Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1398South Africa
Ninarich Trading 3 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mtatyana and Others (2023/000772) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1398 (1 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ninarich Trading 3 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mtatyana and Others (2023/000772) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1398 (1 December 2023)
Ninarich Trading 3 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mtatyana and Others (2023/000772) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1398 (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023/000772
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
01/12/23
In
the matter between
NINARICH
TRADING 3 (PTY) LTD
(REG
NO: 2009/023856/07)
1
st
APPLICANT
NINARICH
INVESTMENTS 1 (PTY) LTD
(REG
NO: 2009/023856/07)
2
nd
APPLICANT
And
MTATYANA,
SIMPHIWE & THOSE LISTED
IN
ANNEXURE "A" TO THE NOTICE OF MOTION
1
st
to 10
th
RESPONDENTS
MANTENGU,
SANDISWE ZANELE & THOSE
LISTED
IN ANNEXURE "B" TO THE NOTICE OF
MOTION
11
th
to 61
st
RESPONDENTS
ZIKHALI,
NOKULUNGA & THOSE LISTED
IN
ANNEXURE "C" TO THE NOTICE OF MOTION
62
nd
to 126
th
RESPONDENTS
MBATHA,
SENAMSILE FUNDISIWE & THOSE
LISTED
IN ANNEXURE "D" TO THE NOTICE OF
MOTION
127
th
to 133
rd
RESPONDENTS
THE
UNLAWFUL INVADERS/OCCUPIERS OF
31
BETTY STREET, JEPPESTOWN
134
th
RESPONDENTS
THE
FURTHER UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF 1
THE
PROPERTIES OCCUPIED BY THE
1
ST
TO THE 133
RD
RESPONDENTS
35
th
RESPONDENTS
THE CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
136
th
RESPONDENT
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand
down is deemed to be 10h00 on 1 December 2023.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J:
[1]
Part B of this application served before me
on an urgent basis on 3 October 2023. On that occasion the matter was
struck off the
roll with the necessary costs order for want of
urgency. Reasons have since been requested on 24 October 2023 whilst
I was on long
leave and traveling. The following are my reasons.
[2]
The disputes between the parties have been
ongoing for a considerable period.
The
relief sought by the Applicants in terms of Part A, was that the
application be treated as one of urgency in terms of Rule 6(12)
of
the Rules of Court; that pending the finalisation of the proceedings
in terms of Part B of the Application, the 1st to the 135'"
Respondents, and all those occupying the listed properties, through
or under them, be evicted in terms of Section 5(1) of the Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, number
19 of 1998, as amended ("the PIE Act") from certain
identified properties.
[3]
Alternatively, that the respondents and all
those occupying the property by, through or under them, be ordered,
and directed to
restore control and possession to the Second
Applicant of the property described as Erf 413 Jeppestown Township,
Registration Division
IR, Province of Gauteng, situated at 31 Betty
Street, Jeppestown. In addition,
inter
alia
that the Respondents, and all
those occupying the properties by, through or under them, be ordered
and directed to vacate the properties
within 48 hours of any order of
the Court.
Nel AJ dismissed Part A of the
notice of motion on 24 May 2023, with reasons subsequently furnished
on 3 October 2023. Part A is
the subject of an appeal process.
The applicants sought relief on the basis
inter
alia
that, t
he
eviction of the respondents will be just and equitable (as
contemplated in terms of the provisions of section 4(6), (7), (8)
and
(9) 4 of the PIE Act) as the Respondents:
[4]
The application follows a prior spoliation
and interdict application under case number 2022-047559 brought by
the Applicants against
the Respondents on urgent basis, which
application was struck off the roll on 2 December 2022, for want of
compliance with the
rules of court by Twala J.
[5]
A notice of amendment of Part B of the
Applicants’ notice of motion seeking eviction was delivered on
31 August 2023. The
Respondents did not object thereto and on 27
September 2023, the amended pages of the notice of motion were
subsequently delivered.
[6]
The trite position whether a matter should
be enrolled and heard as an urgent application is governed by the
provisions of 6(12)
of the Uniform Rules. The sub rule allows the
court in urgent applications to dispense with the forms and service
provided for
in the rules and dispose of the matter at such time and
place in such manner and in accordance with such procedure as to it
seems
meet. It further provides that in the affidavit in support of
an urgent application the applicant shall set forth explicitly the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent and the reasons
why he or she claims that he or she could not be afforded
substantial
redress at a hearing in due course.
