Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1327South Africa
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v LAPA Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2018/40589) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1327 (13 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v LAPA Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2018/40589) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1327 (13 November 2023)
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v LAPA Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (2018/40589) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1327 (13 November 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2018/40589
Date
of Judgment? 13 November 2023
Reportable?
No
Of
interest to other judges? No
In
the matter between:
THE
CITY OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY Applicant
and
LAPA
PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD First
Respondent
NGOU
PHILLEMON LEBELOANE Second
Respondent
JACOB
BOANE MOGAFE Third
Respondent
MATTHEWS
SEKGWENG MOGAFE Fourth
Respondent
MESHACK
RAPHALANE MOGAFE Fifth
Respondent
THOMAS
KAIZER POOE Sixth
Respondent
THOZAMA
RENETH SKOSANA N.O. Seventh
Respondent
VELAPI
SKOSANA N.O. Eight
Respondent
ROBERTO
JORGE MENCHONCA VELOSA Nineth
Respondent
IPROTECT
TRUSTEES (PTY) LTD Tenth
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT Eleventh
Respondent
DEEDS
REGISTRY
Twelfth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
GREEN
AJ:
Ian
Green AJ
1
The City of Ekhurleni Metropolitan Municipality (“the City”),
and Lapa Property Investments (Pty)
Ltd (“Lapa”) entered
into a written Agreement for the sale of 11 erven in Sonneveld
extension 4 Township, Brakpan (“the
Properties”). The
Agreement for the sale of the Properties was concluded pursuant to a
tender process, and the award of the
tender to Lapa was made on 27
July 2006.
2
Clause 7 of the agreement provides:
“
7 The
property is currently zoned “Residential I”, “Residential
III” and “Business II”
in terms of the
Town-planning scheme, and is subject to the conditions contained in
the Town-planning Scheme, and is subject to
the conditions of the
establishment of the township concerned. The Municipality resolved
that the entire township be rezoned to
provide for “Residential
II” purposes and that the ervan shall not be smaller than 700
m2 in extent. It will therefore
be necessary to consolidate and
subdivide the ervan concerned
7.1 It is a
condition of this agreement that the PURCHASER shall, within six (6)
months after the date of transfer of
this property, take the
necessary steps to consolidate, subdivide and rezone the property for
the envisaged purpose and within
eighteen (18) months after the date
of registration commenced with the development of the said property.”
3
Clause 8 of the agreement provides:
“
8. Should
the purchaser breach any term of this contract or fail or neglect to
pay any instalment of the purchase price or
interest thereon on the
due date, or should he fail or neglect to pay assessment rates or any
other levies on the property on the
due date thereof, the Council may
in its absolute discretion:
8.1 Claim
from the Purchaser of such a rear installment, interest rates or
levies; or
8.2 Claim
from the Purchaser the full balance of the purchase price, interest
thereon and assessment rates that might
be due; or
8.3 Cancel
this agreement summarily without further notice to the purchaser and
in such event the Council shall retain
as “rouwkoop” or
pre-estimated damages all amounts paid by the Purchaser to the
Council in terms of these conditions
of sale.”
4
It is common cause that the Properties have not been rezoned, and
that the development of the Properties has
not commenced. From the
papers it appears that after having purchased the Properties, Lapa
requested the City to alter clause 7
so that the zoning of the
Properties would be different, and so that the sub-divisions could be
smaller. It is not entirely clear
what the sequence of events was,
but what is clear, and is common cause, is that the City has not
agreed to adjust clause 7.
5
In the absence of the rezoning of the Properties or the commencement
of the development thereof, the City contends
that it was entitled to
cancel the Agreement, and did so. Following cancellation of the
Agreement the City now claims return of
the Properties. The City did
not tender return of the purchase price.
6
Lapa opposes the City’s application and has brought a
conditional counter application.
7
In opposition to the City’s claim Lapa alleges that the City’s
claim has prescribed and that the
City has not cancelled the
Agreement. In the absence of the Agreement being cancelled Lapa
alleges that the City’s application
must fail. Lapa builds its
non-cancellation defence on the absence of the production of a
resolution of the Council of the City
to cancel the Agreement.
