Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1017South Africa
McGlashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1017 (11 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## McGlashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1017 (11 October 2024)
McGlashan N.O and Others v Fhulufhelo and Another (2023/042194) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1017 (11 October 2024)
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sino date 11 October 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
11
October 2024
CASE
NUMBER:
2023/042194
In
the matter between:
TREVOR JOHN
MCGLASHAN N.O & OTHERS
Applicants
and
IVY
TSHILIMANDILA FHULUFHELO
First
Respondent
CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FRIEDMAN AJ
1
The facts of this matter are straightforward, despite some
suggestions to the contrary in the papers. Because the order
sought
by the applicants is time-sensitive, I have fast-tracked these
reasons, and have stripped them to their bare bones. It is
not
appropriate, in the circumstances, to take any longer than absolutely
necessary to hand down this judgment.
2
In short:
2.1 The applicants are trustees
of a trust formed to give effect to certain philanthropic intentions
of the late Mr Deane
Yates. For convenience, in the discussion below,
I simply refer to the applicants, collectively, as “
the
Trust
”, unless the context requires otherwise.
2.2 Mr Yates’ last will
and testament envisaged that, when he died, certain property
including the immovable property
which is the subject of this
application (“
the property
”), would be passed to
the Trust. Mr Yates recorded in his will that, if the property had
not been transferred to the Trust
by the time of his death, the
property would be transferred to the Trust on his death subject to an
existing lease agreement between
him and the first respondent,
concluded in 2011.
2.3 It is common cause that the
property was only transferred to the Trust after Mr Yates’
death and that the first
respondent was living there at the time. It
is also common cause that, sometime after Mr Yates’ death, the
Trust decided
to dissolve and dissipate its property. The trustees
informed the first respondent of this.
2.4 In terms of the lease, the
first respondent had the right of first refusal to purchase the
property in circumstances such
as these. She attempted to do so, and
made a payment of R40 000. But unfortunately she was unable to
make any further payments,
or make any alternative arrangement to
finance the purchase of the property. Her rental arrears were so
substantial that the Trust
used the R40 000 to offset some of
them. It does not appear to be in dispute (in any meaningful sense)
that it was entitled
to do so.
2.5 As a result of the first
respondent’s inability to purchase the property, it was sold to
someone else. The first
respondent refused to vacate, which
necessitated this application.
3
All sorts of exotic defences were pleaded in the answering affidavit.
None of them has any merit. Unsurprisingly, therefore,
Mr
Mamabolo
, who appeared for the first respondent, quite properly
conceded during the hearing that the first respondent has no valid
defence
to the eviction application.
4
Regrettably, the misdirected focus of the answering affidavit meant
that no evidence was placed before this Court by the
first respondent
on the question of what order would be just and equitable in the
circumstances. No evidence as to the first respondent’s
current
financial position, her prospects of finding alternative
accommodation or anything else relevant was mentioned in the
answering affidavit at all. Instead, it was left to the second
respondent, the City of Johannesburg, to fill in the gaps. The City
filed a very helpful report, which explained the scope of its
Temporary Emergency Accommodation policy. In doing so, it set out
facts which the first respondent provided to the attorney appointed
by the City to prepare the report, at an interview conducted
not too
long before the hearing. These disclose that the first respondent
“takes home” R15 000 per month as her
salary as a
nurse and, as of 24 August 2024, the first respondent lived with a
daughter in grade 12 and another daughter in grade
3, along with her
mother who is a recipient of an old-age grant and a disability grant.
5
I am indebted to the City for filing the report, because without it I
would have had no evidence to assist me in the exercise
of my
discretion as to a just and equitable order.
6
Mr Garvey
, who appeared for the Trust, placed on record that
the Trustees took the view that an order requiring the first
respondent to vacate
by 31 December 2024 would be more than
reasonable in the circumstances. I agree.
7
Based on the facts in the City’s report, and the fact that the
first respondent has now been in unlawful occupation
for almost two
years, I do not consider it appropriate to permit her to remain in
occupation for much longer. I sincerely hope
that, by the time that
31 December arrives, the first respondent’s daughter in grade
12 would have passed her matric exams.
