Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 453South Africa
Baladkis N.O and Others v Jenzen and Another (8334/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 453 (4 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Baladkis N.O and Others v Jenzen and Another (8334/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 453 (4 July 2022)
Baladkis N.O and Others v Jenzen and Another (8334/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 453 (4 July 2022)
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sino date 4 July 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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FLYNOTES:
FRAUDULENT
CLEARANCE CERTIFICATE
Property
– Municipal account – Agreement for sale of immovable
– Fraudulent clearance certificate –
Amounts still
owing to municipality – Dispute between seller and
municipality – Purchaser the innocent party
–
Municipality ordered to open account for purchaser.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 8334/2021
REPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
4
July 2022
In
the matter between:
DEMETRIOS
BALADAKIS N.O.
First
Applicant
THERESA
BALADAKIS N.O.
Second
Applicant
ANDREW
NICHOLAS LAMBRIANOS N.O.
Third
Applicant
JOHN-DEMETRIOS
BALADAKIS N.O.
Fourth
Applicant
And
KEVYN
GLYNN JENZEN
First
Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1]
The four Applicants are the duly authorised Trustees of trust the IVB
Trust No IT002236/2019(G)
(The Trust).
[2]
During or about the year 2019 the Trust concluded in a Deed of Sale
with the first
Respondent in terms of which the Trust acquired
certain immovable property situated at [....] C [....] S [....]
1 S [....]
2 described as the remaining extent of Erf [....]
Township, St Andrews (the Property) for an amount of R3.6milion (the
Purchase
price).
[3]
The property was acquired voetstoots which required the Applicants to
spend considerable
amounts of money to make it habitable. The
property is situated within the Local Municipality of Ekurhuleni.
[4]
It was a term of the Agreement of Sale that the first Respondent
would make payment
of additional costs being bond cancellation fees,
clearance certificate and outstanding rates and taxes as well as
water and electricity
due to the Local Authority.
[5]
It was a further term of the agreement that on taking occupation of
the property the
first Respondent would see to it that the Applicant
is provided with a valid electrical certificate of compliance.
[6]
On the 7
th
December 2019 the Applicants paid the full
purchase price of R3 650 000.00 for the property. Shortly thereafter
Applicant took
occupation and commenced with extensive repairs to the
property. Applicants also engaged a security firm to watch over the
property
and prevent it from being vandalised.
[7]
During or about January 2020 the Applicant received notices of
electricity disconnection
issued by the second Respondent in respect
of the property t unless payment is made to it in the sum of
R52 889.85. Applicant
duly informed the Estate Agent one Melanie
Davids who informed the Applicant that the first Respondent was aware
of the arrears
but was disputing same
[8]
On the 12
th
March 2020 the Applicant paid to Ms Davids the
Agent/Conveyancer transfer costs and transfer duties in the amount of
R234 859.50.
[9]
A new set of Attorneys namely DJ Nkosi Attorneys of Kempton Park came
into the picture
and on the 29
th
July 2020 the property
was transferred into the name of the Trust as the purchaser. Shortly
thereafter the first Applicant who
at all times represented the Trust
attended at the offices of the second Respondent with the intention
to change the services account
being for rates, taxes, levies as well
as electricity from that of the Seller to the Trust. The request was
refused. First Applicant
was informed that there was still an amount
owing to Ekurhuleni Municipality.
[10]
When first Applicant produced the clearance certificate that was
presented by DJ Nkosi Attorneys
for purposes of transfer he was told
that the clearance certificate was a fraud and not valid.
[11]
On the 8
th
October 2020 Applicant’s attorneys
addressed a letter to DJ Nkosi Attorneys, Melanie David Inc. in which
they informed them
that Mr Jenzen the seller had breached the
Agreement of sale in that he did not pay the amount of R678 992.00
owing to the
Municipality. They informed them further that the City
of Ekurhuleni informed them that the clearance certificate was
fraudulently
obtained.
[12]
DJ Nkosi attorneys responded and distanced themselves from the
acquisition of the fraudulent
clearance certificate. They maintained
that all documents were delivered to them by the first Respondent and
all that they did
was to act as middlemen. On the 9
th
October 2020 a day after the previous letter DJ Nkosi addressed
another letter to Applicant attorneys and this time they said that
they received a call on the 4
th
June 2020 from Mashoeshoe
Attorneys of Kempton Park who referred the first Respondent to them
[13]
On the 13
th
October 2020 Melanie Davids respondent to the
fraud allegations denying any involvement. The second Respondent
filed an Opposing
Affidavit in which they allege that since the
clearance certificate was fraudulently obtained transfer of the
property is a nullity.
