Skip to content
Close Menu
ConvictionConviction
  • Home
  • Law & Justice
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Ask The Expert
  • Get In Touch

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Tenant wins urgent court battle after landlord chains and padlocks shop shut

April 17, 2026

Court orders Tshwane to fix school properties it sold without proper approvals

April 17, 2026

RAF cannot exclude undocumented foreign nationals from compensation claims

April 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Tenant wins urgent court battle after landlord chains and padlocks shop shut
  • Court orders Tshwane to fix school properties it sold without proper approvals
  • RAF cannot exclude undocumented foreign nationals from compensation claims
  • JSC overrules tribunal and finds Judge President Mbenenge guilty of gross misconduct
  • Firearm laws and court processes explained through the Julius Malema case
  • Asylum seekers are paying bribes to stay free, and the system is letting it happen
  • Dignity SA asks Pretoria High Court to open a lawful path for assisted dying
  • NHI public participation challenge tests Parliament’s lawmaking process
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
ConvictionConviction
Demo
  • Home
  • Law & Justice
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Ask The Expert
  • Get In Touch
ConvictionConviction
Home » Owner loses urgent court bid to reclaim dog surrendered to SPCA
Civil Law

Owner loses urgent court bid to reclaim dog surrendered to SPCA

High Court finds owner’s express consent to SPCA rescue defeats spoliation claim despite later attempt to reverse surrender.
Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliJanuary 29, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
blank
A dog rescue by the SPCA became the subject of an urgent High Court dispute after the owner sought to reclaim the animal. Picture: SPCA Roodepoort/Facebook
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
  • The High Court dismissed an urgent application by a dog owner seeking the return of his pet after surrendering it to the SPCA.
  • The court ruled that spoliation law turns on consent at the time possession is handed over, not on a later change of mind.
  • Judge Wilson criticised the applicant’s legal representatives for advancing a fundamentally misguided claim

An attempt by John Michael Letang to urgently reclaim his dog from the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) Roodepoort has been firmly rejected by the High Court in Johannesburg. The court found that the dog was lawfully surrendered and not unlawfully taken.

The case arose after Bitsy, a dog owned by Letang, was discovered trapped at the bottom of a drain on his Roodepoort property while he was away on holiday in Durban. The dog was found by Eugene Haricharan, a cadet inspector employed by the SPCA, who attended the property on 2 January 2026.

In a stark account, the court described Bitsy as being in a “dreadful state”, noting that the dog was starving, severely dehydrated, infested with ticks and fleas, and suffering from flystrike in his ear. Judge SDJ Wilson explained that flystrike is “a particularly distressing condition” involving tissue deterioration caused by larvae hatching beneath the skin. The court further noted that Bitsy’s arthritis left him physically unable to escape the drain on his own.

Surrender confirmed, then reconsidered

After contacting Letang and informing him of Bitsy’s condition, Haricharan was told that the owner was not in a position to arrange the urgent veterinary treatment the dog required. Haricharan then asked whether Letang wished to surrender the dog to the SPCA, an offer that Letang accepted.

The surrender was confirmed in writing through a WhatsApp message in which Letang stated that he “do hereby surrender Bitsy to SPCA Roodepoort”. Letang’s daughter, who was present at the property, also signed a form confirming that all ownership rights over Bitsy were being relinquished.

Less than an hour later, however, Letang sent a further message seeking to qualify the surrender, asking that he be informed when Bitsy was “ready for collection”. No response followed. Further messages sent the next day also went unanswered.

By 7 January 2026, Letang’s attorneys demanded Bitsy’s return, asserting that the dog had been unlawfully removed. The SPCA refused, stating that Bitsy had been rescued from neglect and surrendered because his owner could not provide the necessary care. Letang then launched an urgent spoliation application, claiming that he had been unlawfully dispossessed of his dog.

Consent defeats spoliation claim

In dismissing the application, Judge Wilson held that the legal foundation of the claim was misconceived. He stressed that spoliation proceedings are narrowly concerned with whether possession was taken unlawfully, not with disputes about ownership or later intentions.