8
The conditional counter application is brought in the event of it
being found that the City’s claim has
not prescribed and is
built on the basis of what is styled as the “second point in
limine”. This is a reference to
various grounds upon which Lapa
alleges that the Agreement is invalid for want of compliance with
statutory requirements. In the
conditional counter application, and
following a declaration of invalidity Lapa seeks repayment of the
purchase price and tenders
to return the Properties.
9
Lapa has also raised a defence that if the City is allowed to retain
the purchase price, and insofar as the
City relies on clause 8.3 of
the agreement, the roukoop clause, that would be penalty stipulation
and disproportionality would
arise. The City did not raise clause 8.3
in its affidavits and in the City’s heads of argument the point
that the City has
not relied on clause 8.3 is underscored.
10
The readers of this judgement will appreciate that the City’s
claim and Lapa’s counterclaim both lead to the
position where
the Properties are returned to the City. The point of difference in
the result is that the City has not tendered
return of the purchase
price.
11
Matters are however complicated somewhat because whilst the
Properties were registered in the name of Lapa a mortgage
bond was
registered over the Properties in favour of a partnership constituted
between Lapa and the Skosana Family Trust. That
mortgage bond was
registered simultaneously with the transfer of the Properties to Lapa
and is for an amount equivalent to the
purchase price of the
Properties.
12
Whilst the fact of the mortgage bond was established, no facts were
provided to indicate what the outstanding balance is
of the loan that
is secured by the mortgage bond is, nor what the terms of that loan
are.
13
Against the general background I turn now to consider the several
discreet issues.
THE
VOIDNESS ISSUE
14
I deal with the voidness issue first because logically the first
question to be answered is whether there is an agreement.
15
The voidness issue arises from Lapa’s second point in limine,
and is the basis of its conditional counter claim.
16
Lapa alleges that the City has not complied with section 79(18) of
the Local Government Ordinance (No 17 of 1939) (“the
Ordinance”), and section 14 of the Municipal Finance Management
Act No 56 of 2003 (“the MFMA”). But Lapa has
not sought
an order to review or set aside the decision of the City to sell the
Properties.
17
Lapa did not make a positive averment that either the Ordinance or
the MFMA had not been complied with. In respect of the
Ordinance Lapa
said: “The applicant is invited to provide proof of its
compliance with section 79 (18) of the Ordinance prior
to conclusion
of the deed of sale.” and in respect of the MFMA Lapa said “As
far as I am aware, the applicant did not
do so. The applicant is
invited to provide proof of its compliance with section 14 of the MFM
act prior to conclusion of the deed
of sale.”
18
Lapa’s approach was what I would call a negative challenge, and
to ask the City to prove compliance. Lapa did not
put up any facts to
show non-compliance with either the Ordinance or the MFMA. Lapa
needed to prove the facts on which its defence
of voidness was based
and the allegations in the answering affidavit do not reach the
required threshold.
19
It is correct that Lapa invited the City to prove compliance, and
that the City’s response is wanting. But that does
not prove
non-compliance, after all absence of evidence is not evidence of
absence.
20
Because of the view to which I have come on the evidential issue
which is dispositive of the voidness defence and of the
conditional
counter claim it is unnecessary for me to engage in the somewhat
thorny issue of whether the voidness defence is permissibly
raised as
a collateral challenge to an administrative act, and the Ferndale
Crossroads case on which Lapa relied.
PRESCRIPTION
21
If the agreement is not void, as I have found, then the next logical
point to deal with is prescription.
22
The prescription defence was not pressed by Lapa either in its heads
of argument nor in oral argument.
23
Lapa’s defence of prescription is built on the contention that
because development of the properties was to commence
within 18
months of transfer, which occurred on 15 February 2008, prescription
of the City’s claim began to run on 16 August
2009 and
prescribed in 2012. Because this application was only served in 2018,
so the argument goes, the City’s claim has
prescribed.
