Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 173South Africa
City of Cape Town v Various Occupiers and Another (21101/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 173; [2024] 3 All SA 428 (WCC); 2024 (5) SA 407 (WCC) (18 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## City of Cape Town v Various Occupiers and Another (21101/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 173; [2024] 3 All SA 428 (WCC); 2024 (5) SA 407 (WCC) (18 June 2024)
City of Cape Town v Various Occupiers and Another (21101/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 173; [2024] 3 All SA 428 (WCC); 2024 (5) SA 407 (WCC) (18 June 2024)
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sino date 18 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Homeless in city –
Alternative
accommodation
–
Meaningful
engagement – Unlawful occupiers – Impoverished
conditions – Terms of just and equitable eviction
considered
– Interdict not an appropriate mechanism – City met
its obligation to meaningfully engage with occupiers
– Safe
spaces are adequate alternative accommodation – Eviction
just and equitable – Occupation unsustainable
–
Conditions of eviction carefully regulated – Respondents are
evicted.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 21101/2022
In the matter between:
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
and
THOSE PERSONS
IDENTIFIED IN ANNEXURE “A
TO THE NOTICE OF MOTION WHO ARE
UNLAWFULLY OCCUPYING THE ERVEN WITHIN THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN
CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT AND
SURROUND AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN
PARAGRAPH 2 OF THE NOTICE OF MOTION
THOSE PERSONS WHOSE
FULL AND FURTHER PARTICULARS ARE UNKNOWN TO THE APPLICANT WHO ARE
UNLAWFULLY OCCUPYING THE ERVEN WITHIN
THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN
CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT AND SURROUND AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN
PARAGRAPH 2 OF THE NOTICE OF MOTION
Applicant
First Respondent
Second
Respondent
Coram:
Bishop, AJ
Date
of Hearing:
9
and 10 October 2023
Date
of Further Submissions:
10 and 28 November and 8 December 2023
Date
of Judgment:
18
June 2024
JUDGMENT
BISHOP,
AJ
[1]
In
1997, Chaskalson P observed that, “[w]e live in a society in
which there are great disparities in wealth”, and in
which
“[m]illions of people are living in deplorable conditions and
in great poverty.”
[1]
A
commitment to address those conditions, and ensure that all South
Africans live lives of dignity, equality and freedom “lies
at
the heart of our new constitutional order. For as long as these
conditions continue to exist that aspiration will have a hollow
ring.”
[2]
[2]
What was true in 1997 remains true today. While
conditions for millions have improved, still millions of people in
South Africa
live in poverty with inadequate housing, water,
healthcare and food. The Constitution’s call to remedy those
conditions remains
no less urgent.
[3]
This case concerns the rights of some of the most
vulnerable people in our society – people living on the
pavements of downtown
Cape Town. The conditions in which they live
are deplorable. They live next to busy roads in tents or structures
constructed of
plastic sheets and cardboard. They are compelled to
live their lives in public, with little or no privacy. They struggle
for food,
for shelter, and for warmth.
[4]
The
Applicant – the City of Cape Town – has a duty to these
people. “It is irrefutable that the State is obliged
to take
positive action to meet the needs of those living in extreme
conditions of poverty, homelessness or intolerably inadequate
housing.”
[3]
It has
a duty to remedy their conditions of living, to take reasonable steps
to realise their right to housing, and to ensure they
can live lives
with dignity and privacy.
Grootboom
reminds
us that “the Constitution requires that everyone must be
treated with care and concern”, and that those “whose
needs are the most urgent and whose ability to enjoy all rights
therefore is most in peril, must not be ignored”.
[4]
[5]
The homeless people of the City do not exist
separately from the rest of the residents. We are all part of the
same whole. The City
consists of and belongs to those who work in its
corner offices and live in the mansions of Higgovale and Clifton,
just as much
as it does to those who eke out a living on the City’s
streets and sleep on its pavements and in its parks. We are all
entitled
to the same level of respect and concern from our City and
from each other.
[6]
This
case is a reminder that the Constitution dares us all “to care
for the people on the edge of the night”. It also
dares us “to
change our way of caring about ourselves.”
[5]
We can
only care about the homeless when we see ourselves in them; we can
only realise our own humanity if we commit to realizing
theirs; when
we see that we are all a few bad decisions and some bad luck from
life on the pavements.
Umntu
ngumntu ngabantu
.
[6]
[7]
To its great credit, this is largely the attitude
the City has adopted in this litigation. It asks this Court to evict
approximately
200 people (
the Occupiers
)
that live on seven pavements or road reserves that it owns around the
City’s central business district (
the
Properties
). It does not, as other
municipalities have, seek to remove them without a court order and
without alternative accommodation. It
applies under the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(
PIE
). Nor
has it sought to banish them to the City’s periphery; it offers
all the people it seeks to evict alternative accommodation
in “safe
spaces” that it has developed in the City centre.
[8]
The accommodation in the safe spaces is
rudimentary. But it is undoubtedly better than the Occupiers’
current accommodation.
It includes toilets and showers, two meals a
day, blankets, and access to clothes. And it comes with a range of
services designed
not only to give them somewhere to sleep, but to
help them to get off the streets and into permanent homes. The City
commits to
helping those who use its safe spaces to overcome
addiction, to find jobs, and to reconnect with their families.
[9]
Some of the occupiers are willing to take up the
City’s offer. But others are not. They insist that the City has
not adequately
engaged with them – it presented them with a
binary choice: safe spaces or nothing. They want the City to explore
alternatives
with them, and to find joint solutions. They also argue
that the safe spaces are not suitable alternative accommodation. They
do
not meet the ordinary requirements for temporary accommodation
following eviction, and they impose restrictive rules that separate
families and restrict freedom.
[10]
Against this background, this case raises the
following primary questions for determination:
[10.1]
Has the City meaningfully engaged with the
Occupiers?
[10.2]
Are the safe spaces suitable alternative
accommodation?
[10.3]
Is eviction just and equitable and, if so, on what
terms?
[11]
I conclude that the City has meaningfully engaged,
that the safe spaces are suitable alternative accommodation, and that
eviction
is just and equitable, but subject to a detailed order to
ensure the Occupiers’ rights are fully respected.
[12]
Granting the eviction raises another question: the
City seeks an interdict preventing a list of named Occupiers from
re-occupying
the Properties or any other City-owned property. It
argues that, without this relief, the eviction will not achieve its
purpose.
The Occupiers who do not already wish to move to the safe
spaces will have little incentive to do so; they can simply occupy a
different pavement that was not subject to the eviction order. The
City cannot afford, it argues, to keep evicting people from the
pavements.
[13]
The Occupiers contend that an interdict would
authorize further evictions without the protection of a court order
as required by
s 26(3) of the Constitution. It will place them
outside the ordinary protections of PIE and subject to removal at the
whim of the
City. They argue such an order would be unlawful and
unconstitutional.
