Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1977South Africa
Madibeng Local Municipality v Unknown Tresspassers of Letlhabile B Extension 1 Township and Others (57075/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1977 (29 November 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Interdict - Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) – s 6 – eviction of unlawful occupiers – just and equitable order. Application dismissed - no costs -of this application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Madibeng Local Municipality v Unknown Tresspassers of Letlhabile B Extension 1 Township and Others (57075/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1977 (29 November 2023)
Madibeng Local Municipality v Unknown Tresspassers of Letlhabile B Extension 1 Township and Others (57075/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1977 (29 November 2023)
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sino date 29 November 2023
FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Unlawful occupiers –
Land
invasion
–
Municipality
in process for low-income earners to purchase stands – Just
and equitable order and hierarchy of alternative
considerations in
section 6(3) of PIE – Municipality not having alternative
plan for accommodating unlawful occupiers
– Contending that
such plan would promote unhealthy precedent and illegality –
Court having difficulties with
granting eviction order without
plan that will ensure that the destitute do not continue to suffer
humiliation and maltreatment
– Organ of State having an
entrusted responsibility yet rejecting its own citizens due to the
alleged unlawful conduct
– Application dismissed –
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of
Land Act 19 of 1998,
s 6(3).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 57075/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
DATE:
29 November 2023
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
MADIBENG LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
And
UNKNOWN TRESSPASSERS
OF LETLHABILE-
B EXTENSION 1
TOWNSHIP
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS
OF LETLHABILE
B
EXTENSION 1
TOWNSHIP
SECOND RESPONDENT
ALLY SELLO
MALULEKA
THIRD RESPONDENT
Delivery:
This judgment is
issued by the Judge whose name appears herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties /legal representatives
by email. It is
also uploaded on CaseLines and its date of delivery is deemed 29
November 2023
.
Summary:
Interdict - Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) –
s 6 – eviction
of unlawful occupiers – just and equitable
order. Application dismissed - no costs -of this application.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA AJ
[1]
This is the application for the eviction of various occupiers that
unlawfully occupied
the land belonging to the Madibeng Local
Municipality and an applicant in this matter. The land is situated at
Letlhabile - B Extension
1 Township registration JQ North-West
Province. The Respondents are the alleged unlawful occupiers (First,
Second and Third). The
application was comprised of two parts.
Part
A
was for a temporary interdict which was directed at anyone
that intended to erect structures on the said land.
Part B
was
an application for a final interdict for eviction of those that are
already in unlawful occupation (2
nd
-3
rd
Respondents). The Third Respondent is cited herein as a
Representative of the Second Respondents. To the exclusion of the
4
th
-6
th
Respondents, I will refer to the
1
st
-3
rd
as Respondents without separating them
as they constitute a group that is classified as the ‘unlawful
occupiers’. For
the purpose of this application, the focus is
on PART B with its intended consequence for the granting of a final
interdict that
is inclusive of the prayer in PART A.
[2]
The applicant stated that the Respondents:
[2.1]
unlawfully occupied the land that belongs to the Municipality as the
rightful owner of the said land.
[2.2]
have received no consent in law or otherwise to occupy the land.
[2.3]
occupied land that has been earmarked and allocated to other people
to be sold once the Municipality
is able to provide services to the
stands situated therein.
[2.4]
occupation of the land under these circumstances is illegal; and
[2.5]
were provided with notices to vacate the land by the Municipality and
refused to accept the said notices.
[3]
With the above assertions, the applicant prays for:
[3.1]
a final interdict in respect of the interim relief prayed for in PART
A of this application.
[3.2]
all the Respondents that occupy the property in question to be
ordered to vacate the land within sixty
(60) days of the receipt of
the order.
[3.3]
in the result of failure in respect of the above prayer, the Sheriff
of this court to take all the
reasonable steps including but not
limited to obtaining the assistance of the South African Police
Service (Respondents 4-6).
[3.4]
unlawful occupiers to pay for the costs of this application.
[3.5]
any other alternative or further relief.
[4]
The application is opposed by the Respondents and Respondents 4-6
have since withdrawn
from opposing this matter.
[5}
This brings me to the foundations of this application.
