Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 393South Africa
Vajeth and Another v Jongwana and Others (19616/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 393 (28 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 April 2023
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Vajeth and Another v Jongwana and Others (19616/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 393 (28 April 2023)
Vajeth and Another v Jongwana and Others (19616/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 393 (28 April 2023)
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sino date 28 April 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
19616/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
RIAZ
AMOD VAJETH
First
Applicant
SIBUSISIWE
JOY VAJETH
Second
Applicant
and
NDYEBO
TREASURE JONGWANA
First
Respondent
ALL
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS
Second
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Riaz
Amod Vajeth and Another v Ndyebo Treasure Jongwana, and Others
(Case
No. 19616/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 393 ( 28 April 2023)
JUDGMENT
MAKUME J
:
[1] In this matter the
Applicants seeks an order evicting the Respondents from occupation of
certain premises situated at 34B Rietfontein
Road Edenburg, Rivonia
Sandton (the Property).
[2] The Applicants are
the owners of the property mentioned above and concluded a lease
agreement with the first Respondent in terms
of which they leased a
portion of the property to the first Respondent on 20 May 2020.
[3] As a result of the
first Respondent failing to comply with the terms and condition of
the lease same was cancelled during 2022
thereafter Applicant
launched this application.
[4] On the 28
th
June 2022 the Respondent filed a Notice of Intention to Oppose the
application. On the 15
th
July 2022 the Applicants
filed their Notice in terms of Section 4(2) of the PIE Act.
This notice was later withdrawn as it
was premature.
[5] The Respondent then
filed a Notice in terms of Rule 35 (12). On the 11
th
August 2022 the Applicant’s attorneys addressed a letter to the
first Respondent informing him that the Notice in terms of
rule 35(3)
was irregular. It was later withdrawn by the Respondent.
[6] In the Answering
Affidavit the Respondent whilst admitting that he fell in arrears
with the payments in terms of the lease agreement
he nevertheless
says that the Applicant failed to comply with the requirements of
clause 14.2 which requires that the lessor should
first have given
him 7 days’ notice to enable him to remedy the situation.
[7] In the result the
Respondent argues that the application is premature and falls to be
dismissed.
[8] The Respondent
further pleads that a new lease agreement kicked in on the 1
st
June 2022 in terms of the
Rental Housing Act 50 of 1999
which
prescribes that he should have been given one-month notice to
terminate the agreement this he says did not happen.
[9] In the further
submission the Respondent disputes the proper description of the
leased property and also says that the property
is not jointly owned.
[10] On the 3
rd
January 2023 the Applicant filed his Replying Affidavit dealing
effectively with all the technical issues raised by the Respondent.
In particular, it was pointed out that since cancellation of the
lease in May 2022 the Respondent had not made any payment.
[11] On the 13
th
January 2023 the first Respondent without leave of the Court filed
and served a “Supplementary Answering Affidavit.”
He does
so as he says because Applicant raised new matter in reply.
[12] In that last
affidavit the Respondent now takes issue with the description of the
property and says that the outbuildings and
developments were not
approved by the local authority and therefore the lease agreement is
based on an illegality and cannot be
enforced by the Court. The
interesting allegation of illegality is set out in paragraph 15 which
read as follows:
“
In any event the
Applicants have not made out a case for such enforcement. I
submit that the Honourable Court cannot enforce
the illegal contract
because it is against public policy and it would be setting a bad
precedent, that owners of land that are
not compliant with municipal
laws, by among others not paying applicable municipal rates (as is
the case here) can approach the
Court in perpetuance if an
illegality. This is unconstitutional.”
[13] He goes on to submit
at paragraph 19.1 that the lease agreement is invalid and not binding
due to the misrepresentation by
the Applicants. He says that if
he had been aware of this he would not have concluded a lease with
the Applicant.
[14] On the 3
rd
March 2023 the first Respondent filed what he calls a counter
application in which he cites the Applicants as first and second
Respondents and includes one Bernadine Jonathan as 4
th
Respondent and Sheina Rucy as the fifth Respondent. In the
counter application he seeks the following relief:
i)
Declaring the three
dwelling Units in the property 34B Rietfontein Road Edenburg, Rivonia
Sandton as having been erected illegally
and in contravention of the
Sandton Town Plan Scheme.
ii)
Declaring that the use of
the units is in contravention of the current zoning scheme.
iii)
Declaring the lease
agreement unlawful.
iv)
Interdicting the
“Applicant” from conducting business of lease on the
property.
