Reportable: YES/ NO
Circulate to Judges: YES/ NO
Circulate to Magistrates: YES/ NO
Circulate to Reaional Maaistrates: YES/ NO
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY
In the matter between:
MABHEKANE TRADING CC
and Case No:
KOOPMANSFONTEIN COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
UNIDENTIFIED MEMBERS OF THE
KOOPMANSFONTEIN COMMUNAL PROPERTY
ASSOCIATION
Heard: 07/02/2025
Delivered: 16/05/2025 3/2025
Applicant
First Respondent
Second Respondent
Summary: Return day -rule nisi -Authority of attorney challenged . It is the
institution of the proceedings and the prosecution thereof that must be authorised -
Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA). Requisites final
interdict all to be present- (i) clear right; (ii) injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended ; (iii) absence of any other satisfactory remedy.
ORDER
In the result, the following order is made:
The rule nisi is discharged with costs.
Page 12
JUDGMENT
MAMOSEBO, ADJP
[1] On 07 January 2025 the applicant, Mabhekane Trading CC, brought an urgent
application seeking an order restraining and interdicting the respondents,
Koopmansfontein Communal Property Association (K/CPA), and the
unidentified members of K/CPA from unlawfully evicting the applicant and
threatening, intimidating and disturbing the operations of the applicant at
Portion 9 (a portion of Portion 7) of the farm Koopmansfontein-Barkly West
Rd, Koopmansfontein Sentrum/Filling Station/ (Farmhouse 1,
Koopmansfontein, Northern Cape).
[2] This Court issued a rule nisi calling upon K/CPA to show cause on 07 February
2025 why the interdict should not be made final. A further order was made that
the rule was to operate as interim interdictory relief pending the final
determination of the application , which came before me on the anticipated
date of 23 January 2025 but was extended to the return day of 07 February
2025. The applicant is represented by Adv J Mongala and Mr C
Kgotlagomang, who initially represented both respondents , withdrew his
representation of the second respondent, as none emerged.
[3] The applicant has challenged Mr Kgotlagomang's authority to act on behalf of
the remaining respondent. In Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd1
Streicher JA explained that it is the institution of the proceedings and
prosecution thereof which must be authorised. When the applicant applied for
the rule nisi ex parte, the court was informed that Towell & Groenewaldt
Attorneys were the respondents' attorneys of record, and that the application
was served on them. Applicant further repeated reference to the respondents'
firm of attorneys in several paragraphs in its replying affidavit, giving credence
1 2004 (3) SA 615 (SCA)
Page 13
to its recognition of the firm's authority to act. It now, belatedly and spuriously ,
wants to renege after the granting of the interim relief sought. The minutes
dated 11 January 2025 reinforced Towell & Groenewaldt's authority to act. Mr
Kgotlagomang is attached to the firm. Based on the aforesaid, the K/CPA
application to regard the matter as unopposed and to confirm the rule has to
fail.
[4] The applicant concluded a 20·-year lease agreement with the respondent on
15 October 2020 commencing on 01 November 2020 terminating on
01 August 2040. On 21 December 2024 Mr Bheki Jeremiah Ngwane,
deponent to the founding affidavit and director of the applicant, received a
letter addressed to the applicant terminating the agreement citing breach of
contract.
[5] The requirements for a final interdict as confirmed by Innes JA in Setlogelo2
are trite, namely, a clear right, an injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended , and the absence of any other satisfactory remedy to the
applicant. This kind of relief is a drastic measure, and the courts will generally
not grant it, particularly , if there exists alternative relief. The granting of a final
interdict is within the court's discretion. The discretion is limited in
circumstances where all the requirements are met. See also Hotz and Others
v University of Cape Town. 3
[6] The fact that the applicant was granted interim relief does not necessarily
follow that final relief will follow without more. The Constitutional Court per Du
Plessis AJ said the following in The National Gambling BoarcJ4
'An interim interdict is by definition
'a court order preserving or restoring the status quo pending the final determination
of the rights of the parties. It does not involve a final determination of these rights and
does not affect their final determination.'
