Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 134South Africa
Booysen and Another v City of Cape Town and Others (17673/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 134 (20 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Booysen and Another v City of Cape Town and Others (17673/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 134 (20 May 2024)
Booysen and Another v City of Cape Town and Others (17673/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 134 (20 May 2024)
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sino date 20 May 2024
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 17673/2022
In the matter between:
ANNA
BOOYSEN
First Applicant
VERONICA
BOOYSEN
Second
Applicant
and
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN
First
Respondent
THE
OFFICE OF THE DEEDS REGISTRAR, CAPE TOWN
Second Respondent
ANTHONY
BOOYSEN
Third
Respondent
CHARMAINE
LINDA BOOYSEN
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
17 May 2024
Delivered electronically:
20
May 2024
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
The first and second applicants
are sisters. The third respondent is their nephew and the fourth
respondent is his wife. On 21 October
2022 the applicants
launched this application, describing its purpose as follows: (a) a
review ‘
to correct the
wrongs that had been done by the respective respondents regarding the
property’
; and (b) to
‘
correct the legal
wrongs whose ripple effects are being felt by all of us through
eviction proceedings pending in the Magistrate’s
Court’
.
They made clear in the founding affidavit that the application is
brought in terms of s 6 of PAJA
[1]
read with s 33 of the Constitution (pursuant to which PAJA was
enacted).
[2]
The dispute pertains to an immovable property, being erf […]
Manenberg,
Cape Town (the property). At the time the application was
launched the first applicant and third and fourth respondents were
all
residing at the property. Although not apparent from the papers
it was confirmed during argument that the first applicant has since
vacated the property, as a consequence of which the aforementioned
eviction application brought by the third respondent has been
withdrawn. One of the points raised
in limine
by the City and
third and fourth respondents is that the second applicant lacks
locus
standi
. I will however assume in her favour, without deciding,
that she has an interest in the outcome of this matter.
[3]
Although in their notice of motion the applicants sought an order
setting
aside the ‘
sale, purchase and transfer’
of
the property by the first respondent (the City) to the third and
fourth respondents, the evidence of these respondents is that
no sale
has been concluded, and the report of the second respondent
(Registrar of Deeds) confirms that the property remains registered
in
the name of the City. It is accordingly not necessary to deal with
this part of the relief.
[4]
Apart from this the applicants seek orders: (a) setting aside a
lease
concluded between the City and the third and fourth respondents
in respect of the property; (b) compelling the Registrar of
Deeds to transfer the property from the City to the first applicant
‘
in her capacity as beneficiary’
of the property;
and compelling the City to provide information relating to ‘
the
policies and regulations’
utilised by it ‘
in terms
of acquisition, development, sale and transfer’
of the
property. The lease in question has an effective commencement date of
8 April 2019, and its addendum records that for
purposes thereof
the date of occupation by the third and fourth respondents was
6 April 2017.
[5]
Given that the applicants seek relief under PAJA they were required
in
terms of s 7(1) thereof to launch this application without
unreasonable delay and not later than 180 days after the date
–
‘
(a)
subject to subsection (2)(c), on which any proceedings instituted in
terms of internal remedies
as contemplated in subsection (2)(a) have
been concluded; or
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned was
informed of the administrative
action, became aware of the action and
the reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to have
become aware of the action
and the reasons…’
(Section 7(2)(c) is not relevant since
the obligation to exhaust internal remedies has not been raised by
any of the respondents).
[6]
In their founding affidavit the applicants allege that after the
death
of their sister on 4 April 2017 (she was the registered tenant
of the property) they attended at the Manenberg office of the
Department
of Human Settlements and met with a Mr Omar Paulse to
arrange a meeting for purposes of transferring the ‘
rates
lease’
from the name of their late sister to someone else
in the family. Mr Paulse promised to advise them of a suitable date
when this
discussion could take place. They further allege that:
‘
16.
We were still awaiting the call from Mr Paulse when we heard through
the neighbours that our nephew,
who is the Third Respondent was told
by Mr Paulse he can purchase the house from him, and in the
interim have the lease in
his name so they can facilitate this sale
transaction for him. We immediately after hearing that information
rushed to the rand
(sic)
office and enquired why there was a
deviation from the normal process of being a rates lease holder and
why they were busy transferring
the house into the Third Respondent’s
name.
17.
