Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1172South Africa
Ramotsoele and Others v Ramotsoele and Others (30681/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1172 (17 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 October 2023
Headnotes
in terms of section 2 of the Act before the property was transferred and registered in the names of the first and second respondents and that was not done. Therefore, so the argument went, since no enquiry in terms of section 2 of the Act was held by the Director General in compliance with the provision of section 2 of the Act, the transfer of the property into the names of the first and second respondent should not have occurred.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ramotsoele and Others v Ramotsoele and Others (30681/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1172 (17 October 2023)
Ramotsoele and Others v Ramotsoele and Others (30681/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1172 (17 October 2023)
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sino date 17 October 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 30681/2017
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED
Date:
17/10/23
ML
TWALA
In
the matter between:
RAMOTSOELE
LEBELO STEPHEN
FIRST
APPLICANT
RAMOTSOELE
SOPHIE
SECOND
APPLICANT
RAMOTSOELE
TSHIDISO ABEDNIGO
THIRD
APPLICANT
And
RAMOTSOELE
MOLEFE SHADRACK
FIRST
RESPONDENT
RAMOTSOELE
TROPHY MANCHAKEA
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL, DEPARTMENT
OF
HOUSING, GAUTENG PROVINCE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
TWALA,
J
[1]
In this application, the applicants sought an order in the following
terms against the respondents:
1.1
An order cancelling the title deed of house number 7[…]
Sharpeville, Extension […] presently
registered in both the
names of the first and second respondents.
1.2
An order referring the allocation of ownership of the house referred
to in 1.1 above to the Director
General, Department of Housing,
Gauteng Province for an enquiry in terms of section 2 of the
Conversion of Certain Rights into
Leasehold or Ownership Act.
[1]
[2]
The application is opposed by the second respondent and she has filed
a comprehensive answering
affidavit together with its annexures. The
third respondent has however filed a notice to abide by the decision
of this Court.
[3]
It is noteworthy that at the hearing of the matter, the second
respondent and her legal representative
did not attend the Court
proceedings resulting in the applicants seeking an order in terms of
the notice of motion. However, having
read the papers filed on
record, the Court declined to grant the relief as prayed for in terms
of the notice of motion. It was
therefore necessary for the
applicants to argue the matter after the Court indicated its prima
facie view of the matter.
[4]
For the sake of convenience, in this judgment I propose to refer to
the parties as the applicants
and respondent since it is only the
second respondent who is opposing the matter, and where necessary, I
shall refer to each respondent
by its number.
[5]
It is common cause that the applicants and the first respondent are
siblings. The second respondent
is the wife of the first respondent
to whom she is married in community of property since 1989.
House 7[…] Extension
[…], Sharpeville (“the
property”) was initially occupied by the parents of the
applicants and the first respondent
in terms of the then permit
system. Furthermore, it is undisputed that after the death of the
father of the siblings in 1993, the
property was registered in the
names of the first and second respondents in 1998.
[6]
The applicants contend that there should have been an enquiry held in
terms of section 2 of the
Act before the property was transferred and
registered in the names of the first and second respondents and that
was not done.
Therefore, so the argument went, since no enquiry in
terms of section 2 of the Act was held by the Director General in
compliance
with the provision of section 2 of the Act, the transfer
of the property into the names of the first and second respondent
should
not have occurred.
[7]
Furthermore, so it was contended, it was not necessary for the
applicants to disclose to the Court
the existence of the agreement
concluded between the applicants and the first respondent whereby the
applicants agreed to transfer
and register the property in the name
of the first respondent. The applicants admit that they signed the
agreement but contend
that the agreement was signed at a police
station and their rights were not explained to them. In terms of
section 2 of the Act,
the correct authority to determine the
occupation and ownership of the property is vested with the Director
General and not a police
officer. It was contended further by counsel
for the applicants that the deponent signed the agreement for the
property to be retained
by him on behalf of the other siblings and
not to transfer it into the names of the first respondent.