2 Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221
3 2017 (2) SA 485 (SCA) para 29
4 The National Gambling Board v Premier of Kwazulu-Natal and Others 2002 JDR 0067 (CC)
Page 14
[7] Friedman AJP enunciated in Minister of Law and Order v Committee of the
Church Summit of Bophuthatswana and Others5:
'Whether the applicant has a right is a matter of substantive law. The onus is on the
applicant applying for a final interdict to establish on a balance of probability the facts
and evidence which prove that he has a clear or definite right in terms of substantive
law. See Nienaber v Stuckey 1946 AD 1049 at 1053-4; Mosii v Motseoakhumo 1954
(3) SA 919 (A); De Villiers v Soetsane 1975 (1) SA 360 (E) at 362. See also Law of
South Africa (at paras 317-8). The right which the applicant must prove is also a right
which can be protected. This is a right which exists only in law, be it at common law
or statutory law.'
[8] In his founding affidavit the said Ngwane averred that despite the lease
agreement setting out the terms for a breach at Clause 11, the respondents'
legal representative, Towell & Groenewaldt, directed a letter to the applicant
dated 17 December 2024 terminating the lease agreement based on a breach
but did not specify the impugned breach. Neither did the respondents serve it
with a notice requiring the applicant to remedy the breach within the stipulated
period of 14 days. The applicant contends that the agreed premium of
R60 000 per month were paid and attached the payment history annexed to
the papers as "BN6", to demonstrate its purported compliance with Clause 3
of the Agreement. This, according to the applicant establishes a clear right
which can be protected.
[9] The lease agreement in relevant part, stipulates :
'3 Conditions of the Lease
The parties agree that the Lease Agreement shall commence on the
effective date 01 November 2020 and ends on 31 August 2040, and shall be
valid for a period of 20 years from the effective date.
3.1 The Lease Agreement is granted in exchange for a monthly rental
payment of R60 000.00 (Sixty Thousand Rand Only) payable from
5 1994 (3) SA 89 (BG) at p98 D-E
Pagel5
01 November 2020 by Mabhekane Trading CC to Koopmansfontein
Communa l Properties Association in pursuit of the project
contempla ted in clause 2.3 above.
3.2 Annual escalation of monthly rental -8% (eight percent) per annum
compounded with effect from the second year (01 Novembe r 2021)
of the commencement date.
3.9 The Lessee shall be liable for the usage of their own water and
electricity costs.
11 Breach
11.1 In the event of any of the parties committing a breach of any of the
provisions of terms of this Agreement and remaining in breach for
a period of more than fourteen (14) business days after receipt of a
notice in terms of which the party aggrieved by such breach
requires the party concerned to remedy such breach;
11.2 Then, and in that event, the aggrieved party shall be entitled without
further notice, as its option and without derogating from any of the
rights which it may have in terms of this Agreement or at law, to:
11.2.1
11.2.2 Cancel this Agreement and claim and recover from
the defaulting party such damages as the aggrieved
party may have suffered as a result of such breach;
or
Claim specific performance of the terms of this
Agreement without prejudice to any claim for
damages against the defaulting party as a result of
such breach.'
[1 OJ In the respondent's letter of 17 December 2024, annexure "BN4" the following
is written:
'It is our instructions that you have breached the agreement between the parties in
that you failed to effect payment of the rental as per Clause 3 of the Agreemen t.
Page 16
Your attention is brought to the provisions of Clause 11 of the Agreement. In terms
of Clause 11 of the Agreement , in the event that you fail to remedy the breach, our
client would be entitled without further notice to cancel the agreement and recover
from you any damages that it may have suffered as a result of your breach.
Kindly take note that our client forthwith terminates the contract between the parties
and our clients' rights are fully reserved. '
[11] The averment by the applicant that it was not afforded a notice period of
14 days is not correct. This is so because the respondent's letter dated 22 July
2024 the following is stated:
'It is our instructions that you have breached the agreement between the parties in
that you failed to effect payment of the rental as per Clause 3 of the Agreemen t.
It is our instructions to demand from you as we hereby do, that you remedy the breach
as afore-stated within 14 days of receipt of this letter.'
[12] In its response to the notice, the applicant undertook to purge its default and
adhere to the payments of R60 000.00 per month. The applicant raised the
issue of the Eskom electricity account which it must settle, which is not a
component of the monthly R60 000 rental. It must be noted that the letter of
termination issued on 21 December 2024 came about after the notice letter of
July 2024. Despite the two letters directed to the applicant in July and
December, there was no response thereto.
[13) Evidently, the respondent has afforded the applicant sufficient time as
stipulated in Clause 11 to remedy the breach within the 14-day period.
Whether the right the applicant claims to have is clear is a matter of evidence.
