Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 993South Africa
Groenewald and Others v Galloptic Trade and Investment 15 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/0699930) [2024] ZAGPJHC 993 (4 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Groenewald and Others v Galloptic Trade and Investment 15 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/0699930) [2024] ZAGPJHC 993 (4 October 2024)
Groenewald and Others v Galloptic Trade and Investment 15 (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/0699930) [2024] ZAGPJHC 993 (4 October 2024)
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sino date 4 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024-069930
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
In
the matter between:
DEON
GROENEWALD
First
Applicant
KOOS
GROENEWALD
Second
Applicant
UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS OF PORTION 17
OF
THE FARM WELTEVREDE NO 517, JQ
Third
Applicant
and
GALLOPTIC
TRADE & INVESTMENTS 15 (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF FOR THE DISTRICT OF KRUGERSDORP
Second
Respondent
JOHAN
HOMAN
Third
Respondent
Delivered:
4 October 2024 – This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives via
email, uploading
it to CaseLines and releasing it to SAFLII.
ORDER
1.
Mr Johan Homan is joined as the third respondent in the application.
2.
It is declared that the applicants’ appeal under case number
9333/2020 has not lapsed.
3.
The questions of whether the third respondent is in occupation of the
Farm Weltevrede No 517, JQ, (the property) and whether
it is possible
to restore possession of the property to the applicants, are referred
to oral evidence.
4.
The evidence shall be that of any witnesses whom the parties may
elect to call, subject to paragraph 5.
5.
Save in the case of Deon Groenewald, Koos Groenewald, Carla Cato,
David Hlatshwayo, and Johan Homan, a party shall not
be entitled to
call a witness unless:
a. That party has
served on the other parties a statement setting out the evidence to
be given in chief by that witness, within
20 days of the date of this
order if the witness is called by an applicant, and within 30 days of
the date of this order if the
witness is to be called by a
respondent; or
b. The Court, at
the hearing, permits such person to be called, despite the fact that
no such statement has been served; or
c. The witness has
been subpoenaed to give evidence at the hearing, whether such person
has consented to furnish a statement
or not.
6.
The fact that a party has served a statement in terms of paragraph 5a
above, or has subpoenaed a witness, shall not oblige
that party to
call the witness concerned.
7.
Within 10 days of this order, each party shall make discovery, on
oath, of all documents relevant to the issues referred
to in
paragraph 3 above, which is or has at any time been in the possession
or under the control of that party.
8.
Discovery shall be made in accordance with Uniform Rule of Court 35
and the provisions of that rule regarding the inspection
and
production of documents shall be operative.
9.
Pending the finalisation of the matter the first applicant and/or his
representatives shall be given access to the property
every Tuesday
and Friday between the hours of 08h00 and 10h00.
10.
The costs pertaining to the hearings of 2 July 2024 and 11 July 2024
are costs in the application.
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The first respondent, Galloptic Trade & Investments 15 (Pty) Ltd,
owns the immovable property known as Portion 17
of the Farm
Weltevrede 517, JQ (the property). The first respondent obtained an
order for the eviction of the applicants from the
property on 20
April 2022, under case number 9333/2020 in this Division of the High
Court. On 4 October 2022, the applicants were
granted leave to appeal
the order to the Full Court.
[2]
On 21 June 2024, the second respondent, the Sheriff of this Court for
the district of Krugersdorp, evicted the applicants
from the property
on the strength of a warrant of ejectment issued upon the first
respondent’s statement that the appeal
had lapsed.
[3]
The applicants deny that the appeal had lapsed and urgently apply to
have their possession of the property restored pending
the outcome of
the appeal.
[4]
The first respondent contested the urgency of the application, but at
the hearing, I determined that it was sufficiently
urgent to be
enrolled.
[5]
The first respondent opposes the application on two grounds. First,
it contends that the appeal has lapsed, and that the
execution of the
order was therefore no longer suspended in terms of
section 18(1)
of
the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
. As a result, it argues that the
ejectment was lawfully executed.
[6]
Second, the first respondent contends that it was in any event not
possible to restore possession of the property to the
applicants.
This is so, the first respondent contends, because the third
respondent, Mr Homan, has taken occupation of the property.
The
applicants claim that Homan acted as an agent of the first respondent
as part of a scheme devised by the first respondent,
and further that
he, at best, only took occupation of a second dwelling on the farm
and no more. They did not, however, initially
join him as a party to
the proceedings.