It is also at this time we were told by a Mr Mayekiso that this house
does not belong to
us, instead belongs to the City of Cape Town and
they can do whatever they want to do with their property. We were
shocked and
we informed him we knew the property belonged to us as
beneficiaries of it since we were the children of our mother who had
passed
away.
18.
We further informed him the previous government never said the house
belonged to the City
of Cape Town Municipality, but rather their
words were “(t)his is your new home now”. We requested to
have a meeting
with the City of Cape Town, however that request fell
on deaf ears.
19.
On the 24
th
October 2018 we decided to write a letter to
the Manenberg Human Settlement expressing our concerns and requesting
our home rental
lease to be transferred to myself as the First
Applicant…
24.
Our attorney also tried to mediate with the City of Cape Town by
[writing]
them two letters, on the 20
th
January 2022 and 21
st
February 2022,
requesting for reasons and attempting to mediate the unfavourable
situation we currently find ourselves in…
27.
The property was leased and will now be sold by the First Respondent
on or about 06.04.2017
(sic)
to the Third and Fourth
Respondents. I am however not certain when the transfer of the
property will take effect…’
[7]
In the letter to the Manenberg Human Settlements Contact Centre of
24 October
2018 (annexed to the founding affidavit) the
applicants stated that Mr Paulse ‘
is currently busy
transferring our home to our nephew whom is a backyarder’.
It is thus clear that by that date the applicants were aware of what
they regard as the impugned decision. The letters of the applicants’
attorney dated 20 January and 21 February 2022 take the
issue of delay in launching these proceedings no further since
although ‘
adequate’
reasons were indeed requested
in the letter of 20 January 2022, no formal steps were taken
thereafter to procure them prior
to this application being instituted
9 months later; and in any event the 90 day period for requesting
reasons after the applicants
became aware of the administrative
action complained of had long since passed by 20 January 2022.
[8]
Accordingly, on the applicants’ own version, they were aware of
the impugned decision at the latest on 24 October 2018, and the
failure to provide adequate reasons by 21 February 2022, but
only
launched this application on 21 October 2022. Moreover, although
the applicants had a further opportunity to deal with
the delay in a
replying affidavit (since it was pertinently raised
in limine
by both the City and the third and fourth respondents) they elected
not to depose to any replying affidavit. They have also had
legal
representation since at least January 2022.
[9]
I am of course bound by the
Supreme Court of Appeal decision in
OUTA
v South African National Roads Agency Ltd
[2]
where it was held that:
‘
[26]
At common law application of the undue delay rule
required a two stage enquiry. First, whether there was an
unreasonable
delay and, second, if so, whether the delay should in
all the circumstances be condoned (see eg
Associated Institutions
Pension Fund and others v Van Zyl and others
2005 (2) SA 302
(SCA)
para 47). Up to a point, I think, s 7(1) of PAJA requires the
same two stage approach. The difference lies, as I see
it, in the
legislature’s determination of a delay exceeding 180 days as
per se unreasonable. Before the effluxion of 180
days, the first
enquiry in applying s 7(1) is still whether the delay (if any)
was unreasonable. But after the 180 day period
the issue of
unreasonableness is pre-determined by the legislature; it is
unreasonable
per se
. It follows that the court is only
empowered to entertain the review application if the interest of
justice dictates an extension
in terms of s 9. Absent such
extension the court has no authority to entertain the review
application at all. Whether or not
the decision was unlawful no
longer matters. The decision has been “validated” by the
delay (see eg
Associated Institutions Pension Fund
para 46).
That of course does not mean that, after the 180 day period, an
enquiry into the reasonableness of the applicant’s
conduct
becomes entirely irrelevant. Whether or not the delay was
unreasonable and, if so, the extent of that unreasonableness
is still
a factor to be taken into account in determining whether an extension
should be granted or not (see eg
Camps Bay Ratepayers’ and
Residents’ Association v Harrison
[2010] 2 All SA 519
(SCA)
para 54).
[10]
The applicants have not sought
condonation in respect of the delay nor an extension in terms of s 9
of PAJA, and the City,
third and fourth respondents have not agreed
to any such extension. More fundamentally the applicants also do not
explain the reason
for the delay which impacts directly on the
interests of justice requirement in s 9 of PAJA as was explained
by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association v Harrison
:
[3]
‘
[54] …And the
question whether the interests of justice require the grant of such
extension depends on the facts and
circumstances of each case: the
party seeking it must furnish a full and reasonable explanation for
the delay which covers the
entire duration thereof and relevant
factors include the nature of the relief sought, the extent and cause
of the delay, its effect
on the administration of justice and other
litigants, the importance of the issue to be raised in the intended
proceedings and
the prospects of success.’
