Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 875South Africa
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Nkosi and 91 Others (2020/1348) [2022] ZAGPJHC 875 (7 November 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Land - Unlawful occupation - Eviction from - Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) - Application for eviction by organ of State - Availability of land for relocation of unlawful occupiers - Availability of alternative accommodation being relevant circumstances to be taken into account in determining whether just and equitable to grant order of eviction.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Nkosi and 91 Others (2020/1348) [2022] ZAGPJHC 875 (7 November 2022)
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Nkosi and 91 Others (2020/1348) [2022] ZAGPJHC 875 (7 November 2022)
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sino date 7 November 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNEBURG
CASE
NO:
2020/1348
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
7 November 2022
In the matter between:
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
MANDLENKOSI NKOSI AND
91 OTHERS
WHOSE NAMES ARE LISTED
IN
ANNEXURE A TO THE
NOTICE OF MOTION
1
st
to 92
nd
Respondents
NCUMISA NGCUKANA AND
INDIVIDUAL
RESPONDENTS WHOSE
NAMES ARE LISTED IN
ANNEXURE B TO THE
NOTICE OF MOTION
93
rd
to further Respondents
Coram:
Mudau J
Heard
:
3 October 2022: The ‘virtual hearing’ of the case
was
conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft
Teams
.
Delivered:
7 November 2022 –
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 11H00 on 7 November 2022.
Summary:
Land - Unlawful occupation - Eviction from - Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) -
Application for eviction by organ of State - Availability of land for
relocation of unlawful
occupiers - Availability of alternative
accommodation being relevant circumstances to be taken into account
in determining whether
just and equitable to grant order of eviction.
Held,
that
under s 6 of PIE the Court exercised a discretion to grant an
eviction order if it were just and equitable to do so after taking
into account 'all relevant circumstances'.
Held, further,
that it was in the instant case just and equitable to order the
eviction of the occupiers in the interest of
the general public and
the development of a housing project.
J
U D G M E N T
MUDAU, J:
[1]
This
is an application for an order for the eviction and relocation of the
respondents, and all those who occupy the properties
through them, in
terms of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE Act”)
for
purposes of a housing development project. It is trite, the PIE Act
was enacted to prevent the arbitrary deprivation of property
pursuant
to section 26 (3) of the Constitution.
[2]
The
applicant is the City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality, a
Metropolitan municipality (“the Municipality”)
established under General Notice No. 6768 of 2000 (promulgated in
Gauteng Provincial Gazette No. 141 of 1 October 2000), pursuant
to
section 12(1) read with
section 14(2)
of the
Local Government
Municipal Structures Act, 117 of 1998
.
Background
facts
[3]
The
facts are largely common cause. The Municipality is the owner of the
properties known as the Van Dyk Park mining houses situated
at Van
Dyk Park Extension [....], Brakpan (“the houses”), that
are occupied by the respondents. Historically, the houses
were used
as living quarters for employees of a mining company, DRD Gold
(“DRD”). Some of the earliest structures were
built prior
to 1936. DRD had leased the property from the former Boksburg Council
in terms of a land availability agreement. During
2009, pursuant to
DRD closing down its mining operations in the area, the land
availability agreement lapsed and DRD handed back
the property with
all improvements to the Municipality.
[4]
DRD
furthermore cancelled the oral lease agreements that it had entered
into with its former employees and set about evicting them
from the
houses. Subsequently, on 2 September 2010, DRD notified the occupants
of the houses that they ‘have no right to
the property’
and gave them 30 days’ notice of cancellation of the lease
agreement. Some employees left the properties
while others remained
despite the houses having no water, electricity or sewage services.
On 4 November 2010, DRD's manager sent
a notice to the occupants of
the houses reminding them that the ‘Ekurhuleni Town Council is
now the rightful owner of the
Van Dyk land’. There are
currently 49 houses, mainly in a dilapidated state, that have been
illegally occupied for the past
10 years by various groups of people,
including the current respondents in their guises as ‘owners’
or ‘tenants’.
