Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 73South Africa
Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another v Kume and Others (A109/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 73 (31 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another v Kume and Others (A109/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 73 (31 January 2024)
Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another v Kume and Others (A109/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 73 (31 January 2024)
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sino date 31 January 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appeal Case Number:
A109/2022
Court
a quo
Case
Number: 45074/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
SIGNATURE
DATE:
2024-01-31
In the matter between:
MINISTER
OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
First Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF MILITARY VETERANS
Second Appellant
and
STHEMBISO
KUME
First
Respondent
LINDILWA
NTLABATHI
Second Respondent
THIBANE
MALAKA
Third Respondent
YOLISA
PHOLL
Fourth Respondent
LEBO
MOGALE
Fifth Respondent
MOSES
MAKHALEMELE
Sixth Respondent
SIMON
MAKGATHOLELA
Seventh
Respondent
DIANA
MODISE
Eight Respondent
BONGANI
HLONGWANE
Ninth Respondent
ELPHIUS
LEPHALE
Tenth Respondent
SYDNEY
DLAMINI
Eleventh Respondent
ELLIOT
NTLAHLA
NGCOBO
Twelfth Respondent
JOSHUA
MASHIGO
Thirteenth Respondent
ENOCK
MADONSELA
Fifteenth Respondent
MARKS
MUDZANANE
Sixteenth Respondent
JACOB
LEGODI
Seventeenth Respondent
MPUMZI
SAWANA
Eighteenth Respondent
MADIKOANE
MANGENA
Nineteenth Respondent
ORPHAN
OUPA MONEOE
Twentieth Respondent
JOHANNES
MOKOENA
Twenty-First Respondent
PHENGO
MANGLISO MOKGAOTSANE
Twenty-Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HUMAN SETTLEMENT
Twenty-Third Respondent
MEC
OF HOUSING, HUMAN SETTLEMENT
Twenty-Fourth Respondent
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Twenty-Fifth Respondent
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC WORKS
Twenty-Sixth Respondent
BOUTIQUE
HOTEL
Twenty-Seventh Respondent
JUDGEMENT
COETZEE
AJ (Van der Westhuizen J and Mogotsi AJ concurring)
INTRODUCTION
:
[1]
This is an appeal to the full court of this division, against the
order and judgment
by the Honourable Acting Justice Lenya, delivered
on the 1
st
of December 2021, after the Appellants have
been granted leave to do so on 13 April 2022.
BACKGROUND
:
[2]
During 2019 and 2020, the First to Twenty-Second Respondent, who are
Liberation Struggle
War Veterans (LSWV) (hereinafter referred to as
‘the military veterans’), were allocated houses by the
First and Second
Appellant, and the Minister of Human Settlements
(the Twenty-Third Respondent) at Rama City Extension 10, situated on
the Remainder
of the Farm Rama No. 768, Registration Division JR,
Province of Gauteng (‘the property’). During August
2020
violence erupted at the property. According to the
military veterans the community of Rama City accused them of
unlawfully
occupying RDP houses that were not yet allocated to
beneficiaries.
[3]
The above dispute prompted Rama City Development Company (Pty) Ltd to
apply for an
eviction order on the 1
st
of September 2020.
The eviction order was sought against all unlawful occupiers of
certain erven at the property, which did
not include the military
veterans. Following the granting of the eviction order, the
Second Appellant accommodated the military
veterans and their
families at various locations, including a military base and later
several guest houses and a hotel.
[4]
The military veterans maintained throughout the litigation process
that followed that
the property was not safe for their families, due
to the community's belief that they were criminals. The First
and Second
Appellant admitted to providing alternative accommodation
for the military veterans. They claimed that they did so based
on the belief of representations made that the veterans were targeted
and victimized by sections of the Rama City community.
The
Second Appellant asserts that they later investigated the information
and found it to be incorrect.
[5]
The investigations further prompted the Second Appellant to instruct
the military
veterans to vacate the guesthouses and move back to the
property by the 7
th
of September 2021. The military
veterans, however, argued that the safety of the houses and the issue
of evictions with Rama
City Development had not been resolved.
Subsequently, further litigation ensued between the parties.
RELIEF
SOUGHT IN VARIOUS APPLICATIONS
:
[6]
The military veterans approached this court on the 13
th
of
September 2021, on an urgent basis (‘the urgent application’),
for the following relief:
“
1.
That the time periods and forms of service be dispensed with and that
the matter be heard as one of urgent in terms of the Uniform
Court
Rule 6(12) as read with the Honourable court’s practice manual.
2. to
restrain and interdict the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents [The First and Second Appellant] from terminating
provision of accommodation to the applicants and their families and
that the
status quo ante
is retained;
3. that the
1
st
and 2
nd
respondent are ordered and directed
to retain the applicants and their families at the three guesthouses,
which were already allocated
to the applicants and the families until
proper, accommodation are allocated to the respondents;
4. that the
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents allocate such funds for
payment of such allocated accommodation.
5. that the
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents are directed and
ordered to sign all necessary memorandum of understanding and/or
agreements with all relevant stakeholders
including but not limited
to the sixth respondent [the Minister of Public Works] for
identification and allocation of housing within
Pretoria excluding
Rama City Development.
