Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1058South Africa
Red Oak Properties (Proprietary) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...], Door 1[...], Pearlbrook Complex, 3[...] B[...] Street, Hillbrow, Johannesburg and Another (2023/053286) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1058 (16 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 October 2024
Headnotes
SUMMARY – Statutory Interpretation – meaning of “person in charge” as used in the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 1998 (“PIE”).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Red Oak Properties (Proprietary) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...], Door 1[...], Pearlbrook Complex, 3[...] B[...] Street, Hillbrow, Johannesburg and Another (2023/053286) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1058 (16 October 2024)
Red Oak Properties (Proprietary) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Unit [...], Door 1[...], Pearlbrook Complex, 3[...] B[...] Street, Hillbrow, Johannesburg and Another (2023/053286) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1058 (16 October 2024)
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SAFLII
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case number: 2023/053286
[1]
REPORTABLE: YES
[2]
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
[3]
REVISED: NO
SIGNATURE
DATE:
16 October 2024
In
the matter between:
RED
OAK PROPERTIES (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF UNIT […], DOOR 1[…],
PEARLBROOK
COMPLEX, 3[...] B[...] STREET, HILLBROW,
JOHANNESBURG
First Respondent
C
ITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SUMMARY –
Statutory Interpretation – meaning of “person in charge”
as used in the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act, 1998 (“PIE”).
Whether the purchaser
of immovable property at a sale in execution is the “person in
charge” for purposes of an eviction
application in terms of
Section 4 of PIE made prior to transfer.
Sales in Execution -
The Sheriff in carrying on a sale in execution does so as executive
of the law. The Sheriff is not the registered
owner or person in
charge of the property when conducting a sale in execution and grant
express or tacit consent to a purchaser
at a sale in execution to
occupy the property concerned.
PULLINGER AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This application came before me in the
unopposed motion court. It concerns the important question as to
whether the purchaser of
an immovable property at a sale in execution
is the “person in charge” as contemplated in the
Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from Land, 1998 (“
PIE
”).
[2]
This question arises so frequently in this
Court that the dearth of any authority on the point is surprising.
[3]
The question arises as follows:
[3.1]
On or about 26 September 2022 the applicant
purchased the immovable property known as Unit […], Door 1[…],
Pearlbrook
Complex, 3[...] B[...] Street, Hillbrow, Johannesburg at a
sale in execution (“
the
Property
”).
[3.2]
The transfer of the Property into the name
of the applicant is pending.
[3.3]
In terms of the conditions of sale:
"6.1
The property shall be at the risk and profit of the Purchaser [a
reference to the applicant] after the
fall of the hammer and the
signing of the conditions of sale and payment of the initial deposit.
6.2
The Purchaser shall be liable to keep insured all buildings standing
on the property sold for the full
value of same from the fall of the
hammer and the signing of the conditions of sale and payment of the
initial deposit to date
of transfer. Failing which the Sheriff may
affect the insurance at the Purchaser's expense.
6.3
The execution creditor and Sheriff give no warranty that the
Purchaser shall be able to obtain personal
and/or vacant occupation
of the property or that the property is unoccupied and any
proceedings to evict the occupier(s) shall
be undertaken by the
Purchaser at his/her own risk, cost and expense."
[3.4]
The conditions of sale provide further:
"7.2
Notwithstanding any of these provisions the Purchaser shall be solely
responsible for rejecting [sic]
any person or other occupier claiming
occupation, including a tenant, at the Purchaser's cost. No
obligation shall vest the Sheriff
and/or the execution creditor."
[3.5]
The Sheriff certified that the Property was
duly sold to the applicant on 26 September 2022.
[3.6]
Given
the time delay between the sale in execution and the launch of this
application, there is no reason to believe that the payment
of the
initial deposit as contemplated in the conditions of sale was not
paid or, in the absence thereof, the Sheriff would have
been obliged
to approach this Court seeking an order cancelling the sale and
thereby preclude the pending transfer.
[1]
[4]
The applicant now applies for the eviction
of the occupiers of the Property as the “person in charge”.
IS THE APPLICANT “THE
PERSON IN CHARGE” AS CONTEMPLATED IN PIE?