Background
[6]
The applicant in this matter is the Madibeng Local Municipality
(Municipality) and
the owner of the land that is subject of this
application. This land was unlawfully occupied by the Respondents. On
becoming aware
of the invasion of the land, the applicant launched an
urgent application for the removal and eviction of the Respondents
from
the said land.
[7]
The invasion of the land came after the applicant invited bids on 30
May 2019 through
the tender system to be made by the residents in its
area of jurisdiction for the low-income earners to purchase stands
for possible
building of their homes. The price for each of the
stands was valued between R40 000-R50 000 depending on the valuation
and size
of the stand in question. At first, a flaw was identified in
the applicant’s administrative processes which prompted the
withdrawal and re-advertisement of the call for bidding. Following
the second call and whilst the process was underway, for the
transfer
of the land to successful bidders, the applicant, through Ward
Councilor Mr Emmanuel Diale (Mr Diale) on or about 19 June
2019,
learnt that the Respondents and other various occupiers intended to
invade the land on 20 June 2019 which they eventually
did between
20-27 June 2019. The prospects of engaging with the unlawful
occupiers became fruitless and the applicant acted swiftly
and
approached this court for immediate relief on 29 October 2020 and
obtained an order of service on 24 November 2020 in terms
of section
4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation Act 19 of 1998 (PIE Act). The brief of this
notice was by
agreement between the parties:
[7.1]
to remove the matter from the urgent roll to the normal roll for
adjudication of PART A and PART B
of this application.
[7.2
Respondents to ensure that the properties they have will not be
further invaded or occupied.
[7.3]
The applicant to serve a section 4(2) notice in terms of the PIE Act
to all the Respondents to the
hearing of the PART B of this
application; and
[7.4]
The section 4(2) notice to be served on the attorneys of record and
all the listed respondents in
the occupancy audit.
[8]
The occupied land is near an established community that has become
agitated by the
unlawful occupation which also extended to the
illegal connections of services. The said community had threatened
the applicant
to attend the invasion as a matter of urgency. The
applicant also indicated that although there are structures erected
on the land,
most of them remain unoccupied and there are no more
than 10 families that are residing therein. In addition, the
applicant listed
the number of occupiers that do not qualify for the
low-income housing who are likely to be owning immovable property
elsewhere
and not in desperate need for access to the land. The
occupiers themselves have not been cooperative in managing the
situation
as Mr Diale and the South African Police Service (SAPS)
Members tried to engage with them only to be met with aggression and
violent
conduct.
[9]
The Respondents opposed this application and asserted that at the
time this application
was launched, they had stayed on the land since
January 2020. It is their assertion that they were hoping to settle
the matter
out of court without being involved in this protracted
litigation. The Respondent’s replying affidavit by Mr Maluleke,
whom
the applicant classified as a ringleader who caused violence in
the area, traces this matter to the municipal resolutions of the
December 2015 meeting for the community to occupy the land which was
in consultation with Mr Diale. It was, therefore, the community
meeting of 01 January 2020 that endorsed the occupation of the land
due to the concerns on the levels of crime which was committed
in and
around the open space next to their houses. It was in this meeting
that a resolve was taken for the children of the community
that
should build from the stands which included Mr Diale’s son. Mr
Diale himself requested he be allocated 4 stands which
was a thorny
subject for the community and spelt it out that he does not quality
except for his son. Following his disqualification,
he categorically
stated that he will champion for their removal from the applicant’s
side. The Respondents have, since January
2020, never had a meeting
with Mr Diale and have been residing on their properties without
interruption. They also have been in
communication with the applicant
about the land in question since October 2019 and on 10 April 2020 a
meeting was arranged between
them which the applicant failed to
attend. It was in this meeting that a resolution for water services
and for Eskom to provide
electricity to the Respondents was made.
Another meeting of 02 July 2020 was held between the parties where
the Respondents stated
in unequivocal terms that they reside on the
land, and it is for the applicant to legalise their stay. It was the
applicant, represented
by Mr Maabe (Acting Manager) who requested to
be provided with the details of each of the occupiers and promised
them with water
which was delivered on 03 July 2020. Therefore, the
Respondents have been residing at the said property without any
disruption.
[10]
This court as the last line of defence in this matter is now
assessing the facts presented before
it to determine a just outcome
in this dispute.
