Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 248South Africa
Properties in Motion (Pty) Ltd v Lunkanga and Others (2021/9110) [2022] ZAGPJHC 248 (22 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 April 2022
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Properties in Motion (Pty) Ltd v Lunkanga and Others (2021/9110) [2022] ZAGPJHC 248 (22 April 2022)
Properties in Motion (Pty) Ltd v Lunkanga and Others (2021/9110) [2022] ZAGPJHC 248 (22 April 2022)
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sino date 22 April 2022
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.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2021/9110
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED
YES
22
April 2022
In
the matter between:
PROPERTIES
IN MOTION (PTY) LTD
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2015/419321/07)
Applicant
and
A
PERSON KNOWN AS MR LUNKANGA
First Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF
ERF
[....] SOUTH HILLS EXTENSION 1
Second Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
Heard:
26 January 2022
Judgment:
22 April 2022
JUDGMENT
MOVSHOVICH
AJ:
Introduction
and background facts
1.
This is an application for the eviction of
Lukanga Mukinda and any other occupants (including his family)
(collectively, "
the respondents
")
from a property described as Erf [....] South Hills Extension 1
Township, Registration Division IR, Gauteng situated at
38 Amalia
Street, South Hills Extension 1, Johannesburg South, 2197 ("
the
property
").
2.
The applicant was legally represented; the
respondents were not. The first respondent spoke on their behalf at
the hearing.
3.
The applicant seeks an eviction on the
basis that it is the owner of the property and it has validly
terminated any right of occupation
on the part of the respondents
prior to launching the eviction application.
4.
I sketch out only the essential facts.
5.
In 2017, the first respondent (as lessee)
entered into a lease of indefinite duration with a certain Mr Dawid H
Jeremiah van der
Lith (as lessor) in relation to the property ("
the
lease
"). The rental payable in
terms of that lease was R2,500.00 per month. It is unclear whether Mr
Van Der Lith was entering into
the agreement in his own right or as
agent for another party, such as the property's owner, who at that
stage appears to have been
Ramos Family Properties CC ("
Ramos
Properties
"). The respondents
appear to have remained in occupation of the property to date (on
their version pursuant to the lease).
6.
On 14 August 2020, Ramos Properties entered
into an agreement to sell the property to the applicant ("
the
sale agreement
"). The applicant
alleged in its founding papers that in terms of the sale agreement,
the risks and profit in relation to the
property would pass to the
applicant upon signature of the sale agreement. The lease
acknowledged that there were occupants on
the property.
7.
On
26 October 2020, representatives of the applicant sought to engage
with the respondents in person in respect of a possible
"normalisation"
[1]
of
the respondents' tenancy of the property (as the applicant termed it
in the founding papers). When those efforts were rebuffed,
the
applicant engaged attorneys, who sent two letters on behalf of the
applicant to the respondents.
8.
In the first letter, on 13 November 2020,
the applicant recorded that the respondents' right of occupation
arose "
by, through and under the
previous owners of the property
"
and, as the applicant purchased the property, the huur gaat voor koop
principle applied. It then called on the respondents
to "
engage
"
with the applicant "
to make
arrangements in respect of your tenancy
"
by 16 November 2020, "
failing which
we will consider this a repudiation of your agreement of lease. [The
applicant] will accept this repudiation and demand
that you vacate
the unit immediately.
"
9.
Given the lack of engagement on the part of
the respondents, on 20 November 2020, the applicants' attorney sent a
further letter
on the applicants' behalf, purporting to cancel any
right of occupation of the respondents on the basis of the
respondents' repudiation.
10.
On 14 December 2020, the transfer of
ownership of the property from Ramos Properties to the applicant was
registered in the Deeds
Registry.
11.
The eviction application was launched on 24
February 2021.
The issues between
the parties
12.
The applicant contends that it took over
the lease (and any other agreement of occupation) from the erstwhile
owner by virtue of
the
huur gaat voor
koop
principle and was exercising its
rights under that principle and as owner vis-à-vis the
respondents. It avers that it followed
all necessary processes to
cancel the right of occupation and is entitled as owner to seek the
respondents' eviction.
13.
The respondents, on the other hand, contest
the claim to ownership on the part of the applicant, deny that the
applicant has or
had a right to evict them and, in any event, contend
that an eviction will render them homeless contrary to constitutional
and
statutory prescripts.
14.
It
is common cause on the pleadings that the respondents had some right
of occupation (probably as tenant) prior to the events of
October and
November 2020. The first key question is thus whether the right to
occupation was lawfully terminated. The applicant
bears the onus to
prove that the right of occupation was lawfully, clearly and
unequivocally cancelled.
[2]
15.
If the above is established, the question
is whether an order for eviction should issue and, if so, on what
terms, having regard
to all the relevant factors, including the
personal circumstances of the respondents.
Analysis
16.