24
Prescription operates in respect of “debts” and begins to
run from when the debt is “due”. The
claim arises from a
breach that was on going each day beyond the 18 month period allowed
for the commencement of development of
the Properties. It follows
that because the breach was ongoing, and the City had not yet made an
election following the continuing
breach, there was nothing for the
City to claim at that point. Once the City elected to cancel the
agreement then something was
due.
25
There is no dispute that this application was launched within three
years of the date of the City’s cancellation.
On this basis the
prescription defence cannot succeed.
26
For the purpose of reaching my decision on prescription I have
assumed, without deciding, that the City’s claim is
a claim for
a “debt”.
THE
CANCELLATION ISSUE
27
The point that Lapa makes in raising the non-cancellation defence is
that there is no resolution by the Council of the
City resolving to
cancel the Agreement. The point is not that there were no grounds to
cancel the Agreement, after all non-rezoning
and non-commencement
with development are common cause.
28
The City’s case on cancellation is explained as follows in the
founding affidavit:
“
On 30 March 2017,
Council resolved for the cancellation of Sonneveld and this is
recorded in correspondence dated 29 June 2017,
marked as annexure
“COE 11”
29
Annexure COE 11 is a letter of 29 June 2017 drafted by one of the
City’s employees. This letter provides inter alia:
“
Cancellation of
Sonneveld – this report was approved at Council on 30/03/2017,
the minutes extract is attached.”
There
is however nothing attached to the letter that is part of the City’s
founding affidavit.
30
Annexure COE 12 is a letter addressed by the City’s attorneys
to Lapa on 16 October 2018. Paragraph 5 of this letter,
after having
recounted the terms of the Agreement records:
“
This letter serves
to notify you that our client has elected to forthwith terminate the
contract of sale of the property on the
basis of the abovementioned
breach as well as the lack of compliance with the extension that have
(sic) been granted to you on
(sic) previously.”
31
Lapa delivered a notice in terms of Rule 35(12) calling on the City
to produce the resolution where the Agreement had been
cancelled. The
City responded to that notice and provided documents. The documents
which the City provided plainly do not relate
to the Properties, and
deal with different properties. The City’s response is clearly
wrong.
32
Whilst the City has not provided that resolution of its Council to
cancel the Agreement, Lapa has not been able to put
up any primary
fact to show that the Council did not resolve that which is recorded
in annexure COE 11, and as is recorded in the
founding affidavit. The
City’s wrong reply to the rule 35(12) notice founds grounds for
an index of suspicion to be raised,
but that does not, in my
assessment, go so far as to prove that the Council of the City did
not resolve to cancel the Agreement.
33
There is in my view another answer to Lapa’s cancellation
point. Having entered into a contractual relationship with
the City
the relationship between Lapa and the City must be regulated by that
contract. The contract does not stipulate that it
can only be
cancelled if the Council of the City resolves to cancel the
Agreement. Instead, the Agreement refers indiscriminately
and
non-specifically to the City deciding to cancel the Agreement.
34
The City’s founding affidavit deposed to by the Divisional
Head: Legal and Corporate Services avers that the Agreement
was
cancelled. That averment is supported by the letter that was sent by
the City’s attorneys electing to cancel the Agreement.
35
In my view, and I find this to be so, the City is entitled to cancel
the Agreement when an authorised official makes that
election on
behalf of the City. That election is to be found in the letter sent
by the City’s attorneys to Lapa.
36
I therefore find that the City cancelled the Agreement.
CANCELLATION
AND RESTITUTION
37
In its application the City alleges that it has cancelled the
Agreement and seeks return of the Properties. As I have already
mentioned, the City did not tender return of the purchase price.
38
During the argument the absence of a tender of return of the purchase
price by the City was raised with Mr Tsatswane SC
who appeared for
the City. The issue was also raised with Ms de Villiers Golding who
appeared for Lapa. Both counsel were invited
to submit supplementary
heads on the issue of restitution following up on cancellation and
did so.
