Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 138South Africa
Appollis and Another and Breede Valley Municipality and Others (09986/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 138 (24 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
24 March 2025
Judgment
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## Appollis and Another and Breede Valley Municipality and Others (09986/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 138 (24 March 2025)
Appollis and Another and Breede Valley Municipality and Others (09986/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 138 (24 March 2025)
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# THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No:
09986/2025
Before the Hon Madam
Justice Slingers
Hearing:
20 March 2025
Judgment Delivered:
24
March 2025
In the matter between:
RALPH
APPOLLIS
First Applicant
VIOLET
MURRAY
Second Applicant
and
BREEDE VALLEY
MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
EXECUTIVE MAYOR:
BREEDE VALLEY MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
MUNICIPAL MANAGER:
BREEDE VALLEY MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
JARCON INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives’ email addresses. The
date of hand-down is
deemed to be 24 March 2025.
JUDGMENT
SLINGERS J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
In November 2021 the first and second
applicants’
(‘the
applicants’)
rights to lawfully
occupy the fourth respondent’s property were terminated. When
the applicants failed to vacate the property
at the end of January
2022, in accordance with their undertaking, the fourth respondent
instituted eviction proceedings against
them out of the Worcester
Magistrate’s Court. On 19 April 2023 the Worcester Magistrate’s
Court granted an order of
eviction in terms of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(‘PIE’).
[2]
The applicants appealed against the
Worcester Magistrate’s Court’s decision to the Western
Cape High Court. The first
respondent was cited as the second
respondent in the appeal but, unlike the fourth respondent (cited as
the first respondent in
the appeal) did not file a Notice to Oppose.
On 6 December 2024 the appeal court made a deed of settlement an
Order of Court
(‘the settlement
agreement’)
. The deed of
settlement was concluded between the parties in the appeal who were
the applicant and the fourth respondent. In terms
of the deed of
settlement:
(i)
the applicants withdrew their appeal;
(ii)
the applicants would voluntarily vacate on
or before 31 January 2025 and;
(iii)
in conjunction with the agreement reached
between the parties and in conjunction with the Breede Valley
Municipality the applicants
would take occupation of a plot of land
situated at Hammat Pietersen Square in Rawsonville
(‘the
property’)
as set out the first
respondent’s report dated 27 November 2024 which was annexed to
the deed of settlement.
[3]
The first to third respondents argue that
the settlement agreement amounted to an eviction order.
[4]
The applicants were unable to take
possession of the property as per the terms of the settlement
agreement. Consequently they instituted
these proceedings in terms
whereof they seek an order directing the first to third respondents
to immediately provide and make
available to the applicants the
property, alternatively an order directing the first to third
respondents to provide and make available
on an urgent basis any
other suitable land in the same vicinity and extent provided for in
the Court Order of 6 December 2024
(‘the
Court Order’)
.
[5]
Not only does the first to third
respondents oppose the relief sought by the applicants but they have
also instituted a counterapplication
wherein they seek an order
rescinding the Court Order to the extent that it:
(i)
evicts persons other than the applicants;
(ii)
evicts the applicants in terms of the PIE;
and
(iii)
directs the first respondent to relocate
the applicants.
[6]
Both applications were placed on the urgent
roll for Monday, 17 March 2025. However, not only was the record in
excess of 500 pages,
but the applicants also filed their heads of
argument on the day of the hearing. Therefore, the matter was
postponed to the urgent
roll of Thursday, 20 March 2025.
[7]
The applicant’s condonation
application for the late filing of its heads of argument was not
opposed by any party and was
granted. Similarly, no party took issue
with the fourth respondent’s late filing of its heads of
argument.
THE RESCISSION
APPLICATION
[8]
I deal firstly with the first to third
respondents’ rescission application.
[9]
The first to third respondents argue that
the Court Order was erroneously granted because it appears that The
Extension of Security
of Tenure Act, Act 62 of 1997
(‘ESTA’)
was applicable to the applicants’ eviction
which would have ousted the Hight Court’s jurisdiction.
[10]
When
the eviction proceedings were conducted in the magistrate’s
court, the first respondent was cited as a respondent.
[1]
During those proceedings the applicants raised the point
in
limine
that ESTA was the applicable statute. This argument was not supported
and/or endorsed by the first respondent. After hearing the
matter the
Worcester magistrate’s court determined that PIE was the
applicable statute and not ESTA.
[11]
When the matter came on appeal to the
Western Cape High Court, the first respondent was again cited as a
party to the appeal. The
applicants abandoned the point
in
limine
and did not pursue the argument
that ESTA was the applicable statute. During the appeal proceedings,
the first respondent was requested
to and complied with the requests
to prepare housing reports for the appeal court. At no stage did the
first respondent raise the
argument that the Western Cape High Court
had no jurisdiction as ESTA was the applicable statute.