[14]
I agree with the Occupiers. While I understand the
City’s difficulty, and believe that it is motivated by a desire
to assist
the homeless amongst us, not to marginalize them, an
interdict is not the appropriate mechanism. If the City believes it
needs
the power to evict people outside of PIE, it must defend the
existing mechanisms it has created to do so, or create new ones that
are constitutionally consistent and apply equally to everyone.
# the facts
the facts
[15]
It is always useful to start with the facts. To
understand the outcomes this Court reaches, I need to explain where
the properties
are and why the City is particularly concerned about
people living on them. Next, I look at the City’s approach to
homelessness
generally, and particularly its use of safe spaces; what
do they provide, and what restrictions do they impose. I then
describe
the Occupiers – where they come from, how they live,
and what they want. That leads to how this dispute came to court and
the shape of the litigation.
## The Properties
The Properties
[16]
The City seeks the eviction of people living on
seven defined sites in the inner city. These are defined by clear
descriptions,
and by maps attached to the notice of motion. They are
all pavements or road reserves along major roads leading into and out
of
the City’s centre. They are:
[16.1]
The pavement to Buitengracht Street (inclusive of
the corner of Rose Lane and Buitengracht Street behind the wooden
bollards along
the edge of the pavement);
[16.2]
Either side of the road on FW De Klerk Boulevard
(inclusive of the pavements, centre island and road reserve);
[16.3]
The corner of FW De Klerk Boulevard and
Heerengracht leading into the harbour area (inclusive of Foregate
Square, Taxi Rank and
Foreshore as well as outside and opposite
Customs House and along Heerengracht and the pavements and road
reserves in front of,
opposite and along Heerengracht);
[16.4]
Helen Suzman Boulevard (inclusive of the pavements
and road reserves on either side of the road and the centre island);
[16.5]
Strand Street (inclusive of the pavements and road
reserve on both sides of the road after the station outbound and over
the entire
width of the pavement on both sides of the road) and the
Strand Street side of the Castle on the pavement and road reserve and
grass area outside the Castle;
[16.6]
Foreshore N1 (near Turbines) inclusive of the
pavement and road reserve and area surrounding the Roggebaai Gas
Turbines; and
[16.7]
Virginia Avenue and Mill Street Bridge (inclusive
of the pavement and road reserve).
[17]
The City owns all the Properties. The City does
not seek the eviction of persons living in similar conditions on land
it does not
own. For example, there are other homeless people living
next to the Castle on land owned by the national government; the City
does not seek their eviction.
[18]
The City emphasizes that the Properties are not
fit for human habitation. They are adjacent to busy roads and
therefore unsafe.
There is no access to water, sanitation or
electricity. The structures – which are either tents, or are
made out of plastic
and cardboard – are unfit for long-term
habitation. They provide limited protection from the elements, and
little or no safety
or security.
[19]
The City describes the problems at each site
specifically. But several problems are common across most or all of
them.
[20]
First
, there are
risks to state infrastructure. The Occupiers – understandably –
make fires to cook and to keep themselves
warm. But this can damage
pavements, bridges and other infrastructure. A particularly severe
example is the risk posed by people
living and making fires near the
Roggebaai Gas Turbines. Signs and fences have been vandalized to use
for shelter or gain access
to better areas. Waterpipes and drains
have been obstructed or damaged. Simply put, the road reserves
contain a wide range of infrastructure,
none of which is designed to
operate with people living there. The Occupiers’ presence there
threatens this infrastructure
creating a risk for them, and for all
who rely on it.
[21]
Second
, the
Occupiers obstruct pedestrian and vehicular traffic. Because they
live on the pavement, people using the pavement (including
the
occupiers) are forced onto the road. This creates a risk both for
them and for motorists. It also denies other residents of
the City
the ability to freely use the pavements that were designed for that
purpose.
[22]
Third
, the
conditions are unhealthy and hazardous for the Occupiers themselves.
They suffer from malnutrition, physical and psychological
health
risks from living such unsheltered lives, and diseases caused by food
waste, lack of sanitation, exposure to fires and vermin.
People
living on the streets are also generally less likely to seek
healthcare when they become sick, or to take their medication
as
directed.
[23]
Fourth
, the
conduct of the Occupiers affects people living and working in the
City. The City argues that homeless people are forced to
conduct
normal human behaviour in public, including urinating, defecating,
bathing and having sex. The City alleges that this undermines
the
Occupiers’ privacy and dignity, as well as impacting on others
in the area.
[24]
To a degree, I accept that these concerns justify
the City’s decision to seek an eviction. It is no criticism of
the Occupiers
to say that they are compelled to live in public –
they have no choice. The limitation on their rights by being
compelled
to do so is far greater than any impact on those who must
observe them. But there are reasons why the law generally prohibits
urinating,
defecating and washing in public. It is unsanitary and
unpleasant for those who must observe others doing in public what
should
be done in private. It creates health risks for the Occupiers
and for others.
[25]
To make its point, the City relies on complaints
that it has received from members of the public about homeless people
in the CBD.
These complaints range from an inability to use bus
stops, litter and the vandalism of public infrastructure, to the
depreciation
of property values, and the flight of tourists and
businesses from the CBD.
[26]
I accept that the Occupiers’ occupation of
the properties make the use of the City more difficult for others who
use the City,
and may make the downtown less desirable location. I
think this is already established by the City’s other evidence.
[27]
But I do not think much weight should be placed on
these complaints. They are, largely, complaints about the existence
of homeless
people in the CBD. But homelessness is a reality without
any simple solution. Ms Pillay SC, who appeared for the City,
repeatedly
reminded me that this case was not about “solving”
homelessness. I agree. But that means that the complaints will
persist
for as long as people have nowhere else to live and gravitate
to the CBD to make a living. That will happen with or without this
eviction order.
[28]
There is also a degree of nimbyism about the
complaints – “Please move these homeless people somewhere
else and make
them somebody else’s problem.” But
homelessness is
our
problem.
Homeless people are part of the City as much as all its other
residents. Homelessness is a result of some factors beyond
the City’s
control, and some choices we have made as a society about the
distribution of resources. None of the causes
or symptoms of
homelessness will be solved by moving homeless people from one place
to another, even to a safe space.
[29]
Fifth
, there is a
complaint that homeless people are responsible for various forms of
crime in the City, including selling drugs, petty
theft, mugging and
sex work. I do not place any weight on this complaint for two
reasons:
[29.1]
The City did not explain why, if the Occupiers are
responsible for these crimes, they will stop committing them if they
are evicted
from the Properties and move to safe spaces.
[29.2]
I
accept that some homeless people may commit crimes. But to use that
as a justification for eviction without specific proof linking
any
Occupier to crime seems unwarranted. The Indian Supreme Court
described a similar charge against homeless people as “born
of
prejudice against the poor and the destitute. Affluent people living
in skyscrapers also commit crimes varying from living on
the gains of
prostitution and defrauding the public treasury to smuggling. But,
they get away.”
