Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 25South Africa
Malgas and Another v Alexander and Others (21137/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 25 (13 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 January 2022
Headnotes
under Title Deed No. T[....] in respect of the immovable property described as Erf [....] Ennerdale Extension 5, situated at [....] Malagiet Crescent, Ennerdale Extension 5 (“the Immovable Property”), currently registered in the name of the First Respondent; and
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Malgas and Another v Alexander and Others (21137/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 25 (13 January 2022)
Malgas and Another v Alexander and Others (21137/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 25 (13 January 2022)
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sino date 13 January 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21137/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
[13
January 2022]
In
the matter between:
STEVEN
MALGAS
First Applicant
FAITH
MICHELLE
MALGAS
Second Applicant
and
CLEORESE
ALEXANDER
First
Respondent
DEEDS
REGISTRY, JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
CITY
OF
JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
J
U D G M E N T:
NEL
AJ
[1]
This is an opposed application in terms of
which the Applicants seek,
inter alia
,
the following relief:
[1.1] An order
directing the Second Respondent (the Registrar of Deeds) to cancel
the Title Deed held under Title Deed No.
T[....] in respect of the
immovable property described as Erf [....] Ennerdale Extension 5,
situated at [....] Malagiet Crescent,
Ennerdale Extension 5 (“the
Immovable Property”), currently registered in the name of the
First Respondent; and
[1.2] An order
referring the decision as to who is the “
most deserving
beneficiary
” of the Immovable Property back to the
Department of Housing of the City of Johannesburg for a
determination.
THE
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
[2]
The First Applicant, who deposed to the
Founding and Replying Affidavits in support of the Application, and
on behalf of both Applicants,
contends that the Applicants (and their
family) have occupied the Immovable Property since 1999.
[3]
The Applicants allege that occupation of
the Immovable Property was granted to them in terms of an oral lease
agreement concluded
with Mr Enver Alexander (“Mr Alexander”),
the deceased father of the First Respondent, who is the current
registered
owner of the Immovable Property.
[4]
The First Respondent contends that Mr
Alexander did not conclude the oral agreement with the Applicants,
but that in his absence
from the Immovable Property, an unknown
person with whom he was living at the Immovable Property concluded
the oral agreement with
the Applicants. The dispute is however not
relevant for the purpose of determining this Application.
[5]
The Applicants allege that they made
regular monthly payments of rental to Mr Alexander, to his ex-wife,
and the First Respondent.
There is a dispute as between the
Applicants and the First Respondent as to whether the monthly rental
payments were indeed made
by the Applicants, but such dispute is
entirely irrelevant for the purposes of this Application.
[6]
It is however undisputed that the
Applicants’ occupation of the Immovable Property arose as a
result of a rental agreement.
[7]
The Applicants stopped paying rental during
2005, based on advice they received at a community meeting that
rental should not be
paid in respect of council housing. No detail is
provided as to who gave such advice to the Applicants, but in the
Replying Affidavit,
the Applicants refer vaguely to the advice having
emanated from “
Council”.
[8]
The Applicants were also advised at the
same time to commence the process of registering the Immovable
Property into their own name.
[9]
During July 2005 an Agreement of Sale was
allegedly concluded as between the City of Johannesburg and the
Applicants in respect
of the purchase of the Immovable Property. The
document attached in support of such intended sale purports to be the
first page
of an Agreement of Sale in respect of the Immovable
Property, but does not reflect any purchase price, and does not
contain all
of the terms and conditions as required in respect of the
sale of immovable property.
[10]
The Applicants set out that an application
for finance to purchase the Immovable Property was declined, and in
the circumstances
the Agreement of Sale was never given effect to.
[11]
The Applicants allege that during September
2005, the Department of Regularisation and Transfer of Ownership
(“ReTro”)
of the City of Johannesburg summoned the First
Applicant and Mr Alexander to the Ennerdale Community Centre in
respect of the dispute
relating to the occupation of the Immovable
Property. No details of the process followed by the Department of
Regularisation and
Transfer of Ownership (ReTrO) has been set out by
the Applicants, and the First Applicant simply alleged that Mr
Alexander did
not attend at the Ennerdale Community Centre. The First
Respondent stated that she was not aware of the process that was
followed.
