Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1293South Africa
Mavambu Coaches (Pty) Ltd v Zacamate (Pty) Limited and Others (2024/137618) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1293 (19 December 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mavambu Coaches (Pty) Ltd v Zacamate (Pty) Limited and Others (2024/137618) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1293 (19 December 2024)
Mavambu Coaches (Pty) Ltd v Zacamate (Pty) Limited and Others (2024/137618) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1293 (19 December 2024)
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sino date 19 December 2024
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THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2024-137618
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
MAVAMBO
COACHES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ZACAMATE
(PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
SWEET
DEAL (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
RICHARD
BRIAN COUGHLAN
Third
Respondent
MARK
MCNAMARA SMITH
Fourth
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties' legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The date and
time
for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 19 December 2024.
JUDGEMENT
PG LOUW, AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application premised on
the
mandament van spolie
.
[2]
The applicant claims that on 22 November
2024, the third and fourth respondents jumped over the fence of the
premises, situated
at 1[…] V[…] Road, C[…] D[…],
Johannesburg (the premises), and co-ordinated the unlawful
deprivation
of the applicant’s possession on behalf of the
respondents. The applicant’s director (Mr Sibanda) alleges that
the
applicant was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the
premises at the time.
[3]
The fourth respondent (Mr Smith) deposed to
the answering affidavit in his capacity as managing director of the
first and second
respondents, and in his personal capacity as the
fourth respondent. The third respondent (Mr Coughlan) is a
representative of the
owner of the premises, Million Up Investments
86 (Pty) Ltd (Million Up). Mr Coughlan deposed to a confirmatory
affidavit in support
of the answering affidavit.
[4]
At the outset of the hearing the applicant
moved for an amendment in respect of the citation of the first
respondent. The intended
amendment was not opposed. The first
respondent underwent a name change and its citation was amended to
AAA Borehole Services (Pty)
Ltd.
[5]
It was also indicated at the outset of the
hearing that the second respondent was in the process of withdrawing
its opposition to
the application and that the respondents were not
persisting with their dispute in respect of the authority of the
applicant’s
attorneys in terms of rule 7(1).
[6]
Depending on the circumstances of the
matter and provided that the applicant does not unnecessarily drag
its feet, an application
of this nature is normally (but not
necessarily always) urgent. The respondents did not challenge the
urgency of the matter and
although the applicant only raised the
alleged spoliation through a letter of its attorney four days after
the alleged spoliation,
on 26 November 2024, the matter was heard on
an urgent basis on 4 December 2024.
[7]
It
is not sufficient for an applicant in a spoliation application to
make out merely a
prima
facie
case. The applicant must “
prove
the facts necessary to justify a final order – that is, that
the things alleged to have been spoliated were in his possession,
and
that they were removed from his possession forcibly or wrongfully or
against his consent”
.
[1]
[8]
Van
Loggerenberg
,
[2]
sets out the position as follows:
“
When
the proceedings are on affidavit (as they generally will be in the
High Court), the applicant must satisfy the court on the
admitted or
undisputed facts, by the same balance of probabilities required in
every civil suit, of the facts necessary for his
success in the
application. The onus of proving the two requisites for the order is
thus on the applicant (or plaintiff). If he
fails to discharge it,
the parties will be left to their remedy by way of action and a
fortiori where the evidence supports the
respondent.”
[9]
According to Mr Smith, none of the
respondents are in possession or occupation of the premises.
According to Mr Smith, Million Up
is in possession and occupation of
the premises and has placed security guards on the premises to secure
the remaining assets to
protect them from ongoing vandalisation and
theft. Mr Smith states that he, as the representative of the first
respondent (the
valid leaseholder in respect of the premises),
together with the fourth respondent, in his capacity as a
representative of
Million Up (the owner of the premises) [I accept
that the reference to the “fourth” respondent should be
the “third”
respondent], attended at the premises on 22
November 2024 to inspect the premises. They found the premises in a
state of dereliction
and abandonment. The main gate appeared to be
broken. It required several people to open it. The only persons on
the premises were
four Zimbabwe nationals – apparently
employees of a company called “
Pioneer
Coaches
” and a fifth man from
Lesotho. These persons informed Mr Smith and Mr Coughlan that they
were sleeping in the busses because
they had nowhere else to go.
According to Mr Smith, the five “
illegal
occupants
” left the premises of
their own accord whilst a sixth individual jumped over the wall and
ran away on his and Mr Coughlan’s
arrival.
[10]
Further observations of Mr Smith and
confirmed by Mr Coughlan include
inter
alia
:
[10.1]
The water and electricity to the premises
had been terminated.
[10.2]
Many busses, buss trailers and trucks in
various stages of disrepair were found on the premises.
[10.3]
The vehicles and buildings have been
effectively abandoned and are being stripped by criminals or are
deteriorating from standing
out in the open. These observations were
corroborated by photographs taken by Mr Smith.
[10.4]
The premises has no signage beyond the
address which is painted on the wall and predates the applicant’s
occupation thereof.
[10.5]
A large number of vehicles on the premises
did not belong to the applicant and were under attachment of Million
Up.
[11]
According to Mr Sibanda, he was personally
present when the respondents deprived the applicant of possession. He
states that the
applicant’s business has come to a standstill
and that the applicant is unable to perform its legal obligations to
its customers
who have already purchased transport tickets to travel
with the applicant. The applicant is also unable to sell any further
tickets
because it would be unable to perform its legal obligations
to those customers. In addition, Mr Sibanda states that the applicant
uses the premises as a safe halfway rest stop for its drivers.