[12]
Whether or not PIE or ESTA applied was not
a disputed issue which required the adjudication of the appeal court
as the finding of
the magistrate’s court in this regard was no
longer challenged by any party cited in the appeal proceedings.
[13]
In its heads of argument, the first to
third respondents argue that ‘
...
it is unclear whether the Court Order was in fact competent as a
matter of law...’
If the Court
Order was not legally incompetent it should have lodged an appeal
against it and not seek to rescind it.
[14]
Consequently, there is no merit to this
ground challenging the validity and applicability of the Court Order.
[15]
The second ground on which the first to
third respondents seek to rescind the Court Order is that it
purportedly seeks to evict
persons other than the applicants. During
the hearing of the matter this ground was not pursued as it was
accepted that no persons
other than the applicants would be affected
by the Court Order.
[16]
The third ground on which the first to
third respondents seek the rescission of the Court Order is that they
had not agreed to the
specific terms of the Court Order, more
specifically, paragraph 2.3.4 thereof which reads that:
‘
In
accordance with the agreement reached between the parties and in
conjunction with the Breede Valley Municipality the Wendy House
is to
be assembled at Hammat Pietersen Square in Rawsonville (‘the
site’) as set out in the Municipal Progress report
dated 27
th
November 2024 and annexed hereto as
“
RA
1”
[17]
The municipal progress report provides
that:
‘
We,
the Breede Valley Municipality, hereby wish to report to the
Honourable Court on the progress of case number: 694/2022.
Meaningful engagement
took placed on 24 May 2024 via Microsoft Teams with Mr. W. Wagner for
the respondents and Mr. A Tukela for
the Appellant.
The Breede Valley
Municipality currently has a vacant plot in Rawsonville at Hammat
Peteresen Square for the First Appellant and
his family, to take
immediate occupancy since there has been several attempts from the
community and organisations to occupy the
vacant plot illegally.
Furthermore, we wish to confirm that the Applicant did visit the
vacant plot they accepted the offer.
It is therefore our
recommendation to advise the Appolis family to move onto the vacant
plot as soon as possible.’
[18]
Thus, the settlement agreement did no more
than incorporate the first respondent’s recommendation
contained in its report
of 27 November 2024.
[19]
The first respondent’s report dated
27 November 2024 was preceded by correspondence dated 24 October 2024
wherein it was advised
that the applicants were willing to accept the
fourth respondent’s settlement proposal and to finalise the
matter. It was
further informed that:
‘
However,
since the matter is before the High Court, any settlement agreed upon
has to be confirmed by the court and made an order
of Court.
We are therefore
required to obtain a report from your office outlining that the
municipality has provided and for the occupiers
to settle on and the
details of such piece of land, i.e.
-
Location of the plot
-
Size of the plot
-
Nature of tenure (temporary emergency
accommodation or secure tenure)
-
Etc.
Should you wish to sit
and discuss this with you further, I will be in the winelands of 29-
31 Oct and would gladly make time to
meet with you.’
[20]
Thus, the first respondent was expressly
informed that its report was required for the purposes of a
settlement agreement which
would be made an Order of Court.
Therefore, while the first respondent may not have been a signatory
to the settlement agreement
that was made an Order of Court, it was
pertinently aware that its report would be used in the final
settlement agreement which
would be made an Order of Court. In the
circumstances its complaint that it was not a signatory to the deed
of settlement is disingenuous.
[21]
I would be remiss not to mention that at
all times the first respondent was cited as a party to the appeal
proceedings. If it did
not want its report to be incorporated into
the settlement agreement it could have elected to actively
participate in the appeal
by either filing an explanatory affidavit
and/or opposing the appeal. It did neither and for all practical
purposes elected to
abide by the court’s decision
notwithstanding being informed that its report was required for a
settlement agreement that
would have to be made an Order of Court.
[22]
The first to third respondents also bemoan
that they were not:
(i)
advised of the terms of the final
settlement agreement;
(ii)
provided with a copy of the final
settlement agreement;
(iii)
a party to the final settlement agreement;
(iv)
provided with a draft of the court order
before being made final;
(v)
asked to indicate whether it agreed with
the terms of the court order before it was made an order of court;
(vi)
advised at any point prior to 15 January
2025 that the final settlement agreement had been reached; and
(vii)
advised at any point prior to 15 January
2025 that the final settlement agreement had been made an order of
court.
[23]
They do not set out what their position
would have been had they been asked for their input into either the
settlement agreement
or Court Order. The court is not informed
whether they would have objected thereto, and if so, the basis of
such objection.