[12]
During January 2014, the Applicants were
advised by the Housing Department of the City of Johannesburg that Mr
Alexander was deemed
to be the “
deserving
beneficiary
” of the Immovable
Property. It appears from the contents of the letter that the
Applicants were aware of such determination
before 16 January 2016.
[13]
In the letter referred to by the
Applicants, the Applicants were advised that no further meetings
would be held with regard to the
dispute relating to the Immovable
Property, and that the Applicants were at liberty to seek
representation should they wish to
proceed further with the dispute.
The Applicants were also advised that should there be “
no
further developments in the matter
”
within a period of 6 months from 16 January 2014, the City of
Johannesburg, would proceed with the transfer of the Immovable
Property, presumably to Mr Alexander.
[14]
It is clear from the contents of the letter
that the Applicants had already expressed their dissatisfaction with
the determination
by the City of Johannesburg to have found Mr
Alexander to be the “
more
deserving beneficiary
” in respect
of the Immovable Property.
[15]
There is no information or evidence as to
what occurred in respect of the dispute or the process followed
during the period from
September 2005 to January 2014, which is
surprising, as this appears to be the period (more than 8 years)
during which the process
initiated by ReTrO in respect of the
determination as to the Ownership of the Immovable Property was
conducted.
[16]
It would certainly have been more helpful
in determining this Application if the Applicants had set out what
occurred during such
period, in detail.
[17]
On 29 May 2014, the First Applicant
addressed a letter to the Department of Housing of the City of
Johannesburg, requesting the
City of Johannesburg to allow the
Applicants and their family to remain in the Immovable Property. In
the letter, the First Applicant
contended that the Immovable Property
was sold to the Applicants by Mr Alexander for a purchase price of
R15 000.00, but after
payment of such amount, Mr Alexander did
not effect transfer of the Immovable Property to the Applicants. Such
allegation is curiously
not set out in any of the affidavits deposed
to by the First Applicant, and is not relied on as a basis for the
Applicants’
alleged entitlement to occupation of the Immovable
Property.
[18]
The Applicants received no response, and on
13 September 2016 an e-mail was addressed to the City of
Johannesburg, enquiring as
to what motivated the Department of
Housing to consider Mr Alexander as “
the
most deserving beneficiary
” in
respect of the Immovable Property, requesting any written
documentation that supported the decision of the Department
of
Housing, and seeking the provision of copies of any written
correspondence between the Department of Housing and the First
Applicant between the years 2005 to 2015. It appears that the
Department of Housing did not respond to such request, and the
Applicants
launched this Application on 14 June 2017.
[19]
The First Respondent alleged that Mr
Alexander tried on numerous occasions to occupy the Immovable
Property while the Applicants
were in occupation of the Immovable
Property but was unable to do so.
[20]
The First Respondent also alleged that
attempts were made to obtain assistance from the South African Police
Services, but that
the Police refused to intervene.
[21]
The Applicants deny such allegations.
[22]
The First Respondent alleges that a dispute
was then lodged in respect of the Immovable Property, which resulted
in the involvement
of ReTrO.
[23]
Mr Alexander passed away on 8 June 2015,
and the Immovable Property was registered in the name of the First
Respondent on 26 April
2017.
[24]
The First Respondent has been unable to
occupy the Immovable Property, as the Applicants deny her access to
the Immovable Property,
and the First Respondent has instituted
eviction proceedings, which presumably pre-empted the launching of
this Application by
the Applicants.
[25]
The First Respondent had to settle all
outstanding utility bills in order to effect transfer of the
Immovable Property, and remains
liable to make payment of all
municipal services.
IN
LIMINE
ASPECT
[26]
The First Respondent raised as an
in
limine
point that the Application
launched by the Applicants is a review application but that the
Application does not meet any of the
requirements of a review
application.
[27]
The Notice of Motion is certainly not
formulated as an application for the review and setting aside of an
administrative decision.
[28]
I pertinently enquired from the First
Applicant’s counsel whether the Application was intended to be
a review of the decision
by the Department of Housing, and he advised
me that it was not a review, but rather a “
reconsideration
”,
which reconsideration must be undertaken by the Court or the City of
Johannesburg. Applicants’ counsel advised me
that the
Applicants did not have the necessary facts available to them in
order to bring a review application.