6.
That the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this application on the
scale of attorney and own client.”
[1]
[7]
The abovementioned application was removed from the roll on the 13
th
of September 2021, by agreement between the parties, and the issue of
costs was reserved.
[8]
The First and Second Appellant filed an answering affidavit on 21
October 2021 and
simultaneously filed a counter application (‘the
review application’) wherein they sought the following relief:
”
1.
That the decision of the Military Veterans Appeal Board, attached
hereto and marked Annexure A1, be reviewed and set aside,
in terms of
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 03 of 2000
and/or in
terms of Section 1(c) of the Constitution.
2. That the
Honourable Court grant such further and/or alternative relief
including declaring the aforesaid decision
to be void ab initio and
of no legal effect.
3.
That any of the Respondent’s in the counter-application [the
First and Second Appellant and the 23
rd
to 27
th
Respondent] opposing the grant of the review relief be directed to
pay the cost of the application.”
[2]
[8]
The decision of the Appeal Board of Military Veterans, mentioned
above, made the following
order on 4 October 2021:
“
1.
That the decision made by the Respondent [the Second Appellant] on
the 2
nd
of
September 2021, as set out in the attached letter, is herewith set
aside.
2. The
Respondent is ordered to timeously pay the necessary expenses for the
housing of the Appellants where they are
currently staying and to,
within 7 days after the end of each month, confirm with the
Appellants that payment for the specific
month was indeed, made.
3. The
Respondent is ordered to, within 30 days to provide the Department of
Public Works with the information required
in their letter of 24 June
2021, which information is as follows:
3.1 Accommodation
specification of DMV (specifically for LSWV) with the exact number of
residential properties required.
3.2 Draft Memorandum of
Understanding.
3.3 Minutes of the
meeting dated 17 March 2021.
3.4 Confirmation of funds
on user charges or conveyancing fees: and
3.5 Report on the
properties which were previously visited by the DMV and DPWI and
Johannesburg regional office.
4.
The Respondent is ordered to reinstate the Appellant’s [the
Liberation Struggle War Veterans] benefit even
at an alternative
housing project as agreed between the parties by 28 February 2022.
The Appellants cannot unreasonably refuse
to accept an
alternative housing benefit from the Respondent once the Respondent
provides same.
[3]
[9]
The urgent application, which forms the subject of this judgment, was
heard on the
1
st
of December 2021 by the Honourable Acting
Justice Lenyai, who made the following order:
“
1.
The first respondent [the First Appellant] is ordered to comply with
the final decision of the Military Veterans Appeal
Board in the
matter between the Liberation Struggle War Veterans v Department of
Military Veterans dated 4 October 2021, a copy
of which is attached
as “M”.
2. The
applicants [the 1
st
to 22
nd
Respondent] are
ordered to vacate the property of the seventh respondent [27
th
Respondent] on or before 28 February 2022.
3. The first
respondent is ordered to timeously pay all arear expenses and all the
future expenses for the period up
to and including 28 February 2022,
for the housing of the applicants at the seventh respondent.
4.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the cost of the application on
an attorney and own client scale, including
the cost consequent upon
the employment of two council.”
[4]
[10]
The reasons provided for the abovementioned order
[5]
was that in both applications, the urgent and counter application,
the military veterans presented submissions that they were willing
to
seek their own alternative accommodation and pledged to vacate the
hotel by the 28
th
of February 2022. According to the reasons, they further contended,
that they had not voluntarily housed themselves at the hotel
and
insisted that the Second Appellant should settle the hotel bill.
On the other hand, it was stated, that the Appellants
maintained that
they had supported the veterans, believing that their houses were
vandalized at the property. Additionally,
the Second Appellant
could no longer afford to accommodate them at such an expensive
establishment, as they had already allocated
housing to them at the
property. The court
a
quo
stated
that it made the order after considering the arguments of the parties
and acknowledging the risk the military veterans would
face if
returning to an environment that posed mortal danger.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
:
[11]
The main issues to be decided in the appeal are whether the court
a
quo
granted relief that was not originally sought in the
urgent application and whether there was a sufficient factual basis
for
the relief that was ultimately granted.
ANALYSIS
:
[12]
It seems that only the urgent application of the military veterans
was set down for hearing on
the 1
st
of December 2021.
Although the counter application and the decision of the Appeal Board
of Military Veterans were included
in the affidavits, these separate
proceedings were not scheduled for hearing in the court
a
quo
on the specified date.
[13]
The Appellants contended that the first paragraph of the order
granted by the court
a quo
, which ordered the First Appellant
to comply with the final decision of the Military Veterans Appeal
Board, was inappropriate because
it was not sought in the notice of
motion. This is correct. The second, third, and fourth
paragraphs of the order granted
by the court
a quo
were also
not requested in the notice of motion.