[24]
The second and third respondents stand in a
different position to the first respondent as they were never before
the court in either
the lower court proceedings or the appeal
proceedings, while the first respondent was at all relevant times a
cited party. The
first respondent was not cited as a respondent in
the court proceedings as an ordinary respondent. On the contrary, it
was cited
as a result of its constitutional and statutory obligations
to provide emergency accommodation to persons who would be rendered
homeless consequent upon the granting of an eviction order. In light
of the correspondence exchanged between the applicants and
the
municipality and the court’s requests to the municipality to
prepare reports, it had to have been acutely aware of the
reasons for
and possible consequences of its report dated 27 November. Therefore,
while common collegiality would have expected
the applicants to
furnish the first respondent with both the deed of settlement and the
Court Order, nothing prevented the first
respondent from requesting
to be kept abreast of developments and /or specifically asking for
the deed of settlement in respect
of which its report was required.
[25]
Consequently, there is no merit in the
argument that the Court Order should be rescinded on the grounds that
the first respondent
was neither a signatory to the deed of
settlement nor had it agreed to the terms of the Court Order.
[26]
In the circumstances, the first to third
respondents’ counter application to rescind the Court Order of
6 December 2024 is
dismissed with costs, which costs shall include
the costs of 2 counsel where so employed on scale B.
THE MAIN ACTION
[27]
I turn now to the main application wherein
the applicants seek an order directing the first to third respondents
to comply with
the Court Order by directing the first to third
respondents to immediately provide and make available to the
applicants the land
described in the Court Order, alternatively that
they provide and make available on an urgent basis any other suitable
land in
the same vicinity and extent provided for in the Court Order,
further alternatively in the event that the Hammat Petersen Square
land or any other land is not made available, the suspension of the
execution of the Court Order in terms of Rule 45A until such
a time
as land for the relocation of the applicants has been made available
by the first to third respondents.
[28]
On 15 January 2025, the first respondent
was advised in an email that the municipal plot / land provided to
accommodate the applicants
as a form of alternative accommodation was
occupied by unknown person who allege to have been placed on the plot
by the municipality.
The first respondent was asked to verify the
truth hereof, and if so, advise how it intends to rectify the issue.
In response to
this email, the municipality asked for an indulgence
until the 17
th
January 2025 in order to launch a proper investigation and to provide
a correct response. The response came in the form of opposition
to
the main application and a counterapplication to rescind the Court
Order.
[29]
The first respondent states that where open
plots in informal settlements become available and promised to a
particular party, as
in this case, the process is carefully managed
so as to ensure that it is not unlawfully occupied by other persons.
The court is
not told how this process is managed, who manages it and
what resources are required to manage it.
[30]
The first respondent reports that it was
informed on or about 10 September 2024 of complaints relating to a
person who was clearing
the Hammat Petersen Square land
(‘the
property’)
and that it received
another complaint on 15 November 2024 pertaining to the potential
unlawful occupation of the property. The
first respondent duly
responded hereto and prevented the unlawful occupation of the
property.
[31]
The first to third respondents aver that
they are unable to make the property available to the applicants
because it has been unlawfully
occupied.
[32]
The court is not informed how and when the
property came to be unlawfully occupied in light of the first
respondent’s carefully
managed process to prevent unlawful
occupation of the land as well as its previous successful
interventions to prevent the unlawful
occupation thereof. The court
is not advised whether the first respondent learnt of the unlawful
occupation only when it was informed
by the applicants or whether it
learnt of it sooner. More importantly, the court is not informed of
the steps, if any, the first
respondent took to address the unlawful
occupation. The regretful approach of the first respondent appeared
to be that as the applicants
failed to take possession of the
property immediately, the first respondent cannot be held accountable
if the property is no longer
available as a result of unlawful
occupation.
[33]
While the court is told that the first
respondent does not have unlimited resources that would allow it to
constantly patrol all
of its properties, particularly over the
December holiday period it is not told whether or not any resources
were employed in protecting
the property in question. The court is
not told that the first respondent was unable to prevent the unlawful
occupation of the
property despite its best efforts or whether it was
unable to prevent the unlawful occupation because it failed to take
any steps
or was unable to take any steps to prevent it. Put
differently, the first respondent’s explanation does not assist
it because
it is of such a general nature and does not speak to the
specific information relevant to the property.
[34]
Therefore, on the first respondent’s
own version it appears as if it failed to properly manage its own
process to prevent
the unlawful occupation of the property and
thereafter failed to take any steps to address the unlawful
occupation thereof.
