Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 663South Africa
Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Another v Motasi and Others (2021/42636) [2022] ZAGPJHC 663 (8 September 2022)
Headnotes
an inquiry in terms of Section 2 of the Act. As I have indicated, the holding of this inquiry is peremptory under the Act. The purpose of Section 2 is required precisely to deal with the same issues that have arisen in this application. In the present case, the second and third respondents have no connection whatsoever to the disputed property. They never stayed in the disputed property and are unknown to the Zikalala family.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Another v Motasi and Others (2021/42636) [2022] ZAGPJHC 663 (8 September 2022)
Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Human Settlements and Another v Motasi and Others (2021/42636) [2022] ZAGPJHC 663 (8 September 2022)
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sino date 8 September 2022
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.: 2021/42636
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
08/09/2022
In
the matter between:
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT
:
DEPARTMENT
OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
First Applicant
EXECUTOR
IN THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
Second Applicant
KOKI
CHRISTINA ZIKALALA
And
THABANG
SHADRACK MOTASI
First Respondent
LUDMILLEA
MOTASI
Second Respondent
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Dlamini J
Date
of hearing: 31 May 2022 –
in a ‘virtual Hearing’ during a videoconference
on
Microsoft Teams digital platform.
Date
of delivery of reasons: September 2022
This
Judgment is deemed to have been delivered 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 for the cancellation of a Deed of Transfer.
[2]
The first applicant is the Gauteng Provincial Government: Department
of Human Settlement
a Provincial government Department established in
terms of Section 26 of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa and Section
3 of the Housing Act
,1
[3]
The second applicant is the Executor in the Estate of the late Koki
Christina Zikalala.
[4]
The first respondent is Thabang Shadrack Motasi is an adult male
currently residing
at [....] M [....] 1 Street, Meadowlands, Soweto.
[5]
The second respondent is Ludmillea Motasi an adult female currently
residing at [....]
M [....] 1 Street, Meadowlands, Soweto.
[6]
The third respondent is the Master of the High Court of South Africa,
cited herein
on the basis that it serves as a regulatory, supervisory
administrative function in the administration of the Deceased
Estates.
No relief is sought against the third respondent.
[7]
The fourth respondent is the Registrar of Deeds, Johannesburg, which
is responsible
for the registration, management, and maintenance of
the property registry of South Africa.
[8]
The applicant testifies that it is the owner of property number known
as Erf [....]
M [....] 2 N [....] , Soweto Gauteng (the
disputed property).
[9]
In 1973, the first applicant issued a Certificate of Occupation to
the late Koki Christina
Zikalala
[10]
The first applicant submit that during the excise of its
administrative and legislative functions
it erroneously transferred
the disputed property in the name of the second and third
respondents.
[11]
As a result of this error, the first applicant launched this
application to cancel the transfer
and registration of the Deed of
Transfer Number T [....] which Deed holds the disputed property which
was erroneously registered
in the names of the second and third
respondents.
[12]
The question is whether the first applicant transferred the property
to the second and third
respondent in error.
[13]
The first applicant submit that the registration of the disputed
property into the names of the
first and second respondents was a
bona fide administrative error occasioned by the first applicant’s
registration processes.
[14]
The first applicant further submit that the second and third
Respondents are unknown to the Zikalala
family and that they have
their property situated at [....] M [....] 1 Street, Meadowlands,
Soweto.
[15]
Finally, the first applicant avers that it was brought to its
attention when the Zikalala family
came to enquire about their family
title Deed, that upon its investigation, it discovered the disputed
property had been erroneously
registered in the names of the second
and third respondents.
[16]
The second and third respondents insist that they are the true owners
of the disputed property
having bought the property on 17 January
1989. That the disputed property was transferred into their names.
Accordingly, they submit
that the best evidence of ownership of
immovable property is the Title Deed.
[17]
The second and third respondents submit that the first applicant
failed to give details and explain
the nature of the alleged error
that led to the first and second respondents being registered as
owners of the disputed property.
