Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1027South Africa
Winprop (Pty) (Ltd) v Bahlekazi and Others (28781/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1027 (13 December 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Winprop (Pty) (Ltd) v Bahlekazi and Others (28781/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1027 (13 December 2022)
Winprop (Pty) (Ltd) v Bahlekazi and Others (28781/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1027 (13 December 2022)
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sino date 13 December 2022
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 28781/2021
Date
of hearing: 22/11/2022
Date
delivered: 13/12/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In
the matter between:
WINGPROP
(PTY) LTD
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER: 2002/000246/07) Applicant
and
BAHLEKAZI,
APOLLO PEPSI
1
st
Respondent
NYEMBE,
PHINDILE CAROLINE 2
nd
Respondent
NCAMBACHA,NOMKHANGO
3
rd
Respondent
SHEVERI,
AGNES
4
th
Respondent
MOKOBE,
AGNES MANGWATO
5
th
Respondent
VUMASE,
LINDIWE GOODNESS
6
th
Respondent
CHARLIE,
LESIBA PIET
7
th
Respondent
VISAGIE,
JOHNNY
8
th
Respondent
KELEMBE,
VUSUMZI
9
th
Respondent
MASOKO,
DAVID MOSETE
10
th
Respondent
MTHETHWA,
JANE ZETHU
11
th
Respondent
KOTANE,
LESLEY JOSEPH
12
th
Respondent
ZIKHALI,
SIPHO MAHLABANE
13
th
Respondent
MLANGENI,
VUSANI JOHN
14
th
Respondent
NGCOBO,
LINDIWE BEAUTY
15
th
Respondent
MOHLABE,
REPHEDILE GRACE 16
th
Respondent
NGCOBO,
PHYLLIS BUSISIWE
17
th
Respondent
MASHIANE,
LESET JA JERRY
18
th
Respondent
THE
FURTHER UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF
UNITS
1801, 2803, 1907, 501, 602, 806, 1108,
1308,
1402, 1410, 1707, 1911, 2004, 2207,
2210,
2311, 2503 AND 2603 OF THE
H[....]
19
th
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
20
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KEMACK
AJ:
1.
The applicant
is a company named Wingprop (Pty) Ltd, the owner of the H[....]
situated at the corner of K[....] and K[....]2 Streets
in H[....]2,
Johannesburg. The property is registered as Erf [....] Township,
Registration Division I.R., Johannesburg, Gauteng.
As owner of the
H[....], the applicant is the landlord for 333 residential apartment
units situated on twenty-eight stories of
the H[....].
2.
The 1
st
to 18
th
respondents (“the named respondents”) are the known or
presumed occupiers of eighteen units in the H[....]. They are
known
because they previously concluded written leases with the applicant
for those units. Paragraphs 8 to 25 of the founding affidavit
individually identify the named respondents, and the numbers of the
residential units for which they signed leases and which they
occupy.
They are units 1801, 2803, 1907, 501, 602, 806, 1108, 1308, 1402,
1410, 1707, 1911, 2004, 2207, 2210, 2311, 2503 and 2603.
3.
The “19
th
respondent” is a group of unnamed persons who may be occupying
the units attributed to the named respondents, presumably
as tenants
or dependants of the named respondents. They are collectively
cited with reference to the unit numbers applicable
to the named
respondents.
4.
The 20
th
respondent is the City of Johannesburg, an interested party which has
neither opposed nor participated in this application.
5.
The 1
st
to 18
th
respondents fall into two broad categories: those who have entered
appearance to oppose or delivered answering affidavits; and
those who
have neither opposed nor participated in the hearing of the
application.
6.
The first
broad category can be further subdivided into three sub-categories.
The first sub-category comprises the 1
st
and 3
rd
respondents, both of whom delivered similar answering affidavits.
Although some confusion is created by the applicable notice of
intention to oppose, which states that the 1
st
respondent tenders notice of intention to oppose but is signed by 3
rd
respondent, the 1
st
respondent appeared in person and addressed the court in opposition
to the application. The 3
rd
respondent did not do so.
7.
The second
sub-category comprises the 2
nd
,
4
th
to 8
th
,
10
th
,
11
th
and 13
th
to 18
th
respondents, whose attorney entered a notice of intention to oppose
on 29 June 2021. Sudeshnee Naidoo Attorneys delivered an answering
affidavit for these respondents on 20 July 2021, and they were
represented in court by Mr Gaju.
8.
