Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 286South Africa
Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC and Another v 266 Bree Street Johanessburg (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/018054) [2023] ZAGPJHC 286 (3 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 April 2023
Headnotes
on 2 February 2023. Mr. Farber opposed the plan in the form that it was finally adopted, but the plan was approved, it seems, substantially because TUHF supported it at the meeting.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC and Another v 266 Bree Street Johanessburg (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/018054) [2023] ZAGPJHC 286 (3 April 2023)
Hillbrow Consolidated Investments CC and Another v 266 Bree Street Johanessburg (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023/018054) [2023] ZAGPJHC 286 (3 April 2023)
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sino date 3 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case No. 2023/018054
Case No. 2023/018054
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
HILLBROW
CONSOLIDATED INVESTMENTS CC
First
Applicant
SOSENGWASE
TRADING CC
Second
Applicant
and
266
BREE STREET JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
TUMISANG
KGABOESELE NO
Second
Respondent
MAFADI
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
G3
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPT
Fifth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 1 March 2023, I granted the applicants a spoliation order.
I directed the fourth respondent, G3, to restore the first applicant,
HCI, and the second applicant, Sosengwase, to peaceful and
undisturbed possession of a property known as “Metro Centre”,
situated at 266 Bree Street, Johannesburg. I indicated that my
reasons for making that order would be provided in due course.
2
To obtain a spoliation order, the applicants had to prove that
they were in peaceful and undisturbed possession of Metro Centre,
and
that they had been unlawfully deprived of that possession. I was
satisfied that these requirements had been met for the following
reasons.
The dispute
3
At the centre of this case is Mark Farber. He is the deponent
to the founding affidavit. He is also the sole member of HCI, and the
sole shareholder and director of the first respondent, 266 Bree
Street. The first respondent is a company named after the Metro
Centre property, which appears to be its only major asset. In these
capacities, Mr. Farber arranged things so that HCI was the
property
agent appointed to manage the affairs of the Metro Centre property.
Sosengwase is in turn employed by HCI to secure Metro
Centre.
4
Mr. Farber is the subject of a complex set of manoeuvres aimed
at wresting control of Metro Centre from him. The prime mover behind
these efforts appears to be the Trust for Urban Housing Finance
(“TUHF”), which is one of 266 Bree Street’s
creditors. There is an action pending between TUHF and 266 Bree
Street, in which TUHF seeks a money judgment against 266 Bree Street
and against Mr. Farber. It appears that 266 Bree Street took a loan
from TUHF and that Mr. Farber stood surety for its repayment
obligations. Evidence in that action has been led. I understand from
the papers that my brother Senyatsi J is currently hearing
argument
and will deliver judgment in due course.
5
In the meantime, Mr. Farber has placed 266 Bree Street in
business rescue. The second respondent, Mr. Kgaboesele, is the
practitioner
currently overseeing the business rescue process. He is
implementing a business rescue plan that was adopted at a creditors’
meeting held on 2 February 2023. Mr. Farber opposed the plan in the
form that it was finally adopted, but the plan was approved,
it
seems, substantially because TUHF supported it at the meeting.
6
The parts of the plan that are material to this case are those
that provide for the sale of Metro Centre, and HCI’s
replacement
as its managing agent. Acting on these aspects of the
adopted plan, on 13 and 14 February 2023, Mr. Kgaboesele wrote to Mr.
Farber
to inform him that HCI’s management agreement with 266
Bree Street would be terminated and that a new managing agent would
be appointed with effect from 15 February 2023. The new managing
agent Mr. Kgaboesele selected turned out to be the third respondent,
Mafadi Property Management. Mr. Farber, through his attorneys,
immediately objected to the termination of HCI’s management
agreement with 266 Bree Street. Mr. Farber took the view that Mr.
Kgaboesele lacked the power to terminate the management agreement,
which, Mr. Farber contended, could only be terminated pursuant to a
court order. Mr. Kgaboesele, through his own attorneys, predictably
took the contrary view, and demanded that the “handover”
of Metro Centre “be effected forthwith”.
Peaceful and
undisturbed possession
7
What matters about this correspondence is that it plainly
evinces an acceptance that HCI was in possession of Metro Centre, but
that there was a dispute about whether it should be. Indeed, Mr.
Farber sets out in his founding affidavit a detailed account of
HCI’s
work as managing agent at Metro Centre, including the collection of
rent, the supervision of tenants, the management
of leases and a
range of other property management work. HCI has done this work since
10 August 2020, when Mr. Farber appointed
it to manage the property.
In his answering affidavit, Mr. Kgaboesele issues a blanket denial of
the paragraph in which this account
is given in Mr. Farber’s
founding affidavit, but, save for asserting that HCI’s building
manager does not live on site,
the substance of Mr. Farber’s
account of HCI’s work in and possession of the building is not
seriously engaged with.
It must accordingly be accepted that HCI’s
management of Metro Centre entailed HCI being in physical possession
of the property,
through its employees and agents.
8
It is irrelevant to these proceedings whether Mr. Farber is
correct in his assertions about the nature and limits of Mr.
Kgaboesele’s
powers. It was not argued before me that Mr.
Kgaboesele had the power to evict HCI from Metro Centre. The issue of
whether Mr.
Kgaoesele had the right to terminate HCI’s
management agreement is obviously beyond the scope of spoliation
proceedings.
