Zander Burger Properties (Pty) Ltd v Graceful Blessings (Pty) Ltd (2102/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 182 (25 July 2022)

80 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Possession — Mandament van Spolie — Unlawful dispossession — Applicant sought restoration of possession of leased premises after respondent changed locks following alleged lease cancellation — Applicant disputed validity of cancellation, claiming peaceful possession — Court held that respondent unlawfully deprived applicant of possession without legal process, granting the application for restoration of possession and awarding costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an application for a mandament van spolie brought in the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein. The proceedings were initially launched as an urgent application in which the applicant sought an order compelling the respondent to restore occupation and possession of specified business premises, including access to a safe and filing room, together with the relevant keys.


The applicant was Zander Burger Properties (Pty) Ltd and the respondent was Graceful Blessings (Pty) Ltd. The dispute arose from the respondent’s conduct in changing the locks to the premises at 54 Louw Wepper Street, Dan Pienaar, Bloemfontein, which the applicant alleged amounted to unlawful dispossession.


Procedurally, the matter served as an urgent application on 11 May 2022. The respondent opposed the application, and by agreement between the parties the matter was postponed to 2 June 2022 for hearing on the opposed roll, with the applicant granted leave to file a replying affidavit. At the commencement of the hearing on 2 June 2022, the court was informed that urgency had fallen away, leaving only the merits for determination.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the respondent’s lockout of the applicant from leased business premises constituted spoliation requiring restoration, notwithstanding the respondent’s reliance on an alleged prior cancellation of the lease for non-payment of rentals.


2. Material Facts


It was generally common cause that the respondent was the owner of the premises and that the parties concluded a lease agreement on 27 February 2020. In terms of that lease, the respondent let the premises to the applicant for a period running from 1 February 2020 to 31 May 2024.


It was further common cause that during March 2021 the applicant breached the lease by failing to pay rentals. On 4 November 2021 the respondent served the applicant with a notice of cancellation of the lease agreement. Thereafter, on 6 May 2022, the respondent gave notice to the applicant that the locks had been changed.


On the issue of possession, there was no dispute that the applicant was in possession of the premises until the respondent changed the locks. The factual act complained of, namely the lock change resulting in the applicant being unable to access and occupy the premises (including the safe and filing room), was therefore treated by the court as established.


The parties’ dispute centred on the legal effect of the respondent’s prior cancellation and the contractual provisions relied upon. The applicant disputed the validity of the cancellation and asserted that the lease agreement remained extant. The respondent, by contrast, contended that the lease had been validly cancelled pursuant to the applicant’s non-payment, that the applicant failed to remedy the breach after demand, and that the respondent was contractually entitled (by reliance on a clause of the lease) to take possession following cancellation. The respondent also relied on the fact that the applicant had been informed that the locks would be changed.


Materially, the court treated it as significant that the respondent did not obtain possession through consent by the applicant, nor through an eviction order; instead, possession was taken by changing the locks and excluding the applicant.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the applicant had established the requirements for a mandament van spolie, namely prior peaceful and undisturbed possession and unlawful deprivation of that possession.


A further legal issue arose from the way the case was pleaded and argued: although spoliation relief does not generally depend on the applicant’s underlying right to possess, the applicant went further and asserted a substantive contractual right to occupy the premises under the lease. This raised the question whether, and to what extent, the court was required to consider the respondent’s defence that the applicant’s possession was not lawful because the lease had been cancelled and because the contract allegedly entitled the respondent to take possession after cancellation.


In addition, the respondent characterised the relief sought as effectively seeking specific performance of the lease or a final interdict beyond the scope of spoliation proceedings, raising the issue whether the orders sought were permissible as part of a spoliation remedy.


The dispute therefore involved the application of settled legal principles to largely common-cause facts (possession and deprivation), together with an assessment of the legal significance of the lease cancellation and the asserted contractual entitlement to re-take possession without a court order.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by restating the trite requirements for spoliation relief: an applicant must allege and prove prior possession and that it was unlawfully deprived of that possession or deprived against its will. The court relied on established authority confirming these elements.


