Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 843South Africa
Phiri and Others v National Savings and Investments (PTY) Ltd and Another (22/15178) [2022] ZAGPJHC 843 (28 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Phiri and Others v National Savings and Investments (PTY) Ltd and Another (22/15178) [2022] ZAGPJHC 843 (28 October 2022)
Phiri and Others v National Savings and Investments (PTY) Ltd and Another (22/15178) [2022] ZAGPJHC 843 (28 October 2022)
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sino date 28 October 2022
SAFLII
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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: 22/15178
Date
of hearing: 24 October 2022
Date
delivered: 28 October 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
MBALI
PHIRI
First Applicant
HEAVY
CHUKWU
Second Applicant
KABAMBA
KANYIANDA
Third Applicant
MOSES
MWAPE
Fourth Applicant
And
NATIONAL
SAVINGS AND INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE COURT, BOKSBURG
Second Respondent
JUDGEMENT
Coram:
Bekker, AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
This application serves before me on the extended return date of a
rule nisi
order that was issued by this court on 26 April 2022
by my brother Wright, J, pursuant to an urgent application brought by
the
first applicant on the same date. The urgent application, for the
granting of a spoliation order and a temporary interdict, was
obtained by the applicants in this court in the absence and without
the knowledge of the first respondent.
2.
The first applicant in this application was the only applicant who
was
cited by name in the notice of motion, while the words “OTHER
APPLICANTS” appear below the first applicant’s name
thereon. The order reads as follows:
“
1.
A rule nisi is issued, returnable on 8 August 2022, calling upon the
Respondents
to show cause why the following order should not be made
final:
“
1.1
The Respondents are ordered immediately to restore the Applicants,
Mbali Phiri, Heavy Chukwu, Moses Mwape and the
children of the
aforegoing immediately to unit [....], unit [....], unit [....] E
[....] 1 Estate, E [....] 2 Road, Boksburg respectively.
1.2
The Respondents are ordered not to disconnect the electricity at any
of these units.
2
Pending the return day, the contents of paragraph 1.1 and 1.2 above
operate with immediate effect.
3
Costs reserved.”
3.
On 8 August 2022 the return date of the
rule nisi
was extended
by agreement between the parties to 24 October 2022, and the matter
was set down on the opposed interlocutory roll
for this week.
Background
and context
4.
The history of this matter is that the first respondent purchased
units
[....], [....] and [....], E [....] 1 Estates, during 2016,
being three separate residential units in a housing estate in
Boksburg.
At the time of the relevant sales the applicants were
residing in these units, albeit without valid leases or consent
entitling
them to occupation in the respective units.
5. During
2017 registration of transfer of all three units was effected into
the first Respondent’s name, in consequence of which the first
respondent became the registered owner of the three properties.
Despite the first respondent’s right as owner to the full use
and enjoyment of its properties, the first respondent was,
and
remains, unable to obtain occupation and possession of any of the
three units by reason of the applicants and those residing
with them
remaining in unlawful occupation of the respective units.
6.
None of the applicants were able to advance any valid right,
entitlement or reason
for finding themselves in occupation of the
premises. The first applicant annexed a document to her founding
affidavit bearing
the name of a known estate agency, but the document
appears to have been falsified.
7.
In this regard, a rental manager of the particular agency stated
convincingly
in her confirmatory affidavit to the first respondent’s
answering affidavit that it was not that agency’s lease
agreement,
that the purported agent did not work for the agency, that
any enquiries for rentals in Boksburg would not have been dealt with
by the agency’s Pinetown office. She also advanced other
reasons to show the falsity of the document produced by the first
applicant by means of her founding affidavit.
8.
The applicants have accordingly been unable to show any right or
entitlement
that would entitle them to lawfully occupy the units to
the exclusion of the first respondent’s right to the use and
enjoyment
thereof as owner of these units. The applicants’
respective occupation of the said three units was therefore unlawful,
as
the first respondent had become entitled in law to the occupation,
use and enjoyment of the three units, subject, in principle,
to any
earlier or stronger rights of possession that the occupants may be
able to show.
9.
During 2017 and 2018 the first respondent launched three separate
eviction
applications in this Court under case numbers 2018/11666,
2017/27841 and 2017/27767, seeking the granting of eviction orders
against
the unlawful occupiers of units [....], [....] and [....].
