Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 44South Africa
Mohali v Mohali and Others (39683/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 44 (24 January 2023)
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Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mohali v Mohali and Others (39683/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 44 (24 January 2023)
Mohali v Mohali and Others (39683/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 44 (24 January 2023)
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sino date 24 January 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO:
39
case
Number: 39683/2019
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED.
No
24
January 2023
In
the matter between:
MAKOMA
MOHALI
Applicant
And
PHETOLE
VICTOR MOHALI 1st
Respondent
GIDEON
GORDON DIBANE 2
nd
Respondent
MAKOMA
NGUMI MOHALE 3
rd
Respondent
SELLO
MOHALI
4
th
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT SOUTH
GAUTENG
JOHANNESBURG 5
th
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEED OFFICE PRETORIA 6
th
Respondent
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED 7
th
Respondent
PHANGENIPROPERTIES
8
th
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties' legal
representatives by email, and uploaded on caselines
electronic
platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 24 January 2023
Summary:
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1]
This is an unopposed application in
which the applicant seeks the following order:
(a)
a declaratory that the sale, transfer, and registration of the
immovable property at erf [....], S[....]
Section, T[....], Gauteng
Province (the property) carried out by the first and second
respondents to be invalid and set aside.
(b)
interdict the second respondent from destroying the structure of the
building at the property in question.
(c)
to set aside the appointment of the first
respondent by the Master of the High Court as administrator or
executor of the estate of the late Mohale Wilson Mohale as invalid.
Background
facts
[2]
The applicant alleges in the founding
affidavit that she was married to the deceased, Mr Walton Mohale, in
terms of customary rites,
on 27 May 1977. She has misplaced their
marriage certificate. In support of the contention that she was
married in terms of customary
rites she relies on annexure "MM2"
to support her allegation. Annexure MM2 is a document issued by the
then East Rand
Bantu Affairs Administration dated 28 March 1977 and
the title deed.
[3]
During their marriage, the applicant and
the deceased stayed at the abovementioned property. They owned the
property jointly in
terms of the title deed dated 12 March 2002. The
marriage was blessed with now two adult children.
[4]
The deceased concluded a second
customary marriage with Mokgadi Mohale. The marriage was blessed with
three children, Makoma Nguni
Mohale, Victor Mohale, and Sello Mohale.
The three survived their mother, who died on 21 November 2015.
[5]
Due to ill health, the applicant
relocated to Limpopo in 2000 and left the house at T[....] with her
daughter Modjaji Anna Chauke.
[6]
It is apparent that by agreement with
the applicant, the first respondent, Mr Victor Mohale moved from
Limpopo to settle at the
property in T[....]. Having taken occupation
of the property he operated a tavern business in the backyard rooms.
However, that
business failed, and arrangements were then made to
rent out the outside rooms. The tenants are charged a monthly rental
of R 6500.00.
It is alleged that the first respondent collected the
money from the tenants without the authorization of the applicant or
her
daughter.
[7]
The controversy that arose between the
applicant's daughter and the first respondent regarding the issue of
the collection of the
rental resulted in the first respondent
vacating the property voluntarily.
[8]
Following the first respondent's
application after the passing away of the deceased, he was issued the
letter of authority by the
Master of the High Court on 14 March
2018.
[9]
After the passing away of his mother,
the first respondent was appointed the administrator of the late
estate of his mother on 15
June 2018.
[10]
The controversy between the parties
concerns the allegation that the first respondent obtained the
letters of authority to sell
the property in the sum of R450,000
without the applicant's consent and did so fraudulently.
[11]
The property was sold and transferred to
the second respondent, Mr Gideon, Gordon Dibane.
[12]
The
applicant contends that the sale of the property was fraudulent
because the first respondent misrepresented who the true owner
of the
proper was when he made an application in terms of section 4 (1) (b)
of the Deeds, Registries Act.
[1]
[13]
In the affidavit, the first respondent
alleges that he was attesting to the affidavit in his capacity as
representative of the deceased,
Mr Walton Mohale and the late estate
of his mother, Mokgadi Mohale. He further alleged that someone had
incorrectly written the
name "Makoma Mohale" on the
Certificate of the Registered Rights of the Leasehold." The
alleged error, according
to him, was made during the drawing of the
documents. According to him, the correct name is Mokgadi Mohale, (his
deceased mother)
and the identification number is [....].
[14]
Before dealing with the issue of the
validity of the transfer of the property, it is apposite to touch
briefly on whether the applicant
was married to the deceased by
customary marriage.
[15]
Although
the applicant has yet to produce the marriage certificate as required
in terms of section 4 (8) of the Recognition of Customary
Marriage
Act,
[2]
she has introduced the
best evidence in her affidavit to support the allegation about her
marital status. The documentary evidence
supports the evidence that
she was married to the deceased in terms of customary marriage. I am
accordingly satisfied that the
applicant was married to the
deceased.
[16]
I proceeded to deal with the controversy
of whether there was a real intention to transfer the property to the
second respondent.
As I understand it, the applicant's case is that
the first respondent was not legally competent to transfer the
property to the
second respondent.
