Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 251South Africa
Thabit and Others vs Muladzi and Others (30518/2020; 34521/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 251 (17 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 March 2023
Headnotes
at Standard Bank.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Thabit and Others vs Muladzi and Others (30518/2020; 34521/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 251 (17 March 2023)
Thabit and Others vs Muladzi and Others (30518/2020; 34521/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 251 (17 March 2023)
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sino date 17 March 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 30518/2020
AND 34521/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
17.03.23
In the matter between:
THABIT RAFIQ THEMBA
1
st
Applicant
THABIT DORIS TEBOGO
2
nd
Applicant
THABIT KELETSO
3
rd
Applicant
And
MULAUDZI KHAKHU LUCIE
1
st
Respondent
DICHABE
ITUMELENG GIFT
2
nd
Respondent
ABSA BANK LTD
3
rd
Respondent
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS JOHANNESBURG
4
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME, J
:
INTRODUCTION
[1] In this matter the Applicants seek
an order declaring the agreement concluded between the first
Respondent as (Seller) and the
second Respondent (as Purchaser) in
respect of the immovable property described as Erf 1[...]
Johannesburg unlawful, invalid and
of no force and effect (Case No.:
30518/2020 (the Declaratory Application).
[2] In case number 34521/2020 the
second Respondent seeks an order evicting the Applicants from the
property mentioned in paragraph
1 above. An order was granted to hear
the two matters simultaneously for obvious reason (the eviction
application).
[3] In the declaratory application the
Applicants seeks an order firstly that the transfer of the property
from the first to the
second Respondents which took place on the 9
th
April 2019 be declared unlawfully invalid and of no force and effect.
[4] Simultaneously with the setting
aside of the transfer the Applicants seek an order setting aside the
registration of the mortgage
bond number B7854/2020 in favour of Absa
Bank the third Respondent.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[5] On the 21
st
January
2013 the first Respondent Mulaudzi Khakhu Lucie purchased the
property which is the subject of this case namely Erf 1[...]
Johannesburg (the property) for a purchase price of R250 000.00
(Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand). A bond securing
the loan
was registered over the property in favour of Standard Bank of SA
being bond number B8911/2013. The title deed issued
to the
first Respondent was number T12320/2013.
[6] During or about October 2013 the
first Applicant and the first Respondent concluded a written Deed of
Alienation in terms of
which the first Applicant purchased the
property from the first Respondent for an amount of R250 000.00.
[7] The amount of R250 000.00 was
payable in monthly instalment of R3 000.00 (Three Thousand
Rands) the first payment
due on the 1
st
November 2013 from
which date first Applicant would also take occupation of the
property. Clauses 4.3 of the Deed of Alienation
specified that
payment of the monthly instalments be paid directly into the bond
account held at Standard Bank.
[8] The first Applicant made payments
directly to the first Respondent and later also made payments to
Standard bank.
[9] On the 19
th
November
2019 the first Respondent accepted the second Respondent’s
offer to purchase the same property from her for an amount
of
R490 000.00.
[10] On the 9
th
April 2020
despite protest from the first Applicant the property was transferred
to the second Respondent and a bond registered
over it in favour of
Absa Bank the third Respondent.
THE ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION
[11] The joint practice note filed by
the parties dated the 7
th
July 2022 succinctly set out the
issues for determination and for completion sake I reproduce same as
they are.
11.1 The first issue is whether
the first Respondent signed the first agreement and thereafter
whether the first Applicant
has acquired a real right in the property
by virtue of the first agreement which would entitle him to claim
transfer of the.
11.2 The second issue is
whether the first Applicant consented to the sale of the property to
the second Respondent or not
11.3 Thirdly the failure by the first
Applicant and the first Respondent to record their agreement in the
Deeds registry as required
in terms of Section 20 of the Alienation
of Land Act which precludes the Applicants to rely on the doctrine of
fictional fulfilment
to claim transfer.
THE FIRST APPLICANT’S CASE
[12] The Applicant’s case is
that in and around October 2013 and at the offices of Attorneys Kevin
Schaafsma in Randburg the
first Applicant and the first Respondent
concluded a written Deed of Alienation (the agreement) in terms of
which the Applicant
purchased the property for an amount of
R250 000.00.
[13] The terms of the agreement were
the following:
(i)
The full purchase price of R250 000.00 (Two Hundred Thousand
Rand) would be payable in monthly instalments of R3 000.00
with
effect the 1
st
November 2013.
(ii)
The Applicant would take occupation of the property by the 18
th
November 2013.