[11]
I accept that in heads of argument filed on their behalf the
applicants’ counsel
attempted to make out a case for
condonation but it was incumbent on the applicants themselves to have
done so in their papers.
Put simply there is nothing before me to
enable me to exercise a discretion to come to the assistance of the
applicants in respect
of the delay which is very lengthy. That is the
end of the matter and the application falls to be dismissed on this
ground alone.
[12]
However given that it is
desirable, where possible, for a lower court to decide all issues
raised in a matter before it,
[4]
I also deal with the review relief itself. The Constitutional Court
in
Bato Star
[5]
stated as follows:
‘
[27]
The Minister and the Chief Director argue that the applicant did not
disclose its causes of action sufficiently clearly or
precisely for
the respondents to be able to respond to them. Where a litigant
relies upon a statutory provision, it is not necessary
to specify it,
but it must be clear from the facts alleged by the litigant that the
section is relevant and operative. I am prepared
to assume, in favour
of the applicant, for the purposes of this case, that its failure to
identify with any precision the provisions
of PAJA upon which it
relied is not fatal to its cause of action. However, it must be
emphasised that it is desirable for
litigants who seek to review
administrative action to identify clearly both the facts upon which
they base their cause of action,
and the legal basis of their cause
of action…’
[13]
A similar situation arises in the present matter and I will adopt the
same approach as
in
Bato Star
. It is clear from the notice of
motion that the actual impugned decision is the conclusion of the
lease between the City and the
third and fourth respondents. The only
“procedural irregularities” relied upon by the applicants
are set out in the
founding affidavit as follows:
‘
28.
We are advised that in terms of law as earlier highlighted we are
entitled to procedural protection
in that, with everything that
affects us we ought to be consulted and allowed to participate in
whatever process that may unfold
against and affecting our lives. We
categorically state we were never approached by anyone prior to our
property being leased and
being in the process of being sold and we
equally know not of the reason for the said lease and sale…
30.
The processes followed in this transaction requires a judicial
microscope to ensure that
we are not being robbed from what we
believe is rightfully ours…
32.
When we get the record of the processes followed especially from the
offices of First Respondent
we are certain more will be revealed…
33.
We equally pray for supplementing these papers at a later stage once
we receive more information
as requested…’
[14]
The applicants’ papers
were never supplemented and there is no rule 53 record before the
court. The complaint that the applicants
were required to be
consulted by the City is not identified with reference to any
mandatory and/or material procedure or condition
prescribed by an
empowering provision for purposes of s 6(2)(b) of PAJA. The
deponent to the City’s answering affidavit
was Ms Grace
Blouw, the Manager at Tenancy Management, Public Housing. She pointed
out that the applicants do not seek to
set aside the City’s
decision to normalise the third respondent’s tenancy but only
the resulting lease agreement. Accordingly
even if the lease is set
aside on review the City’s decision to normalise that tenancy
remains intact.
[6]
[15]
The first applicant alleges that she, together with her siblings, her
mother who passed
away in 2000, and the third respondent, first took
occupation of the property in around 1984 after being forcibly
relocated from
Table View under the apartheid government. The
applicants’ late sister who passed away on 4 April 2017
was, in the City’s
records, the ‘
previous existing
tenant’
. On 4 October 2018 the Directorate: Human
Settlements and the Department: Home Ownership Transfers &
Tenancy Management
conducted a house visit at the property. Its
subsequent report dated 11 February 2019 indicated
inter alia
the following. The third respondent had filed a housing application
on 9 December 2005 at a time when the first applicant
was absent
from the property (this was during the period 2000 until 2007).
According to the City’s records the date of original
tenancy of
the registered tenant (the applicants’ late sister) was 2 June
2000.
[16]
The report indicated further that the third respondent was not part
of the original family
housed in 2000 but part of a previous tenancy
dated 1984. He moved out in 1999 but moved back during 2001 and
occupied a structure
in the yard with his family. He was employed.
The fourth respondent moved in with the third respondent during 2001.
She was also
employed. Their two daughters, both of whom were majors,
were unemployed. Importantly, the first applicant was not part of the
original family housed per the City’s records
in 2000
for the reason already given. After she returned in 2007 she occupied
the main house with her two sons, one of whom was an unemployed
adult.