[5]
The "person in charge" is defined
in section 1 of PIE as follows:
"… a person
who has or at the relevant time had
legal authority
to give
permission to a person to enter or reside upon the land in question"
(emphasis added)
[5]
In addition to the registered owner of land,
the “person in charge” may apply in terms
of section 4(1)
of PIE for the eviction of an “unlawful occupier”.
[2]
[6]
The
principles of interpretation of documents are uncontroversial. A
Court undertakes a unitary, purposive and objective exercise
by
giving the words used their ordinary grammatical meaning, in their
correct contextual setting, and construed consistently with
the
Constitution
[3]
together with
admissible background circumstances.
[4]
[7]
The
phrase “legal authority” implies a right in law to permit
a person entry upon or to reside upon the land or building
in
question. When the ordinary grammatical meaning of the words in
the phrase is considered, purposively, and through the
lens of the
Constitution,
[5]
the meaning of
the phrase is uncontroversial. It asks whether a person, who is
not the owner of the said land or building
erected on the land, has
the right, in law, to allow another person to enter land or a
building situated thereon and to reside
there.
[8]
Various
people who fall within the class who enjoy the aforesaid right. These
include a lawful tenant that is permitted to sub-let
or a registered
owner’s agent (for example a letting agent). Then, there are
those who enjoy a registered servitude of
usus
,
usufruct
[6]
or
habitatio
.
[7]
Each of these examples are holders of limited real rights which
confer upon the holder the legal authority PIE contemplates to
be the
“person in charge”. But the position is less clear in the
instance of property acquired at a sale in execution.
I have been
unable to find any reported judgments where this has been considered.
[9]
In
the unreported
Red
Stripe
[8]
judgment, Gildenhuys J held that an applicant, in the position of the
applicant herein, lacks
locus
standi
to
apply for the eviction of an unlawful occupier of land or the
buildings erected on such land prior to becoming the registered
owner. The learned judge applied the common law principles applicable
to the
rei
vindicatio
in reaching the conclusion aforesaid.
[10]
In
relation to the
rei
vindicatio
,
the requirements are long settled. In the
locus
classicus
decision in
Graham
,
[9]
Greenburg J (Barry J
concurring) held that:
“
One
of the rights arising out of ownership is the right to possession;
indeed Grotius
Introd
.
2.3.4., says that ownership consists in the right to recover lost
possession.
Prima
facie
therefore
proof that the appellant is owner and that the respondent is in
possession entitles the appellant to an order giving
him possession,
i.e. to an order for ejectment.”
[11]
The
applicant herein does not approach this Court in terms of the
rei
vindicatio
(nor did the applicant in
Red
Stripe
either
)
.
In both instances the applicants approached the Court for
relief in terms of section 4 of PIE
qua
“person in charge”.
Red
Stripe
addresses rights of possession in terms of the common law for
purposes of the
rei
vindicatio
.
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Changing
Tides
[10]
pointed out, in the context of onus in an eviction from residential
property in terms of PIE, an applicant must satisfy the court
that an
eviction order is just and equitable in the circumstances. In
Occupiers,
Berea
[11]
the
Constitutional Court held that the just and equitable enquiry is more
expansive that a determination of rights of occupation
as it would
under the
rei
vindicatio
.
PIE is therefore a departure from the narrow examination of the
common law right of possession in terms of the
rei
vindicatio
.
As such, the question as to what it means to be the “person in
charge” as contemplated in PIE was left unanswered
in
Red
Stripe
.
[12]
In
the course of my research, I found reference to a full bench decision
in
Khaka
[12]
in this division. Notwithstanding my best endeavours and those of the
library staff at the High Court, I have not been able to
obtain a
copy of this judgment.
[13]
From what I have been able to piece
together,
Khaka
was an appeal against a decision of Moshidi J, who had granted an
eviction order in favour of White Rock Property Trading (“
White
Rock
”) on the basis that it was
the “person in charge” of the relevant property.
The property in question had,
similarly to the property in the
instant case, been acquired at a sale in execution and transfer of
ownership was, as in the case
before me, pending. By the time
the replying affidavit was delivered, transfer of the relevant
property had taken place.
