Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 763South Africa
Hartley v Cortley and Others (21/21064) [2023] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 July 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 763
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Hartley v Cortley and Others (21/21064) [2023] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 July 2023)
Hartley v Cortley and Others (21/21064) [2023] ZAGPJHC 763 (5 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_763.html
sino date 5 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 21/21064
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In the matter between:
HARTLEY,
PAUL NICHOLAS
Applicant
and
CORTLEY,
LINDSAY
First
Respondent
CORLETT,
HUGH MARK ANTHONY
Second
Respondent
HARTLEY,
MARK RICHARD
Third
Respondent
HARTLEY,
NICOLE JOY
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FRANCIS J
1. The applicant brought
a
mandament van spolie
application against the first and
second respondents (the respondents) to restore his undisturbed
quasi-possession in the form of
a right of way via a driveway leading
to his property being Portion 5[...] of the original Portion 2[…]
of the Farm Rietfontein
189. He also sought an interim
interdict pending the outcome of an application under case number
12470/12, restraining the
respondents, from interfering or causing to
be interfered with his peaceful, undisturbed quasi-possession in the
form of a right
of way via a driveway leading to his property.
Alternatively, he sought an interdict preventing the respondents from
taking
the law into their own hands and compelling them to follow due
legal process.
2. The applicant has
cited the third and fourth respondents who happens to be his children
but stated that no relief was being sought
against them and that they
were cited as interested parties.
3. The application was
opposed by the respondents on the grounds that there is a material
dispute of fact and the applicant’s
failure to have joined
Mogale City Local Municipality (Mogale City) as a party to the
proceedings. They dispute that the applicant
was unlawfully disposed
of his quasi-possession of the illegal driveway and that he has since
2017 been in peaceful undisturbed
possession of the illegal driveway
and that there is any matter pending under case number 12470/14 in
the Gauteng Division, Pretoria
High court. It was contended
that Mogale City had resolved the dispute and has not been taken on
review and since it has
not been joined in these proceedings it
decision cannot be overruled by this court without having being
heard.
4. The applicant’s
case is that he has been in peaceful and undisturbed possession since
2017 which he contends has not been
disputed. The respondents
do not specifically deny that since 2017 he has been using the
driveway peacefully and in undisturbed
manner i.e. that the applicant
has been in physical quasi-possession since 2017. The
respondents admitted that they took
possession of the property
without a court order. Therefore, the respondents have
dispossessed him of possession or without
his consent or without due
legal process and the dispossession is unlawful.
5. The following facts
are undisputed:
5.1 On 6 November 2006
Mogale City consented to a subdivision of Portion 200 (a portion of
Portion 60) of the Farm Rietfontein 189
IQ into Portions 5[...], 592
and 5[...] with a legal right of way servitude over Portion 592 in
favour of Portion 5[...] as per
the Surveyor General diagrams.
5.2 On 1 October 2007 the
applicant took transfer of Portions 5[...], 592 and 5[...].
5.3 On 6 June 2008 the
applicant obtained certificates of registered title in respect of
Portions 592 and 5[...] without causing
a caveat to be noted in
respect of the legal right of way servitude over Portion 592 in
favour of Portion 5[...].
5.4 On 31 March 2009 the
second respondent and the applicant entered into a sale agreement of
Portion 5[...].
5.5 On 18 December 2010
the first and second respondents took occupation of Portion 5[...]
and built boundary walls on the incorrect
boundary lines as pointed
out by the applicant.
5.6 On 14 March 2011 the
applicant entered into a second sale agreement with the first
respondent.
5.7 On 4 May 2012 the
respondents realised that the applicant had pointed out the incorrect
boundary lines of Portion 5[...] which
had resulted in the boundary
walls being built on the incorrect lines.
5.8 On 13 August
2012 a third sale agreement was entered into between the applicant
and the first respondent and the first
respondent became aware of the
correct boundary lines of Portion 5[...].
5.9 On 12 August 2013
Portion 5[...] was transferred into the name of the first respondent:
property correctly described as per
the Surveyor General diagram.
5.10 During September
2013 the respondents met with the applicant who consented to vacate
the illegal driveway over Portion 5[...].
5.11 On 9 October 2013
the applicant requested an extension for the applicant to vacate the
illegal driveway and the extension was
granted on 27 October 2013.
5.12 On 29 October 2013
the applicant failed to restore possession of the illegal driveway as
consented to, to lock out the first
respondent from her own property,
preventing her from taking possession of her property.
5.13 On 1 November 2013
the applicant obtained an
ex parte
spoliation order against
the second respondent alleging that the second respondent spoliated
him from the legal servitude over Portion
592 as per the Surveyor
General diagram but failed to inform the court of his consent.
5.14 In May 2014 the
first respondent launched vindicatory proceedings in the Pretoria
High Court under case number 2014/12470 against
the applicant seeking
an order declaring the illegal driveway to be part of her property.
