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[2022] ZAECBHC 32
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Fani and Another v Tshantshana and Others (702/2019) [2022] ZAECBHC 32 (27 October 2022)
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Certain
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, BHISHO
NOT
REPORTABLE
Case
no: 702/2019
In
the matter between:
BABALWA
FANI
First Applicant
MONDE
ERIC FANI
Second Applicant
and
PHINDILE
TSHANTSHANA
First Respondent
NOKWAZI
AGNES DIFASI
Second Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, KING
Third Respondent
WILLIAM’S
TOWN
EX-TEMPORE
JUDGMENT
Govindjee
J
[1]
The applicants seek declaratory relief
ordering the respondents to pass transfer of immovable property
situated in Dimbaza (‘the
property’). The first
respondent (‘Mr Tshantshana’) disputes the existence and
validity of an agreement of sale
in respect of the property, as well
as the payment of the agreed purchase price.
[2]
The applicants are married to one another
in community of property. The first applicant’s father (‘Mr
Malawana’)
came to know that the first and second respondents
were selling the property, which was derelict. Mr Malawana agreed to
purchase
the property for the price of R30 000. A R20 000
part-payment was made in cash on 11 January 2006 after Mr Malawana,
his wife, Mr Tshantshana and his wife met to finalise the sale and
transfer of the property. Various documents were signed by these
persons on 21 December 2006, including an application for transfer of
the property to the Malawanas. Transfer was not effected
due to
outstanding amounts owed to the municipality, which none of the
parties to the sale were able to pay.
[3]
Mr Tshantshana and his wife subsequently
applied to the municipality, unsuccessfully, to have the rates
reduced during July 2007.
Mr Malawana was only able to settle the
outstanding balance of the purchase price and the amounts due to the
municipality when
he received his pension during May 2016. The second
respondent had taken ill by this time, although the extent of her
illness is
in dispute. Mr Tshantshana advised Mr Malawana and his
wife to come to Cradock to finalise the matter, and were also
informed,
to their surprise, that the purchase price had now
increased by R46000,00 to R76 000,00.
[4]
Mr
Malawana decided to continue with the purchase of the property and
visited Cradock during April 2017 to effect payment of the
new
outstanding amount, and to sign documentation at the offices of Mr
Tshantshana’s attorneys. The money was duly paid and
received,
as confirmed by a document titled ‘Affidavit’, but
uncommissioned, signed by Mr Tshantshana on 27 April 2017
and
containing the thumbprint of his wife.
[1]
That document further confirms Mr Malawana’s version of events
up to this point, as well as the payment of the sum of R46 000.
[5]
Mr Malawana and his wife had now decided
that the property should be transferred directly to the applicants,
who had occupied the
property since 2012. On the applicants’
version, Mr Tshantshana and his wife agreed to this and a deed of
sale, still reflecting
the original purchase price, was entered into
between the parties on 27 and 28 April 2017. Mr Tshantshana
subsequently refused
to attend to the signature of the necessary
documentation in order to effect transfer of ownership. On the
applicants’ version,
the second respondent, who has since
passed away, signed various related documentation before her passing
by way of a thumbprint.
The applicants made payment of transfer costs
during April 2017 and settled the outstanding amount in respect of
rates and taxes
during August 2017.
[6]
Mr Tshantshana opposes the application. He
relies on the passing of his wife on 31 May 2019, together with her
illness since 2012,
although he cannot recall any precise dates. Mr
Tshantshana claims that his wife could not make any reasonable
judgment of her
own due to her deteriorating health condition, but
does not link this to a specific date, and provides no supporting
documentation.
The second respondent died intestate. As the estate
was not reported and no administrator of the estate has been
appointed, he
suggests that transfer cannot pass until that process
has been completed.
[7]
Mr
Tshantshana adds that he had been ‘cajoled and lured’ by
the applicants’ attorneys to sign the deed of sale,
and that he
would not have signed the document had he known what it was. He
denies that his wife could have signed the documentation
as she was
‘in a vegetative state’. He also claims that there was no
valid contractual relationship with Mr Malawana
and non-compliance
with the
Alienation of Land Act, 1981
.
[2]
Mr Tshantshana does not deal with the contents of Mr Malawana’s
affidavit, on the basis that it is a second ‘founding’
affidavit and may be ignored.
[8]
An
applicant is entitled to introduce further corroborating facts by
means of a replying affidavit should the contents of the answering
affidavit call for such facts, based on a common-sense approach.
[3]
Such facts appear in the form of an affidavit from the attorney
instructed to attend to the sale and transfer of the property during
2006. The confirmation extends to the increased purchase price, the
replacement of the applicants in place of the Malawanas as
purchasers
and the difficulties experienced in contacting the respondents to
finalise the matter, also on the part of correspondent
attorneys in
Cradock. The affidavit of Kingwill explains the circumstances that
resulted in the second respondent signing various
documentation by
affixing her thumbprint on 20 September 2017.
[9]
Pothier
says: ‘It is indeed of the essence of the contract of sale,
that the seller should not retain the right of property
in the thing,
when he is owner of it; and that in such a case, he should be bound
to transfer it to the buyer.’