39
The City’s claim is one for restitution following cancellation.
40
When restitution is claimed the performance that has been rendered by
both parties must generally be returned. Whether
restitution is the
result of an implied term, or is the result of an enrichment action
is an issue that, on my reading of the law,
is something on which
there seems to be no agreement. What is clear is that the reason for
restitution being required is that unjust
enrichment should be
avoided.
41
A tender of restitution is not a requirement for a valid cancellation
of an agreement, instead it arises only when restitution
is claimed.
The point being that there is a difference between cancellation and a
claim for restitution.
42
In the supplementary submissions filed by the City it persisted with
the position that it was not required to tender return
of the
purchase price and adopted the position that return of the purchase
price is a matter to be decided in an enrichment claim
which may yet
be brought by Lapa. In my view the City has elevated the reason for
the rule (to avoid unjustified enrichment) to
the rule. Lapa’s
supplementary submissions adopt the approach that where restitution
is claimed then it must be effected
by both parties.
43
The position analogous to that of the City was set out in Prefix as
follows:
“
Where a contract
is cancelled as a result of breach and where the innocent party
claims return of their performance under the agreement,
the general
position is that a tender to return the performance of the guilty
party is necessary. As was said in Feinstein v Niggli
and Another:
‘that the parties ought to be restored to the respective
positions they were in at the time they contracted
is founded on
equitable considerations.'”
44
That position accords with the position adopted by Christie when he
said:
“
Thus in a
cancelled contract of sale the buyer is entitled to the return of any
of the purchase price he has paid and the seller
is entitled to the
return of the property.
45
What is now required is to apply that position to this matter.
46
The City has not tendered return of the purchase price to Lapa in its
claim for return of the Properties. On the other
hand Lapa has not
raised as a defence to the City’s claim the absence of a tender
of the return of the purchase price. But
in the conditional counter
claim Lapa has claimed return of the purchase price. So the issue of
return of the purchase price is
an issue that was squarely raised on
the papers. In its supplementary submissions Lapa has suggested that
in the absence of a tender
of return of the purchase price the City’s
application should be dismissed, but that was not a point raised in
its answering
affidavit or in its heads of argument. Restitution is
founded on equitable considerations, and because the issue of
repayment of
the purchase price is squarely raised in the papers,
albeit somewhat indirectly via the conditional counter claim, I find
that
the City’s claim should not be dismissed because it did
not tender return of the purchase price.
47
Because restitution is founded on equitable considerations my view is
that in assessing what is equitable I must assess
the matter sensibly
and wholistically, rather than technically and narrowly.
48
Neither party has placed facts before me to dislodge the obvious and
mathematical consequences of retaining or repaying
the purchase
price. If I were to order that the City is entitled to return of the
Properties, but at the same time leave the City
with the purchase
price, the City would without more enjoy a windfall and Lapa would
suffer a loss. That cannot be an equitable
result.
49
For these reasons I find that the City is, when claiming restitution
of the Properties, as it does, required to repay the
purchase price
to Lapa.
50
To be clear, and so that I am not misunderstood, by finding that the
City is required to repay the purchase price to Lapa,
I make no
finding whether either the City or Lapa has a damages or enrichment
or some other claim against each other, and expressly
leave that
question open.
SECTION
6 OF THE DEEDS REGISTRY’S ACT
51
The City relies on section 6 of the Deeds Registry Act to give effect
to the relief which it seeks. By invoking section
6 of the Deeds
Registry Act the City seeks the cancellation of the Deed of Transfer
recording Lapa as the owner of the Properties,
and the revival of the
Deed of Transfer that existed prior to the Lapa Deed of Transfer, the
effect being that the City will revert
to being the registered owner
of the Properties. There was no dispute between the parties that
would be the effect of an order
directing the Registrar of Deeds to
cancel the Lapa Deed of Transfer, and there was no dispute between
the parties that I am able
to make such an order.
