Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1437South Africa
Sasol Oil and Another v Bitline SA 951 CC t/a Sasol Roodepoort West and Another (2023-052191 ; 2023-052612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1437 (11 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Franchise agreement and commercial sublease agreement – application to interdict continued operation of franchise business – and eviction application by Franchisor and owner of premises – termination by effluxion of time – proper interpretation of extension agreement – text, context and purpose leading to ineluctable conclusion that agreements came to an end – interdict granted – application for the eviction from commercial premises succeed.
Judgment
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## Sasol Oil and Another v Bitline SA 951 CC t/a Sasol Roodepoort West and Another (2023-052191 ; 2023-052612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1437 (11 December 2023)
Sasol Oil and Another v Bitline SA 951 CC t/a Sasol Roodepoort West and Another (2023-052191 ; 2023-052612) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1437 (11 December 2023)
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sino date 11 December 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
DATE
:
11
th
December 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
(1)
CASE NO
:
2023-052191
In the matter between:
SASOL
OIL
(PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
And
BITLINE
SA 951 CC t/a SASOL ROODEPOORT WEST
First
Respondent
JASSAT
,
BASHIR
Second
Respondent
AMRICH
58 PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Third
Respondent
(2)
CASE NO
:
2023-052612
In the matter between:
SASOL
OIL
(PTY) LIMITED
First
Applicant
AMRICH
58 PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Applicant
And
BITLINE
SA 951 CC t/a SASOL ROODEPOORT WEST
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Sasol Oil v Bitline SA 951 and Other (2023-052191); Sasol Oil and
Another v Bitline SA 951 (2023-052612)
[2023] ZAGPJHC ----
(11
December2023)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
01 December 2023
Delivered:
11
December 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00 on 11 December 2023.
Summary:
Franchise
agreement and commercial sublease agreement – application to
interdict continued operation of franchise business
– and
eviction application by Franchisor and owner of premises –
termination by effluxion of time – proper interpretation
of
extension agreement – text, context and purpose leading to
ineluctable conclusion that agreements came to an end –
interdict granted – application for the eviction from
commercial premises succeed.
ORDER
(1)
In the matter under case number:
2023-052191
,
the following order is granted in favour of the applicant against the
first and the second respondents: -
(a)
The first and the second respondents and/or
their privies be and are hereby interdicted and restrained from:
(i).
conducting any activities associated with a
service and filling station as contemplated in terms of the franchise
agreement between
the applicant and the first respondent from the
property known as Erf [...] Roodepoort West Township, Registration
Division I Q,
Gauteng Province, held by Deed of Transfer:
T46749/2000, also known as the
Sasol
Service Station
situated at corner Main
Reef and Serfontein Roads, Roodepoort (‘the property’ or
‘the site’) by utilising
and/or by being associated with
the Sasol brand, know how, marketing and comprehensive blueprint
for the operation of a convenience
centre and related businesses,
equipment and programmes, licences and/or trademarks and tradenames
and/or intellectual property;
and
(ii).
sourcing and/or storing and/or distributing
any third-party automotive fuel, automotive products, emission fluids
and related products
at or from the property, which products were
sourced from parties other than the applicant.
(b)
The applicant be and is hereby authorised
to gain access to the property and the site in order to effect an
onsite disablement,
which is to include the manual locking, where so
required, of Sasol’s systems and equipment on site.
(c)
The first and the second respondents,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall
pay the applicant’s
costs of this opposed application.
(2)
In the matter under case number:
2023-052612
,
the following order is granted in favour of the first and the second
applicants against the respondent: -
(a)
The respondent and all those occupying the
property through or under the respondent, the property being Erf
[...], Roodepoort West
Township, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng
Province, situate at corner of Main Reef and Serfontein Roads,
Roodepoort West (‘the
property’ or ‘the premises’),
be and are hereby evicted from the said property.
(b)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the said premises shall vacate the second applicant’s property
(‘the property’)
on or before the 31
st
of January 2024.
(c)
In the event that the respondent and the
other occupiers of the premises not vacating the second applicant’s
property on or
before the 31
st
of January 2024, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith
evict
the respondent and all other occupiers from the said property.
