Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 16South Africa
JGK Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Quarry Master CC and Others (2022-62072) [2023] ZAGPJHC 16 (16 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## JGK Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Quarry Master CC and Others (2022-62072) [2023] ZAGPJHC 16 (16 January 2023)
JGK Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Quarry Master CC and Others (2022-62072) [2023] ZAGPJHC 16 (16 January 2023)
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sino date 16 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-62072
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
16
JANUARY 2023
In
the matter of:
JGK
ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
QUARRY
MASTER CC
First
Respondent
ANDRIES
STEFANUS DU TOIT
Second
Respondent
CECILIA
MARIA MAGDALENA DU TOIT
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, a manufacturer of mining
equipment, seeks the urgent stay of two warrants for its ejectment
from adjoining properties,
which together constitute the commercial
premises situated at 33 Greer Street, Vulcania, Brakpan, from which
it operates.
[2]
The first respondent owns one of the
properties, and the second and third respondents, a married couple,
own the other. They
also own and control the first respondent.
The respondents seek the ejectment of the applicant from the premises
in a counterapplication,
on the basis that the warrants had already
been lawfully executed, whereafter the applicant unlawfully returned
to the premises.
# The facts
The facts
[3]
The facts are not contentious. The
applicant took occupation of the premises at the end of March 2021.
On 28 May 2021
the respondents respectively sold the two properties
to the applicant in terms of two separate contracts. In terms
thereof,
the applicant paid substantial non-refundable deposits, and
had to pay off the balance of the purchase prices at R20 000,00
per month each. Since November 2021, the applicant has not made the
monthly payments.
[4]
On 1 April 2022 the respondents had
formal breach notices served on the applicant, and when the notices
were not complied with,
the respondents cancelled the agreements on
11 May 2022. In the same month they issued two summonses out of
the Magistrates’
Court for the district of Brakpan, each for
both a monetary claim and a claim for ejectment. The applicant
delivered notices
of intention to defend both actions but failed to
deliver its pleas, despite the delivery of notices of bar. The
applicant purported
to deliver notices to remove cause of complaint
in both actions but did not seek to uplift the bars.
[5]
In these circumstances, default judgment
was granted in favour of the respondents, on 18 October 2022 and 11
November 2022 respectively,
and warrants of execution against movable
property and warrants of ejectment were issued pursuant thereto.
[6]
On 7 December 2022 the Sheriff evicted
the applicant from the premises under these warrants, attached the
movables, locked the premises
and handed the keys to the
respondents.
[7]
On 12 December 2022 the applicant
launched applications for the rescission of the default judgments,
and the next day it brought
applications to stay execution pending
the outcome of the applications for rescission, in terms of section
78 of the Magistrates
Court Act, 32 of 1944. These applications
were brought
ex parte
and were granted on the same day.
[8]
Although the two orders stipulate that
they were rules
nisi
,
neither contained a return date. The respondents anticipated
the notional return date on 19 December 2022, when the interim
orders
were discharged.
[9]
On 27 December 2022 the applicant
delivered notices of appeal against the discharge of the interim
rules, and on 29 December 2022,
this application was launched.
[10]
The applications for rescission are
enrolled for hearing on 24 January 2023, although the
respondents still have to deliver
their answering affidavits.
# Analysis
Analysis
## The
warrants have already been executed
The
warrants have already been executed
[11]
The
eviction warrants were executed on 7 December 2022. The applicant
states as much in its papers. The Sheriff had completed the
eviction
when he handed the keys to the premises to the respondents.
[1]
After 7 December 2022 there was thus no longer any possibility of a
stay of execution, as it had already taken place.
[2]
[12]
This position is not affected by the
fact that the applicant is currently again in occupation of the
premises. It now occupies
the premises, not because the
warrants have not yet been executed, but because the applicant had
retaken possession of the premises
through self-help. I will
return to this issue below.
[13]
For this reason alone, the application
must fail. However, I briefly consider two further grounds upon
which the application
in my view also would have failed.
## The
issue has already been decided
The
issue has already been decided
[14]
This
application is a second, separate attempt to stay the warrants after
the same application had failed in the Magistrates’
Court.
The applicant moved for the same relief, on the same cause, in
respect of the same subject matter and between the
same parties.
The issue is thus
res
judicata
.
