Saila v Thulo and Others (1535/2006) [2008] ZAFSHC 41 (7 February 2008)

80 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Property Law — Ownership Rights — Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act 81 of 1988 — Applicant sought to nullify registration of property in respondents' names, claiming ownership based on her late mother's lease agreement — Respondents opposed, asserting valid conversion of rights under the Conversion Act — Court found that the applicant failed to challenge the municipality's decision to grant ownership rights to the first respondent within a reasonable time, and her application for condonation for late filing was flawed — Application dismissed as the applicant did not provide a reasonable explanation for the delay and failed to comply with procedural requirements for review.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter was brought in the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein, as an opposed motion application in which the applicant sought to undo the registration and subsequent transfers of a residential property and to procure registration of that property in her own name. The application was heard on 6 December 2007 and judgment was delivered on 7 February 2008 by Mocumie AJ.


The applicant was Ms Keitumetse Melody Saila, cited as the duly appointed executrix in the estate of her late mother, Mrs N A Saila. The first and second respondents were Mr Tshediso Kenneth Thulo and Mrs Mathapelo Patience Thulo, who had been granted occupational rights and later ownership rights in relation to the property. The third, fourth, and fifth respondents were subsequent purchasers in the chain of transfers, namely Mr Ponane Esau Mahlaba (third respondent) and Mr Molehi Walter Kgaile and Ms Kelebogile Theodoria Kgaile (fourth and fifth respondents). The sixth respondent was the Registrar of Deeds, and the seventh respondent was the Mangaung Municipality, the local authority involved in the administrative decision-making that culminated in conversion to ownership and transfer.


In broad terms, the dispute concerned the administrative conversion and transfer of a municipal residential property from the late Mrs Saila to the first respondent, and the validity and consequences of that conversion and subsequent transfers. Procedurally, the court treated the matter as turning centrally on whether the applicant had properly and timeously invoked any competent procedure (including condonation, and whether the matter could be approached as an appeal or a review) to impugn the municipality’s decision and the registration that followed.


2. Material Facts


Mrs Saila and her husband began residing at the property (described in the notice of motion as Erf 42992, Mothibi Street, Rocklands, Bloemfontein) in 1982. During 1987/1988 they relocated to Bloemspruit to pursue farming. The applicant’s father died on 21 January 1998, and her mother died on 5 January 2005.


At some stage, the late Mrs Saila concluded an oral lease arrangement with the first respondent. The first and second respondents took occupation of the property sometime in 1998. Towards the end of 1998, after having been in occupation for approximately twelve months, the first respondent reported to the Mangaung Municipality that he had a lease contract with the late Mrs Saila, who was no longer residing at the property. The municipality then cancelled Mrs Saila’s residential permit and granted occupational rights to the first respondent, which were converted to ownership rights in terms of the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act 81 of 1988. The conversion to ownership rights is recorded in the judgment as having occurred on 12 March 1998.


The property was transferred into the names of the first and second respondents on 5 February 1999. Thereafter, they sold the property to the third respondent for an undisclosed amount. The papers did not show when registration into the third respondent’s name occurred. The third respondent later sold the property to the fourth and fifth respondents, and registration into their names was effected on 23 January 2006 under Title Deed No. T1063/2006 (as cited in the relief sought).


The late Mrs Saila was informed of the municipality’s decision on 16 March 1998. She lodged an internal appeal with the municipality on 30 March 1998, which was unsuccessful. A dispute was then declared regarding the rightful occupier before the first respondent was granted ownership. The dispute was heard by an Adjudication Committee, which on 14 May 1998 ratified the earlier decision that the first respondent was the rightful occupier and consequently the owner under the R7 500 rebate scheme applicable at the time. The late Mrs Saila was informed of further adverse reasoning (including the view that she was in breach of conditions such as subletting without consent and failure to pay amounts due) on 15 May 1998. Despite dissatisfaction, there was no judicial challenge by way of appeal or review brought in court at that time against the procedural validity of the municipality’s decision.


It was confirmed by the Registrar of Deeds that no certificate of leasehold was ever issued to Mr Abram Saila or to Mrs Saila in respect of the property.