On the element of possession, the court accepted that it was not disputed that the applicant was in possession of the premises until the respondent changed the locks. The court reiterated the principle that, in spoliation proceedings, the mere fact of possession gives rise to a protectable right (the jus possessionis) and that the applicant’s legal entitlement to possession is generally irrelevant to spoliation relief.


However, the court noted that the applicant had gone further than the minimum necessary case for spoliation by asserting a substantive right to occupy based on the lease and by calling on the respondent to justify dispossession. Relying on authority, the court explained that where an applicant claims a further substantive right to possession, the respondent may respond to that additional assertion and attempt to show that the applicant lacks the right claimed. The court therefore considered itself obliged to take account of the issues raised by the respondent regarding the alleged lawfulness of its conduct and the asserted contractual entitlement to re-take possession.


The respondent’s position was that the lease was cancelled on 4 November 2021 because the applicant failed to pay rentals despite demand, and that a lease clause entitled the respondent to take possession after cancellation. The respondent also argued, with reference to authority, that parties may contractually agree to forfeit rights, and contended that its conduct was consistent with the contractual arrangement.


The court rejected that contention. It held that the respondent’s reliance on Van Rooyen v Hillandale Homeowners Association was misplaced because that matter was distinguishable on its facts, including the regulatory and governance context applicable there. The court treated the present case as one involving a conventional landlord-and-tenant relationship, where the respondent’s lockout was a form of self-help.


On the lease clause relied upon, the court found that the agreement (and in particular clause 18 referred to in argument) did not grant the respondent a right to change the locks and thereby exclude the applicant without recourse to law. The court endorsed the approach that, in such circumstances, there are lawful methods to obtain possession, specifically consent or an eviction order. The respondent had done neither, and instead took the law into its own hands by locking the premises.


The court further expressed the view that even if a clause were construed as permitting unilateral repossession, it would in any event conflict with the fundamental principle underlying the mandament van spolie, namely that no person is entitled to take the law into their own hands and enforce rights without legal process.


Finally, the court addressed the respondent’s contention that the applicant was seeking relief beyond the proper scope of spoliation. The court did not accept that the relief sought (in prayer 2.2 of the notice of motion) was interdictory in nature; it was regarded instead as adjunct relief necessary to give effect to the restoration of occupation and possession.


On this reasoning, the court concluded that the applicant had established that it was in peaceful and undisturbed possession and that it was unlawfully deprived of such possession by the respondent’s lock change.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted the application for a mandament van spolie in terms of paragraphs 2.1 to 2.2 of the notice of motion, directing restoration of occupation and possession of the premises (including the safe and filing room) and associated access.


The respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the application. The judgment did not grant the punitive costs sought by the respondent; instead, costs followed the result in the ordinary course.


Cases Cited


Yeko v Qana 1973 (4) SA 735 (A).


Sithole v Native Resettlement Board 1959 (4) SA 115 (W).


Ngqukumba v Minister of Safety and Security and Others 2014 (2) SACR 325 (CC).


Street Pole Ads Durban (Pty) Ltd & Another v Ethekwini Municipality [2008] ZAGPHC 33; 2008 (5) SA 290 (SCA).


Blendrite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Moonisami and Another (Case no 227/2020) [2021] ZASCA 77 (10 June 2021).


Van Rooyen v Hillandale Homeowners Association (1603/2014) [2014] ZAFSHC 226 (11 December 2014).


La Familia Street Culture (Pty) Ltd v Amber Brand Investments (Pty) Ltd [2019] ZAGPJHC 520.


Legislation Cited


The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (referred to in discussion distinguishing Van Rooyen v Hillandale Homeowners Association).


Townships Ordinance of 1969 (referred to in discussion distinguishing Van Rooyen v Hillandale Homeowners Association).


Companies Act (referred to in discussion distinguishing Van Rooyen v Hillandale Homeowners Association).


