Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 486South Africa
Sethaba Thaba Land Investment CC v Mnomane Investment CC and Others (16137/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 486 (15 May 2023)
Judgment
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## Sethaba Thaba Land Investment CC v Mnomane Investment CC and Others (16137/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 486 (15 May 2023)
Sethaba Thaba Land Investment CC v Mnomane Investment CC and Others (16137/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 486 (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NO
:
16137/2021
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
15.05.23
In
the matter between:
SETHABA-THABA
LAND INVESTMENT CC
Applicant
And
MNOMANE
INVESTMENTS CC
First Respondent
BP
SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
CONTROLLER
OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Third
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Sethaba
-Thaba Land Investment CC v Mnomane Investment CC & Others
(Case
No:
16137/2021
)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 486 (15 May 2023)
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines
the Judgment is deemed to be
delivered.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J:
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1] The dispute around
commercial eviction is a common feature in the Judicial turf. This is
so especially, in cases involved in
the supply of petroleum and
related products at a retail point. This is an opposed application to
evict the first respondent from
an immovable property that was used
to sell petroleum and related products.
B.
BACKGROUND
[2] The applicant seeks
the eviction of the first respondent from the immovable property with
the description Erf 182 Devland Extension
1 Township, Registration
Division I.Q, Transvaal and Erf 183 Devland Extension 1 Township,
Registration Division I.Q, Transvaal
and Erf 184 Devland Extension 1
Township, Registration Division I.Q. Transvaal (“the
property”).
[3] The applicant
concluded a lease agreement with BP Southern Africa (Pty) Limited,
the second respondent in this matter during
1993, which was notarialy
registered against the titles of the property by the Registrar of
Deeds in favour of the second respondent.
The lease was for the
development of a filling station to sell petroleum and related
products on the property. The second respondent
in turn, concluded a
sublease agreement in 2010 with the first respondent to sell those
products from the property. The sublease
was for a period of five
years.
[4] The first respondent
opposes the eviction application. The second respondent has filed a
notice to abide the decision of the
court.
[5] The first respondent
has instituted a counter application. It seeks an interdict
restraining the applicant and the second respondent
from interfering
with its business on the property pending the finalisation of a
referral for arbitration in terms of
section 12B
of the
Petroleum
Products Act 170 of 1977
. The counter application is opposed by the
applicant and the second respondent but the latter has not filed any
opposing affidavit
to the counter application.
[6] The sublease
agreement concluded between the applicant and the first respondent
terminated in 2015 and the second respondent
continued to sub lease
the property to the first respondent on a month-to-month basis
thereafter. The second respondent concluded
a further written lease
with the first respondent in September 2018. The lease was for a
period of seven years and would terminate
in 2025. The sublease was
dependent on the existence of the headlease concluded by the
applicant and the second respondent.
[7] As stated herein
before, the headlease which was concluded in 1993 was for a period of
22 years and registered at the Deeds
Office. This was to secure the
interest of the second respondent who invested capital and installed
the necessary equipment including
tanks and pumps at the property.
During the period of the long lease, the second respondent was able
to conclude the sublease agreement
with the retailers to sell its
products from the property. This was permitted by the headlease
concluded and the second respondent.
For the duration of the long
lease, the second respondent sold petrol and diesel to the sub tenant
who in turn sold same to the
public.
[8] The sublease
agreement was concluded by the second respondent with the first
respondent from June 2010 for a period of five
years and came to an
end in 2015 and was subsequently replaced by a month-to-month lease.
[9] Clause 44 of the head
lease concluded between the applicant and the second respondent
states as follows:
“
Insofar as
the Lessor has tenure in respect of the property or the leased
premises under the headlease and if such headlease is
cancelled or
terminated for any reason whatsoever, the lease
ipso
facto
likewise
terminate”.
[10] The headlease
terminated by effluxion of time on 30th June 2015. It appears from
the papers that the first and second respondents
continued to act in
terms thereof. During June 2020, the applicant advised the second
respondent that it no longer wished to continue
to lease the
property. A formal termination notice was sent to the second
respondent on the 15th of March 2021 by the applicant’s
attorney.
[11] The contents of the
formal termination notice to the second respondent read as follows:
“
3. Pursuant
to the headlease which was concluded between our client and
yourselves and which has now expired due to the efflux of
time as
well as the volume obligation in terms of sales, we do advise that
our client hereby provides a formal notice of termination
of the
headlease.
4. In line with the discussions
between our client and yourselves, we confirmed that there shall be
no further renewal of the current
month to month basis of the lease
and determination is effective immediately.
5. We further confirm that BP has
waived its rights in terms of the notice. For the termination in
terms of the head lease, and
search termination is again effective
immediately”.
