Botha and Another v Hendriks N.O and Others (700/2008) [2008] ZANCHC 25 (6 June 2008)

80 Reportability
Contract Law

Brief Summary

Interdict — Urgent application for interdict pendente lite — Applicants sought access to property and release of attached goods pending appeal — First applicant evicted and goods attached following judgment for breach of contract — Court held that execution of judgment is automatically suspended upon noting of appeal, preventing further enforcement actions — Applicants entitled to restoration of status quo ante pending appeal.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an urgent application for an interim interdict (interdict pendente lite) brought in the High Court, Northern Cape Division, Kimberley. The interim relief was sought pending the outcome of an appeal (case number CA&R 37/08) against a judgment granted by the Magistrates’ Court, De Aar.


The applicants were Lorraine Sophie Botha (first applicant) and Khulelekani Laundry CC (second applicant). The first, second and third respondents were sued in their official capacities as trustees of the JJW Hendriks Trust (IT 2151/1995), namely Johannes Jacobus Wiese Hendriks N.O, Martha Magrieta Hendriks N.O, and Henry Robins Rich N.O. Additional respondents were cited due to potential interests in the property (fourth and fifth respondents as tenants), and because the Sheriff (sixth respondent) had implemented the eviction and attachment in execution.


The procedural history was central to the dispute. The Trust obtained judgment in the Magistrates’ Court on 3 April 2008 against the first applicant for breach of a deed of sale relating to immovable property. On 4 April 2008, execution followed immediately: the Sheriff evicted the first applicant and attached tools and equipment at the premises. The first applicant thereafter noted an appeal (albeit outside the prescribed time period) and simultaneously launched a condonation application for the late noting of the appeal. This High Court application sought, in substance, to restore the pre-execution position pending the appeal.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether, in light of the appeal and the operation of the rules governing suspension of execution pending appeal, the applicants were entitled to interim relief restoring access to the premises for trading and enabling use of attached tools of trade.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause or not seriously disputed that the first applicant concluded a written deed of sale with the first and second respondents (in their capacities as trustees of the Trust) on 19 November 2003 in respect of the immovable property described as Erf 4128, De Aar (the property). Pursuant to that deed of sale, the first applicant occupied the property and conducted a laundry service from it.


During 2005, the second applicant, a close corporation, was established. The first applicant was (and remained) its sole member. It was not disputed that the business of providing laundry services continued to be conducted from the property, and it was also not disputed that the second applicant traded as a laundry service provider at the premises at all material times relevant to the application.


On 3 April 2008, the Trust obtained judgment in the Magistrates’ Court against the first applicant. The judgment included cancellation of the deed of sale, an eviction order, monetary orders for unpaid instalments (R8 000.00) and rates and service charges (R32 246.90), forfeiture of R180 000.00 already paid, interest, and costs.


On 4 April 2008, acting on a warrant of execution issued pursuant to that judgment, the Sheriff evicted the first applicant from the property and attached all equipment and tools of trade situated on the property.


The first applicant then noted an appeal against the Magistrates’ Court judgment. The notice of appeal was filed a few days late under the Magistrates’ Court Rules, and the first applicant also launched an application for condonation in respect of the late noting. It was common cause that the first applicant furnished security of R1 000.00 in connection with the appeal.


It was further common cause that no application had been brought in the Magistrates’ Court under section 78 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944 to direct that the judgment be carried into execution or that execution be suspended pending appeal. The present application was directed at restoring the status quo ante as it existed prior to eviction and attachment.


A principal disputed matter arose in argument regarding standing and possessory status: the respondents contended that, on the applicants’ own version, the second applicant was the occupier and possessor at the time of eviction and attachment, and that the second applicant was not a party to the Magistrates’ Court litigation. The applicants’ case, as accepted for purposes of interim relief, was that the first applicant’s entitlement to possess and occupy flowed from the deed of sale, and that the close corporation functioned as the vehicle through which she conducted the business from which she derived her livelihood.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, primarily, the legal consequences of noting an appeal from the Magistrates’ Court judgment in circumstances where execution had already occurred and no section 78 direction had been sought.