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant proved the requirements for spoliation relief, namely that it had been in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the premises and that the respondent unlawfully deprived it of such possession by changing the locks and excluding the applicant.


It further held that the respondent could not justify the lockout on the basis of lease cancellation or alleged contractual entitlement to repossess without legal process. The court treated the respondent’s conduct as impermissible self-help, and it considered that lawful repossession in these circumstances would require either the applicant’s consent or an eviction order.


The court also held that the additional relief sought in relation to restoration (including keys/access) was not an impermissible interdict, but ancillary to the mandament van spolie.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The mandament van spolie protects possession, not underlying title or entitlement. To succeed, an applicant must establish prior possession and unlawful deprivation (or deprivation against the possessor’s will), and restoration follows without an enquiry into the merits of competing rights in the ordinary course.


The applicant’s underlying right to possession is generally irrelevant because the claim arises from the fact of an unprocedural deprivation of possession, and the remedy aims to prevent self-help and to preserve public order by requiring disputes to be resolved through lawful processes.


Where an applicant goes beyond the essentials of spoliation by asserting a substantive right to possession (whether arising from ownership or contract), the respondent may answer that additional claim of right. In such circumstances, the court may consider issues raised regarding the alleged right claimed insofar as they arise from the applicant’s own reliance on a substantive entitlement.


Even in the context of a lease dispute and alleged cancellation, repossession must occur through lawful means. The judgment applied the principle that a party may not unilaterally re-take possession by changing locks and excluding an occupier; possession must be obtained through consent or by obtaining an eviction order, rather than by taking the law into one’s own hands.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 182
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Zander Burger Properties (Pty) Ltd v Graceful Blessings (Pty) Ltd (2102/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 182 (25 July 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
number: 2102/2022
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
ZANDER
BURGER PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
GRACEFUL
BLESSINGS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
HEARD
ON:
02
JUNE 2022
JUDGMENT
BY:
DANISO,
J
DELIVERED
ON
:                This
judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email and by release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to
be 11H00 on 25 July 2022.
[1]
On 11 May 2022 this matter served before me as an urgent application
in terms of which
the applicant sought an order directing the
respondent to restore the occupation and possession of a business
office including
a safe and a filing room situated at 54 Louw Wepper
street, Dan Pienaar, Bloemfontein (“the premises”) to the
applicant
together with the keys on the grounds that the applicant
was despoiled of possession of the premises.
[2]
The respondent opposed the application. By concurrence of both
parties, the application
was postponed to 2 June 2022 for hearing on
the opposed roll. The applicant was granted leave to file its
replying affidavit.
[3]
At the commencement of the hearing, I was informed that the urgency
of the application
had fallen away, the only issue which remained to
be determined was the merits of the application.
[4]
The salient background facts giving rise to this application are
generally common
cause: The respondent is the owner of the premises.
On 27 February 2020 the parties concluded a lease agreement in terms
of which
the respondent let the premises to the applicant from 1
February 2020 to 31 May 2024. During March 2021, the applicant
breached
the lease agreement by failing to pay rentals. On 4 November
2021 the respondent served the applicant with a notice of
cancellation
of the lease agreement and thereafter on 6 May 2022 gave
the applicant notice that the locks of the premises have been
changed.
[5]
In the founding affidavit the applicant disputes the validity of the
cancellation
and insists that the lease agreement
[1]
is extant. The applicant states that prior to 6 May 2022 the
applicant was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of the premises.