The first respondent (as applicant) cited named the individual
persons
as respondents in the respective applications, while the last
respondent in each such application was cited as “
The
Unlawful Occupants of Unit … E [....] 1 Estates
.”
10.
On 1 August 2019 this Court granted three eviction orders under the
above-mentioned
case numbers in relation to each of the three units,
granting the unlawful occupiers until 1 October 2019 to vacate the
units.
All three eviction applications were opposed by the applicants
through their legal representatives at the time.
11.
The eviction orders that were granted on 1 August 2019 were issued
against the
applicants as well as against “
The Unlawful
Occupants of Unit
[ _]
E [....] 1 Estates
”. The
similarly-worded worded orders read as follows (the respective unit
numbers and the names of the respondents cited
being omitted, for
practicality):
“
1.
The
[
…]
respondents,
and all persons holding under them, being the Unlawful Occupants at
Unit
[.…]
…
are
evicted from the property.
2.
The
[ …]
respondents vacate the property on/or before 1
October 2019, failing which, the Sheriff, or his lawful deputy, for
the area within
which the property is situated is authorised to evict
the
[.…]
respondents and all persons holding under
them.
3.
[.…]
respondents to pay the costs of this application.”
12.
During October 2019 the applicants launched three separate
applications, seeking
the rescission of the eviction orders that were
granted against them on 1 August 2019. The first respondent opposed
these applications,
and as a result all three these applications were
dismissed on 15 June 2020, on 2 September 2020 and on 17 February
2021 respectively.
According to the first respondent, the COVID-19
regulations prevented it from executing upon the warrant, the first
respondent
was only able to execute the eviction orders granted in
its favour as from April 2022.
13.
The eviction order that was granted against the third and fourth
applicants
in this application, relating to unit [....], was executed
during April 2022. At the time of executing the order the sheriff
found
the premises to be unoccupied and empty, evidently having been
vacated by the third and fourth applicants who previously resided
there. The state of the rooms inside the unit, as appears from
photographs that were taken at the time of executing the warrant,
show that the unit had been vacated by its occupants and that it was
empty at the time, with no sign that anybody lived there.
14.
When the eviction order was served on the unlawful occupants of unit
[....],
the first applicant was also not present at the unit. The
sheriff similarly found the premises to be unoccupied and empty,
having
been fully vacated. This is also borne out by a set of
photographs which is accompanied by a confirmatory affidavit from the
photographer
that is annexed to the first respondent’s
answering affidavit.
15.
Regarding the execution of the warrant of eviction relating to unit
[....],
the Sheriff sought to serve the warrant on the unlawful
occupier of that unit, being the second applicant. The second
applicant
was however also not present at the time, and the sheriff
duly served the warrant on one Mr Stanley Onyibor, as he was entitled
to do in the circumstances.
16.
I am satisfied that the service of the warrant on him constituted
valid service
of the warrant for eviction. Mr Onyibor was the first
respondent in the original eviction application relating to unit
[....] that
was brought under case number 2017/27767, and he would
accordingly have been well aware of the eviction order that was
granted
under that case number on 1 August 2019.
17.
Anticipating the impending execution of the warrant of eviction, and
on 22 April
2022 (being a few days before the present application was
launched on 26 April 2022), the four applicants cited in this
application
simultaneously launched three urgent applications in this
Court relating to units [....], [....] and [....], under case numbers
2022/15255, 2022/15256 and 2022/15257, in which they sought urgent
orders from this Court to prevent their eviction from these
units.
18.
The applicant in the first urgent application in case number
2022/15255, being
the first applicant in this application, sought an
order to interdict and restrain the first respondent from evicting
her from
unit [....]. The applicant in the second urgent application
in case number 2022/15256 is the second applicant herein, while the
fourth applicant in this application was the applicant in the third
urgent application under case number 2022/15257, in which a
similar
order was sought.
19.
The applicants’ three urgent applications were served on the
first respondent’s
attorneys of record on 22 April 2022, and
the applications were opposed. The urgent applications last appeared
on the urgent roll
of this court on 24 May 2022, where it was not
entertained by the court. The three urgent applications have however
also not been
withdrawn by the applicants, and those proceedings are
therefore still pending between the parties.