[3]
As mentioned above, the dismissal of the applications in the
Magistrate’s Court is the subject matter of pending appeals.
Assuming, without deciding, that the order is appealable, the matter
is
lis
pendens
.
[4]
[15]
Mr Van Nieuwenhuizen, on behalf of the
applicant, sought to overcome this hurdle on the basis that interim
relief may be revisited
if there are new facts requiring it. The
applicant argues that the new information allowing for the proverbial
second bite at the
cherry is the dichotomous outcome in the
Magistrates’ Court applications, where the warrants of
execution against the moveable
property was stayed, but the warrants
for eviction not.
[16]
The ‘new information’ is not
a reason to revisit the issue, even if this option was available to
the applicant, which
I am not convinced of. It does not speak
to the facts underpinning the outcome of the previous attempt but to
the previous
outcome itself.
[17]
The Magistrate, in discharging the
interim order for the stay of the warrants of ejectment, concluded:
“
The
warrant of ejectment has already been executed by the Sheriff on the
7
th
December 2022. This court has no jurisdiction to
overturn that ejectment. This fact was not disclosed in the
Applicant’s
founding affidavit. The court can
stay/suspend the warrant of execution against the movables which were
attached by the Sheriff,
nothing more. What the Applicant is
asking for is an order for specific performance which this court
cannot grant.”
[18]
The Magistrate, quite correctly in my
view, appreciated that once the warrant had been executed, there was
no execution to stay,
as already dealt with above. The warrants
against movable property were not yet fully executed, because there
had only been
an attachment. There is thus no disjunct in the
treatment of the two types of warrants that justifies a
‘reconsideration’.
[19]
In any event, the applicant has already
raised this issue for determination on appeal. In its notices of
appeal it contends that
one of the Magistrate’s errors was the
conclusion that:-
“
2.
The Court can stay the attachment of movables that
has already been attached by the Sheriff but cannot stay
the
ejectment that has already taken place.”
[20]
This then brings us back full circle to
lis pendens.
## It
will not be just to grant a stay
It
will not be just to grant a stay
[21]
This
Court may stay the execution of a warrant when real and substantial
justice requires it, or put differently, where injustice
would
otherwise result.
[5]
The Court
exercises its discretion when considering whether to stay the
execution of a warrant.
[6]
[22]
The applicant did not disclose to the
Magistrate that it had in fact already been evicted from the
premises. In the founding affidavits
in support of the
ex
parte
applications, which are
similar in content, Mr Kaushal, a director of the applicant, stated
that –
“
23.
The Sheriff served me with the warrant of ejectment and a warrant of
execution against moveable property on 7 DECEMBER
2022, I have been
unable to operate my business in part and/or at all since then.
...
27.
In light that my business has been severely interrupted and that
our
ejectment and execution is imminent
, and I have no
alternative but to approach this court on an urgent basis.”
(emphasis
added)
[23]
The applicant thus expressly presented
to the Court that it had not yet been evicted – a position that
is untenable on the
facts.
[24]
The
withholding or suppression of material facts in an
ex
parte
application by itself entitles a Court to set aside an order, even if
the nondisclosure was not wilful or
mala
fide
.
[7]
The Court exercises its discretion in such circumstances and will
have regard to factors such as
[8]
(i) the extent of the nondisclosure; (ii) whether the Court might
have been influenced by proper disclosure; (iii) the reasons
for the
nondisclosure and (iv) the consequences of setting the provisional
order aside.
[25]
It is clear that the applicant misled
the Magistrate. It knew that it had been evicted, yet it
presented the opposite to the
Magistrate. As can be seen from
the Magistrate’s judgment on the return day, that omission was
material to the granting
of the
ex
parte
orders. If the fact of
the eviction had been disclosed, the orders would not have been
made. The applicant thereafter
forced its way back onto the
premises. To my mind, this reveals a wilful abuse of the process of
court to obtain an ostensible
basis for its return to the property.
[26]
Justice requires that the applicant
should not be rewarded for its improper conduct. This is so
even though there is the potential
that the judgments underlying the
warrants may be upset in the rescission applications. A court
cannot countenance conduct
whereby a party obtains an order through
misrepresentation and then, on the back of that order, asserts
non-existent rights through
self-help to obtain possession of
property.
[27]
In the result the application must
fail.