[8]
As noted above, the second respondent and her legal representative
were absent from Court on the
hearing of this matter. The Court
considered the case on the papers wherein the respondent contended
that there was an agreement
entered into between the applicants and
the first respondent that the property be registered in the name of
the first respondent.
However, because of the marriage in community
of property between the first respondent and herself, the property
was registered
in both their names. The respondent further stated in
her papers that the applicants did not take the Court into confidence
by
failing to disclose the agreement entered into by the applicants
and the first respondent and by so doing, they were misleading
the
Court.
[9]
The respondent further testified in her answering affidavit that the
denial by the applicants
that they did not know what they were
signing, that the deponent signed the agreement believing it was
meant for him to hold and
retain the property for the other siblings,
raises a dispute of fact which cannot be resolved on these papers and
requires the
matter to be referred to trial. What triggered this
litigation is the problem the respondent experienced in her marriage
with the
first respondent which resulted in her obtaining a
protection order against the first respondent. Since the passing of
the father
of the applicants in 1993, she has been living in the
property without any interference from the applicants.
[10]
It is noteworthy that the permit which was issued to the father of
the applicants, Mr Ramotsoele by the Local
Authority on the 2
nd
of December 1959 can only be a residential permit as contemplated by
Regulation 7 of the Regulation Governing the Control and Supervision
of an Urban Black Residential Area and Relevant Matters
[2]
and that it was not a site permit as contemplated in Regulation 6, or
a Certificate of Occupation as contemplated in Regulation
8 thereof.
It is not apparent on the papers whether Mr Ramotsoele renewed his
permit over the years.
[11]
The question that arises for determination in this case is whether
the only process that was available to
the first and second
respondents to convert the residential permit into a right of
ownership and to register the property into
their names would have
been first for the Director General to hold an inquiry in terms of
section 2 of the Act, as contended by
the applicants.
[12]
It is now opportune to restate the relevant provisions of the Act
which provide as follows:
“
2. Inquiry as
to rights of leasehold
(1)
The Director General
shall conduct an
inquiry in the prescribed manner in the respect of affected sides
within his province, in order to determine who
shall be declared to
have been granted a right of leasehold
or, in the case
where the affected sites are situate in a formalized township for
which a township register has been opened, ownership
with regard to
such sites.
(2)
Before the commencement of such inquiry the Director General
shall, after satisfying himself as to the identity
of the affected
site, and of the person appearing from the records of the local
authority concerned to be the occupier of that
site, and, in respect
of premises referred to in section 52 (5) of the principal Act, is in
possession of an aerial photograph
or plan of the premises concerned,
certified as provided in section 52 (5) (a) of that Act, publish a
notice indicating that such
inquiry is to be conducted.
(3)
…
6. Certain persons to
be lessees
(1)
The holder –
(a)
of a residential permit or hostel permit referred to in the
regulations, or of a permit issued
by a local authority allowing the
person mentioned therein to occupy a site set apart under those
regulations for allotment to
a trader for trading, business or
professional purposes, the building upon which site is leased to that
holder by the local authority,
shall from the commencement of this
Act;
(b)
…
and subject to the
provisions of subsection (2), be the lessee, and the local
authority concerned shall be the lessor, of
the site or accommodation
concerned: Provided that nothing in this subsection contained shall
be construed as derogating from any
right that the holder of a site
permit, certificate, trading site permit or rights contemplated in
Section 2 (4) (b) (ii) might
have acquired by virtue of the
provisions of the regulations.”
[13]
In
Marule
and Others v Marule and Others,
[3]
a
judgment of this Division,
the
court was faced with the interpretation of section 2 and section 6 of
the Act and quoted with approval the finding in
Toho
v Diepmeadow City Council & Another
[4]
and held as follows:
“
[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, 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’.”
[5]
[14]
I propose to assume that the residential permit issued to the late Mr
Ramotsoele was renewed over the years
for his occupancy of the
property and that at the time of his passing in 1993, he was still
lawfully occupying the property in
terms of the residential permit.