The timing of the order should
hopefully not, therefore, disrupt her studies. The interview which is
reflected in the City’s
report was conducted less than two
months ago. If it is correct – and there was no suggestion to
the contrary by
Mr Mamabolo
– that the first
respondent’s take-home pay is R15 000 (and her mother can
make a modest contribution via her
grants), then it should be
possible for the first respondent to procure alternative
accommodation by 31 December 2024. Either way,
for an individual who
cannot be described as indigent, who has offered no facts to suggest
that eviction by the end of the year
would be unfair, almost three
full months is more than reasonable in the context of this case.
8
Mr Garvey
suggested that this would be an appropriate case for
a punitive costs order (which the Trust sought from the outset) to be
made
against the first respondent. This does not flow from a right
under the lease agreement. It flows, on his argument, from the
unreasonableness
of the first respondent’s conduct – ie,
to remain in occupation for all of this time without any valid basis
to do
so, and for her counsel then to concede the entire case as soon
as oral argument commenced.
9
I have agonised about this aspect of the case. Undoubtedly, the first
respondent’s response to this litigation was
not objectively
appropriate or reasonable. But, lurking at the back of my mind, is a
concern for the role played by her legal representatives.
Mr
Mamabolo
very reasonably, at the hearing, did not press any of
the unsustainable points taken by the first respondent in her
answering affidavit.
So I make clear that no aspersions whatsoever
may be cast on him. However, his instructing attorney filed an
answering affidavit
which was patently defective. It did not raise
any remotely arguable or sustainable defence to the application, and
it also failed
to provide the only information which actually would
have been useful in the circumstances – evidence of the first
respondent’s
personal circumstances, relevant to nature of the
order which could be made. For instance, it would have been helpful
to have been
told more about the first respondent’s children,
her elder daughter’s studies, efforts made to procure
alternative
accommodation and the like. It was left to the City to
provide relevant information. Even though someone who earns R15 000
per month cannot be treated as indigent, he or she is not affluent
either. It would have been open to the first respondent to adduce
evidence which could have impacted on, at least, the timeframe in
which she should be ordered to vacate the premises. If she was
not
advised of this by her attorneys, then she was failed by them.
10
The fact of the matter is that, despite my disquiet, I have
insufficient evidence before me to justify any form of special
costs
order against the first respondent’s attorneys. That leaves the
punitive costs order sought by the Trust. I agree with
Mr Garvey
that the first respondent’s conduct objectively constitutes an
abuse of process – ie, it was conduct which used rules
and/or
legislation for purpose A (ie, staying in the property for as long as
possible without having any lawful basis to do so)
when that
legislation and those rules were intended for purpose B (ie, ensuring
that people, especially poor people, at risk of
losing their homes
are treated as humanely and justly as possible). However, sight
should not be lost of the nature of the Trust
(wholly charitable in
its purpose) and what seems to have been an existing relationship
between the deceased and the first respondent.
It is impossible for
me to speculate about what Mr Yates would have wanted in these
circumstances. I appreciate that every cent
acquired or saved by the
Trust is money which will, when the assets of the Trust are
dissipated, go to worthy causes. So the issue
of Mr Yates’
philanthropic intentions, and their impact on the equities here, cuts
both ways. However, I choose to assume
that he would not have wanted
the first respondent, who is clearly not a wealthy person, to be
prejudiced by a very onerous costs
order.
11
Taking all circumstances into account, I have ultimately decided that
an ordinary costs order is sufficient. There is no
reason why it
should not include the reserved costs reflected in the order made by
Justice Crutchfield on 9 October 2023, in which
she sent the matter,
up to then unopposed, to the opposed roll.
12
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The first
respondent, and all persons who occupy 2[…] C[…] M[…],
O[…] Road, B[…] V[…]
Johannesburg (“the
property”) with the permission of, and/or at the behest of
and/or through the first respondent,
are ordered to vacate the
property by no later than 31 December 2024.
2.
In the event that
the persons described in paragraph 1 of this order have not vacated
the property by 31 December 2024, the Sheriff
of Court is authorised
to remove the persons described in paragraph 1 above from the
property at any date from 14 January 2025
onwards, if necessary by
obtaining the assistance of the South African Police Service.
3.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application, including
the costs reserved by this Court on 9 October 2023
.
A.
FRIEDMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected above and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter. The
date for hand down is
deemed to be
11 October 2024
.
Heard:
7 October 2024
Judgment:
11 October 2024
Appearances
:
For Applicants:
Attorneys for
the Applicants:
CB Garvey
Cuthbertson &
Palmeira Attorneys
Inc
For Respondent:
Attorneys for
Respondent:
T Mamabolo
MT Mamabolo
Attorneys
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