- The
respondent shall pay the first and the second applicants’
costs of this opposed application, such costs to include the
costs
consequent upon the utilisation of two Counsel, one being a Senior
Counsel, where so employed.JUDGMENT
The
respondent shall pay the first and the second applicants’
costs of this opposed application, such costs to include the
costs
consequent upon the utilisation of two Counsel, one being a Senior
Counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
On 01 December
2023 the above two opposed applications came before me in the
Commercial Court of this Division. The first application
(‘the
interdict application’) is by Sasol Oil (Pty) Limited (‘Sasol
Oil’ or ‘the first applicant’)
against Bitline SA
951 CC (‘Bitline SA’ or ‘the respondent’) and
two other respondents. The second one
(‘the eviction
application’) is by Sasol Oil and Amrich Properties 58 (Pty)
Limited (‘Amrich’ or ‘the
second applicant’)
against Bitline SA. Sasol Oil is an applicant in both these
applications and Bitline SA is a respondent
in both applications. The
further commonality between these two opposed motions is the central
fact in these applications that
Erf [...], Roodepoort West Township,
Registration Division IQ, Gauteng Province, situate at corner of Main
Reef and Serfontein
Roads, Roodepoort West (‘the property’
or ‘the premises’) is occupied by and is in possession of
Bitline
SA.
[2].
The factual
matrices underlying the applicants’ causes of action overlap to
a great extent and central to both these matters
is the ownership and
occupation of the property. It is accordingly convenient to deal with
these two matters in one judgment.
[3].
In the
interdict application, Sasol Oil applies for final interdictory
relief in terms of which Bitline SA is to be interdicted
from
carrying on the business of a service and filling station under the
‘Sasol’ name and brand. The case of Sasol
Oil in a
nutshell is that the Franchise Agreement in terms of which Bitline SA
was entitled to operate the filling station under
the Sasol banner
came to an end by effluxion of time, whereafter Bitline SA could no
longer carry on as a Sasol franchisee. The
termination of the
franchise agreement is denied by Bitline SA, who contends that the
said agreement was not lawfully terminated
by Sasol Oil, which means,
so Bitline SA submits, that they are entitled to continue with the
business on the basis of the franchise
agreement.
[4].
The issue to
be decided in the interdict application is therefore simply whether
the Franchise Agreement came to an end as alleged
by Sasol Oil.
[5].
In the
eviction application, Sasol Oil and Amrich apply for the eviction of
Bitline SA from the property, which by all accounts,
are owned by
Amrich, who let same to Sasol Oil, who, in turn, sublet to Bitline SA
pursuant to and in terms of the Franchise Agreement.
Sasol Oil’s
case is based on the termination of the Franchise Agreement,
including the sublease, which means, so their case
goes, that Bitline
SA has no right to occupy the said property and should vacate same.
Amrich’s case is based simply on the
rei
vindicatio,
and it alleges that, in the absence of a
ius
retentionis
(the right to retain) in favour of Bitline SA, the latter’s
occupation is unlawful and it is liable to be evicted from the
said
property.
[6].
Bitline SA
opposes the application mainly on the basis that its occupation is
lawful as the franchise agreement, which entitled
it to occupy the
premises, has not been lawfully terminated. It also contends that
Sasol Oil does not have the necessary
locus
standi
to
bring the application for its eviction from the property. As regards
the eviction claim by Amrich, Bitline SA alleges that a
case is not
made out on behalf of it as the necessary allegations are not made
nor supported by the founding papers. The application
is also opposed
by Bitline SA on the basis of what can best be described as overly
technical defences, to which I shall revert
later on in this
judgment.
[7].
The issue to
be considered by this court in the eviction application is simply
whether the applicants made out a case for the eviction
of Bitline SA
from the commercial premises in question. This issue, as well as that
implicated in the interdict application, are
to be decided against
the facts in the matters, which I will discuss when analysing each
case. Most notable are the two agreements
and a proper interpretation
of their provisions.
The
Interdict Application
[8].
A convenient
starting point for an analysis of and a discussion on the issues
pertinent to the interdict application is the franchise
agreement,
which was the sole and exclusive source to Bitline SA’s
entitlement to occupy and operate the Sasol service and
filing
station as a franchisee and for it to use Sasol Oil’s
equipment, intellectual property and petroleum products.