[15] On the 28 March 2023
the Applicant filed a notice in terms of Rule 30 (b) of the Uniform
Rules seeking an order to declare
the counter application an
irregular step as envisaged in Rule 30. This has not been
responded to.
[16] I have proceeded to
set out the contents of the Respondent’s Supplementary
Answering Affidavit as well as the contents
of his counter
application not with the purpose of relying on the averments therein
but to demonstrate the extent to which the
first Respondent who is an
admitted advocate of the High Court went to abuse the Court process.
[17] This application was
postponed and set down for hearing during January 2023 to be heard on
the 17
th
April 2023 with the knowledge of the Respondent.
[18] When this matter was
called for hearing on the 17
th
April 2023 it is the
Respondent who addressed the Court telling the Court that this matter
was not ripe for hearing and that he
had been expecting the Applicant
to remove it from the roll.
[19] The basis for that
submission he says is because the Applicants have not answered to his
counter application also that he himself
still has to respond to the
Rule 30 (b) irregular step proceedings served by the Applicant.
[20] After hearing
further submissions from both Counsel I made a ruling that first
Respondent Supplementary Affidavit was filed
without leave of the
Court and as to be excluded. I secondly ruled that the
Respondent’s Counter application is a separate
application and
can be dealt with on its own more so that the two other tenants of
the property were not properly joined and were
not before Court.
My ruling meant also that the Rule 30 (b) notice fell by the
wayside. I directed the parties to proceed
and address the
Court on the main application for eviction.
[21] It is common cause
that since the Respondent was served with the Eviction application on
the 21
st
June 2022 he has filed all sorts of processes
aimed at not bringing this matter to finality but to delay same in
the meantime not
only had the lease been properly cancelled it had
also come to an end by effluxion of time. During all that time
the Respondent
has not been paying anything for his occupation of the
property save for a payment in December 2021 which was the last time
he
made such payment.
[22] It is clear that the
Respondent has sought to argue all sorts of unmeritorious defences
not supported by any evidence or logic
the most ridiculous being that
the Applicants do not own the property jointly when in fact the deeds
search document filed with
the Founding Affidavit indicate that.
He says this without proffering evidence in support of his
contention.
[23] The Respondent
clearly does not and never had a valid defence this he knows very
well. He firstly says that there is
no valid agreement
concluded between him and the Applicants because of the “wrong”
unit and then turns around to say
that the lease agreement was not
validly cancelled. This last contention is not only bad in law
but is once more meant to
cloud issues. I say this because
clause 14.2 of the lease agreement provides that the Applicant shall
give the Respondent
a period of seven days to pay his arrears and on
expiration of those seven days if no payment is received eviction
proceedings
would be instituted.
[24] The Applicant’s
attorneys addressed such a letter to the Respondent on the 1
st
April 2022 and only commenced eviction proceedings on 3
rd
June 2022. The Respondent in my view is being disingenuous when
he in paragraph 9 and 10 of his Answering Affidavit says
the
following:
“
[9]
The Applicants have failed to comply with this provision of the
lease. The
Applicants did not give a 7 calendar days’ notice of
cancellation and the Applicants commenced the eviction
proceedings
prematurely.
[10] On the 30
th
May 2022 the Applicant sent a letter which herewith cancels the
agreement. The Applicant did not give a 7 day calendar days’
notice as agreed in the lease. If the Applicants had given 7
calendar days’ notice the lease would be due to terminate
on
the 8
th
June 2022 and therefore can the Applicants launch
these proceedings.”
[25]
I find this assertion hard to believe in the first place he decided
to say nothing about the letter dated 1
st
April 2022 which is the letter calling on him to make payment of
arrears in the sum of R44 548.20. In that letter
Applicants’
attorneys tell him that “our client is also
entitled to cancel the agreement, claim damages or exercise all
rights accruing
to the owner/landlord in term of the common law.”
