Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 445South Africa
Tladi and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2020/05024) [2022] ZAGPJHC 445 (5 July 2022)
Headnotes
on the 26 March 1997. It is important to note that despite proper service of this notice of enquiry on the fourth Applicant, the fourth Applicant did not attend this enquiry.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tladi and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2020/05024) [2022] ZAGPJHC 445 (5 July 2022)
Tladi and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2020/05024) [2022] ZAGPJHC 445 (5 July 2022)
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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.
2020/05024
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
5
July 2022
In
the matter between:
FRIDA
TLADI (NEE SEOME )
1
st
Applicant
(ID
NO: [....])
EPHRAIM
SEOME
2
nd
Applicant
(ID
NO: [....])
MARTHA
JOHANNA KEDISALETSI MOFUBE
3
RD
Applicant
(NEE
SEOME) ID NO: [....])
OFNIEL
PETER
MODISE
4
th
Applicant
([....])
And
CITY
JOHANNESBURG METROPPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
1
ST
Respondent
EXECUTORS
(RAMOERANE ABIZETTE SEOMA)
2
nd
Respondent
MAAJE
CHRISTINA
SEOMA
3
rd
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL
FOR
HUMAN SETTLEMENT(PRETORIA)
4
th
Respondent
THE
MEC FOR HUMAN SETTLEMENT
5
th
Respondent
(GAUTENG
PROVINCE)
THE
REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS
6
th
Respondent
(JOHANNESBURG)
THE
MASTER OF THE SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT
7
th
Respondent
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of hearing: 11 April 2022 – in a
‘virtual Hearing’ during a videoconference
on Microsoft
Teams digital platform.
Date
of Judgment: 05 July 2022
This
judgment is deemed to have been handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
shall
be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
This is an application wherein the Applicants seek an order reviewing
and setting aside the decision
of the Housing Appeal Tribunal
Judgment in respect of property number [....] A [....] S [....]
Orlando East Soweto( the disputed
property).
[2] In their notice of
motion, the Applicants seek the following orders;
2.1 That the
Agreement of Sale made and entered into by and between the West Rand
Administration Board, predecessor
of the City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality and the second Respondent in respect of
proprety known as Erf [....] A [....]
S [....] Orlando East Soweto be
declared invalid, and same be reviewed and set aside
2.2
That the Deed of Sale made and entered into by and between the City
Council of Soweto and Ramoerane Abizett
Seoama be declared invalid
and same be reviewed and set aside
2.3 An
Order directing that the judgment of the pre appeal adjudicator Mr I.
Vally of the Housing Department dated
20 February 2018 in respect of
property [....] A [....] S [....] Orlando East be upheld.
2.4. An Order
directing that the judgment of the Appeal Housing Tribunal dated 28
January 2020 in respect of property [....]
A [....] S [....] Orlando
East be set aside.
[3]
The disputed property was owned by the erstwhile Soweto City Council.
On 12 July 1961, in terms
of its regulations the Council issued a
residential permit to the biological mother of the Applicants,
Catherine Matlakala Ramogari.
Mrs Ramoogari, subsequently passed away
in 1966. After the death of the Applicant’s mother, the Council
cancelled their late
mother residential permit. Due to the fact that
the Applicants were at that time minors , the Council could not as
per its regulation
issue a residential permit in their name. Instead
the Council issued a new residential permit in the name of the second
Respondent,
an uncle to the Applicants.
[4]
In June 1982 the second Respondent entered into a purchase and sale
agreement of the disputed
with the West Rand Administration Board.
The second Respondent passed away in April 1993. In July 1994 the
third Respondent ( wife
to the second Respondent) concluded a deed of
sale in respect of the disputed property with the Soweto City
Council. The property
was then transferred into the name of the third
Respondent.
[5]
On 11 March 1997 the fourth Respondent issued a notice of enquiry in
terms of Section 2 Conversion
of Certain Rights into Leasehold or
Ownership Act
[1]
, (the
Conversion Act), to be held on the 26 March 1997. It is important to
note that despite proper service of this notice of enquiry
on the
fourth Applicant, the fourth Applicant did not attend this enquiry.
[6]
On 8 December 2015 the Applicants launched an application in this
Court to set aside the transfer
of the disputed property to the third
Respondent. This application was successful, the Court set aside the
transfer and referred
the matter back to the Housing Department for
determination in terms of Section 2 of the Conversion Act. This new
enquiry was held
on the 20 February 2018. This enquiry chaired by
Adjudicator I.Vally, ruled in favour of the Applicants. The third
Respondent passed
away in August 2017. The beneficiary of the estate
of the late third Respondent launched an appeal against this
decision.
[7]
On 29 January 2020, upon hearing the matter, the Appeal Tribunal
upheld the appeal and awarded the disputed property to the
estate
late second and the third Respondents. At the core of its decision,
the Appeal Tribunal held that “
the
Respondents (Applicants herein ) should have sought an order setting
aside the certificate and or the agreement leading to the
issue
thereof in order for their claim to be sustainable”.
