Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 355South Africa
Communicare NPC v Khonzaphi and Another (6683/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 355 (21 May 2024)
Headnotes
AND CHRONOLOGY 3. The applicant is Communicare NPC, an incorporated association not for gain. The first respondent, Ms Ncumisa Khonzaphi is a 29-year-old female who shares the premises with her 2 (two) minor children, aged 4 years and 8 months of age, . and from which the applicant seeks to evict her. 4. In her answering affidavit, the first respondent states that she has a self employed partner who provides maintenance support but he does not share the residence with her. 5. It is common cause that the applicant and the first respondent
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Communicare NPC v Khonzaphi and Another (6683/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 355 (21 May 2024)
Communicare NPC v Khonzaphi and Another (6683/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 355 (21 May 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 6683/2023
In
the matter between
COMMUNICARE
NPC
APPLICANT
REGISTRATION
NO: 1929/001590/08
And
NCUMISA
KHONZAPHI
FIRST RESPONDENT
IDENTITY
NO: 9[…]
AND
ALL THOSE HOLDING TITLE UNDER HER
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
Van den Berg AJ
NATURE OF RELIEF
1.
The applicant applies for an order requiring the first
respondent and all those who hold title under her at the property
situated at Erf 2[…] Cape Town more fully described as
05[…]
R[…], Corner of K[…] Road, Diep Street, R[…]
Street and F[…] Street, Brooklyn (“
the Property
”)
be ordered to vacate the property on a date to be determined.
Additionally, the applicant seeks an order that in the event
of the
first respondent and all those who hold title under her failing to
comply with the eviction order, be evicted by the Sheriff
of this
Court as well as costs associated with the application.
2.
The first respondent opposes the relief applied for, and the
second
respondent, the City of Cape Town Municipality, filed a Housing
Report and affidavit on 6 February 2024.
SYNOPSIS
AND CHRONOLOGY
3.
The applicant is Communicare NPC, an incorporated association
not for
gain. The first respondent, Ms Ncumisa Khonzaphi is a
29-year-old female who shares the premises with her 2
(two)
minor children, aged 4 years and 8 months of age, . and from which
the applicant seeks to evict her.
4.
In her answering affidavit, the first respondent states that
she has
a self employed partner who provides maintenance support but he
does not share the residence with her.
5.
It is common cause that the applicant and the first respondent
concluded a written lease agreement on or about 28 February 2021, in
terms of which the first respondent leased the property for
residential purposes. The monthly rental is R4,000.00, with an
annual increase.. The lease agreement was for an initial
period
of 8 (eight) months, which commenced on 1 March 2021.
6.
In the event the first respondent does not pay rental or other
monies
due in terms of the lease agreement, the applicant shall issue
a written notice calling upon the first respondent
to remedy such
breach. Failing which, the applicant shall be entitled in its sole
discretion and without prejudice to any other
rights to either claim
specific performance or cancel the lease agreement forthwith and
claim arrear rental.
7.
In terms of clause 27.1 of the lease agreement, any letter or
notice
given in terms of the lease agreement shall be in writing be
posted by pre-paid registered post. It shall be deemed
to have been
received by the addressee on the fifth business day following the
date of such posting or if transmitted by facsimile
or e-mail be
deemed to have been received by the addressee one calendar day after
dispatch.
8.
The first respondent’s contact details are recorded in
terms of
paragraph 27.2, read with paragraph 1.17 of the lease agreement as
follows:
“
The Tenant’s
contact details
Physical
K[…] River, D[…] and F[…] Streets, Brooklyn,
Cape Town, 7405 ...
Cellular
00276
[…]
Email
k
[…]
”
9.
The applicant applied for and obtained a Court order in terms
of
section 4(2) of the Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Lands
Act 19 of 1998, which order and notice were duly served upon
the
first respondent. It is not contested that the applicant has
complied with the provisions of the PIE Act. .
THE
FIRST RESPONDENT’S DEFAULT AND TERMINATION OF THE LEASE
AGREEMENT
10.
The applicant contends that the first respondent materially breached
the terms
of the lease agreement by failing or refusing to make
payment of the monthly rental and other charges due in terms of the
lease
agreement. As of 1 October 2022, the first respondent was
in arrears in an alleged amount of R40,119.80. The first
respondent disputed this amount of arrear rental. Annexure
“RJ4” to the founding affidavit is a “
Tenant /
Debtor Transactions Schedule”
for the period January 2019
to October 2022.