The applicant admitted the illegal
driveway property of the first
respondent but counter-applied for an order that the first respondent
sell the illegal driveway
to him.
5.15 In 2016 after
postponements at the behest of the applicant, the applicant amended
his counterclaim seeking rectification of
the purchase agreement on
the basis that the property was incorrectly described in the contract
of sale (without having joined
Mogale City who had to amend its
subdivision authorisation or the Surveyor General who would have to
amend his diagram) and years
after having entered into the sale
agreement at a time when both parties were in possession of the
diagram and surveyors report
depicting the correct boundary lines of
Portions 5[...], 592 and 5[...].
5.16 On 24 May 2017 on
the day that the transfer of Portion 592 into the names of the
applicant’s children came up for preparation
in the Deeds
Office, the applicant’s attorney signed a notice setting the
applicant’s counterclaim down for a hearing.
5.17 On 26 May 2017 the
applicant transferred Portion 592 (the major encroaching property) to
his children namely the third and
fourth respondents, without
registering the legal servitude over Portion 592 in favour of Portion
5[...], without Mogale City’s
permission and without informing
the first respondent’s legal representatives.
5.18 On 20 October 2017
the applicant’s spoliation application against the first
respondent was dismissed in the Krugersdorp
Magistrate’s court
under case number 5119/2017. It was discovered during the
proceedings that the applicant had divested
himself of Portion 592.
5.19 On 6 November 2017
the High Court application in Pretoria was referred to trial and the
third and fourth respondents were joined
in the proceedings as the
first respondent’s vindicatory relief against the applicant
would have been of no force or effect
since the applicant had
divested himself of the property.
5.20 On 3 April 2018 the
first respondent’s amended her declaration and the applicant’s
children were cited as second
and third defendants.
5.21 On 25 April 2018 the
applicant and the third and fourth respondents filed their plea
without a counterclaim merely raising
a plea of rectification of the
contract.
5.22 Between 10 and 21
May 2018 the attorneys who had transferred Portion 592 from the
applicant confirmed that the applicant had
not informed them of the
legal servitude over portion 592 which had to be registered over
Portion 592 in favour of Portion 5[...].
Mogale City had
ordered the applicant and the third and fourth respondents to do so.
5.23 On 13 December 2018
the applicant laid a complaint against the first respondent with
Mogale City about the first respondent’s
boundary wall which he
knew was encroaching on the Vleipad as he had indicated the wrong
boundary lines to the second respondent
on 31 March 2009, and also
represented to Mogale City that he was the owner of Portion 592.
5.24 On 3 March 2019 the
first respondent laid a counter complaint with Mogale City about the
encroachment of Portions 592 and 5[...]
on Portion 5[...] (the
illegal driveway).
5.25 On 7 August 2019
after an investigation by Mogale City initiated by the applicant, the
owners of all three portions were ordered
to discontinue their
illegal conduct.
5.26 In September 2019
the only objection raised by the Applicant against the demand of
Mogale City was seeking for an extension
to comply was that on the
grounds that there was a matter pending in the High Court.
5.27 On 27 May 2020 the
first respondent consequently withdrew her action in the Pretoria
High court to address the only objection
raised by the applicant with
regard to the order received from Mogale City.
5.28 On 3 July 2020 there
was a follow up inspection by Mogale City and the first respondent
complied but there was no compliance
by the applicant and third and
fourth respondents.
5.29 On 15 July 2020 the
Mogale City in a follow-up report recorded that the applicant had
requested an extension to remove his
power box on the illegal
driveway and arrange for his evacuation of the illegal driveway also
recording that there would be no
issue with the first respondent now
taking possession of the illegal driveway.
5.30 On 18 July 2020 the
first respondent took possession of the illegal driveway by virtue of
the outcome of the Mogale City proceedings.
5.31 On 20 July 2020 the
applicant withdrew his spoliation application against the second
respondent indicating an acquiescence
in Mogale’s City’s
order (or the first respondent taking possession of the illegal
driveway).
5.32 On 20 November 2020
the applicant launched a harassment application against the second
respondent in the Krugersdorp Magistrate’s
Court.
5.33 On 5 May 2021 the
applicant served this application.
6. The applicant
contended that the respondents have unlawfully taken possession and
control of the driveway leading to the applicant’s
property
during the period July 2020 through to date by various unlawful
acts. The respondents are preventing the applicant,
his staff,
family members and guests, visiting a guesthouse on the applicant’s
property from accessing the driveway leading
to the applicant’s
property.
7. The applicant
contended further that the issue of legality does not arise in a
spoliation application which needs to be determined
separately.
A person deprived unlawfully of his or her quasi-possession of a
servitude right or a right which is incidental
of the possession or
control of property has recourse in the form of a
mandament van
spolie
. The acts of spoliation occurred in July 2020.
These acts goes directly against the clear principle of our law which
is to prevent persons taking the law into their own hands.