The third
sub-category comprises the 9
th
and 12
th
respondents, who neither entered appearance to oppose nor appeared at
the opposed application hearing. The application against
them is
effectively unopposed.
9.
Nevertheless,
owing to the nature of this application and the consequences of the
applicant succeeding, in considering the position
of the 9
th
and 12
th
and 19
th
respondents, the court takes into account all the defences
collectively raised by those respondents who have opposed this
application.
In so doing, the court deals with all defences raised as
applicable to all respondents, and does not limit defences to only
those
respondents who expressly raised them.
10.
The
applicant’s case reduces to the following propositions: the
applicant is the owner of and landlord for the H[....]; the
1
st
to 18
th
respondents are former tenants and current occupiers of apartments
(“the affected apartments”) in the H[....]; as a
consequence of a so-called rent boycott, the tenants and occupants of
the affected apartments have not paid rentals since dates
varying
from 2011 to 2017; the applicant treated this as a repudiation and
terminated the lease agreements for the affected apartments
on 4 June
2021; the tenants or occupants of the affected apartments remain in
occupation, but continue not paying rentals; the
applicant instituted
this application on 21 June 2021 within two weeks of the
cancellation, and seeks the ejectment from the affected
apartments of
the named respondents and any unnamed persons holding occupation of
the affected apartments through them (i.e. the
“19
th
respondent”).
11.
Prima facie
the applicant makes
out a valid case for ejectment of the 1
st
to 18
th
respondents and any other occupiers, from the affected units. It is
necessary, however, to consider the defences raised by the
respondents. This judgment proceeds to do so.
That
the applicant is obliged to comply with a subsidy agreement between
the applicant and the Gauteng Provincial Department of
Housing
12.
The founding
affidavit discloses that during June 2003, the applicant applied for
an institutional subsidy in terms of chapter 6
of the National
Housing Code, a copy of the then current version of which is annexure
“FA-3” to the founding affidavit.
13.
The
application was successful, and the applicant concluded a written
subsidy agreement with Provincial Housing Department on 25
October
2005. The agreement is annexure “FA-5” to the founding
affidavit.
14.
Despite the
subsidy agreement’s five-year term, the Department repudiated
the subsidy agreement during 2008 and the applicant
cancelled the
subsidy agreement in 2008 before the end of its five-year term.
15.
The
respondents admit their rent boycott, but state that they were
entitled to stop paying rentals,
inter
alia
because they either did not get ongoing subsidised rentals or an
option to purchase their units after four years, in accordance
with
their perception of the National Housing Code and the subsidy
agreement.
16.
Chapter 6 of
the National Housing Code, however, neither obliges the applicant to
charge subsidised rentals in perpetuity, nor to
provide occupiers of
subsidised properties with options to purchase the properties.
17.
As appears
from section 6.2.4.2. of the Code, the subsidised institution must
grant beneficiaries secure rights of tenure, which
may include lease,
instalment sale, share block or individual ownership after four
years.
18.
Section
6.2.4.3 of the Code confirms that “
tenure
in the form of lease shall be with or without an option to the
beneficiary to purchase the property
”.
Such an option is clearly not compulsory. As pointed out by the
applicant, such an option was not possible in respect of
units in the
H[....], because those units are neither subdivided nor part of a
sectional title scheme, and therefore could not
be sold individually
to their occupiers.
19.
It is
sufficient for compliance with these sections if the applicant grants
subsidised leases without an option to purchase after
four years,
which the applicant did during the period up to termination of the
subsidy agreement.
20.
While section
3.4 of the agreement states rentals applicable to bachelor and
two-bedroomed units, section 3.5 expressly provides
that those
rentals may escalate annually by no more than the applicable
inflation rate.
21.
On the basis
that the applicant terminated its agreement with the department
following repudiation by the department, there is no
basis for
treating the National Housing Code and subsidy agreement as applying
to the H[....] after the date of cancellation.
22.
Thus, the
agreement between the applicant and the department contains no terms
which support the respondents’ contentions.
23.
Moreover, it
is apparent that the H[....] as a whole provided accommodation for
tenants in two broad categories: those who were
entitled to
subsidised rentals and those who were not so entitled. The named
respondents have not produced evidence that they were
ever registered
as beneficiaries of the subsidy scheme, or entitled to insist on
subsidised rentals.
24.
It follows
that the named respondents have no justifiable cause for complaining
that the applicant has deprived them of any entitlement
to either
subsidised rentals or options to purchase their units after four
years.
25.
