Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1111South Africa
Executive Mobility Financial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Gulf Oils Fuels (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112065) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1111 (30 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Property – Return of property – Rei vindicatio -requirements established-application granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Executive Mobility Financial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Gulf Oils Fuels (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112065) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1111 (30 October 2024)
Executive Mobility Financial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Gulf Oils Fuels (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/112065) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1111 (30 October 2024)
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sino date 30 October 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
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2024-112065
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
30
October 2024
In
the matter between:
EXECUTIVE
MOBILITY FINANCIAL SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
GULF
OILS AND FUELS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
EUGENE
NEL N.O
Second
Respondent
ABRAHAM
MASANGO N.O
Third
Respondent
TENDAYI
TINASHE JACOB MAWOKO
Fourth
Respondent
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail and released to
SAFLII. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 30 October 2024
.
Summary: Property –
Return of property – Rei vindicatio -requirements
established-application granted.
The applicant applied for
a
rei vindicatio
against the first and second
respondents. The motor vehicle, which the applicant sought to
recover, had been delivered to the first
respondent, Gulf Oil (in
liquidation) but was in the possession of the fourth respondent, its
director.
Held: On the facts, the
applicant successfully established that at the time of issuing the
application its ownership of the motor
vehicle and that the fourth
respondent was in possession thereof. The lease having expired,
the fourth respondent
had no basis in law to keep the motor vehicle.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J:
[1]
The
applicant seeks the return of a vehicle from the fourth respondent
based on a
rei vindicatio
pursuant
to Rule 6 (12) of the Uniform Rules. It is common cause between the
parties that the applicant is the owner of a Mercedes-Maybach
GLS600
vehicle with engine number 1[…], chassis number W[…],
registration number K[…] and that the fourth
respondent is
currently in possession thereof. The dispute between the parties
turned on the limited issue whether the applicant
discharged the onus
of proving its ownership of the motor vehicle. After hearing
submissions, I granted the following order having
determined that the
requirements of Rule 6 (12) were met:
“
1.
The fourth respondent is immediately to return the applicant's
Mercedes- Maybach GLS600 with engine number 1[…] chassis
number W[…] and registration number K[…] ("the
motor vehicle") to the Applicant.
2.
In the event that the fourth respondent fails to comply with
paragraph 1, within 1 calendar day of the granting of this order,
that the Sheriff of this Honourable Court is authorised to attach and
remove the motor vehicle from the possession of the fourth
respondent
and to return the motor vehicle to the Applicant.
3.
The fourth respondent shall pay the costs of this application,
including the costs of counsel, on the scale C.”
[2]
The
applicant, Executive Mobility Financial Solutions (Pty) Ltd, is a
company duly registered and incorporated in accordance with
the
company laws of the Republic of South Africa. Its principal place of
business at 22 Hurlingham Road, Dunkeld, Johannesburg.
[3]
The
first respondent, Gulf Oils and Fuels (Pty) Ltd, in liquidation
("Gulf Oils”), is a company duly registered and
incorporated in accordance with the company laws of the Republic of
South Africa, and having its principal place of business at
4708
Bergamot Crescent, Summerfields Estate, Centurion. It is common cause
that, Gulf Oils was placed in final liquidation on 8
September 2022
by order of this court in Pretoria (per Nyathi J).
[4]
The
second respondent, Eugene Nel, is an adult male liquidator of Gulf
Oils appointed as such on 4 July 2023.
[5]
The
third respondent, Abraham Masango, is an adult male liquidator of
Gulf Oils appointed as such on 4 July 2023.
[6]
The
fourth respondent, Mr Tendayi Tinashe Jacob Mawoko (" Mr
Mawoko") is an adult male businessman presently residing
at […]
R[…], S[…] G[…] Estate, Kempton Park, Gauteng,
1619. Mr Mawoko is the sole director of Gulf
Oils.
Factual
background
[7]
Briefly
stated, pursuant to a rental agreement entered into between the
applicant and Gulf Oils, the applicant gave possession of
its movable
property, the Mercedes-Maybach GLS600 referred to above to a
representative of Gulf Oils, Mr Mawoko. Importantly, the
rental
agreement between the applicant and Gulf Oils expired on 25 July
2024.
In
terms of the Rental Agreement, the vehicle was required to be
returned to the applicant. It is the applicant’s case that,
Mr
Mawoko was never authorised, in his personal capacity, to have
possession of the motor vehicle. The liquidators of Gulf Oils
have
confirmed that they were unaware of the Rental Agreement,
importantly, that they have no claim against the applicant and that
they will abide the decision of this Court.
[8]
Mr
Mawoko denied that the application is urgent. Whilst conceding that
the original lease agreement is no more by effluxion of time
as
alleged by the applicant, he contends that “there exists
another agreement concluded in series with the lease agreement
which
provides for the purchase of the motor vehicle. In terms of the other
connected agreement, the framing of the lease agreement
was intended
merely for securing the debt pending the extinction of the principal
debt”.
[9]
It is
common cause between the parties that on 13 July 2022 (annexure
TM1”), the applicant in written communication to Gulf
Oils,
advised in response, to a request for a settlement quotation advised
that subject certain stipulated conditions as well as
those terms
stipulated in the Vehicle Rental Agreement, payment of the amount of
R3,005,537,47 ("the settlement amount")
on or before
20/07/2022 ("the settlement date") will discharge Gulf Oils
of its obligations to the applicant arising
out of the Vehicle Rental
Agreement. This was followed up by another settlement quote dated 20
July 2022 (“as per annexure
TM2”), in the amount of
R3,088,810.70 relied upon by the fourth respondent.
