Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1064South Africa
JC Administrative Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Sekheleli and Others (2023/006391) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1064 (22 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## JC Administrative Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Sekheleli and Others (2023/006391) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1064 (22 September 2023)
JC Administrative Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Sekheleli and Others (2023/006391) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1064 (22 September 2023)
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sino date 22 September 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
2023/006391
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
22.09.23
In
the matter between:
JC
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES (PTY) LTD
1
st
APPLICANT
JESERI
PROPERTIES
2
nd
APPLICANT
YU
KENG HUANG
3
rd
APPLICANT
And
E.T.
SEKHELELI
1
st
RESPONDENT
T.J.
VALOYI
2
nd
RESPONDENT
G.
NDLOVU
3
rd
RESPONDENT
J.
CHIRAMBA
4
th
RESPONDENT
C.
MONO
5
th
RESPONDENT
T.
SHOTELI
6
th
RESPONDENT
T.L.
NDLOVU
7
th
RESPONDENT
M.
MOYO
8
th
RESPONDENT
S.
NDLOVU
9
th
RESPONDENT
L.
DUBE
10
th
RESPONDENT
N.
KHUMALO
11
th
RESPONDENT
P.P.
TSHABALALA
12
th
RESPONDENT
G.
NDLOVU
13
th
RESPONDENT
S.P.
MDLULI
14
th
RESPONDENT
A.V.
NDLOVU
15
th
RESPONDENT
I.N.
MLOTSHWA
16
th
RESPONDENT
ALL
OTHER OCCUPANTS
17
th
RESPONDENT
LEAVE
TO APPEAL JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
[1] This is an
application for leave to appeal brought by the respondents in this
matter against a judgment I granted on 14
February 2023.
[2] In brief, the
respondents (“who are the applicants in this leave to appeal
but for convenience I will continue to
refer to them as respondents”)
occupy a building in Johannesburg. The registered owner of the
building is a close corporation
called Jeseri Properties CC
(“Jeseri”). Its sole member is a Ms Hu- Keng Huang.
[3] In the case
before me, heard as an urgent application, the applicant was not
Jeseri or Huang, but JC Administrative Services
whose sole director
is John Constable. He has been appointed as the administrator of the
building by Jeseri and sought access to
the building to perform these
administrative services. He described how he was denied access to the
building and became the subject
of threats made by certain
unidentified occupants. Jeseri presently owes a large sum of money to
the municipality for unpaid expenses
exceeding, in January 2023, five
million rand.
[4] The applicant
sought relief, inter alia, to be allowed access to the building.
Mr. Constable appeared himself and
was not legally represented. On
the day the matter was set down one of the respondents, the sixth,
appeared and said he had been
mandated by the others as their
spokesperson and asked to be given an opportunity to get legal
representation. I postponed the
matter till Friday, in order for him
to procure these services. He duly appeared again on the Friday but
still without legal representation,
but he had filed an opposing
affidavit which raised certain technical defences. I considered them
to be of no merit and I gave
the following relief:
1. The 01
st
to 17
th
RESPONDENTS are interdicted from preventing the 1st Applicant, its
office bearers, employees, and contractors, access to the properties
identified as ERVENS 3367 & 3368, commonly known as VH/VRODOLJAK
HEIGHTS, situated at CNR. STIEMENS AND DE BEER STREETS, JOHANNESBURG,
GAUTENG PROVINCE.
2. 01
st
to 17
th
RESPONDENTS are interdicted from obstructing the 1st Applicant, its
office bearers and employees in the execution of their duties,
functions, and obligations in administering the properties identified
as ERVENS 3367 & 3368, commonly known as VH/VRODOLJAK
HEIGHTS,
situated at CNR. STIEMENS AND DE BEER STREET, JOHANNESBURG, GAUTENG
PROVINCE.
3. The 01
st
to 17
th
RESPONDENTS are interdicted from intimidating, harassing, and
threatening the 1st Applicant, its office bearers, employees, and
contractors.
4. The SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES to serve this order on the RESPONDENTS, and
ensure the RESPONDENTS give effect to paragraph
2 of this order.