The respondent had no valid reasons to cancel the lease and deprive
the applicant the peaceful and undisturbed possession of the

premises. The respondent must therefore show justification for
depriving the applicant peaceful and undisturbed possession.
[6]
The respondent opposes the application on the grounds that the
applicant is not entitled
to the relief sought in that: in the
founding affidavit the applicant alleges that its occupation of the
premises arises from a
lease agreement, the applicant is thus
claiming specific performance of the lease agreement which is beyond
the scope of Mandament
van Spolie. The applicant also seeks a final
interdict whereas the requirements for a final interdict have not
been established.
[7]
In response to the applicant’s invitation to furnish reasons
justifying the
dispossession, it is the respondent’s case that
the lease was cancelled on 4 November 2021 pursuant to the
applicant’s
breach of the terms of the lease by failing to pay
the rentals despite demand. Except to dispute the validity of the
cancellation
the applicant failed to rectify the breach with the
result that the respondent invoked the provisions of clause 18
[2]
of the lease agreement which entitles the respondent to take
possession of the premises after cancelling the lease. The applicant

was duly informed on 6 May 2022 that the locks of the premises would
be changed
[3]
therefore, the
applicant has no contractual right to remain in the premises. The
application must be dismissed with a punitive
cost order.
[8]
The requirements to be proven by the applicant in order to succeed
with this application
are trite. The applicant must allege and prove
prior possession and that it was deprived of that possession
unlawfully or against
its will:
Yeko v Qana
1973 (4) SA
735
(A) at 739E-F;
Lawsa
2
nd
edition, 2014
at 113 para 108 and
Blendrite (Pty) Ltd and Another v Moonisami
and Another
Case no 227/2020
[2021]
ZASCA 77
(10 June 2021).
[9]
With regard to possession, it is not disputed that the applicant was
in possession
of the premises until the respondent changed the locks.
The mere fact of possession generates a right which is generally
referred
to as the
jus possessionis,
the applicant’s
legal right to possess the premises is irrelevant to a claim for
spoliatory relief. See
Sithole v Native
Resettlement Board
1959
(4) SA 115
(W) at 117C-G;
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security and others
2014 (2) SACR
325
CC at para 10
.
[10]
In this matter, the applicant has however gone further and alleged a
substantive right to occupy
the premises based on the lease agreement
and implored the respondent to provide reasons justifying the
dispossession.
[11]
In
Street Pole Ads Durban (Pty) Ltd &
Another v Ethekwini Municipality
[2008] ZAGPHC 33
;
2008 (5) SA 290
(SCA) at para 15 it was held that:
"…
good
title is irrelevant: the claim to spoliatory relief arises solely
from an unprocedural deprivation of possession. There is
a
qualification, however, if the applicant goes further and claims a
substantive right to possession, whether based on title of
ownership
or on contract. In that case, ‘the respondent may answer such
additional claim of right and may demonstrate, if
he can, that
applicant does not have the right to possession which it claims’.
This is because such an applicant 'in effect
forces an investigation
of the issues relevant to the further relief he claims. Once he does
this, the respondent's defence in
regard thereto has to be
considered
."
[12]
The court is thus behoved to also consider the issues raised by the
respondent relating to the
lawfulness of the possession when
considering the ordinary requirements of possession and unlawful
deprivation of possession.
[13]
According to the respondent, in terms of clause 8 of the lease
agreement the applicant agreed
that in the event of default the
respondent would be entitled to take possession of the premises
simply based on the cancellation
of the agreement.
[14]
It was argued by counsel for the respondent that parties are entitled
to contractually agree
to forfeit their rights to property and to
bolster his argument he relied on
Van Rooyen v Hillandale
Homeowners Association
(1603/2014) [ZAFSHC 226)
(11
December 2014)
where Moeng AJ held that the respondent’s
conduct in limiting the applicant’s right to purchase pre-paid
water and electricity
did not amount to spoliation as it was in line
with the provisions of
the
estate rules and the agreement entered into by the parties.
[15]
I do not agree with the respondent’s contentions. The reliance
on
Van Rooyen
is misplaced as the facts in that matter are
clearly distinguishable from the facts of this case. See paragraph 37
thereof where
the court held that:

It
is common cause that in terms of proclamation 16 of 2004, the Estate
was declared a township in terms of section 14(1) of the
Townships
Ordinance of 1969 and authority was granted to respondent, as a
company in terms of section 21 of the Companies Act,
to govern the
township. Its administration of the Estate should logically be in
accordance with national and provincial legislation
as provided for
in the Constitution. The trust, by its ownership of the erf is a
member of the respondent and is bound by its rules.
The applicant, as
occupant and lessee is likewise bound by the rules. The provisions of
rule 13.11 of the Manual for Community
Participation and paragraph
10.3 of the water and electricity provision agreement, falls squarely
within the Constitution of the
respondent and is therefore binding on
both the trust and the applicant. One of the conditions of title
agreed upon by the trust,
and registered against the title of the
property, were that the trust would be bound by the statutes and
rules of the respondent.
This
position therefore differs from illegal clauses in lease agreements
wherein a lessee consents to the termination of the supply
of his
water and electricity
(my
underlining).
[16]
The lease agreement, specifically clause 18 does not
grant the respondent a right to change the locks of the premises
thereby evicting
the applicant from the premises without recourse to
law. See
La
Familia Street Culture (Pty) Ltd v Amber Brand Investments (Pty)
Ltd
[2019]
ZAGPJHC 520
at paras 20-21 the court
stated that:

[20]
In the present matter the respondent has not denied the allegation of
dispossessing the applicant of the premises. It sought
to justify its
action on the basis that the applicant was in arrears in payment of
the rental and that it issued a notice of termination
of the lease
agreement.
[21]
There are two ways in the circumstances of this case through which
the respondent could have obtained possession of the premises.
The
first is by way of consent by the Applicant. And the second is by way
of an eviction order. The Respondent did none of these.
It decides to
take the law into its hands by locking the premises and thus taking
possession from the Applicant in an unlawful
manner.”
[17]
It is my view that such a clause would in any event
be
in direct conflict with the
fundamental
principle
of Mandament van Spolie that no one is entitled to take the law into
their own hands and enforce their rights without
legal process.
[18]
I don’t regard the relief sought in prayer 2.2. as an
interdictory relief which goes beyond
the scope of mandament but an
adjunct relief to the necessary restoration of
the occupation
and possession of the premises to the applicant.
[19]
It is for these
reasons above that I conclude that the applicant has succeeded
in
establishing that it was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of
the premises and that it was unlawfully deprived of that possession.
There is no reason why the costs should not follow
the result.
[20]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The
application for a Mandament van Spolie in terms of paragraphs 2.1 to
2.2 of the notice of motion is granted;
2.
The respondent to pay the costs of this application.
NS
DANISO, J
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
on behalf of Applicants:

Adv. C.J. Hendricks
Instructed
by:

Gouws Virtue Attorneys
BLOEMFONTEIN
Counsel
on behalf of Respondent:

Adv. R. van
der Merwe
Instructed
by:

Honey Attorneys.
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
The copy of the lease agreement is attached on the founding
affidavit as Annexure “ZB1.”
[2]
Clause 18 provides thus: “
Should
the LESSEE fails, neglects or refuses to pay any rent and/or other
monies herein stipulated within SEVEN days of the date
on which
payment is due…the LESSOR shall be entitled, notwithstanding
any prior waiver, extension or condonation and without
prejudice to
any other rights the LESSOR may have hereunder,  immediately
and without prejudice to any other rights the
LESSOR may have
hereunder, immediately and without prejudice to any other rights and
remedies, to give the tenant notice, in
in the manner set forth in
Clause (14) of this Lease Agreement, specifying the default
complained of and if the tenant fails
to rectify the default so
complained of within SEVEN days of receiving such notice, or should
the LESSEE or sub-lessee consistently
breach any one or more of the
terms of this Lease in such a manner as to justify the LESSOR in
holding that the LESSEE’S
conduct is inconsistent with the
LESSEE’S  intention or ability to carry out the terms of
this Lease, the LESSOR shall
have the right to cancel this contract
by written notice sent to the LESSEE by the LESSOR…”
[3]
Annexures “A01.1, to “A01.3” of the respondent’s
answering affidavit are copies of a series of correspondences

between the parties’ legal representatives including letters
of demand, the notice of cancellation of the lease and of
the change
of locks of the premises.