As a result, the second Respondent cannot be
forced to open a new account in the name of the Applicant until the
amount of R1million
outstanding is paid.
[14]
Mr Davey Frank the deponent to the second Respondent’s Opposing
Affidavit informed the
Court that the lady by the name of Fully Tsebe
whose name appears on the clearance certificate had left the
employment of the City
Council 2 years prior to the date of the
issuing of the clearance certificate.
[15]
The first Respondent filed his Answering Affidavit and laid out his
basis of opposition as follows:
i)
That he disputes that he owes any arrears on the property to enable
the second Respondent to issue a clearance certificate.
ii)
He raised the issue of incorrect billing by the Municipality in
respect of the property.
iii)
He disputes that the clearance certificate was fraudulently issued.
He continued to pile an attack on the statements of account
issued
and says that the billing was incorrect. He says that the bill from
the year 2019 is an absolute confusion.
[16]
In his Opposing Affidavit Mr Davey Frank for the second Respondent
says that the only interest
that the second Respondent has in this
matter is to see to it that the first Respondent settles arrears in
respect of the property
and that once that shall have been done a
valid rate clearance certificate shall be issued and a service
account in the name of
the purchaser viz the Applicant Trust shall be
opened.
[17]
The first Respondent says that he did not commit any fraud in respect
of the property. The second
Respondent has filed a counter claim in
which it seeks an order nullifying and setting aside clearance
certificate number 86814
POINT
IN LIMINE AGAINST THE FIRST RESPONDENT
[18]
The Applicant has raised two points in
limine
against the
first Respondent the first being that the first Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit was filed six days out of time
without any
application for condonation. Applicant requests this Court not to
exercise its discretion to condone non-compliance.
[19]
It is trite law that it is the trial Court which has a discretion
whether to admit a late affidavit
or not, and in exercising that
discretion the overriding factor that ought to be considered is the
question of prejudice.
[20]
In this matter the first Respondent’s Affidavit was filed six
days later to which the Applicant
fully replied. The Applicant has
not shown why they would be prejudiced if the matter is heard with me
taking the first Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit into
consideration. All the papers were placed before me and the matter
was ready to be heard. As Wepener J
said in
Pangbourne Properties
v Pulse Moving
2013 (3) SA 140
page 148F
“
To
uphold the argument that the Replying Affidavit and consequently the
answering affidavit fall to be disregarded because they
were filed
out of time will be too formalistic and an exercise in futility and
will leave the parties to commence the same proceedings
on the same
facts
de novo
.”
[21]
In the result the late filing of the first Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit is hereby condoned
and the point in
limine
is dismissed.
SECOND
POINT IN LIMINE
[22]
The second point in
limine
attacks the validity of the
affidavit dealt with above on the basis that it was not properly
oathed before a commissioner of oaths
in accordance with the Justice
of Peace and Commissioner of Oath Act 16 of 1963 read with the
regulations.
[23]
I have already admitted this affidavit when I dealt with issues of
condonation above. It will
serve no purpose for this Court to now
find that there is no affidavit.
[24]
Erasmus in Superior Court Practice second edition at page D1 –
53 quoting from the decision
of
Goodwoood Municipality v Rabie
1954 (2) SA 404
(C)
and says the following:
“
An
affidavit is a statement in writing sworn to before someone who has
authority to administer the oath, it is a solemn assurance
of facts
known to the person who states it and sworn to as his statement
before someone in authority such a Magistrate, Justice
of the peace,
Commission of the Court or Commission of Oath.”
[25]
It would appear that the aspect that the Applicant takes an issue
with is the fact that the person
who administered the oath did not
print his full name business and address as is required by Regulation
4(2).
[26]
I do not see how that defect can result in the statement made by the
first Respondent to be invalid.
After all there are people who
testify verbally in Court and decline to take an oath because of
their religious beliefs that does
not water down their evidence.
[27]
The Court in Goodwood Municipality expressed itself in the following
words at page 406 –
G:
“
Die
is die vereistes van die wet wat nagekom moet word. As ons nadaardie
dokument kyk, dan is daar ‘n dokument; dit lui “beedigde
verklaring”dit is ‘n verklaring; dit is onderteken deur
die twee verklaarders en hulle word beskrywe as die deponente,
dit is
mense volgens ons praktyk wat skriftelik getuinis gee. So word hulle
ook beskrywe deur die kommisaris van Ede. Die deponente
verklaar dat
hulle die inhoud van hierdie verklaring ten volle begryp en verstaan
Dus aan die vereistes van die seksie wat ek nou
gelees het stiptelik
voldoen. Dan eindig dit, wat betref die “manner of attestation”
Beedig voor my op die 10e dag
van November 1953” Myns insiens
is dit heeltemaal duidelik dat daar geen beswaar geneem kan word teen
di aansoek op grond,
dat dit nie vergesel is deur ‘n behoolike
beedigde verklaring.”
