Others (2024/095052) [2024] ZAGPJHC 868 (5 September 2024)
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sino date 5 September 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
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
2024/095052
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
Yes☐ / No ☒
3.
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
5
September 2024
In
the matter between:
WONGEL
AMAGNOCH CHURCH TEMBISA BRANCH
Applicant
and
GOSPEL
LIFE INTERNATIONAL CHURCH
First
Respondent
PASTOR
MITIKU ACHAMO
Second
Respondent
PROPHET
MAMO LATEBO
Third
Respondent
UMZI
WAS CHIEF CORNER STONE CHURCH IN ZION
Fourth
Respondent
Coram:
Du Plessis AJ
Heard
on:
5 September 2024
Decided
on:
6 September 2024
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the CaseLines digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of
South Africa,
Johannesburg, and by e-mail to the attorneys of record of the
parties. The deemed date and time of the delivery is
10H00 on 6
September 2024.
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The ordinary forms and service provided for
in the Uniform Rules of Court are dispensed with, and this
application is heard and
determined on an urgent basis in terms of
the provisions of Rule 6(12)(a).
2.
The first to third respondents are ordered to restore physical
possession of the church premise at […] T[…]
C[…]
Street, S[…], Tembisa, to the applicant immediately.
3.
In the event that the first to third respondents refuse to comply
with the order in 2 above, the Sheriff of this court
or the South
African Police Services are authorised and directed to assist the
applicant with regaining possession of the aforesaid
property.
4.
The first to third respondents are to pay for the cost of this
application on a party and party scale (A).
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
[1]
In this urgent application, the applicant asks for the
restoration of possession of a church building based on the
mandament
van spolie
.
[2]
The applicant is a non-profit company that operates a church
on premises in Tembisa. The applicant sets out that it had peaceful
and undisturbed possession of the property until they were unlawfully
deprived of their possession by the respondent. The applicant
has
been in possession of the premises since November 2020 in terms of a
lease agreement. It constructed a new church building
on the premises
when its followers increased. On these premises, the applicant
continued to conduct its church activities.
[3]
Around 23 June 2024, the second and third respondent
unlawfully dispossessed the applicant of the premises by ejecting the
current
members and founders. The respondents continued to trade
under the applicant's name for a while but soon changed it to “Gospel
Life Church International” (first respondent) around 25 July
2024.
[4]
The second and third respondent then threatened all members of
the applicant to stay away from the property. They now operate under
the name “Gospel Life Church International”. This
takeover stemmed from the second respondent being accused of
mismanagement
of the applicant's funds while he was still a member of
the applicant. In short, without going into too much detail, the
second
and third respondents broke away from the applicant, who,
aggrieved by how they were treated, started their own church and took
over the premises where the applicant operated.
[5]
Not only have they taken possession of the premises, but they
have also taken down the applicant’s signage from the property.
This did not happen in terms of any legal or lawful process.
[6]
The respondents’ case is that it concluded a valid lease
agreement for the property in 2016 and that they later merged with
the applicant. Then, recently and out of their own free will, the
second and third respondents terminated their membership in the
applicant, established the first respondent, and continued with the
lease agreement they concluded in 2016. When they merged, they
did
not cede the lease in the property to the applicant; now that they
split, they are merely relying on the lease agreement they
concluded.
They focus thus on who the valid lessee is.
[7]
At the heart of the dispute is the issue of who can collect
the funds from the churchgoers by utilising the property. This is
also
what the urgency is based on: if the respondent is to remain in
the premises, the applicant is deprived of the premises where it
can
hold its services and derive its income from.
[8]
I
accept that the matter is sufficiently urgent to enrol in the roll.
The applicant does not specify in detail what happened between
25
July 2024 and the date the application was launched, but there is
some evidence of a criminal case that was opened. While it
is true
that no particular kind of matter is
inherently
urgent
[1]
based on the kind of
right being enforced, the mandament being a speedy and robust remedy
is more often than not a remedy that
is sought with some urgency.
[9]
What is left to decide is whether the applicant is entitled to
their spoliation order.
[10]
The
mandament is sometimes counter-intuitive because it focuses on
restoring possession regardless of rights. For the most part,
courts
should disregard the dispute's merits when deciding whether the
remedy should be granted.
