Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 928South Africa
Marule and Others v Marule and Others (15082/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 928 (17 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 July 2023
Headnotes
in terms of section 2 of the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act, 91 of 1988 (“the Conversion Act”) as amended in 1993. The applicants base their argument for the relief they seek squarely on the contention that no such inquiry (which I shall refer to as a “section 2 inquiry”) took place.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Marule and Others v Marule and Others (15082/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 928 (17 July 2023)
Marule and Others v Marule and Others (15082/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 928 (17 July 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 15082/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
MARULE
,
LERANYANE CHRISTINA
First
Applicant
MARULE
,
MASEMETA JOHN
Second
Applicant
MNISI
,
MPHO ELIZABETH (nee Marule)
Third
Applicant
MOGABUDI
,
NTALE MARIA (nee Marule)
Fourth
Applicant
MARULE
,
SELEBANE SYLVIA N.O.
(in
her capacity as executrix of the estate of the late
Metlele
Karel Marule)
Fifth
Applicant
And
MARULE
,
ERNEST
First
Respondent
MARULE
,
ELIZABETH THELMA
Second
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS, GAUTENG PROVINCE
Third
Respondent
MEC,
DEPARTMENT OF HUMANSETTLEMENTS, GAUTENG PROVINCE
Fourth
Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Fifth
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Sixth
Respondent
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MOULTRIE
AJ
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and publication
on
CaseLines.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10h00 on 18 July 2023
.
[1] The first to
fourth applicants and the first respondent are children of the late
Solomon and Dinah Marule, and the fifth
applicant is the executor of
one of their siblings. The second respondent is the first
respondent’s spouse.
[2] This matter
relates to an immovable property situated in Wattville, Benoni that
the applicants (but not the first and
second respondents) refer to as
their “family house”. The property is currently
registered by the Registrar of Deeds
in the names of the first and
second respondents under Deed No TL34003/2003, which I shall refer to
as the 2003 Deed. It is common
cause that prior to 2003 (at the
earliest), the owner of the property was the fifth respondent Local
Authority, being the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality and its
predecessors.
[3] In this
application, the applicants seek orders:
(a) cancelling the
2003 Deed;
(b) directing the
Registrar of Deeds to “
revert the ownership
” of
the property to the Local Authority “
in order for them to
facilitate that the Third Respondent
(The
Director-General
of
Human
Settlements,
Gauteng Province) hold
an investigation and a hearing in terms of Section 2 of The
Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or
Ownership Act 81 of
1988 as amended in 1993, for the purposes of determining who is
rightfully entitled to the ownership of [the]
property
”;
and
(c) ordering that a
caveat be issued against the Deed preventing the alienation of the
property “
until this matter has been finalised
”.
[4]
During the apartheid era, the property formed part of land
which was designated
for
occupation
by
Black
people
under the Blacks (Urban
Areas)
Consolidation Act, 25 of 1945. In terms of this legislation, a Black
person could apply for and be granted a permit by the
relevant local
authority to reside in a house owned by it on such land.
[5] In 1952, the
parties’ father, Solomon Marule applied for such a permit. The
application was successful, and he was
allocated Municipal House No.
[...]. The permit was subsequently renewed from time to time. For
example, the permit issued on 4
November 1971 records that Solomon
Marule was granted permission “
to occupy, together with the
undermentioned member(s) of his family, Municipal House No. [...]
”.
The “
undermentioned members of his family
”
numbered thirteen identified people and included his wife, Dinah, as
well as all the applicants and the first respondent,
all of whom
stayed in and grew up in the house.
[6] It is relevant
to note at this juncture that the 1971 permit can only (as the first
and second respondents allege) have
been a “residential permit”
as contemplated in Regulation 7 of the Regulations Governing the
Control and Supervision
of an Urban Black Residential Area and
Relevant Matters published under Government Notice R1036 of 14 June
1968 and that it was
not a “site permit” as contemplated
in Regulation 6, or a Certificate of Occupation as contemplated in
Regulation 8
thereof. Site permits were issued for the purposes of
allowing the holder to erect a dwelling on a vacant site (which was
clearly
not the case, as Solomon Marule’s successful 1952
application had been for the allocation of a “Municipal
House”),
and Regulation 8 Certificates were not “permits”
at all. Furthermore, the word “site” was crossed out on
the 1971 permit and Solomon Marule had referred to his permit as a
residential permit as early as 1954, and the 1966 permit expressly
stated that it was a residential permit.
