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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 1292
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## Patel NO v Deedat and Another (2024/16548)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1292 (18 December 2024)
Patel NO v Deedat and Another (2024/16548)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1292 (18 December 2024)
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sino date 18 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2024-
16548
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
AQUEEL PATEL NO
in his capacity as curator to MAHOMED
DEDAT,
ZAIBOONISHA DEDAT, SHAHEDA DEDAT, ZOHRA
MAHOMED DEDAT,
ISMAEL BHOJA NO
Applicant
and
MOHAMED NAEEM
DEEDAT
First Respondent
REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
BADENHORST AJ:
[1]
“
How sharper than a serpent’s tooth
it is to have a thankless child
”
,
wrote Shakespeare in Act 1, Scene 4 of King Lear. Once tender hearts,
now sharp like knives, is a tale as old as time, where greed
survives.
[2]
This case and its related litigation tell the
story of family strife over inherited assets which have spurned
costly litigation
that keeps inflaming emotions. Considered in the
cold light of day, the lesson is that a prudent family should never
travel the
same road. It can safely be predicted that, if this family
remains on its current trajectory of inability to reach an amicable
resolution of this destructive feud, nothing will remain of their
earthly feud when the bitter end is reached.
[3]
The application was launched on 12 October 2024 in
the form of a so-called “semi-urgent” matter for hearing
in the urgent
motion court on 3 December 2024. Elaborate times were
allowed for the filing of papers.
[4]
The relief claimed is, in essence, for the
status
quo
to be preserved in relation to a
one eighteenth fraction [“the fraction”] of an undivided
share of the ownership in
a property situated at Erf 2[…] F[…]
(“the property”) with the street address 4[…] L[…]
Road, F[…], Johannesburg.
[5]
More particularly, the first respondent (who owns
the contested fraction) is sought to be interdicted against
encumbering, alienating,
bonding, selling, leasing or in any way
transacting or dealing with it pending the finalisation of an action
instituted by the
applicants under case number 2024-107194 (“the
action”). It is claimed in the action that first respondent
fraudulently
took transfer of “certain undivided shares in the
property”. These allegations are vehemently disputed in the
answering
affidavit.
[6]
An order is also requested for the Registrar of
Deeds (the second respondent) to record the proposed interim
interdict against the
title deed of the property to avoid any
dealings with the property by anyone in the interim.
[7]
The action was launched in this court on 19
September 2024. The claims made therein are advanced on the premise
that the plaintiffs
in that case (whose interests coincide with those
of the applicants) are the owners of the property and that the
defendants (including
the first respondent) are obliged to transfer
the shares in the property held in their names to the plaintiffs.
[8]
On 26 April 2024, the first respondent and others
(not cited herein but who also hold undivided fractional ownership
interests in
the property) launched an application [“the April
2024 application”], citing Mr Mahomed Dedat (a 95 year old man)
[“Mr
Dedat”] who is registered as the owner of a one
third share in the property. In the April 2024 application, an order
is sought
to terminate the joint ownership in the property, sell the
property and divide the proceeds according to the interests held by
the respective part owners.
[9]
The story begins many years earlier when Mr Dedat
and his two brothers (now deceased) became owners of one third each
of undivided
shares in the property. The deceased brothers’
shares have since devolved to their respective heirs, hence the
lengthy list
of litigants cited in the various proceedings.
[10]
I shall refer to the two (regrettably) opposing
sides as “the Dedat camp” to describe Mr Dedat and his
curator bonis
(the applicant in the urgent application) and to “the
opposing camp” being the heirs and successors of the two
deceased
bothers of Mr Dedat. Together, the opposing camp holds two
thirds’ interest in the property (made up of several fractions)
and Mr Dedat (via his curator) holds the remaining one third.
[11]
Since September 2024, the Dedat camp’s
attorney addressed serial requests to the opposing camp’s
attorney for an undertaking
pending the final determination of the
action to preserve the status quo. No undertaking was forthcoming. In
fact, on 30 Sept 2024
the attorney made it clear that no undertaking
was forthcoming.
[12]
The impasse eventually triggered this urgent
application.
[13]
The urgent application is confined to restricting
all dealings by the first respondent of whatsoever nature concerning
the fraction,
pending the finalisation of the action.
[14]
It is unexplained in the papers why the rest of
the opposing camp had not been joined in the proceedings. I agree
with counsel for
the first respondent that they have a substantial
interest in at least paragraph 3 of the notice of application (in
which the Registrar
of Deeds is requested to prohibit any dealings
with the property pending the finalisation of the action). Such
relief cannot be
granted without joining them, or it is at least
shown that they have waived their right to be joined or that they
abide this court’s
decision. None of these requirements is
satisfied.
[15]
To overcome this problem, counsel for the
applicant abandoned paragraph 3 during argument but persisted with
prayer 2 against the
first respondent.
[16]
The applicant states the following in support of
his alleged reasonable apprehension irreparable harm in paragraphs 45
and 46 of
the founding affidavit, in support of the request for
interim relief:
“
The
Applicants have no protection at this stage that the First Respondent
will not on-transfer title in the property to an unsuspecting
member
of the public or try to alienate title to an associated person by way
of a mortgage bond so as to frustrate the Applicants
rights. First
Respondent is already party to a fraud that appears from the
affidavits filed by Applicants in the main application.
There is
therefore good cause to believe that he will take steps to hold onto
his share of the property by any means
.
Currently, the
First Respondent is both able and capable to alienate title in the
property
.”
[17]
The legal position of a co-owner (of an undivided
share in property) is stated as follows in Bonheur 76 General Trading
(Pty) Ltd
v Caribbean Estates (Pty) Ltd 2011 JDR 0182 (SCA) at
paragraph [13]:
“
Each
co-owner of property is entitled to dispose of his share without the
consent of the others. The right of disposal is not fettered
unless
by agreement. Of course, one co-owner may not use or deal with the
common property as a whole without the consent of all
the co-owners.
But the sale of a share, or its hypothecation, does not affect the
property as a whole.”
[18]
It is accordingly correct, as stated by the
applicant, that the first respondent can alienate the fraction. But
such alienation
will not affect the property as a whole. First
respondent may not use or deal with the common property (as a whole)
without the
consent of all the co-owners including the applicant.
[19]
That brings me to the well-known requirements for
an interim interdict – proof of a prima facie right, a
reasonable apprehension
of harm, absence of an alternative remedy and
that the balance of convenience favours the relief claimed by
applicant.
[20]
The application fails to establish these
requirements: the applicant has no right to interdict the first
respondent from encumbering,
alienating, bonding, selling, leasing or
in any way transacting or dealing with his (fractional) share in the
property. The allegation
of fraud is contested and I am unable to
find that the alleged right has been prima facie established upon the
application of the
test in Webster v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at
1189-1190 and Gool v Minister of Justice and Another
[1955] 3 All SA
115
(C).There can in any event be no harm to the applicant, because –
as a matter of law – none of the perceived actions
by first
respondent can affect the property as a whole. It also follows that
there is no balance of convenience in applicant’s
favour and
the question of an alternative remedy does not arise. Tellingly, the
applicant does not allege that the first respondent
has threatened to
or has the power to do anything that will affect the property as a
whole.
[21]
The following order is issued:
The application is dismissed with
costs.
BADENHORST AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
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