A close scrutiny of "BN6" (the payment history) under the column CPA rent
payment shows the converse:
•
•
• 25 January 2024
01 February 2024
03 March 2024 no payment
R 5000
R20 000
Page 17
• 26 March 2024 R30 000
• 26 April 2024 R60 000
• 25 May 2024 R60 000
• 13 June 2024 no payment
• 25 June 2024 no payment
• 27 June 2024 R35 000
• 25 July 2024 R50 000
• 23 August 2024 R10 000
• 26 August 2024 R50 000
• 27 September 2024 R60 000
• 26 October 2024 R40 000
• 06 November 2024 R 3000
• 28 November 2024 R60 000
[14) It is undisputed that when the full amount of R60 000 was paid Eskom would
not be paid. It is also significant that only four full payments were made for the
period January to November 2024. Over this 11-month period the applicant
should have paid R660 000.00 instead of R483 000.00 leaving an arrear
amount of R177 000.00. The amount leaves out of the reckoning the 8%
escalation from the 13th month of the contract period or any period outside
annexure "BN6". The papers are silent as to what happened to the payments
made between 01 November 2020 and 25 January 2025. Clause 3.9 is
unambiguous that the obligation for water and electricity lies with the applicant.
Clause 3 further deals with an annual escalation of 8% starting from November
2021. The applicant's letter dated 11 August 2024 in response to the 22 July
2024 letter commits to adhering to the R60 000 monthly rental but seems to
raise the issue of Eskom repayments as a cause for their non-compliance.
[15] The second requisite relates to injury actually committed or reasonab ly
apprehended. In Committee of the Church Summit6 Friedman AJP explained :
6 Ibid at 98H • I
Page 18
'This is the second essential for the granting of a final interdict. The phraseology
'injury' means a breach or infraction of the right which has been shown or
demonstrated and the prejudice that has resulted therefrom. See Setloge/o v
Setlogelo ( supra). The term 'injury' is used as a translation of Van der Linden's phrase
'een gepleegde feitelijkheid' ('a fact committed'). See Law of South Africa (op cit para
318). It has also been held that prejudice is not equivalent to damages. It will suffice
to establish potential prejudice.
[16] Mr Ngwane was informed by members of the K/CPA on Friday 03 January
2025 that the applicant was no longer welcome to occupy their premises. Mr
Ngwane stated that the applicant intends to bring action proceedings
challenging the lawfulness of the termination of the lease agreement. The
respondents gave the applicant until 10 January 2025 to vacate the premises
and close its business. It is alleged that one of the members of the K/CPA
even threatened to lock the pumps of the filling station. Mr Mongala incorrectly
invoked s 4(2} of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act, 1 of 1998 (PIE). The immovable property in issue is
business premises and PIE finds no application. There can be no gainsaying
that the agreement has ceased to exist then there can be no apprehension of
harm.
[17] Whereas the claim for an interim interdict was necessary to preserve or
restore the status quo pending the final determination of the rights of the
parties for a final interdict, the test is objective. The facts established on the
return date pertaining to the requirement of injury do not support the grounds
to entertain a reasonable apprehens ion claimed by the applicant. I am
satisfied that the applicant has not shown a breach of a right and a prejudice
or potential prejudice that stands to flow therefrom. The applicant has, as I
have already found above, not demonstrated a clear right which can be
protected.
[18] The third and final requirement is the absence of an alternative remedy. The
applicant only conveyed the following in the founding affidavit pertaining to the
existence or otherwise of an alternative remedy:
Page 19
"I submit that there is no satisfactory alternative remedy for the applicant, save to
approach this Court and seek the relief in the notice of motion. The police would have
no right to intervene in the protection of civil rights and that right would only be
protected by this Honourable Court"
[19] The aforementioned explanation falls short of this requirement. The applicant
failed to honour the terms of the lease agreement over a prolonged period and
then sought to interdict the K/CPA and claim an infraction of a right on frivolous
grounds. I therefore find that the applicant has not demonstrated a clear right
which has been infringed and further failed to make out a case that there were
no alternative remedies at its disposal.
Costs
[20] There is no basis why costs should not follow the result.
[21] In the result, the following order is made:
The rule nisi is discharged with costs.
' 7 \ M.C. MAMOSEBO
ACtlNG DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
For the Applicant:
Instructed by:
For the Respondent:
Instructed by: Adv. J Mongala
Moribe Attorneys
Mr. C Kgotlagomang
Towe II & Groenewaldt Inc