[17]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in Liegator Mckenna Inc and Another v Shea
and Others,
[3]
held that the
abstract theory in respect of the passing of ownership was applicable
in our law. The two requirements to be satisfied
for ownership to
pass from one person to another are the following:
(a)
the must be a real agreement between the
parties.
(b)
The transfer must be legally competent.
[18]
In
Ned Bank Limited v Mendelow NO,
[4]
the Court held that the second respondent was not authorized to
execute the late estate of the deceased due to his fraudulent and
misrepresentation in obtaining letters of authority. The Court
further held that only a truly representative or executor or
executrix
of the deceased estate could form an intention to transfer
the property. Because there was no real agreement to transfer the
property,
the Court found the transfer to be void
ab
initio
.
Although the respondents dealt with the first respondent as
a
bona
fide
seller,
the property transfer to them was also found to be void
ab
initio,
since
the second respondent had never become the property owner.
[19]
It
has been said that "fraud unravels all subsequent transactions
even…… a subsequent sale to a
bona
fide
purchaser.
[5]
In
Firstrand
Bank Ltd t/a Rand Merchant Bank and Another v The Master of the High
Court, Cape Town,
[6]
the Court after considering the fraudulent misrepresentation made by
the attorney to the Master of the High Court said:-
"
[20]
It is trite that the effect of fraud is far-reaching. In Farley
(Aust) Pty Ltd v JR Alexander & Sons (Qld) Pty Ltd
[1946]
HCA 29
;
(1946)
75 CLR 487
the
High Court of Australia, per Williams J, said this:
'
Fraud
is conduct which vitiates every transaction known to the law. It even
vitiates a judgment of the Court. It is an insidious
disease, and if
clearly proved spreads to and infects the whole transaction.'
[21]
And in Lazarus Estates Ltd v Beasley
[1956]
1 QB 702
(CA)
at 712 one finds Lord Denning's well-known remarks:
'
No
court on this land will allow a person to keep an advantage which he
has obtained by fraud. No judgment of a court, no order
of a
Minister, can be allowed to stand if it has been obtained by fraud.
Fraud unravels everything. The Court is careful not to
find fraud
unless it is distinctly pleaded and proved, but once it is proved, it
vitiates judgments, contracts and all transactions
whatsoever.
[22]
In South Africa, the 'insidious effect of fraud permeates the
entire legal system'. It renders contracts voidable. It
is one of the
elements of delictual liability. It constitutes a crime. Fraud
excludes the effect of an ouster clause in the legislation.
See
Narainsamy v Principal Immigration Officer
1923
AD 673
at
675. It also nullifies a contractual exemption clause which purports
to exclude a party from the consequences of fraudulent
conduct. See
Wells v SA Alumnite
1927
AD 69
at
72."
[20]
In this matter, it is clear that the
first respondent misrepresented to the Master of the High Court that
the true owners of the
property were his father and his deceased
mother. What he represented to the Master of the High Court was
clearly incorrect, and
there is no dispute that the first respondent
knew about this fact.
[21]
He misrepresented to the conveyancer
during the transfer process that the property belonged to his father
and mother. In the conveyancing
process, he falsely presented an
affidavit stating that the applicant's names, as they appear in the
title deed, were erroneous.
The typographical error regarding the
names of the applicant's deceased mother’s names was, according
to him, made during
the drafting of the papers. He misled the
conveyancers.
[22]
The sale and registration of the
property in the name of the second respondent were consequently
fraudulent and invalid.
[23]
In
the circumstances, I find that the applicant has made out the case as
prayed for in the notice of motion.
Order
[24]
In
the premises the following order is made:
I.
The sale transaction of immovable property referred to as Erf [....]
S[....] location
T[....], Gauteng Province entered into between first
respondent and second respondent is declared invalid and set aside;
2.
The registration of the immovable property referred to as Erf [....]
S[....] location T[....],
Gauteng Province in the names of second
respondent by sixth respondent is invalid and set aside;
3.
The second respondent is to desist from
damaging and destroying any structure or building on the premises
of
immovable property referred to as Erf [....] S[....] location
T[....], Gauteng Province belonging to applicant;
4.
The appointment of first respondent by fifth
respondent as an executor of the late Mohale /Yalton Mohale
under
late estate with reference number 0058I3 dated I5 march 20I8 is
declared invalid and set aside.
5.
There is no order as to costs.
E
MOLAHLEHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Representations:
Counsel
for the applicant: Ad.
A Moholo
Instructed
by:
M
L Matame Inc.
Counsel
for the defendant: No
appearance
Hearing
date; 7
September 2022
Delivered: 24
January 2023.
[1]
Act
number 47 of 1937.
[2]
Act number 120 OF 1998.
[3]
2010 (1) SA 35 (SCA).
[4]
[686 (12) [2013] ZASCA 98.
[5]
Moseia and Others v Master of the High Court: Pretoria and Others
(36201/2018) [2021] ZAGPPHC 37 (26 January 2021).
[6]
case no: 679/13 (11 November
2013),
ZAWCHC, 2013
,
173, at paragraphs [20] to [22]
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