[35]
During the hearing of the matter advocate
Adikhari for the first to third respondents submitted that the court
could not force the
first to third respondents to institute eviction
proceedings. That may be. However, the first to third respondents are
statutorily
obligated to maintain, safeguard and manage its assets,
which would have included the property. Therefore, they do not have
the
election not to take active steps against the unlawful
encroachment on its assets. A failure to take active steps could
render
it derelict of its statutorily mandated obligated, in addition
to its constitutional obligation to uphold the rule of law.
[36]
In the circumstances, the first to third
respondents defence of impossibility cannot be sustained as it
appears to have contributed
to the factors giving rise thereto.
[37]
The first to third respondents made an
offer of alternative accommodation at Spokiesdorp. The applicants
sought and was granted
an opportunity to file a further affidavit
setting out why this offer was not acceptable. Similarly, the first
to third respondents
were afforded the opportunity of replying
thereto. In its supplementary replying affidavit, the first to third
respondents take
issue with the fact that applicants supplementary
affidavit is deposed to by the legal representative and that no
confirmatory
affidavits have been filed. Therefore, it constitutes
impermissible hearsay evidence. While it may constitute hearsay
evidence,
it is trite that hearsay evidence may be admitted in urgent
applications.
[38]
The applicants have rejected the offer of
alternative accommodation at Spokiesdorp on the basis that there is a
risk of flooding,
the area is crime-ridden and unsafe and that it is
close to the sewage works and that three is a lack of electricity.
[39]
The first to third respondents concede that
the Spokiesdorp plot is in the 100 year floodline. However, it goes
on to state that
during July 2023 emergency repairs to the riverbank
and the construction of an earth berm to prevent future flooding was
completed.
Further remedial work to prevent flooding is due to
commence in March 2025 and is anticipated to be completed within 3
months.
[40]
The first to third respondents concede that
there is no electricity in Spokiesdorp but submit that provision
would be made for water
and sanitation for the applicants. They argue
further
that Spokiesdorp is a mere 250m
away from the property and that the same concerns in respect of crime
and health would be be equally
applicable to the property.
[41]
The property may be 250m away from the
offered plot in Spokiesdorp but there is no South African Human
Rights Commission investigation
and report into the property while
there is one in respect of Spokiesdorp which found it to be a health
hazard due to its proximity
to floodwater and sewage works and which
recommended the relocation of residents.
[42]
In the circumstances it cannot be said that
the offer of accommodation to Spokiesdorp is a suitable alternative,
especially as the
applicants have minor children.
[43]
As mentioned above, the second and third
respondents are in a different position to the first respondent as
they were never parties
to the court proceedings either in the court
a quo
or
in the appeal proceedings. Therefore, I am not inclined to make any
order against them flowing from the settlement agreement
and Court
Order.
[44]
Therefore, after considering the papers
filed on record and after hearing argument, I make the following
order:
(i)
the first to third respondents counter
application to rescind the Court Order of 6 December 2024 is
dismissed with costs, which
costs shall include the costs of 2
counsel where so employed and shall be on scale B.
(ii)
the applicants’ non-compliance with
the forms, time periods and service required by the Uniform Rules of
Court are condoned
and the matter is deemed urgent in terms of Rule
6(12).
(iii)
it is declared that the first respondent
had a constitutional obligation to take reasonable steps to ensure
that the applicants’
rights to occupy the land described in the
settlement agreement made an order of court , per Saldanha, J and
Williams, AJ on 06
December 2024, as the vacant plot at Hammat
Petersen Square, Rawsonville (‘the property’) were not
infringed upon by
unlawful occupiers.
(iv)
it is declared that the first respondent
failed to comply with its obligations as referred to in paragraph 3
of this Order, by failing
to take reasonable steps to prevent
unlawful occupation of the property and thereafter failing to take
urgent and reasonable steps
to remedy the said lawful occupation.
(v)
the first respondent is therefore directed
to provide and make available the applicants, within 30 days, of
obtaining knowledge
of this Order, a suitable vacant plot in the same
vicinity, and of comparable size, quality and condition as the
property.
(vi)
the first respondent is directed to report
back to this court, in writing, within 30 days of the order of this
court, setting out
the steps they have taken to give effect to and
comply with (v) of this order.
(vii)
the execution of the Relocation Agreement
Order is temporarily suspended in terms of Section 45A of the Rules.
Any party may set
the matter down on the urgent roll within 10 days
of the report referred in paragraph (vi) of this order has been
issued.
(viii)
in respect of the main application, the
respondent shall be liable for the cost of the applicant and the
fourth respondent, such
costs to include the costs of 2 counsel where
so employed and shall be on scale B.
SLINGERS J
[1]
The
second and third respondents were not cited as parties in the lower
court proceedings nor in the appeal proceedings.
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