Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 120South Africa
Mahlangu v Nkosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 120; 43615/21 (23 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mahlangu v Nkosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 120; 43615/21 (23 February 2023)
Mahlangu v Nkosi and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 120; 43615/21 (23 February 2023)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 43615/21
REPORTABLE:
Yes
☐
/ No
☒
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
☐
/ No
☒
REVISED:
Yes
☐
/ No
☒
23
February 2023
In
the matter between:
SHIRLEY
ELLEN
MAHLANGU
APPLICANT
and
VIOLET
NKOSI AND ALL UNLAWFUL
1
ST
RESPONDENT
OCCUPANTS
OF ERF [....] MAMELODI WEST
PRETORIA
IN THE GAUTENG PROVINCE
BEAUTY
SOMKANZA VAN
EEDEN
2
ND
RESPONDENT
FRANK
VAN
EEDEN
3
RD
RESPONDENT
MUBI
DAVID
NKOSI
4
TH
RESPONDENT
PUSANA
MARTHA
NKOSI
5
TH
RESPONDENT
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
6
TH
RESPONDENT
MUNICIPALITY
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
# Background
Background
[1]
This is an application for an eviction in
terms of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation
Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”)
that was enrolled on my unopposed
roll.
[2]
On 2 February 2021, Moosa AJ authorised the
Applicant to serve the application as contemplated in PIE, on all the
respondents, by
service by the Sheriff, on all persons they might
find at the property described as Erf no [....] Mamelodi Township
Gauteng Province
(“the property”), and by affixing the
documents on the front gate or door of the property if no other
service is possible.
[3]
From the founding affidavits deposed by the
Applicant, the following is evident. Ms Mahlangu is an unemployed
adult that lives in
Mpumalanga and is the lawful owner of the
property known as [....] Mamelodi West. The first Respondent resides
at the property.
Second to firth Respondent lives elsewhere in
Mamelodi, but the Applicant seeks no relief against them. No relief
is sought against
the sixth Respondent, the municipality, either.
[4]
The second to fifth Respondents sold the
property to the Applicant, pursuant to a sale agreement. The transfer
of the property was
affected on 17 September 2020. However, since the
transfer, the Applicant could not take occupation since the first
Respondent
refused to vacate the property. The Applicant appointed
attorneys and sent a letter of demand to the first Respondent and her
family
to vacate the property.
[5]
The Applicant further places the following
facts before the Court: she purchased the property for her late
brother’s children
and grandchildren, of which 5 are minors
living in an uninhabitable residence. The guardian who takes care of
the five children
is unemployed and cannot afford to find a suitable
habitable place of residence.
[6]
The Applicant then states that she is the
duly registered property owner, and that the first Respondent and her
family have no right
to occupy the property. The Applicant states
that an order to vacate the property will place her in a position to
have
control and undisturbed use of the property. She currently pays the
rates and taxes, although she does not have occupation
of the
property.
[7]
She also states that the first Respondent
and all the other unlawful occupants are all major persons who are
gainfully employed
or are employable. Other than that, she is not
aware of any relevant facts that may influence the reasonability and
fairness of
an order for the immediate eviction of the first
Respondent and her family from the property. It is not clear, for
instance, whether
any of the s 4(7) factors are applicable, or if the
eviction will lead to homelessness.
[8]
This leads to the conclusion that the
damages that she, as the owner, will suffer outweigh those that the
Respondent will suffer
with an eviction order. An eviction order is
also the only effective remedy available against the first Respondent
and her family.
From the affidavit, it is unclear what damages the
first Respondent will suffer that leads the Applicant to this
conclusion.
[9]
The Applicant wants this Court to declare
that the occupation of the property by the first Respondent is
unlawful and that they
are, therefore, to vacate the property in
terms of section 4(7) of PIE. Thus, the request is that the Court
must grant an order
in terms of s 4(8)(a) of PIE for the first
Respondent to vacate the property within five days of granting the
order and to order
the Sheriff to affect the eviction in terms of s
4(8)(b), not more than five days after granting the order.
[10]
A notice of intention to oppose was filed,
but there was no answering affidavit filed. The circumstance of the
Respondent is thus
not placed before the Court other than what the
Applicant stated in her affidavit.
[11]
In
court I asked Mr Kabinde about the factors I should consider that
would make the granting of the eviction order “just and
equitable” as required by PIE. He reiterated that the Applicant
bought the house for her children and grandchildren and that
the
Applicant is unlawful. I referred Mr Kabinde to the recent case of
Madulammoho
Housing Association NPC vs Nephawe and Another ; Final Housing
Solutions (Pty)
Ltd
v Lukhanya
[1]
by Wilson J, specifically the part dealing with onus, and invited him
to file short heads of argument to answer the question again.