[7]
If
belonging to a category of people who commits crimes was relevant to
eviction, homeless people are not the only ones who would
face an
insecure future.
[30]
The Occupiers accept that living on the street
creates risk for their physical and mental well-being. They do not
contend that they
have a right to occupy the properties indefinitely.
They accept that, ultimately, their eviction may be warranted –
but only
once it has engaged meaningfully and offered suitable
alternative accommodation.
## Homelessness in the City
and the Safe Spaces
Homelessness in the City
and the Safe Spaces
[31]
There are no clear figures of how many homeless
people live in Cape Town, or in the CBD. The estimates range from
about 6 175
in 2015 (including those living in shelters) to
14 357 in 2020. The parties agree that the economic impact of
the Covid 19
pandemic significantly exacerbated the problem. But
there were no reports to estimate just how much the population of
homeless
people has increased.
[32]
Whatever the precise number, there are thousands
of people living on the streets in Cape Town. Most of them live in
the CBD, Belville
and Mitchell’s Plain because that is where
the opportunities exist for them to make a living. Homeless people
perform a number
of valuable services in these areas – they
wash and guard cars, they recycle litter. Some also resort to
crime –
petty theft, muggings, sex work, drug dealing.
[33]
What causes homelessness? The parties agreed that
the causes are multi-faceted. The City emphasized general factors
beyond its control
– organized crime, national economic
hardship, inadequate mental health care, the prevalence of domestic
violence, and persistent
poverty and inequality. No doubt these all
contribute to people leaving or being forced to leave their homes to
live on the street.
None of them are directly within the City’s
power to address (although it has a role).
[34]
But the City’s own policies and practices
must also affect the extent and nature of homelessness. Most homeless
people live
on the streets because there is no better option
available to them. It is fundamentally the City’s
constitutional role to
provide better options. It is also the City’s
role to assist homeless people. It is also the City’s role –
which
it accepts – to undo the legacy of apartheid spatial
injustice. Part of the reason the City struggles to offer affordable
housing in the inner city is precisely because apartheid policies
forced Black and Coloured people to the peripheries.
[35]
The City has adopted what it calls a “holistic
and multi-faceted” approach to addressing homelessness. It has
a Street
People Programme Unit that is designed to reduce the number
of people living on the streets by reintegrating them into the
community.
The City says its approach has three “pillars”:
rehabilitation; reintegration and an immediate alternative to living
on the streets. Rehabilitation addresses drug addiction, and
treatment for mental or other illnesses. Reintegration focuses on
employment, reunification with families, assisting people to obtain
ID documents, and developing skills to enable people to lead
functional lives.
[36]
It is the third pillar that is at the centre of
this application – an alternative to living on the streets.
The City
provides funding to NGO-run shelters that provide a place
for homeless people to sleep. But the City also runs its own safe
spaces
to provide temporary accommodation for homeless people. The
City first opened the Culemborg Safe Space in the City Centre on 29
June 2018 with space for 230 people. By 2020, it had opened two more
– Culemborg II and Paint City in Belville. Collectively
they
can accommodate 700 people. The City plans to expand the safe spaces
and open a new one at the bottom of Ebenezer road for
a further 300
people. It has allocated R142 million over three years to expanding
and operating safe spaces. It estimates that
it spends R41 000
per occupant, per year.
[37]
The safe spaces include the following practical
amenities:
[37.1]
Beds and shelter. They are not “a housing
structure” but “more akin to a dormitory-type structure,
although each
person has their own personal space”. In
Culemborg I it appears that people sometimes sleep outdoors but
protected from rain.
[37.2]
Shared ablution facilities, including towels and
toiletries provided by the City. In addition to toilets, there are
bucket showers
and access to water. The sites are cleaned daily.
[37.3]
Two meals – breakfast and dinner – are
provided per day, but no cooking is allowed on the site because of
the risk posed
by fires.
[37.4]
Locker space for residents to store their goods.
[37.5]
24-hour support, security and medical assistance
is available.
[38]
The City also provides a range of social services
to people in safe spaces to help them to reintegrate into society:
[38.1]
The City provides job opportunities under the
expanded public works programme. It also links residents with other
job opportunities
and claims “an excellent success rate”.
[38.2]
It assists people to obtain identity documents,
including facilitating the funding for the applications.
[38.3]
It provides access to a substance abuse
rehabilitation programme. It seems undisputed that street people have
high levels of substance
abuse. The City claims its drug
rehabilitation has an 80% success rate.
[38.4]
The City offers development programmes geared for
reintegration. These include trauma therapy and family strengthening
programmes.
It also provides computer skills training, helps people
write their CVs, and apply for jobs. It even gives them appropriate
clothing
for, and transport to, job interviews.
[39]
The goal of the safe spaces is to be temporary
because the City wants to help people off the streets, not send them
back to the
streets. The hope is that the services they provide will
allow people to reintegrate with their families or find employment
that
will enable them to move off the streets.
[40]
These facilities are offered free of charge to any
person willing to take up the City’s offer and accept social
support. All
three are located near business districts. The two
Culemborg sites are in the CBD, and the Paint City site is near the
Belville
business district.
[41]
But there are strings attached.
[41.1]
Safe spaces are weapon free, drug free and alcohol
free. People are searched on entry. If people arrive intoxicated,
they are not
allowed entry until they are sober. The City explains
that these rules are essential to “protect the dignity and
health and
safety of all the persons utilising” the safe
spaces. Without them, there would be “social discord”
which would
negatively affect those trying to rehabilitate and
reintegrate.
[41.2]
Residents of safe spaces are either required or
encouraged to leave the safe spaces during the day. The ordinary rule
is that they
must leave between 8:00 and 17:00. But that rule is
flexible, and – as I detail later – the City has relaxed
it even
further for the Occupiers.
[41.3]
The accommodation is primarily divided by gender
for safety reasons. But some couples’ accommodation is also
available. The
City has guaranteed that couples’ accommodation
will be available for all the Occupiers if they are evicted.
[41.4]
Safe spaces are not meant to be permanent. For
those who use them voluntarily, they are ordinarily required to leave
after six months.
The purpose of the safe spaces is to provide a base
to enable street people to rehabilitate and reintegrate, not to
provide a permanent
home. The City has, again, been willing to modify
that rule for the Occupiers who choose to take up its offer of access
to safe
spaces.
[42]
The City’s approach should not be mistaken
as being designed solely to benefit homeless people – although
I have no
doubt that it is and that it does. The City is plain that
its aims are also to ensure that all its residents can use and enjoy
streets and other public places. They cannot do so – the City
claims – if those spaces are occupied by homeless people.
