Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1304South Africa
Hassiem v Prime Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/137597) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1304 (24 December 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent application – rule 6(12)(b) – if there is some delay in instituting the proceedings an applicant has to explain the reasons for the delay. Mandament van spolie - interim relief pending a final determination of the parties' rights.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hassiem v Prime Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/137597) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1304 (24 December 2024)
Hassiem v Prime Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/137597) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1304 (24 December 2024)
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sino date 24 December 2024
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2024-137597
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
In application between:
MAGAMAT
KASHIEF HASSIEM
Applicant
and
PRIME
PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF WILLOWDOWN
Second
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 24 December 2024.
Summary:
Urgent application – rule 6(12)(b) –
if
there is some delay in instituting the proceedings an applicant has
to explain the reasons for the delay
.
Mandament van
spolie
-
interim relief pending a final
determination of the parties' rights.
JUDGMENT
PG LOUW, AJ
[1]
This application is premised on the
mandament van spolie.
[2]
The applicant seeks an order requiring the
respondents to restore the electricity supply to its full load
capacity for a specific
unit (the flat) in the sectional tittle
scheme known as Willowdown situated at 6 First Avenue, Bordeaux (the
property) within 24
hours. The applicant also seeks a punitive cost
order against the respondents.
[3]
The
applicant alleges to be a tenant of the flat. The second respondent
is the body corporate in respect of the property in terms
of the
Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act (the
Act).
[1]
The first respondent is the managing agent of the second respondent.
[4]
On or about 31 July 2024, a letter was
slipped under the door of the flat. The letter, authored under the
letterhead of the first
respondent, indicate that the owner of the
flat occupied by the applicant owes the second respondent a
substantial amount of money
in respect of levies and electricity and
water charges. The applicant was given written notice that the
services to the flat will
be terminated on 31 August 2024.
[5]
The applicant contacted his attorney of
record on or about 30 August 2024 for assistance to deal with the
threat of the disconnection.
On the same day, the applicant’s
attorney sent a letter to the first respondent stating,
inter
alia
, that the threat of disconnection
is unlawful, that the applicant is the tenant of the flat and is in
peaceful and undisturbed
possession of electricity and/or other
services, and that if the first respondent disconnects the
electricity or any other services
to the flat without a court order,
the applicant will proceed with an urgent application for the
reconnection thereof and will
seek punitive costs and damages against
the first respondent. The letter seem to have had the desired effect,
as the electricity
supply to the flat was not disconnected at that
stage.
[6]
However, according to the applicant,
without any notice or court order, the respondents disconnected the
electricity to the flat
on or about 8 November 2024 (the first
disconnection).
[7]
The respondents’ version is that, on
1 November 2024, the owners of the second respondent, in view of the
substantial arrears
in respect of levies, water, electricity and
ancillary expenses for the flat, resolved to limit the flow of
electricity to the
flat by reducing the electricity amperage from 60
amp to 10 amp. The respondents deny that the supply of electricity to
the flat
was disconnected.
[8]
The applicant submits that he was only able
to consult with his attorney on 14 November 2024. On the same day,
his attorney addressed
a letter to the first respondent demanding
that the electricity be restored to the flat. Consequently, the
electricity was restored
to the flat on the same day. However, one of
the members of the second respondent informed the applicant’s
son that the electricity
would “
trip
if any large load appliances were used, that is appliances such as
the stove, the geyser, the iron, the kettle and the like”
.
The member apparently also informed the applicant’s son that
should the electricity trip, it would not be switched back
on.
[9]
The respondents admit that the amperage was
reduced and contend that the applicant still had electricity for
daily use. According
to the respondents, the applicant’s son
was advised that with the reduction of the amperage there would still
be electricity
for lights, stove, geyser, iron, kettle and the like
but that these appliances could not be used simultaneously.
[10]
On 18 November 2024, the applicant switched
on the geyser, which caused the electricity in the flat to trip.
According to the applicant,
he has not had any electricity in the
flat since 18 November 2024 (the second disconnection).
[11]
The respondents deny that the reduction in
amperage left the applicant without the supply of electricity.
According to the respondents,
the applicant “
has
electricity for his daily use
”.
[12]
On 19 November 2024, a further letter was
sent to the first respondent by the applicant’s attorney
demanding that the electricity
supply be restored to its full
capacity by 20 November 2024, failing which the applicant would
proceed to urgent court. The applicant
received no response to this
letter.
[13]
The applicant was able to consult his
attorney on 25 November 2024 after he was able to raise the required
funds to pay his attorney’s
fees. The application was ready for
signature on 26 November 2024.
[14]
The applicant’s children aged 24, 18
and 16 resided with him until 21 November 2024. He booked a flight
for them to visit
his mother in Cape Town until he could resolve the
current situation.
[15]
It was argued on behalf of the respondents
that the applicant should have approached his landlord (the owner of
the flat) upon receipt
of the 31 July 2024 letter from the first
respondent. It was submitted that the applicant’s urgency is
self-made.
[16]
In
Arcfyre
International (Pty) Ltd and Others v Govender and Another
,
[2]
Adams J held as follows:
[3]
“
Moreover,
the applicant must justify the invasion of the respondent’s
rights to proper notice and an adequate opportunity
to prepare. . . .
The applicant must fully set out the facts supporting the conclusion
advanced; mere lip service will not do.