[6] Now more than
six months later, the respondents, who are now represented by an
attorney, seek leave to appeal. There was
no attempt to seek
condonation for the delay in seeking leave to appeal, but Mr.
Seloane, who appeared for the respondents, said
it was a problem
caused by access to the records on court online and CaseLines.
I do not know if this explanation satisfactorily
accounts for the
full period of the delay, but as the applicant, now represented by an
attorney and counsel, did not take this
point, I will only consider
the merits of the appeal.
[7] The first point
to note is that the order I gave contains a limited form of relief.
It deals with access to a building
by the owner’s agent. It is
not a PIE application, although it may well be preparatory for one
that will follow. It is thus
difficult to appreciate why leave is
still even sought given the time that has elapsed since the judgment
and the limited relief
it confers on the applicant.
[8] The respondents
have raised only technical points as points of appeal premised on
alleged deficiencies or inconsistencies
in the applicant’s
documentation. These points suggest, without going as far as stating
so, that cumulatively there is something
irregular in the entire
application. But if the respondents have such facts, then the
appropriate remedy would have been for them
to bring an application
for recission, not an application for leave to appeal where I am
confined to a record that does not make
out such a case. The most the
respondents are able to rely on in the record to found their appeal,
is a want of formality by the
applicant in some respects, but beyond
that nothing more.
[9]
The first point taken is that the owner of the building is not
Jeseri, the Close corporation, but Jeseri Properties Pty
Limited, a
private company of the same name. But this point is not correct. The
Title deed contains an endorsement by a conveyancer
showing that in
1996 the private company of the same name had been converted to a
close corporation of the same name, which was
now the owner. At the
time this was done a private company could still convert to become a
close corporation. This window only
closed on 1 May 2011.
[1]
Hence there is nothing irregular in the conversion nor the title
deed. Jeseri the close corporation,
ex
facie
the
title deed, owns the building in
casu.
[10]
The next point of attack was on Ms Heung herself. In the Companies
and Intellectual Properties Commission (“CIPC”)
registration papers Ms Heung identity number is reflected as
[...]
.
However, she has also in the course of this litigation submitted a
copy her identity card which reflects her identity number as
[...]
.
As my emphasis in bold shows
the
discrepancy occurs in the last three digits. Mr. Seloane suggested
that this was irregular and hence the relief should not have
been
granted because Home Affairs would never grant a person two identity
numbers. But Mr. Mashava, who appeared for the applicant,
makes the point that a change in the final three
digits of an identity number is not unusual when someone converts
from permanent
residence to citizenship. Admittedly, I have no
evidence whether this was indeed the case, but from the record it
appears that
Ms Heung is,
ex facie
the identity document, someone borne in China.
[11]
But on the other hand, I have no evidence in the record beyond the
earlier use of the one identity number and the later
use of the other
(“it varies by only the three last digits”) to suggest
that there is anything irregular here.
[2]
Nor is the suggestion of the applicant that this is normal when the
basis of citizenship changes implausible. But, even if Ms Heung
has
identity number issues (“which is not established”) what
matters only for this appeal is that her company is the
owner of the
building (“its is
ex
facie
the
title deed”) and second that it authorised the applicant to act
– which it did.
[12] The next point
is that the applicant did not attach a resolution from Jeseri
authorising him to act. It is correct that
there is no such
authorisation. But Jeseri is a close corporation with Heung as its
sole member. She has given an affidavit to
confirm what Constable
stated in his affidavit,
inter alia
that he had authority.
This point is purely formal and of no substance.
[13]
Then, the follow up point related to this, was that the affidavit of
Heung was deficient for want of conformity with
the regulations for
attesting to an affidavit. Although the affidavit is signed by a
commissioner of oaths (“in this case
a policeman”) it
appears
ex
facie
the
document that he did not attest it, but instead authenticated it as a
true copy of the original. However, case law makes it
clear that
compliance with the regulations is directory and not a
prerequisite.
[3]
This too is an
entirely formal point and is not a basis for leave to appeal.