The
safe spaces are part of its plan to reduce the number of homeless
people living on the streets. But the City realises it can
only
achieve that goal by helping them find somewhere else to live.
[43]
In the year from July 2021 to June 2022, 1 813
people were helped off the streets and 2 799 people participated
in development
programmes at City-run safe spaces. The City offered
936 EPWP referrals and 566 referrals for social grants, identity
documents,
specialized care or substance abuse.
[44]
Independent NGOs have also supported the increased
use of safe spaces. The Occupiers provide a report prepared for the
Hope Exchange
which advocates for
more
safe spaces and refers to “the
current success of Safe Space[s]”. While I place limited value
on the Hope Exchange report
as it was prepared by students, not
experts, the Occupiers did not provide expert evidence to support
their contention that the
safe spaces were an inappropriate or
ineffective measure in helping homeless people off the streets.
[45]
In addition to lauding the benefits of its safe
spaces, the City argues that the ordinary Emergency Housing Programme
(
EHP
) that
it ordinarily offers when people are evicted is not suitable for the
Occupiers. It argues that the “holistic”
intervention it
offers is better suited to the needs of homeless people, than a house
in a temporary relocation area (
TRA
).
It offers three reasons.
[46]
The first (and best reason) is that TRAs are all
located far from the city centre; there are none in the CBD. But the
Occupiers
– like all street people living in the CBD –
depend on proximity to the CBD for their livelihoods. That is where
the
opportunities for them to earn a living exist, not in
Blikkiesdorp or Wolwerivier. Even if spaces were available in TRAs,
the City
contends the Occupiers could not live there and would return
to the CBD. The Occupiers do not dispute this – they seek other
temporary accommodation in the city centre.
[47]
Second, the City argues that the safe spaces are
targeted to assist homeless people to reintegrate and rehabilitate.
They come with
a range of support – from the material (food,
blankets and toiletries), to the developmental (job-finding, trauma
support,
identity documents, and substance abuse rehabilitation).
Assignment of a structure in a TRA comes with none of that support,
making
it less likely the homeless person will escape homelessness.
The basic point is that what is keeping many people homeless is not
just access to a house, but the ability to function effectively off
the streets.
[48]
Third, it argues that there is no space in its
existing TRAs and that it has no funds to construct new ones for the
Occupiers. It
claims the cost for each emergency housing opportunity
will be between R55 000 (for an 18m
2
structure) and R81 000 for a (30
m
2
structure),
assuming the City already owns the land. But that is not for land
located in the CBD. By contrast, the safe spaces –
in which the
City has already invested – are a far more efficient mechanism.
The numbers do not seem drastically different
– R55 000
for a TRA structure and R41 000 per year for a safe space. The
efficiency seems to lie in the proximity
to the CBD and the
additional services safe spaces provide.
## The Occupiers
The Occupiers
[49]
Who are the occupiers? This is a question of some
complexity.
[50]
Attached to the notice of motion is a list of 114
people who the City described as the First Respondent. They are all
the people
who the City had identified as living on the Properties.
There were 30 people living on Buitengracht, seven on FW De Klerk
Boulevard,
three at Foregate Square, 20 on Helen Suzman Boulevard, 44
on Strand Street, four by the Roggebaai gas turbine, and six at the
Mill Street bridge.
[51]
But homeless people are, understandably,
transient. Since the notice of motion was filed in December 2022,
people have moved onto
the Properties while others have left.
[52]
In their answering affidavit, the Occupiers –
who are represented by the Socio Economic Rights Institute of
South Africa
(
SERI
)
– provided the details of 54 people who were living on the
various properties, as well as some of their partners. Many of
them
also had partners or
family living with them.
[53]
I cannot recount all their stories in this
judgment. But I think it is important to recall some of them. They
explain how the Occupiers
became homeless, what their lives are like,
and what they want for their futures:
[53.1]
Mr Mquqa has been living on the streets for five
years. He had to leave his home because he lost his job and could not
afford rent.
He did not finish school because of abuse by his family.
He now lives on FW De Klerk Boulevard, where he has been since 2017.
He
explains that although the structure he lives in “is
constructed with salvaged wooden boards and plastic sheets” and
“does not boast the strength of a brick-and-mortar building, it
is my only home and holds profound significance for me.”
He
makes about R80 a day by assisting people to park their cars, and by
collecting recycling.
[53.2]
Kashifa Williams is 37. She used to live with her
family in Manenberg. She was “kicked out by her family”
and came to
the inner city to find work. She and her partner Leighton
Vlok live at the FW De Klerk Boulevard site. She makes a living
collecting
recycling and makes roughly R100 a day. She is willing to
move to the safe spaces but has concerns about their rules and
location.
[53.3]
Zeinab Sutria is 43 and lives on Buitengracht
Street with her partner, Niezaar Abdula. She moved there in January
2023. Ms Sutria
used to live in Manenburg, but came to the inner city
to find employment, without any luck. They survive off informal work
and
make R80-R100 per day. They support children who do not live with
them. They are not willing to move to the safe spaces because
they
would not be able to live together and would be locked out during the
day.
[53.4]
Denis Fortuin has lived at the Buitengracht site
since 2020. She was rendered homeless when her family home was sold.
She moved
to the inner city to try to find accommodation and
employment. She has applied for an RDP house but has not had any
feedback. She
lives with her partner Immanuel Adams. They do informal
work and make about R80 a day. She is reluctant to relocate to the
safe
spaces because she is worried about whether she will be able to
make a living.
[53.5]
Unathi Noyi used to live with his family. But he
became embroiled in activities that disrupted his schooling and
forced him to leave
his family. He used to live in a safe space, and
on the street in District 6 and now lives on the Strand Street site.
He earns
about R90 a day and has no problem relocating as long as he
can make a living and have safe and secure accommodation.
[53.6]
Sithembiso Kupiso also lives on the Strand Street
site. He ended on the street because he lost his job, could not pay
his mortgage,
and lost his house. He was left homeless. He moved to
the inner city to seek employment. He earns about R80 a day and would
be
willing to relocate if he could continue to earn a living.
[53.7]
Terisa Townsend is 41 and has been living in the
inner city since 2011. She makes just R30 a day. She used to live
with her family
but left when their relationship broke down. She
previously lived near a McDonalds, but was evicted and placed in Safe
Space 1.
She was forced to leave the safe space because of capacity
constraints and returned to the streets. She does not want to return
to the safe spaces because she fears again being forced to leave and
because she was poorly treated last time she was there.
[54]
Many of the Occupiers struggle with drug or
alcohol addiction. Most suffer from chronic illnesses. Some have
skills but no jobs.
Most make a living doing odd jobs in the City –
guarding or washing cars, collecting recycling or “skarreling”.
Some of them have been at the same site for years, others have moved
multiple times, either for their own reasons or because they
were
chased away, sometimes by the City’s officials. Some have
applied for housing from the City but have not received it.