Discussion
[11]
This court is faced with the historic manifestation of the legacy of
this country regarding the
question of the lack of access to land
which touches on many of the fundamental rights and responsibilities
that are envisaged
in the Constitution 1996. It will also not focus
on this history. The question of access to land has become a
contested terrain
in South Africa today. The applicant as a ‘coal
face’ of governance in the local sphere carries the brunt of
responding
to the imperatives of the new dispensation in addressing
the historic imbalances in this area of contestation. This role
raises
a question in this application with reference to the balancing
of competing rights and responsibilities regarding the fulfilment
of
rights by the applicant and access to such rights by the Respondents.
[12]
The applicant, as an organ of state exercising authority in the local
sphere of government is
defined in section 239 of the Constitution
as:
(a)
any department of state or administration in the national,
provincial, or local sphere of
government; or
(b)
any other functionary or institution:
(i)
exercising a power or performing a function in terms of the
Constitution or
a provincial constitution; or
(ii)
exercising a public power or performing a public function in terms of
any legislation,
but does not include a court or a judicial officer;
and … .
[13]
This provision gives due recognition not only to the status of the
applicant but its broad functions
regarding its role in the local
sphere of government. It is common cause that the applicant is the
face of the general system of
governance in concretising the gains
that were attained during South Africa’s democratization in
1994. It is at the forefront
in ensuring the delivery of quality
basic services as in this case because of its direct contact with the
general citizenry and
receives concerns about the lack of compliance
with fundamental principles of the new democracy. Such a role was
broadened by the
adoption of the Local Government Municipal
Structures Act 117 of 1998 (Structures Act). I am not going to
regurgitate the legal
framework as presented by both parties on
papers and argument except for the limited focus on PART B of this
application regarding
the quest for an interdict against the unlawful
occupiers of the land in question.
[14]
I must first address the procedural aspect brought by this
application. The Respondents attorney
withdrew from this matter and
their application for Legal Aid assistance was also not approved.
They were represented in person
by Mr Tebogo Bopape, a non-legally
trained person. On the other hand, the applicant was represented by
highly trained Advocates.
I am raising this issue beforehand to
indicate what I consider as an ‘
elephant and ant’
approach which indicates the unequal legal and constitutional
power imbalances between the parties. Let me leave the status of
legal
representation and address the effect it has in this case
regarding the quality of access to justice as envisaged in section 34
of the Constitution. The said section provides that:
everyone has the right
to have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law
decided in a fair public hearing before
a court or, where
appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or forum.
[15
This section is broad enough as it is meant to eliminate all forms of
conduct that would
take over the authority of the courts in settling
disputes in a fair and unbiased way. It also enhances the capacity of
the court
in assessing the quality of evidence on an equal basis.
According to Mokgoro J in
Lesapho v North West Agricultural
Bank
1999 (12) BCLR 1420
(CC)
and held that the:
‘
right
of access to court is indeed foundational to the stability of an
orderly society [by] ensuring the peaceful, regulated, and
institutionalised mechanisms to resolve disputes, without resorting
to self-help. The right of access to court is a bulwark against
vigilantism, and the chaos and anarchy which it causes. Construed in
this context of the rule of law and the principle against
self-help
in particular, access to court is indeed of cardinal importance. As a
result, very powerful considerations would be required
for its
limitation to be reasonable and justifiable’, (
para
22
)
.
[16]
In this case, the Respondents were ‘
left at the altar
’
by their representatives and a lay person appeared in person which
limited his ability to engage meaningfully on the interpretation
and
application of the law. Considering the costs of litigation with
parties not on an equal standing in terms of the advancement
of not
only of the understanding of the law but the argument to be made in
the context of the case at hand. The Respondents found
themselves in
a position where they had to deal not just with pure legal language
but the constitutional language of the courts
regarding the
interpretation of the principles of the new dispensation. This
touched on their role in giving meaning to the substance
of accessing
justice. Section 34 right does not entail entering the court building
but the contribution to the significance of
the legal framework on
the matter. However, it is also not for this court to feel pity for
the unequal balance in legal representation
of the Respondents. The
determination of this matter touches on the foundations of the
Republic as envisaged in section 1 of the
Constitution.