The applicants' case for eviction is based
squarely on its rights as owner and any rights and obligations which
accrue to it by
virtue of the
huur gaat
voor koop
principle. In this particular
case, the applicant effectively sought to act as landlord prior to
the transfer of ownership of the
property. It took the steps to place
the respondents in default and to cancel their right of occupation
prior to 14 December 2020.
It did so in its own name and not as agent
for or on behalf of the then owner, Ramos Properties. The applicant
contends that it
was entitled to do so by virtue of the
huur
gaat voor koop
principle.
17.
It is thus necessary to determine the
proper scope of the principle. The Appellate Division in
Genna-Wae
held as follows:
"Accordingly,
I hold that in terms of our law the alienation of leased property
consisting of land or buildings in pursuance
of a contract of sale
does not bring the lease to an end. The purchaser (new owner) is
substituted ex lege for the original lessor
and the latter falls out
of the picture. On being so substituted, the new owner acquires by
operation of the law all the rights
and obligations of the original
lessor under the lease".
[3]
18.
The above does not expressly answer the
question as to when the
huur gaat voor
koop
principle becomes effective, but
in my view, it is clear from the above quotation and the earlier
authorities on which the Appellate
Division relied that the rights
and obligations under the relevant lease agreement only transfer
pursuant to the principle upon
the change of ownership. Thus, while
the principle refers in its language to the personal rights and
contracts (lease, being
huur
)
and (purchase, being
koop
),
it becomes operative upon the "
alienation
"
of property and the substitution of the purchaser for the seller as
landlord only occurs when the purchaser becomes the "
new
owner
". In the case of fixed
property in South African law, that occurs on the date of
registration of transfer in the Deeds Registry.
Prior to that date,
it is only the seller who may exercise the rights associated with the
lease agreement and ownership. If a notice
of default is to be sent,
the seller (or someone acting on its behalf) must do so. The
purchaser has no standing until the date
of transfer.
19.
Indeed,
were it otherwise, anomalies could eventuate. The transfer of
property does not become final until registration. Thus, anything
could happen until that time to upend the transaction and the sale
may never be finalised or implemented. It would be peculiar
were the
purchaser to exercise rights under a lease for an interim period for
those rights to revert to the seller simply
ex
lege
.
Such a construction would in any event undermine the requirements of
legal certainty, a central tenet of the rule of law.
[4]
It would be difficult for lessees to know the identity of their
landlord, as this would depend on the personal (and potentially
confidential) transactions between seller and purchaser, and the
implementation thereof, rather than on a public, known and accessible
act of registration of ownership.
20.
I note that the applicant has not sought to
rely in its pleadings on any specific terms of the sale agreement to
invest itself with
rights which it would otherwise not have in terms
of the
huur gaat voor koop
principle. The only provision it cited is that the sale agreement
envisaged the applicant assuming the risk in and profit of the
property from the signature date of the sale agreement. Such a
provision in itself would not, in my view, confer any additional
rights of action relevant in this matter and did not confer on the
applicant the rights and obligations of landlord over the
respondents.
Moreover, even if the parties to the sale agreement
sought to confer such rights and obligations on the applicant prior
to transfer
by agreement, it is unclear that this could be achieved
without the respondents' informed consent (after the contents of sale
agreement
were communicated to the respondents). Certainly,
obligations could not be transferred without consent, and it is
difficult to
see how concomitant rights could be either. But I need
not come to a final view on this given that this was not part of the
pleaded
case.
21.
In all the circumstances, the applicant has
not established that it lawfully, clearly and unambiguously
terminated the respondents'
right of occupation and the eviction
application must fail on this basis alone. This renders it
unnecessary to consider any other
requirements or issues.
Costs
22.
I see no reason why the costs should not
follow the result in this case. Of course, adverse costs may be
limited given that the
respondents were self-represented.
Order
23.
I thus make the following order:
23.1
the application is dismissed with costs.
Hand-down
and date of judgment
24.
This judgment is handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties or their legal representatives by email
and by uploading
the judgment onto Caselines. The date and time for
hand down of the judgment are deemed to be 10:00 on 22 April 2022.
VM
MOVSHOVICH
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Applicant's
Counsel:
L Peter
Applicant's
Attorneys:
Vermaak Marshall Wellbeloved
Inc.
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents: Lukanga
Mukinda (in person, and representing the second respondent)
Date
of Hearing:
26 January 2022
Date
of Judgment:
22
April 2022
[1]
The
applicant wrote that it wanted to "
normalise
"
the leasing arrangements.
[2]
Davidan
v Polovin NO
[2021]
4 All SA 37
(SCA), para [23];
Thepanyega
NO v Letsoalo
[2022] ZASCA 30
(24 March 2022), paras [9] and [10].
[3]
Genna-Wae
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Medio-Tronics (Natal) (Pty) Ltd
1995
(2) SA 926 (A), 939.
[4]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC), para [1];
Public
Servants Association obo Ubogu v Head of Department of Health,
Gauteng and Others
2018 (2) SA 365
(CC), para [50]; and
Gcaba
v Minister for Safety and Security and Others
2010 1 SA 238
(CC), para [62].
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