52
The issue of some debate was whether section 6 permits me to order
the cancellation of the mortgage bond. In this regard
Ms de Villiers
Golding pointed out that section 6(1) operates in respect of “other
than a mortgage bond”. On this basis
the submission was that
section 6 does not permit me to order the cancellation of the
mortgage bond. I do not agree with this submission.
53
It is important to place section 6 in its correct context. Section 6
is not an empowering section which affords a court
the power to do
certain things. Instead it is a section which imposes a restriction
on the Registrar of Deeds so that a Deed of
Transfer may only be
cancelled upon an order of court. But that prohibition does not
operate in respect of a mortgage bond, and
hence why the section uses
the phrase “other than a mortgage bond”. The reason for
this may be because mortgage bonds
are dealt with in section 56 of
the Deeds Registry Act to which I return below.
54
The reach of section 6 was considered by the Court in the Kuzwayo
matter. The Court said:
“
Section 6 is not
an empowering provision, however. It provides only that the registrar
of deeds may not cancel any deed of transfer
except upon an order of
court.”
55
The Court then went on to deal with the court’s powers when
issuing an order contemplated by section 6 and said:
“
The court has the
inherent power, implicit in section 6 of the Deeds Registry’s
Act, to order cancellation of rights registered
in the Deeds
Register: Ex Parte Raulstone N.O.
1959 (4) SA 606
(N); and Indurjith
and Others v Naidoo and Another
1973 (1) SA 104
(D)”.
56
In Indurjith referred to by the court in Kuzwayo, property had to be
transferred but two caveats were registered against
the property in
favour of execution creditors who could not be traced. The report of
this case is particularly short in that it
records only the argument
for the applicant and the order that was granted. What is clear is
that the court found that it has an
inherent power to order the
removal of the caveats against the Title Deed.
57
Ex Parte Raulstone which was also referred to by the Court in Kuzwayo
is further authority for the proposition that a court
has an inherent
power to order the removal of an encumbrance on a title deed.
58
There is support to be found for a court’s authority to direct
the removal of a mortgage bond that is an encumbrance
against a title
deed in section 56 (1)(c) of the Deeds Registry’s Act. Section
56 deals with the transfer of hypothecated
immovable property and
provides that no immovable property shall be transferred unless a
mortgage bond registered against the property
has been cancelled.
There is then a proviso to that prohibition to the effect that no
cancellation shall be necessary if so ordered
by a court.
59
On the basis of what is said in Kuzwayo and the cases referred to,
read together with the provisions of section 56 (1)(c)
of the Deeds
Registry’s Act, I find that a court has an inherent power to
order the cancellation of a mortgage bond when
granting an order in
terms of section 6 of the Deeds Registry’s Act. The exercise of
such a power is necessary to ensure
that a commercially sound and
sensible result is achieved, and this is demonstrated by the debate
that was had during the hearing
of the matter which is set out in
paragraph 66 below.
THE
BOND
60
Having found that the City is entitled to reclaim the Properties but
must repay the purchase price I turn now to consider
the issue
relating to the mortgage bond.
61
Lapa has raised as a defence to the return of the Properties the
existence of the mortgage bond. The argument is, as I
understand it,
that a court cannot order the cancellation of the mortgage bond, and
therefore the Properties cannot be returned
to the City. As an
alternative the argument was that if the Properties are to be
returned to the City then the mortgage bond must
remain in place.
62
I have already mentioned, the mortgage bond was registered over the
properties simultaneously with the registration of
the Properties in
the name of Lapa.
63
The mortgagee is a partnership consisting of Lapa and the Skosana
Family Trust.
64
In the answering affidavit delivered on behalf of Lapa there is a
statement that the mortgagee does not consent to the
cancellation of
the mortgage bond. But this is taken no further, and no explanation
is provided for why consent to the cancellation
of the mortgage bond
is refused.