9
It can accordingly be accepted that on 15 February 2023, HCI
was in possession of Metro Centre, and that it had been in possession
of Metro Centre for the better part of three years. It is not clear
from the papers when Sosengwase was appointed to secure the
building,
but it seems clear that HCI’s possession of Metro Centre was
exercised, at least in part, through Sosengwase’s
own presence
in and possession of the property.
10
On 16 February 2023, representatives of Mafadi Property
Management went to Metro Centre intent on taking over the management
of
the property. They were later joined by employees of a security
company described on the papers as “GSG” security. Simon
Mhlongo, a manager of Sosengwase whose responsibility it was to
oversee security at the property, made clear that GSG’s
personnel were not welcome, and that they had to leave. GSG and
Mafadi withdrew.
The unlawful
dispossession
11
Mafadi then appointed a new security company to take control
of the property. This was the fourth respondent, G3. G3 arrived at
the property on 18 February 2023. Its personnel were armed and they
arrived in greater numbers than GSG had mustered on 16 February.
Its
personnel occupied the property and refused to leave. Although it
appears that neither Mr. Mhlongo nor Sosengwase’s other
personnel were physically removed from the property, the presence of
a large number of armed security guards obviously interfered
with
Sosengwase and with HCI’s possession of the property. It also
placed their personnel in reasonable fear of what would
happen if
they remained on the property for too much longer. Outnumbered and
out-gunned, they left the property.
12
Mr. Solomon, who appeared together with Mr. Hollander for the
applicants, said that this was a spoliation. I was inclined to agree,
which is why I made the 1 March 2023 order. However, Mr. Mahon, who
appeared together with Ms. Mitchell for Mr. Kgaboesele, resisted
the
application on two fronts. First, he argued that the application was
not urgent, and ought to have been struck from the roll.
He secondly
contended that, on the facts, both Sosengwase and HCI gave up
possession of the property voluntarily when their personnel
withdrew.
Urgency
13
On the question of urgency, Mr. Mahon drew my attention to a
number of instances of non-compliance with this court’s
practice
directives on the preparation of urgent applications for
hearing. I was not convinced that these instances of very technical
non-compliance
disqualified the matter from urgent consideration. The
over-arching question in urgent applications is whether, assuming
everything
the applicant says is true, the applicant will be deprived
of substantial redress if they are forced to enrol the matter in the
ordinary course. It seems to me that HCI and Sosengwase would clearly
not be able to obtain such redress if they were forced to
wait
several months for a hearing on the ordinary opposed roll. By that
time Mafadi and G3 would have been entrenched at the property,
and
the damage to HCI’s interests as the appointed property
management agent would have been done.
14
In addition, while I do not think, as was argued on behalf of
HCI, that all spoliation applications are inherently urgent, a
spoliation
which the despoiled person seeks promptly to reverse will
nearly always be urgent. This is because the public interest in
quickly
reversing the breach of the peace embodied in the act of
spoliation will almost always outweigh any other consideration that
might
militate against granting the despoiled person an urgent
hearing.
Consent
15
On the question of consent, even though it is true that HCI
and Sosengwase vacated the property under their own steam, I found it
impossible to accept that they did so voluntarily. Unlawful
dispossession need not be violent. Coercion is sufficient. Faced with
a large number (24 by Mr. Farber’s reckoning) of armed security
guards, whose intentions, though implicit, could not have
been
obscure, HCI and Sosengwase quit the property. But they plainly did
not do so freely and voluntarily. That this is the test
for consent
at common law, even in in the context of spoliation proceedings, has
long been established, as has the rule that the
onus of proving
consent rests on the person alleging it (see
Metropolitan
Evangelical Services v Goge
2018 (6) SA 564
(GJ) at paragraph 19
and
Laws v Rutherfurd
1924 AD 261
at 263). The test was
plainly not met on the facts of this case.
16
It was finally suggested that HCI and Sosengwase relinquished
control of the property in obedience to a lawful instruction issued
by officers of the fifth respondent, the JMPD, and that this rendered
the dispossession lawful. I do not think that the facts support
that
contention. It appears that, early on 18 February 2023 there was some
commotion at the property, which passing JMPD officers
investigated.
They took the view that G3 was lawfully entitled to take over the
property, and they told Mr. Mhlongo so. They then
left. It is
apparent from the founding affidavit (and not seriously disputed in
the answering affidavit) that Mr. Mhlongo remained
at the property
for an hour and forty-five minutes after the JMPD left the scene.
There is no suggestion that the JMPD officers
had any role in
coercing him to leave when he did. Even assuming that what the JMPD
officers said amounted to an instruction that
Mr. Mhlongo must leave
the property, and that they were entitled to issue such an
instruction, I do not think that, in these circumstances,
the JMPD
officers can realistically have been said to have caused HCI’s
or Sosengwase’s loss of possession of the property.
17
It was for these reasons that I made the 1 March 2023 order.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment was
prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email, by uploading it to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment
to the
South African Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 3 April 2023.
HEARD
ON:
1
March 2023
DECIDED
ON:
1
March 2023
REASONS:
3
April 2023
For
the Applicants:
R
Solomon SC
L
Hollander
Instructed
by
SWVG
Inc Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents:
D
Mahon
L
Mitchell
Instructed
by:
Thomson
Wilks Inc
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