[7]
On 3 July 2024, the issue of whether the appeal had lapsed was argued
by the applicants and the first respondent. The
applicants accepted
that the issue of whether the restoration of possession of the
property is possible, cannot be determined without
Homan’s
participation or acquiescence to the outcome of the application. In
the result, the applicants sought an opportunity
to apply for the
joinder of Homan on an urgent basis, which I allowed.
[8]
Of immediate concern to the applicants was that some of the first
applicant’s animals remained on the property and
were not taken
care of. He thus sought interim relief in that regard as well.
[9]
I therefore granted an order on 3 July 2024, in the following terms:
“
1. The
application is postponed to 11 July 2024 at 10h00.
2. The applicants
are afforded an opportunity to supplement their papers.
3. The first
respondent is afforded an opportunity to supplement its answering
affidavit.
4. The applicants
are directed to join Mr Johan Homan to the application.
5. The first
applicant and all persons necessary in order to assist him, is given
access to Portion 17 of the Farm Weltevrede
517, JQ (the property),
in order to assess and search for his animals and to take care of his
animals.
6. The first
applicant is given reasonable access forthwith to the property, in
order to inspect the property.
7. All aspects of
costs are reserved.”
[10]
The applicant delivered an application to join Homan, who did not
oppose the joinder but opposed the ultimate relief
sought by the
applicants. Counsel for the parties informed me that they agree that
the issues of whether Homan is in possession
of the property, and
whether restoration of possession is possible, cannot be resolved on
the papers due to factual disputes. They
proposed, by agreement, that
the issues be separated, and that I determine the issue of whether
the appeal had lapsed. Should I
find that it had lapsed, that would
be the end of the matter, and the application must fail. However,
should I conclude that the
appeal has not lapsed, the parties
requested that I refer the remaining issues to oral evidence. The
approach is a sensible one
and I agreed.
[11]
In the result, the parties, by agreement, moved for an order which I
granted on 11 July 2024 in the following terms:
“
1. The issue
of whether the appeal has lapsed is separated from the remainder of
the dispute.
2. Pending the
finalisation of the matter the first applicant and/or his
representatives shall be given access to Portion
17 of the Farm
Weltevrede 517, JQ (“the property”) pending the
finalisation of this application on the following terms:
2.1 Every Tuesday
and Friday between the hours of 08h00 and 10h00.
3. Judgment in
respect of paragraph 1 is reserved.”
[12]
Mr Homan’s
joinder as third respondent was not mentioned in the order, and I
will include it in the order I make here. He
is a necessary party to
the application and should be joined to the proceedings.
[1]
The parties agreed on this. A court in any event may join a necessary
party.
[13]
I now turn to the question of whether the appeal has lapsed. To do
so, it is necessary to briefly consider the procedure
of prosecuting
a civil appeal in the High Court.
# Prosecuting an appeal
Prosecuting an appeal
[14]
Uniform
Rule 49
regulates the procedure for obtaining leave to appeal from
the court of first instance and prosecuting the appeal if it lies to
the full court of the division. The appellant must deliver its notice
of appeal within 20 days from the date upon which leave to
appeal was
granted.
[2]
The appellant has a
further 60-day period to make a written application to the Registrar
for a date for the hearing of the appeal.
Should the appellant fail
to do so, any respondent in the appeal may apply for the set down of
the appeal, within 10 days of the
expiry of the 60 days. If no
application is received within the 70 days, the appeal shall be
deemed to have lapsed.
[3]
[15]
The
appellant is furthermore obliged to file three copies of the record
on appeal with the Registrar and furnish two copies to the
respondent
when the application for a date for the hearing is made. If the
copies of the record are not ready timeously, the Registrar
may
accept an application without the copies of the record, if the
application is accompanied by a written agreement between the
parties
that the copies of the record may be handed in late, or upon
simultaneous receipt of a condonation application.
[4]
[16]
After
delivery of the copies of the record, the Registrar must assign a
date for the hearing of the appeal and set it down for hearing,
on at
least 20 days' written notice to the parties.
[5]
If the party who applied for the hearing date fails to file the
copies of the record within 40 days after the Registrar accepted
the
application for a hearing date, the other party may approach the
court for an order that the appeal has lapsed.