[14]
In
a subsequent application for eviction, this court, per Opperman
J,
[13]
recorded that the full
bench dismissed the earlier application on the basis that “…
as
the applicant
[a
reference to White Rock]
was
not the registered owner at the time that the first eviction
application was instituted, thus the appeal had succeeded on the
basis that the applicant then lacked locus standi
.”
[14]
[15]
It
appears that the appeal turned on the fact that White Rock had not
taken transfer of the property concerned at the time it launched
the
first eviction application.
[15]
I infer the appeal court held that White Rock was not the “person
in charge” as contemplated in PIE. While Opperman
J’s
decision in White Rock records what the full bench decided. The
rationale underpinning that decision appears to be lost
in time.
[16]
Subsequent
to the hearing of this matter, Ms Lombard, who appeared for the
applicant, provided me with helpful heads of argument
in which she
referred to the an unreported decision of the full court of the Free
State Division, Bloemfontein in
Motete
.
[16]
[17]
In
Motete
,
the full bench gave some content to the meaning of “person in
charge” as contemplated in PIE. It said,
“
[16]
At common law, one needed to be either an owner or lawful occupier in
order to be clothed with the authority
to initiate eviction
proceedings.
The
definition of "a person in charge" has therefore extended
the category of persons or entities that could qualify to
bring
eviction proceedings, without being necessarily an owner or someone
already in occupation.
This
opened room for persons or entities who are not owners and have never
been in occupation of the property to be able to bring
eviction
proceedings, subject to one qualification: such person or entity must
have the legal authority to allow or refuse entry
or occupation of
such property. In other words, as long as the person or entity has
some legal basis or entitlement (whatever the
source) to have the
said authority
. An owner obviously has
such authority. The same goes for a lessee who occupies in terms of a
valid lease or who has been conferred
with the authority by the owner
or landlord, or is subleasing lawfully in terms of a valid lease
agreement, although not in occupation
then or was never in occupation
before.” (emphasis added)
[18]
The
full court, which was not addressing the consequences of a sale in
execution, found that the applicant was not the “person
in
charge” as contemplated in PIE. It said, “…
even
if the Deed was found to be valid, which it is not as already stated
above, in the absence of a written agreement to deliver
vacuo
possessio on an earlier date than upon transfer of the property, the
respondent would have no right or entitlement to occupy
the property,
and thus cannot qualify as a person in charge (as a lawful tenant or
lessee) in terms of the Deed
”
.
[17]
This must be seen in the context of a contractual provision
that “
[p]ossession
and vacant occupation of the property shall be delivered to the
Purchaser on transfer or such earlier date as mutually
agreed upon by
the parties, from which date it shall be at the sole risk, loss or
profit of the Purchaser
.”
[19]
The
decision in
Motete
holds, albeit
obiter
,
that in an ordinary sale of immovable property, absent a contractual
right to possession, the purchaser has no right of possession
until
registration of transfer. This appears consonant with the
principle that property which has been sold, but not delivered,
remains that of the seller
[18]
because the bundle of rights accruing to an owner of property, being
possession and the right to recover possession,
[19]
use and enjoyment
[20]
and
disposition,
[21]
remain vested
in the seller. In
Chetty
,
[22]
the Appellate Division affirmed that one of the incidents of
ownership as the right to exclusive possession of the property. As
owner of immovable property, the seller has the right to possession
until registration of transfer save for an express contractual
agreement to the contrary.
[20]
It is in this context that I examine sales
in execution and the sheriff’s duties and powers to pass
transfer of immovable
property to a purchaser at a sale in execution.
THE DUTIES AND POWERS
OF THE SHERIFF
[21]
Pursuant to a judgment being entered
against a debtor, a creditor sues out a writ of attachment
instructing the sheriff to attach
the judgment debtor’s
property.
[22]
Upon
the attachment of the judgment debtor’s property, a
pignus
judiciale
come into being. In
Liquidators
Union
,
[23]
Kotze JA stated the position as follows:
“…
an
arrest effected on property in execution of a judgment creates
a
pignus praetorium
or
to speak more correctly, a
pignus
judiciale,
over such property. The
effect of such a judicial arrest is that the goods attached are
thereby placed in the hands or custody of
the officer of the Court.