[29]
Applicants’ counsel advised that the
City of Johannesburg considers requests for accommodation and then
makes awards relating
to such requests, but that the Applicants are
“
not sure
”
whether the City of Johannesburg took proper steps in reaching the
decision to find Mr Alexander to be “
the
most deserving beneficiary
”.
[30]
I enquired from the Applicants’
counsel as to whether the appeal process as referred to by the First
Applicant in paragraph
7.6 of the Founding Affidavit was followed.
Applicants’ counsel advised me that there was no appeal
procedure, but simply
an opportunity to make further representations.
Applicants’ counsel advised me that the use of the word
“
appeal
”
in the Founding Affidavit simply meant that the First Applicant was
entitled to “
escalate the matter
”.
[31]
I enquired from Applicants’ counsel
as to whether there were any specific procedures or municipal by-laws
that regulated the
decision-making process of the Department of
Housing, or that set out the steps that should be followed, such as
for subsequent
internal remedies or appeals. Applicants’
counsel advised me that he was not aware of any particular law, and
did not know
whether there were any applicable municipal by-laws to
such effect.
[32]
In the Founding Affidavit it is clearly set
out that the Application is an application launched in terms of
Section 6(1) of the
Deeds Registries Act, Number 47 of 1937, as
amended (“the Deeds Registries Act”), for,
inter
alia
, an order cancelling the Title
Deed and ancillary relief.
[33]
In terms of Section 6(1) of the Deeds
Registries Act, no registered Deed of Transfer shall be cancelled,
except by way of a Court
Order. It is accordingly clear that a Court
has the power, as conferred by Section 6(1) of the Deeds Registries
Act to cancel the
registration of a Deed of Transfer, provided that
there are proper and lawful grounds to do so.
[34]
I am satisfied that the Application was not
intended to be a review application, but rather an application for
the cancellation
of the registration of a Deed of Transfer, together
with the relief that would follow upon such cancellation. The basis
for such
cancellation is dealt with in greater detail below, in
considering the relevant legal framework.
[35]
If I were wrong in such regard, and the
Application was intended to be a review application, the Application
does not meet the requirements
of a review, in that,
inter
alia
, the time limit applicable (180
days) was not complied with (and no condonation was sought), there
does not appear to have been
an exhaustion of all internal remedies,
and no proper grounds on which the determination of the Department of
Housing should be
reviewed have been set out. It is the
determination, and not the process that the Applicants have a
difficulty with. If the Application
was a review application, it
would have had to be dismissed.
THE
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[36]
In the Heads of Argument submitted by the
attorney of the Applicants, no reference was made to any case law or
specific provisions
of any statutes that supported the Applicants’
claims to the relief sought
[37]
Applicants’ counsel simply referred
in the Heads of Argument to certain provisions of the Constitution,
without specifying
or indicating why the specific sections entitled
the Applicants to the relief sought.
[38]
Similarly, First Respondent’s counsel
did not refer in her Heads of Argument to any case law or statutes in
support of the
First Respondent’s opposition.
[39]
I specifically enquired from Applicants’
counsel which statute or authorities the Applicants rely on in
support of the relief
sought, and was advised that the Applicants do
not “
have
”
any specific law that they rely on, other than Section 33 of the
Constitution.
[40]
Section 33 of the Constitution relates to
just administrative action and the entitlement of every citizen to
lawful, reasonable
and procedurally fair administrative action.
Section 33 of the Constitution does not however provide a specific
basis for the relief
sought in this application, particularly in
circumstances where the Applicants are not seeking the review of the
determination
of the City of Johannesburg.
[41]
It is clear that if there was any
impropriety or error in the registration of Mr Alexander, (and
after his death, the First
Respondent) as the owner of the Immovable
Property, the registration could be set aside in terms of Section
6(1) of the Deeds Registries
Act.
[42]
The Applicants do not allege that there was
any impropriety or error in registering the Immovable Property into
the name of Mr Alexander,
thereby recording Mr Alexander as the owner
of the Immovable Property.
[43]
There are no allegations that the
Department of Housing of the City of Johannesburg, or the Department
of Regularisation and Transfer
of Ownership (ReTrO) of the City of
Johannesburg acted improperly in reaching a decision finding Mr
Alexander to be the “
most
deserving beneficiary
” and
ultimately the owner of the Immovable Property. There are simply no
factual allegations relating to the steps taken
by the relevant
Departments of the City of Johannesburg, and despite requesting
information, which was not provided, no steps were
taken by the
Applicants to compel the City of Johannesburg to provide the
information necessary to obtain a record of the proceedings,
or the
determination.