“The only question is whether, at the point Mr Haricharan took control of Bitsy, he did so with Mr Letang’s consent,” the judge said. “Clearly, he did.”

Judge Wilson rejected the argument that Letang’s later message requesting the dog’s return could undo the original consent. Whether the surrender resulted in a permanent loss of ownership was, the judge said, irrelevant to spoliation proceedings and could only be explored in separate litigation.

“Once Mr Letang conceded, as he had to, that he voluntarily placed Bitsy with the SPCA, there could have been no question of the SPCA having unlawfully dispossessed him,” the court held. “For these reasons, the spoliation application must fail.”

Court warns legal representatives

While the SPCA sought attorney and client costs, arguing that the application should never have been brought, Judge Wilson declined to impose a punitive costs order against Letang himself. Instead, he turned his attention to the conduct of Letang’s legal representatives.

“This is not the first time I have been constrained to observe that the legal representatives currently acting for Mr Letang have brought a fundamentally misguided claim before the urgent court,” the judge said, referring to an earlier matter heard in January 2026.

He went further, warning that the errors in the present case were so serious that the representation “fell below the standard that ought reasonably to be expected of a legal practitioner admitted to appear in our courts”.

Although the court stopped short of ordering counsel to pay costs personally, Judge Wilson cautioned that persistently advancing “transparently untenable arguments” could, in future, result in personal cost orders.

The application was dismissed with costs on the ordinary scale, leaving Bitsy in the care of the SPCA.

Conviction.co.za

Get your news on the go. Clickhere to follow the Conviction WhatsApp channel.

animal welfare High Court rulings Property law SPCA cases Spoliation law
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Kennedy Mudzuli

    Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

    Related Posts

    Tenant wins urgent court battle after landlord chains and padlocks shop shut

    April 17, 2026

    Court orders Tshwane to fix school properties it sold without proper approvals

    April 17, 2026

    RAF cannot exclude undocumented foreign nationals from compensation claims

    April 17, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Prove your humanity: 8   +   2   =  

    Subscribe to our newsletter:
    Top Posts

    Making sectional title rules that work: A practical guide

    January 17, 2025

    Protection order among the consequences of trespassing in an ‘Exclusive Use Area’

    December 31, 2024

    Between a rock and a foul-smelling place

    November 27, 2024

    Irregular levy increases, mismanagement, and legal threats in a sectional title scheme

    June 2, 2025
    Don't Miss
    Regulatory Law
    4 Mins Read

    Tenant wins urgent court battle after landlord chains and padlocks shop shut

    By Kennedy MudzuliApril 17, 20264 Mins Read

    The High Court in Pretoria ordered a mall to reopen a locked shop after finding that the landlord unlawfully dispossessed the tenant without following legal process.

    Court orders Tshwane to fix school properties it sold without proper approvals

    April 17, 2026

    RAF cannot exclude undocumented foreign nationals from compensation claims

    April 17, 2026

    JSC overrules tribunal and finds Judge President Mbenenge guilty of gross misconduct

    April 16, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • WhatsApp
    Demo
    About Us
    About Us

    Helping South Africans to navigate the legal landscape; providing accessible legal information; and giving a voice to those seeking justice.

    Facebook X (Twitter) WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Tenant wins urgent court battle after landlord chains and padlocks shop shut

    April 17, 2026

    Court orders Tshwane to fix school properties it sold without proper approvals

    April 17, 2026

    RAF cannot exclude undocumented foreign nationals from compensation claims

    April 17, 2026
    Most Popular

    Making sectional title rules that work: A practical guide

    January 17, 2025

    Protection order among the consequences of trespassing in an ‘Exclusive Use Area’

    December 31, 2024

    Between a rock and a foul-smelling place

    November 27, 2024
    © 2026 Conviction.
    • Home
    • Law & Justice
    • Special Reports
    • Opinion
    • Ask The Expert
    • Get In Touch

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.