Even if that
were the case, the named respondents’ individual lease
agreements do not contain any terms to that effect, and
there can be
no contractual basis for the named respondents to lawfully cease
paying rentals on the basis of an alleged breach
of a contract
between the applicant and a third party in the form of the
department, rather than between the applicant and the
individual
tenants.
26.
It must
follow, therefore, that the named respondents repudiated their lease
agreements by embarking on a rent boycott and refusing
to pay
rentals, and the applicant was entitled to terminate their lease
agreements, as it did.
27.
As the Code
and the subsidy agreement do not oblige the applicant to grant
subsidised rentals in perpetuity, or sell individual
units after four
years, the defence that the named respondents are contractually
entitled to such benefits as beneficiaries under
a
stipulatio
alteri
, is
inherently without merit. The named respondents cannot accept
non-existent rights under the agreement between the applicant
and the
department, and there is in any event no evidence supporting the
named respondents’ acceptance of benefits as third
parties to a
contract between the applicant and the department.
That
the prior pending litigation between the parties renders this
application vexatious and gives rise to the defence of
lis alibi
pendens
28.
The
respondents allege that there has been prior litigation between the
same parties, with the same subject matter, and in particular
that
the applicant instituted a pending 2016 application for ejectment.
29.
The 1
st
respondent alleges a 17 October 2012 application initiated by the
respondents against the applicant, before the Rental Housing
Tribunal. The 1
st
respondent also alleges two applications by the applicant before this
court, commencing in 2014 and 2016.
30.
Case number
40562/2014 was between the applicant and the Gauteng Provincial
Department of Housing, in which the disputed issue was
the validity
of the subsidy agreement. This clearly does not give rise to a
defence of
lis
pendens
in
this matter, as the subject matter was not the same.
31.
In case number
35016/2016, the applicant applied for the eviction of the
respondents’ and other residents. On 22 May 2017
the 2016 and
2014 applications were consolidated, and the respondent took the
stance that the applicant is precluded from proceeding
with this
ejectment application because the 2016 ejectment application remains
unfinished.
32.
As stated by
the Western Cape High Court Full Bench in
Belmont
House (Pty) Ltd v Gore and Another NNO
2011 (6) SA 173
(WCC), a court will only stay proceedings which are
vexatious or an abuse of the process of the court; even then the
court has
a discretion; and in the absence of vexatiousness a court
will not suspend an eviction order on equitable grounds pending the
finalisation
of related matters.
33.
The only prior
pending matter which arguably satisfies the requirements for
lis
pendens
is
the pre-consolidation 2016 application for ejectment. It is not
necessary for this court to consider matters relevant to
vexatiousness
and a discretionary stay of proceedings, however,
because during argument of the present application on 22 November
2022, the applicant
delivered a notice of withdrawal of its 2016
ejectment application against all eighteen of the present named
respondents.
34.
Since the
notice of withdrawal put an end to any prior litigation that may have
given rise to a valid defence
lis
alibi pendens
,
that defence cannot succeed.
That
the applicant has failed to join the Gauteng MEC for the Department
of Human Settlements, and the Social Housing Regulatory
Authority
35.
The
respondents raise this defence on the basis that the ongoing
application of the subsidy agreement and the Social Housing
Regulations,
necessitate the joining of the Social Housing Regulatory
Authority (“SHRA”) and the Gauteng MEC.
36.
The applicable
test is whether the MEC and the SHRA have direct and substantial
interests in the subject matter of this application,
in the sense of
a legal interest in the subject matter which may be prejudicially
affected by the judgment of the court. See in
this regard
South
African History Archive Trust v South African Reserve Bank
2020 (6) SA 127
(SCA) at para 30.
37.
Any interest
that the MEC or the SHRA may have had in the outcome of this
application would only have arisen from the existence
of the subsidy
agreement. The subsidy agreement, however, was cancelled
approximately fourteen years ago in 2008, and there is
no basis on
which the MEC and the SHRA can be considered to have had a direct and
substantial interest since then.
38.
There is
accordingly no merit in the non-joinder defence.
That
the applicant is not the owner of the property
39.
The
applicant alleges that it is the registered owner of the property,
and annexure “FA-2” to the founding affidavit
is a
WinDeed Deeds Office property search for the property – Erf
[....], Johannesburg Township, Registration Division IR
- showing
that Wingprop (Pty) Ltd purchased the property on 2 August 1993 for a
purchase price of R16 900 000 and was registered
as the owner on
24 October 1996.
40.
The
respondents raise the objection that the applicant’s 2002
company registration number disproves the applicant’s
ownership, because a company with a 2002 registration number could
not have purchased a property in 1993 or become the registered
owner
in 1996.