8. The first issue that
needs to be determined is whether Mogale City should have been joined
as a respondent in this application.
9. The applicant
contended that Mogale City need not be joined in the spoliation
application since it does not have a direct and
substantial
application interest in this application. Further that Mogale
City has no jurisdiction to act without a court
order. It will only
have a direct and substantial interest when the rightful owner of the
driveway was determined in separate proceedings.
It was also
not party to the dispossession.
10. The applicant
contended further that Mogale City does not have the authority to
spoiliate or the power to authorise spoliation
by the respondents
without duly following legal procedure, that is to say a court
procedure. The compliance notice itself
does not authorise the
Mogale City or any other person to resort to self-help. The
compliance notice must issue a warning
to the effect that the person
must comply with the notice or the person may be required by an order
of court to demolish, remove
or alter any building, structure or work
illegally erected or constructed or to cease with the illegal
activity and rehabilitate
the land concerned.
11. It is common cause
that Mogale City was not cited as a party by the applicant. It had
made a ruling in this matter and the applicant
has not taken that
ruling on review. I do not deem it necessary to deal with the
issues raised by the applicant about what
the powers of Mogale City
are whether it had acted beyond its powers since the arguments raised
by the applicant does not deal
address the issue of substantial
interest and bearing in mind that this court is not sitting as a
review court. It is of
no moment to state that the ruling made
by Mogale City was not supported in law. The fact of the matter
is that the dispute
was referred to it by the applicant and that a
ruling was made rightly or wrongly.
12. The test for
non-joinder is set out by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Absa Bank
Ltd v Naude NO
(20264/2014)[2015] ZASCA 97 (1 June 2015) as
follows:
“
[10]
The test whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject matter
of the
litigation which may prejudice the party that has not been joined.
In Gordon v Department of Health, Kwazulu-Natal
it was held that if
an order or judgment cannot be sustained without necessarily
prejudicing the interest of third parties that
had not been joined,
then those third parties have a legal interest in the matter and must
be joined.”
13. In
Judicial
Service Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and Another
2013
(1) SA 170
SCA at para 12:
“
[12]
It has been by now become settled law that the joinder of a party
only is required as a matter of necessity – as opposed
to a
matter of convenience if that party has a direct and substantial
interest which may be affected prejudicially by the judgment
of the
court in the proceedings concerned (see Bowring NO v Vrededorp
Properties CC
2007 (5) SA 391
(SCA PARA 21). The mere fact that a
party may have an interest in the outcome of the litigation does not
warrant a non-joinder
plea. The right of a party to validly
raise the objection that other parties should have been joined to the
proceedings,
has thus been held to be a limited one.”
14. Mogale City had
already on 6 November 2006 consented to a subdivision of Portion 2[…]
(a portion of Portion 6[…])
of the Farm Rietfontein 189 IQ
into Portions 5[...], 5[…] and 5[...] with a legal right of
way servitude over Portion 592
in favour of Portion 5[...] as per the
Surveyor General diagrams. I have already set out the role that
Mogale City played
in the issue of the boundaries. The applicant had
referred the issue of the boundaries to Mogale City which conducted
an investigation
and made a ruling in the matter. The applicant
had sought some time to comply with the ruling made by Mogale City
and thereafter
launched this application. The position would
have been different had the applicant not referred this issue to
Mogale City.
15. But since the issue
was referred by the applicant to Mogale City and applying the test
referred to above I am of the view that
the issue raised by the
respondents bears merit. The facts of this matter and the
involvement of Mogale City made it necessary
for Mogale City to have
been joined as a party in these proceedings. It made ruling
which is binding to the parties and that
ruling has not been set
aside on review.
16. The application
stands to be dismissed for failure to have joined Mogale City as a
party in this application.
17. There is no reason
why costs should not follow the result.
18. In the circumstances
I make the following order:
18.1 The application is
dismissed with costs on a party and party scale.
FRANCIS J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
FOR
APPLICANT
D
GINTNER
INSTRUCTED
BY
CRAWFORD
LEGAL PRACTITIONERS
FOR
1 AND 2
RESPONDENTS
S
KOLBE SC
INSTRUCTED
BY
FIONA
MARCANDONATOS INC
DATE OF HEARING : 9
NOVEMBER 2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT :
05 JULY 2023
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10h00 on 5 July 2023.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Hartog v Daly and Others (A5012/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 40; [2023] 2 All SA 156 (GJ) (24 January 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 40High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Halstead v Member of the Executive Council for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng Provincial Government (039776/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 581 (26 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 581High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Halstead v MEC for Public Transport and Road Infrastructure of the Gauteng Department (40162/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 871 (31 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 871High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
H.W and Another v R.S (18246/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1354 (24 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1354High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Hendricks Holding (Pty) Ltd v PHP Armed Response (Pty) Ltd (2022/043254) [2024] ZAGPJHC 972 (30 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 972High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar