Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1158South Africa
Khumalo v Master of High Court Johannesburg and Another (2023/095270) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1158 (9 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khumalo v Master of High Court Johannesburg and Another (2023/095270) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1158 (9 October 2023)
Khumalo v Master of High Court Johannesburg and Another (2023/095270) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1158 (9 October 2023)
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sino date 9 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO. 2023/095270
In
the matter between:
LANDY
KHUMALO
Applicant
And
THE
MASTER OF HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
First
Respondent
SIBONGILE
CAROLINE MDAKI
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1] The applicant
approached this court on urgent basis for relief. The relief sought
is stated in the notice of motion and supported
by founding affidavit
as required by the Rule 6(12). The applicant request this court to
dispense with the normal rules prescribed
by the Uniform of Court and
Practice Directives applicable in this division.
[2] The relief sought by
the applicant is to the effect that the court grant and order
suspending the letter of executorship issued
by the first respondent
(Master of the High Court, Johannesburg). The order is to subsists
under finalization of what the applicant
refers to as Part B
application declaring the letter of executorship unlawful and issuing
a new one I her favour.
[3] The further to
interdict the second respondent from dealing the with the deceased
estate of late Obed Maliwe pending finalisation
of Part B of the
application and that the order sought should be of immediate effect
and also costs.
[4] The applicant claims
right to launch these proceedings as she alleges that she was
universal partner of the deceased. She alleges
that she has been
staying with the deceased since 2011 until the death of the deceased
in August 2023.
[5] According to the
applicant she is entitled to the relief sought as she has prima facie
right. This is because she had universal
partnership with the
deceased. According to her she contributed materially to the
partnership. According to her she considered
herself as ‘wife’
of the deceased and was so recognised by the family of the deceased.
The applicant alleges she was
also so recognised at the church where
the deceased was a pastor.
[6] Despite the truncated
timelines that the applicant imposed on the second respondent she was
able to submit a comprehensive answering
affidavit to refute the
allegations made by the applicant. In a nutshell she denies that the
deceased had a universal partnership
with the applicant. The second
respondent asserts that she is the customary wife of the deceased.
She has annexed some documentary
evidence to substantiate her claim.
[7] The answering
affidavit further provides background about what happened after the
death of her customary law husband. Among
the incidents was attempts
by one of the relative of the deceased to interdict her from burying
her husband. She also annexed the
papers which were prepared in order
to approach the high court. ultimately the contemplated proceedings
were abandoned, and she
proceeded to bury the deceased.
[8] The answering
affidavit further confirms that the first respondent has issued her
with a letter of executorship and that she
is at the initial stages
of executing her duties as executor of deceased estate. She denies
that the applicant has ay claim to
the deceased estate of her
husband.
[9] In addition to the
factual basis on which the second respondent opposes the application,
she opposes the granting of the order
sought on legal grounds. The
respondent asserts that the applicant has not established grounds
urgency. And that applicant in here
the founding affidavit has failed
to establish right to obtain an interdict.
Urgency
[10] It is important to
note that it is only in the replying affidavit that the applicant
attempts to deal with the issue of urgency.
It is trite that an
applicant must state the facts that it is alleged the application is
urgent. The applicant must show it will
not obtain adequate relief in
due course. It is also true that urgency is a question of facts. The
applicant who is approaching
the court on urgent basis is seeking
condonation to dispense with the prescribed rules.
[11] The remarks by
Coetzee J remains apposite in that ‘undoubtedly the most abused
rule is rule 6 (12) which reads as follows:
’
12 (a) In urgent applications
the court or a judge may dispense with forms and service provided for
in these rules and may dispose
of such matter at such time and place
and in such manner and in accordance with such procedure (which shall
as far as practicable
be in terms of these rules) as to seems meet.
(b) In every affidavit or petition
filed in support of the application under para (a) of the sub-rule,
the applicant shall set forth
explicitly the circumstances which he
avers render the matter urgent’
. See
LUNA
MEUBELVERVAARDIGERS (EDMS) BPK V MAKIN AND ANOTHER (T/A MAKIN’S
FURNITURE MANUTACTURERS
)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W)
at 136. At 137F the court ‘ mere lip service to the
requirements of Rule 6 (12) will not to and applicant must make out
a
case in the founding affidavit justify the particular extent of the
departure from norm which is involved in the time and day
for which
the matter be set down’.
[12] Despite the
observation the practice of abusing the practice appears to have
continued unabated. The recent observation by
Vally J in 39
VAN
DER MERWE STREET HILLBROW CC v CITY Of JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY AND ANOTHER
(2023-069078) [2023]
ZAGPJHC 963 (25 August 2023) bears testimony to this observation. At
para [27] of the judgment the learned
judge makes the following
observation:
‘Interim interdicts are capable of being,
have been, and continue to be, abused by a party that succeeds in
securing or resisting
one. The applications wherein they are sought
are often split into two, a Part A and a Part B, with the former
being a call for
an interim interdict while the latter constitutes a
claim for final relief. The relief sought in Part A would be crafted
along
the lines of: ‘Pending finalisation of Part B of the
application the respondent is interdicted from …’ They
are also brought without a Part B. This would be in a circumstance
where the final relief is sought in an action proceeding. In
such a
case the relief would be crafted along the lines of: ‘Pending
the finalisation of an action (or to be brought) by
the applicant …’.
In either case, once the interim relief is granted or refused the
successful applicant has little
interest in having either Part B or
the action finalised. Having secured victory, albeit only on an
interim basis, the successful
party can easily frustrate the
finalisation of the matter by taking advantage of the rules set out
in the Uniform Rules of Court.
The experience thus far demonstrates
that courts have to be more vigilant when dealing with applications
for interim interdicts,
especially when granting them’.
[13] The DJP of this division has made
similar trend and issued a Notice dated 04/102021 titled ‘
Notice
to legal practitioners about urgent motion court, Johannesburg’
directed as follows:
Para [6] ‘The requirement to
consolidate the case on urgency in a discrete section of the founding
papers is mandatory. Often
this is not done. In future a failure to
observe the practice shall attract punitive costs orders’.
Para [7] Argument on urgency must be
succinct. Too often a flaccid and lengthy grandstanding performance
is presented. This must
stop. If the matter is truly urgent an
argument in support of it must be prepared before hearing and quickly
and clinically articulated.’
[14] In this applicant has failed to
even attempt to show any urgency. She was only alerted to this fact
by the answering affidavit.
The evidence shows clearly that if there
is any urgency then it was self-created. The applicant does not take
the court in her
confidence regarding the chronology of events. She
does not appear to have been part of the efforts to interdict the
second respondent
from burying the deceased. She does not appear to
have been prepared to bury the deceased despite considering to be her
husband.
It is not clear from the applicant’s papers as to when
she became aware that the first respondent has issued the letter of
authority.
[15] In her replying affidavit the
applicant is not dealing with the evidentiary proof showing that the
deceased paid lobola for
the second respondent. She does not say
anything about the nomination that the deceased completed at his
place of employment, where
he listed the second respondent as his
spouse.
Requirement of Interdict
[16] The requirement of
interdict are clearly articulated in the case of
SETLOGELO v
SETLOGELO
1914 AD 221
at 226 where the court stated that ‘The
requisites for the right to claim an interdict are well known; a
clear right, injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended and
absence of similar protection by any other ordinary remedy’.
The principle
was further confirm to still good law in
V & A
WATERFRONT PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD AND ANOTHER v HELICOPTER & MARINE
SERVICES (PTY) LTD AND OTHERS
2006 (1) SA 252
(SCA) at par 21 the
Court states as follows ‘The leading common-law writer on the
subject of interdict relief used the words
'eene gepleegde
feitelijkheid
' to designate what is now in the present context,
loosely referred to as 'injury'. The Dutch expression has been
construed as something
actually done which is prejudicial to or
interferes with, the applicant's right. Subsequent judicial
pronouncements have variously
used 'infringement' of right and
'invasion of right'. Indeed, the leading case,
Setlogelo
, was
itself one involving the invasion of the right of possession.
(references omitted). See also the confirmation of the requirements
by the constitutional court in
MASSTORES (PTY) LTD v PICK N PAY
RETAILERS (PTY) LTD
2017 (1) SA 613
(CC) at para [8].
[17] Unlike in the quoted
decision in casu the right of the applicant is not clear. I am
satisfied no clear right has been shown.
As I have noted her silence
regarding documentary proof of the lobola payment and the nomination
by the deceased where he designate
the second respondent as his
spouse.
[18] The allegation of a
universal partnership remains just that an allegation. There is
nothing to substantiate that claim. The
applicant on her papers has
failed to show that she had a clear right. There is no injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended.
[19] In respect of
requirement of similar protection by any other remedy the applicant
must also failed. If the applicant can proof
universal partnership,
then she becomes a creditor to the deceased estate. The
Administrative of Deceased Act has inbuilt mechanism
for the
applicant to follow.
Costs
[20] The general rule in
matters of costs is that the successful party be given costs, and
this rule should not be departed from
except where there are good
grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the part of the
successful party or other exceptional circumstances.
See Meyers v
Abramson 1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455. I can think of no reason why this
court should deviate from this general rule.
Order
Application is dismissed
with costs. Costs on attorney and client scale.
Thupaatlase AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Heard
on:05 October 2023
Judgment
delivered on: 09 October 2023
For
Applicants:
Adv.
S Zimema
Instructed
by:
Gwede
Attorneys
For
second Respondents
Adv.
B Mokgothu
Instructed
by:
Khoza
and Associates Attorneys
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