This raised a central issue of law and application of law to fact, namely whether the common-law rule that execution is automatically suspended upon the noting of an appeal applied, and if so, whether steps already taken in execution (specifically, eviction and attachment) could remain effective after the appeal had been noted.


A further legal question concerned the effect of a late noted appeal accompanied by an application for condonation: whether lateness meant that the appeal was not “duly noted” for purposes of suspending execution, or whether the appeal was nevertheless noted once the formal requirements for noting had been met, leaving condonation as a separate issue affecting the prosecution of the appeal.


A third issue involved the interim interdict requirements and whether the applicants had shown a prima facie right. This included a point of legal characterisation: whether the first applicant could claim restoration of possession and occupation notwithstanding that the trading entity in physical occupation was a close corporation, and whether the second applicant’s presence as occupier undermined the possibility of restoring a status quo in favour of the first applicant.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by locating the dispute in the framework of section 78 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, which empowers a Magistrates’ Court to direct either that execution proceed or that execution be suspended pending an appeal (or certain applications). Because it was common cause that neither party had sought such a direction, the court held that the position was governed by the common law regarding the effect of noting an appeal.


Applying the established common-law practice, the court accepted that execution is automatically suspended upon the noting of an appeal. The court referred to authority explaining that the rationale for this rule is to prevent irreparable damage to an appellant while the appeal is pending. In that context, the court addressed the respondents’ concession that authority existed (in particular, Schoeman v Nedbank Ltd & Others) for the proposition that, once an appeal is noted, steps taken in execution—such as attachment—cannot remain in force. Although the respondents submitted that the case was wrongly decided and relied on an obiter dictum in Le Grange en Andere v Boksburgse Stadsraad en Andere, the court rejected that submission and held that the approach in Schoeman was consistent with the rationale for suspension pending appeal.


The court also supported its conclusion by reference to the structure of the Magistrates’ Court Rules, noting that the rules permit execution steps to be taken shortly after judgment (Rule 36(7)), while allowing a longer period within which an appeal may be noted (Rule 51(3)). From this, the court reasoned that the rules contemplate the practical possibility that execution steps may be taken before an appeal is noted; therefore, once an appeal is noted, sound practice and common sense require that prior execution steps be reversed, consistent with the automatic suspension principle.


On the point that the appeal had been noted late, the court rejected the submission that only the appeal court could decide condonation and therefore the appeal was not duly noted. The court treated this as a confusion between (a) the procedural act of noting an appeal in the Magistrates’ Court and (b) the separate issue of whether the appeal may be prosecuted despite non-compliance with time limits. Relying on Rule 51(4), the court held that the requirements for noting an appeal are delivery of a notice of appeal and provision of security in the prescribed amount. The court regarded “delivery” as filing with the clerk and service on the respondent, and emphasised that while strict compliance is expected where the successful party would be deprived of the benefit of a judgment, the compliance relevant to “duly noting” concerns these formal requirements. Condonation, in the court’s analysis, did not determine whether the appeal was noted; it affected whether the appeal could proceed.


The court further explained that condonation is concerned with fairness and justice in permitting non-compliance with time limits, and noted authority recognising a High Court’s inherent power to grant condonation. The court distinguished situations where an appeal lapses (for example by being struck from the roll) from the act of noting an appeal, and it concluded that, on the facts, the first applicant had duly noted the appeal because notice was delivered and security furnished, notwithstanding lateness.


Turning to interim relief, the court applied the requirements for an interdict pendente lite as stated in LF Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality. The respondents’ standing objection was treated as going primarily to the existence of a prima facie right. The court accepted that the first applicant’s right to occupation and possession emanated from the deed of sale, and that before 2005 she exercised it personally, thereafter conducting business through the close corporation. The court accepted as undisputed that the first applicant depended wholly on that business for income and that the close corporation was formed after the deed of sale.