Granting
of the rule
nisi
20.
On 26 April 2022 the applicants brought this application as an urgent
application
in this court under the above case number. As mentioned,
the notice of motion falsely purports to have been served on the
first
respondent, but it was in fact not served on the first
respondent nor on its attorneys of record.
21.
The urgent court that granted the
rule nisi
order was
therefore misled about the notice of motion having been served on the
first respondent, and by non-disclosure of the
fact that there were
other pending legal proceedings between the parties, in the form of
three urgent applications in which substantially
similar relief was
being claimed by the applicants from the first respondent.
22.
The urgent spoliation application proceeded in the absence of
opposition by
the first respondent, and a rule
nisi
order was
granted by the urgent court against the first respondent on the same
day, on an unopposed basis.
23.
The first respondent’s attorneys only became aware that an
order had been
granted against their client some two days later and
they struggled for another day to obtain a copy of the application
and of
the order. In terms this order the first respondent was
ordered to show cause on 8 August 2022 why the
interim
order
should not be made final, as appears more fully from the wording of
the order referred to above. That is what serves before
this court.
24.
It is to be noted from the terms of the rule
nisi
order that,
unless discharged, it would have a permanent and enduring effect. If
the order were to be confirmed, it would of necessity
mean that the
first respondent is forever deprived of its right to possession and
occupation of the respective units. In addition,
confirmation of the
order will result therein that the applicants, who are unlawful
occupiers of the units, may continue to reside
permanently in these
units free of charge, whilst the first respondent remains obliged by
order of court to continue paying their
electricity bills. This is
the factual situation has prevailed for the past few years.
25.
Subsequent to the eviction order being granted against the Applicants
on 1 August
2019 they unsuccessfully attempted to rescind the order,
but their rescission applications were dismissed. The eviction order
of
1 August 2019 therefore stands and it should be given full effect
to. In terms thereof, the unlawful occupiers, which include the
applicants, had to vacate the respective units on or before 1 October
2019.
26.
In my view, the doctrine of effectiveness and the proper
administration of justice
will best be served by enforcing the
provisions of the eviction order. The series of urgent applications
were evidently brought
by the applicants simply with a view to
frustrating the first respondent’s valid and lawful attempts to
execute upon an order
of this court, thereby prolonging their
sponsored stay.
27.
For various reasons as mentioned herein, it appears to me that the
applicants
have resorted to improper measures in their collective
endeavours, which were designed to ensure that their unlawful
rent-free
occupation of the units with free electricity being
provided continues for as long as possible, if not indefinitely.
28.
The rule
nisi
order can clearly not be confirmed, and I do not
intend doing so. It is a trite principle of our law that a person is
not allowed
to benefit from his own unlawful conduct, and it will in
my view be incongruous to allow the current situation to continue. It
would make a mockery of justice and would operate to unjustly deny
the first respondent, as owner, of its right to full possession,
occupation and enjoyment of its property, whether for the owner’s
own use or to rent it out to the market in order to earn
income
therefrom.
Lis
alibi pendens
29.
The three urgent applications launched by the Applicants comprise
pending litigation
between the same parties, being based on the same
cause of action and in respect of the same subject matter - namely
the eviction
orders against them that were granted on 1 August 2019.
The first respondent raised a special plea
in limine
,
contending that this application and the three urgent applications
are
lis alibi pendens
.
30.
I find that the institution of the present application by the
Applicants, in
circumstances where three urgent applications for
essentially the same relief are pending in this court in fact renders
this application
lis pendens
. (see:
Caesarstone Sdot-Yam v
The World of Marble and Granite 2000 CC and others
[2013] 4 All
SA 509
(SCA)).
31.
The required elements are indeed present. Accordingly, a factual
presumption
arises in law that the second proceedings are
prima
facie
vexatious. The three urgent applications were instituted
earlier in time, and taking into account certain peculiar and
disturbing
features of this matter, I find that the present
application by the Applicants is in fact vexatious. No request was
made during
argument by either counsel for this application to be
stayed.
32.
Notably, the fourth applicant’s affidavit that is annexed to
the first
applicant’s founding affidavit in this application
has not been signed or deposed to in front of a commissioner of
oaths.