[9].
Amrich is the
registered owner of the property. In terms of and pursuant to a
written notarial deed of lease concluded between the
parties, Sasol
Oil secured the right to occupy the site for the sole purpose of
conducting a Sasol branded fuel service and filling
site, as well as
accessory and ancillary business activities associated with the
filling station. Moreover, Sasol Oil secured the
right to sub-let the
site to Bitline SA for the sole purpose of operating the site as a
Sasol service and filling station.
[10].
The initial
franchise agreement was concluded between Sasol Oil and Bitline SA
during 2012 and was subsequently renewed for an additional
period of
three years, terminable on 01 August 2020. On 01 April 2021, an
addendum was concluded between the parties, which stipulated
that the
‘third period franchise agreement’ would endure from 31
July 2020 on a month-to-month basis until 30 June
2022. The
addendum accordingly had a definitive and defined termination date
which did not require any notice of termination.
[11].
It may be
apposite to cite the relevant provisions of the addendum relating to
the period of the extended franchise agreement. It
reads, in the
relevant part, as follows: -
‘
1
Preamble
Whereas
[Sasol Oil] and [Bitline SA] (‘the parties’) entered Into
a Franchise Agreement for the operation of a Sasol
Franchise in
accordance with the defined standard of operations and procedures as
set out in the Franchise Agreement for Sasol
Roodepoort West.
And
whereas the parties have agreed to extend the 3
rd
Period
Franchise Agreement from 31 July 2020 on a month-to-month basis
for
a period not exceeding 30 June 2022
.
And
whereas [Sasol Oil] has agreed that it will provide three (3) months’
notice to [Bitline SA] for termination of this Agreement
if
terminated earlier than 30 June 2022
,
And
whereas the parties wish to record the amendment of the Franchise
Agreement In this Addendum.
2
Amendments to the Addendum to Option and Final Franchise Agreement
2.1
The parties wish to record in writing the following agreed amendments
to the Franchise Agreement: -
2.1.1
Duration of the Agreement
2.1.1.1
Notwithstanding signature date, this 3
rd
Period Franchise
Agreement shall endure
from 31 July 2020 on a month-to-month
basis
, unless it is terminated at any earlier time in terms or
this Franchise Agreement.
2.1.1.2
[Sasol Oil] shall notify [Bitline SA] In writing, at least three (3)
months prior to the termination of this Agreement.
2.1.1.3
… … …’. (
Emphasis
added).
[12].
A textual and contextual interpretation of
the cited provisions of the ‘Second Addendum to the Option and
Final Franchise
Agreement’, signed by the parties on 01 April
2021, ineluctably leads one to the conclusion that the intention of
the parties,
when concluding the said addendum, was that the extended
Franchise Agreement would endure only to 30 June 2022. The addendum
expressly
provides so in as many words in the preamble, which states
that the parties have agreed to extend the Franchise Agreement ‘for
a period not exceeding 30 June 2022’. It cannot be stated in
clearer terms than that and there can, in my view, be little
doubt
that the parties intended for the ‘month-to-month’
agreement to terminate by effluxion of time on 30 June 2022.
Moreover, the three months’ notice period found application
only in the event of Sasol Oil intending to terminate the extended
agreement prior to 30 June 2022. I reiterate that, if regard is had
to the text and the wording of the addendum, one cannot come
to a
conclusion other than that the Franchise Agreement terminated on 30
June 2022, as contended by Sasol Oil.
[13].
In
sum, the aforegoing conclusion I reach after having given due
consideration to the language used in the light of the ordinary
rules
of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed, and the
material known
to those responsible for its production. (
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[1]
).
The point is simply that the language, grammar and syntax used in the
quoted addendum confirm the intention of the parties that
the
Franchise Agreement was to come to an end on 30 June 2022.
[14].
As regards context, t
he
head lease between Sasol Oil and Amrich terminated on 27 July 2022,
at which stage the right to occupy the property and to operate
the
filing station of both Sasol Oil and Bitline SA ceased to exist. This
was confirmed by Sasol Oil in a written communiqué
dated 22
June 2022, in which Bitline SA’s Mr Jassat (the second
respondent in the interdict application) was advised that
Sasol Oil
had no tenure in respect of the property beyond July 2022.