[12] The applicant
contends that as a result of the termination of the headlease, and in
accordance with clause 44 thereof, the
sublease and the subsequent
month to month agreements automatically terminated. The applicant
furthermore contends that it is not
certain what transpired between
the first and the second respondent but nevertheless the second
respondent has accepted that determination
of the headlease gave rise
to the termination of the sublease between itself and the first
respondent.
[13] The first respondent
was advised by the second respondent of the termination of the
sublease by way of a final notice which
was sent to the first
respondent on the 1st of December 2020. The second respondent in its
letter to the first respondent stated
that it acknowledged
section
12B
of the arbitration process initiated by the first respondent with
the Controller of Petroleum Products. The notice stated that the
applicant was not a party to such proceedings in that it was entitled
to have its property back as it gave adequate notice of termination
which was filtered on time to the respondent.
[14] The first respondent
contends as the occupier of the property it was entitled not to be
evicted because it concluded a sublease
agreement with the second
respondent that expires in 2025. It argues therefore that it is not
in unlawful occupation of the property
and that the applicant is not
entitled to evict it. It also wants by way of a counter application
for these proceedings on eviction
to be stayed pending the
determination of the
section 12B
arbitration process.
C. ISSUES FOR
DETERMINATION
[15] The issues for
determination in this litigation can be summarised as follows:
(a)
Whether the applicant is entitled to
evict the first respondent from its property following the
termination of head lease agreement
it concluded with the second
respondent; and
(b)
Whether the first respondent is
entitled to have the eviction proceedings stayed pending the
determination of the
section 12B
arbitration process.
D. THE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES AND REASONS FOR THE JUDGMENT
Owner’s right in
common law and the requirements to succeed in eviction.
[16]
All evictions, other than in respect of commercial property, are
regulated by either the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from
and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
[1]
(“PIE
Act”) and the Extension of Security of Tenure Act
[2]
(“ESTA”).
The two pieces of legislation do not apply where the eviction does
not fall within the ambit of the two Acts.
In such cases as in the
instant case, the common law principles apply and more importantly
the owner of the property receives his
recourse through
rei
vindicatio
.
[17]
For the applicant as the owner to succeed in eviction, he must prove
his ownership of the property and that the respondent
is in
possession thereof. When the owner acknowledges that the occupier of
his property had a right of occupation that has terminated
such
through the lease, the owner must prove that the lease has come to an
end.
[3]
In
explaining this approach, Jones JA
[4]
stated
the following:
“
If he
concedes in his particulars of claim that the defendant has an
existing right to hold (e.g. by conceding a lease or hire-purchase
agreement, without also alleging that it been terminated:
Boshoff
v Union Government,
1932 T.P.D. 345
at p 412
)
His statement of claim obviously discloses no cause of action. If he
does not concede an existing right to hold, but, nevertheless,
says
that a right to hold now would have existed but for a termination
which has taken place, then
ex
facie
the
statement of claim he must at least prove the termination, which
might, in the case of a contract, also entail proof of the
terms of
the contract. This is dealt with by Greenberg, J, in Boshoff v Union
Govern1932 T.P.D. 345 at p 412:
‘
I do not
think that any court would be entitled to decree an order for
ejectment, when a plaintiff comes to court and says: I am
the owner
of ground I let that ground to the defendant on a lease which covers
the present period, without some allegation that
the lease is no
longer enforce or no longer gives the defendant the right of
occupation. It may be that the cause of action in
such a case, is the
ownership of the ground, but where the plaintiff’s own
allegations it is declaration, or what is equivalent
to his
declaration, show that he is not entitled to ejectment, it does not
appear to me that any Court would be entitled to decree
ejectment in
his favour. The code would require something to show that
notwithstanding the right that he has given to the defendant,
the
defendant no longer has a right to remain in possession’.”
[18]
It is the principle of our law that provided that neither party is in
default, performance of all obligations under leases
which were
entered into for a fixed period is complete when that period ends.
The lease terminates automatically.
[5]
[19]
Periodical leases continue in being until terminated by notice. Under
common law, the period of notice
still
quietly differs according to the nature of the lease, that is if the
list is weekly, monthly, yearly, et cetera.
[6]
The rights of the
sub-tenant at common law under sub-lease agreement
[20] A
lease and a sublease are distinct contracts.
[7]
The
first one is a contract between the lessor and the lessee (head
lease) whereas the second one is a contract between the lessee
and
the sublessee (sublease).
[21] There is no
contractual relationship between the lessor and the sublessee. The
sublessee cannot acquire from the lessee greater
rights than the
lessee has in terms of the headlease because the sublessee’s
rights are subservient to the head lease. The
lessee must discharge
his full obligations under the head lease to the lessor. If the head
lease is cancelled for any reason, then
the sublessee’s right
to possession and occupation of the property and any other rights to
use and enjoy the fruits of the
property are extinguished.