The court also identified matters that were common cause or not in dispute, including that Mrs Saila had not been living at the property for a considerable period; she did not pay rent to the municipality at R89 per month; she did not pay for services during that period; she received money from the first respondent described as rent (albeit on different asserted bases); she had not applied for conversion of her residential rights into ownership rights in the prescribed form under the rebate scheme; and the municipality’s decision to grant the first respondent a certificate of ownership had not been set aside in any appeal or review and therefore stood as an extant administrative act with legal consequences.


3. Legal Issues


The court identified two principal issues for determination. The first was whether condonation should be granted for the late launching of the application, which was sought from the bar on the footing that the application should be treated as an appeal. The second was whether, assuming procedural obstacles could be overcome, the substantive relief sought—namely the retrospective setting aside of registration and transfers and the compelled registration of the property in the applicant’s name—could be granted.


The dispute was not confined to pure fact-finding. It primarily concerned the application of procedural and administrative-law principles to the facts, including compliance with procedural requirements (notably Rule 53 for reviews), whether there had been an unreasonable delay (under both common-law principles and PAJA), and whether the applicant’s claim had prescribed under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969. It also involved an evaluative judgment as to the effect of delay, prejudice, and finality in administrative decisions.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On condonation, the court held that the application was “extremely flawed” because the applicant sought condonation from the bar without having brought a substantive condonation application, supported by properly set out grounds, filed with the Registrar and served on the respondents. On the authorities cited, the court treated the procedural steps of filing and service as necessary for an application to be regarded as having been “made”. The court further emphasised that failure to lodge an appeal within the prescribed time and form could not be condoned without good cause, and that the applicant bore a duty to explain the lengthy delay. On the facts, a delay of approximately seven years had elapsed before approaching the court, and the applicant did not provide a reasonable explanation for that delay. For that reason alone, the court found that condonation could not be granted.


The court also considered whether the matter could be approached as a review. It concluded that it could not, because the application did not comply with the requirements of Rule 53, “in particular”. The court then addressed delay in the context of review more generally. Under the common law, review proceedings must be brought within a reasonable time, and under section 7 of PAJA review must be instituted without unreasonable delay and, in any event, not later than 180 days after the person concerned was informed of the administrative action where no internal remedies were available. The court explained that these time constraints serve, among other things, to secure finality in administrative acts and to avoid litigation being brought many years later when reconstruction and recollection may be practically impossible. Applying those principles, the court regarded the applicant’s delay as inordinate and unjustified.


In dealing with the consequences of the municipality’s decision to grant ownership to the first respondent, the court relied on the principle that an administrative act—even if unlawful—produces legally valid consequences until it is set aside by a court. Because the municipality’s decision had never been attacked by way of judicial review or appeal, the certificate and ensuing transfers were treated as having continued legal effect. The court considered that this consequence could not be ignored in the analysis of the relief sought.


The court further assessed the applicant’s delay in light of when she should have acted. It expressed the view that the applicant ought to have launched proceedings earlier, referring specifically to correspondence from 7 November 2000 as indicating a point by which she was aware of the relevant issues, and in any event before the death of her mother. The court also noted internal inconsistencies and improbabilities in the versions placed before it (including the late Mrs Saila’s own admissions regarding renting out the house, contrasted with later allegations of misrepresentation), and observed that the death of Mrs Saila made it impossible to test the veracity of certain averments. This fed into the court’s assessment of prejudice and the difficulties caused by late litigation.


Prejudice to respondents played a further role in the court’s evaluative reasoning. The court highlighted that the property had passed through multiple hands and that the fourth and fifth respondents had purchased bona fide and, on the papers, had not occupied the house for a lengthy period while the dispute remained unresolved. The court considered that undoing the chain of transactions at that late stage would cause serious prejudice to persons involved, and that the prejudice could have been avoided had appropriate action been taken timeously.


Separately, the court held that the applicant’s claim to set aside the transfer and to demand registration of the property in her name had prescribed by 2003 by operation of section 11 of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, read with sections 10 and 11. Relying on authority, the court characterised a claim of this kind (to set aside transfer and procure re-registration) as constituting a “debt” for purposes of prescription. The court concluded that, given prescription and delay, granting the application would serve no useful purpose.


Having reached conclusions on delay and prescription, the court considered it unnecessary to decide other matters raised in argument. It nevertheless added that, on the evidence before it, the late Mrs Saila resided under a regulation 6 residential permit that conferred residential rights only, not leasehold rights, and that even if the applicant’s contentions on entitlement were accepted, the property might revert to the municipality in terms of the title deed—leading to a result inconsistent with the applicant’s demand to have registration effected in her name. The overall conclusion was that the applicant had not made out a case entitling her to the relief sought.