[17]
It is therefore prudent to address the fundamental principle that is
raised in this application
regarding the Respondent’s
‘self-help’ approach in accessing land to the compromise
of the due process of law
and mostly, at the prejudice of the
law-abiding citizens that adhered to the prescripts regarding the
housing allocation. The applicant
classified the Respondent’s
conduct as ‘queue jumping’ to get preference in the
allocation of houses. In curbing
these undue tendencies, the
application for an interdict is intended to restrict any present or
future conducts that may bedevil
the carriage of the primary mandate
in the delivery of the quality of access to land. The Respondents on
the other hand stated
that they hoped that the matter would be
settled out of court as they continued to engage with the applicant
in resolving the impasse.
An e-mail dated 04 November 2023 which was
presented from bar and not responded to by the applicant was read for
the court to indicate
their attempts to resolve the matter without
the involvement of the courts. However, the applicant’s counsel
was not made
aware of the communication up until argument and his
instruction was to continue with this application for the eviction of
the
Respondents.
[18]
This case as noted, raises an important principle against ‘self-help’
which may also
be interpreted as ‘land grabbing’ by the
applicant. This was viewed differently by the Respondents because of
their
suspicion regarding the way in which the tender system was
administered and saw it imperative that they occupy the land in
getting
the attention of the applicant regarding their plight in
accessing housing and of their concern regarding the crime rate in
accordance
with the resolutions of their January 2020 meeting.
[19]
The Respondents stated vehemently during argument and did not deny
the unlawful occupation of
the land. They justified their unlawful
occupation of the land on their desperation in accessing housing. The
bravery of the Respondents
during arguments which was not founded in
law about their ‘hostile take-over’ of the land was
indicative of the lack
of insights on the deeper understanding of the
due process of law and its interpretation. Their conduct was not
reminiscent of
the provision of section 34 of the Constitution as
noted above on the quality of access justice as an integral framework
for concrete
legal arguments regarding access to the land in
question. The courage on unlawful occupation was nothing more than
the creation
of chaos and instability in the jurisdiction of the
applicant which is not consonant with a stable society. Whilst the
applicant’s
counsel was stuck to the legal principles for the
eviction of the Respondents, the latter made wild allegations about
the suspicions
they had regarding the way in which the applicant
handled the bidding process. The suspicion does not justify the lack
of respect
for compliance with the laws of the Republic. Despite the
Respondents situation, it is not for them to promote lawlessness in
accessing
housing. The Respondents, even with caution by this court,
disputed that their conduct amounted to ‘self-help’
contrary
to the prescripts of the legal framework that regulate the
allocation and accessing of the land. They contended that due to the
way the bidding processes were administered, they were of the view
that the applicant was trying to prefer people over others that
must
be allocated stands. The applicant, by its own admission, conceded
that there were flaws in its administration of the tender
process
hence they readvertised it so that it runs smoothly without any
hindrance.
[20]
However, it is also not of this court to consider the suspicious
allegations but to stress that
it will not in any way promote
vigilantism and disorder in the administration and management of the
democratic system in regulating
the authority by the local sphere of
government. ‘Self- help’ creates hostility particularly
in a country like ours
that is governed and subscribes to the general
principles of constitutionalism which are founded on the rule of law.
Unlawfulness
undermines stability not only in the applicant’s
jurisdiction but nationwide. The Respondents are equally bound by
section
8 of the Constitution to respect the foundations of democracy
in defence and sustenance of the values of the new dispensation.
[21]
In this case, there was also a dispute of fact on papers and argument
in which the applicant
had reservations about whether the occupiers
moved and stayed in the land for more or less than six (6) months.
The period touches
on the immediate action by the applicant for
having applied for the eviction of the Respondents as prescribed by
section 6 of the
PIE Act. The legislative prescriptions are
acknowledged by this court; however, it also wishes to balance the
timeframes against
the applicant’s corresponding duties
regarding what is best for the people in distress that lack access to
land and the way
in which the applicant handled this matter. The
applicant also stated that the ‘
duration or occupation is
however, a self-standing consideration as envisaged in section
6(3)(b) of PIE’
, (
para 16)
. An inference is
drawn in that the applicant is not necessarily concerned about the
time frame except for the urge to have the
people be removed from the
land. I am also not getting into the contested facts whether the
Respondents occupied the land under
the impression created by
Councilor Diale whilst on the other hand the applicant refutes any
impression or authority that could
have been created by Councilor
Diale for the occupation of the land.