(iii) Transfer of the property
into the name of the Applicant would take place as soon as Applicant
shall have made payment
of 50% of the purchase price.
[14] The Applicant says he made
payments directly to the first Respondent and some payment into the
bond account of the first Respondent
at Standard bank. On the 8
th
December 2015 the Applicant took occupation of the property.
[15] During or about September 2018 he
the Applicant requested the first Respondent to transfer the property
into his name since
according to him he had by that time made payment
of 50% of the purchase price. This request did not materialise.
[16] The Applicant says that he
continued to make payments to the first Respondent including an
amount of R200 000.00 which
was paid into the Trust Account for
Nel Attorneys.
[17] During November 2018 and at
Diepkloof Shopping Centre the Applicant and the Respondent met with
an Estate Agent who told him
that the first Respondent intends
selling the property to the second Respondent. He was offered
R150 000.00 (One Hundred
and Fifty Thousand Rand) which he
declined to accept.
[18] During March 2019 he received an
sms from the first Respondent that he should vacate the property as
it had been sold to the
second Respondent. He consulted
attorneys to intervene on his behalf but that did not help.
[19] On the 26
th
March 2019
the attorneys who had been instructed to attend to the transfer of
the property to the second Respondent addressed a
letter to him in
which they informed the first Applicant that his agreement with the
first Respondent had not been registered in
terms of the provisions
of
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
.
[20] The property was ultimately
transferred to the second Respondent on the basis of no offer to
purchase signed between the first
and second Respondent on the 1
st
November 2019. A bond was registered over the property in
favour of Absa Bank the third Respondent.
THE FIRST RESPONDENT’S CASE
[21] The first Respondent denies that
she concluded the agreement with the Applicant alternatively he says
that such agreement falls
foul of the provisions of the
Alienation of
Land Act and
is accordingly null and void.
[22] According to the first Respondent
their agreement was that the first Applicant would assist her with
evicting the illegal tenants
whereafter they would then conclude an
agreement of sale.
[23] She says that the Applicant did
make payment of monies to her as well as into her Standard Bank bond
account. At a later
stage the Applicant told her that he is
unable to raise a bond and is unable to purchase the property that is
why she then went
ahead and instructed an Estate Agent to sell the
property.
THE AGREEMENT
[24] I am satisfied that despite the
first Respondent’s denial that the parties concluded the sale
agreement.
[25] The issue is what effect should
be given to that agreement. In order to answer that question
this Court has to look into
whether the parties thereto complied with
the provisions of the agreement read with the Alienation Land Act.
[26] Clause 2,2 of the Agreement reads
that: “The seller shall within 30 (thirty) days after
conclusion of this contract hand
to the purchaser a certificate drawn
by the Mortgage indicating the monies the mortgage requires to be
paid. There is no
evidence that this requirement was complied
with.
[27] Clause 4.2 reads that payment of
the R3 000.00 per month should be paid into the mortgage bond
account of the seller at
Standard Bank. This clause was also
not fully complied with in that some payments were made directly to
the first Respondent.
[28] It is common cause that the first
Applicant and the first Respondent acknowledged that the first
Agreement is subject to the
provisions of the Alienation of Land Act
69 of 1981 (See: clause 3.1 and 3.2)
[29] Clause 4.4 of that agreement
provided that Applicant would be entitled to take transfer of the
property once 50% of the purchase
price, shall have been paid and in
terms of clause 18.3 an obligation was placed on the first Respondent
to record the agreement
with the Deeds Registry in terms of
Section
20(1)
(a) of the
Alienation of Land Act and
in the event the first
Respondent failed to do so then the first Applicant had the right to
do so (See clause 19.4).
[30] The first Applicant failed to
comply strictly with the terms of payment of the purchase price in
that he did not make payments
into the bond account held by the fist
Respondent at Standard Bank, this failure led to Standard bank
foreclosing on the bond and
obtained judgment against the first
Respondent for payment of the sum of R280 105.28 together with
interest on the 16
th
April 2015. Standard bank also
obtained an order declaring the property executable.
[31] It is correct that during or
about October 2018 the Applicant instructed his own attorneys Messrs
Nel Attorneys to request
a cancellation of bond and to do transfer of
the property into his name now that as he alleged he had made payment
of 50% of the
purchase price. Standard bank obliged on the 23
January 2019 and furnished figures to Nel Attorneys showing that an
amount
of R305 478.22 was payable and required to enable
Standard bank to cancel the bond.