The fourth applicant has therefore not placed any affidavit or
case before this court, and it appears to me that the fourth
applicant
is properly before this court as a co-applicant.
33.
Apart from the falsified lease agreement that the first Respondent
relies on,
a further peculiarity in the founding affidavit of the
first applicant is the allegation made by her to the effect that on
25 April
2022 she received from the registrar of this court a
document (designated as annexure “EV2” to the founding
affidavit,
but not annexed thereto or uploaded onto Caselines) “
to
explain the invalidity of the order on behalf of the Applicant
”.
In addition, the copy of the court order that is attached to the
first applicants’ founding affidavit appears to
have been
partially obfuscated.
PIE
34.
The Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of
Land Act,
19 of 1998 (“PIE”) is regulatory in nature, it
does not divest an owner of its property. Instead, it provides a
basis
upon which the judiciary can and must regulate the exercise of
the owner’s proprietary right to possession against an unlawful
occupier in a manner that, as far as practically achievable, remains
consistent with the Bill of Rights and the Constitution. (see:
Standard Bank Ltd v Hunkydory Investments 188 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2009] 4 All SA 448
(WCC).)
35.
Considering that a court may, in appropriate circumstances, stay or
suspend
an eviction order so as to give a tenant a reasonable time to
vacate the premises. (see
Lan v OR Tambo International Airport
Department of Home Affairs Immigration Admissions and Another
2011 (3) SA 641
(GNP)) I am enjoined to exercise this discretion by
taking into account the commercial realities underlying the balancing
of the
parties’ competing interests. If the immediate execution
of an eviction order will result in the particular occupants’
financial ruin, the interest of justice will demand that the eviction
order be stayed for a suitable period of time to afford the
occupant
an opportunity of finding suitable alternative premises.
36.
Section 4(8) of the PIE Act provides for the order that the court
must grant
if it is satisfied that all the requirements of section
4(8) have been complied with and that no valid defence has been
raised
by the unlawful occupier. The court is then obliged to make an
order for the eviction of the unlawful occupier and to determine
a
just and equitable date on which the unlawful occupier must vacate
the land under the circumstances, and the date on which an
eviction
order may be carried out if the unlawful occupier has not vacated the
land on the said date.
37.
Section 4(9) provides that, in determining a just and equitable date
contemplated
in subsection (8), the court must have regard to all
relevant factors, including the period the unlawful occupier and his
or her
family have resided on the land in question. The court is
enjoined by the PIE Act to determine a just and equitable date on
which
the unlawful occupier must vacate the land, and the date on
which the order may be executed if the property is not vacated
timeously.
In exercising its discretion, a court should have regard
to all relevant factors, including the time that the unlawful
occupier
and his or her family have resided on the land in question.
38.
These considerations were presumably taken into account by the court
when the
eviction order was made, when a period of two months was
granted to the applicants and other unlawful occupiers to vacate the
units.
The applicants failed to comply with that court order and have
failed to permanently vacate the units. At some stage before the
sheriff arrived to evict the applicants from the units they evidently
vacated the units. None of them were to be found at the units
when
the warrants were served by the sheriff.
39.
At some stage after service of the warrant for eviction the
applicants and those
living with them must have moved back into the
respective units, thereby re-taking occupation and possession of the
respective
units afresh. Such conduct was again unlawful, save that
this time it also occurred in direct contravention and flagrant
disregard
of the eviction orders that were made against the
applicants.
40.
Since the present application was launched on 26 April 2022 for a
rule
nisi,
and with the return date of 8 August 2022 pending,
the applicants have had several months in order to organise their
affairs. However,
they have remained rent-free in unlawful occupation
of the units and have evidently been focusing their efforts on
frustrating
the first applicant’s eviction orders in concerted
fashion, while both obstructing and abusing the processes of this
court.
41.
Counsel for the first respondent contended, on the strength of
Occupiers of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v De Wet NO and Another (Poor
Flat Dwellers Association as Amicus Curiae)
[2017] JOL 38039
(CC), at [63] – [67], that the effect of PIE is not and should
not be to effectively expropriate the rights of the landowner
in
favour of unlawful occupiers. The landowner retains the protection
against arbitrary deprivation of property. PIE should serve
merely to
delay or suspend the exercise of the landowner’s full property
rights until a determination has been made whether
it is just and
equitable to evict the unlawful occupiers and, if so, under what
conditions.