11.
On 6 December 2022, the applicant’s attorneys emailed a written
letter
of demand to the first respondent at “
k[…]
”.
12.
The applicant's attorneys despatched a further final demand and
cancellation
notice to the first respondent on 6 March 2023.
13.
The applicant further contends that the tenancy was on a
month-to-month
basis and that the applicant, in its letters, gave 30
days' notice of the termination of the lease agreement. The lease
agreement
provides that either party may terminate the lease for any
reason on 30 days’ notice.
14.
The applicant contends that the respondent is in unlawful occupation
of the
property.
15.
In opposition to the relief sought, the first respondent denied that
she received
any of the notices or letters of demand. She
states that she was never alerted to any breach of the agreement and
avers that
her email address was incorrectly recorded by the
applicant. However, the first respondent admits that she fell
into arrears
due to reduced employment hours and her being off on
maternity leave. According to the first respondent, the
applicant has
not attempted to mediate the dispute regarding her
eviction in good faith. The first respondent states in
paragraphs 10 and
11 of her answering affidavit that she consistently
paid the agreed upon rent save for just a few months. No rent
was paid
for July, September and November 2022. During December
2022, March 2023, and April 2023, the first respondent admitted to
paying less than the agreed upon rental amount.
16.
The first respondent further contends in paragraph 13 of her
answering affidavit
that:
“
... despite
these short payments, there is clear indication that despite some
past difficulties I have faced financially, I am genuinely
and in
good faith committed to ensuring that I continue to occupy the
property.”
17.
She further contends that the arrear amount could be easily settled.
THE
LEGAL POSITION
18.
Access to
adequate housing remains one of the major challenges in South
Africa. Our urban areas face a desperate shortage
of adequate
housing, exacerbated by increasing urbanisation.
[1]
19.
It has
become settled that the State is constitutionally obliged to provide
relief to individuals who have no access
to land, who are
facing intolerable living conditions or crises, and lack access to
land or shelter. Accordingly, the provision
of emergency
accommodation by the Government forms part of the right of access to
adequate housing entrenched in section 26 of
the Constitution.
[2]
20.
The
provisions of the PIE Act apply to all persons irrespective of
whether they lawfully occupied the property at an earlier stage.
They
qualify as” unlawful occupiers.”
[3]
Section 4(7) of PIE provides guidance and specifies the factors and
considerations to be taken into account when a
Court exercises
its discretion to determine whether it is just and equitable to grant
an eviction order. It reads:
“
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 in 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 landowner for the
relocation of the unlawful
occupier, and including the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disable persons and households
headed by woman.”
21.
Without
considering the other pertinent factors, a determination that an
occupant is in unlawful occupation does not automatically
result in
an eviction order. Whether granting an eviction would be just
and equitable in light of the circumstances of the
case is the final
determination of the court. . If eviction is warranted, the
court then determines a period of time that
is both reasonable and
equitable.
[4]
22.
Our Courts
take a pro-active role when considering eviction applications.
The fact that the eviction may result in homelessness
places an
obligation upon local authorities’ to provide temporary
emergency occupation. This duty must be read
in
conjunction with the provisions of section 4(7) of PIE, that one of
the circumstances which may be relevant to the just
and equitable
enquiry was whether land had been made available by a municipality or
other organ of State or another landowner for
the relocation of the
unlawful occupier. A Court would therefore not be able to
decide the fairness and equity of an
eviction without hearing
from the local authority upon which a duty is imposed to provide
temporary emergency accommodation..
[5]
23.
In each
case, the court is obligated to conduct an enquiry and r
proactively gather information regarding all pertinent
and relevant
circumstances.
[6]
before
rendering a just and equitable decision based on that information.
IS
THE FIRST RESPONDENT IN UNLAWFUL OCCUPATION
24.
The applicant caused 2 (two) notices of demand to be delivered to
the
first respondent’s email address as recorded in the lease
agreement as well as another to be delivered by pre-paid registered
post. The applicant has complied with the terms of the lease
agreement and in law the first respondent is deemed to have
received
such notice.
25.
It is further undisputed that the first respondent received the
notice of her
arrears and the drastic relief sought against her when
she received service of the main eviction application as well as the
section 4(2) PIE Act notice and order.
26.
Moreover, the first respondent’s tenancy is month-to-month. The
lease
agreement stipulates that any of the parties may terminate the
lease with 30 days' notice, which is precisely what the applicant
did.
27.
I therefore conclude that the lease agreement was lawfully terminated
and that
the first respondent is in unlawful occupation.
SECTION
4(7) OF PIE
28.
The first respondent had occupied the property for more than 6 (six)
months
when the eviction proceedings were initiated. The Court may
grant an order for eviction if it considers all of the relevant
circumstances and finds that it is just and equitable.
29.
The inevitability of rapidly escalating living expenses in
comparison
to meagre sources of income is a sombre d but
undeniable reality that impacts everyone. . Considering the
evidence,
it is uncertain if the first respondent can afford to pay
the arrear rent or commit to the agreed rental with or without an
escalation
in the future. The answering affidavit was deposed to on
20 September 2023. The replying affidavit is dated 7 May 2024.
Neither
of these affidavits shed light on the current outstanding
rent or what amounts have been paid to the date of the judgment.
30.
In her answering affidavit, the first respondent offered to pay R4000
as rent
per month with an additional R500 for the arrears. During the
argument, Mr Nduli, who appeared on behalf of the first respondent,
indicated that her offer was increased from R500 to R1000 for the
arrears.
31.
The first respondent attached copies of her bank statements to her
answering
affidavit. Mr Randall, who appears for the applicant,
pointed to several entries on the bank statements of payments to the
first
respondent other than her salary income or maintenance. Mr
Randall submitted that the applicant earns more money than what she
disclosed.
32.
Mr Nduli argued that the court should dismiss the eviction
application because
the applicant stands to suffer no prejudice. The
applicant has a willing and able tenant who wishes to continue
occupying the property.
33.
In
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
[7]
the Constitutional Court per Justice Theron held at para 80 that:
“
Our law has
always, to a greater or lesser extent, recognised the role of equity
(encompassing the notions of good faith, fairness
and reasonableness)
as a factor in assessing the terms and the enforcement of contracts.
Indeed, it is clear that these values
play a profound role in our law
of contract under our new constitutional dispensation. However, a
court may not refuse to enforce
contractual terms on the basis that
the enforcement would, in its subjective view, be unfair,
unreasonable or unduly harsh. These
abstract values have not been
accorded autonomous, self-standing status as contractual
requirements. Their application is mediated
through the rules of
contract law including the rule that a court may not enforce
contractual terms where the term or its enforcement
would be contrary
to public policy. It is only where a contractual term, or its
enforcement, is so unfair, unreasonable or unjust
that it is contrary
to public policy that a court may refuse to enforce it.”
34.
It is further settled that the Court can not make an agreement for
parties by
way of an order of court.
35.
The first respondent further raised the possibility of mediation.
None of the
parties filed any notice in terms of Rule 41(A).
Mediation is, in any event, a voluntary process. The Court can not
compel parties
to mediate. Despite this, I afforded the parties
during the argument the opportunity to stand down to explore the
potential for
resolution of the dispute. No settlement
could be reached.
36.
Therefore, I am of the considered view that an eviction order should
be granted.
JUST
AND EQUITABLE PERIOD WITHIN WHICH AN EVICTION SHOULD TAKE PLACE
37.
The second respondent, the City of Cape Town Municipality, filed the
housing
report on behalf of the City. The report confirms
that the first respondent is an adult female who has 2 (two)
dependent
children. She is employed with a monthly household
income of R9,500.00. She has been residing at the property for
a
period of 3 (three) years and will be rendered homeless if
evicted. Apart from the 2 (two) minor children there are no
disabled
or elderly persons residing on the premises.
38.
The City contends that the respondent can be provided with a
so-called “
emergency housing kit”
as a last resort
if she is not able to obtain accommodation through her own means.
In paragraph 13 the City request the Honourable
Court to grant a
period of 18 (eighteen) months from the date of having received a
complete acceptance form the first respondent
to make a
structure available for occupation at an emergency accommodation
site. This is only applicable should the first
respondent not
be able to secure a site with the landowner's consent in writing for
the construction of the so-called “
emergency housing kit”
.
39.
The first
respondent argues that her constitutional right to access adequate
housing can only be achieved if the parties engage
each other
meaningfully.
[8]
The first
respondent pleads that the Court should allow the parties to find a
mutually beneficial solution through mediation.
The first
respondent further alleges that the applicant charges different
rental amounts for apartments of similar size.
In this regard,
the first respondent argues that the Court should not grant an
eviction order until the City has taken reasonable
and concrete steps
to assist the first respondent with alternative accommodation.