[17]
The City, applying its policy
referred to below, determined that the third respondent qualified as
an ‘
unlawful occupant’
since the tenant had passed away and he was not a member of the
‘
original household’
when the applicants’ late sister was registered as the tenant
in 2000. (The fourth respondent was in a similar position).
It was
then recommended that the third respondent’s tenancy be
regularised in terms of clause 1.3 of the City’s Unlawful
Occupation Policy
[7]
which provides that unlawful occupants who moved onto a property
prior to 1 March 2006 will be considered for ‘
normalisation’
subject to their meeting the eligibility criteria, which the City was
satisfied the third respondent had met.
[18]
At a meeting of the City’s Cases Committee (which Ms Blouw
chaired) on 21 February
2019 it was resolved that the third
respondent’s tenancy be normalised on this basis, subject to
there being evidence on
file confirming that he was still in
occupation (which was subsequently provided), and that he be given
the opportunity to purchase
the property once the normalisation
process was complete. It was further resolved that the third
respondent be entitled to move
into the main dwelling on his own
volition. Accordingly, on the City’s version: (a) neither
applicant had filed a housing
application in respect of the property
when the third respondent’s application was approved; and
(b) sadly in the circumstances,
the applicants have no
entitlement to the property as “beneficiaries” of their
late mother who passed away in 2000.
[19]
The Unlawful Occupation Policy was annexed to the City’s
answering affidavit. Ms Blouw
explained that in cases such as
the present, where an original tenant of a property belonging to the
City passes away and there
are persons left in the property, the
position is regulated by the City’s Housing Policy which must
be read together with
the Unlawful Occupation Policy. The latter
Policy refers to an unlawful occupant as one who has been left behind
by a tenant who
has died. Whereas clause 1.3 provides that unlawful
occupants who moved in prior to 1 March 2006 will be considered
for normalisation
subject to their meeting the eligibility criteria,
clause 1.4 provides that unlawful occupants who moved in after
1 March
2006 must vacate, failing which legal action will be
taken for their eviction unless they are the next qualifying
applicants for
assistance on the waiting list or qualify in terms of
clause 1.2 which pertains to children of ‘
former tenants’
which is not the case in the present matter. The City also confirmed
that while the first applicant is recorded as only having
moved back
into the property in 2007, the second applicant is not recorded as
having lived in the property at all. Indeed in her
confirmatory
affidavit the second applicant confirmed that she resides at a
different address. Save for one or two minor discrepancies
in dates
the third and fourth respondents confirm the City’s version in
all material respects.
[20]
While the court has great sympathy, in particular for the first
applicant, there is simply
no evidence to refute the City’s
version in relation to the absence of any right on the part of the
applicants to either
lease or own the property, or to support the
applicants’ claim that the procedure adopted (and explained) by
the City was
in any way procedurally unfair. It is also
well-established that a court hearing a review is not at liberty to
substitute a decision
of an administrative functionary simply because
it does not like it. In the circumstances the application must in any
event fail.
[21]
Although the City asks for costs in a limited respect, in the
exercise of my discretion
I decline to make any such order in the
particular circumstances of this case. Counsel for the applicant
appears
pro bono
; the City can hardly be hugely out of pocket
as a result of this application; and the third and fourth respondents
are represented
by the Law Clinic of the University of Cape Town.
[22]
The following order is made:
1.
The
application is dismissed; and
2.
Each
party shall pay their own costs.
J I CLOETE
For
applicants
: Adv S
Sibanda
Instructed
by: Mbebe and Associates (Mr U Mbebe)
For
first respondent
: Adv P
Gabriel
Instructed
by: ZS Incorporated (Mr W Saban)
For
third and fourth respondents
: Adv T
Mayosi
Instructed
by: UCT Law Clinic (Mr Y Moodley)
[1]
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[2]
[2013] 4 All SA 639
(SCA).
[3]
[2010] 2 All SA 519
(SCA) at para [54] referred to in
OUTA
above.
[4]
Theron
N.O. v Loubser N.O.: In Re Theron N.O v Loubser
2014 (3) SA 323
(SCA) at paras [21], [24] and [26];
Spilhaus
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v MTN and Another
2019 (4) SA 406
(CC) at para [44].
[5]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others
2004 (4) SA 490 (CC).
[6]
In terms of the well-established
Oudekraal
principle,
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2010 (1) SA 333 (SCA).
[7]
Policy on the Unlawful Occupation of Council Rental
Stock, approved on 27 March 2008, C90/03/08.
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