[5]
Annexure
‘A’ lists the names and details of 92 respondents who
have hijacked the houses (from numbers 7 to 85) and represent
themselves as the ‘owners’ and ‘landlords’ of
the houses. They have let rooms in the houses to families
who are
expected to pay them ‘rent’. In some cases, they have
allowed backyard dwellers to erect shacks on the property
in exchange
for the payment of ‘rent’. Annexure ‘B’ lists
the names and details of some of the respondents
who are the
‘tenants’ living in the 49 hijacked properties and who
pay ‘rent’ to the so-called ‘owners’
of the
houses. Their full and further particulars are according to the
Municipality, unknown. The Municipality avers that, it has
been
difficult, if not impossible, for the Municipality to identify all
the respondents in annexure ‘B’, the backyard
shack
dwellers, as their numbers fluctuate due to their personal
circumstances.
[6]
It
is the case of the Municipality that it has never entered into any
lease agreements with any of the respondents nor condoned
their
unlawful occupation of its properties. Notwithstanding this, the
Municipality has, as part of its constitutional obligations,
provided
water to the illegal occupiers via a standpipe; the occupiers get
electricity through prepaid metres. Since 2013, the
Municipality has
provided the respondents with basic services such as sanitation and
waste collection in compliance with its constitutional
obligation.
THE
VAN DYK PARK HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
[7]
During
2018, the Municipality Council decided to embark on a mega project to
develop a mixed-use housing project that would fast
track service
delivery within the City of Ekurhuleni. This project, the Van Dyk
Park Housing Development ("Housing Development
Project") is
to be constructed on land that has been re-zoned and proclaimed as a
township to be known as ‘Van Dyk Park
Extension 2’. The
applicant avers, which is undisputed, that the houses, are situated
right in the middle of the project
site. The Housing Development
Project will see the construction of high, medium and low density
housing; schools; business areas;
community facilities; mixed use and
parks and sports fields. It is envisaged that 1702 RDP houses will be
built; 683 social housing
units will be built for rental; 746
subsidised units will be built; as well as 342 bonded units to be
built for people who are
able to obtain bonds.
[8]
According
to a ‘Status Report’ compiled by Akwethu, an engineering
and development company, dated 12 November 2019,
the implications of
the delay with the evictions are serious and far-reaching. The budget
for the Housing Development Project is
a conditional grant. If the
funds are not spent in the current financial year, the money will be
returned to Treasury; the risk
of losing the funding is high due to
the inability to relocate the residents and demolish the houses. The
continuation of the development
is dependent not only on the eviction
and relocation of the respondents, but also on the demolition of the
houses.
[9]
Previously,
a budget of R80 million was allocated for the Housing Development
Project in the 2019/2020 financial year and an instruction
to proceed
with work (“IPW”) was issued for bulk services in respect
of water and upgrading road intersections. The
Housing Development
Project is ready to proceed to construction stage; however, it has
come to a standstill as a result of the
respondents’ refusal to
vacate the old mining houses. Due to the delay in relocating the
respondents, R51 118 964.95 of the
allocated budget of R80 million in
2019/20 was unspent and had to be returned to Treasury. The applicant
contends that the respondent's
unlawful occupation is negatively
impacting on budget expenditure and the Municipality's obligations in
respect of service delivery
to its residents.
[10]
It
is common cause that the respondents were aware of the proposed
Housing Development Project as early as 2015. The Municipality
had
regular engagements with the respondents since 2019 and 2020 about
the proposed development. On 28 April 2019 and 11 May 2019,
meetings
were held with the respondents to discuss the Housing Development. On
26 November 2019, the Gauteng MMC for Housing met
with the
respondents to address their concerns about the Housing Development
Project. On 28 January 2020, a public meeting was
held to update the
respondents on the Housing Development Project.
[11]
On
27 and 28 February 2020, the Municipality and its social facilitation
service provider, Kuhle Solutions, undertook a physical
assessment
and verification of the households. Kuhle Solutions produced a report
which recorded that "301 households were
living at the 49 mining
houses" in the Van Dyk Park area. However, intimidation of both
‘tenants’ and the Municipality's
officials by the
‘landlords’ resulted in a lack of any meaningful
engagement regarding the Housing Development Project.