[6]
[17]
The
appellant must further provide security for the respondent’s
costs of appeal before lodging copies of the record with
the
Registrar unless the respondent waives its right to security or the
Court on application releases the appellant.
[7]
[18]
In terms of
Rule 49(15)
, the appellant shall deliver a concise and
succinct statement of the main points which it intends to argue on
appeal, with a list
of authorities, not later than 15 days before the
appeal is heard. The respondent shall do the same, not later than 10
days before
the appeal is heard.
[19]
In addition, there are practice directives for the Gauteng Division
of the High Court regarding the prosecution of an
appeal. With effect
from 1 October 2023, Consolidated Practice Directive 1 of 2023
replaced Consolidated Practice Directive 2 of
2022 but retained the
same directives in respect of civil appeals. The directive required
the legal representatives to upload all
documents, including heads of
argument and practice notes to the appeal file but did not make it a
precondition for the application
for a hearing date.
[20]
Consolidated Practice Directive 1 of 2024 replaced Consolidated
Directive 1 of 2023 with effect from 26 February 2024.
Paragraphs
33.17 to 33.20 stipulate:
“
33.17. Once
an appeal has been timeously noted, the registrar shall not accept
any appeal matter [as contemplated in
Rule 49(2)
,
6
(a) and
7
(a) or
Rule 50
6
(a) and
7
(a)], unless the appellant or the attorney of the
appellant simultaneously uploads to the electronic court file:
33.17.1. complete
record, indexed and paginated;
33.17.2. The
appellant’s heads of argument and practice note.
The registrar shall
thereupon issue an acknowledgement of receipt thereof.
33.18. The appellant or
the appellant’s attorney shall:
33.18.1. Thereupon
serve on the respondent or the respondent’s attorney of record,
the record and the appellant’s
heads of argument, practice note
and a copy of the registrar’s acknowledgement, and further
state that the respondent’s
heads of argument and practice note
must be uploaded to the electronic court file not later than 30 court
days from the date of
that service; and
33.18.2. Upload a
copy of such service to the electronic court file within 5 days of
such service.
33.19. The appellant or
the appellant’s attorney shall not earlier than the day after
the respondent’s heads of argument
and practice note are due,
act as follows:
33.19.1. If the
respondent has complied with paragraph 33.18.2, apply to the
registrar to have the matter set down, whereupon
the registrar shall
provide the appellant or the appellant’s attorney with a notice
of set down, which the appellant or the
appellant’s attorney
shall serve on the respondent or the respondent’s attorney
forthwith, and upload a copy of such
service with to the electronic
court file within five days of such service;
33.19.2. If the
respondent has not complied with paragraph 33.18.1, set down an
application to compel compliance in the special
interlocutory court;
33.19.3. The
registrar shall, notwithstanding the non-compliance by the
respondent, upon presentation by the appellant or
the appellant’s
attorney with an order of the special interlocutory court, act
further in accordance with that order to set
down the matter and
issue a notice of set down.
33.20 The Deputy
Judge President may direct, in any particular matter, that the
parties deliver heads of argument otherwise
than as provided for in
paragraph 33.17 and 33.18 above, either of his/her own accord or on
receipt of a written request from one
or both parties.”
# The prosecution of the
appeal
The prosecution of the
appeal
[21]
The applicants were granted leave to appeal on 4 October 2022,
whereafter they delivered their notice of appeal timeously
on 24
October 2022. On 16 January 2023 (thus shortly before the 60-day
period within which to apply for a hearing date would expire),
the
applicants’ attorney applied for a hearing date for the appeal.
[22]
On 15 March 2023 the appeal record was lodged, with security for
costs and a power of attorney. However, no date for
the appeal has
yet been allocated.
[23]
The first respondent contends that the applicant did not timeously
apply for a hearing date. It argues that proper application
was not
made, because the application was not accompanied by the record as
required by
Rule 49
, and the applicants’ heads of argument and
practice note as required by the practice directives. It further
contends that
the Registrar did not accept the application, as there
was no confirmation of the acceptance, and a note placed on CaseLines
indicates
that the application had not been accepted.
[24]
I address each of these arguments in turn.
[25]
As pointed out above,
Rule 49(7)
requires the record to be delivered
with the application for a hearing date, unless the parties agreed to
deliver the record later,
or, if not, the application is accompanied
by an application to condone the late delivery of the record. The
applicants claim that
the parties had agreed to deliver the record
later. This is denied by the first respondent.