The court rejected the argument that the status quo could not be restored because the close corporation (and not the first applicant personally) was the physical occupier and possessor at the time of execution. The court characterised this argument as a confusion between the entitlement to possession (ius possidendi) held by the first applicant and the right of possession based on factual possession (ius possessionis) associated with the close corporation’s occupation. The court drew on property-law commentary to emphasise the conceptual distinction between possession as a factual state and the legal consequences flowing from it, and held that the first applicant’s entitlement remained the relevant foundation for restoration.


In addressing a contractual point raised from clause 10.3 of the deed of sale (relating to letting prior to transfer), the court held that the situation was not one of letting to another entity. The court accepted that the first applicant had not leased the property to the close corporation; rather, she had conducted trade through that entity as a business vehicle, with no lease agreement between the first applicant (as purchaser) and the second applicant (as occupier).


On these bases, the court concluded that possession and access should be restored to the applicants pending the appeal, and that the attached tools of trade should be released for use in trading, subject to remaining under judicial attachment. Costs were held to follow the result.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court granted interim relief pending finalisation of the appeal under case number CA&R 37/08. The first, second and third respondents were interdicted from denying the applicants access to Erf 4128 for purposes of operating as a laundry service provider.


The Sheriff of the Magistrates’ Court, De Aar, was ordered to release the machinery and tools of trade identified in the relevant annexure to the founding affidavit (marked (x) and (√)) for purposes of trade only, pending the appeal, on condition that those goods would remain under judicial attachment pending finalisation of the appeal.


The first, second and third respondents were ordered to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.


Cases Cited


Malan v Tollekin 1931 CPD 214.


Gentiruco AG v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd 1972(1) SA 589 (A).


Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Stama (Pty) Ltd 1975(1) SA 730 (A).


South Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty) Ltd 1977(3) SA 543 (A).


Schoeman v Nedbank Ltd & Others 1989(4) SA 812 (W).


Reid and Another v Godart and Another 1938 AD 511.


Le Grange en Andere v Boksburgse Stadsraad en Andere 1991(3) SA 222 (W).


Nunlal v Pillay 1948(4) 720 (N).


Yunnan Engineering CC and Another v Chater and Others 2006(5) SA 571 (T).


Multilaterale Voertuigongelukke Fonds v Pretorius 1994(1) SA 814 (O).


Herf v Germani 1978(1) SA 440 (T).


LF Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality 1969(2) SA 256 (C).


Strydom en ’n Ander v De Lange en ’n Ander 1970(2) SA 6 (T).


Legislation Cited


Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, section 78.


Rules of Court Cited


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 2(1)(b).


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 36(7).


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 51(3).


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 51(4).


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 51(7).


Held


The court held that, where no direction is sought under section 78 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act, the common-law rule applies such that execution is automatically suspended upon the noting of an appeal.


It held further that, once an appeal is noted, steps already taken in execution—such as eviction and attachment—cannot remain operative and the position should be restored in line with the suspension of the judgment’s enforceability pending appeal.


The court held that a late noted appeal is nevertheless “duly noted” for purposes of suspension where the formal requirements for noting the appeal have been met, and that condonation concerns whether the appeal may be proceeded with rather than whether noting has occurred.


On the facts, the court held that the applicants established the requirements for an interim interdict, including a prima facie right, and that the distinction between the first applicant’s entitlement to possession and the second applicant’s factual possession did not prevent restoration of access and release of tools for trading pending the appeal.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The noting of an appeal from a Magistrates’ Court judgment, in the absence of a contrary direction under section 78 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, triggers the common-law practice that suspends execution automatically pending the appeal, reflecting the policy of preventing irreparable harm to an appellant.


Where execution steps have already been taken before an appeal is noted (as the Magistrates’ Court Rules may allow), the suspension principle may require that such steps—such as attachment and other measures implementing the judgment—be treated as unable to remain in force once the appeal is noted, pending the appeal’s outcome.


The procedural act of noting an appeal is distinct from an application for condonation relating to non-compliance with time limits. Compliance with the formal requirements for noting an appeal (delivery of a notice of appeal and provision of security as required) is treated as determinative of whether an appeal has been noted, whereas condonation governs whether the appeal may be prosecuted despite lateness.