Spoliation
42.
Turning now to a consideration of the applicants’ allegation
that they
were unlawfully deprived of their peaceful and undisturbed
possession of the respective units, it is at the outset clear that
the
execution of the warrant for eviction was performed lawfully,
being pursuant to and in accordance with the eviction order that was
granted on 1 August 2019.
43.
The eviction having been performed in pursuance of due legal process
and in
a lawful fashion, the applicants must fail in their reliance
on the
mandament
as a cause of action. (see:
George
Municipality v Vena
1989 (2) SA 263
(A).) Moreover, the
mandament
does not protect contractual rights and cannot be used to enforce
specific performance of a contract. (see:
First Rand Ltd t/a Rand
Merchant Bank v Scholtz NO
2008 (2) SA 503
(SCA), and
ATM
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Olkru Handelaars CC
2009 (4) SA 337
(SCA).)
44.
I agree with the submission of the first respondent’s counsel
that the
first applicants’ allegation that she, the third
applicant and the fourth applicant were in peaceful and undisturbed
possession
of the relevant units at the time when the warrant for
eviction was served, constitutes an admission that they were in fact
unlawful
occupiers of the units, as specifically contemplated and
provided for in the eviction order.
45.
It is further trite law that an eviction order made against and
occupier includes
all his family members, or persons occupying
through him, and that separate orders for the ejectment of such
persons are not required.
Nevertheless, evictions that are undertaken
in terms of statutes, such as PIE, require that all unlawful
occupiers be cited. (see:
Ntai and others v Vereeniging Town
Council and Another
1953 (4) SA 579
(A) at 584 and 590.)
46.
There is a further reason to distrust the applicants’ version –
according to an affidavit by a trustee of the E [....] 1 Estate Body
Corporate, no “movement control form”, which all
new
occupants are required to complete when they take occupation of the
property, were submitted to the Body Corporate, either
by any of the
applicants or by anybody else in relation to units [....] and [....].
The second applicant resides unlawfully in
unit [....], together with
the said Mr Onyibor.
47.
I have referred above to the falsified purported lease agreement
pertaining
to unit [....] that the first applicant produced in an
endeavour to show the existence of a valid lease that would entitle
her
to occupation of unit [....]. In any event, and even if the lease
had been valid and genuine, the lease would, according to its
own
terms, have terminated due to effluxion of time on 1 April 2022
already. It therefore does not assist the first respondent,
instead
it demonstrates her lack of
bona fides.
48.
I therefore find that the applicants have not succeeded in
discharging their
onus
of establishing any right or
entitlement to their continued occupation of the relevant units. I
further find that the applicants
have not established
bona fide
defences, by advancing grounds evidencing that it would not be just
and equitable to evict them from the units, as required by
the
relevant provisions of the PIE Act. The personal circumstances of the
first applicant can hardly be described as remarkable,
whilst there
is no evidence before me regarding the personal circumstances of any
of the other applicants.
49.
It was, in my view, incumbent upon the applicants to adduce facts
relating to
the ages, gender, relationship of the persons occupying
the property, the extent to which they are financially dependent on
one
another, their respective financial positions, sources of income
and income and expense statements, full particulars of their assets
and liabilities, full details of their health situation and
disabilities (and how these factors may have a bearing on their
ability
to relocate) and facts relating to the availability of
alternative accommodation.
50.
Moreover, the applicants were required to furnish the date from which
they unlawfully
occupied the units and all surrounding facts
regarding the manner and the period of occupation, as well as all
other facts that
may have a bearing on their ability to find
alternative accommodation. (see:
Chetty v Naidoo
1974 (3) SA
13
at 20 (C).)
51.
It was held by the Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) that the availability of alternative accommodation is less
relevant where the eviction is sought at the instance of a private
landowner, than when an organ of state is the applicant. In an
eviction at the instance of a private landowner, the right to
property
comes into play as private entities cannot be expected to
provide free housing for other members of the community indefinitely.
52.
As aforementioned, the first applicant failed to place any facts
before me in
respect of the personal circumstances of the second,
third and fourth applicants, specifically regarding the period of
time that
they would require to find alternative accommodation. On
the first applicant’s own version, she had paid a deposit of
R5,500,
and is in a position to pay a monthly rental of R5,500 per
month. Therefore, on her own version, she has the means to obtain
suitable
alternative accommodation – there are hundreds of
similar units.