[14] Then it was
argued that no basis was made for granting a final interdict. But it
is not clear from the heads of argument
on what deficiency this
contention is based. I cannot deal with this any further other than
to state that the applicant had shown
all the elements existed.
[15] Then a point
was made that the applicant had relied on hearsay evidence in its
application. Here the criticism was that
Constable had alleged that
he had found out that the person who had denied him access to the
building on the one occasion, had
purported to be an employee of a
certain security company. Constable had stated that he had
ascertained from the owner of the company
that it had not employed
anyone to provide security at the building. Mr. Seloane argued that
because the version of the owner had
not been deposed to in a
confirmatory affidavit, this was hearsay. But this overlooks two
aspects. Even without the affidavit from
the security company owner,
Constable gave direct evidence in his affidavit that he was denied
access to the building. Next, the
courts have made it clear that in
urgent applications hearsay evidence may be submitted, to quote
Erasmus this is subject to the
proviso that:
“
(…)
the source of the information and the grounds for the belief in its
truth are stated.”
[4]
[16] Constable has
done this, including attaching a WhatsApp conversation he had with
the owner which confirms Constable’s
allegation, albeit not
attested to.
[17] The
respondents also argued that the order should have been granted in
the form of a
rule
nisi
because the respondents were
not legally represented. I pointed out in my reasons that the hearing
was postponed to 10 February,
to allow them to get representation
which, despite this, they did not obtain. But there seems to have
been no difficulty in them
obtaining legal advice later, since the
attorney of record filed a notice of appointment on the 10
th
February – the same day I had heard the argument. There is no
explanation given why the attorney could not have been approached
on
the day before. Nevertheless, as a matter of substance this point on
lack of legal representation is without foundation. The
relief was
not invasive of the rights of the respondents nor was the matter of
any complexity. Constable, not a lawyer either,
represented the
applicant. The sixth respondent was clearly alive to technicalities
and must have got some advice to have raised
them, albeit it
unsuccessfully.
[18] Finally, there
was a complaint that the order authorises the police to serve the
order. But this service, as I was informed
by counsel, has already
taken place so the point is moot. But even so, given the history of
threats against Constable, the use
of the police for this task was
justified.
Conclusion
[19] The test on
leave to appeal is not controversial and best set out in the matter
of
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha,
where the Supreme
Court of Appeal held:
“
Once again it
is necessary to say that leave to appeal, especially to this Court,
must not be granted unless there is truly a reasonable
prospect of
success. Section 17(1)(a) of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
makes it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where the Judge
concerned is of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable
prospect of success; or there is some other compelling reason why it
should be heard. ... A mere possibility of success,
an arguable case
or one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must be a sound,
rational basis to conclude that there is a
reasonable prospect of
success on appeal.”
[5]
[20] The plurality
of points has not made the case for leave to appeal any stronger as
none are of substance. I conclude that
no other court would come to a
different conclusion and the application for leave to appeal must be
dismissed.
ORDER:-
[21] In the result
the following order is made:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2.
The Respondents (“the applicants in the
leave to appeal”) are to pay the applicant’s (“the
respondent in
the leave to appeal”) costs on a party and party
scale, including the costs of one counsel.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing: 21
September 2023
Date of judgment: 22
September 2023
Appearances:
For the Applicants:
Mr Mashava
Instructed by:
Musingwini Mukondeleli
Inc
For the Respondents:
Mr Seloane
Instructed by:
Seloane Vincent Attorneys
[1]
See
CIPC registration Guidance note on conversion of companies to close
corporations, number 4 dated 10 June 2011.
[2]
The
entry in the CIPC record, which has the prior identity number,
reflects next to this number that she was appointed on 19 June
1996.
The identity book extract shows the new number was issued a year
later on 13 October 1997.
[3]
See
State
v Munn
1973(3)
SA 734 (NC) at 737 D to E. See also following this approach in this
division,
Knuttel
N.O. and Others v Bhana and Others
GLD
Case no. 38683/2020 (27 August 2021), paras 50 to 54.
[4]
See
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice,
D1
-86, 2016 edition.
[5]
2016 JDR 2214 (SCA) paragraphs 16-17.
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