40.
The first respondent appears to be a hard-working mother who succeeds
in earning
a respectful income. She receives financial support and
maintenance from her boyfriend. She has a family and does not appear
to
be destitute, although she is by no means prosperous.
41.
The applicant presents uncontested evidence regarding the
availability of similar
accommodation in the area, although at higher
monthly rentals. The first respondent did not answer to these
allegations but merely
persisted in contending that she would suffer
prejudice should her children and she be forced to move.
42.
What is then a just and equitable period within which an eviction is
to take
place? The applicant proposed 4 months. Mr Ndoli proposed 18
months in line with the City’s housing report. The City’s
stance to be that all evictions should be halted for a period of 18
months is beyond my comprehension. Depriving the applicant,
as
owner, of any remedy for such an expanded period would also not be
just and equitable.
43.
I agree with the applicant that executing the eviction
order should
be suspended for four months.
COSTS
44.
The applicant is cited as a Nonprofit Corporation (NPC) that provides
housing
to lower-income households. I accept that the applicant
needs to protect its financial position just like any other landlord.
On the other hand, the first respondent cannot afford to bear the
costs of an opposed application. I have also mentioned that the
parties could not mediate the matter despite the first respondent's
offers. While I do not assign blame to any of the parties involved,
the Court was left in the dark regarding the updated arrears owed by
the first respondent and why the applicant was unwilling to
accept
the first respondent’s offer. The first respondent did not
place any updated information before the court regarding
the rental
payment as she could have done in terms of Uniform Rule 6(5). I am
inclined to order each party to pay their own costs,
but this may be
unfair to the applicant, who was substantially successful.
45.
I intend to
grant a cost order that aims to strike a balance between the
applicant's substantial success and the first respondent's
assertion
that she wanted to settle the matter and did not intentionally breach
the terms of the lease agreement
[9]
.
It safeguards the applicant should the first respondent fail to
vacate the property and lessens the harshness of the relief should
the first respondent comply with the terms of the order.
RELIEF
AND ORDER GRANTED
46.
Considering the aforesaid an order is granted as follows:
[1]
The first respondent and all those who occupy by, to or under them,
at
the property situated at
ERF 2[…] CAPE TOWN
more
fully described as
05[…] R[…], corner of K[…],
River Diep and F[…] streets, Brooklyn (hereinafter referred to
as “
the property
”)
known as
05[…] R[…], Corner of K[…] Road, D[…]
Street, R[…] Street and F[…] Street, Brooklyn
shall
vacate the property by no later than
30 September 2024
.
[2]
Failing compliance with paragraph 1 above, the Sheriff and/or Deputy
Sheriff
is authorised to evict the first respondent and any other
occupants and to remove their belongings on 1 October 2024, or so
soon
as is reasonably practically possible thereafter.
[3]
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application,
including
the costs of counsel on Tarif A in terms of Uniform Rule
69(7),
[4]
The costs order in paragraph 3 is suspended and will only become
effective
if the first respondent does not vacate the property on or
before 30 September 2024. If the first respondent vacates the
property
before 30 September 2024, each party shall pay its own
costs.
VAN
DEN BERG AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
HEARD
ON
17 May 2024
JUDGMENT
21 May 2024
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPLICANT
:
Adv R Randall
Instructed
by
JKS Attorneys Inc
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
Adv B Nduli
Instructed
by
Legal Aid
FOR
THE SECOND RESPONDENT
:
None
[1]
Cape Town
City v Commando
2023 (4) SA 465
(SCA) at par 1
[2]
Government of
the Republic of South Africa and others v Grootboom and
others
2001
(1) SA 46
(CC)
Cape Town City v
Commando
2023 (4) SA 465
(SVA) at par 6
[3]
Dekker and
another v Jika
2003 (1) SA 113
(SCA) at par 11 at 122C to D
[4]
Grobler v
Phillips
2023 (1) SA 321
(CC) at 331C to G, par 28 and 29
[5]
Occupiers
Berea v De Wet NO and Another
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) at par 54 to 58
[6]
The
Occupiers, Shulana Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v
Steele 2010 (9) BCLR 911 (SCA)
[7]
2020 (5) SA
247
(CC)
[8]
Occupiers of
51 Olivia Road, Berea Township and 197 Main Street, Johannesburg
and
others v City of Johannesburg 2008 (3) SA 208 (CC)
[9]
Goodfin
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Adriaanse and Others
[2022] ZAWCHC 245
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