[12]
The
Municipality envisages that the eviction and relocation of the
respondents, and all those who occupy the houses through them
will
proceed as follows: The respondents will be evicted from the houses
in groups of 100 and transport will be provided for the
respondents’
possessions to be completed in three (3) days, which according to the
municipality is a manageable number, as
it will allow the respondents
to be relocated to the transit site on the same day. In this way,
carrying out the eviction in stages
will help prevent invasion of the
transit site and the empty houses.
[13]
The
respondents will be relocated to the transit site, the old primary
school site, Erf [....], located within the construction
site, which
can accommodate 370 families. According to the applicant, there is no
other alternative land available to accommodate
all the respondents
close to the Van Dyk Park area and close to the respondents’
schools and places of employment. Each family
will be housed
immediately in a structure measuring 12 square metres, which will be
constructed from new material provided by the
Municipality.
[14]
It
is envisaged that standpipes will be erected on the same day that the
respondents are relocated and there will be 10 temporary
toilets in
place in each section. The respondents will have access to pre-paid
electricity, but that will be installed once all
the respondents have
been relocated, within 12 days from the start of the eviction
process. Light masts will be installed at intervals
at the transit
site to ensure the safety of the respondents. The respondents will be
moved into RDP houses as soon as they are
built and if they meet the
beneficiary qualification criteria, which is likely to happen in less
than three years.
[15]
According
to the Municipality, to ensure the respondents’ health and
safety while at the transit site, a contractor will be
appointed to
complete the construction of the housing development as soon as the
eviction and relocation of the respondents is
completed. The
contractor will be required in terms of the Municipality's policies
to produce a safety plan which must include
the needs of the
respondents living at the transit site. A health and safety officer
will be on site at all times during the construction.
The
Municipality undertook, under oath, to submit to the Court, within 30
days of the eviction and relocation of the respondents,
a safety plan
to be implemented for the duration of the above respondents’
relocation (provision has been made for this in
the notice of
motion).
[16]
Initially,
none of the respondents filed opposing affidavits; consequently, this
application was set down for hearing on 26 August
2021 on the
unopposed roll. However, on the eve of the hearing, on 25 August
2021, the 1st to 49th respondents filed an answering
affidavit almost
a year after filing a notice to oppose; having been served with the
application on 15 September 2020, resulting
in the postponement of
the matter, with costs reserved, without seeking condonation for the
inordinate delay as required by rule
27(1) of the Uniform Rules.
[17]
In
the answering affidavit by the 1st to 49th respondents through their
erstwhile attorneys (Peter Ramano Attorneys), there are
three
versions proffered in an attempt to justify their occupation of the
houses. First, the allegation that they were granted
permission to
reside in the houses from various named people as per Annexure ‘MN2’.
However, there are no confirmatory
affidavits that the houses
belonged to the named people and that they were legally authorised to
allow the occupiers to ‘take
over’ the houses. Also, none
of those who allege that they were employed by the mine have provided
any evidence of their
employment with DRD.
[18]
Second,
they claim that DRD told them that they ‘would not be evicted
and there are arrangements in place that the Municipality
would take
all the necessary steps to transfer ownership of these houses to the
mine employees, their relatives and/or beneficiaries
for their
loyalty and hardworking’. Again, there is no evidence before
this court that DRD in fact made such a statement.
In any event, this
is contradicted by notices sent by DRD in 2010 to its employees,
seeking to evict them from the houses in question.
[19]
Third,
they allege without the support of a confirmatory affidavit, that
‘there was never any lease agreement entered into
between DRD
Mining and its former employees’ and deny that DRD told its
former employees to ‘evacuate the houses’.
They claim
that DRD informed them that ‘we must continue residing in the
houses/property pending them sorting out and handing
over of title
deeds to us’.
[20]
In
the replying affidavit, the applicant contends that the so- called
owners do not come to court with ‘clean hands’
as they
have not been open and honest with the court. At least seven of them
are owners of other properties, including being beneficiaries
of
government subsidised housing. These are: Thelma Lungiswa Siko,
occupying house [....]; Tonny Mahlakahlaka, occupying house
[....];
Sodosi Elmon Sibiya, occupying house [....]; Mandlenkosi Nkosi,
occupying house [....]; Tshepo Frans Bonzo, occupying house
[....];
Phindile Nellie Mabuza, occupying house [....] as well as Nokwanele
Poporayi, occupying house [....]. The applicant emphasised
that there
is no allegation at all in the answering affidavit that any of the
so-called owners will be rendered homeless upon eviction.
