Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 796South Africa
Rycloff-Beleggings (PTY) Ltd v Bonkolo and 70 Others (2019/18156) [2022] ZAGPJHC 796 (4 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rycloff-Beleggings (PTY) Ltd v Bonkolo and 70 Others (2019/18156) [2022] ZAGPJHC 796 (4 October 2022)
Rycloff-Beleggings (PTY) Ltd v Bonkolo and 70 Others (2019/18156) [2022] ZAGPJHC 796 (4 October 2022)
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sino date 4 October 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2019/18156
Reportable: No
Of interest to other
judges: Yes
Revised: Yes
4 October 2022
In
the matter between:
RYCLOFF-BELEGGINGS
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
NTOMBEKHAYA BONKOLO
and 70 others
1
st
to 71
st
RESPONDENTS
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
72
ND
RESPONDENT
MUNICIPALITY
EXECUTIVE
MAYOR, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
73
RD
RESPONDENT
CITY
MANAGER, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
74
TH
RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR
OF HOUSING, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
75
TH
RESPONDENT
JOHANNESBURG
PROPERTY COMPANY
76
TH
RESPONDENT
INTERNATIONAL
COMMISSION OF JURISTS
AMICA CURIAE
JUDGMENT
– WRIGHT J
WRIGHT
J
1.
Ms P [....] M [....] is a person with dignity. Ms
M [....] has a partner, Mr L [....] Masolisa and the couple has a
daughter, T
[....] who is now four years old. Ms M [....] and Mr M
[....] 1 make a living by collecting, sorting and selling recyclable
materials.
Ms M [....] and Mr M [....] 1, together with T [....] live
in a shack on Randjiesfontein farm, which is close to where they
collect
waste during the day and put it onto flat-bed trollies. At
night they sort the reclaimed waste where they reside.
2.
About seventy other persons live on the farm.
These persons, with the same dignity and fortitude of Ms M [....]
make a living in
the same way and also reside in shacks. I shall
refer to all the persons sought to be evicted, collectively as Ms M
[....].
3.
The applicant company, Rycloff, owns the farm and
wants to use the land commercially. It wants to evict Ms M [....] on
the basis
that the occupation of Ms M [....] is illegal and has been
for well over six months.
4.
The papers in this case are long and complicated.
There are many side issues. The application was launched as long ago
as May 2019.
The court file is filled with many affidavits,
supplementary affidavits, reports, additional reports, minutes of
meetings and papers
indicating that much time and effort has been
spent engaging and attempting to find agreement.
5.
Court cases necessarily include a time lag
between the closing of the papers and argument at a hearing and then
the handing down
of judgment. The interests of justice require that a
decision in this matter be made sooner rather than later. It follows,
sadly,
that my reasons for my order need to be terse. There is a
sharp difference between the reasons for an order and reasoning
manufactured
after the order to justify it.
6.
Under section 4(7) of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
“
If
an unlawful occupier has occupied the land in question for more than
six months at the time when the proceedings are initiated,
a court
may grant an order for eviction if it is of the opinion that it is
just and equitable to do so, after considering all the
relevant
circumstances, including, except where the land is sold in a sale of
execution pursuant to a mortgage, whether land has
been made
available or can reasonably be made available by a municipality or
other organ of state or another land owner for the
relocation of the
unlawful occupier, and including the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disabled persons and households
headed by women
.”
7.
It is common cause that the only real issue in
this case is whether or not the City, when it provides temporary
emergency accommodation
to Ms M [....], must take into account her
need to make a basic living from reclaiming waste and where and how
she does so.
8.
Ms M [....], in her answering affidavit dated as
long ago as 19 July 2019 made it clear that she needed to be able to
work at or
reasonably close to where she lives, given her kind of
work. Ms M [....] underlined her right to dignity in this context.
9.
The City of Johannesburg has filed a latest
report in the form of an affidavit dated 22 June 2022, deposed to by
Mr Patrick Phophi,
who is the Executive Director of Housing in the
City. He shows that the City has engaged, to some extent, with Ms M
[....] regarding
temporary emergency housing. The City has considered
various alternative places for Ms M [....]. The City has budget
constraints
and there is a shortage of housing. Persistent land
invasions make matters more difficult for the City. The City intends
to integrate
Ms M [....] into an existing community and is able to
accommodate Ms M [....] at Kya Sands. Ms M [....] says that she will
not
be able to make a living there.
10.
Mr Phophi, quite understandably, does not say
that there is no place in the greater area of the City that does not
meet the needs
of Ms M [....].
11.