## The
counterapplication
The
counterapplication
[28]
The respondents brought a
counterapplication for the ejectment of the applicant from the
premises. As already shown, the applicant
had been evicted from
the premises, and thereafter, without the imprimatur of a court order
or the owners’ consent, forcefully
regained possession (by
changing the locks to the property).
[29]
A party cannot unilaterally undo the
consequences of execution and then, on the pretence that execution
had not yet taken place
but is imminent, seek to prevent a further
eviction. The Court will not allow its process to be abused in
this manner.
[30]
The statement that the applicant
regained entry onto the premises “due to the interim order”,
is obviously wrong.
The applicant obtained an interim order
staying execution of the warrants of ejectment, not that it may
re-enter the premises.
It could not have obtained such an
order, because the case that it presented to the Magistrate, on oath,
was that it had not yet
been evicted from the premises.
[31]
The applicant had no entitlement to
dispossess the respondents of their property in this fashion, and its
possession of the property
is unlawful.
[32]
Although
the respondents framed their application along the lines of an
interdict, their case, as set out in their papers, is in
reality
vindicatory in nature. It is common cause that they are the
owners of the properties, and that the applicant does
not have their
permission to occupy the premises. As has been shown above,
there is no superior right which the applicant
may lay claim to for
its possession of the premises. In the result, the respondents
are entitled to vindicate their property.
[9]
[33]
In the result the respondents are
entitled to an order for ejectment.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[34]
In my view there is no reason why the
costs should not follow the result.
[35]
In the result I make the following
order:
(1)
The application for a stay of eviction
under case numbers 1002/2022 and 1003/2022 in the Magistrates’
Court for the District
of Brakpan is dismissed.
(2)
The Sheriff of this Court is authorised
and directed to evict the applicant from the properties known as
Erven 64 and 65 Maryvlei
Township Extension 12, situated at 33 Greer
Street, Vulcania, Brakpan as well as all persons claiming occupations
through or under
the applicant.
(3)
The applicant shall pay the respondents’
costs in respect of both the application and the counterapplication.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard: 10
January 2023
Judgment: 16
January 2023
Counsel
for the Applicant: Advocates
HP Van Nieuwenhuizen
and
A Nadasen
Instructed
by: Pisanti
Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent: Advocate
G
Botha
Instructed
by: ODBB
Inc Attorneys
[1]
O’Sullivan
v Mantel an Another
1981
(1) SA 664
(W) at 669 B – C.
[2]
O’Sullivan
supra
;
Makhubedu
and Another v Ebrahim
1947 (3) SA 155(T).
See especially the comments of Blackwell J
in the dissenting judgment in
Makhubedu
at p
163.
[3]
See for instance
National
Sorghum Breweries Limited (t/a Vivo African Breweries) v
International Liquor Distributors (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 159
;
2001
(2) SA 232
(SCA) in [2];
Aon
v Van den Heever
2018 (6) SA 38
in [22].
[4]
See also the statements by Lord Hoffman in
Arthur
JS Hall & CO
(
a
firm) v Simons; Barratt v Ansell & Others (t/a Woolf Seddon (a
firm)); Harris v Scholfield Roberts & Hill (a firm) and
Another
[2000] UKHL 38
;
[2000] 3 All ER 673
(HL) at 701 c – e, cited in
CSARS
v Hawker Aviation Services Partnership & Others
2005
(5) SA 283
(T) in [46]. The matter was overturned on appeal in
CSARS v
Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA), but the statements of the principles were not
criticised – see para 24 of the SCA Judgment.
[5]
G
ois
t/a Shakespeare’s Pub v Van Zyl
2011 (1) SA 148
(LC) in [32];
Road
Accident Fund v Strydom
2001 (1) SA 292
(C) at 304 G.
[6]
Reynders
v Rand Bank Bpk
1978 (2) SA 630
(T) at 639 F.
[7]
National
Director of Prosecutions v Basson
[2002] 2 All SA 225
(SCA) in [21].
[8]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA) in [29];
Recycling
and Economic Development Initiative of South African NPC v Minister
of Environmental Affairs
2019
(2) 251 (SCA) in [52].
[9]
Goudini
Chrome (Pty) Ltd v NCC Contracts (Pty) Ltd
[1992] ZASCA 208
;
1993 (1) SA 77
(A);
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974 (3) SA 13
(A).
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