[44]
The only basis put forward by the
Applicants in support of the relief sought is that it would be just
and equitable for the registration
of the Title Deed to be cancelled
and the determination of the ownership of the Immovable Property to
be referred back to the City
of Johannesburg, on the basis of
prejudice The Applicants contend that the First Respondent’s
mother and grandmother have
accommodation, and that therefore the
First Respondent would not be prejudiced if the Immovable Property
was awarded to the Applicants,
whereas the Applicants would be
prejudiced if the Immovable Property was not awarded to them, as they
have no alternative accommodation
for the Applicants and their
extended family. This may be an aspect to be considered in the
eviction proceedings, but cannot found
a basis for the relief sought
in this Application.
[45]
In July 1998 the Conversion of Certain
Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act, Number 81 of 1988 (“the
Conversion Act”)
was promulgated, in order to provide for the
conversion of certain rights of occupation into leasehold rights.
[46]
The Conversion Act was amended by the
Development Facilitation Act, Number 67 of 1995, in order to provide
for the conversion of
certain rights of occupation not only into
leasehold rights, but also into ownership rights.
[47]
In terms of Section 2 of the Conversion
Act, as amended, the Director General of the relevant Provincial
Administration must conduct
an inquiry in order to determine who
should be granted a right of leasehold, or in the case of formalised
townships, who should
be granted ownership of immovable property.
[48]
At the conclusion of such inquiry, the
Director General will determine the grant of the leasehold or
ownership in respect of the
immovable property.
[49]
The Director General is entitled, in terms
of Section 10 of the Conversion Act, to delegate the powers conferred
upon him to an
officer in the provincial administration, or to any
person appointed for the purpose of giving effect to the Conversion
Act.
[50]
In terms of Section 9 of the Conversion Act
regulations are to be passed as to the manner of the inquiry, the
procedures to be followed
and the manner of hearing of any appeal
process.
[51]
Section 3 of the Conversion Act
specifically entitles any person aggrieved by a determination
relating to the conferring of a right
of leasehold or ownership to
appeal against that determination to the relevant administrator.
[52]
Whilst there is no reference in any of the
correspondence emanating from the City of Johannesburg to the
Conversion Act, it appears
that the Department of Regularisation and
Transfer of Ownership (ReTrO) of the City of Johannesburg was
established in order to
give effect to the Conversion Act.
[53]
It accordingly appears, in the absence of
any evidence or allegations to the contrary, that the transfer of
ownership of the Immovable
Property to Mr Alexander and the
subsequent registration of ownership of the Immovable Property into
the name of Mr Alexander with
the Registrar of Deeds was given effect
to in terms of the Conversion Act.
[54]
In
the matter of
Phasha
v Southern Metropolitan Local Council of the Greater Johannesburg
Metropolitan Council
[1]
the Court held
[2]
as follows:
“
I
am of the view that it is clear that the Conversion Act does not and
cannot limit acquisition to dominium. The very purpose of
the
Conversion Act itself is precisely to deal with rights obtained by
black persons which fell short of leasehold or ownership
and through
the mechanisms of the Act to provide for the upgrading of lesser
rights.”
[55]
It
was also held by the Court
[3]
that the Director General has a wide discretion and is empowered to
roam widely in the conduct of the Section 2(1) enquiry.
[56]
In
the matter of
Nzimandi
v Nzimandi and Another
[4]
the Court confirmed that the Director General has a wide discretion,
and specifically held that the Conversion Act was not intended
automatically to convert existing rights under the regulations into
the rights of leasehold or ownership, and the Director General,
after
having investigated a dispute, exercised a discretion in his
determination of who had acquired the right of leasehold or
ownership
in respect of the property. In reaching such determination, a variety
of factors would have to be considered.
[5]
[57]
In
the unreported matter of
Disetsane
and Others v Moganedi and Others
[6]
the Full Bench considered an appeal relating to the registration of
transfer of immovable property, in terms of which the appellant
sought an order cancelling a Title Deed, and an order directing the
Director General of the Department of Housing for the Province
of
Gauteng, to hold a hearing in terms of the Conversion Act for the
purpose of determining the rightful owner of a particular
immovable
property.