[10]
Mr
Mawoko's solitary defence to the
rei
vindicatio
claim by the applicant is that he and the applicant allegedly entered
into an "oral agreement" for the sale of the motor
vehicle
which the applicant denied. Mr Mawoko states that, “he elected
not to proceed with the terms of such settlement quotations
referred
to above but continued on with the monthly repayments".
Importantly, the applicant admits that negotiations did ensue
as
regards a potential sale of the motor vehicle but those negotiations
fell through and no agreement was ever reached.
[11]
It
is trite that
in
application proceedings the affidavits take the place not only of the
pleadings in an action, but also of the essential evidence
which
would be led at a trial.
[1]
[12]
The
most obvious fundamental challenge for Mr Mawoko is that he failed to
plead the elements for the conclusion of a sale agreement.
Mr Mawoko
has not pleaded that a purchase price was agreed to, nor that he has
paid the applicant such purchase price. It is the
applicant’s
case that he cannot make such allegations because neither occurred.
[13]
It
trite that, for purposes of this cause of action, a litigant in the
position of the applicant has to first allege and prove,
that
he/she/it is the owner of the thing.
[2]
Second, possession on the part of the respondent at the time of the
institution of the proceedings.
[3]
Accordingly, legal proceedings based on the
rei vindicatio
therefore
always must relate to the physical control being exercised by the
respondent over the object in question at the time of
the institution
of the legal proceedings. A vindicatory relief is only open to an
owner for the recovery as in this instance, its
property.
[14]
The
applicant claims delivery of a motor vehicle on the basis that it is
the owner of the motor vehicle, and that the fourth respondent
is in
possession of the motor vehicle.
It
is common cause and not contentious that the vehicle is in Mr
Mawoko's possession and that he continues to drive the motor vehicle
in spite of the expiry of the lease agreement with the first
respondent. The proceedings were therefore instituted in respect of
an act which was being performed at the time of the institution of
the proceedings, viz the exercise by the fourth respondent of
physical control over the motor vehicle.
In
the words of Jansen JA, in
Chetty
v Naidoo
,
[4]
a case where:
“
a
plaintiff who claims possession by virtue of his ownership must
ex
facie
his
statement of claim prove the termination of any right to hold which
he concedes the defendant would have had but for the
termination. . .”.
[15]
I
am satisfied that applicant meets each of the legal requirements for
the relief sought. The applicant's proof of ownership is
attached to
its founding affidavit. Mawoko has not meaningfully challenged this
ownership or put up a serious defence as to his
continued possession
of the vehicle.
In
essence, the fourth respondent, by contrast, has failed to establish
that he was “vested with some right enforceable against
the
owner (e.g., a right of retention or a contractual right)”
which entitled him to continue to hold against the owner.
[5]
[16]
As
regards the question of urgency, the applicant also attached as
annexure "RA1”, being tracking reports of the motor
vehicle for the period between 18 September 2024, being the date on
which a Mr Ekeh confronted the unauthorised driver who had
been
driving the motor vehicle unlawfully, up to 10 October 2024. It is
clear from this tracking report that:
the
motor vehicle has repeatedly been driven, above the speed limit,
despite Mr Mawoko's attorney's undertaking that the 18 September
incident was a "single incident" and that it would not
occur again. In addition, the motor vehicle was being stored,
over-night, at various unknown locations which are not the locations
cited in the Rental Agreement for either Mr Mawoko or Gulf
Oils.
[17]
The
applicant pointed out to my satisfaction that it will, inter alia, be
unable to fulfil its obligations by delivering the vehicle
to the new
rentee of the vehicle, in terms of the new rental agreement which the
applicant has entered into. Accordingly, the applicant
as it
contended will be deprived of substantial redress in due course were
the matter not to be heard on an urgent basis.
[18]
I remain satisfied that the fourth respondent
failed to show that he has a proper defence against the
applicant's
rei vindication.
The
applicant was therefore entitled to vindicatory relief. It was inter
alia, for these reasons that I granted the relief.
MUDAU J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
C. Shahim
Thomson
Wilks Inc.
Counsel
for the Fourth Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
Matlhaba E. Manala
Paul
Friedman & Associates
Date
of Hearing:
Date
of Judgment:
15
October 2024
30
October 2024
[1]
See
inter alia,
Radebe
v Eastern Transvaal Development Board
1988
(2) SA 785
(A)
at
793E;
Transnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
2006
(1) SA 591
(SCA)
at
600G;
Molusi
v Voges NO
2016
(3) SA 370
(CC)
at
381F–H).
[2]
See
Goudini
Chrome (Pty) Ltd v MCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 208
;
1993
(1) SA 77
(A) 82;
Concor
Construction (Cape) (Pty) Ltd v Santambank Ltd
1993
(3) SA 930.
[3]
See
Krugersdorp
Town Council v Fortuin
1965 (2) SA 335 (T)
at 336G and
Vulcan
Rubber Works (Pty) Ltd v South African Railways and
Harbours
1958 (3) SA 285 (A)
at 289F;
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974
(3) SA 13 (A)).
[4]
1974 (3) SA 13 (A)
at 21G.
[5]
Id at
20B-D.
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