In assessing a prima facie right for interim interdict relief, the court accepted that conceptual distinctions between entitlement to possession (ius possidendi) and factual possession (ius possessionis) can be material in determining whether restoration of access and possession is legally coherent, particularly where business is conducted through a separate legal entity without constituting a lease or transfer of the underlying entitlement.

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[2008] ZANCHC 25
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Botha and Another v Hendriks N.O and Others (700/2008) [2008] ZANCHC 25 (6 June 2008)

Reportable: Yes / No
Circulate to Judges:
Yes / No
Circulate
to Magistrates: Yes / No
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern Cape Division)
Case
no: 700/2008
Date
heard: 2008-05-30
Date
delivered: 2008-06-06
In
the matter of
:
LORRAINE
SOPHIE BOTHA FIRST APPLICANT
KHULELEKANI
LAUNDRY CC SECOND APPLICANT
AND
JOHANNES
JACOBUS WIESE HENDRIKS NO
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MARTHA
MAGRIETA HENDRIKS NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
HENRY
ROBINS RICH NO THIRD RESPONDENT
CYRIL
STRYDOM FOURTH RESPONDENT
JOHAN
HENDRIKS FIFTH RESPONDENT
THE
SHERIFF SIXTH RESPONDENT
Coram:
MAJIEDT
J
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT
J:
This
is an urgent application for an interdict
pendente
lite
,
which is opposed by the first, second and third respondents.
The applicants seek the
following relief in their Notice of Motion:
“
2.1 That
the first (to) third respondents be interdicted from denying the
applicants access to Erf 4128 for purposes of trading at
the said
premises as a laundry service provider pending the outcome and
finalisation of the Appeal under case number CA&R 37/08.
That
the sheriff be ordered to release the machinery and tools of trade
attached in terms of Annexure A hereto and marked (x)
and (
√
)
for purposes of trade only pending the outcome and finalisation of
the Appeal under case number CA&R 37/08 and subject
to the
provision that the abovesaid goods shall remain under judicial
attachment pending the outcome and finalisation of the
aforesaid
appeal.
That the first (to)
third respondents pay the costs of the application.”
The
first applicant is the sole member of the second applicant close
corporation. It is not in issue on the papers that the second
applicant had at all material times hereto traded as a laundry
service provider on the property known as erf 4128, De Aar (“
the
property”
).
The
first, second and third respondents are cited in their official
capacities as trustees of the JJW Hendriks Trust (IT 2151/1995
–
“
the
Trust”
).
The fourth and fifth
respondents have been cited merely due to their potential interest
in the matter – they are tenants of certain
portions of the
buildings on the property. The sixth respondent has been cited due
to the fact that he had evicted the applicants
from the property and
had attached certain goods in execution of a judgment obtained by
the Trust against first applicant, to which
I shall make reference
later.
Those
facts which are either common cause or are not seriously in issue on
the papers are the following:
The first applicant had
concluded a written deed of sale in respect of the property on 19
November 2003 with the first and second
respondents in their
capacity as trustees of the Trust. It is not clear on the papers
when the third respondent had also become
a trustee in the Trust,
but nothing turns on it. The third respondent acted as attorney
for the Trust in the Magistrate’s
Court proceedings referred to
hereinafter and also in these proceedings.
Pursuant
to the aforementioned written deed of sale, the first applicant
occupied the property and conducted a laundry service
from it.
During the course of 2005 the close corporation, the second
applicant herein, was established. As stated before, the
first
applicant is the sole member thereof.
On 3 April 2008 the
Trust obtained judgment in the Magistrate’s Court at De Aar
against the first applicant for breach of contract
in respect of
the written deed of sale regarding the property. That judgment was
for:
cancellation of the deed
of sale of 19 November 2003;
an order evicting the
first applicant from the property and placing the Trust in
possession of the property;
an
order that the first applicant pay the amount of R8000.00 to the
Trust in respect of unpaid instalments due on the written deed
of
sale;
an
order that the first applicant pay the amount of R32246,90 to the
Trust in respect of outstanding rates and service charges on
the
property;
an
order in terms whereof the first applicant forfeits the amount of
R180 000,00 already paid in terms of the deed of sale