[28]
In the result the objection to the first Respondent’s affidavit
is also dismissed.
POINTS
IN LIMINE IN RESPECT OF THE SECOND RESPONDENT
[29]
The first such issue of objection is similar to
the one dealt with above about the administration of the
oath not
being in compliance with the Act and the regulations. My conclusion
is similar to the reasons advanced above and I dismiss
the objection.
[30]
This is similarly followed by an objection to the fact that Mr Davey
Frank in the affidavit has
not indicated how he knows of the facts he
is deposing to. It is argued by the Applicant that Mr Davey Frank
deposed to hearsay
evidence. This objection is technical and not
worth dealing with. The affidavit is before me.
[31]
In the counter application to the main application Mr Davey Frank
says the following at paragraph
1
“
I
am an adult male employed by the Applicant as a Division Head:
Specialised Legal Drafting and SCM Support. I am duly authorised
to
depose to this affidavit on behalf of the Applicant and also as a
deponent to the main application on behalf of the Applicant
who is
the second Respondent herein. Attached as proof thereof is a
resolution marked “CA1”.”
[32]
I am satisfied that the second objection is also without merit and it
is accordingly dismissed.
THE
APPLICATIONS BEFORE THIS COURT
[33]
The first application before this court is the main application in
which the Applicant seeks
certain relief against the Municipality to
enable them to have full use and access to the property they
purchased from the first
Respondent.
[34]
The Applicant maintains that they have complied fully with the terms
of the agreement of sale
between them and the first Respondent and
that the transfer of the property to them has taken place legally.
Applicants assert
that they played no part in the acquisition of any
fraudulent document for purposes of transfer.
[35]
The second Application is the counterclaim by the Municipality the
second Respondent who seek
an order setting aside clearance
certificate number 86814 obtained by the Seller Mr Jenzen (first
Respondent) in the main application)
which clearance certificate
Jenzen handed to his transferring attorneys DJ Nkosi for purposes of
transferring the property from
Jenzen to the Applicant. In
addition, the Municipality seeks an order to the effect that the
first Respondent owes it money
in respect of the property.
THE
CLEARANCE CERTIFICATE 86814
[36]
The central issue in this matter is not so much the sale agreement it
is the clearance certificate
purportedly issued by the second
Respondent and used by the conveyancer DJ Nkosi to transfer the
property. This is a certificate
issued in terms of Section 118
of the Local Government Municipal System Act 32 of 2020.
[37]
That clearance certificate which is dated 15 June 2020 records as
follows:
“
This
is to certify that all the amounts due in terms of Section 118 (1) of
the Local Government Municipal System Act 32 of 2000
payable to
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality in respect of the land or the
right in land described hereunder have been paid
in full.”
[38]
The second Respondent maintains that the clearance certificate is not
authentic and was issued
fraudulently firstly because it purports to
have been signed by an employee who had long left the employment of
the City prior
to the date of issue of the certificate. Secondly it
is also said that the first Respondent did not pay the amount due to
enable
the City to issue a clearance certificate.
[39]
It is common cause that the seller namely the first Respondent does
not dispute that he did not
pay the amount of money that the second
Respondent says it is owing to it. The first Respondent says that he
played no part in
the issuing of the certificate. In paragraph 20 of
his Answering Affidavit Mr Jenzen the first Respondent says the
following:
“
I
have never personally attended at the second Respondent’s
offices in my life but I did however make calls to various people
at
the Municipality trying to explain that there were huge credits due
on the account and they should please attend to the adjustments,
and
stemming from that alone the certificate was issued.”
[40]
That statement in my view is loaded and its reliability will have to
be tested in another Court.
This Court is not in a position to
declare that the clearance certificate was in fact fraudulent for
reasons that will appear hereunder.
Neither is this Court saying that
the certificate was valid.
[41]
The attorneys both Melanie Davids and DJ Nkosi will have to be called
to explain what part they
played in the acquisition of that clearance
certificate. It is to be noted regrettably that both now blame each
other. This dispute
amongst the two sets of attorneys and their
client the seller should and can never be used as a valid reason to
question the transfer
of the property.