[22]
For this application, the question of land ownership was not in
dispute except for the way in
which such land must be accessed and
utilized. The applicant, in satisfying the remedy for an interdict,
placed before this court
that it is the owner of the said land and
the continued unlawful occupation by the occupiers undermines its own
processes in housing
delivery and there is no other alternative or
satisfactory remedy available to curb the Respondent’s conduct,
(
Madikizela v Nkosi
19408/2021
para 12
).
It is clear from the applicant’s contention that requirements
for the granting of the interdict were satisfied as the ownership
of
the land was not disputed. This court will also not deal with this
uncontested fact because a clear right is satisfied by the
probabilities test in considering the relief sought for an interdict
in preventing present and future conducts. Adhikari AJ in
Levi
v Bankitny
[2023] ZAWCHC 84
citing with approval
Mhlantla AJA in
National Council of Societies for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v Openshaw
[2008] ZASCA
78
held that ‘
an interdict is not a remedy for past
invasion of rights but is concerned with present or future
infringements. It is appropriate
only when future injury is feared.
Where a wrongful act giving rise to the injury has already occurred,
it must be of a continuing
nature or there must be a reasonable
apprehension that it will be repeated
, (
para 20
).
For the application of this principle in this case, the Respondents
argued passionately about their unlawful occupation of the
land
putting emphasis on their suspicions regarding the way in which the
bidding process was handled by the applicant. As noted,
land
ownership was not disputed, and this court draws an inference that
the Respondents had a considered understanding of the rights
and
ownership of land as the applicant’s property. However, the
question is hanging on the balance relating to the extent
to which
the applicant deals with the plight of people finding themselves in
an emergency situation
vis-à-vis
the fulfilment of its
own primary mandate?
[23]
This brings me to the regulatory framework that governs the eviction
of unlawful occupiers in
a certain land by organs of state. In this
instance, section 26 of the Constitution is foundational to the role
of the courts in
considering the interdicts for the unlawful
occupation of the land and in turn for the protection of the said
right as it reads
as follows:
1
everyone has the
right to have access to adequate housing.
2
The state must take reasonable legislative and other measures, within
its available resources, to achieve the
progressive realisation of
this right.
3
no
one may be evicted from their home, or have their home demolished,
without an order of court made after considering all the relevant
circumstances. No legislation may permit arbitrary evictions,
(my
emphasis).
[24]
The essence of section 26 was given context by Yacoob J in
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Grootboom
2000 (11) BCLR
1169
(CC)
judgment wherein the Judge said:
[section
26] need to be considered in the context of the cluster of
socio-economic rights enshrined in the Constitution. It entrenches
the right of access to land, to adequate housing and to health care,
food, water and social security … and also protect
the rights
of the child and the right to education. … [and] it cannot be
said to exist on paper only … [and]
the
state is obliged to take positive action to meet the needs of those
living in extreme conditions of poverty, homelessness or
intolerable
housing. Their interconnectedness needs to be taken into account in
interpreting the socio-economic rights, and, in
particular, in
determining whether the state has met its obligations in terms of
them
, (
paras
19-24
and all
footnotes omitted).
[25]
Yacoob J’s emphasis in
Grootboom
on the states
obligations is integral to the execution of evictions of those
alleged to have unlawfully occupied the land belonging
to the state,
which in this instance, the applicant. This means there is a needed
balance of competing rights between the state
in carrying its own
mandate in prohibiting any unlawful conduct and on the other hand the
general citizenry that is equally responsible
in its quest for the
fulfilment of their rights. It is acknowledged that accessing housing
or land is not immediately realisable
but is to be progressively
realized within the framework of the financial muscle of the state.
This court dispels the unequal status
of rights and their
categorization into inboxes as they are interdependent failing which
the right to equality, dignity, freedom,
and security of the person
will flow into a ‘
hollow ring
’, (
Grootboom
para 24
). Therefore, the adoption of the PIE Act as
envisaged in section 6 carries the plan not just for the due process
to be followed
but the infusion of the elements of human rights if
unlawful occupiers had to be evicted from the land by a state organ.