Furthermore, my assumption is correct since the applicants’
contended that their father
occupied the property through the then
permit system. Since the property was occupied on the strength of the
residential permit,
I concur with the authorities quoted above and
hold that the Director General had no power to hold an enquiry in
terms of section
2 of the Act to form an opinion with a view to the
conversion of the tenure under such residential permit to leasehold.
[15]
As a matter of course, section 2 of the Act empowers the Director
General to hold an enquiry with a view
to determine the right of
occupancy to the property and whether it is an affected site as
defined in the Act. That was not necessary
in this case since the
occupancy of the property had been through the residential permit and
falls within the purview of section
6(1) (a) of the Act. Furthermore,
the people who occupied the property had entered into an agreement as
to who should succeed the
late Mr Ramotsoele as holder of the
residential permit, which on conversion resulted in the property
being transferred and registered
in the names of the first respondent
and his wife to whom he is married in community of property.
[16]
This brings me to the point that, as contended by the respondent,
there is a dispute of fact in this case
which cannot be resolved
without the matter being referred to trial for oral evidence. I agree
that there is such a dispute of
fact in this case. However, I
disagree that such a dispute is incapable of being resolved on these
papers to the extent that it
must be referred to oral evidence. I
hold the view that the dispute of fact is capable of resolution by
applying the
Plascon-Evans
[6]
rule by considering the facts alleged by the respondent together with
the admitted facts in the applicants’ affidavit.
[17]
It is undisputed by the applicants that an agreement was concluded,
except to say that they did not know
what they were signing as their
rights were not explained to them. There is no merit in the argument
that since the agreement was
drafted in the form of an affidavit and
was commissioned at a police station, it should therefore be ignored
for want of authority
as the issues of permits fall within the
purview of the Director General and not a police officer. The
applicants and the first
respondent converged at the police station
to conclude this agreement. The applicants knew exactly what they
went to the police
station for and the police officer who
commissioned the affidavit had no duty whatsoever to explain the
rights of the applicants
for he did not know their rights and was not
in any way interfering with their rights, except to administer the
oath. The police
officer had nothing to do with the contents of the
affidavit.
[18]
It does not lie in the mouth of the applicants to say that they did
not know what they were signing, and
that the deponent was to retain
the property on behalf of the other siblings. They signed the
document, which is clear and plain
in stating that they, (the
siblings), agree that, since their father, Salathiel Ramotsoele has
died, the property must be registered
in the name of Molefe Shadrack
Ramotsoele. Molefe Shadrack Ramotsoele is the first respondent, who
is the husband of the second
respondent to whom he is married in
community of property.
[19]
It is my respectful view therefore that since the property was
occupied through the residential permit system,
it did not fall
within the purview of section 2 of the Act but under section 6(1)(a)
of the Act. Furthermore, as the applicants
agreed that the property
be registered in the name of the first respondent, it was not
necessary for the first respondent to approach
the Director General
to convene an enquiry with a view for the conversion of the right
into leasehold. The ineluctable conclusion
is therefore that the
applicants’ reliance that the title deed must be cancelled for
there was non-compliance with section
2 of the Act is misplaced and
falls to be dismissed.
[20]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are ordered, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, to pay the costs
of the second respondent.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Delivered
:
This judgment and order were prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines. The
date of the
order is deemed to be the 17
th
October 2023.
Appearance
For
the Applicants:
Mr MD
Hlatshwayo
Instructed
by:
Hlatshwayo
- Mhayise Incorporated
Tel:
011 333 7303
mdhinfo@lantic.net
For
the Respondents:
No
Appearance
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid SA
Tel:
016 421 3527
shaheen@jlaw.co.za
Date
of Hearing:
9
th
of October 2023
Date
of Judgment:
17
th
of October 2023
[1]
81 of 1988 (“the Act”).
[2]
GN
R1036, 14 June 1968.
[3]
(15082/2020)
ZAGPJHC 928 (17 July 2023) (“
Marule
”).
[4]
1993
(3) SA 679 (WLD).
[5]
Marule
above
n 3.
[6]
See in this regard
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984] 2 All SA 366
(A);
1984 (3) SA 623.
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