[42]
The Deed Registry Act 47 of 1937 assigns onerous responsibilities to
conveyancers. It is imperative
that conveyancers are meticulous and
methodical in the collecting and studying of information and
supporting documentation. The
duty to obtain accurate facts and to
process correctly a conveyancing transaction is assigned to the
conveyancer by the Deeds Registry
Act and Regulations especially
Section 15, 15A and Regulation 43, 44 and 44A.
[43]
The fraudulent act was discovered by the second Respondent’s
officials early in the year
2020 when the first Applicant approached
it to process its rates and taxes service certificate and yet up to
now the second Respondent
has done nothing to investigate that fraud
and to appraise this Court of its findings.
[44]
The clearance certificate is issued on the letter head of the
Municipality Ekurhuleni and also
stamped. This has not been disputed.
The signature is that of a person who according to them is no longer
in their employment and
yet no criminal charges of fraud have been
laid against that person to enable the police to investigate.
[45]
Lastly the Municipality has not taken any legal action in terms of
their credit regulation to
recover the money that it says the seller
Mr Jenzen owes to it. In trying to mitigate their failure to act the
second Respondent
has seen it fit to hold the Applicant to ransom. It
must be recalled that Mr Frank in the Answering Affidavit on behalf
of the
second Respondent says the following at paragraph 2:
“
Let
me point out from the outset that the second Respondent has no
interest whatsoever in the dispute between the Applicant and
the
first Respondent. The only interest that the second Respondent has in
this matter is that the first Respondent fully settle
its arrears.
Once the arrears are fully settled, the second Respondent will follow
the legal procedure for issuing an account for
the property in the
name of the Applicants.”
[46]
Firstly the second Respondent is incorrect in saying that there is a
dispute between Applicant
and first Respondent. There is no such
dispute. The only dispute that is there is between the first and
second Respondents and
it concerns payment of arrears rates and
taxes.
[47]
Secondly the property has been transferred to the Applicant. The
second Respondent has not cited
the Deeds Registry office in its
counter application directing them to cancel the title deed. The
validity of the transfer cannot
at this stage be placed at the door
of the Applicants who did everything in their power to comply with
the deed of sale.
[48]
When the first Respondent obtained the clearance certificate from the
second Respondent he warranted
to the Applicant in terms of clause
5.2 of the Sale Agreement that he had effected payment of the full
debt due by him to the second
Respondent. The first Respondent by
obtaining the clearance certificate and then producing it to the
conveyancer represented that
all the amounts due to the second
Respondent had been paid in full.
[49]
What the second Respondent wants to achieve in the counter claim is
contrary to the decision
laid down by the Constitutional Court in the
matter of
Jordaan and Others v Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
and Others
2017 (6) SA 287
CC
. The second Respondent is trying to
recover a historical debt due and owing to it by the seller in a
rather dubious manner by denying
the Applicant who is the purchaser
and a new owner its right to enjoy the benefit of its property.
[50]
The Central issue in Jordaan (supra) was whether Section 118 (3)
permits a Municipality to reclaim
from a new owner of property debts
a predecessor in title incurred. The second Respondent was a party in
that matter. In that matter
the Applicants had recently taken
transfer of properties within the jurisdiction of the Municipalities
involved. The Applicants
complained that the Municipalities which
included Ekurhuleni had suspended Municipal service or refused to
conclude consumer services
agreement for Municipal services until the
historical debts relating to the property had been cleared.
[51]
The Constitutional Court concluded that this was akin to deprivation
of property as entrenched
in Section 25 of the Constitution of South
Africa at paragraph 58 of that Judgment the following was said:
“
[58]
Apart from the
consideration the municipalities advanced as favouring survival of
the change, we also weigh these severe consequences of imposing
historical debts on a new owner. The Bill of Rights prohibits
arbitrary deprivation of property. It was rightly not disputed that
the new owner has a property interest that would be affected,
if the
charge were transmissible. Equally the interest of bond holders who
advanced loans to transferees would be affected if the
debts
accumulated during the previous owners title were to operate as a
charge against the new owner.”
[52]
The second Respondent failed to take any steps to deal with the
alleged fraud neither did it
take steps to recover the money from the
first Respondent. There is in my view no justification for the second
Respondent to refuse
to open a municipal service account in the name
of the Trust. Reliance on the impugned clearance certificate by the
second Respondent
to justify the failure to open the account is
misplaced and an after-thought.
[53]
The Applicants are the innocent party in this matter. It is the first
and second Respondents
who must resolve their dispute and not drag
the Applicants into that mess. The Applicant and the first Respondent
had an intention
to transfer which was achieved.