[58]
The Appeal Court set aside the registration
of the Deed of Transfer, based on Section 6 of the Deeds Registries
Act, on the basis
that there was a clear error in the transfer of the
immovable property to the respondent in that matter.
[59]
In
the unreported matter of
Ntshalintshali
and Others v Sekano and Others
[7]
an
application was launched to seek the cancellation of a Title Deed, as
well as the institution of an inquiry in terms of Section
2 of the
Conversion Act. In the
Ntshalintshali
matter there was an error in the offices of the Housing Department,
which provided the Second Respondent in that application with
an
opportunity to sell the Immovable Property.
[60]
It appears that no inquiry was held by the
Director General for the Department of Housing in the
Ntshalintshali
matter, and that in the absence of such an inquiry the registration
of the immovable property into the name of the first respondent
pursuant to the Conversion Act was null and void.
[61]
In the circumstances, the Court ordered the
cancellation of the Title Deed, and ordered the Director General to
hold a hearing in
terms of Section 2 of the Conversion Act.
[62]
The legal basis for the relief sought by
the Applicants must therefore clearly be found within the provisions
and application of
the Conversion Act.
CONDONATION
[63]
The First Respondent sought condonation for
the late filing of her Answering Affidavit.
[64]
The explanation for the late filing of the
Answering Affidavit clearly constituted good cause, and I was
satisfied that the First
Respondent should be granted condonation.
[65]
In the Replying Affidavit the Applicants
conceded that the First Respondent should be granted condonation.
THE
MERITS OF THIS APPLICATION
[66]
It appears from the allegations made in the
various affidavits, and in particular the correspondence that passed
between the Applicants
and the relevant departments of the City of
Johannesburg, that a procedure was initiated to determine the
ownership of the Immovable
Property, as a result of the dispute that
had arisen between the Applicants and Mr Alexander as to the
occupation of the Immovable
Property. It is certainly not clear from
the documentation or the affidavits what the nature of the inquiry
was, and whether or
not an inquiry was properly conducted as
envisaged by Section 2 of the Conversion Act.
[67]
It is however clear that at the conclusion
of the determination process, the relevant department of the City of
Johannesburg determined
that ownership of the Immovable Property
should be granted to Mr Alexander.
[68]
The Applicants’ complaint appears to
relate not to the manner of the determination process, or whether
there was compliance
with the Conversion Act, but rather the
determination itself, on the basis that the determination was not
just and equitable.
[69]
In the absence of the details of the
inquiry process, I am unable to conclude that no inquiry or a
deficient inquiry was held.
[70]
As set out above, the Applicants contend
that they will suffer prejudice if they (and their family) are not
granted a right to occupy
the Immovable Property. The Applicants
contend that the First Respondent will not suffer prejudice as she
can reside with her mother.
[71]
The First Respondent pointed out that she
has two minor children, and that she, her spouse and her two minor
children cannot reside
with her mother. It is clear that the First
Respondent will suffer prejudice if she is prevented from exercising
her right of ownership.
[72]
Even having regard only to the allegations
made by the Applicants, I am of the view that no proper basis has
been set out to justify
the granting of the relief as sought.
[73]
Whilst the Courts naturally have sympathy
with the dilemma facing the Applicants (and all other citizens of the
Republic of South
Africa) in respect of accommodation and residential
difficulties, the merits of the Applicants’ case are
insufficient to
justify the granting of the relief sought.
THE
ORDER
[74]
In the circumstances, I make the following
order:
[74.1]
The late filing of the First Respondent’s Answering
Affidavit
is condoned.
[74.2]
The Application is dismissed.
[74.3]
The Applicants are to pay the costs of the Application.
G
NEL
[Acting
Judge of the High Court,
Gauteng
Local Division,
Johannesburg]
Date
of Judgment:
13 January 2022
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Mr M W Sekgatja
Instructed
by:
Sekgatja Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv E Liebenberg
Instructed
by
Coetzee Attorneys
[1]
2000
(2) SA 455 (W).
[2]
At
479A-B.
[3]
At
478D-E.
[4]
2005
(1) SA 83 (W).
[5]
At
paragraphs 66 and 67.
[6]
Case
No. A910/2012 GD (Pretoria) 27 August 2014.
[7]
Unreported
judgment, case number 2014/31317 Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg.
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