[7] It is common
cause that Solomon Marule moved out of the house in the early 1980s
and applied to transfer his tenancy to
the first respondent. The
application was signed by the first respondent as the “
prospective
tenant
”, and he specifically undertook “
to
accommodate all [Solomon Marule’s] dependents reflected on
[his] registered permit … under all circumstances except
when
they find alternative accommodation
”. While it is common
cause that the Local Authority purported to approve the application
on 2 September 1981, it is not apparent
from the papers whether a
replacement permit was issued at that stage.
[8] The precise
reasons why Solomon Marule nominated the first respondent (and not
any of his other children, including the
first applicant, who was his
eldest child) for the tenancy are disputed. However, the applicants
rightly point out (and the first
and second respondents do not appear
to dispute) that the transfer could not have been a matter of
inheritance or any other unilateral
act on his part. The tenancy did
not constitute property that was legally amenable to being
transferred, whether by testation or
otherwise, and whether to the
first respondent or any other person. Furthermore, it does not appear
to me that the 1968 Regulations
included any provision for the
transfer of a residential permit. As such, Solomon’s reasons
for nominating the first respondent
as the new tenant of the house
are irrelevant.
[9] Solomon passed
away during August 1984. Shortly afterwards, on 12 December 1984, the
Local Authority issued a new residential
permit to the first
respondent in terms of the 1968 Regulations entitling him to occupy
the house together with the second respondent
and various other named
members of the family, including all of his siblings. A number of
them continued to occupy the house for
various periods between 1981
and 2018.
[10] On 30 May 2003, in
circumstances of which the applicants plead ignorance, and which are
not explained by the respondents, a
“Certificate of Registered
Grant of Leasehold” (i.e. the 2003 Deed) was registered in the
Johannesburg Deeds Office
in relation to “erf [...] Wattville
Township”, which appears to have been identified on a General
Plan prepared in
1985. The 2003 Deed certifies that “
the
right of leasehold in respect of erf [...] … has been granted
to [the first and second respondent] by the Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan
Municipality
”.
[11]
Both
parties refer to the 2003 Deed as a “title deed” and
assume that it confers rights of ownership over the property
on the
first and second respondents. While I do not think that mere
registration (without more) of the 2003 Deed could have conferred
such rights, it is beyond doubt that the first and second respondents
are currently the registered owners of the property. The
printout of
a Deeds Office property search attached to the founding papers (which
also refers to the 2003 Deed as a “title
deed”) states
that the nature of the first and second respondent’s rights
over the erf is that of “
eiendomsreg
”
(i.e. ownership),
[1]
and this is confirmed by a report filed in the matter by the
Registrar of Deeds, which states that:
According to the
records of this office, Erf [...] Wattville Township, is registered
in the names of [the first and second respondents]
by virtue of
Certificate of Registered Grant of Leasehold
:
TL34003/2003. The records further
reflect that the said leasehold has been upgraded in terms of the
Upgrading of Land Rights Act
112 of 1991 into full ownership.
[12] The question that
arises for determination in this matter is whether, as the applicants
contend, the only process whereby the
first respondent’s
residential permit issued under Regulation 7 of the 1968 Regulations
could lawfully have been converted
into a right of ownership would
have had to involve an inquiry held in terms of section 2 of the
Conversion of Certain Rights into
Leasehold or Ownership Act, 91 of
1988 (“the Conversion Act”) as amended in 1993. The
applicants base their argument
for the relief they seek squarely on
the contention that no such inquiry (which I shall refer to as a
“section 2 inquiry”)
took place.