65
The mortgage bond operates to establish security in respect of a loan
agreement that Lapa entered into. The security provided
by the
mortgage bond operates in respect of a loan amount of R6,3 million
and interest thereon. The interest that is secured by
the mortgage
bond is described as being interest “… calculated in the
manner and at the rate agreed upon between the
Mortgagor and the
Partnership or failing such agreement in the manner and at the rate
usually required by the partnership for the
kind of transaction in
question”. This is the loosest of clauses, and it is not clear
whether any interest has been agreed
to, and there is no indication
of what might usually be required.
66
During argument the issue relating to the mortgage bond was raised
with Ms de Villiers Golding and the point was made that
unless the
mortgage bond is cancelled the City would receive return of the
Properties together with the encumbrance of the mortgage
bond whilst
at the same time having to repay the purchase price to Lapa. The
result of that would be, in practical terms, that
the City would have
to pay a further R6.3m to discharge the mortgage bond whilst Lapa
would enjoy the benefit of the purchase price
being returned to it by
the City, but which it had borrowed from the mortgagee. The end
result would be that the City would be
out of pocket by R6.3m and
Lapa would enjoy a windfall of R6.3m. I understood Ms de Villiers
Golding to accept that could not be
the result.
67
The mortgage bond provided security for the purchase price of the
Properties. To ensure that the rights of the mortgagee
are protected
as far as possible, I will order that the return of the purchase
price that is to be paid by the City is to be paid
first to the
mortgagee, and only to the extent that there is an amount remaining
after the amount owing by Lapa to the mortgagee
has been discharged
is that balance to be returned to Lapa. This will ensure that the
mortgagee enjoys the benefit of the security
that it had obtained in
the form of the mortgage bond and will at the same time avoid Lapa
receiving an undue windfall.
68
Given that Lapa is one of the members of the mortgagee partnership
there ought not to be a dispute about what amount is
owing to the
mortgagee. To the extent that such a dispute does arise I will deal
with that in the order that I will make by directing
that in the
event of a dispute arising between the mortgagee and Lapa as to the
amount which is to be paid to the mortgagee, then
the City’s
attorneys will be required to take into their trust account the
amount which the City is required to pay, and
to issue an
inter-pleader summons so that the dispute between the mortgagee and
Lapa as to who should be paid what amount can be
resolved.
69
I am mindful that relief relating to how payment is to be made was
not specifically claimed by either party, but take the
view that this
relief is necessary to give effect to the restitution, and that I am
therefore free to issue this structural order.
INTEREST
70
The City’s claim is based on its cancellation of the Agreement.
That cancellation operates ex nunc.
71
Although the City notified Lapa of its cancellation of the Agreement
on 18 October 2018 in the letter sent by its attorneys
that letter
does not attach any consequence to the cancellation. There is no
indication of whether the City will be claiming damages
or
restitution, or both.
72
The City first claimed return of the properties when it commenced
this application, and that was on 1 November 2018.
73
Restitution is based on equitable consideration and it follows that
interest which might be payable as part of an order
for restitution
should reflect the same equitable considerations.
74
It is a matter of speculation what would have transpired if the City
had tendered return of the purchase price in the application.
But
Lapa did not take the point that a tender of return of the purchase
price was missing from the City’s claim. Instead
it mounted the
prescription defence and the non-cancellation defence. Those are
defences that are unrelated to the absence of a
tender of repayment
of the purchase price.
75
It is not clear why this application which was launched in 2018 has
taken so long to get to court. The replying affidavit
was filed in
August 2019. Lapa filed its heads of argument in June 2022, in May
2023 Lapa brought an application to compel the
City to file its heads
of argument (a requirement for an application to be enrolled) and the
City filed its heads of argument on
6 October 2023.
76
The delay in the application does not seem to lie at the feet of Lapa
and that is relevant to the question of interest
in the context of
the equitable considerations that under pin resititution.
77
Because I have found that the City is required to tender return of
the purchase price and because that was first claimed
by the City
when this application was launched on 1 November 2018 I find that the
City is liable to pay interest to Lapa from 1
November 2018.
