Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 413South Africa
Thami Ndlala Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Urban Mountain (058334/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 413 (2 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Thami Ndlala Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Urban Mountain (058334/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 413 (2 May 2023)
Thami Ndlala Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Urban Mountain (058334/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 413 (2 May 2023)
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sino date 2 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
058334/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
02.05.23
In
the matter between:
THAMI
NDLALA HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
THAMSANQA
LUCAS NDLALA
Second
Applicant
and
URBAN
MOUNTAIN
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Thami Ndlala Holdings
(pty) LTD and Another v Urban Mountain
(Case
No. 2022/058334) [2023] ZAGPJHC 413 (2 May 2023)
JUDGMENT ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE
TO APPEAL
YACOOB J:
1.
The applicants for leave to appeal were the
respondents in the urgent application, which they seek to appeal.
2.
The applicants applied at the hearing of the
application for leave for a postponement to obtain the transcript of
the urgent hearing,
to submit that transcript as evidence because
part of the reasons I gave for the order was that the order was
granted by consent,
and to adduce evidence in the application for
leave to appeal of events after the hearing. That application was
dismissed for reasons
given
ex tempore
.
3.
In summary, the reasons were that the transcript
is irrelevant, because the application for leave can be determined on
the basis
that there was no consent to the order, and because by
seeking to adduce evidence of events after the hearing the applicants
were
seeking to make out a new case. In any event if there were
issues with what happened after the order was granted the appropriate
forum would have been another court, approached either urgently or
otherwise, to remedy any unlawful actions that were being taken.
4.
I was unable to deliver a decision in the leave to
appeal
ex tempore
because
the Caselines platform was intermittently offline and I was unable to
contemporaneously refer to those portions of the papers
to which the
parties referred me in argument.
5.
During the arguing of the application, there was a
suggestion that the fact that the order states that it was by
agreement is another
ground for appeal and that is why the transcript
is necessary. There is no merit in that suggestion. The order being
by agreement
is does not change the substance of the order, or the
effect of it. It is not part of the appealable terms of the order,
and does
not change the outcome of the matter.
6.
In the initial notice of application for leave,
the applicants sought leave on the basis that the court did not
“appreciate”
the evidence before it; that a different
order was granted than that sought; that the court impermissibly
found a different cause
of action for the (then) respondent; and that
the court impermissibly interfered in a lease agreement. The
applicants also submitted
that it was in the interests of justice to
grant leave despite the order “appearing” to be an
interim order.
7.
In the supplementary grounds, the applicants
contended that the court had impermissibly granted an eviction order
while postponing
the eviction application; that the order is now
moot; that the court was wrong in finding there was restoration work
which needed
to be done, and that the court did not provide an end
date for the order, meaning that the respondent could abuse it.
8.
I am satisfied that the evidence before me on the
day of the urgent hearing does not support a conclusion that there
were people
making their home at the property, and therefore that the
order granted does not amount to an unlawful eviction order. The
respondent
stated in its founding affidavit that occasionally
builders employed by the applicants would stay on the property for a
temporary
period while doing work and then would move on. The
applicants did not respond to this allegation and it must be taken to
be admitted.
The applicants deal in their answering affidavit with
the workers having stayed there on a particular night, but nowhere is
there
an allegation that their presence had any element of permanence
or that they made their homes there. This was something that the
applicants ought to have made a positive allegation about if it was
the case. Certainly without any such allegation there is not
enough
from which a court can draw the inference that there are people
making their home on the property. Nor is it appropriate
for a court
to draw inferences in application proceedings save in very restricted
circumstances.
9.
I am satisfied also that the order is not final in
effect. Although no date was fixed in the order for the restoration
of the property,
the provision that the property be restored when the
work was done coupled with the requirement that the respondent report
monthly
on progress of the work done is sufficient in my view to
protect the applicants’ interests. If there was any indication
that
the respondent was dragging its heels, or delaying in bad faith,
the applicants are entitled to approach a court for assistance.
10.
As far as the mootness argument is concerned, the
applicants on the one hand contends that the restoration has been
completed and
on the other that it was not necessary. If, as
suggested in argument, the “completion” referred to by
the applicants
is the work they claimed to have done, of which
photographs were submitted at the hearing, it was clear that the
fencing depicted
in the photographs would not have the effect of
preventing the kind of damage that was feared. If it is that work has
since been
done, then the appropriate remedy is to approach a court
for restoration to the property in terms of paragraph 1.4 of the
order.
11.
The respondent submitted that if the order is moot
that precludes leave to appeal because the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
states in section 16(2)(a)(i) that an appeal may be dismissed
simply on the ground that the decision would have no practical
effect,
and
section 17(1)(b)
precludes the granting of leave in
such circumstances.
12.
Although the supplementary grounds for appeal
contend that the order is now moot, it is clear that the applicant
relies on its contention
that no restoration work was necessary at
the time, and therefore that the order was always moot. I do not
think that that is the
sort of mootness that is meant by
section
16(2)(a)(i).
1cm; line-height: 150%">
13.
There is no basis to the allegations that the
court “created” a cause of action. The reason the
respondent approached
this court on an urgent basis is well set out
in its affidavit and is the cause of action on which the relief was
based. Relief
may be fashioned by a court in accordance with a cause
of action set out and supported in affidavits. This is what this
court did.
14.
I am satisfied that there is no merit in any of
the grounds on which leave is sought. I am not satisfied that another
court would
come to a different conclusion.
15.
The respondent in asking for the application for
leave to be dismissed with costs asked that the Court include the
costs of the
abortive hearing last week, when the matter could not
proceed primarily because there were problems hearing counsel for the
applicants
on the virtual connection. I agree that the costs of the
application should include the costs of that abortive hearing,
whichever
party bears them. Although it was the duty of counsel for
the applicant, once the brief was accepted, to ensure he was in a
place
from which he could address the place audibly and with a good
connection, I think that it would require some element of gross
negligence
for these kinds of logistical matters for a negative costs
order to result.
16.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed
with costs, including the costs of 20 April 2023
S YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing: 20 and 25 April 2023
Date of Judgment: 02 May 2023
For the
Applicant:
AW Pullinger
Instructed by:
Fairbridges
Wertheim Becker
For the
Respondents:
CM Shongwe
Instructed by:
Enhle Ngwane
Attorneys Inc
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