The said
section reads as follows:
(1)
a
n organ of state may institute proceedings for the eviction of an
unlawful occupier from land which falls within its area of
jurisdiction,
except where the unlawful occupier is a mortgagor and
the land in question is sold in a sale of execution pursuant to a
mortgage,
and the court may grant such an order if it is just and
equitable to do so, after considering all the relevant circumstances,
and
if:
(a)
the consent of that organ of state is required for the erection of a
building or structure
on that land or for the occupation of the land,
and the unlawful occupier is occupying a building or structure on
that land without
such consent having been obtained; or
(b)
it is in the public interest to grant such an order.
(2)
for the purposes of this section, “public interest”
includes the interest of
the health and safety of those occupying the
land and the public in general.
(3)
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
,
(
my emphasis
).
[26]
As noted, PIE is the regulatory statute governing the process of
eviction of unlawful occupiers
of a certain land. In giving substance
to section 6 provisions, the applicant, through its Acting Manager
conceded that it does
not have an alternative plan for accommodating
the unlawful occupiers, otherwise, ‘
doing so would promote
unhealthy precedent and illegality’
. On the other hand, the
applicant placed before this court of a possible plan to accommodate
the Respondents in the municipal hall
that has electricity, ablution
facilities and a kitchen that may serve the purpose for alternative
accommodation if the application
is granted. This plan did not
indicate the time frame in which people are to be resident in the
said hall. It is my considered
view that the applicant does not have
a reasonable and alternative plan to accommodate the occupiers
because putting people in
a municipal hall does not accord with the
quality of standards in accessing housing. This is an affront to many
of the fundamental
rights that are entrenched in the Constitution,
1996.
[27]
I am finding it difficult for an organ of state with an entrusted
responsibility to reject its
own citizens due to the alleged unlawful
conduct. It is evident that the unlawful occupiers appear to be
outcasts that are not
entitled to the quality of standard of living
as is the case with other human beings. In this case, if we look at
this matter through
the lens of a ‘family’ in local
government, the unlawful occupiers are vetoed by their own heads of
the household that
are supposed to embrace and protect them from the
socio-political and legal challenges of the world. The vulnerability
of the people
that are supposed to be brought back from the
‘unlawfulness blanket’ do not have the constitutional and
the rights
space in their own ‘home yard’ due to their
taking of the law into their own hands. The applicant narrowed its
focus
on the consequence of the actions of the occupiers and not on
the cause that resulted in the said consequence. It is striking that
the applicant did not view the lack of access to land and or housing
as a disaster that requires emergency attention. However,
this court
acknowledges that it will not under any circumstance promote
unlawfulness but the conduct of the applicant as an organ
of state is
required to go beyond its own means and marshal the resources to
ensure equal access to land.
[28]
Therefore, the hierarchy of alternative considerations in section
6(3) of PIE captures the content
of human rights by requiring a
holistic approach in determining the factors that could have
contributed to landlessness. The proof
of a clear right and ownership
as is the case in this matter should correspond to the circumstances
in which the Respondents found
themselves, and not for the organ of
state (applicant) turn a blind eye and apply the rigidity of the
‘
move out from my land
’ approach. The
determined factors serve as guide to this court with reference to the
‘
interests and circumstances of the Respondents and pay due
regard to broader considerations of fairness and other constitutional
values, so as to produce a just and equitable result
’,
(Ponnan JA in
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Various
Occupiers, Eden Park Extension 5
(873/12)
[2013] ZASCA 162
para 18
citing with approval Horn AJ
in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Peoples Dialogue on Land and Shelter
2000 (2) SA 1074
(SE) at 1081E-G).
It is also noted that the
availability of the land alternative is at the lowest of the protocol
which sets the bar low for this
court in granting a just and
equitable order. The determination of holistic factors that resulted
in landless carry no substance
if after such an undertaking, the
people to be evicted would still not have alternative accommodation
as presented by this case.
However, the applicant does not provide
the timeframe in which people would be moved to better suited
accommodation except for
‘
throwing in the towel
’
that it does not have a further alternative land.
[29]
It is my considered view that the establishment of a clear right by
the applicant with a potential
to place people in a community hall
does not address the concern about the lack of access to land. The
applicant conceded that
it does not have a plan or capacity to deal
with this shortcoming in its systems of governance. The prospects of
subjecting people
to humiliating treatment by accommodating them in a
municipal hall does not only undermine the requisites of the section
6 PIE
provisions but the overall scheme of the right to property as
envisaged in section 25 of the Constitution which envelops access
to
land by giving substance to property rights as it reads as follows:
(
1)
No one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general
application, and no
law may permit arbitrary deprivation of property.
