Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 70South Africa
Huma v Kruger N.O. and Others (39164/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 70 (16 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 February 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Opposed application – final interdictory relief or claim for damages. Section 2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981 – oral agreement to re-acquire immovable property of no force or effect – no legal basis for the relief claimed – applicant’s cause of action not supported by the provisions of the said section – application refused –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Huma v Kruger N.O. and Others (39164/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 70 (16 February 2022)
Huma v Kruger N.O. and Others (39164/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 70 (16 February 2022)
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sino date 16 February 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
39164/2020
DATE
:
16
th
February 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
HUMA
,
BOITUMELO
Applicant
and
KRUGER
,
STEPHAN N O,
In his official capacity
as duly appointed
Executor in the Deceased
Estate:
HUMA
,
AUDREY
First Respondent
SA
HOME LOANS (PTY)
LIMITED
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
23 November 2021 – The matter was disposed of without an
oral
hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
16 February 2022 – This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
system and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 11:00 on 16 February 2022.
Summary:
Opposed application – final interdictory relief or
claim for damages. S
ection 2(1) of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
–
oral agreement to re-acquire immovable property of no force or effect
–
no legal basis for the relief claimed –
applicant’s cause of action not supported by the provisions of
the said section
– application refused –
ORDER
(1)
The applicant’s application against the first and second
respondents
is dismissed with costs.
(2)
The applicant, when required to do so by the first respondent’s
attorneys, shall sign any and/or all of the necessary documentation
required for the registration of the transfer of the property,
being
Erf [....], Zakariyya Park Extension 4
Township, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng Province, measuring 428
square meters, (‘the
property’), into the name of t
he
estate late Audrey Huma, Estate number [....].
(3)
Failing such signature by the applicant on request, the Sheriff of
this
Court for the district of Johannesburg North, be and is hereby
authorised and directed to sign all such documentation, on behalf
of
the applicant.
(4)
The applicant shall pay the first respondent’s costs of this
opposed
application.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
This is an opposed application by the
applicant for interdictory relief against the first and second
respondents in relation to
his alleged ownership of immovable
property in Zakariyya Park, Johannesburg (‘the property’).
The first respondent
acts herein in his official capacity as the duly
appointed Executor in the deceased estate of the late Audrey Huma,
who, according
to the first respondent, is the true owner of the
property, the full Deeds Office description of which is: Erf [....],
Zakariyya
Park Extension 4 Township, measuring 428 square meters,
Registration Division IQ, Gauteng Province. The said property is at
present
and has been at all times material hereto registered in the
name of the applicant. The second respondent is the bondholder in
respect
of the property, but the bond is presently paid up, which
probably explains why the second respondent, although the application
appears to have been properly served on it, plays no part in this
litigation.
[2].
The particular relief prayed for by the
applicant in his notice of motion is that the first and second
respondents be interdicted
and restrained from selling the property.
In the alternative, the applicant applies for damages against these
respondents and claims
from them the amount of R120 810, which
the applicant alleges represents the amounts paid by him on the bond
account, pursuant
to an alleged agreement reached between him and the
deceased shortly before her death on 9 June 2018. Further
alternatively, the
applicant prays for an order that he be granted
the right of first refusal to purchase the property. The latter
prayer I can give
short thrift to in that, howsoever one views the
applicant’s case, no cause of action, whether in contract or
otherwise,
is made out. The applicant’s claim for that relief
therefore stands to be dismissed without further ado.
[3].
The issue to be decided in this
application is simply whether the applicant has been able to
demonstrate that he holds ownership
rights in the property, entitling
him to the final interdictory relief claimed by him. This requires me
to try the facts in the
matter, but, more importantly, I am required
to adjudicate the sustainability, from a legal point of view, of the
applicant’s
cause of action.
[4].
These
issues are to be decided against the factual backdrop as set out in
the paragraphs which follow. For the most part, the important
facts
are common cause. Where there are factual disputes, my inclination is
to go along with the first respondent’s version
on the basis of
the
Plascon
Evans
[1]
rule. Moreover, the applicant had not filed a replying affidavit,
which means that whatever the first respondent averred in his
answering affidavit I have to accept as fact. And, as contended in
his written Heads of Argument by Mr Govender, who represents
the
first respondent in this application, it appears that the applicant
is being opportunistic as ‘Ms Huma is not here to
speak for
herself’.
[5].