[32] The cancellation figures clearly
indicate that the first Applicant had not as yet paid sufficient
money to enable him to take
transfer. What is further strange
is that the Applicant then attaches deposit slips totalling
R200 000.00 (Two Hundred
Thousand Rand) which amounts were paid
to Nel attorneys not with references to the property in question but
relates to the property
in Orlando East.
[33] The Applicant did not comply with
the terms of the first agreement and was not entitled to take
transfer of the property.
When it became clear that the
Applicant was unable to proceeded with the transaction the first
Respondent as he was entitled to
accepted an offer from the second
Respondent.
[34] There is a dispute as to whether
the Applicant consented to the second sale to the second Respondent.
This Court must
accept the version of the first Respondent which is
supported by the Estate Agent that indeed the Applicant agreed to the
sale
on condition he is refunded R150 000.00 (One Hundred and
Fifty Thousand Rand).
[35] It was when the Applicant through
his attorneys belatedly raised an objection to the sale that he was
informed that in fact
the first agreement was not recorded in the
deeds registry as required in terms of Section 20 of the Act.
[36] The Applicant and the first
Respondent were aware all along that the first agreement was subject
to the provisions of the
Alienation of Land Act. They
acknowledged their obligation in terms of
Section 20
thereof to
record the first agreement with the Deeds registry they failed to do
so hence there is nothing that could have prevented
the second
Respondent to take transfer of the property.
[37] The Applicant failed to meet his
obligation in terms of the first agreement and accordingly acquired
no real rights therein.
In his Founding Affidavit in particular
with reference to provision of Section 7 of the Act the Applicant
does not say that he
obtained a certificate from Standard bank
stating the amount payable to enable the bank to release the property
from the bond.
In any case when his attorneys did obtain that
in the year 2019 Standard bank had already cancelled the bond and
foreclosed.
The property was at that time strictly speaking in
the hands of Standard bank. The Applicant even at that time
failed to
make payment of the amount indicated by Standard bank.
[38] Failure by the Applicant and the
first Respondent to register the agreement in terms of Section 20 of
the Act had the following
consequences. Firstly, Standard bank
is not deemed to have consented in favour of the Applicant to
discharge the mortgage
bond as contemplated in Section 9(8) of the
Act. Secondly in terms of Section 26 of the Act the first
Respondent was not
entitled to receive and the Applicants were not
obliged to pay any part of the purchase price. Lastly the
Applicant and the
first Respondent did not give notice to prospective
purchase about the first Agreement which could and should have been
done by
registering the first agreement in order to create a caveat
against transfer of the property.
[39] The Applicants were informed by
way of a letter from the attorneys dated the 26 March 2019 that
failure to have the first agreement
recorded in terms of Section 20
is fatal still the Applicant did not do anything to has that first
agreement recorded. The
Applicant acquired no rights in that
agreement and have no
locus standi
to oppose registration of
the transfer of the property to the second Respondent. At the
most out of this transaction the
first Applicant has an enrichment
claim against the first Respondent. In any case he had already
previously indicated that
he will accept an amount of R150 000.00
(One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Rand) to enable him to walk away from
the deal.
[40] The second Respondent makes
common cause with the third Respondent on the issue that the first
agreement having not been recorded
as required by Section 20 of the
Act transferred no real right to the Applicant at best the Applicant
acquired a personal right
that can only be enforceable against the
first Respondent and not against bona fide third party possessors
like the second Respondent.
[41] The Applicants have in their
heads of argument avoided dealing with the provisions of Section 20
of the Act which in my view
is dispositive of their application.
Applicants have instead not only raised technical issues about the
deponent to the third
Respondent’s Affidavit as well as failure
to apply for condonation by the Respondent for the late filing of
their Answering
Affidavit.
DID THE APPLICANT ACQUIRE A REAL RIGHT
IN THE PROPERTY?
[42] The answer to this question is a
no. What the Applicant acquired is a personal right only
enforceable against the first
Respondent. The Applicant would
have acquired a real right to claim transfer of the property after
paying 50% of the purchase
price had there been registration of the
agreement in terms of Section 20 of the Act.
[43] It is so that in the view of this
Court and others the first agreement only regulates the contractual
relationship between
the first Applicant and the first Respondent.
[44] The Applicants did not do
anything or take steps to place the first Respondent in mora.
They did not do so because there
was non-compliance also from their
side. There is no evidence by the Applicant that they made
payment of transfer costs,
transfer duty, rates and taxes as well as
service charges in terms of clause 6 of the first agreement.