On costs, the court considered the question (though it was not fully argued) and held that, in the “peculiar circumstances” of the case, it was not necessary to make any costs order.


5. Outcome and Relief


The application was dismissed.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Tyhopho v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1984 (2) SA 73 (Tk).


Jacobs v Polmed Medical Fund 2001 (2) SA 502 (T).


Wolgroeiers Afslaers (Edm) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Kaapstad 1978 (1) SA 13 (A).


Qqweta v Transkei Development Corporation Ltd and Others 2006 (2) SA 603 (SCA).


Nzimande v Nzimande 2005 (1) SA 83 (WLD).


Nzimande v Nzimande and Another 2005 (1) SA 83 (WLD).


Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA).


Radebe v Government of the Republic of South Africa and Others 1995 (3) SA 787 (NPD).


Legislation Cited


Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold or Ownership Act 81 of 1988.


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000.


Prescription Act 68 of 1969.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule of Court 53.


Held


The court held that the applicant’s attempt to obtain condonation for late institution of proceedings could not succeed because no substantive condonation application had been filed and served, and because no reasonable explanation was given for the lengthy delay.


The court held further that the matter could not properly be treated as a judicial review, as the application did not comply with Rule 53, and that in any event review proceedings must be brought without unreasonable delay, with PAJA prescribing a 180-day outer limit in the circumstances described.


The court held that the municipality’s decision to grant the first respondent ownership, having never been set aside on review or appeal, continued to exist in fact and to have legal consequences, and that the chain of transfers and the prejudice to subsequent purchasers weighed against the relief sought.


The court held that the applicant’s claim to set aside the transfer and to compel re-registration in her name had, on the court’s analysis, prescribed under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, and that for these reasons the relief sought could not be granted. The application was dismissed, with no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party seeking condonation for late prosecution of proceedings must bring a proper application in accordance with the rules and must show good cause, including a reasonable explanation for the delay; an informal request from the bar is not a substitute for a properly filed and served application.


A purported review of administrative action must comply with the procedural requirements of the rules, including Uniform Rule 53 where applicable, and must be instituted within a reasonable time at common law and, where PAJA applies, within the statutory framework requiring institution without unreasonable delay and, in the circumstances described in section 7, not later than 180 days after the applicant was informed of the administrative action.


An administrative act that has not been set aside by a court may produce legally effective consequences in the interim; it cannot simply be disregarded by a litigant who considers it invalid.


A claim framed as setting aside transfer and compelling re-registration may constitute a debt for purposes of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, with the consequence that such a claim may become unenforceable if not pursued within the applicable prescriptive period.

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[2008] ZAFSHC 41
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Saila v Thulo and Others (1535/2006) [2008] ZAFSHC 41 (7 February 2008)

IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(ORANGE FREE STATE
PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
Case
No.: 1535/2006
In the case between:
KEITUMETSE
MELODY SAILA
Plaintiff
and
TSHEDISO
KENNETH THULO
1
st
Respondent
MATHAPELO
PATIENCE THULO
2
nd
Respondent
PONANE
ESAU MAHLABA
3
rd
Respondent
MOLEHI
WALTER KGAILE
4
th
Respondent
KELEBOGILE
THEODORIA KGAILE
5
th
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS
6
th
Respondent
THE
MANGAUNG MUNICIPALITY
7
th
Respondent
_______________________________________________________
JUDGEMENT:
MOCUMIE, AJ
___
____________________________________________________
HEARD
ON:
6 DECEMBER 2007
_______________________________________________________
DELIVERED
ON:
7 FEBRUARY 2008
_______________________________________________________
[1] The applicant, Ms
Keitumetse Melody Saila is the duly appointed executrix in the
estate of Mrs N A Saila, who was her late mother.
She seeks an
order:
“
(a) Nullifying and / or setting
aside retrospectively the registration of the property commonly
known and described as Erf 42992
Mothibi Street, Rocklands,
Bloemfontein, currently held under Title Deed No.: T1063(32006, at
Deeds Office, Bloemfontein and which
property has been registered in
the names of first to fifth Respondents.
Compelling the 6
th
Respondent to register the property referred to in paragraph (a)
herein, in the name of the Applicant, Keitumetse Melody Saila;
(c) Order the Applicant to pay all
the costs pertaining to the transfer of the said property in her
name;
(d) Cost
of suit against the first to the fifth Respondents, and seventh
Respondent only if defended;
Further and / or alternative
relief.”
The
application is opposed by all respondents.
[2] The application has
to be understood in the following context. Mrs Saila and her
husband started to stay in Erf 4299, Rocklands,
Bloemfontein, (“the
property”) in 1982. They relocated to Bloemspruit
in
1987/1988
to pursue farming there. Applicant’s father passed away on 21
January 1998 followed by her mother on 5 January 2005.
The late Mrs
Saila entered into an oral lease agreement with Mr Thulo (first
respondent). Mr and Mrs Thulo (second respondent)
started to stay
at the property sometime in 1998. Towards the end of 1998 almost
twelve months from the time they moved into the
property, he
reported the fact that he had a lease contract with the late Mrs
Saila, who was no longer staying at the property,
to the Mangaung
Municipality (seventh respondent). Seventh respondent cancelled Mrs
Saila’s residential permit and granted first
respondent
occupational rights which were converted to ownership rights in
terms of the Conversion of Certain Rights into Leasehold
or
Ownership Act 81 of 1988 (
“the
Conversion Act”
)
on 12 March 1998. The property was transferred in the names of
first and second respondent on 5 February 1999. First and second
respondent in turn sold the house to third respondent for an
undisclosed amount. It is not shown in the papers when registration
of the property was effected in the names of third respondent.
Third respondent in turn sold the property to fourth and fifth
respondent. The registration of the property in their names was
effected on 23 January 2006.
[3] On
16 March 1998 the late Mrs Saila was informed of seventh
respondent’s decision. On 30 March 1998 she lodged an appeal
with
seventh respondent which was unsuccessful. She then declared a
dispute over who was the rightful occupier prior to first respondent
being granted ownership by seventh respondent. The dispute was
heard by the Adjudication Committee set up to hear disputes in
this
regard. On 14 May 1998 the Committee ratified the decision that was
made earlier that first respondent was the rightful occupier
and
consequently the owner in terms of the R7 500, 00 Rebate Scheme
applicable then. Mrs Saila was not satisfied with this decision
and
seventh respondent sought advice from the City Council legal
advisor. In a letter drafted as a opinion, Mr Van Jaarsveld opined
as follows:
“2. Although Ms
NSaila concluded a lease agreement with Mangaung City Council on
March 25, 1992 for the lease of site 2992, she
is not currently
occupying the premises. She is furthermore in breach of the lease
agreement in respect of the following clauses:
2.1 clause 6-she
sublet the premises to Mr KT Thulo
without the
lessor’s prior written consent;
2.2 clause 19-she
failed to pay the rates and service
charges
due to the lessor, on the due dates;
2.3
clause 23-she failed to pay rental due in terms of
See page 60 “A”-61
of the Opposing Affidavit.
The
late Mrs Saila was informed of this decision on 15 May 1998.
Notwithstanding this, there was never an attack on the procedural
validity of that decision by way of appeal or review to this Court.
[4] According to the
Registrar of Deeds as confirmed in para 5.3 of his affidavit dated 6
December 2006 no certificate of leasehold
was ever issued to Mr.
Abram Saila (the applicant’s late father)
or
Mrs Saila
(the applicant’s late mother)
in respect
of the property.
[5] In my view there are
two issues which I have to decide upon. Whether to grant the
application for condonation as prayed for
from the bar and whether
the relief sought should be granted.
The
application is extremely flawed based on two simple reasons. Firstly
an application for condonation for late filling of this
application
which applicant argued should be considered as an appeal was made
from the bar. No substantive application in which
the grounds of