78
Lapa has suggested that the rate of interest should be fixed at the
date that it commences to run. Given that interest
is bound up with
the restitution my view is that the better approach, reflecting more
accurately the equitable considerations of
restitution, would be to
order the interest to run at the rate fixed in terms of section
1(2)(b) of the Prescribed Rate of Interest
Act of 1975.
COSTS
79
Both the City and Lapa have been partially successful, and conversely
they have both been partially unsuccessful.
80
The City has succeeded in securing an order for the cancellation of
the Lapa Title Deed, and Lapa has been successful in
securing the
repayment of the purchase price.
81
Given that both parties have achieved some measure of success and in
the exercise of my discretion in respect of costs
I will order that
each party is to pay its own costs. That order will, in my view
reflect the partial success that each party has
achieved.
ORDER
82
For the reasons set out above I make the following order:
1 The agreement
concluded between the applicant and the first respondent, annexure
COE 5 to the founding affidavit, is cancelled.
2 The Registrar of
Deeds is directed to take all steps necessary to cancel Mortgage Bond
B[....]8.
3 The Registrar of
Deeds is directed to take all steps necessary to cancel Deed of
Transfer T[....]08, and to revive Deed
of Transfer T[....]95.
4 To the extent
that any documents are to be signed to give effect to the orders in 2
and 3 above the conveyancer appointed
by Divisional Head: Legal and
Corporate Services of the City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality is authorised to sign those
documents.
5 The applicant is
to pay R6.3 million together with interest calculated from 1 November
2018 at the rate fixed in terms of
section 1(2)(b)
of the
Prescribed
Rate of Interest Act of 1975
from time to time (“the
restitution amount”) as follows:
a. The applicant is to
pay so much of the restitution amount as is required to discharge the
indebtedness secured by Mortgage Bond
B[....]8 to the mortgagee, and
to pay the balance, if any, to the first respondent.
b. The mortgagee,
represented by the seventh and eight respondents, is to submit to the
applicant’s attorneys, within three
days of the date of this
judgment, the amount which it alleges is owing to it by the first
respondent and which is secured by the
mortgage bond.
c. The first respondent
is to submit to the applicant’s attorneys, within three days of
the date of this judgment, the amount
which it alleges is owing by it
to the mortgagee and which is secured by the mortgage bond.
d. In the event of the
mortgagee and the first respondent agreeing on the amounts owing to,
and by, them the applicant is to pay
the restitution amount first to
the mortgagee and any balance to the first respondent.
e. In the event of the
mortgagee and the first respondent not agreeing on the amounts owing
to, and by, each of them then the applicant
is to pay the restitution
amount into the trust account of its attorney who shall forthwith
issue an interpleader summons on the
mortgagee and the first
respondent to resolve which to them is entitled to what part of the
restitution amount, and the restitution
amount will thereafter be
dealt with in terms of the interpleader summons proceedings.
f. The applicant’s
attorneys will be entitled to recover their costs of the interpleader
proceedings as a first charge
against the restitution amount, such
costs to be taxed on an attorney and client scale.
6 Each party is to
pay its own costs of this application.
Ian
Green
Acting
Judge of the High Court
13
November 2023
16
November 2023. On 14 November 2023 the respondents attorneys brought
to my attention an error in the second line of order 5d.
The
reference in the second line of order 5d to the first respondent
having to pay is a patent error and ought to have been a reference
to
the applicant. I amended that in terms of
rule 42(1)(b)
and invited
the parties to ideintify any further patent errors. A further request
was received from the respondents to extend the
time period of three
days referred to in the order to 10 days. I declined to make that
amendment as it is not a patent error and
cannot be accommodated
under
rule 42(1)(b).
On
behalf of the Applicant:
K
Tsatsawane SC
B Bhabha
Instructed
by: Mohamed
Randera and Associates
On
behalf of the First to fourth and sixth the Respondents
(collectively
referred to as “the Respondents”) C
de Villiers-Golding
N Nyembe
Instructed
by: Melvin
Neale Attorneys
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