to the
Trust;
interest at 15,5% per
annum from date of summons; and
costs of suit.
On
the following day, namely 4 April 2008, the Sheriff, acting on a
warrant of execution in pursuance of the aforementioned judgment,
evicted the first applicant from the property and attached all the
equipment and tools of trade situated at the property.
The
first applicant noted an appeal against the aforementioned judgment
– this notice of appeal was noted a few days after the
due date
prescribed in the Magistrates’ Court Rules. An application for
condonation of the late filing of the notice of appeal
was also
filed at the Magistrate’s Court. The notice of appeal contains
detailed grounds of appeal. Security in the amount
of R1000.00 has
also been furnished.
It is
common cause that the first applicant’s eviction and the
attachment of the equipment and tools of trade by the sixth
respondent
occurred in execution of the judgment of the Magistrate
at De Aar. The present application is aimed at restoring the
status
quo ante
as
it prevailed prior to the judgment of the magistrate.
Section
78 of the Magistrates’ Court Act, 32 of 1944, provides as follows:
“
78 Execution
or suspension in case of appeal, etc
Where
an appeal has been noted or an application to rescind, correct or
vary a judgment has been made, the court may direct either
that the
judgment shall be carried into execution or that execution thereof
shall be suspended pending the decision upon the appeal
or
application. The direction shall be made upon such terms, if any, as
the court may determine as to security for the due performance
of any
judgment which may be given upon the appeal or application.”
It is
common cause that no application that the judgment be carried into
execution or that execution thereof be suspended pending
the
decision on appeal, has been filed with the magistrate. As a
consequence, the common law regarding the effect of an appeal
comes
into operation.
See in this regard:
Malan
v Tollekin
1931 CPD 214
at
215-216 where Gardiner JP held as follows:
“
It
seems to me that when neither party applies and neither of these
orders is made, the ordinary common law rule governs the matter,
and
execution is automatically suspended.”
This
aforementioned common law rule of practice is well established and
in terms thereof the execution of a judgment is automatically
suspended upon the noting of an appeal so that consequently, pending
such appeal, the judgment cannot be carried out and no effect
can be
given thereto.
See
generally:
Gentiruco
AG v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd 1972(1) SA 589 (A)
at
667;
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Stama (Pty) Ltd 1975(1) SA 730 (A)
at
746;
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd 1977(3) SA 543 (A)
at
545 A;
Schoeman
v Nedbank Ltd & Others 1989(4) SA 812 (W)
at
815 D – 816 C.
In
Reid
and another v Godart and another
1938 AD 511
at 513 De Villiers JA expounded the rationale for this common law
rule of practice as follows:
“
The
foundation of the common-law rule as to the suspension of a judgment
on the noting of an appeal, is to prevent irreparable damage
from
being done to the intending appellant, whether such damage be done by
a levy under a writ, or by the execution of a judgment
in any other
manner appropriate to the nature of the judgment appealed from.”
(cited
with approval in:
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
,
supra
at 545 B-C).
Mr.
Van Niekerk, who appeared on behalf of the first, second and third
respondents, conceded that
Schoeman
v Nedbank Ltd and others
,
supra
,
is direct authority that, once an appeal is noted, steps which had
been taken in execution of the judgment appealed against (such
as an
attachment), cannot remain in force. He submitted, however, that
that case had been wrongly decided and referred me to an
obiter
dictum
of
Flemming J in
Le
Grange en andere v Boksburgse Stadsraad en andere 1991(3) SA 222 (W)
at
229 I – 230 A.
I do
not agree. The
ratio
decidendi
in
Schoeman
v Nedbank Ltd and others
accords
with the general rationale underlying the automatic suspension of a
judgment by the noting of an appeal (see the cases referred
to
above). Moreover, I am fortified in my view by the construction of
the Magistrate Courts’ Rules of civil practice, namely:
a) Rule
36(7) provides that in all cases, except where judgment has been
entered by consent or default, process in execution of a
judgment
shall not be issued without leave of the court applied for at the
time of granting the judgment, before the day following
the one on
which the judgment is given.
b) Rule
51(3), on the other hand, provides that an appeal may be noted within
20 days after the date of the judgment appealed against