[14]
The Appellants further contended that the second, third, and fourth
paragraphs of the granted
order contains implications that could not
have been intended. They argued that the order effectively
imposed an obligation
on the First Appellant to make payments of
unspecified amounts and to provide unspecified services to the
military veterans for
an unspecified period. This, they argued,
is contrary to the procurement framework, sourced from section 217 of
the Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, that
prohibits the eventualities arising from the order of the court
a
quo.
[15]
The court in
The
Road Accident Fund v Taylor and other matters
[6]
stated
that:-
“
In
the circumstances, the age-old principle of
audi
alteram partem
required that the affected
persons be afforded reasonable prior notice and opportunity to state
their cases. In
De Beer NO v North-Central
Local Council and South-Central Local Council and Others (Umhlatuzana
Civic Association intervening)
[2001] ZACC 9
;
2002 (1) SA
429
(CC) para 11, the following was said with particular reference to
s 34 of the Constitution:
‘
This
fair hearing right affirms the rule of law which is a founding value
of our Constitution. The right to a fair hearing before
a court lies
at the heart of the rule of law. A fair hearing before a court as a
prerequisite to an order being made against anyone
is fundamental to
a just and credible legal order. Courts in our country are obliged to
ensure that the proceedings before them
are always fair. Since
procedures that would render the hearing unfair are inconsistent with
the Constitution courts must interpret
legislation and rules of
court, where it is reasonably possible to do so, in a way that would
render the proceedings fair. It is
a crucial aspect of the rule of
law that court orders should not be made without affording the other
side a reasonable opportunity
to state their case. . .”
[16]
The full bench held in
Mgoqi
v City of Cape Town & Another
[7]
that:-
“
the
relief sought by applicant’s counsel during his argument could
not be considered as the notice of motion did not provide
therefore
and the applicant failed to move for an appropriate amendment of the
notice of motion”.
[17]
In
National Commissioner of Police and Another v Gun Owners of
South Africa
', the Court dealt with the amendment of the relief
claimed at the instance of a Court. The SCA said the
following':
‘
[25] Counsel
for the appellants submitted that this intervention by Prinsloo J was
inappropriate, and effectively resulted
in a new case for GOSA, put
up at the instance of the court itself. In my view, the submission
has merit for two related reasons.
The first is that there is a real
risk that judicial intervention of the kind in question, may render
the court susceptible to
an accusation of bias. It is a fundamental
tenet of the administration of justice, now subsumed under the
Constitution,
[10]
that
all those who appear before our courts are treated fairly and that
Judges act – and are seen to act – fairly
and impartially
throughout the proceedings. In
President
of the RSA v SARFU
,
[11]
the
Constitutional Court explained it this way:
‘
A
cornerstone of any fair and just legal system is the impartial
adjudication of disputes which come before the courts and other
tribunals. This applies, of course, to both criminal and civil cases
as well as to quasi-judicial and administrative proceedings.
Nothing
is more likely to impair confidence in such proceedings, whether on
the part of litigants or the general public, than actual
bias or the
appearance of bias in the official or officials who have the power to
adjudicate on disputes.’
[26] The
second reason is that in our adversarial system of litigation, a
court is required to determine a dispute as set out
in the affidavits
(or oral evidence) of the parties to the litigation. It is a core
principle of this system that the Judge remains
neutral and aloof
from the fray. This Court has, on more than one occasion, emphasised
that the adjudication of a case is confined
to the issues before a
court:
‘
[I]t
is for the parties
,
either
in the pleadings or affidavits
(which
serve the function of both pleadings and evidence),
to
set out and define the nature of their dispute
,
and
it
is for the court
to
adjudicate
upon those issues
.
That is so even where the dispute involves an issue pertaining to the
basic human rights guaranteed by our Constitution, for “it
is
impermissible for a party to rely on a constitutional complaint that
was not pleaded”. There are cases where the parties
may expand
those issues by the way in which they conduct the proceedings. There
may also be instances where the court may mero
motu raise a question
of law that emerges fully from the evidence and is necessary for the
decision of the case. That is subject
to the proviso that no
prejudice will be caused to any party by its being decided. Beyond
that
it
is for the parties to identify the dispute and for the court to
determine that dispute and that dispute alone
.’
[12]
’
[18]
The Appellants were not alerted in advance that the aforementioned
order would be requested,
nor were they given the opportunity to
present their case. As a result of this alone, the order cannot
stand and must be
set aside.
As a result, the
following order is made:
ORDER
:
- The
appeal is upheld with costs.
The
appeal is upheld with costs.
- The order of the
Honourable Acting Justice Lenyai, granted on 1 December 2021, is
substituted with the following:
The order of the
Honourable Acting Justice Lenyai, granted on 1 December 2021, is
substituted with the following:
“
The
Application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the
reserved costs on 13 September 2021.”
COETZEE, AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be the
[1]
Record, Volume 1, pg. 4 and 5.
[2]
Record, Volume 3, pg. 258 to 289.
[3]
Record, Volume 3, pg. 298 to 299.
[4]
Record, Volume 6, pg. 501 and 502.
[5]
Record, Volume 5, pg. 490 to 500.
[6]
(1136-1140/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 64
(8 May 2023) at par 33 to 34.
[7]
2006
(4) SA 355
(CPD) at paras [10] - [13].
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