[22]
In affirming the common law position, Malan J
[8]
stated
the following:
“
The second
applicant (sublessee) stands in no contractual relationship to the
first respondent (lessor). There is no privity of
contract between a
sublessee and the landlord and a subtenant has no legal interest in
the contract of lease between the landlord
and the tenant despite the
subtenant’s financial interest in it (
Wistyn
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Levi Strauss & Co and Another
[9]
).
The second a
pplicant
occupies the premises with the consent of the first respondent by
virtue of the franchise agreement between the two applicants.
It
follows that any breach of the obligation to give
commodus
usus
can
be vindicated only by the first applicant, who is entitled to the
right flowing from the agreement of lease between it and the
first
respondent”.
[23]
In
Metcash
Trading Africa Ltd v Clothing City Trading Plastics (Pty) Ltd t/a
Crazy Plastics
[10]
the
court also considered the interdependent nature of the headlease and
the sublease and held as follows:
“
The
Commercial context in this matter is that the respondent, as stated
previously, could and did only derive each title to occupy
the
premises from the applicant, as anchor tenant. This is so because the
only contractual nexus which bound the respondent was
that between it
and the applicant its sub-landlord. Once the main lease between the
owner of the building and the applicant came
to an end, there would
be no basis upon which the respondent’s occupation of the
sub-leased premises could continue, unless
it concluded a fresh
contract with a new anchor tenant or perhaps with the landlord. It is
obviously for this reason, in my view,
that there were so many
references in the agreement of sublease to the main agreement of
lease and its terms where specifically
incorporated therein.”
[24] The facts of the
present case have a peculiar similarity to the authorities quoted
above. In a nutshell, the first respondent
does not deny title of the
applicant as the owner of the property. He simply contends that the
applicant and the second respondent
have somewhat connived to
interfere with its commercial operation out of the property. The
purported sublease concluded between
the first and the second
respondent that was to terminate during 2025 is not supported by a
conclusion of the new headlease between
the applicant and the second
respondent. It follows therefore, in my view, that the first
respondent has failed to establish the
right to occupy the property
the result of which is that it is in an unlawful occupation thereof.
Accordingly, I hold the view
that the applicant is entitled to
vindicate it's right to the property and the order of eviction would
under the circumstances
be appropriate. There is no justification
whatsoever, why the first respondent should continue to be in
occupation of the property
in the absence of a valid headlease
between the applicant and the second respondent.
Counter application
[25] I
now deal with the counter application by the first respondent that
relates to the relief in terms of which the current eviction
application should be stayed pending the determination of the
s52B
of
the
Petroleum Products Act
(“the Act”).
[11]
It
claims that the applicant colluded with the second respondent to
terminate the sublease agreement relies on what it call “an
understanding” between itself and the second respondent. I fail
to understand how the absence of the existence of a new headlease
in
this argument can be sustained.
[26] The first respondent
claims that since there is a pending arbitration to determine the
dispute between itself and the second
respondent, this litigation
should be stayed. It is important to consider what the purpose of the
Act is so as to see if the counter
application can be sustained.
[27] The express purpose
of the Act is:
“
To provide
for measures in the saving of petroleum products and an economy in
the cost of distribution thereof, and for the maintenance
and control
of a price therefor, for the furnishing of certain information
regarding petroleum products, and for the rendering
of services of a
particular kind, or services of a particular standard, in connection
with petroleum products; to provide for the
licensing of persons
involved in the manufacturing and sale of certain petroleum products;
to promote the transformation of the
South African petroleum and
liquid fuels industry; to provide for the promulgation of regulations
relating to such licences; and
to provide for matters incidental
thereto.”
[28]
The Act provides for three distinct licencing regimes.
[12]
The
term licence is defined in the Act to mean
[13]
a
manufacturing, wholesale, site or retail licence. A
“
site
licence” is defined as a licence issued to a person who holds
the land or has permission from the owner of the land to
develop a
site for the retailing of the petroleum products. A “retail
licence” means “a licence to conduct the
business of a
retailer”. Once the retail licences issued, the holder thereof
is permitted to sell the petroleum products
to the end user for own
consumption. In the instant case, the second respondent is the
licenced wholesaler.
[29] To succeed with its
counter application, the first respondent bears the
onus
to
allege and prove that the applicant is a retailer or a wholesaler for
the purposes s12B of the Act. S12B of the Act provides
as follows:
“
12B.
Arbitration
(1)
The Controller of Petroleum Products may on request by a licensed
retailer alleging an unfair or unreasonable contractual
practice by a
licensed wholesaler, or vice versa, require, by notice in writing to
the parties concerned, that the parties submit
the matter to
arbitration.
(2)
An arbitration contemplated in subsection (1) shall be heard—
(a)
by an arbitrator chosen by the parties concerned; and
(b)
in accordance with the rules agreed between the parties.