As already indicated, the applicant
alleges that a verbal agreement was entered into during April 2018
between himself and the deceased,
in terms of which the deceased had
handed back to him the property and all rights in and to the said
property, including the rights
to occupy and use same. He was also
required, pursuant to this verbal agreement, to take over any and all
responsibilities relating
to the property, including the payment of
the monthly instalments on the mortgage bond, which, so the applicant
claims, had by
then fallen into arrears.
[6].
It bears emphasising that this agreement
in terms of which the deceased had ostensibly agreed to hand over to
the applicant, on
a silver platter, any and all of her rights in and
to the property in question, was never reduced to writing. What was
however
reduced to writing is an agreement of settlement concluded
between the applicant and the deceased on 24 November 2008 when they
got divorced from each other by a decree of the Johannesburg Central
Divorce Court. Before their divorce on 24 November 2008, the
applicant and the deceased were married to each other in community of
property and the property in question formed part of their
community
estate, although it was registered only in the name of the applicant,
as is still the case to date. All of the aforegoing
is common cause
between the parties. What is more is that the agreement of settlement
was also made an Order of Court, which order
remains extant as we
speak. In terms of the said agreement of settlement, which, as
indicated, was made an order of Court, the
deceased was ‘to
retain’ the property, which she then did, although she never
had it registered into her name.
[7].
It is therefore common cause between the
parties that up to about 2018, the deceased was the owner of the
property and had since
2008 been entitled to have the said property
transferred into her name. This was however never done for reasons
which are not altogether
clear from the papers. The only dispute
between the parties is therefore whether such ownership of the
property was transferred
to the applicant, as alleged by him, during
April 2018.
[8].
The first difficulty faced by the
applicant is
s 2(1)
of the
Alienation of
Land Act, Act
68 of 1981, which provides as follows:
‘
2
Formalities in respect of alienation of land
(1)
No alienation of land after the
commencement of this section shall, subject to the provisions of
section 28
, be of any force or effect unless it is contained in a
deed of alienation signed by the parties thereto or by their agents
acting
on their written authority’.
[9].
The oral agreement, as alleged by the
applicant, is therefore of no force or effect.
[10].
That, in my view, is the end of the
applicant’s application.
[11].
The applicant, however, argues that the
aforegoing section does not find application
in
casu
in view of the fact that, as
things stand, the property is presently still registered in his name.
There is no merit in this argument.
The simple common cause fact of
the matter is that the deceased is the true owner of the property and
can at any time insist on
transfer of same into her name. The fact
that the property is not presently registered in her name is
irrelevant. The only way
in which her status as the owner of the
property can be changed is by compliance with the provisions of
s
2(1).
[12].
The
applicant also submits that the alleged oral agreement between him
and the deceased was entered into freely and voluntarily.
The terms
thereof, so the applicant contends, are not immoral, illegal or
contrary to public interest, and therefore it should
be upheld and
enforced. In my view, this argument lacks merit. The particular
provision, which imposes strict formalities in respect
of the
alienation of immovable property, fair or unfair as it may be
perceived to be, is the law as things stand at present. It
has not
been held to be unconstitutional or, as contended by the applicant,
contra
bonis mores
.
There is a very good reason for its existence as part of our law,
that being certainty in respect of dealings involving immovable
property. So, in my view, it cannot possibly be suggested that the
particular provision should be struck down as being against
public
policy. As was held by the SCA in
Exdev
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Pekudei Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2]
at para 1:
‘
[1]
Section 2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
, which visits
nullity upon a sale of immovable property, “unless it is
contained in a deed of alienation signed by the parties
thereto or by
their agents acting on their written authority”,
was
designed to promote certainty, and to avoid disputes, litigation and
possible malpractice
. Unfortunately,
history has proved it to be fertile ground for litigation, the law
reports being replete with decisions concerning
the validity of deeds
of sale of land. Consequently, it has been remarked that the section
has failed to achieve its objectives,
and it has indeed correctly
been observed that, reading between the lines, the section is often
abused, in particular “by
unscrupulous sellers who regret
having sold the property at the price they did and then try to
rescind the contract because of
non-compliance with the technical
formality requirements of the Act”. This comment is not without
substance, but it may be
somewhat unfair. Human nature being what it
is, there may well have been many more disputes arising out of the
sale of land, had
no formalities been required, and, as Innes J
observed in
Wilken v Kohler
1913 AD 135
at 142, whether such a provision 'does not create as
great hardships as it prevents, is a matter upon which opinions may
well differ”.’
(My emphasis).
[13].