To relocate Ms M [....] to a place, otherwise
suitable but where she can’t earn a basic living such as she
presently does,
would leave her at risk of not being able effectively
to maintain her dignity and look after T [....]. The rights of
Rycloff are
important, as are those of the City but it would be
unfair and therefore unconstitutional to allow Rycloff to have its
property
while T [....] is hungry. Under section 28 of the
Constitution, the rights of children are paramount in a case
involving children.
12.
On 20 September 2022, the Constitutional Court
gave judgment in the case of
Grobler v
Phillips
and others
[2022]
ZACC 32
.
I
t
is clear that persons who are sought to be evicted as illegal
occupiers do not have the right to insist on being relocated to
a
property of their choice.
13.
There is no point in ordering the City to do want
it can’t do. It seems unavoidable that the City be given the
choice of where
the alternative accommodation will be provided, as
long as this choice falls within certain parameters. I take my cue
from the
decision in
Grobler
,
modified to meet the different facts of the present case.
14.
Ideally, court orders are certain and there is no
room for debate about their implementation. In cases like the
present, it appears
unavoidable that an order be made with some
elasticity. The only alternative is to make an order, certain in its
terms, but which
may become overtaken by fast moving events. Such a
course would not avoid the problem that the availability of
alternative land
is an ever moving target for the City.
15.
The City knows what it can and can’t do.
The City must in my view be trusted to do as best it can as soon as
reasonably practicable,
subject to a definite time constraint.
16.
There has been much criticism in this case
against the conduct of the City, particularly by Rycloff and some of
the respondents.
There seems to have been a change in advice given to
the City over the lengthy period it has taken for the matter to get
to this
hearing.
17.
In my order below, I shall attempt to do justice
to all concerned and in a way which lowers the heat rather than
raises it, concerning
all issues, including that of costs.
Accordingly, there shall be no costs order, particularly as this case
concerns Constitutional
rights.
ORDER
1.
The 1
st
to 71
st
respondents are to vacate Portion [....] Randjiesfontein No. [....]
JR situated in Region A of the City of Johannesburg by 4 April
2023
provided that the City has given the 1st to 71st respondents at least
one month’s written notice that the City has complied
with
paragraphs 1-3 of this order.
2.
The City must, by no later than 4 March 2023, on
land of its choice but within the Municipal area of the City, provide
temporary
emergency accomodation for the 1
st
to 71
st
respondents which accomodation meets the following specifications :
2.1
each unit to be at least 24 square metres in
extent
2.2
have a galvanised roof and is water-proof
2.3
each unit to be within reasonable proximity to
communal ablution facilities
2.4
there must be reasonable provision, which may be
communal, for toilet facilities with water -borne sewerage
2.5
there must be reasonable provision, which may be
communal, for fresh water.
3.
The land chosen by the City shall be land where
the 1
st
to 71
st
respondents can live at night and there lawfully and safely sort the
reclaimed waste and from where they can reasonably go during
the day
to use their flat-bed trollies lawfully and safely to collect waste.
4.
The City is to provide transport to the new
accommodation free of charge.
5.
This order is not to be interpreted as allowing
the 1
st
to 71
respondents to jump any queue for housing.
6.
There is no costs order.
HEARD
: 4 October 2022
DELIVERED
: 4 October 2022
APPEARANCES
APPLICANT
Adv W Mokhare SC
082 440 3944
wmokhare@duma.nokwe.co.za
Adv M Majozi
majozi@law.co.za
082 419 5259
briefed by
Werksmans
bmabasa@werksmans.com
tkarberg@werksmans.com
szazela@werksmans.com
1
st
to 71st RESPONDENTS:
Adv I De Vos
011 676 2660/079
440 7710
irenedevos@law.co.za
briefed by
Seri Law Clinic
khululiwe@seri-sa.org
tshepo@seri-sa.org
nomzamo@seri-sa.org
72
nd
– 75
th
RESPONDENTS
Adv C Georgiades SC
cgeorgiades@law.co.za
Adv N Mahlangu
mahlangu@rsabar.com
briefed by
BMK Attorneys
mampai@bmkinc.co.za
76
th
RESPONDENT
Adv P Mokoena SC
082 469 2734
pmokoena@thulamelachambers.co.za
Adv MJS Langa
084 488 8193
mjs@advlanga.co.za
briefed by
Padi
Inc
sibusiso@padiattorneys.co.za
Amica
Curiae
Adv M Marongo
076 992 8783
briefed by
Lawyers for Human
Rights:
thandekac@lhr.org.za
sino noindex
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