[54]
In the matter of
Du Plessis v Prophitius and Another
2010 (1) SA
49
SCA
it was held that ownership, the real right can nonetheless
pass even in instances of fraud and the property cannot be vindicated
in the hands of an innocent third party. The Trust is being
prejudiced by the conduct of the first and second Respondents.
[55]
The first Respondent in particular has breached clause 5.2 of the
Sale Agreement and the Trust
has a right to claim specific
performance by calling on the first Respondent to settle its dispute
with the second Respondent.
[56]
Having regard to what has been stated above regarding the clearance
certificate especially taking
into consideration the Constitutional
Court decision in Jordaan the Applicants cannot be held liable for
debts of the first Respondent.
It accordingly means that no basis
remains to refuse to open a Municipal service account in the name of
the Trust.
[57]
In the result I have come to the conclusion that the main application
by the Applicant be granted
as per the orders hereunder and that the
second Respondent’s counter application be dismissed.
COSTS
[58]
What now remain is to determine the application for a punitive costs
order against the first
Respondent’s previous attorneys.
[59]
It is common cause that this application was wrongly set down for
hearing at the Pretoria High
Court by the first Respondent’s
Attorneys for sometime in February 2022. It was removed and the costs
were reserved. Then
on the 6
th
May 2022 at the
commencement of the hearing Advocate Alli interjected proceedings
whilst counsel for the Applicant was making his
introductory
submissions and told the Court that his brief had been recalled and
asked to be excused.
[60]
As a result of that happening I stood the matter down to the 12
th
May 2022 to enable Mr Jenzen the first Applicant to resolve issues
about representation. Saleem Ebrahim Attorneys filed a notice
of
withdrawal as his attorneys of record only on the 9
th
May
2022.
[61]
The Applicant now ask that this Court should order attorneys to pay
wasted costs of the two postponements
de bonis propris.
The
attorneys are opposing that application and have filed an affidavit.
[62]
Having read the affidavit by Attorney Nomonde Msimanga I am satisfied
that the enrolment of this
matter at the Pretoria High Court was a
bona fide error and cannot be attributed to any form of negligence on
the part of the attorney.
The costs of that day will follow the
result on a party and party scale.
[63]
It is the wasted costs of the 6
th
May 2022 which are of
great concern. Miss Msimanga says she informed first Respondent by
email on 13
th
April 2022 to make payment of fees. The
email read as follows:
“
Dear
Kevin,
Kindly
find the attached letter from the opposing attorneys. Please take
note that in order for us to brief Counsel to appear for
the
pre-trial as well as the hearing on 2 May 2022 we will need you to
settle the outstanding invoice as sent to you and further
pay a
deposit”
[64]
There is no indication what their client said or how he responded to
the email. All seemed in
order until the 6
th
May 2022 when
suddenly Counsel withdrew. It took the first Respondent by surprise
also.
[65]
In my view the attorney did not give their client a date by when to
pay the outstanding fees
neither did they tell him that failure to
make payment they will withdraw. They did the opposite and proceeded
to brief Counsel
who appeared on the 6
th
May 2022 only to
withdraw a few minute after commencement. I find that unacceptable as
it not only disrupted the Court roll but
caused Applicants costs. In
my view the attorneys should bear the wasted costs occasioned by the
postponement of the 6
th
May 2022
de bonis propris
.
[66]
In the result I make the following order:
MAIN
APPLICATION
1.
The application is granted
on the following terms:
a)
The second Respondent is
ordered to amend its records to reflect the Trust as the owner of the
property situated at [....]
C [....] S [....] 1, S [....] 2
described as the remaining extent of Erf [....] Township,
St Andrews.
b)
The second Respondent is
ordered to open a Municipal Account in the name of the Trust on
receipt of this order.
c)
The second Respondent
shall provide and supply the property with electricity within 3 days
after payment of amount due in respect
of the property for the period
30
th
July 2020 to date of this order which amounts shall be paid by the
Applicants.
d)
The first and second
Respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this application jointly
and severally on a party and party scale
including the costs of
Counsel.
e)
The Attorney’s firm
Saleem Ebrahim are ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned by the
postponement of the matter on the
6
th
May 2022
de bonis
propris
.
SECOND
RESPONDENTS COUNTER APPLICATION
2.
This application is
dismissed with cost which shall include costs of Counsel.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this 4th day of July 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE
OF HEARING
:
06
th
and 12
th
MAY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT :
JULY 2022
FOR
APPLICANTS
:
ADV
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
Messrs
Leoni Attorneys
FOR
RESPONDENTS :
ADV
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
Messrs
Mabuza Attorneys
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