[12]
Mr Kabinde did as requested. He argues as
follows:
i.
The Applicant is the lawful owner, having
purchased the property from the previous owners;
ii.
The Applicant is unable to occupy the
property since the purchase, as the first Respondent remains in
unlawful occupation of the
property, preventing the Applicant from
undisturbed use and enjoyment of the property in question;
iii.
The Applicant did not have knowledge of the
first Respondent’s occupation of the property, and does not
have knowledge of
the first Respondent’s personal circumstances
and or further particulars, and thus could not plead the Respondent’s
circumstances;
iv.
The Applicant only became aware of the
identity of the occupier when attempting to occupy the property;
v.
The first Respondent is presented and has
filed a notice of intention to oppose; however, the Respondent failed
to do so.
vi.
This
means that there is compliance with the applicable legislation,
namely, the Applicant has the necessary authority as the owner
to
launch the proceedings,
[2]
the
Notice of Motion adequately informs the Respondent of her rights in
terms of s 4(5) of PIE; there was proper service of the
court
processes and set down in accordance with the Rules of the Court
(rule 4(2) and 4(3)).
vii.
The application further falls within the
ambit of section 4(7) PIE, “as the application was issued in
access of six months
of the applicant acquiring ownership of the
property”. The Court must thus make a factual finding to
determine what is just
and equitable to order an eviction,
considering the relevant circumstances “which it is submitted
for the applicant include
both the Applicant and Respondent’s
circumstances”. The Applicant made out her case, including the
detriment to her
constitutional and common law rights of ownership of
immovable property (the escalating municipal account and the
prejudice to
the minor orphans who cannot lodge in the property).
viii.
The
Madulammoho
Housing Association Judgment
reaffirms
the courts’ judicial discretion when determining what is just
and equitable to make an order of eviction in an unopposed
eviction
application, specifically whether the Respondent will be homeless due
to the eviction. However, it is not clear whether
that matter was
opposed or not. There is a stark difference between a Respondent who
is aware of an eviction and a Respondent who
is unaware. An unaware
Respondent cannot contribute to the proceedings and assist the Court.
ix.
In this case, the Respondent is well aware
of the proceedings, having filed a notice of intention to oppose
through a legal representative
still on record. The Respondent has
nonetheless wilfully omitted to provide the Court with information.
Section 4(7) never envisaged
placing the onus on the Applicant or the
local authority to prove the Respondent’s circumstances and
whether the Respondent
will be homeless and/or has alternative
accommodation. This is the duty of the Respondent, especially if they
are aware of the
proceedings. The reasonable inference to make from
the Respondent’s omission to make submissions is that she will
suffer
no prejudice if an order for eviction is granted.
x.
The Court’s discretion in terms of s
4(7) to make an order for eviction with reference to alternative
accommodation “becomes
academic under circumstances
as
there
is
no
evidence
of
the
need
for
alternative
accommodation by the Respondent”, and the reasonable inference
from the available evidence is that there is no
apparent need for
alternative accommodation.
xi.
Thus, in light of the personal
circumstances of the Applicant, the fact that the Respondent is aware
of the proceedings and an election
not to defend or place information
before the Court in respect of her personal circumstances means that
there is no valid defence
and that the Applicant satisfies the
requirements of s 4. The Applicant discharged her onus proving
justice and equity, proved
her ownership and proved the unlawful
occupation by the Respondent. An order for eviction must thus be
granted.
[13]
This is not entirely in line with the law,
especially caselaw, on the matter.
# The law
The law
[14]
Section 26(3) of the Constitution states
that
No one may be evicted
from their home, or have their home demolished, without an order of
the Court made after considering all the
relevant circumstances. No
legislation may permit arbitrary evictions.
[15]
To
give effect to this provision, the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) was
promulgated. In this case, ss 4(1)
[3]
and (7)
[4]
are specifically
applicable, as well as ss4(8) and (9).
[5]
PIE authorises the Court
[16]
The
Constitutional Court in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[6]
further
guided how PIE should be interpreted. Sach J said the following:
[7]
[S]ection 26(3) […]
[emphasises] the need to seek concrete and case- specific solutions
to the difficult problems that arise.
Absent the historical
background outlined above, the statement in the Constitution that the
courts must do what courts are normally
expected to do, namely, take
all relevant factors into account, would appear otiose (superfluous),
even odd. Its use in section
26(3), however, serves a clear
constitutional purpose. It is there precisely to underline how non-
prescriptive the provision is
intended to be. The way in which the
courts are to manage the process has accordingly been left as wide
open as constitutional
language could achieve, by design and not by
accident, by deliberate purpose and not by omission.