such application were set out was filed with the Registrar and
served on the respondents. The Rules are clear
that if both steps
have not been taken, the application was not
“made”
.
(
Tyhopho
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
1984
(2) SA 73
(Tk) ;
Jacobs
v Polmed Medical Fund
2001 2 SA 502
(T) at 506. Failure to lodge an appeal within the
prescribed time and in the prescribed form cannot be condoned unless
good cause
is shown. Undoubtedly the applicant has a duty to
explain the long delay of seven years which lapsed before
approaching this Court
when it was clear as early as 2000 at least
that she was not satisfied with the decision of seventh respondent
and was aware of
the procedural steps to take to address her
dissatisfaction. She has not advanced a reasonable explanation for
this unreasonable
delay. On this basis alone the application for
condonation for the late filling of this application cannot succeed.
[6] Secondly this
application cannot even be regarded as a review as it clearly does
not comply with Rule 53 in particular. In
terms of the common law
such review application should be brought within a reasonable time
without necessarily prescribing what
reasonable time is. See
Wolgroeiers
Afslaers (Edm) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Kaapstad
1978(1) SA 13 (A). Section 7 of Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (“
PAJA
”)
which now governs the review of administrative actions provides that
judicial review must be instituted without unreasonable
delay and
not later than 180 days of after the date on which the person
concerned was informed of the administrative action if
no internal
remedies were available. This is meant to
inter
alia
bring finality to administrative decisions and acts and not
encourage litigants to approach courts many years later when
chances
of recollection and reconstruction of cases may be virtually
impossible. See
Qqweta
v Transkei Development Corporation Ltd and Others
2006(2) SA 603(SCA) at 612E-613A.
[7] The Conversion Act
deals with the conversion of occupational rights into ownership
rights as set out in section 6 read with
section 8 . For clarity
section 6 provides that:
“6(1)
The holder-
(a) of a residential permit …
referred to in the regulations… issued by a local authority
allowing the person mentioned therein
to occupy a site set apart
under those regulations …shall from the commencement of this
Act… become the holder of a right
of leasehold or an owner, from
such date;
(2) Subject
to any by-laws relating to letting that may apply to the site or
accommodation concerned, a lease contemplated in subsection
(1)-
(a) may be terminated by the
lessee on three months’ written notice;
(b) shall be subject to the
payment of rental by the lessee to the lessor in an amount equal to
the amount paid by the lessee
immediately before the commencement of
this Act in respect of the site or accommodation concerned unless
such amount is varied
by agreement.
Section 8 provides that:
“No person, including the
State, shall be liable in respect of anything done in good faith in
the exercise or performance of
a power of duty conferred or imposed
by or under this Act”.
[8] The Conversion Act
prescribes an open, transparent enquiry process for the
resolution of disputes with regard to the
ownership of section 6
houses. It is clear from the scheme of the Act that it is
imperative that the process should be
compatible with the
principles of
audi
alteram partem
,
as well as the rules of natural justice in order to ensure that
there is fair administrative justice. In addition in order to
benefit from the Conversion Act the lessee had to satisfy the
requirements set out in the letter referred to in para 3 above.
See
Nzimande
v Nzimande
2005
(1) SA 83
(WLD) for a detailed analysis of the historical background
of landownership of black African people in this country.
[9] It is common cause
or at least not in dispute that:
9.1 Mrs Saila was not
staying in the property in dispute for a considerable time;
9.2 She
did not pay rent to seventh respondent at R89, 00 per month;
9.3 She
did not pay for services in that period;
9.4 She
received money for rent from first respondent albeit on different
bases;
9.5 She
had not applied for the conversion of her residential rights into
ownership rights in the prescribed form and in terms
of the R7,
500, 00 Rebate Scheme; and
9.6 Seventh respondent’s
decision to grant first respondent a certificate of ownership in
respect of the property in dispute
was properly made as its
validity was never attacked in any proceedings be it an appeal or
review before a Court of law. It
follows that until the
certificate is set aside by a Court in proceedings for judicial
review, it exists in fact and it has legal
consequences that
simply cannot be over looked: See
Nzimande
v Nzimande and Another
2005
(1) SA 83
(WLD) at 97A. This salutary principle was endorsed and
given the necessary
imprimatur
by
Howie
P
et
Nugent JA
in
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City Of Cape Town and Others
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA) at 242A stated:
“The proper functioning of a
modern state would be considerably compromised if all administrative
acts could be given effect
to or ignored depending upon the view the
subject takes of the validity of the act in question. No doubt it
is for this reason
that our law has always recognised that even
an unlawful administrative act is capable of producing legally valid
consequences