(2)
….
(3)
….
(4)
…...
(5)
The state must take reasonable legislative and other measures within
its available resources,
to foster conditions which enable citizens
to gain access to land on an equitable basis.
[30]
Except for the negative obligation of the state in sub-section 1, of
importance is the mandate
placed upon the state, inclusive of the
local sphere of government, to ensure equitable access to land. The
29 years of democracy
is no ‘longer about learning by doing’
but the drawing from previous experiences for measures that will
enable the
building of capacity in addressing the question of
landlessness in South Africa. I am not convinced that the plan for
low-income
earners is reasonable for equal access except for the
applicant’s determination to evict the unlawful occupiers from
the
land.
[31]
Of further importance is the concern about the protection of the
privacy rights of the people.
The right to privacy is envisaged in
section 14 of the Constitution which reads as follows:
everyone has the right
to privacy, which includes the right not to have:
(a)
their person or home searched;
(b)
their property searched;
(c)
their possessions seized; or
(d)
the privacy of their communications infringed.
[32]
The significance of this right is two-pronged in that it is
individualistic in approach by endorsing
individual rights of a human
person and extends protection to the property rights of the said
person. This right is of universal
application in that article 17(1)
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights adopted
in 1966 by the United Nations
General Assembly provides that:
1
no one shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with
his
privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to unlawful attacks
on his honour and reputation.
2
everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such
interference
or attacks.
[33]
In the context of this case, if the right of privacy is of an
international standing, the housing
of people in a municipal hall
with no prospects of them having access to quality or decent housing
touches on the content of the
rights of human persons despite their
categorization whether they are unlawful occupiers or not. The
individualistic nature of
this right entails the corresponding
protection of the right to property in which the Respondents’
access to quality property
is relegated to the sphere of no
significance. The potential of the inhuman treatment of the unlawful
occupiers for their accommodation
in a municipal hall cannot be saved
even by the limitation of rights as envisaged in section 36 of the
Constitution. This section
entails the determination of whether there
is an infringement of the right and whether such infringement is
rationally connected
to the purpose to be achieved by such
limitation, (
S v Makwanyane
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995 (6) BCLR 665
(CC)
para 104
). In this case, the determination of the
existence of the limitation of the right necessitates the balancing
of competing interests
which entails the role of the applicant
vis-a
vis
the right of the Respondents in accessing land. The eviction
of the unlawful occupiers from the applicant’s land is not
directly
linked to the aspirations of the new democracy in creating
an environment that is conducive for all to access their right which
in turn, would have involved the fulfilment of the primary mandate of
the organ of state (the applicant).
[34]
The determination of the limitation of the right is not a mere
protection of the right but for
each human person to be free from all
forms of invasions. It serves as a central tenet for safeguarding
other rights such as the
right to human dignity as envisaged in
section 10 of the Constitution, (
Dawood v Minister of Home
Affairs
[2000] ZACC 8
;
2000 (8) BCLR 837
para 35
)
.
It buttresses the quest not to be treated in a degrading and
humiliating way as it appears to be methodology that the applicant
is
seeking to place human beings in a municipal hall where it is common
knowledge that privacy and other associated rights are
likely to be
severely undermined. It brings the
elephant and the ant
approach to the fore as evidenced by legal representation where those
that are unlikely to stand up and ensure the enforcement
of their
rights due to the variety of factors they are faced with are
relegated into the arena of inhuman treatment. The eviction
of
unlawful occupiers without a concrete plan for the future of the area
in securing access to land is a manifestation of forced
removals of
South Africa’s history which this judgment is restraining
itself in delving into it. If Mhlantla JA in
Rusterburg Local
Municipality v Vincent Mdango
(937/13)
[2014] ZASCA 83
on an appeal from the North West High Court, (Mafikeng) raised eyes
browse after the court a
quo
was concerned about the
‘
municipality’s attitude and its failure to suggest
any plan regarding the resettlement of the occupiers to provide steps
taken
to consider the issue of alternative accommodation or land
but
granted the eviction order and suspended it pending the availability
of suitable accommodation or land for the settlements of
the
respondents
’
(
para 10,
my
emphasis
) in the context of this case, that case touches on the
similarly situated status of the Respondents for the applicant to
provide
them with such accommodation before coming to this court. The
suspension of the order by the court a
quo
is indicative of
the importance of the alternative accommodation principle on eviction
matters.