Subsequently,
o
n
21 September 2022, Sasol Oil advised Bitline SA in writing that, the
lease negotiations between Sasol Oil and Amrich relating
to an
extension of the lease having failed, Sasol Oil was obligated to
‘divest from the site’. Bitline was accordingly
afforded
thirty days within which to vacate the premises on or before 01
November 2022. They were also placed on terms to attend
to the
closure of all operations at the Sasol Roodepoort West premises,
including employee relations, supplier relations and any
other
operational elements which such closure may impact.
[15].
Against the
aforesaid background, it has to be accepted that the agreement, as
per the addendum, was that the Franchise Agreement
would terminate on
30 June 2022. I accordingly do not accept Bitline SA’s
contention that the parties, Sasol Oil and Bitline
SA, had during
July 2022 agreed verbally to extend the franchise agreement, which
verbal agreement, according to Bitline SA, was
reduced to writing and
was for a period of six months until 31 January 2023.
[16].
In the
circumstances, I am satisfied that Sasol Oil has made out a case for
final interdictory relief sought in the first application.
I am
persuaded that Sasol Oil, as the applicant for interdictory relief,
has fulfilled the requirements for such relief, to wit:
(a) it has a
clear right; (b) it has a reasonable apprehension of irreparable
harm; and (c) it has no alternative remedy that
would suitably
address any harm suffered in the normal course of events.
[17].
Sasol Oil has
a clear right, in the form of its ownership of the intellectual
property, which requires protection and which Bitline
SA presently
uses without Sasol Oil’s authority to do so. No more needs to
be said about this requirement. Bitline SA and
Mr Jassat continue to
operate the site as a Sasol branded service station, without the
consent of Sasol Oil, misrepresenting to
the general public that the
site is and remains a Sasol service and filling station. They are
also using Sasol’s equipment
and intellectual property, on the
unsubstantiated and contradictory contention that a valid and binding
franchise agreement is
and remains in place.
[18].
There can also
be no doubt that Sasol Oil will suffer irreparable harm if the
interdict is not granted. It is so, as contended by
Mr Aucamp,
Counsel for Sasol Oil, that in the case of a vindicatory or quasi
vindicatory claims, it is factually presumed, until
the contrary is
shown, that Sasol will suffer irreparable harm if the interdict is
not granted.
[19].
Moreover,
Sasol Oil does not have available to it any alternative remedy. Even
where an injury may be capable of pecuniary evaluation
and
compensation, the court will generally grant an interdict if the
injury is a continuing violation of an applicant’s rights
as is
the case with Sasol Oil
in
casu
.
[20].
For all these
reasons, the interdict application should succeed.
The
Eviction Application
[21].
Both Sasol Oil
and Amrich make application for the eviction of Bitline SA from
commercial premises, being the property situate at
corner Main Reef
and Serfontein Roads, Roodepoort West (‘the premises’ or
‘the property’) and from which
premises Bitline SA
conducts the franchise business as Sasol Roodepoort West. Amrich
approaches the court for an eviction order
in its capacity as owner
of the premises and Sasol Oil’s cause of action is based on its
contractual and common law obligation(s)
owed to Amrich as owner to
return free and undisturbed possession of the premises to its owner.
[22].
As I have
already found, the franchise agreement, at best for Bitline SA, came
to an end by effluxion of time on 30 June 2022. This
therefore means
that it does not have any right to remain in occupation of the
premises. Sasol Oil is therefore entitled to an
eviction order
against Bitline SA. The simple fact of the matter is that Bitline SA
was granted the right to occupy the premises
by Sasol Oil pursuant to
and in terms of the Franchise Agreement and this is the only basis on
which they could and in fact did
occupy the said property. Once the
Franchise Agreement was terminated, Bitline SA’s entitlement to
occupy the premises came
to an end and Sasol Oil was entitled to ask
for their eviction from the premises.
[23].
Amrich, on the
other hand, as the owner of the property, is entitled to an eviction
order against an unlawful occupier on the basis
of the
rei
vindicatio
.