[13] Although the first
and second respondents appear to dispute (albeit without much
conviction) that a section 2 inquiry did not
take place, their
primary contention on the merits of the application is that section 2
is of no relevance to the question of the
validity of the 2003 Deed
and their ownership of the property. This, they say, is because the
residential permit was not an “affected
site” as
envisaged in section 2 of the Conversion Act but resulted in a
statutory lease in terms of section 6 of that Act.
[14]
In
my view, the first and second respondent’s contention is
correct. For the reasons set out at length by Stegmann J in
Toho
v Diepmeadow City Council
,
[2]
there is no scope for a section 2 inquiry in relation to a house
occupied by virtue of a residential permit issued under Regulation
7
of the 1968 Regulations. The court concluded that the Conversion Act
made “
specific
provision
”
in
section 6 for such properties, which do not fall within the
definition of an “affected site” as defined in section
1
thereof. The court held that:
With effect from the
repeal of the 1968 ... Regulations [by the Conversion Act] on 1
January 1989, the tenure evidenced by the residential
permit was
converted into an unregistered statutory lease [by virtue of section
6(1)(a) and that this] by implication had the further
effect of
excluding the residential permit from the category of rights which
qualified for consideration by the [Director-General]
with a view to
forming an opinion for the purposes of the definition of 'affected
site' and of s 2(4)(b)(ii) of the Conversion
… Act.
In other words, I hold
to be correct Mr Navsa’s submission that, as a matter of law,
the [Director-General] had and has no
power to form the opinion that
the rights formerly held under such a residential permit were
sufficiently similar to the rights
held under a site permit, a
certificate of occupation or a trading site permit, to warrant the
holding of an inquiry under s 2
of Act 81 of 1988 with a view to the
conversion of the tenure under such a residential permit to
leasehold.
[3]
[15] The authorities that
the applicants rely on for their contention to the contrary (i.e.
that the 2003 Deed was invalid in the
absence of a section 2 inquiry)
are distinguishable:
(a)
Kuzwayo
was
a case involving a site permit (i.e. a permit entitling the holder to
construct their own house) issued under Regulation 6 of
the 1968
Regulations,
[4]
which is
expressly included within the definition of an “affected site”
in the Conversion Act.
(b)
The court in
Phasha
held on
the facts that the property in question was occupied by virtue of a
trading site permit as defined in section 1 of the Conversion
Act,
[5]
which is expressly included
within the definition of an “affected site” and to which
section 2 undoubtedly applies.
(c)
It is not apparent
from the report in
Disetsane
(which
was an appeal against the refusal of an unopposed application) on
what basis the applicant had challenged the validity of
the relevant
Deed of Transfer, but it was undisputed that the property had been
transferred in error. The only finding made by
the court was that
section 6
of the
Deeds Registries Act, 47 of 1937
empowers a court to
order cancellation of an erroneously registered deed of grant, deed
of transfer, certificate of title or other
deed conferring or
conveying title to land.
[6]
(d)
While it is also not
clear what the nature of the right of occupation had been in
Ntshalintshali
,
the court’s order cancelling the relevant title deed was made
on the basis that the second respondent had knowingly taken
advantage
of an erroneous failure by the Housing Department to endorse a
“family rights agreement” against the title
deed and had
therefore sold “a property that she was not entitled to
sell”.
[7]
There is no
suggestion in the current matter of the existence of such an
agreement.
(e)
Khwashaba
involved
a property occupied by virtue of a certificate of occupation issued
under Regulation 8 of the 1968 Regulations, and it
was common cause
that a property occupied by virtue of such a certificate was an
affected site that “
falls
within the scope of section 2 of the Conversion Act
”
.
[8]
[16]
Although
the
disputed
properties
in
Maimela
[9]
and
Molata
[10]
were
originally occupied by
virtue of residential permits issued under Regulation 7 of the 1968
Regulations, these cases were both decided
without any reference to
Toho
,
and on the basis that they were indistinguishable from those of
Kuzwayo
,
[11]
Khwashaba
[12]
and
Nzimande
,
[13]
which related to properties that had all been occupied by virtue of
either Regulation 6 site permits or Regulation 8 occupation
certificates. The court in
Nzimande
specifically
observed that the statutory procedure provided for in section 2 of
the Conversion Act applied only to Regulation 6
and Regulation 8, and
not to Regulation 7 rights.