In sum, the Constitution
imposes new obligations on the courts concerning rights relating to
property not previously recognised
by the common law. It counterposes
to the normal ownership rights of possession, use and occupation, a
new and equally relevant
right not arbitrarily to be deprived of a
home. The expectations that ordinarily go with title could clash
head-on with the genuine
despair of people in dire need of
accommodation. The judicial function in these circumstances is not to
establish a hierarchical
arrangement between the different interests
involved, privileging in an abstract and mechanical way the rights of
ownership over
the right not to be dispossessed of a home, or vice
versa. Rather it is to balance out and reconcile the opposed claims
in as just
a manner as possible taking account of all the interests
involved and the specific factors relevant in each particular case.
[17]
Thus,
the Constitution requires courts to approach eviction matters
differently than the pre-constitutional structures that used
to place
unfettered ownership in the centre of disputes.
[8]
Of course, the right of ownership means that an owner has certain
remedies at their disposal, but these remedies do not exist in
the
abstract and will not always trump the interests of those with no or
weaker rights. Individual owners do not hold (and enforce)
their
rights in the abstract; they do so in a particular context, standing
in a particular relationship with people with no or
weaker rights.
[18]
The inquiry is contextual: even if the
owner did comply with all the procedural requirements of filing such
an application, what,
in a particular circumstance, is just and
equitable, considering the specific circumstances, is substantive in
nature.
[19]
In
eviction matters respondents are holders of rights – the right
not to be evicted without a court order, granted after the
Court has
considered all the relevant circumstances as per s 26 of the
Constitution. This right that the unlawful occupier holds
is given
effect to by PIE, creating a statutory property right not to be
arbitrarily evicted.
[9]
As
stated above: the content of this right is more than just a
procedural right. It also has substantive considerations, as set
out
in PIE and interpreted in case law. This does not extinguish (or
expropriate) ownership, but, in some instances, it does delay
or
suspend the exercise of the owner’s rights.
[10]
[20]
This is because both the right not to be
evicted arbitrarily and the property right to ownership need to be
considered and weighed
up. One cannot, per default, trump the other:
the inquiry is always contextual. This means that even in an
unopposed application,
the Court can refuse an eviction order if it
is of the opinion that, substantively, it will not be just and
equitable to grant
it, despite procedural compliance
by
the
Applicant.
This
is
where
the
importance
of
all
relevant circumstances comes in, and who
bears the onus of bringing the facts to the Court’s attention.
# Onus
Onus
[21]
Case
law clarifies that the onus of showing that an eviction will be “just
and equitable” rests on the Applicant. The
Applicant must place
facts before a court to enable the court to exercise its
Constitutional obligation to determine whether an
eviction would be
“just and equitable”.
[11]
Merely proving ownership of the Applicant and unlawful occupation of
the Respondent is not enough for the Court to order an eviction
–
the facts must demonstrate that it is just and equitable to do
so.
[12]
[22]
Applicants in an eviction application thus
must plead their cases thoroughly. The only way for a court to
conclude that an eviction
would be just and equitable in an unopposed
court is if the Applicant sets out the facts that they have, or can
reasonably, collect,
to enable the Court to exercise its discretion.
This includes information on the Respondent. This is because the
Court can only
perform its Constitutional duty in ensuring that a
court order is only granted with consideration of all the relevant
circumstances
if the necessary information is available.
[23]
This does not require the Applicant to also
be a Respondent. Like the so-called Rule46A applications (default
judgment and execution
of residential property) that is also
frequently on the unopposed motion courts. The Applicant can dipose
of an affidavit to indicate
what action they took to gather as much
relevant information as possible, even if such a search amounted to
nought.
[24]
The
extent of the onus and the extent of the Applicant's duty to provide
the Court with information will, of course, depend on who
the
landowner is, the nature of the property, and the circumstances of
the Respondent. It is a contextual inquiry that depends
on the
particular facts of each case. So much as stated already in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[13]
“
The
combination
of
circumstances
may
be
extremely
intricate,
requiring a
nuanced appreciation of the specific situation in each case. Thus,
though there might be a sad uniformity in the conditions
of
homelessness and desperation which lead to unlawful occupations, on
the one hand, and the frustration of landowners at being
blocked by
intruders from enjoyment of their property, on the other, the actual
details of the relationships involved are capable
of infinite
variation.
[30] It is not easy to
classify the multitude of places and relationships involved. This is
precisely why, even though unlawfulness
is established, the eviction
process is not automatic and why the courts are called upon to
exercise a broad judicial discretion
on a case by case basis. Each
case accordingly has to be decided not on generalities but in the
light of its own particular circumstances.
Every situation has its
own history, its own dynamics, its own intractable elements that have
to be lived with (at least for the
time being), and its own creative
possibilities that have to be explored as far as reasonably possible.
The proper application
of PIE will therefore depend on the facts of
each case, and each case may present different facts that call for
the adoption of
different approaches.”