[55]
As the examples above show, the Occupiers have
different attitudes to the safe spaces. In the answering affidavit,
several indicated
that they would be willing to go to the safe spaces
if the rules around access and/or partners were amended or relaxed.
Others
had had bad experiences or had heard negative reports from
those who had been to the safe spaces. Some did not want to give up
the comparative freedom they enjoy living on the pavements.
[56]
This is just a snapshot. As Mr Mquqa – the
deponent to the answering affidavit – put it: “Each of us
has experienced
a great deal more than we are able to say in this
affidavit. Each of us hopes for a great deal more than we have
experienced in
our lives so far.” They are stories of
suffering, setbacks and failure. But they are also stories of
perseverance in the
face of extreme obstacles, and of survival
against all odds.
[57]
In the replying affidavit, the City provided an
updated list of the Occupiers who were named in the answering
affidavit (it did
so as part of its further engagement with the
Occupiers that I describe below). The City engaged with 87 people in
total. The list
provides the person’s name, the names of those
they lived with, their employment, and their attitude to the City’s
offer of a safe space.
[58]
Some were amenable to relocating to the safe
spaces, others would be if the rules were altered, while some were
completely opposed.
The concerns about the safe spaces were generally
about their ability to work, whether they would be allowed to live
with their
partners, and concerns about the rules or conditions
either based on prior experience or what they had heard from others.
While
the 54 occupiers are the same in the answering affidavit and
the list provided in reply, there are differences in the description
of the partners, children and family members with whom that cohabit.
[59]
On 5 October 2023, shortly before the hearing, at
the Court’s request, the City conducted a further process where
it sought
to count the number of structures at each of the sites.
There were a total of 107 structures across the seven sites, ranging
from
one at Mill Street Bridge to 22 at Strand Street. The City
estimated there were 214 people occupying all seven sites.
[60]
At the hearing, the Occupiers produced a
“composite” list that included all the people who had
been mentioned in the
notice of motion, the answering affidavit, or
the replying affidavit. It has a total of 272 people. The list just
provides basic
details – name, age, which site they occupy –
and in which document they were mentioned.
[61]
Following the hearing, the City and SERI conducted
another engagement (more details to follow) that again sought to
determine how
many people were occupying the properties and,
particularly, how many Occupiers were elderly or disabled, how many
children were
present, and how many Occupiers were living with their
partners. There was some disagreement between the City and SERI about
the
numbers. But the following emerged:
[61.1]
There were 113 structures across the seven sites.
[61.2]
The City reported that there were 99 people on the
sites who engaged with the City, and a further four who refused to
engage. SERI
counted 125 people, including those not present.
Ultimately, it seems there were between 99 and 140 people living on
the sites.
[61.3]
Of the 99 the City engaged with, 37 accepted the
City’s offer of accommodation at the safe space (37%).
According to SERI,
64 were willing to move to the Safe Spaces out of
(at most) 140 (46%).
[61.4]
The City identified 14 couples. SERI identified a
further six couples, making a total of 20.
[61.5]
There was one person with a disability. The oldest
Occupier was 57 or 58 years’ old.
[61.6]
The City identified three minor children –
VD and ZD aged 5 and 2, and PA aged 14. SERI claimed there were a
further four
minor children, but further investigation by the City
revealed they had all moved elsewhere.
[62]
The Court is deeply appreciative of the work that
both the City and SERI did to identify the Occupiers. The information
cannot be
precise. The nature of the sites is that people move in and
out of them. There has also been a delay of six months from the time
of the latest report to the date of this judgment. The position may
now be very different. But the reports do give a sense of the
scale
of the problem, the demographics of the Occupiers, and their
attitudes towards the safe spaces.
[63]
There is a final issue to address in describing
the Occupiers – who represents them? For this purpose, there
are two groups
of Occupiers: those named in the answering affidavit;
and those not named. The Occupiers who are expressly named in the
answering
affidavits and who have filed confirmatory affidavits are
plainly represented by SERI. But SERI also initially claimed to
represent
all other unnamed Occupiers, and the answering affidavit
was purportedly filed on behalf of all the Occupiers. Is that
permissible?
[64]
When questioned, SERI properly explained that it
could only formally represent those Occupiers who had given it
express instructions.
It could not claim to represent, in the
ordinary sense, those Occupiers who had never instructed them, and
whose details they may
not even be aware of. However, it contended
that it still acted in the interests of
all
the occupiers whose fates are tied
together. As Ms Bhengu put it: “SERI considers itself under a
general ethical duty to seek
to protect the interests of as-yet
un-named and unidentified persons who may have come to live at one of
the seven sites”.
[65]
Public interest litigation is often messy.
Representing people who are vulnerable and disempowered is not easy.
While it was inaccurate
for SERI to say that it formally represented
unnamed Occupiers, I do not think it should be criticised. There was
no reason to
believe that the interests of its specific clients would
differ from the interests of the Occupiers as a whole. In my view,
SERI
eventually adopted the correct approach – it was on record
only for specific named Occupiers. But it made submissions in the
interests of all the Occupiers. It did so in the best tradition of
public interest litigation in this country which seeks to make
sure
that all people have a voice in litigation that concerns them.
### The Shape of the
Litigation
The Shape of the
Litigation
[66]
The
application to evict was launched in December 2022. On the City’s
version, people began occupying the seven properties
in April 2020,
largely as a result of the lockdown imposed during the Covid-19
pandemic.
[8]
The
City explains that it did not want to evict the Occupiers during
Covid-19, and so waited until the pandemic was over and the
various
restrictions had been lifted. It had previously offered all the
Occupiers it could identify a spot at a safe space. Some
accepted.
Others turned down the offer and remained.
[67]
The notice of motion in the eviction application
was not initially linked to the provision of alternative
accommodation; although
the founding affidavit made it clear that the
City believed the safe spaces were an adequate alternative. The
Occupiers initially
complained that the City sought their eviction
without any guarantee of even accommodation at the safe spaces. By
the hearing,
this issue had fallen away and the City accepted that
the Occupiers could only be evicted if it could provide them with
accommodation
at a safe space.
[68]
The Occupiers were initially unrepresented and the
matter was set down for hearing on 19 April 2023. By that time, the
Occupiers
(or at least some of them) had obtained legal
representation. The parties agreed to afford the Occupiers until 30
June 2023 to
file their answering papers.
[69]
The answering papers oppose the eviction on two
broad grounds. First, the Occupiers allege the City had not
meaningfully engaged.
Second, they argued that the safe spaces were
not suitable alternative accommodation because of the rules they
impose, and their
failure to cater for families and couples.
[70]
The Occupiers also, rightly, complain that while
this application was pending, the City attempted to demolish some of
their homes.