or within 20
days after receipt of the written judgment, whichever is the longest.
Based
upon this construction, it is manifestly evident that in many cases
steps in execution may be taken before an appeal is noted,
since this
is exactly what the Rules provide for. In such circumstances it
seems to me that common sense and sound practice require
that steps
in execution already taken should be reversed in line with the common
law practice of the suspension of the judgment upon
the noting of an
appeal against such judgment.
12.1 A
further matter raised by Mr. Van Niekerk on behalf of the first three
respondents, is the fact of the late noting of the appeal.
According
to his submission, given the fact that only the court hearing the
appeal can decide the merits of the condonation application,
the
appeal cannot be said to be duly noted in terms of the Rules. This
submission is devoid of any merit and is the result of an
obfuscation
of two different procedures, namely condonation and the noting of an
appeal. Rule 51(4) reads as follows:
“
An
appeal shall be noted by the delivery of notice, and, unless the
court of appeal shall otherwise order, by giving security for
the
respondent’s costs of appeal to the amount of R1000…..”
The
only requirements prescribed are therefore:
a) Delivery of a notice
of appeal; and
b) Furnishing of security in the amount of
R1000.00.
“
Delivery
”
means filing with the clerk of the court and serving a copy on the
respondent and “
notice
”
means notice in writing;
see:
Magistrates’ Court Rule 2(1)(b).
While
strict compliance with the Rules is necessary before a successful
party can be expected to be deprived of the benefit of the
judgment
obtained, such compliance relates only to delivery of the notice and
the furnishing of the security as set out above.
See in
this regard:
Nunlal
v Pillay 1948(4) 720 (N)
at
721.
12.2 Condonation
has nothing to do with whether an appeal can be said to have been
duly noted. In concerns only the question whether
an appeal may be
proceeded with in the appeal court. As a general rule it is firmly
established that in all cases where time limits
apply, a High Court
has an inherent right to grant condonation for non-compliance with
such time limits, where the principles of
justice and fairness demand
same and where the reasons for non-compliance with the time limits
have been explained to the satisfaction
of the Court.
See generally:
Yunnan
Engineering CC and Another v Chater and Others 2006(5) SA 571 (T)
at
578 H-J.
The difference between
these two procedures can be illustrated by reference to two decided
cases:
a) In
Multilaterale Voertuigongelukke fonds v Pretorius 1994(1) SA 814
(O)
,
Hattingh J confirmed the practice in that Division that matters
ancillary to appeals from the lower courts (e.g. condonation
applications)
be heard by the court hearing the appeal, since the
prospects of success on the merits is an important aspect for
consideration in
a condonation application. This bears no relation
whatsoever to the question whether the appeal can be said to be “duly
noted”
in the lower court (and thus suspending execution of the
judgment).
b) In
Herf
v Germani 1978(1) SA 440 (T),
an appeal was struck from the Roll and it was held that the effect
thereof is that the appeal has
lapsed
and it is thus deemed that the appeal
has
been discontinued
,
so that the judgment appealed against would no longer be suspended.
This striking off does not, however, preclude an application
by an
appellant for condonation of the failure to
prosecute
the
appeal. It is clear therefore that
noting
an appeal and applying for condonation for non-compliance so as to
continue
prosecuting
the appeal are different, albeit interrelated, procedures.
To summarize therefore:
the first applicant has duly noted an appeal herein, since she has
complied with the provisions contained
in Rule 51(3) read with rule
51(4)( and rule 51(7) of the Magistrates’ Court Rules (it is
common cause that the first applicant
has furnished security in the
sum of R1000.00 as required in Rule 51(4)). The fact that she has
noted her appeal late and that
she seeks condonation for this
non-compliance from the court of appeal, has no bearing whatsoever
on the due noting of her appeal
in the Magistrate’s Court.
Whereas condonation is a process in the High Court where the appeal
is to be heard to decide whether
she may in fact proceed with her
appeal, the due noting of the appeal is a process in the
Magistrate’s Court, which has in
fact been finalised.
Mr.
Van Niekerk has raised a further matter for consideration during his
argument. He submits that on the applicants’ papers
the second
applicant was the occupier of the immovable property and possessor
of the movable tools of trade and equipment at the