[21]
As
for the various demands by the respondents i.e. the demand for
‘permanent suitable alternative accommodation’, that
they
‘each be given a RDP house in the Housing Development’,
and the demand that the Municipality gives them ‘an
undertaking
that once this project is complete, we will all automatically qualify
at minimum for an RDP houses and/or lowest cost
houses’; the
applicant contends, with which I agree as it will become apparent
that the demands are unreasonable. The Municipality
also contends
that this is nothing more than blackmail to which the Municipality
will not give in or entertain. The Municipality
points out that the
housing beneficiary administration process is a competence of the
Gauteng Province Housing Department. The
respondents have been
unapologetic about bringing this Housing Development Project to a
standstill; they will vacate the houses
only if their demands are
met.
Second
Answering Affidavit
[22]
On
the eve of hearing this application, 33 respondents introduced,
without a condonation application, a second affidavit dated 23
September 2022. There is neither an application for leave to have the
second answering affidavit admitted. Rule 6 (5) (d) (ii)
of the
Uniform Rules provides that
“
any
person opposing the grant of an order sought in the notice of motion
must —
(ii)
within fifteen days of notifying the applicant of intention to oppose
the application, deliver such person’s answering
affidavit, if
any, together with any relevant documents”
[23]
If
an affidavit is tendered both late and out of ordinary sequence, it
is trite that the party tendering it is seeking not a right
but an
indulgence from the court. It behoves such a party to explain why it
is out of time and to satisfy the court that in all
the circumstances
of the case that the affidavit should be received. In
Gold
Fields Limited and Others v Motley Rice LLC
,
In re:
Nkala
v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others
[1]
this Court (per Mojapelo DJP) at para 122 and 123 put it thus:
“
[122]
The respondent is given one opportunity only, to deal with the
applicant’s cause of action and present evidence in opposition
in the answering affidavit. The applicant is then afforded an
opportunity in the replying affidavit to reply only to what the
respondent has stated and may not raise new matter or new issues. The
three affidavits, founding affidavit, answering affidavit
and
replying affidavits (with such supporting affidavit as may be
necessary for each) then conclude the essential affidavits, and
thus
close the pleadings and evidence in motion proceedings.
[123]
There is no automatic right to file the fourth and further
affidavits. Additional affidavits should be allowed only in
exceptional
circumstances and only with the leave of court.”
[24]
The
applicant contends in opposing the introduction of the second
answering affidavit, that the 33 respondents in doing so acted
irregularly and impermissibly by a raising a new defence (lack of
meaningful engagement), which has been shaped to relieve the
pinch of
the shoe pursuant to the Municipality setting out substantively in
the replying affidavit why their occupation is unlawful.
[25]
The
trite principle with regard to the wide powers of the court to
condone non-compliance with its own rules is subject to the
requirement, and safeguard, that good cause must be shown.
[2]
In
principle, the discretion is to be exercised judicially with regard
also to the merits of the matter seen as a whole.
[3]
To
permit the filing of a further answering affidavit severely
prejudices the party, in this case the applicant, who has to meet
a
case based on those submissions. In the second answering affidavit,
the respondents contend that there was no meaningful engagement
with
the Municipality as set out in by the Constitutional Court in the
case of
Occupiers
of 51 Olivia Road, Berea Township and 197 Main Street Johannesburg v
City of Johannesburg and Others
[4]
before litigation commences. However, this is not borne out by the
common cause facts alluded to above. There is, accordingly,
no proper
case established for the admission of the second answering affidavit
and it falls to be regarded as
pro
non scripto
.
As a consequence, the second answering affidavit is inadmissible.
[26]
It
is significant to point out that there is no allegation at all in the
answering affidavit that an of the so-called owners will
be rendered
homeless upon eviction. The 1st to 49th respondents’ version, I
find, is clearly untenable, does not create any
real disputes of
fact.