[12]
According to Mr Smith, on 22 November 2024,
after Million Up had taken possession and occupation of the premises,
Mr Sibanda drove
his vehicle towards the entrance of the premises and
forced himself onto the premises. Mr Sibanda then alleged that he was
the
owner of the premises, parked his vehicle inside the premises and
refused to leave. According to Mr Smith, Mr Sibanda slept in his
vehicle for the entire night of 22 November 2024 but left the
premises on 23 November 2024 and abandoned his vehicle by leaving
it
at the premises. Mr Sibanda alleges (in reply) that Mr Smith chased
him away from the premises and that he abandoned his vehicle
“
out
of fear”
.
[13]
The
applicant relies on
Million
Up Investments 86 (Pty) Ltd v Mavambo Coaches (Pty) Ltd and
Another
.
[3]
Million Up lodged an urgent application against the applicant during
September 2024 seeking an order that the applicant be ordered
not to
prevent Million Up’s duly authorised employees and the new
tenant, being the first respondent herein, from entering
and
occupying the remaining portion of the premises, and further that the
applicant restores possession and occupation of a portion
of the
premises to Million Up. In the judgment of Strydom J it is stated
that the applicant “
has
been in possession of the premises or a portion thereof since 2017”
,
and the applicant never vacated the premises although further leases
were entered into in circumstances where the applicant was,
according
to Million Up, in unlawful occupation of a portion of the premises.
This led to a summons being issued against the applicant
wherein
Million Up sought the ejectment of the applicant from the premises.
That litigation has not yet been finalised, but Million
Up brought an
application on an extremely urgent basis for similar relief on the
basis that it had entered into a lease agreement
with a tenant who
wants to occupy a portion of the premises. The matter was struck off
the roll for lack of urgency.
[14]
Mr Marx, who appeared on behalf of the
applicant, submitted that the pending litigation, the September 2024
application and a recent
change in the name of the first respondent,
together with the events on 22 November 2024, are indicative of a
serious misuse of
the justice system.
[15]
As
tempting as the adoption of this contention may be, Mr Smith states
that he is informed by Mr Coughlan, who was the deponent
to the
founding affidavit in the urgent application before Strydom J, that
Million Up “
believed
that the applicant was in occupation of the premises when the
application was launched. It was only afterwards on inspecting
the
property, as I set out above, that it was discovered that the
property and its contents had been abandoned by the applicant”.
This
version does not stand to be rejected as being far-fetched or clearly
untenable.
[4]
In my view, this
allegation is corroborated by the evidence put up by the respondents
in the answering affidavit.
[16]
Mr Sibanda, in the replying affidavit,
again states that he was personally present on 22 November 2024 “
to
witness the respondents’ unlawful deprivation of the
applicant’s possession”
. He
relies on a screenshot of a WhatsApp conversation between himself and
a driver, Mr Gurumombe, wherein Mr Gurumombe apparently
informed Mr
Sibanda of Mr Smith and Mr Coughlan’s attendance at the
premises. No confirmatory affidavit by Mr Gurumombe is
before the
court.
[17]
In addition, Mr Sibanda, in reply, relies
on “
updated photographs”
taken by him on 22 November 2024 depicting the busses, trucks and the
electricity connections. He confirms that there is solar
power to the
property. These photographs, in contradistinction to the photographs
relied upon by the respondents, depict, on the
face of it, mobile and
operating trucks and busses. On the face of it, the premises
where these photographs were taken appears
to differ from the
premises where the respondents’ photographs were taken. I make
no finding in this regard. However, the
question does beckon why this
evidence, particularly the (uncorroborated) evidence pertaining to
the WhatsApp conversation was
not put up in the founding affidavit.
Mr Sibanda refers to a photograph he took of himself and Mr Smith and
Mr Coughlan (FA9),
however this photograph does not form part of the
papers before the court.
[18]
From a conspectus of all the evidence
placed before the court, I am of the view that the applicant has not
discharged the onus of
showing that it was in possession when it was
allegedly spoliated.
[19]
Even if this finding is wrong, there is
another reason why the application ought to fail: Million Up is
in possession and
occupation of the premises, but is not a party to
this application. The first respondent is not in occupation of the
premises.
The second respondent is not in occupation of the premises.
Mr Smith and Mr Coughlan, in their personal capacities, are not in
possession of the premises. The respondents’ version in this
regard has not been rebutted. There is accordingly force in the
submissions of Mr Heher, who appeared on behalf of the first, third
and fourth respondents, that this is not a case where the alleged
spoliator has parted with the possession of the premises to a third
party, and that, factually, none of the respondents are in
possession
of the property. By implication, none of the respondents are in a
position to restore possession of the premises to
the applicant, even
if the applicant had been spoliated. In my view, an order directing
any of the respondents to restore possession
to the applicant cannot
be enforced and is therefore not competent.
[20]
Insofar as the issue of costs is concerned,
I am of the view that the general rule that costs should follow the
event should not
be departed from.
[21]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the first,
third and fourth respondents’ party and party costs, including
cost of counsel
of Scale C.
PG LOUW
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv
P Marx
Schickerling
Incorporated
Counsel
for first, third and fourth respondents:
Instructed
by:
Adv
J M Heher
Khupane
Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
Date
of judgment:
4
December 2024
19
December 2024
[1]
See Van Loggerenberg in Erasmus:
Superior
Court Practice
,
Volume 2 at D7-14 and the authorities cited in note 121
.
[2]
Id at D7-14 and the authorities cited in note 127
.
[3]
(2024/107226)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1053 (16 October 2024).
[4]
South
African Veterinary Council v Szymanski
2003
(4) SA 42
(SCA) at para 24.
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