41.
In its
replying affidavit to the 2
nd
and 4
th
- 18
th
respondents, however, the applicant refers to a company report
showing that it was registered as a close corporation in 1988, and
converted to a private company in January 2002, for which reason its
company registration number contains the year 2002. Annexure
“RA-3”
to this replying affidavit is a WinDeed Company report which confirms
that the applicant company was previously
a close corporation with
registration number 1988/023485/23, which is consistent with the
applicant’s evidence.
42.
Annexure
“RA-1” to the replying affidavit is a copy of the title
deed for Erf [....], showing that the property was
transferred to
Wingprop CC CK88/023485/23 on 24 October 1996.
43.
Accordingly,
there is no merit to the defence that the applicant is not the owner
of the H[....].
That
the applicant fails to comply with its obligations as landlord to
provide maintenance and services in the building
44.
The
respondents allege that the building is in a state of disrepair, and
that this entitles them to not pay rentals.
45.
In paragraph
88 of the founding affidavit, the applicant states that about 60% of
the units at the H[....] are in default of rental
payments. In
paragraph 87, the applicant states that it has sustained a loss of
close to R38 million as a consequence of these
non-payments.
46.
The
applicants’ inability to satisfactorily maintain the building
is unsurprising, considering this default in rent payments.
47.
Up to the
cancellation of their leases, the named respondents were obliged to
pay rent in advance every month, but failed to do
so. On this basis,
they are not entitled to raise the defence that the applicant has
failed to comply with any contractual obligation
to provide
maintenance and services in return for rental. Such a contractual
defence is in any event inherently inapplicable after
the
cancellation of the leases.
48.
Under the
circumstances, this defence cannot succeed.
That
the application is subject to irresoluble disputes of fact
49.
There are no
material disputes of fact. The evidence shows that the applicant is
the owner of the H[....], that the named respondents
were previously
lessees of their units in the building, and that they individually
stopped paying rentals between 2011 and 2017
under a so-called rent
boycott. The respondents do not dispute the rent boycott, but state
that their substantive defences mentioned
above give them a right not
to pay rental.
50.
As the rent
boycott led to a lawful cancellation of the eighteen leases by the
applicant, the eighteen respondents and any persons
occupying their
formerly leased units through or under them, are not entitled to
retain occupation and are unlawful occupiers as
defined in the PIE
Act: “
A
person who occupies land without the express or tacit consent of the
owner or person in charge, or without any other right in
law to
occupy such land …
”.
The
Prevention of Illegal Eviction From and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”)
51.
As stated in
paragraph 1 of the judgment in
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker and Another v Jika
2003 (1) SA 113
(SCA), the PIE Act “
gives
‘unlawful occupiers’ some procedural and substantive
protection against eviction from land.
”
The Act defines “
land
”
as including a portion of land.
52.
Section 4(2)
of the PIE Act requires that “
At
least 14 days before the hearing of the proceedings contemplated in
subsection (1), the court must serve written and effective
notice of
the proceedings on the unlawful occupier and the municipality having
jurisdiction.
”
Subsection 4(1) states that the provisions of section 4 “
apply
to proceedings by an owner or person in charge of land for the
eviction of an unlawful occupier
”.
Section 4 is accordingly applicable to this application.
53.
On 22 March
2022, this court granted the applicant an order under section 4(2).
The order authorises service of the applicant’s
notice under
section 4(2). Such service was duly effected.
54.
Section 4(6)
of the PIE Act states that “
If
an unlawful occupier has occupied the land in question for less 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 the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disable persons and households headed by women
”.
55.
In paragraph
17 of the
Ndlovu
judgment, the Supreme Court of Appeal clarified the meaning of
section 4(6) of the Act, and of section 4(7) which applies if an
unlawful occupier has been in occupation for more than six months
when the proceedings are initiated. Simply put, “
the
period of the occupation is calculated from the date the occupation
becomes unlawful
”.
56.
The
applicant’s demands for payment from the eighteen named
respondents on 22 February 2021, did not elicit payment from the
respondents and the applicant terminated the eighteen named
respondents’ leases on 7 June 2021 as it was entitled to do.
57.
7 June 2021 is
accordingly the date on which the eighteen named respondents’
occupation became unlawful, and the same applies
to any persons
occupying their units through or under them. The application was
served on 21 June 2021, less than six months later,
and section 4(6)
of the PIE Act is applicable.
58.