[4]
In the case of immovable
property, ownership passes upon registration of transfer in the Deeds
Registry, coupled with all the standard
requirements of intention to
transfer ownership on the part of both parties.
[10]
Section
2(1)
of the
Alienation of Land Act, 1981
[5]
provides that no alienation of land shall, subject to the provisions
of
s 28
, be of any force or effect unless it is contained in a deed
of alienation signed by the parties thereto, or by their agents
acting
on their authority. A deed of alienation is defined to mean a
document or documents under which land is alienated.
[6]
It is permissible for parties to a deed of alienation to include only
three provisions, namely those related to
s 2(2A)
of the Act, the
thing to be sold and the price, being the essentialia of the
contract. In
Gowar
Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Section 3
, Dolphin Coast Medical Centre
CC
,
[7]
the SCA held that a deed of alienation that does not comply with
section 2(2A)
is not void
ab
initio
,
but voidable at the instance of the
purchaser
.
That proviso accordingly requires no further consideration.
[11]
It is readily apparent from a provincial
Department of Housing and Local Government document contained in the
papers that the first
and second respondents clearly intended to sell
the property to the Malawanas during December 2006. It is also clear
that the applicants,
Mr Tshantshana and his wife entered into a valid
deed of sale during April 2017, constituting the entire contract
between the parties.
The property was sold for the sum of R30 000,00
and the applicants were responsible for the costs. That the purchase
price
was paid on 27 April 2017 is apparent from Mr Tshantshana’s
own signed statement of that date, which makes reference to his
wife
being party to the arrangement, and confirms Mr Malawana’s
version of events and the increased purchase price paid.
It is
equally apparent that the first and second respondent acknowledged
receipt of the initial payment of R20 000 when this
was
received, and appended their signatures to a document confirming
this.
[12]
In
the circumstances, any averments to the contrary contained in the
answering affidavit are, in my opinion, not such as to raise
a real,
genuine or bona fide dispute of fact or are so far-fetched or clearly
untenable so as to warrant their rejection on the
papers.
[8]
As the court held in
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
:
[9]
‘
A
real, genuine and
bona fide
dispute of fact can exist only where the court is satisfied that the
party who purports to raise the dispute has in his affidavit
seriously and unambiguously addressed the fact said to be disputed.
There will of course be instances where a bare denial meets
the
requirement because there is no other way open to the disputing party
and nothing more can therefore be expected of him. But
even that may
not be sufficient if the fact averred lies purely within the
knowledge of the averring party and no basis is laid
for disputing
the veracity or accuracy of the averment. When the facts averred are
such that the disputing party must necessarily
possess knowledge of
them and be able to provide an answer (or counterveiling evidence) if
they be not true or accurate but, instead
of doing so, rests his case
on a bare or ambiguous denial the court will generally have
difficulty in finding that the test is
satisfied … There is
thus a serious duty imposed upon a legal adviser who settles an
answering affidavit to ascertain and
engage with facts which his
client disputes and to reflect such disputes fully and accurately in
the answering affidavit. If that
does not happen it should come as no
surprise that the court takes a robust view of the matter.’
[13]
As
Eksteen J held, on behalf of a full bench, in
M
v van der Merwe
:
[10]
‘
A
real dispute of fact arises most obviously when the respondent denies
material allegations made by deponents on the applicant’s
behalf and produces positive evidence to the contrary.’
[14]
The second respondent’s condition
between 2012 and 2017 is a matter within Mr Tshantshana’s
knowledge. He nonetheless
fails to address the contention that Mr
Malawana made arrangements with both him and his wife for the
property to be transferred
to the applicants, or to explain the
circumstances in which she co-signed both the deed of sale and Mr
Tshantshana’s document
entitled ‘affidavit’, which
made reference to her, on 27 April 2017 by affixing her thumbprint on
each page. These
documents are largely ignored in the answering
papers.
[15]
The
remaining arguments advanced in the papers on behalf of the first
respondent lack merit. Mr Tshantshana is content to disavow
the Deed
of Sale on the basis that it has been attached to Mr Malawana’s
affidavit, rather than the affidavit of the first
applicant. He also
failed to answer the affidavit of Mr Malawana in its entirety, based
on a misunderstanding of Uniform
Rule 6(1).
This subrule requires a
notice of motion to be accompanied by at least one affidavit but
there is authority that a notice of motion
can be supported by any
person who is in a position to provide the necessary material to
support the claim, even if that person
is not an applicant.
[11]
Various material allegations made by Mr Malawana are not addressed
and, also for the other reasons already mentioned, must be accepted.
The submission that Mr Tshantshana is left ‘with a doubt as to
who has instituted these proceedings’ is simply disingenuous
and there is no basis, on these papers, for affording him a further
opportunity to do so, also given the applicants’ interests
in
bringing the matter to finality.
[16]
It
was for Mr Tshantshana to have given notice of his wife’s death
to the Master, to have compiled an inventory within 14
days and to
have secured letters of executorship or obtained directives from the
Master, in terms of the
Administration of Estates Act, 1965
.