If
there is some delay in instituting the proceedings an applicant has
to explain the reasons for the delay
and must also explain why, despite the delay, it claims that it
cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
This however does not mean that an applicant can create its own
urgency by simply waiting until the normal rules of court can no
longer be applied and a delay in bringing the application, or
self-created urgency, is a basis for a court to refuse to hear a
matter on an urgent basis.” (Emphasis added.)
[17]
In
Volvo
Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading
CC
,
[4]
Wilson J held the following:
[5]
“
There
is, accordingly, no class of proceeding that enjoys inherent
preference. Counsel appearing in urgent court would, in my view,
do
well to put the concept of ‘inherent urgency’ out of
their minds. There are, of course, some types of case that
are more
likely to be urgent than others. The nature of the prejudice an
applicant will suffer if they are not afforded an urgent
hearing is
often linked to the kind of right being pursued. Spoliation is a
classic example of this type of claim.
Provided
that the person spoliated acts promptly, the matter will nearly
always be urgent
. The urgency does not,
though, arise from the nature of the case itself, but from the need
to put right a recent and unlawful dispossession.
The applicant comes
to court because they wish to restore the ordinary state of affairs
while a dispute about the right to
possess a thing works itself out
. Cases
involving possible deprivations of life and liberty, threats to
health, the loss of one’s home or some other basic
essential of
daily life, such as water or electricity, destruction of property, or
even crippling commercial loss, are also likely
to be urgent.”
(Emphasis added.)
[18]
In this matter, the application was not
instituted with haste. On the applicant’s version, he “
was
in peaceful and undisturbed possession of electricity immediately
prior to the first disconnection and I had limited possession
of
electricity after the partial restoration thereto on 14 November
2024
”. If the letter from the
first respondent dated, 31 July 2024, was not sufficient indication
for the applicant to approach
his attorney or his landlord to try to
resolve the situation, the indication to his son on 14 November 2024
of the reduced electricity
supply, should have triggered the
launching of this application on an urgent basis. The applicant,
however, only proceeded to prepare
the application eleven days later
on 25 November 2024. The application was heard on 11 December 2024,
more than a month after the
first disconnection. One would have
expected the applicant to approach the court much sooner. I
accordingly find that the applicant
did not act promptly as suggested
in
Volvo
.
[19]
There
is another reason why the application ought not to succeed. The
mandament
van spolie
provides for interim relief pending the final determination of the
parties’ rights.
[6]
In
this matter, the applicant is not seeking any determination of the
parties’ rights. Put differently, the spoliation order
sought
is not subject to or pending any action over the merits of the
dispute between the parties. If this reasoning is correct,
it means
by necessary implication that the
mandament
van spolie
is not available to the applicant, but rather that the applicant
should meet the requirements of injunctive relief. The applicant,
however, made it clear that his case is based on the
mandament
van spolie
and that he does not seek interdictory relief.
[20]
In
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
,
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal summarised the essence of the remedy of
the
mandament
van spolie
as
follows:
“
The
mandament van spolie (spoliation) is a remedy of ancient origin,
based upon the fundamental principle that persons should not
be
permitted to take the law into their own hands to seize property in
the possession of others without their consent. Spoliation
provides a remedy in such a situation by requiring the status quo
preceding the dispossession to be restored by returning the property
'as a preliminary to any enquiry or investigation into the merits of
the dispute' as to which of the parties is entitled to
possession. Thus a court hearing a spoliation application does
not require proof of a claimant's existing right to property,
as
opposed to their possession of it, in order to grant relief. But what
needs to be stressed is that
the
mandament provides for interim relief pending a final
determination of the parties' rights
,
and only to that extent is it final. The contrary comment of the full
court in
Eskom v Nikelo
is clearly wrong.
A spoliation order is
thus no more than a precursor to an action over the merits of
the dispute
.” (Footnotes omitted
and emphasis added.)
[21]
In the circumstances, I am not inclined to
grant the relief sought by the applicant. The matter ought to be
struck from the roll
for lack of urgency.
[22]
Insofar
as the issue of costs is concerned, the respondents seek a costs
order on the attorney and client scale. The request is
based on
Management
Rule 25(4)
,
[8]
which
provides for the liability of a ‘member’ to the body
corporate for legal costs and disbursements in the collection
of
arrear contributions or any other arrear amounts due and owing to the
body corporate, or in enforcing compliance with the Management
Rules,
the conduct rules or the Act. In my view, the provisions of the rule
do not find application in this spoliation application.
The
respondents are not collecting any monies or enforcing any compliance
in this application.
[23]
In the circumstances, I grant the following
order:
1.
The application is struck from the roll for
lack of urgency.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the first
and second respondents’ party and party costs, including the
costs of counsel on
Scale B.
PG LOUW
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for applicant:
Adv
M Rodrigues
Instructed
by:
Kaveer
Guiness Inc.
Counsel
for first and second respondent:
Adv
C D Roux
Instructed
by:
Arnold
Joseph
Date
of hearing:
Date
of judgment:
11
December 2024
24
December 2024
[1]
8
of 2011.
[2]
(2023-098452)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1243 (31 October 2023).
[3]
Arcfyre
at para 24.
[4]
(2023/067290)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023).
[5]
Volvo
at para 6.
[6]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386
(SCA) at para 8.
[7]
Eskom
at
para 8.
[8]
Prescribed in terms of s 10(2)(a) of the Act.
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