They pass out of the estate of the judgment debtor… the
dominium remains in the debtor, who can,
up to the last moment before
actual sale, redeem his attached property: that is to say, the
property subject to the
pignus
judiciale,
for while
the
pignus
lasts
he remains the owner of the pledge
(dominus
pignoris, Dig.
20.5.12:
Cod
.
4.24.9).”
[23]
At
common law, the sheriff's duty is to take care of the attached goods
until ownership is transferred.
[24]
In my view there is no difference between a judicial pledge and any
other form of pledge in this regard.
[25]
[24]
In
the same way, there is no difference between the sheriff’s
right to use and enjoyment of the attached property and the
rights of
a pledgee under another form of pledge. Use and enjoyment of the
pledged property is not a right accruing to the pledgee.
[26]
The effect of the judicial arrest is to create security for the
satisfaction of the judgment debt
[27]
subject to certain limitations.
[28]
Although custody and control of the attached property passes to the
sheriff, the sheriff
qua
pledgee, does not acquire the right to beneficial use and enjoyment
as the object of a judicial pledge is to establish security
over the
asset of the judgment debtor. And, just like under another form of
pledge, the pledgor may redeem the pledged property
by paying the
debt secured by the pledge,
[29]
the judgment debtor may redeem the property until registration of
transfer.
[30]
[25]
At
a sale in execution, the sheriff acts as the executive of the courts,
not the agent of the judgment debtor.
[31]
The sheriff's duty is to carry out the order of court.
[26]
Upon
the fall of the hammer at a sale in execution, a contract comes into
being between the Sheriff,
suo
nominee
[32]
and the purchaser in respect of the attached property. The terms of
the contract are set out in the Conditions of Sale stipulated
in the
Uniform Rules of Court.
[33]
[27]
It is the sheriff's duty to perform in
terms of that contract and pass transfer of ownership of the property
to the purchaser upon
fulfilment of the conditions in that contract.
Concomitantly, it is the purchaser’s duty to fulfil those
obligations before
transfer can take place failing which the sheriff
is obliged to apply to court for an order setting the sale aside.
[28]
One
of the express contractual provisions of the Conditions of Sale, is
that risk and benefit to the execution purchaser. As such,
the
purchaser at a sale in execution is entitled to the benefit of the
purchased property. Benefit relates to the fruits and not
possession.
[34]
These benefits
have been held to include dividends (in the case of shares) or
rent.
[35]
[29]
In the Conditions of Sale signed by the
applicant, there is no such express contractual provision to
possession of the Property
ahead of transfer.
[30]
Thus, the sheriff does not acquire the
legal authority to permit a person to reside in the subject immovable
property or to apply
for the eviction of an unlawful occupier of such
property,
ex lege
by virtue of the
pignus judiciale
created by the attachment of the property. Having not acquired such
rights, the sheriff cannot transfer such rights to an execution
purchaser on application of the
nemo
plus iuris ad alium transferre potest quam ipse haberet
principle
and the execution purchaser does not acquire such rights
ex
contractu
in terms of the Conditions of
Sale.
CONCLUSION
[31]
On the strength of the conclusion that I
reached above, the purchaser of immovable property at a sale in
execution is not the “person
in charge” for purposes of
section 4(1) of PIE. PIE contemplates that those persons who
have a right in law to possession
of immovable property being used
for purposes of a “home” by an “unlawful occupier”
may, in addition to
the registered owner to approach a court seeking
the eviction of an unlawful occupier.
[32]
In the result, I make the following order:
The application is
dismissed.
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
10h00
on
16
October 2024
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
13
September 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
16
October 2024
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
N
LOMBARD (Ms)
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANT:
DU
TOIT BURGER INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
n/a
ATTORNEY
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
n/a
[1]
Rule
46(11)(a)(i) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides
“
If
the purchaser fails to carry out any obligations due by the
purchaser under the conditions of sale, the sale may be cancelled
by
a judge summarily on the report of the sheriff conducting the sale,
after due notice to the purchaser, and the attached immovable
property may be put up for sale again.”