[45] Secondly there is in my view
sufficient evidence that the Applicants consented to the sale of the
property to the second Respondent.
Even if they had not so
consented they had not acquired any right over the property save a
personal right against the first Respondent.
The Applicant can
therefore not quality to claim specific performances as in their
prayers.
THE SECOND AGREEMENT
[46] The first and second Respondents
concluded an agreement of sale during November 2018 with the
knowledge of the Applicant.
They proceeded to lodge and record
such agreement with the office of the Registrar of Deeds. That
agreement can never be
assailed by the so called existence of the
first agreement.
[47] Firstly the facts relating to the
conclusion of the agreement of sale of the property between the first
and second Respondents
and compliance with Section 2 (1) of the Act
is not disputed. It was reduced into writing and signed by both
parties thereafter
it was recorded in the Deed office in terms of
Section 20.
[48] The only basis on which the
Applicant challenge the validity of the second agreement is that the
first Respondent was still
having a valid agreement with the
Applicant. That defence is not correct the agreement between
the Applicant and the first
Respondent at that time produced
consequences of a personal right and not a real right to the
property.
CAN THE APPLICANT RELY ON THE THEORY
OF FICTIONAL FULLFILLMENT AS OPPOSED TO THE THEORY OF ABSTRACT
TRANSFER
[49] To answer this question the law
as set out by the SCA in the matter of
Legator McKenna Inc and
Another v Shea and Other 2010(1) SA 35 SCA
is instructive.
In that matter it was held as follows:
“
In accordance with the abstract
theory the requirements for the passing of ownership are two fold,
namely delivery which in the
case of immovable property is effected
by registration of transfer in the Deeds office. Coupled with a
so-called real agreement
or “Saaklike ooreenkoms” the
essential elements of the real agreement are an intention on the part
of the transferor
to transfer ownership and the intention of the
transferee to become the owner of the property.”
[50] The sale agreement between
the first and second Respondents complied with all the requirements
of a valid agreement
coupled with the necessary intention and meeting
of the minds between the transferror and the transferee. In
keeping with
the Legator Mckenna decision the registration of
transfer effectively rendered the second Respondent the
de facto
and de jure owner of the property. Hence the Applicants did
nothing to interdict such transfer.
[51] The finding that the second
agreement was valid in all respects goes without saying that there
can be no valid attack on the
existence and validity of the bond
registered over the property in favour of the third Respondent.
The mortgage bond was
lawfully and validly registered; the Applicants
have no basis to pray for an order directing the fourth Respondent to
cancel the
title deed against which the third Respondent rights have
been registered and secured.
[52] The Applicant reliance on the
theory of fictional fulfilment must also fail. It is a theory
that operate where a party
to a contract deliberately commits some
act by which fulfilment of a condition is hindered. The
Applicant has not presented
evidence in which respect did the first
Respondent interfere with fulfilment of a condition of the first
agreement. The Applicants
reliance on this doctrine is
misplaced.
[53] In conclusion this Court is
satisfied that the agreement between the first and second Respondents
remain valid and that the
agreement between the Applicant and the
first Respondent no longer existed at the time that transfer of the
property took place.
[54] In the result the application in
case number 30518/2020 is dismissed with costs.
THE EVICTION APPLICATION CASE NO
34521/2020
[55] The Applicant in this matter is
the second Respondent in the declaratory application referred to
above. I have already
in that matter found that the second
Respondent acquired the rights of ownership of the property lawfully.
[56] The issues to be determined in
this eviction application are the following:
a) Whether the Applicant in the
declaratory application acquired any legal right to continue
occupation of the property.
b) Whether it is just and equitable to
evict the Applicants.
c) In the event the eviction is
granted what will be a suitable time period within which the eviction
shall be executed.
[57] I shall henceforth refer to the
parties as they are listed in the eviction application to avoid
confusion.
[58] It is common cause that the
property Erf 1[...] was registered in the name of the Applicant
namely Dichabe Itumeleng Gift on
the 9
th
April 2019.
It is also common cause that the property is occupied by the third
Respondent being the daughter of the first
and second Respondents.
[59] After the sale and registration
of the property into the name of the Applicant a letter was sent to
the Respondents to vacate
the property by the end of August 2019.
The Respondent did not heed that letter of demand as a result a
second letter was
sent to the Respondent by the Applicants’
attorneys calling on the Respondents to vacate the property by the
14
th
September 2020. Still the Respondents did not
vacate the property it is this refusal that prompted the Applicant to
proceed
with this application in terms of the PIE Act.
