Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 670South Africa
Unlocked Properties 18 (PTY) Ltd v Mjikwa and Others (31036/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 670 (7 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Unlocked Properties 18 (PTY) Ltd v Mjikwa and Others (31036/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 670 (7 September 2022)
Unlocked Properties 18 (PTY) Ltd v Mjikwa and Others (31036/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 670 (7 September 2022)
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sino date 7 September 2022
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 31036/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
7
September 2022
In
the matter between:
UNLOCKED
PROPERTIES 18 (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
SIPHOKUHLE
MJIKWA
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
ZACHARIA
SIPHO MATHABA
THIRD RESPONDENT
UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS OF UNIT 303
PALM
SPRINGS, 35 GEORGIA CRESCENT
COSMO
CITY
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 7
th
September 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
Before this Court, is an opposed application in which the applicant
seeks the following
orders:
1.1
Ordering that the first respondent and all those persons who reside
on the property through or under the first
respondent and or reside
on the property with his authority, vacate the property known as Unit
303 Palm Springs, 35 Georgia Crescent
Street, Cosmo City also known
as Portion [....] of Erf [....], Cosmo City (hereinafter referred to
as the “
Property”
);
1.2 In
the event that the first respondent or any of those persons who may,
through the first respondent and or
with his authority, be residing
at the property and or fail to comply with prayer 1 above, the
Sheriff is hereby authorised to
eject the first respondent and any
such persons from the property forthwith;
1.3 In
the event that the Sheriff requires the assistance of the South
African Police Service or a private security
company, that the
Sheriff be authorised to use such assistance where necessary;
1.4 In the
event that the first respondent and or any person who resides on the
property through and under the first
respondent reinvades the
property, the Sheriff be authorised to immediately execute the
eviction order again;
1.5
Directing that the costs of this application be borne by the first
respondent on an attorney and client scale
[2]
At the commencement of the hearing of this case, the applicant moved
an application
to join the third respondent in these proceedings
which application was not opposed – hence I granted an order
that the third
respondent be joined in these proceedings.
Furthermore, I propose to refer to the first and third respondents as
the respondents
as it is apparent that they are a family and shall
refer to the second respondent as the City where necessary.
[3]
The foundational facts to this case are in essence common cause and
are briefly as
follows: on the 1
st
of December 2019 the
applicant and the respondents concluded a written lease agreement
whereby the applicant leased the property
to the respondents for a
period of twelve months ending on the 30
th
of November
2020 for the rental amount of R5 650.00 per month. It was a term
of the lease agreement that upon termination
of the initial lease
period the lease agreement will automatically continue on a month –
to – month basis. The lease
agreement expired on the 30
th
of November 2020 and no new written lease agreement was concluded
between the parties and the respondents remained in occupation
of the
property with the consent of the applicant and continued to pay their
rental amount until they stopped paying in January
2021.
[4]
In February and March 2021 the applicant sent some members of its
staff to the respondents
in an attempt to resolve the issue of the
arrear rental but without success. On the 21
st
of May 2021
the applicant issued a letter of demand to the respondents demanding
that they make payment of the arrear rental to
remedy the breach
within seven (7) days from the date of the letter otherwise the lease
agreement would be cancelled. There was
no response from the
respondents – hence on the 5
th
of June 2021 the
attorneys for the applicant sent a letter to the respondents advising
them of the cancellation of the agreement
and demanding that they
immediately vacate the property.
[5]
In essence the respondents’ defence is that there was no
compliance on the part
of the applicant with the provisions of
section 5(5) of the Rental Housing Act, 50 of 1999
(“RHA”)
and clause 6 of the lease agreement in that the applicant has failed
to furnish them with a one calendar month notice to vacate
the
premises. Furthermore, that, since the notice period was only
fourteen (14) days instead of one calendar month, the Prevention
of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 19 of 1998
is not applicable for they are not in illegal and or unlawful
occupation of the property.
[6]
Before debating the issues and to put the matters in the proper
context, it is apposite
at this stage to restate the relevant
provision of the
Rental Housing Act which
provides as follows:
“
Provisions
pertaining to leases
Section
5.(1)
……………………
(5)
If on the expiration of the lease the tenant remains in the dwelling
with the express
or tacit consent of the landlord, the parties are
deemed, in the absence of a further written lease, to have entered
into a periodic
lease, on the same terms and conditions as the
expired lease, except that at least one month’s written notice
must be given
of the intention by either party to terminate the
lease.”
[7]
Clause 6.1 of the lease agreement provides that upon termination of
the initial period,
the lease agreement will automatically continue
on a month-to-month basis. Furthermore,
section 6.3
provides that if
the lease continues on a month-to-month basis either party shall be
entitled to terminate the lease agreement
without reason or penalty
at any time, provided that they give the other party a calendar
Month’s written notice of such
termination. The provisions of
clause 6 of the parties lease agreement are in line with the
provisions of
section 5(5)
of the RHA.
[8]
However, for the purposes of this discussion it is necessary to
consider the provisions
of clause 23 of the lease agreement which
provides for a breach of the lease agreement by the tenant as
follows:
“
23.1 In the
event of the tenant not paying the rental or any other monies due in
terms of this lease agreement on the date upon
which such monies are
due and payable, or committing any other breach in terms of this
lease agreement then;
23.1.1 ……………..