[27]
Section
26(1) of the Constitution guarantees the right to access to adequate
housing and places a positive obligation on the state
in section 26
(2) to realise that right within its available resources, which the
applicant in this instance recognises. No one
can be evicted without
an order of court after proper consideration of all the relevant
circumstances.
[28]
The
question that arises in this application is whether it is just and
equitable, as envisaged by section 4(7) of PIE Act read with
section
6 thereof, to grant an order directing the eviction of the
respondents’ consideration being had to all the relevant
facts.
Importantly,
it is clear that
the
Municipality has never consented to the respondents’ occupation
of the houses nor has the Municipality ever entered into
a lease
agreement with any of the respondents. It is accordingly indisputable
that their occupation of the houses is unlawful.
Section 4(7) of PIE
provides guidance on what considerations have to be taken into
account, when a court exercises its discretion
to determine whether
it is just and equitable to grant an eviction order. Section 4 (7)
reads:
"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."
[29]
In
terms of section (6) (3) of PIE “in deciding whether it is just
and equitable to grant an order for eviction, the court
must have
regard to— (a) the circumstances under which the unlawful
occupier occupied the land and erected the building or
structure; (b)
the period the unlawful occupier and his or her family have resided
on the land in question; and (c) the availability
to the unlawful
occupier of suitable alternative accommodation or land."
[30]
In
deciding whether it is just and equitable taking into account the
rights and needs of the elderly, children, disabled persons
and
households headed by women to grant an order of eviction, I take into
account that land has been made available by the Municipality
for the
relocation of the unlawful occupiers to fulfil its constitutional
obligation to provide alternative accommodation. In this
case the
respondents do not deal with any hardship they are likely suffer
should they move to the proposed site in any meaningful
way.
[31]
Recently,
the Constitutional court
[5]
stated:
“
The
question whether the constitutional rights of the unlawful occupier
are affected by the eviction is one of the relevant considerations,
but the wishes or personal preferences of the unlawful occupier are
not relevant. An unlawful occupier …does not have a
right to
refuse to be evicted on the basis that she prefers or wishes to
remain in the property that she is occupying unlawfully.”
[32]
In
Baron
v Claytile
(Pty)
Ltd
[6]
,
the Constitutional Court reminds us that there has to be some offer
by both parties, compromises have to be made, in order to
reach a
just and equitable outcome. In
City
of Johannesburg City of Johannesburg v Changing Tides
74 (Pty) Ltd
[7]
the Supreme
Court of Appeal held at para 15 that ‘an eviction order in
circumstances where no alternative accommodation is
provided is far
less likely to be just and equitable than one that makes careful
provision for alternative housing’.
Changing
Tides 74
held,
as in this case, that eviction is ordinarily just and equitable if
alternative accommodation is made available.
[33]
In
Port Elizabeth Municipality Vs Various Occupiers
[8]
,
the Constitutional Court held appositely, that “the public
interest requires that the legislative framework and general
principles which govern the process of housing development should not
be undermined and frustrated by the unlawful and arbitrary
actions of
a relatively small group of people. Thus the well-structured housing
policies of a municipality could not be allowed
to be endangered by
the unlawful intrusion of people at the expense of those inhabitants
who may have had equal claims to be housed
on the land earmarked for
development by the applicant. Municipalities represent all the people
in their area and should not seek
to curry favour with or bend to the
demands of individuals or communities, whether rich or poor. They
have to organise and administer
their affairs in accordance with the
broader interests of all the inhabitants”. Footnote omitted.
This such a case.
[34]
I
am satisfied that the respondents’ concerns raised in the
second affidavit, even if I was to consider it, that the
accommodation
proffered is ill-suited have been addressed by the
Municipality to the best of its financial abilities. I take cognisant
that the
duty is one of progressive realisation, and accordingly
accept that the housing structures proffered qualify as suitable
alternative
accommodation which is provided by the Municipality
within its available resources.