[7]
The procedure set out in rule 6(12) as case
law makes clear, is not there for taking.
Mere lip-service to the requirements
of rule 6(12)(b) is not sufficient. An applicant must set
forth explicitly the circumstances
which he avers render the matter
urgent. More importantly, the applicant must state the reasons why he
claims that he cannot be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in
due course. The question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent
to be enrolled
and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by
the issue of absence of substantial redress in an application in due
course.
The rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a
litigant because if the latter were to wait for the normal course
laid
down by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress (see
inter alia
,
East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd and Others
(11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011).
[8]
In the instant case given the litigation
history, I was unpersuaded that if the applicants were to wait and
bring the matter in
the normal course, they will not be able to be
afforded substantial redress at a hear in in due course. By the
applicants’
own version in the supplementary affidavit, “by
the time of the unfavourable outcome of the first application, the
applicants,
which were already cash-strapped, had run out of funds to
pursue the application further”.
[9]
On the applicant’s version per a
supplementary affidavit dated 22 September 2023, “
the
applicants reasonably believed that
it
would be imprudent to enrol part "B"
hereof without first establishing Nel AJ's reasoning in dismissing
part "A". In the absence of such reasoning,
the
applicants could not (and cannot) ascertain which element of their
case had been determined in the negative. More particularly,
amongst
other things, the Applicants could not discern: whether Nel AJ
was in disagreement regarding the existence of a rent
boycott and/or
building hijacking and/or attempted building hijack; and/or whether
Nel AJ considered the Applicants to be obliged
to pursue other
remedies; and/or whether Nel AJ was at odds with Applicants
contention that the balance of hardship favoured
the Applicants (the
Respondents all having been previously assessed for their ability to
afford rent, save for the occupiers of
31 Betty Street who, at that
stage, had only been in occupation of that property for 6 months);
and/or whether Nel AJ was not satisfied
that the Applicants had
demonstrated that they are the owners of the respective properties;
and/or whether Nel AJ had taken into
account the justness and equity
of an eviction, which does not form part of the enquiry in an
eviction application brought in terms
of section 5(1) of PIE;
and/or…Each of the above questions would have a bearing on the
Applicants' case insofar as part
"B" is concerned. In
effect, the Applicants were rendered unable to establish the
specifics regarding the (further) case
they were required to make
out”.
Various
correspondences between the parties and the office
of the DJP followed in which reasons for the Nel AJ order were
pursued.
[10]
The Applicants' submitted that the
urgency of this matter is, “self- evident, given, the serious
prospects that the Applicants
and, in turn, the purchaser, will lose
the properties to the Respondents permanently, and thereby suffer
irreparable harm, arising
from the Respondents' patently unlawful,
manipulative and disingenuous conduct;…
the
real risk that the purchaser and the SHRA will abandon the Betty
Street social housing project completely, as has unfortunately
often
transpired, and as has been exacerbated by opportunistic continuation
of the attacks on the social housing sector;…”.
[11]
The applicants further alleged
that
“simply enrolling part "B" without the City's
eviction report would inevitably have led to the indefinite
postponement of the application for the Court to obtain the City's
input. It was therefore imperative that the City first carry
out its
investigation and compile its report before the hearing of part "B".
[12]
Whilst this matter was enrolled as urgent
in the absence of reasons Nel AJ, it seemed to me as evidenced by the
parts of the supplemental
affidavit referred to above. The submission
by counsel on behalf of the applicants that the awaited reasons were
unnecessary for
the determination of Part B was in stark contrast to
the relevant averments. In my judgment, the question of urgency
regarding
this matter was self-created. On the applicants’
version, it has been urgent- since the launch in November of 2022.
Accordingly,
there is no reason why the application was not set down
on a date on the normal roll. It is for the above reasons that the
matter
was struck off the roll with the necessary costs order.
TP MUDAU
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant: Adv. Hollander
Instructed by: Vermaak Mashall
Wellbeloved Incorporated
For
the 1
st
to 135
th
Respondent: Adv. Moela
Instructed by: Sithi and
Thabela Attorneys
For
the 136
th
Respondent: No appearance
Date
of Hearing: 03 October 2023
Date of Judgment: 1
December 2023
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