The
Appeal Tribunal sought reliance for this proposition based upon the
decision of the court in
Oudekraal
Estate (Pty) Limited v City of Cape Town
[2]
,
where
the court essentially held that, where any legal act depends for its
validity upon some official or administrative prior act,
such as a
certification or adjudication
.
Then,
if one wishes to attack the legal act itself for having been
unlawfully procured or committed , one is obliged first to have
the
administrative act upon which its validity depends, set aside on
review and one cannot simply ask the court to declare the
legal act
void or invalid without reviewing and setting aside the underlying
administrative act.
[8]
The numb of the issue here is whether the certificate of occupation
issued to the second Respondent
is valid and whether the subsequent
agreement of sale entered into between the third Respondent and the
City Council of Soweto
in 1994 is valid. Finally whether the decision
of the Appeal Tribunal should be set aside.
[9]
The Applicants testified that when their mother passed away in 1966,
all of them were still minors.
A meeting was held between the Council
and social workers, where it was agreed that the third Respondent
(their uncle) be appointed
their guardian and that he be issued with
the residential permit and to hold same on their behalf until the
eldest of them Ephraim
Seome became of age and was able to take over
the property. In sum the Applicants submit that base on the above
agreement they
approached the second and third Respondents and
requested them to hand back the property to them without success.
That the first,
fourth and fifth Respondents have also failed and
refused to tissue Applicants with the residential permit over the
property. Further
that the sale of the disputed property to the
second and third Respondent is unlawfull and should be set aside. The
Applicants
finally avers that the Housing Appeal Tribunal did not
acquaint itself with the facts of the matter and its decision should
accordindly
be dismissed.
[10]
For these submission, the Applicants relies upon the decision of the
court
in
Moloi vs Moloi and Others
[3]
.
In
my view reliance by the Applicants on Moloi is misplaced in that the
facts therein differs from those in the present case. In
Moloi,
there
was a formal minuted family meeting with the then Soweto Ctiy
Council, wherein the Housing Committee of the Council resolved
to
transfer tenancy to Mr Henry Moloi. This resolution was in line with
with the agreement and recommendations that was made by
all the
members of the Moloi family. In the present case however there are no
minutes filled of the meeting between the applicants
and the Soweto
Ctiy Council. There is no resolution of the Housing Committee of the
Sewoto Ctiy Council attached to the applicants
pleadings in support
of their allegation
.
The
established facts are that the Soweto City Council was the owner of
the property. In terms of the Black Administration Act
[4]
,
it had the right to issue or cancel a certificate of occupation, to
persons who were fit and proper , heading a family and had
income. In
the present case the City Council on merit decided to issue the
certificate of occupation to the second Respondent.
I agree with the
second and third Responded submission that there is no evidence
adduced before this court that City Council acted
unlawfully or
illegally in issuing the certificate. Further there are no affidavits
attached to this application by the Applicants
from anyone present at
that meeting to support their claim.
[11]
The Applicants avers that the disputed property was transferred to
the second and third Respondents by misrepresentation
and default and
it was an error on the side of the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Council to transfer the property to second
and third Respondents as
the whole process was fundamentally flawed.
[12]
Here, the Applicants do not submit a shred of evidence to support
these allegation. This court is not advised
who committed the alleged
misrepresentation. The alleged default is not explained by the
Applicants. Also, there is no explanation
on the nature and extent of
this error that occurred on the side of the City of Johannesburg.
These are just bald and unsubstantiated
allegations and they fall to
be dismissed.
[13]
Furthermore, it is common cause that at the time the Second
Respondent entered into the sale agreement with
the West Rand
Administration Board in 1982, all the Applicants were majors. The
second and third Respondents correctly point out
that no action was
taken by them to challenge this Agreement of Sale. In fact, the
Applicants are merely trying to cure their previous
application ,
wherein they did not challenge the validity of the agreement of sale
as held by the Appeal Panel upholding the
Oudekraal decision.
T
his application also falls to be dismissed on the basis that
there is no application for condonation explaining why this
application
was only launched now.
[14] In
the light of all these circumstances , I make the following order.
(i)
The Application is dismissed with costs.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
11 April 2022
handed down
on:
05 July 2022
for
the Applicants:
BJ RADASI INC ATTORNEYS
Email:
bj@radasiattorneys.co.za
For
the 2
nd
and
3
rd
:
RANKOOA ATTORNEYS
Respondents
Email:
rankooa.attorneys@gmail.com
[1]
Act
no 81 of 1988 as amended.
[2]
2004
(6) SA 222
(CSA)
[3]
(20175/2010, ZAGPJHC 275 (26 October 2012)
[4]
Black administration act 38 of 1927
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