[26] The Respondent then
seeks to rely on the provisions of
Section 5(5)
of the
Rental Housing
Act 50 of 1999
which reads that
“
If on the
expiration of the lease the tenant remains in the dwelling with the
express or tacit consent of the landlord the parties
are deemed in
the absence of a further written lease to have entered into a
periodic lease on the same terms and conditions as
expressed lease,
except that at least one month’s written notice must be given
if the intention by either party to terminate
the lease.”
[27] Once again the
Respondent does not know where he stands he blows hot and cold.
By seeking reliance on this Act he then
concedes that there was a
valid lease agreement which aspect he has long placed in dispute.
Secondly there has never been
an express or tacit consent by the
landlord that the Respondent shall remain on the property.
Clause 14.1 of the lease agreement
is instructive it reads as
follows:
“
Should
the agreement be cancelled by the lessor due to breach of contract
the lessee shall be obliged to forthwith vacate the premises
and
allow the lessor to take occupation thereof.”
[28] The Respondent’s
contention that when the lease expired a new lease kicked in and was
concluded in terms of
Section 5(5)
of the
Rental Housing Act is
nothing but a smoke screen and must be dismissed with the contempt it
deserves.
[29] I am satisfied that
the Applicants are the owners of the property, secondly that the
lease agreement was properly and procedurally
cancelled as a result
of the continuous breach thereof. The Respondent has not been
able to demonstrate any right to remain
in occupation of the property
for which he is not paying anything.
[30] What remains is
whether it is just and equitable to evict the Respondent now that he
has decided not to vacate voluntarily.
The first Respondent is
not a member of a household headed by a woman, secondly there are no
handicapped, elderly or vulnerable
persons on the property occupied
by him. He is a practicing Advocate of the High Court and earns
income sufficient to make
him afford rental at other premises in
Gauteng provided he is prepared to pay.
[31] The Applicant says
in his Founding Affidavit that rental income from the units is his
only income and that Respondent by insisting
to live on the property
without paying is prejudicial. He is in fact subsidising the
Respondent. In my view justice
and equity demands that I grant
the Applicant the order as requested which is set out in his draft
order handed to me.
[32] In the draft order
this Court is asked to refer the judgement and record of proceedings
to the Legal Practice Council with
instruction to investigate the
conduct of the Respondent. This request was made in the notice
of irregular step in terms
of
Rule 30(b)
which was not ventilated for
reasons that I have already alluded to. In the circumstances I
did not think it will be fair
and just to accede to this prayer as
the Respondent did not have an opportunity to explain himself.
This Court hopes that
the Respondent will in future devise proper and
acceptable steps to deal with litigation whether it refers to him in
his personal
capacity or for his clients. I agree that the
manner in which he chose to deal with this matter leaves much to be
desired
but is not such as to require investigation by his statutory
regulation body.
[33] I am satisfied that
the Applicant has made out a case on all fours and is entitled to an
order evicting the Applicant and all
those who take after him from
the property.
[34] In the result I
hereby make order as follows:
ORDER
1.
The
Applicants’ Notice of Motion is amended by removing the words
“Unit 2” from prayer 1 thereof.
2.
The
1
st
Respondent and any other person claiming a right of occupation
through, under or by virtue of him, is hereby evicted from the
premises known as 34B Rietfontein Road, Edenburg, Rivonia, SANDTON
(“the property”);
3.
The
1
st
Respondent and any other person claiming a right of occupation
through, under or by virtue of him is ordered to vacate the property
by not later than 16h00 on the 30 April 2023, failing which the
sheriff for the area within which the property is situated be
authorised to evict the 1
st
Respondent and any other person claiming a right of occupation
through, under or by virtue of him.
4.
The
1
st
Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application on an
attorney-client scale, including all reserved costs and the costs
of
all interlocutory applications.
DATED at JOHANNESBURG
this the day of APRIL 2023.
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE OF HEARING : 14
APRIL 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT : 28
APRIL 2023
FOR
APPLICANT:
IN PERSON
FOR
RESPONDENT:
ADV CARVALHEIRA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
BENNET
MCNAUGHTON ATTORNEYS
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