[18]
There is no dispute that this Court has the authority to order the
cancellation of any deed conferring
title by the Registrar of Deeds
in terms of Section 6(1) of the Deeds Registries Act.
[1]
[19]
The brief history of the ownership of land by black people in the
urban areas can be traced back
to the introduction by the then regime
of the 99-year lease over the properties granted to black people.
Thereafter the introduction
of full ownership rights of black people
was granted through the introduction of the Black Community
Development of 1984.
[20]
This brings us to the promulgation of the Conversion of Certain
Rights into Leasehold or Ownership
Act
[2]
(the Conversion Act). The main purpose of the Act was in the main to
cater to the conversion of certain rights of occupation into
leasehold or ownership and matters connected thereto.
[21]
The Act devolves the powers of converting the occupational rights
into ownership to the provincial
administrators. The 1993 amended
Conversion Act provides for the procedure to be undertaken by the
Director General (DG) of a Province
before making the conversion. In
terms of Section 2 of the Act, the DG is required to hold an inquiry
to determine (a) whether
the site in issue falls within the
formalized township for which the township register had been open and
(b) whether those who
claim rights over the property satisfy the
conversion requirements.
[22]
At the end of the inquiry, the DG is granted powers to and once
satisfied that the person is
the holder of a right as envisaged in
the Act, to declare that person to be the owner of the said property.
Section 3 of the Act
allows any person who is dissatisfied with the
DGs decision to appeal against that decision. Once the appeal is
finalized the DG
is then required to declare ownership of the
property to the person to whom the determination has been made.
Thereafter transfer
of the property to that person is in then
effected.
[23]
It follows, from the above that any decision to declare a person an
owner of the disputed property
would be irregular and invalid if such
declaration is done without holding of the inquiry in terms of
Section 2 of the Act.
[24]
In the present case its common cause that the DG has not held an
inquiry in terms of Section
2 of the Act. As I have indicated, the
holding of this inquiry is peremptory under the Act. The purpose of
Section 2 is required
precisely to deal with the same issues that
have arisen in this application. In the present case, the second and
third respondents
have no connection whatsoever to the disputed
property. They never stayed in the disputed property and are unknown
to the Zikalala
family.
[25]
The fact that no Section 2 was ever held is on its own a mistake as
this contravenes the provisions
of the Act.
[26]
The second and third respondents have not disputed the fact that the
first applicant is the statutory
owner of the disputed property. That
the first applicant is enjoined by the provision of section 2 the Act
in dealing with the
disputed property. The second and third
respondents have not denied the first applicant had issued a
Certificate of Occupation
to the late Christina Zikalala.
[27]
The holding of this inquiry was essential as it would have assisted
the first applicant to determine
after satisfying itself as to the
identity of the persons that resided in the affected property and of
the person appearing from
the records of the local authority
concerned, to be the occupier of that property and after
consideration of any relevant claims
and or objections, thereafter
determine who it intends to declare to have been granted the right of
leasehold in respect of the
disputed property. I, accordingly agree
with the applicant's submission that the fact that the Section 2
inquiry was not held before
the issuing of the title deed held by the
first and second respondents, that applicants are vindicated in their
assertion that
the title deed was issued erroneously.
[28]
The above in my view, simply bolstered the applicant's assertion that
an administrative error
occurred during the transfer of the disputed
property to the first and second responses.
[29]
In the light of all the above, it is my considered view that the
applicants have made out their
case.
ORDER
The draft order that I
signed dated 31 May 2022 is made an order of this court.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
31 May 2022
Delivered:
September 2022
For
the Applicants:
Adv JD Napo
Email:
dee.napo@gamil.com
For
the1st and 2
nd
Respondents
:
Adv F Matika
Email:
advmatika@webmail.co.za
[1]
Act
47 of 1937
[2]
Act
81 of 1988
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