[35]
I found ‘
salt in the mouth
’ with the
applicant’s attitude that shows the complete disregard not only
of its role but of the fundamental principles
and values of the new
dispensation. The applicant, as the local sphere of governance with
no comprehensive plan and or a policy
that will deal with people
finding themselves in distress amounts to the undermining of the
lessons that should have been learnt
from the Yacoob J in
Government
judgment above. In that case, the Constitutional Court found
the states housing programme as having failed in its primary
responsibility
to develop and adopt a housing plan or policy that
deals with people in emergency situations, (
para 98
).
[36]
I must express that there is a needed insight which has become more
urgent for the infusion of
the elements of humanity in the eviction
of people in distress. These elements include but not limited to the
African philosophy
of the value of
Ubuntu
which requires the
treating of each person with humanity and respect for no other reason
than being human. Sachs J in
Port Elizabeth Municipality v
Various Occupiers
2004 (12) BCLR 1268
(CC)
emphasized the
elements of humanity in the application of the eviction law, which in
this instance, section 6 of PIE. In that case,
Sachs J held that:
…
PIE
expressly requires the court to infuse elements of grace and
compassion into the formal structures of the law. It is called
upon
to balance competing interests in a principled way and promote the
constitutional vision of a caring society based on good
neighbourliness and shared concern. The Constitution and PIE confirm
that
we are
not islands unto ourselves.
The spirit of ubuntu, part of the deep cultural heritage of the
majority of the population, suffuses the whole constitutional order.
It combines individual rights with a communitarian philosophy, (
para
37,
my
emphasis).
[37]
The significance of
Ubuntu
was concretised by Mokgoro J in
Makwanyane
in that ‘
it runs like a golden
thread in our veins
’, (
para 308
). The
infusion of human elements entails the interdependence of values in
the system of governance as envisaged in the idiom of
being ‘
not
islands unto ourselves
’ without which the centrality of
the whole system of co-rights-responsibility would hang in the
balance. The non-infusion
of human elements in governance is an
indication of the lack of a transformed system of governance in the
regulation of its authority
at the local sphere of governance. The
way in which the applicant should respond to the manner in which it
handles the eviction
processes is founded in the principles and
commitment that is envisioned in the preamble of the Constitution
‘
for a democratic and open society in which government is
based on the will of the people and for each citizen to be equally
protected
by law’
. The adoption of ‘
this is my
land approach
’ to the exclusion of the considerations
that were the subsequent cause of the unlawful occupation of the land
entrenches
the ‘
elephant and ant
’ approach
as is the case with accessing justice in this case. I am not
satisfied that the applicant has complied with provisions
of section
4(8) of the PIE Act which requires this court to grant
a just and
equitable order if no valid defence has been raised and the applicant
has complied with the requirements of this section.
The court is
the last line of defence, the satisfaction of a clear right is
intertwined with the responsibility attached to it
and not the
exercise of the latter right to overpower the Respondents that are
not on an unequal footing in enforcing their rights.
[38]
It is concerning that this court is faced by the applicant as an
organ of state is at the vanguard
of evicting people from the land by
perpetuating the historic manifestation of the forced removals of the
past under the name of
‘
a clear right on land ownership
’
without a strategy to extend ownership to the most vulnerable people
with no security of tenure that are supposed to equally
benefit from
the gains of the democracy. This court finds it difficult to grant an
eviction order without a plan that will ensure
that the destitute do
not continue to suffer humiliation and maltreatment under the hands
of the government (applicant) that is
founded on many of the
fundamental rights alongside their values as entrenched in the
Constitution.
[39]
The order below is not a bar to any further attempts between the
applicant and the Respondents
to find alternative ways to resolve the
impasse on accessing land.
[40]
As a consequence, the following order is made:
[40.1] The
application for an interdict is dismissed.
[40.2] There is no
order of costs of this application.
N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Date
Heard
: 06 November
2023
Date
Delivered
: 29
November 2023
Appearances:
Applicant
:
D van der Borget with SS Maelane
Groenkloof Chambers
Pretoria
Respondents
:
In Person: Mr Tebogo Bopape
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