[14]
I am thus of the respectful view that
Maimela
and
Molata
were
incorrectly decided insofar as the orders issued therein were based
on the absence of a section 2 inquiry.
[17] In the
circumstances, even if I accept in favour of the applicants that no
section 2 inquiry was held prior to the registration
of the 2003
Deed, the applicants are not entitled to an order cancelling the 2003
Deed on that basis.
[18] While no other basis
was advanced by the applicants for the relief that they seek, and
although I am not called upon in this
matter to determine whether the
first and second respondent’s title is invalid for any other
reason (and while it must thus
be emphasised that nothing in this
judgment should be taken as constituting the determination of any
such question), I should note
that:
(a) As the court in
Toho
observed, it was possible for a residential permit holder
such as the first respondent to have acquired a leasehold such as
that
provided for in the 2003 Deed in terms of Chapter VI of the
Black Communities Development Act, 4 of 1984. This possibility was
specifically contemplated in section 11(2) of the Conversion Act,
which provides that “
[n]othing in this Act contained shall
be construed as prohibiting any person from acquiring of his own
accord a right of leasehold
or ownership in respect of a site
”.
(b) Section
52(1)(a) of Act 4 of 1984 (which forms part of chapter VI) has at all
material times provided for a local authority
to “
grant to
any person … a right of leasehold in the prescribed manner in
respect of any leasehold site which is situate on
… land
”
of which it is the registered owner or which vests in it. Section
52(10) envisages that such leasehold would be registered
in the
appropriate deeds registry.
(c) Furthermore,
the provisions of section 2 of the Upgrading of Land Rights Act, 112
of 1991, would potentially explain the
statement in the report
submitted to this court by the Registrar of Deeds to the effect that
the first and second respondent’s
leasehold has been upgraded
to full ownership in terms of that Act.
[19] With regard to
costs, the usual rule is that the successful party should be awarded
their costs. The first and second respondents
have been substantially
successful, and I see no reason to depart from that approach. None of
the other respondents opposed the
application, and none of them
should be awarded costs.
[20] I grant the
following order:
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. The applicants
are jointly and severally ordered to pay the costs of the first and
second respondents.
RJ Moultrie AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
L
Memela instructed by Gcwensa Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
MA
Tshivhase
Instructed
by
T
Morotolo Attorneys
[1]
Van
Heerden v Pienaar
1987
(1) SA 96
(A) at 106F.
[2]
Toho v
Diepmeadow City Council and Another
1993
(3) SA 679 (W).
[3]
Toho
(above)
at 689J-693D. For the sake of completeness, I note that the
Conversion Act was amended in 1993, after the Toho judgment
was
delivered, so as to replace the provincial secretary with the
Director- General, but this change is of no significance for
current
purposes.
[4]
Kuzwayo
v Representative of the Executor Estate Late Masilela
[2011]
2 All SA 599
(SCA) paras 3 - 5.
[5]
Phasha
v Southern Metropolitan Local Council
2000
(2) SA 455
(W) at 475A – 480G.
[6]
Disetsane
v Moganedi
2014
JDR 1720 (GP) para 13.
[7]
Ntshalintshali
v Sekano
2015
JDR 1413 (GJ) paras 5 and 6.
[8]
Khwashaba
v Ratshitanga
2016
JDR 0776 (GJ) para 24.
[9]
Maimela
v Maimela and Others
(13282/16)
[2017] ZAGPJHC 366 (24 August 2017).
[10]
Molata
v Lekaje
2016
JDR 1265 (GJ) paras 2 and 11.
[11]
Kuzwayo
(above).
[12]
Khwashaba
(above).
[13]
Nzimande
v Nzimande
2005
(1) SA 83
(W) para 33.
[14]
Nzimande
(above)
paras 13 - 16
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