[35]
With
due regard to all the facts, I hold that it is just and equitable
that all the respondents be evicted and that the relocation
is
undoubtedly in the greater public interest for the benefit of more
families in need of housing pursuant to section 6 (3) (c)
of the PIE
Act. Eviction under the circumstances, is a reasonable measure to
facilitate the Housing Development Programme by the
Municipality.
Should the applicants not comply with the order, the sheriff of the
court is authorised to execute the eviction and
if necessary, to
request the assistance of members of the South African Police
Service. Ordinarily, costs follow the result. Eviction
matters
however involve constitutional issues, and I accordingly in the
exercise of my discretion, make no order regarding costs,
including
those previously reserved.
[36]
Order
1)
The
applicant is granted leave to supplement its founding affidavit;
2)
The
supplementary affidavit deposed to by Selven Davey Frank dated 19
August 2021 is hereby admitted;
3)
The
first to 92nd respondents and the 93rd to further respondents, whose
names are listed in annexures A and B attached to the notice
of
motion, including those who are occupying the properties through
them:
3.1
are to be evicted from the properties known as the Van Dyk Park
mining houses situated at Van Dyk Park Extension 1, Brakpan.
3.2
are to be relocated immediately upon their eviction, on the property
described as Erf [....] situated at Bloubos Road, Van Dyk
Park,
Brakpan.
4)
The
applicant shall proceed with the eviction and relocation of the above
respondents within 3 days from the date of this order
in accordance
with the relocation plan set out in paragraphs 48—48.4.7 of the
founding affidavit and annexure ‘P’
attached to the
founding affidavit, as follows:
4.1.1
The respondents will be evicted from the houses in groups of 100 and
relocated at the transit site on the same day.
4.1.2
Transport will be provided for the respondents’ possessions.
4.1.3
The eviction of the respondents should be completed in three (3)
days.
4.1.4
Each family will be housed immediately in a structure measuring
between 12 square metres, which will be constructed from new
material
provided by the Municipality.
4.1.5
Standpipes will be erected on the same day that the respondents are
relocated and there will be 10 temporary toilets in place
in each
section.
4.1.6
The respondents will have access to pre-paid electricity, to be
installed once all the respondents have been relocated, within
12
days from the eviction.
4.1.7
Light masts will be installed at intervals in the transit site.
4.1.8
The transit site will have designated entrances.
4.1.9
The houses will be demolished on the same day if reasonably possible
after each group of respondents has vacated the houses,
alternatively, the applicant shall proceed with the demolition of the
houses as soon as all the respondents have been removed from
the
houses and relocated to the transit site.
4.1.10
The eviction and relocation of the respondents shall be completed by
the applicant within 7 days.
5)
The
applicant shall within 30 days of the eviction and relocation of the
above respondents, submit to the Court, under oath, a safety
plan to
be implemented for the duration of the above respondents' relocation.
6)
There
is no order as to costs.
MUDAU J
[Judge of the High
Court]
APPEARANCES
For the
Applicant:
Adv Georgiades
SC
Adv U Dayanand-Jugroop
Instructed
by:
Nozuko Nxusani Incorporated
For the
Respondent:
Adv. L Mtshiyo
Instructed by: Dudula
Attorneys
Date of Hearing:
03 October 2022
Date of
Judgment:
07
November 2022
[1]
[2015]
4 All SA 299 (GJ)
[2]
See
Mynhardt
v Mynhardt
1986
(1) SA 456
(T)
at
463G-H;
Chasen
v Ritter
1992
(4) SA 323 (SE)
at
329C.
[3]
See
Gumede
v Road Accident Fund
2007
(6) SA 304 (C)
at
307C-I. See also
James
Brown & Hamer (Pty) Ltd
(previously
named Gilbert Hamer & Co Ltd) v Simmons NO
1963 (4) SA 656
(A) at 660D-H.
[4]
[2008] ZACC 1
;
2008
(3) SA 208
(CC).
[5]
Grobler
v Phillips and Others
(CCT 243/21)
[2022] ZACC 32
(20 September 2022) para 36.
[6]
2017
(5) SA 329 (CC).
[7]
2012
(6) SA 294 (SCA).
## [8]2005
(1) SA 217 (CC) at para 26.
[8]
2005
(1) SA 217 (CC) at para 26.
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