[60] The first and second Respondents
are not in occupation of the property however, it is so that the only
occupier being the third
Respondent does so on the authority of the
first and second Respondents.
[61] The Respondent oppose this
eviction application on the following grounds:
i) That their occupation of the
property is lawful because they have an existing lawful sale
agreement with the owner Ms
Khakhu Mulaudzi.
ii) Secondly that the sale agreement
between the Applicant and Ms Mulaudzi is invalid thus affecting the
transfer of the property
to the Applicants.
[62] I refer to the judgment in case
number 30518/2020 and repeat contents thereof in this judgment.
I have made a finding
that the sale agreement and subsequent transfer
of the property to the Applicant on the 9
th
April 2019 is
valid and cannot be faulted.
DOES THE FIRST TO THIRD RESPONDENTS
HAVE A LEGAL RIGHT TO CONTINUE OCCUPATION OF THE PROPERTY?
[63] This question has been answered
in my finding in respect of case number 30518/2020. The first
Respondent in his own words
admitted having stopped making payments
to Ms Mulaudzi the seller. I have also in my judgement above
found that the first
agreement became void by virtue of it not having
been registered in terms of
Section 20
of the
Alienation of Land Act.
[64
] There is evidence that the first
Respondent knew as far back as November 2018 that Ms Mulaudzi was
selling the property to someone
else. The first Respondent took
no steps to assert his rights in terms of the first agreement. The
seller Ms Mulaudzi acted
openly and did not hide that fact. If
the Respondents felt aggrieved they could have at that stage
interdicted the sale.
In the result I find that the first to
third Respondents lost whatever right they may have in respect of the
property during November
2018 and accordingly have no right to
continue occupation.
IS IT JUST AND EQUITABLE TO EVICT THE
FIRST TO THIRD RESPONDENTS?
[65] The first and third Respondents
do not claim that the property is their prime residence. It is
only the third Respondent
who can claim that the property is her
primary residence.
[66] Section 4 (6) of the PIE Act
provides that a Court must grant an eviction order if it is of the
view that it is just and equitable
to do so after considering all the
relevant facts. Such relevant facts besides ownership includes
inter alia whether the
property is occupied by the elderly, children,
disabled persons and households headed by woman.
[67] The third Respondent who is the
daughter of the first and second Respondents has not filed an
affidavit setting out her personal
circumstances neither has the
first Respondent informed this Court whether the third Respondent
deserves protection under one or
more of the relevant facts set out
in Section 4(6) of PIE. In the absence of any information to
the contrary I conclude that
the third Respondent will not be left
homeless after eviction. She still has a home in Orlando East
where the first and second
Respondents are. She is free to join
them or seek rented accommodation elsewhere.
WHAT WILL BE A SUITABLE DATE FOR THE
RESPONDENTS TO VACATE?
[68] The Applicant is the registered
owner of the property and is presently paying off a bond registered
over the property that
he is not enjoying. This has been the
case since the year 2019. It is now almost three years that he
has been deprived
of enjoyment of his property.
[69] On the other hand it is so that
the Respondents have been in occupation since 2015 and need a fair
amount of time to move their
furniture to an alternate place.
[70] In the result I have come to the
conclusion that a reasonable period to vacate be not later than the
30
th
of April 2023. Accordingly, I make the
following order:
ORDER
1. The application in Case Number
30518/2020 is hereby dismissed.
2. The first Applicant is ordered to
pay the Respondents taxed party and party costs.
3. The application in Case Number
34521/2020 is granted.
4.
The first, second and third Respondents and all persons occupying the
property through and under them are ordered to vacate the
property by
not later than Monday the 30
th
April 2023 at 14h00.
5. In the event that the first, second
and third Respondents do not vacate the property voluntarily by the
given date the Sheriff
or his Deputy duly assisted by the South
African Police Services or a Private Security Company are hereby
authorised to carry out
the eviction.
6. The first, second and third
Respondents and all persons occupying through or under them are
hereby interdicted and restrained
from entering the property at any
time after they have vacated same or been evicted therefrom by the
Sheriff.
7. The first Respondent is ordered to
pay the taxed party and party costs of this application.
Dated at Johannesburg on this 17th
day of March 2023
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF HEARING:
16
th
JANUARY 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17
th
MARCH 2023
FOR
APPLICANT:
ADV
S SWIEGEN
FOR
RESPONDENT:
ADV
PHUKUBJE
ADV
LIAN KEISER
ADV
NICO HORN
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