[2]
Section
4(1) of PIE provides
“
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law or the common law, the
provisions of this section apply to proceedings
by an owner or
person in charge of land for the eviction of an unlawful occupier."
[3]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard and Another
2014
(4) SA 474
(CC) at [28]
[4]
The
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Blair Atholl Homeowners
Association
2019 (3) SA 398
(SCA) at [61]
[5]
[6]
October
N.O and Another v Hendriks and Another
2016 (2) SA 600
(WCC) at [15]
[7]
Hendricks
v Hendriks and Others
2016 (1) SA 511
(SCA) at [6] to [11]
[8]
Red
Stripe Trading 68 CC v Khumalo
(31039/04)
[2005] ZAGPHC 31
(23 March 2005)
[9]
Graham
v Ridley
1931 TPD 476
at 479; approved in
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974 (3) SA 1
(A) at 21A - E
[10]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (6) SA 295
(SCA) at [34]
[11]
Occupiers,
Berea v De Wet NO and Another
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) at [65]
[12]
Khaka
v White Rock Trading (Pty) Ltd
case number A5003/2016 (GLD)
[13]
White
Rock Property Trading v Khaka and Another
an unreported judgment per Opperman J under case number 19602/16
[14]
At
[2]
[15]
At
[10]
[16]
Motete
v Mogorosi
2014 JDR 2167 (FB)
[17]
At
[19.6]
[18]
Harris
v Buissine’s Trustees
2 M 105;
van
Aardt v Hartley’s Trustees
(1845) 2 Menzies 135
;
Cornelissen
N.O v Universal Caravan Sales (Pty) Ltd
1971 (3) SA 158
(A) at 179 B to H
[19]
G.
2.3.4
[20]
Voet
7.1.3
[21]
v.d.L.,
115
[22]
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974 (3) SA 13
(A) at 20 B - C
[23]
Liquidators
Union and Rhodesia Wholesale Ltd v Brown & Co
1922 AD 549
at 558-9
[24]
Hackwell
Mackeurtan’s
Sale of Goods in South Africa
,
5
th
ed at 252
[25]
S
A Breweries v Levin
1935 AD 77
at 84;
Retmill
Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v Sanlam Life Insurance Company Ltd and
others
[2013] 3 All SA 337
(WCC) at [30]
[26]
Freeman
Cohen’s Consolidated Ltd v General Mining & Finance
Corporation Ltd
1906 TS 585
at 591
[27]
Brits
Real
Security Law
at 478 and the authorities cited in
fn
666. In
Maasdorp’s
Institutes of South African Law
,
Volume II, 8
th
ed, the learner authors refer, at 192, to this form of security
being a “lien over other creditors who have not obtained
a
judgment against the debtor”.
[28]
Ibid
at 479
[29]
Darling
v Registrar of deeds, Cape Town
1929 AD 28
at 35;
McCullough
& Whitehead v Whiteaway & Co
1914 AD 599
at 626
[30]
Liquidators
Union
supra
[31]
Sedibe
and Another v United Building Society and Another
1993 (3) SA 671
(T) at 676 A – C overturning
South
African Permanent Building Society v Levy
1959 (1) SA 228
(T) which held, at 230 B, that “[w]hen the
Sheriff carries out the duties imposed upon him in the sale of
attached property,
he does not sell as a principal but acts as a
statutory agent on behalf of the
judgment
debtor
who is being compelled to sell the particular attached asset.”
(emphasis added)
[32]
Sedibe
at 675 I;
Haralal
v Naicker and Another
2009 (1) SA 636
(D) at [12]
[33]
Rule
46(8)(g)(a)(i)
[34]
Shackell
v Lippert
7 SC 75
;
Meintjies
v Manley
1922 CPD 151
;
Mulder
v van Eyk
1984 (4) SA 204
(SECLD) at 207 C
[35]
Nel
v Bornman
1968 (1) SA 498
(T) at 499 A citing
Fincham
v De Kock and Bolus
,
9 H.C.G 120 at 123 and
De
Kock and another v Fincham
19 SC 126
at 145
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