On 16 May 2023, the City’s officials demolished
about 15 structures at the FW De Klerk site. The City initially
denied the
demolition, then admitted it and claimed it was permitted
under a court order. However, the City eventually offered R1 700
to each affected occupier as recompense and undertook that no further
demolitions would be conducted at the Properties while this
application was pending. It was improper (and probably unlawful) for
the City to unilaterally demolish the structures while seeking
an
eviction order. The City appears to have, grudgingly, admitted its
error.
[71]
The Occupiers also filed a counter-application
challenging the constitutionality of certain provisions of the City’s
Streets,
Public Places and Prevention of Noise Nuisance By-Law. The
City had relied on the By-Law as one of the bases on which the
Occupiers’
occupation of the Properties was unlawful. The
Occupiers argued that the provisions of the By-Law criminalized
homelessness and
permitted eviction contrary to s 26(3). The City
abandoned reliance on the By-Law and the Occupiers did not persist
with their
counter-application. Part of the reason is that there was
a separate challenge to the constitutionality of the By-Law on
similar
grounds.
[72]
As I narrated earlier, the parties had also
engaged between the filing of the answering and replying affidavits.
More on that and
whether it was adequate later.
[73]
That was the shape of the litigation when it was
allocated to me. I must next explain the steps I took, beyond merely
hearing the
application.
[74]
A
court’s role in an eviction application is not the same as its
role in other civil litigation. It has an additional duty
to ensure
it has all the information it needs to satisfy itself that an
eviction will be just and equitable. As the Constitutional
Court
explained in
PE
Municipality
,
courts are “entitled to go beyond the facts established in the
papers before it” particularly where the evidence “leaves
important questions of fact obscure, contested or uncertain”.
[9]
When
necessary, a court must engage in “active judicial management
according to equitable principles of an ongoing, stressful
and
law governed social process”.
[10]
[75]
But
there are limits on how far a court can legitimately go. “A
more active role in managing the litigation does not permit
the judge
to enter the arena or take over the running of the litigation.”
[11]
While
a court asked to evict people can ask for more information and can
construct remedies that ensure evictions are executed only
when
appropriate, it cannot redefine the issues between the parties.
[12]
[76]
This will sometimes be a tightrope that judges
must walk with care: Intervening enough to ensure they can do justice
in the case,
but not so much that they become an active participant
in the litigation. In this case, I intervened on two occasions.
[77]
I held a meeting with the legal representatives
for the parties on 3 October 2023, a week before the hearing. At the
meeting, I
raised questions about issues that were “obscure,
contested or uncertain” on the papers. I sought clarity either
immediately,
or through affidavits the parties were invited to file
before the hearing. The issues on which I sought the parties’
assistance
were:
[77.1]
On whose behalf the SERI was acting. As I
mentioned earlier, SERI claimed to be acting on behalf of both the
named Occupiers, and
the unnamed Occupiers.
[77.2]
The details of the persons occupying the
properties. Having considered the papers, there was not only a lack
of clarity, but also
an inconsistency in the information provided by
the City and the Occupiers.
[77.3]
The availability of couples’ accommodation
at the safe spaces.
[77.4]
Whether the City would permit Occupiers who were
evicted and decided to move to a safe space to stay there beyond six
months and
until they found alternative accommodation.
[78]
Both the City and the Occupiers filed affidavits
detailing their responses. I deal with them thematically when I reach
those questions.
[79]
After the second day of hearing, I held a meeting
with counsel for the parties. I enquired whether the parties would be
amenable
to further engagement on the make up of the Occupiers, and
the operation and availability of the safe spaces. There seemed to be
a disconnect between the City’s explanation to the Court about
what the safe spaces entailed, and the Occupiers’ understanding
of what relocation to a safe space meant. The City’s position
had also shifted to guarantee couple’s accommodation
and stays
beyond six months. As a result it was very difficult to predict how
many people were likely to take up the offer of safe
space if they
were evicted. There was also uncertainty about the number of couples,
children, elderly and disabled people, and
the capacity of the City
to accommodate them.
[80]
The parties engaged in correspondence about my
suggestion subsequent to the hearing. There was a tension between
them about the
ambit and purpose of further engagement. The City was
willing to engage on a defined basis, but worried about re opening
the
litigation, or allowing the Occupiers to raise new complaints.
The Occupiers saw it as an opportunity for a more open engagement
about all the options that could be made available to the Occupiers,
and the suitability of the safe spaces.
[81]
Following the exchange of correspondence which was
provided to the Court, I issued an order on 20 October 2023 that
reflected what
the parties had agreed on. It required the parties to
engage on:
[81.1]
Ascertaining the total number of persons occupying
the subject properties who intend taking up the City’s offer of
accommodation
at the safe spaces;
[81.2]
Ascertaining the number of persons who require
couples’ accommodation at the safe spaces;
[81.3]
Determining the number of elderly persons and
disabled persons, and whether the safe spaces pose any reasonable
constraints to them
accepting the offer of alternative accommodation;
and
[81.4]
Determining whether there are any more minor
children on the subject sites (in addition to those identified in the
affidavits filed
to date) and to obtain full details of the minor
children.
[82]
It also required the City’s officials to be
available to engage with the Occupiers on: (a) what is offered at the
safe spaces;
(b) the rules applicable at the safe spaces; and (c) the
details of the operation of the safe spaces. The order then provided
a
timeline for the filing of further affidavits by the parties on the
results of their engagement. Finally, paragraph 9 of the order
expressly stated that it did not preclude the parties from engaging
on other issues, and reporting to the Court on the outcome
of those
engagements if they deemed it appropriate.
[83]
The City filed a report, to which SERI responded,
and to which the City filed a reply. I deal with the contents where
they are relevant.
Overall, the exercise elicited significant useful
information.
[84]
I do not think I exceeded my powers in the manner
I engaged with the parties. I needed clarity on certain issues in
order to determine
whether eviction was just and equitable and, if
so, what order I should make. This is not an ordinary eviction. There
was little
to guide me on how to manage the eviction of a transient
group of people who were currently homeless. This was a challenge not
only for the court, but for the parties too. I needed more
information. At the same time, I have been very careful not to
introduce
new issues on either side – not to give the City new
bases to justify eviction, and not to raise new defences for the
Occupiers.
Rather I sought clarity on the parties’ positions,
or better and updated evidence that was relevant to the issues as
they
were already defined by the parties.
[85]
In my view, it would not have been useful to
refuse eviction because, for example, the City had not provided
sufficient information
about the number of children, elderly or
disabled people. While in an “ordinary” eviction
application where the occupiers
are stable over time, it could and
should provide that information in its founding papers, the City
faced legitimate difficulties
in obtaining that information for these
Occupiers. So did the Occupiers’ own legal representatives.
Similarly, it was not
the City’s fault that it could not
predict how many Occupiers would take up its offer for safe spaces if
they were evicted.