In
Teaca
Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others v Banza and Others
[2018] JOL 39867
(GJ), the facts before Kathree-Setiloane J were
similar to the facts of this matter in that the unlawful occupants
had deliberately
embarked on a rent boycott. Kathree-Setiloane J
found those occupants to have organised themselves into a militant
body that took
the law into its own hands, and applied
Ngqykumba
v Minister of Safety and Security
2014 (5) SA 112
(CC) [at 21] in finding this sort of conduct
repugnant to constitutional values and the rule of law. The same
finding is unavoidable
in this application.
59.
The court in
Teaca
Properties
applied section 4(6) of PIE. Kathree-Setiloane J took into account
that the boycotters’ conduct had deprived their property
owner
of a revenue stream, that they were on their own admission people who
were able to pay rent but had deliberately not done
so after
embarking on their rent boycott, and that the question of
homelessness did not arise.
60.
In this
application, none of the respondents have alleged that eviction will
render them homeless, and there is therefore no obligation
on the
20
th
respondent to provide temporary shelter or alternative housing. In
any event, that obligation only arises in respect of persons
who find
themselves in an emergency housing situation that they are unable to
address, for reasons beyond their control. In this
instance, the
reasons are within the named respondents’ control as they
deliberately embarked on a rent boycott. See
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties
39 (Pty) Ltd and Another
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) para 27; and
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) para 47
61.
The
respondents in this matter have not made out any case that they or
their dependants are women, children, the elderly or disabled
persons
whose rights to shelter would be violated if evicted.
62.
The conduct of
the named respondents in refusing to pay rent for many years,
together with similar conduct from other rent boycotters
in the
H[....] who are not respondents in this application, has obviously
severely reduced the applicant’s ability to maintain
the
building, leading to a deterioration of conditions in the building.
That inevitably has an adverse effect on conditions for
those tenants
who have not joined the rent boycott but continue paying their
rentals.
63.
Taking all
these factors into account, it is just and equitable that an eviction
order be granted.
64.
The court also
needs to consider what constitutes a just and equitable time for the
eviction order to take effect. The court is
mindful that at this time
of the year, Christmas and New Year public holidays occur and many
potential providers of alternative
accommodation may be taking their
end of year holidays. For this reason, the 30-day period requested by
the applicant is insufficient.
The court considers it just and
equitable that the eviction order take effect on 31 January 2023, and
the applicant’s counsel
has sensibly agreed to this.
65.
Under these
circumstances, the court’s order is as follows:
65.1.
The 1
st
to 18
th
respondents and any persons in occupation by, through or under them
are evicted from the property situated at Units 1801, 2803,
1907,
501, 602, 806, 1108, 1308, 1402, 1410, 1707, 1911, 2004, 2207, 2210,
2311, 2503 and 2603 of the H[....], corner K[....] and
K[....]2
Streets, H[....]2, Johannesburg, described as Erf [....] Johannesburg
Township, Registration Division I.R., Johannesburg,
Gauteng;
65.2.
The 1
st
to 18
th
respondents and all persons in occupation by, through or under them
are ordered to vacate these units on or before Tuesday 31 January
2023;
65.3.
In the event
that the 1
st
to 18
th
respondents and all those occupying the units by, though or under
them do not vacate the property by 31 January 2023, the Sheriff
of
the Court or his lawfully appointed deputy is authorised and directed
to evict them from the units;
65.4.
The 1
st
to 18
th
respondents and all those occupying the property by, through or under
them are interdicted and restrained from reoccupying the
H[....] upon
their eviction therefrom;
65.5.
The 1
st
to 8
th
,
10
th
and 11
th
,
and 13
th
to 18
th
respondents are ordered to pay the applicant’s costs of the
opposed application, jointly and severally;
65.6.
The 9
th
and 12
th
respondents are ordered to pay the applicant’s unopposed costs,
jointly and severally;
65.7.
The
applicant’s attorneys are to forthwith serve this judgement and
order on the 1
st
,
3
rd
,
9
th
and 12
th
respondents either personally or by delivery to the units occupied by
them.
KEMACK
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT: Adv
C van Der Merwe
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT: Vermaak
Marshall Wellbeloved Inc.
1
ST
RESPONDENT: In
person
COUNSEL
FOR 2
ND
& 4
TH
- 18
TH
RESPONDENTS:
Mr
Gaju
ATTORNEY
FOR 2
ND
& 4
TH
- 18
TH
RESPONDENTS: Sudeshnee
Naidoo Attorneys
DATE
HEARD:
22 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 12
December 2022
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