23.1.2 Should the
lease agreement continue on a month-to-month basis in accordance with
the provisions of clause 6.1, and the provisions
of
section 14
of the
CPA accordingly not apply to this lease agreement, and the tenant
remain in breach of any of the terms of this lease agreement
for a
period of 7 (Seven) calendar days after dispatch of a written notice
calling upon the tenant to remedy such breach, then
the landlord
shall be entitled, in his sole discretion and without prejudice to
any other rights that he may have in law, to either
claim specific
performance in terms of this lease agreement, or to cancel this lease
agreement forthwith and without further notice
claim all arrear
rental and or any other damages from the tenant.”
[9]
It is plain that
section 5(5)
of the RHA is triggered and comes into
play immediately the periodic lease is terminated and the tenant
remains in occupation of
the property with the tacit or express
consent of the landlord. I disagree with the applicant’s
contentions that, where the
lease agreement containing a forfeiture
clause is terminated by the landlord due to the lessee’s
failure to pay the rent,
section 5(5)
of the RHA does not find
application. In casu, although the lease agreement made provision
that when the initial lease period expires
the lease will
automatically continue on a month-to-month basis and incorporated in
its clause 6.1 the provisions of
section 5(5)
of the RHA by stating
that either party shall be entitled to terminate the lease agreement
without reason or penalty at any time,
provided that they give the
other party a calendar Month’s written notice of such
termination.
[10]
Counsel for the applicant referred the Court to the case of
Magic
Vending (Pty) Ltd v Nzeba Tambwe and Others (19432/2019)
[2020]
ZAWCHC 175
;
2021 (2) SA 512
(WCC) (7 Decmber 2020)
in which the
Court discussed the provisions of
section 5(5)
of the RHA as follows:
“
Paragraph 14:
If on the expiration of the lease the tenant remains in the dwelling
with the express or tact consent of the landlord,
the parties are
deemed, in the absence of a further written lease, to have entered
into a periodic lease, on the same terms and
conditions as the
expired lease, except that at least one month written notice must be
given of the intention by the either party
to terminate the lease.
It is plain that the
provision is applicable to the termination of a periodic lease that
is deemed to have come into being when
the lessee remains on in the
property with the express or tacit consent of the lessor after the
expiration of a pre-existing fixed
term lease. It is not applicable
in a situation in which a lease containing a forfeiture clause is
terminated by the landlord by
reason of the lessee’s failure to
pay the rent. The judgment in Luanga, which held that the one month’s
notice referred
to in
s5(5)
denoted one calendar months’
notice, also has no bearing on a landlord’s right to terminate
a lease on account of a
material breach of contract by the lessee.”
[11]
The facts of the above case are distinguishable from the present case
in that Mr Tambwe had been
in occupation of the premises for many
years, originally in terms of an oral agreement and later entered
into a written lease agreement
that operated on a month to month
basis. In the present case, at the expiration of the initial period
of lease, the parties did
not enter into a new or a written lease
agreement – hence the provisions of
s5(5)
of the RHA came into
play and entitled either of the parties to a calendar month written
notice if the one party intended to terminate
the lease.
[12]
It is my considered view that it is not competent for the applicant
to rely on the provisions
of the fixed term lease agreement which was
terminated by the effluxion of time and the respondents remained in
occupation of the
property on the tacit or express consent of the
applicant without entering into a new written lease agreement.
Although the respondents
remained in occupation of the property under
the same terms and conditions of the expired lease, the provisions of
s5(5)
takes precedent since there is not written new lease agreement
concluded between the parties. The forfeiture clause the applicant
wants to rely upon would only have been effective if it was contained
in a new written lease agreement which is the case with Tambwe
case.
[13]
I therefore conclude that the applicant has failed to meet the
requirements of
s5(5)
of the RHA and that is fatal to the applicant’s
case. The inescapable conclusion is therefore that the respondents
were not
in illegal or unlawful occupation of the property since the
applicant has failed to furnish a proper notice of termination of the
lease in terms of
s5(5)
of the RHA.
[14]
The respondents appeared in person in this case. However, they
submitted that they have spent
a lot of money in their engagement of
counsel to assist them in the preparation of their papers. I am not
persuaded by this submission
for throughout the proceedings the
exchange of papers has been between the applicant and the
respondents. At no stage was an attorney
engaged to represent the
respondents. Furthermore, the respondents did not demonstrate that
they incurred any out of pocket costs
which they were in fact
entitled to be reimbursed if proven. I am therefore of the view that
an order that each party pays its
own costs would be appropriate in
the circumstances.
[15]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed
2.
Each party to pay its own costs.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
29
th
August 2022
Date
of Judgment:
7
th
September 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate JW Kiarie
Instructed
by:
Schindlers Attorneys
Tel: 011 448 9600
vanwijk@schindlers.co.za
For
the First and Respondent:
Zacharia Sipho Mathaba
Siphokuhle Mjikwa
szmathab@bu.edu
061 197 0507
sino noindex
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