53.
The inference that I draw from the applicant’s failure to place
their
personal circumstances properly before this court is that they
are in fact able to afford alternative accommodation of a similar
standard, even in the same housing estate. All four of the applicants
have enjoyed legal representation throughout the aforementioned
legal
proceedings, and I am of the view they are in all probability not
destitute, nor unable to afford alternative accommodation
for
themselves and for those residing with them.
Determination
of a date
54.
Counsel for the first respondent also relied on the
Occupiers
decision (supra) in contending that while a court should, when
considering whether it is just and equitable to grant an eviction
order, be guided by the spirit of
ubuntu
, grace and
compassion, but that this does not mean that “just and
equitable” trumps illegality.
55.
In my view, the applicants and those residing with them have been
afforded ample
time and opportunity to find alternative
accommodation. Mindful of their poor prospects of the order being
made final on the return
day, they should have acted reasonably by
finding alternative accommodation in the time available to them. This
they failed to
do, instead they appear to be taking their chances on
the outcome of this application.
56.
I consider that, having regard to the history of this matter, a
period of one
month would constitute a just and equitable notice
period for the applicants and all other unlawful occupiers residing
with them
to vacate the relevant units.
Costs
57.
For reasons mentioned above, I am of the view that the Applicants
have not acted
in a
bona fide
manner and that their conduct
amounts to an abuse of the process of this court. I have already
found that the institution of this
application was
prima facie
vexatious, in light of the three urgent applications that the
applicants instituted days earlier, and which are currently pending
in this court.
58.
It is further to be noted that the Applicant’s attorney, one Ms
Mirriam
Bareki, sent an email to the first Respondent’s
attorneys on 23 September 2022, being approximately one month before
the
hearing, advising that “our office” was no longer
acting on behalf of the applicants. The applicants’ present
attorneys of record came on record on 5 August 2022. It appears from
the record that they failed to respond to requests from the
first
respondent’s attorneys to attend a meeting to prepare a joint
practice note, and no practice note or heads of argument
were filed
in this application on behalf of the applicants.
59.
In my view, the respondents have shown ample cause why the rule
nisi
order should not be made final, that the applicants and the other
unlawful occupiers of the relevant units should restore occupation
and possession of the units to the first respondent, and that there
is no reason or basis for the first respondent to be paying
the
electricity accounts for the electricity usage of these unlawful
occupiers. The first respondent is further entitled my view
to
disconnect the electricity at any of these units with effect from 1
December 2022, whether or not such units are occupied at
the time.
60.
It was contended by the first respondent’s counsel, relying
upon the decision
in
Mahomed & Son v Mahomed
1959 (2) SA
688
(T), that the applicants’ application is so lacking in
arguable merit that its merits an attorney-and-client costs order.
For the various reasons mentioned above, I agree therewith.
ORDER:
In
the result, I order as follows:
(a)
The rule
nisi
order that was issued in this matter on 26 April
2022, returnable on 8 August 2022, is not made final and is hereby
discharged;
(b)
The applicants and all other unlawful occupiers occupying Units
[....],
[....] and [....] E [....] 1 Estates, E [....] 2 Road,
Boksburg, (“the units”) are ordered to vacate the units
that
they are occupying on or before 30 November 2022;
(c)
The date on which the eviction orders may be carried out if the
applicants
and/or other unlawful occupiers of the units have not
vacated the relevant units is 1 December 2022, upon which date full
and undisturbed
possession and occupation of the units must be
restored to the first respondent;
(d)
The first, second, third and fourth applicants are ordered to pay the
first respondent’s costs of this application, inclusive of the
reserved costs of 26 April 2022, on the attorney-and-client
scale.
BEKKER
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
ATTORNEYS
FOR APPLICANTS:
KAGISO
RAKHUBA ATTORNEYS
PRECIOUS
MULEYA ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANTS: ADV MHLANGA
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT: ADV S SCHULENBURG
ATTORNEYS
FOR RESPONDENT: LEVINE AND FREEDMAN ATTORNEYS
DATE
HEARD: 24 OCTOBER 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 28 OCTOBER 2022
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