time of eviction
and attachment by the sixth respondent. He submitted that second
applicant has no
locus
standi
to rely on the suspension of the execution of the judgment, since it
was not a party to the proceedings in the Magistrate’s Court.
He
submitted further that the first applicant also cannot seek
suspension of the execution of the judgment, since she did not
in
her personal capacity occupy the immovable property, nor did she
personally possess the movable tools of trade and equipment.
He
submitted that, as a consequence, there is no
status
quo
which
can be restored in respect of the first applicant.
The
aforegoing submissions are based on a misconception. The first
applicant concluded the deed of sale with the Trust at a time
when
she was trading in her personal capacity and when the second
applicant had not been established as yet. Thereafter she
registered
the second applicant close corporation of which she is
the sole member. The first applicant averred that she is wholly
dependent
on the business of the second applicant as a source of
income. This was not disputed by the first three respondents. It
was also
not disputed that the second applicant was established only
after the conclusion of the deed of sale with the Trust.
The
requirements for an interdict
pendente
lite
are
as follows:
A
prima
facie
right,
though open to some doubt;
A
well grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief
is not granted;
The balance of
convenience favours the granting of interim relief;
That the applicant has
no other satisfactory remedy.
See:
LF
Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality 1969(2) SA 256
(C)
at
267 A-F.
Mr.
Van Niekerk’s submissions,
supra
,
concerns the first requirement above, namely a
prima
facie
right
although open to some doubt.
It
is not in issue that the first applicant has a right, emanating
from the written deed of sale, to be in possession and occupation
of the property. Prior to 2005 she exercised that right in her
personal capacity. Subsequent to the establishment of the second
applicant close corporation, she exercised that right through
another legal entity, namely the close corporation of which she
is
the sole member. There cannot be any doubt whatsoever (nor has any
been suggested in argument) that the close corporation
is the
vehicle through which she conducted and still conducts her business
and from which she derives her sole source of income.
In my view
it matters not that the second applicant is a separate legal entity
(on the contrary, that is the whole motivation
for trading in the
name of the close corporation, namely so as to protect her own
personal estate).
The
argument that, because the close corporation was in occupation and
possession of the property, such occupation and possession
cannot
be restored to the first applicant, is a misconception of the law.
It confuses the
ius
possidendi
of the first applicant (i.e. the entitlement to demand control over
the property by virtue of the right emanating from the deed
of
sale) with the
ius
possessionis
of the second applicant (i.e. the right of possession).
Van
der Merwe, Sakereg, 2
nd
edition
at 91 cautions (with good reason as the present case illustrates)
as follows:
“
Om
verwarring te vermy, behoort ‘n duidelike onderskeid gemaak te word
tussen besit as ‘n regsfeit en die gevolge van besit wat
uit die
regsfeit vloei.”
See
also:
Badenhorst,
Pienaar, Mostert: Silberberg & Schoeman’s The Law of Property,
5
th
ed
at
275;
Kleyn
& Boraine, Property
at 113-114.
In
Silberberg & Schoeman (
supra
)
it is pointed out that:
“
(the
ius possessionis) is available only to a person actually in
(physical) possession of a thing; and
“…
a
person may have the intention to control a thing without actually
being in possession of the particular thing and, conversely,
he or
she may have a right of possession without having a ius
possidendi,”
(ibid).
This is particularly
apposite to the facts in the present matter.
The
situation in the present matter is analogous to a
scenario
where a purchaser enters into a lease agreement with a lessee who
then occupies the premises and, following upon litigation
between
the seller and the purchaser, the right to possession of the
premises has to be restored to the purchaser in terms of
a Court
order or by operation of law. In such an instance it matters not
that the purchaser was not in physical possession of
the premises.
The lessee does not enter into the picture at all and the right to
possession must simply be restored to the purchaser
who can
thereafter decide as to whether to continue letting the premises or
to occupy the premises him/her/itself.
A
further illustration of this principle can be gleaned from the
facts and decision in