for so long as the unlawful act is not set aside.”
[10] I
am of the view that the applicant was dilatory and should have
filed the application in 2000 as per letter of the Head:
Local
Government & Housing dated 7 November 2000, Annexure “B” at
page 62 and 63 which is the date on which she first
became aware of
first respondent’s actions or at least before her mother passed on
in 2004. I say this because in relation to
the issue of alleged
misrepresentation (false information) given to seventh respondent by
first respondent, the late Mrs Saila
admitted in one of her letters
as alluded to above that she was renting the house out or at least
that she left first respondent
in the house to look after it. Yet
applicant avers that her parents left the house in or around 1997
to set up a farming business.
The late Mrs Saila admitted renting
out the house contrary to her agreement with seventh respondent and
then later on alleges
that she was misled by first respondent to
give him a receipt to get money from his employer. These are
conflicting versions giving
rise to improbabilities. Mrs Saila has
passed on and as a result there is no way to test the veracity of
her averments different
as they are on their own and as compared to
the applicant’s.
[11] It should be
abundantly clear that the inordinate delay by the applicant to
launch this application has serious prejudice
for the respondents.
This is clear from the fact that after seventh respondent sold the
property to first respondent, he sold
it to third respondent who
also sold it to fifth respondent. Fifth respondent bought the house
bona
fide
from third respondent and has to date not occupied the house to use
it as he had wanted to for seven years. It is clear from the
history of this matter that the property in issue has gone through
many hands. To attempt, at this late stage, to undo all the
various
transactions would, in my view, cause serious prejudice to various
people who were involved. This could have been avoided
if the
applicant had taken appropriate action at the appropriate time. In
any event, as alluded to above, applicant has not filed
any
substantive application for condonation. There is therefore nothing
to consider.
[12] It seems to me that
in any event the applicant’s claim to have the transfer of the
property set aside and to demand registration
of the house in her
name prescribed in 2003 by virtue of
section 11
of the
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
. See subsections 10 and 11 of the
Prescription Act
68 of 1969
. See too
Radebe
v Government of the Republic of South Africa and Others
1995 (3) SA 787
(NPD) at 804 A – B, whereat
Booysen
J
states:
“
Assuming the applicant had the
right to have the expropriation and transfer set aside or to demand
redelivery of the land to him
by registration thereof in his name,
that right arose as soon as he was deprived of his possession and
ownership. The effect of
the expropriation, whether valid or not,
is that the applicant has been deprived of ownership of the land.
He was thus left with
no more than a personal right (if he has any
right at all) to claim redelivery of the land by registration of
title in his name.
Such a claim constitutes a debt within the
meaning of
ss 10
and
11
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
. While
‘debt’ is not defined in the Act, it has to be given a wide and
general meaning.”
In
the circumstances, it would, in my view, serve no useful purpose to
grant this application.
[13] In the light of
the conclusion I have reached in respect of the delay and
prescription it is not necessary for me to decide
the various other
matters raised in argument. It is clear from the evidence before me
that the late Mrs Saila resided in the
house in dispute under a
regulation 6 residential permit granted by seventh respondent which
gave her residential rights only
and not lease hold rights by the
time she passed on in 2003. Even if I may be wrong in the
interpretation of the relevant sections
and regulations of the
Conversion Act and can conclude that she was the rightful occupier
prior to seventh respondent granting
first respondent rights he was
not entitled to have, in the light of her not having met the
requirements set out, the property
would revert to seventh
respondent in terms of the Title Deed T2156/1999 in which event,
seventh respondent would be entitled to
deal with the property as
it pleased. I therefore conclude that applicant has not made out any
case entitling her to the relief
sought. The relief sought cannot
be granted.
[14] The remaining issue
is that of costs. I have considered this matter although not fully
argued. In the peculiar circumstances
of this case I do not find
that it is necessary for any costs order to be made.
[15]
I
make the following order:
15.1 The
application as per notice of motion is dismissed.
15.2. No
order as to costs.
___________________

B. C. MOCUMIE, AJ
BCM/em
(wilma)
On behalf of the
applicant: L.L. Ketja
Instructed by:
Lovius
Block
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of the 1
st
,
2
nd
and
3
rd
respondents: J. van der Vyver
Instructed by:
Kramer
Weihmann & Joubert Inc.
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of the 4
th
and
5
th
respondents: S. Oosthuizen
Instructed by:
Symington
& De Kok
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of the 6
th
respondent: Registrar of Deeds
Instructed by:
The
State Attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of the 7
th
respondent: H.N. Botha
Instructed by:
Naudes
BLOEMFONTEIN