[2]
In
the affidavits, the concepts “possession”, “proprietary
rights”, “lease agreement”, and
“ownership”
are at times used interchangeably. During the hearing I reminded the
parties that the focus of the mandament
is on possession only, and
then not possession in the legal sense, but factual possession.
[11]
This
is because the purpose of the mandament is to restore unlawfully
deprived possession at once to the possessor to prevent people
from
taking the law into their own hands. It is a remedy that seeks to
ensure respect for the rule of law and to encourage the
establishment
and maintenance of a regulated society. The mandament further only
provides temporary relief; it is speedy and robust.
Once possession
is restored, the parties in this case can focus on the dispute
regarding who has the right to occupy the premises.
[3]
[12]
There are two requirements for the mandament: possession and
unlawful or wrongful deprivation of that possession. While it is
final
in effect because it restores the possession, it is not aimed
at restoring rights. For that reason, an inquiry into the parties'
rights is not evaluated in mandament proceedings. That is for the
proceedings that usually follow after the restoration of possession.
If restoration is ordered, the restoration is factual possession –
it does not mean that the court made a finding on the
merits of the
property rights.
[13]
The applicant must thus satisfy the court that they were in
possession of the property. Again, that is not legal possession but
factual possession (
detentio
) with the intention (
animus
)
of securing some benefit. The cause of the possession is also
irrelevant. Even a thief’s possession can be protected by
the
mandament. If the possession is peaceful and undisturbed, it is
protected.
[14]
The second requirement for granting the mandament is the
wrongful deprivation of possession. This deprivation must be actual
and
physical.
[15]
During argument in court, much was made about the merits of
the dispute and about who concluded the lease agreement. That is
neither
here nor there in spoliation applications. The question is:
was the applicant in peaceful and undisturbed possession, and was the
applicant unlawfully deprived of such possession? The answer in both
instances in this case is yes. In fact, with regards to the
second
requirement, as much was conceded to some extent by counsel for the
respondents during argument.
[16]
It is also not seriously disputed that until the second and
third respondents left the applicant, the applicant was in charge of
the building, conducted their church services and other activities,
and had signages on the outside walls. This all indicates factual
possession.
[17]
When the second and third respondents left the church and
established the first respondent in July 2024, the first respondent
(through
the actions of the second and third respondent) deprived the
applicant of that possession by taking over possession of the
property
and banning the applicant and its leaders from entering the
premises and taking off the signage of the first applicant. That is
dispossession. And that is unlawful because they did not do so in a
lawful manner.
[18]
The respondents cannot resort to self-help, and this is what
the mandament is there to prevent. If the first to third respondents
have concluded a valid lease agreement with the owner (on which I
make no finding), and if the applicant does not have a valid
lease
agreement (on which I also make no finding), they must request the
applicant leave. If the applicant refuses, they must bring
an
application for the
rei vindicatio
to have the applicant
ejected from the premises. Arriving on the premises, threatening the
applicant, and even having some members
arrested are not lawful ways
to gain possession.
[19]
I accordingly grant the applicant the relief it seeks, despite
how inelegantly it was phrased in the notice of motion.
Order
[20]
The following order is made:
5.
The ordinary forms and service provided for
in the Uniform Rules of Court are dispensed with, and this
application is heard and
determined on an urgent basis in terms of
the provisions of Rule 6(12)(a).
6.
The first to third respondents are ordered to restore physical
possession of the church premise at […] T[…]
C[…]
Street, S[…], Tembisa, to the applicant immediately.
7.
In the event that the first to third respondents refuse to comply
with the order in 2 above, the Sheriff of this court
or the South
African Police Services are authorised and directed to assist the
applicant with regaining possession of the aforesaid
property.
8.
The first to third respondents are to pay for the cost of this
application on a party and party scale (A).
WJ
du Plessis
Acting
Judge of the High Court
For
the Applicants: C Economou, an attorney with right of appearance
For
the Respondents: SM Nkabinde instructed by Khaolonyane K Attorneys
[1]
Volvo
Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose
Trading CC
[2023] ZAGPJHC 846.
[2]
ZT Boggenpoel
Property
Remedies
(2017) p 96.
[3]
ZT Boggenpoel
Property
Remedies
(2017) p 94 onwards.
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