An owner is entitled to reclaim possession of its property with the
rei
vindicatio
and is required only to allege and prove: (a) ownership of the
premises; and (b) that the respondent is in possession of the said
thing. Should the respondent claim a right to be in possession or
occupation of the premises, the respondent must allege and prove
such
right. Accordingly,
in
casu
the
onus is on Bitline SA to justify its continued occupation of the
premises in relation to Amrich as the owner thereof. This,
Bitline SA
has miserably failed to do, which, in my judgment spells the end of
Bitline SA’s case in opposition to the eviction
application.
[24].
As correctly
submitted by Mr Brett SC, who appeared on behalf of Amrich, together
with Mr Kaplan, the
rei
vindicatio
is available to an owner as a cause of action for the recovery of
immovable property from whoever is in possession thereof whether
or
not the possession is
mala
fide
or
bona fide
.
[25].
Bitline SA
argued that, because of its right to possession to the site in terms
of the Franchise Agreement, Amrich needed to assert
its right against
Sasol Oil. Mr Brett contended that this argument is misguided. I find
myself in agreement with this submission.
There is no contractual
nexus between Amrich and Bitline SA and the Franchise Agreement
between Bitline SA and Sasol Oil is irrelevant
to Amrich’s
claim. Moreover, Amrich is entitled, as a matter of law, to proceed
on the basis of the
rei
vindicatio
against whoever is in possession of the site.
Other
Defences raised by Bitline SA and Other Interlocutory Issues
[26].
Bitline SA has
raised various other defences to the claim by Amrich. None of these
defences has any merit and it is therefore not
necessary for me to
deal with them in any detail.
[27].
The most
notable of the legal defences raised by Bitline SA relates to the
fact that, according to Mr Venter, Counsel for Bitline
SA, Amrich did
not, in its founding papers, make out a case necessary to sustain its
cause of action based on the
rei
vindicatio
.
There is no merit is this contention. In the founding affidavit,
which was filed on behalf of both Sasol Oil and Amrich, the
undisputed and unchallenged averment is made that Amrich is the owner
of the property. In its answering affidavit, Bitline SA does
not only
not challenge this allegation, but it in fact also confirms it,
which, in my view, makes that issue common cause between
the parties
on the papers. That, in my judgment, is the end of that legal point
on behalf of Bitline SA.
[28].
Bitline SA’s
argument that the allegation relating to ownership of the property
should have been made by Amrich itself and
not by the deponent to the
founding affidavit, who happens to be an officer of Sasol Oil, is
equally devoid of any merit. The evidence
to that effect was given by
the deponent and there is no bar to a third-party giving evidence on
behalf of a party, as was the
case
in
casu
. What
is more, is that this fact is accepted by Bitline, which meant that
this aspect was no longer in dispute between the parties.
[29].
The simple
point is that Amrich,
via
the deponent to the founding affidavit, properly pleaded ownership of
the property and, in addition, presented the supporting evidence
in
the form of the
Windeed
search report. Bitline SA’s contention to the contrary is
misguided, as is its reliance on the myriad of case authorities
which
require an applicant to make out its case in its founding papers.
That is exactly what Amrich did.
[30].
Moreover, it
cannot possibly be, as contended by Bitline SA, that the evidence
relied upon by Amrich is inadmissible as being of
a hearsay nature.
Hearsay evidence which, according to a party, is inadmissible will
only be disregarded if it is struck out on
application. This is not
the case
in
casu
. And,
as correctly contended by Mr Brett, there is not a blanket
prohibition against hearsay evidence. In this application, the
facts
which arise from such evidence was, in any event, admitted by Bitline
SA, which, I reiterate, became common cause on the
pleadings.
[31].
For all of
these reasons, it was not necessary, in my view, for Amrich to
subsequently file an affidavit, confirming on its behalf
what was
said in the first and the second applicants’ combined founding
affidavit. Amrich however did so
ex
abundanti cautela
and
their approach in that regard cannot be faulted. Their application to
file the confirmatory affidavit rather belated should
therefore be
granted. The opposition by Bitline SA to the application for leave to
file the said confirmatory affidavit is ill-advised.
All things
considered, and especially having regard to the fact that the
affidavit merely served to confirm what was already said
indubitably
in the founding affidavit, the application should be granted, and
Amrich is therefore granted leave to file the said
affidavit.