# eviction
eviction
[86]
Is an eviction order just and equitable in these
circumstances? To answer that primary question, I consider the
following topics:
[86.1]
The basic requirements for eviction are met;
[86.2]
The City has meaningfully engaged with the
Occupiers;
[86.3]
The City was not obliged to offer housing under
the Emergency Housing Programme;
[86.4]
The safe spaces constitute suitable alternative
accommodation;
[86.5]
In all the circumstances, eviction is just and
equitable; and
[86.6]
The timing and details of the eviction order.
## The Basic Requirements
for Eviction
The Basic Requirements
for Eviction
[87]
The starting point is s 26(3) of the Constitution
which prohibits evictions without an order of court made after
considering all
relevant circumstances. Parliament has enacted
legislation to give effect to s 26(3) – PIE.
[88]
Prior
to the Constitution and PIE, eviction was characterized by abuse,
paid no heed to the impact on those evicted, and was generally
used
as a tool to enforce White domination and control. The “manifest
objective” of PIE is “overcoming [those]
abuses and
ensuring that evictions in future took place in a manner consistent
with the values of the new constitutional dispensation.”
[13]
[89]
PIE
creates two distinct mechanisms for eviction. Section 4 permits
evictions by the owner or person in charge of a property. Section
6
permits eviction at the instance of an organ of state, even if it is
not the owner of the property. The basic requirements are
the same –
the occupier must occupy the property unlawfully, and the eviction
must be just and equitable. And the procedures
for eviction under
both sections are the same.
[14]
But
there are differences:
[89.1]
An
organ of state can only apply for eviction under s 6 if its consent
is required for occupying the property, or “it is in
the public
interest to grant such an order”.
[15]
Public
interest “includes the interest of the health and safety of
those occupying the land and the public in general.”
[16]
There
is no similar requirement under s 4.
[89.2]
Unlike s 4, s 6 specifically lists factors a court
must consider in deciding whether eviction is just and equitable:
“(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.”
[90]
This application was brought under both s 4 and s
6. The City claims that both thresholds are met. Given the approach I
take to
the case, nothing turns on whether the application is
evaluated under s 4 or s 6. I accept that the City has brought this
application
not only to vindicate its rights as owner, but also in
the public interest, and to vindicate the rights of members of the
public
who use the CBD.
[91]
There are two central factors a court must almost
invariably consider in an eviction application by an organ of state,
and that
take centre stage in this case. I consider each in more
detail below, but mention them briefly now:
[91.1]
When a
municipality is seeking the eviction, a court will be reluctant to
grant an eviction if the municipality has not meaningfully
engaged
with the occupiers.
[17]
Meaningful
engagement is meant to avoid the need for eviction by finding
alternatives. As Yacoob J explained in
Olivia
Road
:
“Engagement has the potential to contribute towards the
resolution of disputes and to increased understanding and sympathetic
care if both sides are willing to participate in the process.”
[18]
[91.2]
Generally,
a court will not grant an order of eviction if there is a risk that
the order of eviction will render the occupiers homeless.
That is not
an absolute rule – the Supreme Court of Appeal put it this way:
“an eviction order in circumstances where
no alternative
accommodation is provided is far less likely to be just and equitable
than one that makes careful provision for
alternative housing
.
”
[19]
Before
it grants an eviction, a court must know where the evictees will
live, and will very rarely grant the eviction if no suitable
alternative accommodation is available.
[92]
This case is somewhat unusual because the City
seeks to evict people who are already homeless. Yet it was common
cause that this
was the appropriate legal route for the City to
follow. I agree, but should briefly explain why.
[93]
Section 26(3) whenever a person is evicted from a
“home”. To give effect to that, PIE defines eviction
widely as “to
deprive a person of occupation of a building or
structure, or the land on which such building or structure is
erected, against
his or her will”. It gives a similarly broad
meaning to “building or structure”, so that the term
“includes
any hut, shack, tent or similar structure or any
other form of temporary or permanent dwelling or shelter”.
[94]
The
Occupiers shelters, while rudimentary, were undoubtedly their homes.
They saw them as their homes. They are also “structures”
as defined in PIE. While all the parties referred to the Occupiers as
“homeless” that is, in some sense, inaccurate;
they do
have homes. Depriving them of occupation of their homes, however
basic, constitutes an eviction.
[20]
[95]
The City was right to recognize that the
consequence of removing the Occupiers from its land would be an
eviction and that it therefore
required an eviction order under PIE.
[96]
The parties also accepted that PIE’s
procedural requirements for an eviction have been met. There was also
no argument from
the Occupiers that they are occupying the Properties
lawfully. They accept they are unlawful occupiers as defined by PIE.
The precise
reason their occupation is unlawful does not seem to
matter much. They do not have the City’s consent to occupy.
Their occupation
is also contrary to the Roads Ordinance 19 of 1976.
[97]
The real debate was whether eviction as just and
equitable in light of the two considerations I mentioned above: was
there meaningful
engagement, and will there be suitable alternative
accommodation?
###
### Did the City Meaningfully
Engage?
Did the City Meaningfully
Engage?
[98]
The
requirement of meaningful engagement prior to an eviction was birthed
in
Olivia
Road
.
[21]
The
case did not concern eviction under PIE, but an application under the
National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act
103 of 1977
to remove the occupants on the basis that the building they occupied
was unsafe. Yacoob J held that the Constitution
“obliges every
municipality to engage meaningfully with people who would become
homeless because it evicts them.”
[22]
[99]
But
the Court was specific about what meaningful engagement requires. It
did not require a municipality
“
to
make provision for housing beyond the extent to which available
resources allow. As long as the response of the municipality
in the
engagement process is reasonable, that response complies with section
26(2)” of the Constitution.
[23]
At one
point, the Court held that there must either be meaningful engagement
“
or,
at least, that the municipality has made reasonable efforts towards
meaningful engagement.”
[24]
[100]
In
Joe
Slovo
,
Ngcobo J (as he then was) emphasized that meaningful engagement must
be conducted “in good faith and with a willingness
to
listen and, where possible, to accommodate one another.”
[25]
Still,
the decision of what to offer those facing eviction “lies with
the government” as long as it is “informed
by the
concerns raised by the residents during the process of
engagement.”
[26]
[101]
Joe Slovo
is an
interesting example. The case produced multiple judgments, with none
commanding a clear majority. All of them saw defects
in the
engagement process. But none of them refused eviction as a result.
[101.1]
Yacoob
J held that “the state could and should have been more alive to
the human factor and that more intensive consultation
could have
prevented the impasse that had resulted”.
[27]
And he
held that “[i]t would have been ideal for the state to have
engaged individually and carefully with each of the thousands
of the
families involved.”
[28]
But
ultimately, he concluded meaningful engagement “involves
realism and practicality. There has been reasonable engagement.”