The aforegoing applies equally to the
further argument raised on behalf of the applicant that the verbal
agreement entered into
between him and the deceased met the
requirements for a contract and, therefore,
pacta
sunt servanda
. This principle plays
second fiddle to
s 2(1)
, which is underpinned by and designed to
promote certainty.
[14].
The applicant furthermore argues that his
case is not based on the sale and/or the purchase of the property and
therefore
s 2(1)
does not apply. His cause of action, so the
applicant contends, is an enforcement of a binding oral agreement in
terms of which
the deceased offered him to take over the property and
its risks including the payment of the bond from April 2018. There
was no
need for the deed of alienation, so it was argued by the
applicant, to be reduced to writing because the property was still in
the name of the applicant. This argument is self-defeating. If the
property, which everyone agree is presently owned by the deceased,
was not re-acquired by the applicant, then his case for the
interdictory relief falls flat as he would then have no right to have
the property remain registered in his name.
[15].
In sum, the applicant’s application
for an interdict should fail as being bad in law.
[16].
As regards the claim for damages against
the first and second respondents, there are a number of difficulties
with the applicant’s
case. As already indicated, if the alleged
oral agreement is, as has been found by the Court, of no force and
effect, then the
applicant cannot claim damages for breach of
contract. Furthermore, the applicant falls horribly short in proving
the amount of
his alleged damages. In fact, he gives no indication of
how this amount is arrived at. So, for example, he does not provide
the
court with a schedule of the payments made by him to the second
respondent from April 2018 to April 2020. Even more instructive
is
the fact that no proof of such payments are provided.
[17].
A further issue left in the air by the
applicant in his supposed damages claim is whether or not he received
any benefit and, if
so, what the value of such benefit is. In other
words, in calculating his damages, did the applicant take into
account the fact
that for the period between April 2018 and April
2020, and subsequently, he was in occupation of the property? Surely,
if the applicant
has a damages claim against either the first or the
second respondent, or, for that matter, a claim for unjust
enrichment, that
consideration would reduce the amount of his damages
quite dramatically. This is so especially since the applicant has now
been
in occupation of the property rent-free for an additional twenty
months or so.
[18].
The claim for damages therefore stands to
be dismissed.
[19].
In conclusion, I need to deal with first
respondent’s request that, in addition to dismissing the
applicant’s application,
I should also compel him to give his
cooperation in ensuring that the property is registered into the name
of the estate late of
the deceased. I am satisfied that, in his
papers before me, the first respondent has made out a case for such
an order, which,
would, in any event be based on a previous court
order of the Johannesburg Central Divorce Court. I therefore intend
granting such
an order.
Costs
[20].
The general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party
should be given her or his
costs, and this rule should not be
departed from except where there are good grounds for doing so.
[21].
In casu
, I can think of no reason why I should deviate from
this general rule and I therefore intend granting costs in favour of
the first
respondent against the applicant.
Order
[22].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The applicant’s application against the first and second
respondents
is dismissed with costs,
(2)
The applicant, when required to do so by the first respondent’s
attorneys, shall sign any and/or all of the necessary documentation
required for the registration of the transfer of the property,
being
Erf [....], Zakariyya Park Extension 4
Township, Registration Division IQ, Gauteng Province, measuring 428
square meters, (‘the
property’), into the name of t
he
estate late Audrey Huma, Estate number [....].
(3)
Failing such signature by the applicant on request, the Sheriff
of this Court for the district of Johannesburg North, be and is
hereby authorised to sign all such documentation, on behalf of the
applicant.
(4)
The applicant shall pay the first respondent’s costs of this
opposed
application.
_________________________________
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
23
rd
November 2021 –
The matter
was disposed of without an oral hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
JUDGMENT
DATE:
16
th
February 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
Advocate
Fumisa Ngqela
Cell no
: (081) 524 9100
Email
:
fumisa@ngqela.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY:
P M Suping Attorneys
Cell no
: (074) 201 2025
Email
:
molatlhego@pmsupingattorneys.co.za
FOR
THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
Advocate Teniele Govender
Cell no
: (082) 505 8506
Email
:
tgovender@law.co.za;
INSTRUCTED
BY:
David C Feldman Attorneys
Cell no
: (011) 482 2255
Email
:
d.ramushu@feldlaw.co.za
FOR
THE SECOND, THIRD
AND
FOURTH
RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No appearance
[1]
Plascon-Evans
v Van Riebeeck Paints
1984 (3) 623 (AD).
[2]
Exdev
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Pekudei Investments (Pty) Ltd
2011
(2) SA 282
(SCA).
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