[25]
In
other words, a single private dwelling owned by a private landowner,
where the respondents have been in unlawful occupation for
a short
period, can discharge their onus that an eviction will be just and
equitable reasonably easily.
[14]
On the other end of the continuum, state land occupied by respondents
who have occupied the land for a long time and who might
be homeless
if evicted has a more onerous duty of discharging their onus.
[15]
[26]
In
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides
[16]
the Supreme Court of Appeal also confirmed this. That case dealt with
an appeal from the High Court where the eviction application
was not
opposed. The Court stated that
[17]
“
Both
the Constitution and PIE require that the Court must take into
account all relevant facts before granting an eviction order.
Whilst
in some cases it may suffice for an applicant to say that it is the
owner and the Respondent is in occupation, because those
are the only
relevant facts, in others it will not. One cannot simply transpose
the former rules governing onus to a situation
that is no longer
governed only by the common law but has statutory expression.”
[27]
And
“
Most
applicants for eviction orders governed by PIE will have at least
some knowledge of the identity of the persons they wish to
have
evicted and their personal circumstances. They are obviously not
required to go beyond what they know or what is reasonably
ascertainable.”
[28]
The
Applicant noted that occupiers are all adults who can work and are
staying unlawfully in the house. It did not, however, explain
other
circumstances that might have a bearing on the justice and equity of
the eviction, and it did not explain how the unlawfulness
arose.
Judging from the fact that the first Respondent has the same surname
as the third and fourth Respondent, this might explain
why they are
occupying the property. Such facts might not play an overwhelming
role in granting an eviction order in this case,
but they might
influence determining a just and equitable date for eviction.
[18]
[29]
The
Court must actively probe and investigate the surrounding
circumstances.
[19]
This is the
case in settlement agreements, the Constitutional Court found,
[20]
and is also the case in unopposed motion court.
# Order
Order
[30]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1.
The application is postponed
sine
die
for the Applicant to file a
supplementary affidavit detailing what effort she has made to obtain
the necessary information regarding
the circumstances of the
respondent occupiers.
2.
The Applicant must ensure that this
judgment is brought to the respondents' attention.
3.
As soon as 1 & 2 are complied with, the
Applicant may re-enrol the matter.
WJ
DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Mr Kabinde (attorney)
Instructed
by:
Kabinde Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
13 February 2023
Date
of judgment:
24 February 2023
[1]
Madulammoho
Housing Association NPC vs Nephawe and Another ; Final Housing
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Lukhanya
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 7.
[2]
In
terms of s 4(1) PIE.
[3]
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law or the common law, the
provisions of this section apply to proceedings
by an owner or
person in charge of land for the eviction of an unlawful occupier.”
[4]
“
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.”
[5]
S
4 (8) If the court is satisfied that all the requirements of this
section have been complied with and that no valid defence
has been
raised by the unlawful occupier, it must grant an order for the to
order an eviction when it is “just and equitable”
to do
so after considering all the relevant circumstances. What exactly is
“just and equitable” is a contextual inquiry
based on
the specific facts before the Court, although the principle has been
developed and interpreted in various cases.
eviction
of the unlawful occupier, and determine-(a) a just and equitable
date on which the unlawful occupier must vacate the
land under the
circumstances; and (b) the date on which an eviction order may be
carried out if the unlawful occupier has not
vacated the land on the
date contemplated in paragraph (a).
S
4(9) 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.
[6]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7.
[7]
Paras
22 – 23.
[8]
For
a thorough analysis of this, see C Cloete, 'A critical analysis of
the approach of the courts in the application of eviction
remedies
in the pre-constitutional and constitutional context', (2016)
Stellenbosch University.
[9]
See
AJ Van der Walt,
Property
and Constitution
(PULP)
2012 where he develops this argument from p 115 onwards.
[10]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides
74
(Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) para 16.
[11]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides
74
(Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) para 34;
Madulammoho
Housing Association NPC vs Nephawe and Another ; Final Housing
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Lukhanya
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 7 para 10.
[12]
Madulammoho
Housing Association NPC vs Nephawe and Another ; Final Housing
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Lukhanya
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 7 para 10.
[13]
Paras
29 - 30
[14]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides
74
(Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) para 16.
[15]
Van
der Walt,
Property
and Constitution
166.
[16]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
(SCA)
[2012] ZASCA 116
[17]
At
para 30.
[18]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd (SCA)
[2012] ZASCA 116
para 32.
[19]
Pitje
v Shibambo
[2016]
ZACC 5
par 19; see also Cloete and Temmers Boggenpoel, 'Re-
evaluating the court system in PIE eviction cases' (2018) 135
SALJ
432.
[20]
Occupiers
of Erven 87 & Berea v De Wet NO 2017 (5) SA346 (CC)
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