[12]
The failure to do so appear to constitute offences in terms of that
legislation. In any event, Mr Tshantshana accepts that he has
assumed
the responsibilities of a surviving spouse in a deceased intestate
estate as provided for in the Intestate Succession Act,
1997. That
aside, there appears to me to be no legal basis for these failures to
prevent the applicants from the relief they seek.
[17]
There is no basis for the averment that
this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter, or that there has
been non-compliance
with ss 2 and 28 of the Act.
[18]
The
first and second respondents jointly entered into a contract for the
alienation of the property, which formed part of the joint
estate.
[13]
The presumption is
that the sellers intended to make the applicants the owners of the
property.
[14]
[19]
The applicants seek a mandatory interdict
compelling the first and second respondents to act in order for their
ownership rights
to the property to be vindicated. The three
requirements for granting this relief have been met: the applicants
have demonstrated
a clear right, an injury actually committed or
reasonably apprehended and the absence of any other satisfactory
remedy. The injury
amounts to a continuing violation of the
applicants’ rights and, given the averments made by the first
respondent regarding
his means, cannot be vindicated through payment
of damages, which will in any event be difficult to assess, and
involve expensive
and time-consuming litigation. It would be
inequitable to delay the granting of this relief purely on the basis
that the second
respondent has passed away. This occurred more than
three years ago and no steps appear to have been taken to administer
her estate
in that time. In addition, she died intestate and Mr
Tshantshana is the surviving spouse.
[20]
Given the nature of the averments made by
Mr Tshantshana and the manner in which he appears to have concocted a
version to suit
his own ends, and persisted therewith, it is
appropriate that costs be awarded on a punitive scale.
Order
[21]
The following order will issue:
1.
The late filing of the first respondent’s
answering affidavit is condoned.
2.
The first respondent and the estate of the
second respondent pass transfer to the first and second applicants of
the immovable property
known as Unit No. [....] Dimbaza Location,
Dimbaza, Eastern Cape Province within 10 (ten) days of the date of
this Order;
3.
The Sheriff of the above Honourable Court
is authorised to forthwith sign the transfer and related documents
for and on behalf of
the estate of the second respondent, as seller;
4.
In the event of the first respondent
failing to pass transfer of the said property to the first and second
applicants in terms of
paragraph two of this Order, then in such
event, the Sheriff of the above Honourable Court is authorised to
sign the transfer and
related documents for and on behalf of the
first respondent as seller.
5.
Pending the registration of transfer of the
immovable property as aforesaid, the first respondent and the
executor of the estate
of the second respondent be interdicted and
restrained from disposing of the said immovable property to any third
party or from
further encumbering the said property in any manner
whatsoever;
6.
the first respondent be and is hereby
ordered to pay the costs of and incidental to this application on the
scale as between attorney
and client.
A.
GOVINDJEE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard
:27
October 2022
Delivered
:27
October 2022
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv C Woods
Instructed
by:
Gordon McCune Attorneys
King William’s Town
043 642 1519
For
the Respondent:
Mr S Sokutu
Instructed
by:
Siyathemba Sokutu Attorneys
King William’s Town
admin@sokutuattorneys.co.za
[1]
Certified
copies of the identification documents of the first and second
respondents are attached to the affidavit of the conveyancer
instructed to attend to the transfer of the property during 2006,
filed in reply.
[2]
Act
68 of 1981.
[3]
eBotswana
(Pty) Ltd v Sentech (Pty) Ltd
2013
(6) SA 327
(GSJ) at 336G-H.
[4]
Pothier
Sale
Preliminary
Article as quoted in G Glover
Kerr’s
Law of Sale and Lease
(4
th
Ed) (LexisNexis) (2014) p 163.
[5]
Act
68 of 1981.
[6]
S
1 of the Act.
[7]
Gowar
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Section 3, Dolphin Coast Medical Centre CC
2007
(3) SA 100 (SCA).
[8]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
[9]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008]
ZASCA 6
para 13.
[10]
[
2014]
ZAECGHC 15
[11]
Leth
NO and Heath NO v Fraser
1952
(2) SA 33
(O) at 36B.
[12]
Act
66 of 1965.
[13]
S
15 of the Matrimonial Property Act, 1984 (Act 88 of 1984), including
the requirement of two witness signatures, relates to performance
of
a juristic act with regard to a joint estate without the consent of
the other spouse, and is inapposite in the present instance.
It
relates to the performance of a juristic act by one of the spouses
married in community of property, the starting point being
that this
is permissible without consent in instances other than those set out
in subsections (2) and (3). The present instance
deals with a case
of common consent, rather than one spouse performing a unilateral
act for which separate consent may be required:
see HR Hahlo
The
South African Law of Husband and Wife
(5
th
Ed) (1985) 251. In other words, this was a case of the joint
entering into of a contract for the alienation of immovable property
forming part of the joint estate, so that the s 15(5) requirement of
two competent witnesses necessary where ‘independent’
consent is given is not required.
[14]
RH
Zulman and G Kairinos
Norman’s
Law of Purchase and Sale in South Africa
(5
th
Ed) (2005) 3.