(3)
If the parties fail to reach an agreement regarding the arbitrator,
or the applicable rules, within 14 days of receipt
of the notice
contemplated in subsection (1)—
(a) the Controller
of Petroleum Products must upon notification of such failure, appoint
a suitable person to act as arbitrator;
and
(b) the arbitrator
must determine the applicable rules.
(4) An arbitrator
contemplated in subsection (2) or (3)—
(a) shall determine
whether the alleged contractual practices concerned are unfair or
unreasonable and, if so, shall make
such award as he or she deems
necessary to correct such practice; and
(b) shall determine
whether the allegations giving rise to the arbitration were frivolous
or capricious and, if so, shall
make such award as he or she deems
necessary to compensate any party affected by such allegations.
(5)
Any award made by an arbitrator contemplated in this section shall be
final and binding upon the parties concerned and
may, at the
arbitrator’s discretion, include any order as to costs to be
borne by one or more of the parties concerned.”
[29] The provisions of
section 12B are intended to regulate the dispute between the licensed
wholesalers and the licenced retailers
of the petroleum products.
There is no evidence before me that the applicant in this litigation
is either a wholesaler or a licenced
retailer of the petroleum
product. As I understand it, the applicant granted the permission to
the second respondent in terms of
the head lease to develop this site
for the sale of petroleum products because of the significant
investment the second respondent
was expected to make on the site
that did not belong to it, it required the registration of its long
head lease between the applicant
and itself to protect its tenancy.
[30] The first respondent
also claims that the cancellation of the head lease is simulated,
meaning that it is not real. The first
respondent contends that the
notice to terminate the head lease is a sham because the second
respondent continues to occupy the
property. It bases its arguments
on the previous number of notices of termination of the sublease by
the second respondent. It
contends that all the previous notices of
termination on the basis that the head lease was terminated was
false. The first respondent
fails, however, to provide the evidence
of the new headlease agreement between the applicant and the second
respondent. It further
claims that the second applicant enjoys an
undisclosed influence over the applicant because of the deed of
servitude that has been
concluded between the applicant and the
second respondent. I am not persuaded that the contentions by the
first respondent takes
the argument anywhere for the purpose of the
s12B arbitration. The dispute the first respondent has with the
second respondent
should be ventilated in terms of the s12B
arbitration process, but the owner of the property should, in my
view, be allowed to
vindicate its rights. It follows in that the
first respondent has not persuaded me that it is entitled to the
relief sought in
the counter application. I say so because the third
respondent, as a regulatory authority, cannot have its functions
usurped by
this court without justification.
[31] Having considered
the papers before me, I am of the view that the applicant is entitled
to the eviction order and that the
applicant has not succeed in
staying the eviction application.
E.
ORDER
[32] As a result the
following order is made:
(a)
That
the first respondent and all persons holding under it, be declared to
be in unlawful occupation of
Erf
182
Devland Extension 1 Township, Registration Division
I.Q., Transvaal; Erf
183
Devland
Extension 1 Township, Registration Division I.Q., Transvaal and Erf
184
Devland Extension
1 Township, Registration Division I.Q., Transvaal.
(b)
That the first respondent be directed
to vacate the aforesaid property within 30 (Thirty) days from the
Honourable Court granting
an order in terms of this application,
failing which, the Sheriff for the area within which the property is
situated be authorised
to evict the first respondent and all persons
holding under it.
(c)
The first respondent is to pay the
costs of the application on a scale as between attorney and client.
(d)
The first respondent’s counter-
claim is dismissed, with the first respondent to pay the costs on a
scale as between attorney
and client.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE JUDGMENT
RESERVED:
9 November 2022
DATE JUDGMENT
DELIVERED:
15 May 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv
E Van As
Instructed
by:
Koor
Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
W Strobl
Instructed
by:
Metcalfe
Attorneys
[1]
No:
19 of 1998.
[2]
No:
62 of 1997.
[3]
See
Chetty v Naidoo 1974 (3) SA 13
[4]
Chetty
v Naidoo above at pg 20
[5]
See
Glover: Kerr’s Law of Sale and Lease 4
th
Edition,
pg 570, para 23.3.1.
[6]
See
Glover, above at page 572 para 23.4.2.
[7]
See
Floral Displays (Pty)Ltd v Bassa Land and Estate Co (Pty) Ltd
1965(4) SA 99 (D) 100-1
[8]
Sweets from Heaven (Pty)
Ltd and Another v Ster Kinekor Films (Pty) Ltd and Another
1999
(1) SA 796
(W) at page 800E-F
[9]
1986(4)
SA 796 (T) at 802B.
[10]
[
2014]
JOL 31829(GSJ)
[11]
No:
120 of 1977.
[12]
See
s2B
[13]
See
s1 Definitions
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