[26]
On 10 January 2023, Mr Crawford, the applicant’s attorney,
wrote to Mr Van Zyl, the first respondent’s attorney,
in the
following terms:
“
2. We advise
that we are desirous to apply for a date for the hearing of the
appeal of this matter.
3.
Accordingly we advise that the record will be finalised today,
however that we would like to afford your office an opportunity
to
consider the index and advise if you would like any further documents
to be included.
4. To this
end we request your agreement that we may proceed to apply for the
appeal date and that the final appeal record
shall then follow when
your office has had an input.”
[27]
Mr Van Zyl
replied on 16 January 2023, stating that “
we
confirm that the arrangements proposed in paragraphs 3,4 and 5 [is]
acceptable to our client”
.
Rule 49
requires the agreement to be in writing. The exchange of the
letter complies with this requirement.
[8]
[28]
The same day Mr Crawford addressed a letter to the Registrar and
included the two letters. He stated as follows:
“
2. We
herewith present an agreement between the parties that the record be
handed in later, the signed leave to appeal judgment
still being
outstanding and request that a date for the hearing of this matter be
allocated.”
[29]
In the answering affidavit, Ms Cato, the first respondent’s
sole director, states that Mr van Zyl denies that an
agreement was
concluded. Mr Van Zyl deposed to a confirmatory affidavit in the
generic style merely confirming the contents of
Ms Cato’s
affidavit insofar as it related to him.
[30]
Ms Cato further claimed that the correspondence attached to the
founding papers bears out that no agreement had been
reached, saying
that Mr van Zyl’s letter of 16 January 2023 on the face thereof
clearly does not confirm paragraph 2 of the
letter to the Registrar.
[31]
The first respondent seems to have misread the founding affidavit and
the annexures. The applicants attached as annexure
C to the founding
papers the email to the Registrar, the letter to the Registrar from
which I quoted above, and the two letters
exchanged between the
parties’ attorneys regarding the agreement. The letter from Mr
Van Zyl was attached before the letter
from Mr Crawford, so that a
cursory look at annexure C may create the impression that Mr Van
Zyl’s letter is a response to
the letter to the Registrar,
whereas in fact, it was a response to Mr Crawford’s letter,
which appears immediately thereafter
in the papers.
[32]
The above illustrates the need for parties to take care in managing
documents. It is a better practice to individually
mark attached
documents, even if they are grouped through sub-numbering under a
main reference, such as, in this instance, C1,
C2, C3 and C4
respectively. It also shows the importance of being clear when
documents are referred to in affidavits. One would
expect a prudent
deponent to explain in the affidavit that a particular annexure
includes the documents attached thereto upon transmission.
[33]
Mr Van Zyl
confirmed Ms Cato’s statement that no agreement had been
reached. This is something he would have personal knowledge
of. It
was not a peripheral issue in the application – the first
respondent put the issue front and centre as a reason why
the appeal
had lapsed. One must be concerned how it came about that Mr van Zyl,
in the circumstances, could state on oath that
no agreement was
reached when it is patent from his letter that such an agreement had
been reached. This unfortunate situation
also illustrates why parties
should be slow to present evidence through confirmatory affidavits
not dealing with the evidence itself,
but merely confirming what
another witness has said. This type of affidavit is only suitable for
noncontentious evidence.
[9]
[34]
The first
respondent did not “
seriously
and unambiguously address the fact said to be disputed”
and there is thus no real, genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact on the papers.
[10]
I find that the parties did agree to deliver the record later. In
this regard,
Rule 49
was complied with.
[35]
The first respondent further argues that the application was not and
could not have been accepted by the Registrar, because
on 17 January
2023, the Registrar placed a note on the CaseLines file requiring the
attorneys to create and upload the notice of
appeal on CourtOnline,
and not CaseLines, whereafter a new number were to be issued.
[36]
In reply, the applicants contend that they had complied with the
requirements of the Practice Directive and the Registrar’s
note
was only a practical requirement in the move to initiate matters on
CourtOnline rather than on CaseLines. I agree. The note
was neither a
prerequisite to applying for a hearing date nor an indication that
the Registrar did not accept the application.