Strydom
en ‘n ander v De Lange en ‘n ander 1970(2) SA 6 (T)
.
The facts were briefly as follows:
(a) An erf was purchased
by the first appellant as nominee of the second respondent in
accordance with an informal oral trust agreement
between them. The
erf was registered in the name of first appellant as nominee.
(b) First appellant also
acted as agent of the second respondent in terms of a mandate granted
to him (the first appellant) to let
or sell the erf with the dwelling
on it, subject to second respondent’s prior approval.
(c) First
appellant then concluded a deed of sale with second appellant in
respect of the erf and advised the second respondent of
the sale,
also claiming commission (qua agent) in the process. Second
respondent refused to confirm the sale and challenged the
first
appellant’s right to deal with the property without his prior
consent. The second respondent notified the first appellant
of his
intention to take transfer of the property himself after the present
tenant had vacated it.
(d) After the tenant
vacated the property, it was occupied by the first respondent. First
appellant applied ex parte for and was
granted an order that first
respondent vacate the property – the order also served as a
temporary interdict.
(e) Upon
receipt of the order, the first respondent applied ex parte for and
was granted a temporary spoliation order, with the second
respondent
and second applicant also joining the proceedings. First appellant
unsuccessfully applied for a spoliation order, the
Magistrate finding
that he had acted
mala
fide
.
The temporary spoliation order in favour of the first respondent was
confirmed.
In
its judgment on appeal, the Court held:
(i) that the second
respondent as beneficial owner had lawful possession of the erf and
that right was enforceable against the first
appellant as nominee who
merely had bare dominium of the erf (at 11 H; 12 B-E).
(ii) that
the rights of second respondent and second appellant might be weighed
against each other in the same way as the personal
rights of two
separate purchasers who had purchased the same property from the same
seller and therefore, before transfer, the prior
personal right (i.e.
of the second respondent) had preference (at 14 D-G).
In my
view the legal position of the second respondent in that case is
similar (albeit not identical) to that of the first applicant
in the
present matter and that of the first appellant is more or less
similar (in law, not in fact) as that of the second applicant
herein.
For
these reasons I am of the view that there is no merit in Mr. Van
Niekerk’s contention that the
status
quo
cannot
be restored in the present circumstances. He has, during oral
argument, drawn my attention to clause 10.3 of the written
deed of
sale which provides that prior to transfer of the property into the
name of the first applicant, she may not let the property
without
prior written consent of the seller (the Trust). But that is not
the case here. The first applicant has not let the property
to
another entity. All that has happened, as I have pointed out above,
is that she has conducted trade in the name of another
legal entity
of which she is the sole member. There is no lease agreement
between the first applicant (
qua
purchaser
)
and the second applicant (
qua
occupier
).
For
the aforementioned reasons I am of the view that possession of the
property and of the movable tools of trade and equipment
should be
restored to the applicants forthwith, pending the outcome of the
appeal which is pending in this Court. Costs must follow
the
outcome.
The
following order is issued:
The
first, second and third respondents are interdicted from denying
the applicants access to erf 4128 for purposes of trading
on the
said premises as a laundry service provider pending the outcome and
finalisation of the appeal under case number CA&R 37/08.
The
Sheriff of the Magistrate’s Court, De Aar, is ordered to release
the machinery and tools of trade attached in terms of annexure
A to
the first applicant’s founding affidavit and marked (x) and (
√
)
for purposes of trade only, pending the outcome and finalisation of
the appeal under case number CA&R 37/08 and subject
to the
provision that the above said goods shall remain under judicial
attachment pending the outcome and finalisation of the
aforesaid
appeal.
The first, second
and third respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the
application jointly and severally, the one paying
the others to be
absolved.
_____________
SA MAJIEDT
JUDGE
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF : ADV BLOEM
INSTRUCTED
BY : TOWELL & GROENEWALD ATTORNEYS
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF : ADV JG VAN NIEKERK SC
INSTRUCTED
BY : L COETZEE