[32].
There is one
last issue, which I need to deal with briefly and that relates to
condonation applications by the various parties for
late delivery of
affidavits. The objections to these applications were somewhat muted
and I am of the view that it would be in
the interest of justice that
such applications for condonation should be granted. I therefore
grant such applications, with no
costs orders relative thereto.
Costs
[33].
Accordingly,
the relief sought by the applicant in the interdict application and
by the first and the second applicants in the eviction
application
should be granted.
[34].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his 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:
Myers
v Abramson
[2]
.
[35].
I can think of no reason why I should
deviate from this general rule.
[36].
The applicants have also urged me to grant
punitive costs orders against the respondents to show my displeasure
with what is perceived
to be an abuse by the respondents of the court
processes in their opposition to the applications. I am not persuaded
that a case
is made out for punitive costs orders on the scale as
between attorney and client.
[37].
I therefore intend awarding ‘ordinary’
costs against the respondents in favour of the applicants.
Order
[38].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
In the matter under case number:
2023-052191
,
the following order is granted in favour of the applicant against the
first and the second respondents: -
(a)
The first and the second respondents and/or
their privies be and are hereby interdicted and restrained from:
(i).
conducting any activities associated with a
service and filling station as contemplated in terms of the franchise
agreement between
the applicant and the first respondent from the
property known as Erf [...] Roodepoort West Township, Registration
Division I Q,
Gauteng Province, held by Deed of Transfer:
T46749/2000, also known as the
Sasol
Service Station
situated at corner Main
Reef and Serfontein Roads, Roodepoort (‘the property’ or
‘the site’) by utilising
and/or by being associated with
the Sasol brand, know how, marketing and comprehensive blueprint
for the operation of a convenience
centre and related businesses,
equipment and programmes, licences and/or trademarks and tradenames
and/or intellectual property;
and
(ii).
sourcing and/or storing and/or distributing
any third-party automotive fuel, automotive products, emission fluids
and related products
at or from the property, which products were
sourced from parties other than the applicant.
(b)
The applicant be and is hereby authorised
to gain access to the property and the site in order to effect an
onsite disablement,
which is to include the manual locking, where so
required, of Sasol’s systems and equipment on site.
(c)
The first and the second respondents,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, shall
pay the applicant’s
costs of this opposed application.
(2)
In the matter under case number:
2023-052612
,
the following order is granted in favour of the first and the second
applicants against the respondent: -
(a)
The respondent and all those occupying the
property through or under the respondent, the property being Erf
[...], Roodepoort West
Township, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng
Province, situate at corner of Main Reef and Serfontein Roads,
Roodepoort West (‘the
property’ or ‘the premises’),
be and are hereby evicted from the said property.
(b)
The respondent and all other occupiers of
the said premises shall vacate the second applicant’s property
(‘the property’)
on or before the 31
st
of January 2024.
(c)
In the event that the respondent and the
other occupiers of the premises not vacating the second applicant’s
property on or
before the 31
st
of January 2024, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith
evict
the respondent and all other occupiers from the said property.
(d)
The respondent shall pay the first and the
second applicants’ costs of this opposed application, such
costs to include the
costs consequent upon the utilisation of two
Counsel, one being a Senior Counsel, where so employed.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
1
st
December 2023
JUDGMENT DATE:
11
th
December 2023 –
judgment handed down electronically.
FOR SASOL OIL (APPLICANT IN THE
FIRST MATTER):
Advocate Schalk Aucamp
INSTRUCTED BY:
DM5 Incorporated,
Illovo, Johannesburg
FOR THE AMRICH 58 PROPERTIES
(SECOND APPLICANT IN SECOND MATTER):
Adv J J Brett SC, together with Adv
J L Kaplan
INSTRUCTED BY:
Hirschowitz Flionis Attorneys,
Rosebank, Johannesburg
FOR THE BITLINE SA 951 (FIRST
RESPONDENT IN THE FIRST MATTER) AND THE SECOND RESPONDENT:
Advocate J A Venter
INSTRUCTED BY:
Des Naidoo & Associates,
Parktown, Sandton
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18;
[2]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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