[37]
This, in my view, also deals with the argument that there is no
indication that the Registrar accepted the application
for a hearing
date. The Registrar did not expressly communicate an acceptance of
the application but gave further instructions
about the prosecution
of the appeal. In my view, that indicates that the Registrar accepted
the application.
[38]
What remains, is to confirm whether the Registrar could have accepted
the application when it was not accompanied by
the applicants’
heads of argument and practice note.
[39]
Having concluded that the Registrar accepted the application for a
hearing date on 17 January 2023, the provisions of
Practice Directive
1 of 2024 are moot in respect of the acceptance of the appeal by the
Registrar, as referred to in paragraph
33.17 of that directive. The
paragraph expressly refers to compliance with the steps contemplated
in
Rule 49(2)
,
49
(6)(a) and
49
(7)(a). All three of those steps had
already taken place before the effective date of the practice
directive. In the circumstances,
the applicants had applied for a
hearing date for the appeal as required by
Rule 49
, read with the
Practice Directive operative at the time. The appeal is thus not
deemed to have lapsed.
# The order
The order
[40]
In the
circumstances, I deem it appropriate to make an order referring the
question of whether the third respondent is in occupation
of the
property to oral evidence in the customary form,
[11]
adjusted to align with the current practice requiring matters to be
fully prepared for a hearing before a date is allocated.
[41]
In the result I make the following order:
a) Mr Johan Homan
is joined as the third respondent in the application.
b) It is declared
that the applicants’ appeal under case number 9333/2020 has not
lapsed.
c) The questions of
whether the third respondent is in occupation of the Farm Weltevrede
517, JQ, (the property) and whether
it is possible to restore
possession of the property to the applicants, are referred to oral
evidence.
d) The evidence
shall be that of any witnesses whom the parties may elect to call,
subject to paragraph 5.
e) Save in the case
of Deon Groenewald, Koos Groenewald, Carla Cato, David Hlatshwayo,
and Johan Homan, a party shall not
be entitled to call a witness
unless:
i) That party has
served on the other parties a statement setting out the evidence to
be given in chief by that witness, within
20 days of date of this
order if the witness is called by an applicant, and within 30 days of
date of this order if the witness
is to be called by a respondent; or
ii) The Court, at
the hearing, permits such person to be called despite the fact that
no such statement has been served; or
iii) The witness
has been subpoenaed to give evidence at the hearing, whether such
person has consented to furnish a statement
or not.
f) The fact that a
party has served a statement in terms of paragraph (i) above, or has
subpoenaed a witness, shall not oblige
that party to call the witness
concerned.
g) Within 10 days
of this order, each party shall make discovery, on oath, of all
documents relevant to the issues referred
to in paragraph (c) above,
which is or has at any time been in the possession or under the
control of that party.
h) Discovery shall
be made in accordance with Uniform Rule of Court 35 and the
provisions of that rule with regard to the
inspection and production
of documents discovered shall be operative.
i) Pending the
finalisation of the matter the first applicant and/or his
representatives shall be given access to the property
every Tuesday
and Friday between the hours of 08h00 and 10h00.
j) The costs
pertaining to the hearings of 2 July 2024 and 11 July 2024 are costs
in the application.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Heard:
2 & 11 July
2024
Judgment
Date: 4 October 2024
Counsel
for the Applicants: JW Kloek, instructed by Crawford Harris Inc.
Counsel
for First Respondent:HF Geyer, instructed by Swanepoel Van Zyl
Attorneys
Counsel
for Second Respondent:No appearance
Counsel
for Third Respondent:J Swanepoel, instructed by Mosterts Inc.
[1]
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd and Others
2018 (1) SA 1
(CC) in paras 91 to 93.
[2]
Uniform
Rule 49(2).
[3]
Uniform
Rule 49(6)(a).
[4]
Uniform
Rule 49(7)(a)(i).
[5]
Uniform
Rule 49(7)(c).
[6]
Uniform
Rule 49(7)(d).
[7]
Uniform
Rule 49(13).
[8]
See for instance
Goldblatt
v Fremantle
1920
AD 123
at 126.
[9]
See for instance
Drift
Supersand (Pty) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality
[2017] 4 All SA 624
(SCA) [2017] JDR 1611 (SCA) in para 31.
[10]
See
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) in paras 12 and 13.
[11]
Metallurgical
and Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
1971 (2) SA 388
(W) at 396 G – 397 B.
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