[29]
[101.2]
Similarly,
O’Regan J held that despite “the failure to have a
coherent and meaningful strategy of engagement”
the state was
entitled to an eviction order.
[30]
The
engagement, she held, had “not been coherent or comprehensive
and that at times it has been misleading”.
[31]
But
still, she concluded that given the size and novelty of the problem
it was unsurprising there were deficiencies in the engagement
process. The state
had
engaged,
even if the engagement was imperfect.
[32]
[102]
Ordinarily
the topic of meaningful engagement is relatively straightforward –
what are the options to avoid eviction. That
normally involves either
allowing the occupiers to stay where they are, or figuring out what
alternative accommodation is available.
In
Saratoga
Avenue
the
Constitutional Court left open the question whether meaningful
engagement “would entitle all evictees to contest the quality
of temporary accommodation being provided to them”.
[33]
[103]
In light of these cases, what exactly does
meaningful engagement require? There is no comprehensive definition,
and I do not intend
to provide one. But in my view it must include at
least the following elements which are relevant in this case:
[103.1]
The municipality must inform the occupiers about
the consequences of eviction, what options are available to them if
they are evicted,
including what the municipality can or must do to
assist them.
[103.2]
The municipality must also afford the occupiers an
opportunity to express their views about those options, and to
suggest alternatives.
[103.3]
The municipality must listen to those opinions and
see if it is possible to accommodate the concerns.
[103.4]
Both parties must engage in good faith with the
hope of reaching an agreed solution. They must be open to alternative
proposals
and compromises.
[103.5]
Meaningful engagement may require some
back-and-forth; it should be more than simply an offer which
occupiers must take or leave.
[103.6]
Engagement can happen individually, or at a
collective level if the municipality is satisfied that the occupiers
have properly chosen
people to engage on their behalf.
[104]
Having said all that, there are also limits on
what meaningful engagement can require. Courts must not impose a
process that is
so burdensome it unduly inhibits a municipality from
legitimately pursuing the eviction of those unlawfully occupying its
land.
With that in mind, there are two important restrictions on the
scope of meaningful engagement:
[104.1]
While an agreed resolution is ideal,
meaningful
engagement does not require agreement
.
An eviction can be granted even though the occupiers remain
dissatisfied with the options the municipality has presented.
[104.2]
Meaningful engagement is about resolving a
specific situation where eviction is threatened. It is not a
mechanism to resolve broader
policy disputes. A municipality conducts
meaningful engagement within its existing policy framework and
budget. It is not required,
in order to show it has meaningfully
engaged, to second-guess its policies or its budget each time it
seeks to evict people.
[105]
What was the nature of the engagement in this
case, and did it meet these requirements? There were three phases of
engagement.
[106]
First
, before it
brought the application the City alleges it interacted with the
Occupiers on multiple occasions, making offers of social
assistance
and alternative accommodation. Some of the occupiers accepted those
offers; others did not. The City argues that its
endeavours to engage
were “entirely dependent on the co-operation of the individuals
concerned”. The high watermark
of the interaction was
collecting information about the Occupiers, and making offers of
alternative accommodation.
[107]
At this stage, the Occupiers were neither
represented, nor organized. There was no person or group that could
speak on behalf of
the Occupiers. The City could only interact with
them individually.
[108]
The Occupiers contend that the pre-litigation
“engagement” consisted primarily of the City’s law
enforcement fining
them, demolishing their homes, and chasing them
from one place to the next. At most, the Occupiers say the City
conducted a “census”
of the Occupiers.
[109]
The
second
phase occurred after the Occupiers filed their
answering affidavit, and before the City filed its reply. The
engagement was specifically
prompted by the Occupiers’
allegation that the City had failed to meaningfully engage. While not
admitting any shortcomings,
the City sought to do more. Following an
exchange of correspondence between the parties’ attorneys, the
engagement was agreed
to between the parties and took place between
16 and 19 August 2023.
[110]
The City’s version is that it engaged all
the named respondents it could locate. It sought information about
each person,
particularly: whether they had a partner, whether they
worked after closing hours, whether they understood the safe spaces’
rules (a copy of which was provided) and whether they had concerns
about only being able to stay there for six months. As I set
out
above, the process allowed it to provide a better statement of the
number of respondents, their circumstances, and what the
consequences
of eviction would be.
[111]
In the process, the City explained to the various
Occupiers that: (a) they could return to the Safe Spaces after hours
if they were
working; (b) there was some provision for couples to
live together; and (c) their stay would not be automatically
terminated after
six months. The Occupiers’ attorneys were
present throughout the engagement.
[112]
The City did not engage with the Occupiers about
alternatives to the safe space. It had already taken a decision that
the only offer
of alternative accommodation it could make was for the
safe spaces. Its engagement was about the details of that offer, and
seeking
to understand the Occupiers’ possible concerns with
that offer.
[113]
But the City did change its position as a result
of the engagement. It noted the concerns about the lockout times and
engaged with
the management of the safe spaces to emphasise that the
rule had to be flexibly and reasonably enforced. It made clear that,
while
the default rule was that people would vacate after six months,
if they had not found an alternative place to stay “
they
will remain at the Safe Space
”
subject
to ongoing assessment. It also recognized the need for couples’
accommodation, although it did not (at this stage)
commit to
providing it for all who needed it.
[114]
The Occupiers acknowledge that this second
engagement was a step in the right direction. But they still
criticize it as “nothing
but a box ticking exercise”.
They focus on the limited utility of seeking to ascertain the
Occupiers’ personal details
when those could have been obtained
from the Occupiers’ attorneys. They also say that the
engagement had a “pre-determined
outcome” and that the
City “has never been prepared to seriously listen to the
occupiers’ concerns and needs
and to build the trust necessary
to find a workable solution”.
[115]
The
final
phase of engagement occurred after the hearing in
line with the order I issued on 20 October 2023. The City again
engaged with each
of the persons present on the seven Properties,
trying to produce a more reliable list of the people occupying the
sites. It also
obtained more information about people with
disabilities, elderly people, children, and those needing couples’
accommodation.
It discussed the rules of the safe spaces with the
Occupiers – now including all the concessions it had made
through the
litigation – and answered any questions. Depending
on whose numbers were used, either 37 of 99, or 67 of 140 people
accepted
the City’s offers of accommodation at safe spaces. The
City also allowed both the Occupiers and their attorneys to view Safe
Space 1.
[116]
However, the City did not regard this as an
opportunity to re-open issues that had been addressed in the
litigation or to re-argue
whether the safe spaces were suitable
alternative accommodation. The purpose was limited to obtaining a
better sense of who occupied
the properties and engaging with the
occupiers about what moving to the safe spaces would entail so they
could decide whether to
accept the offer.
[117]
The Occupiers’ view, after this engagement,
was that it had “yielded partial success”. But their
objection remained
that meaningful engagement was “meant to be
a two-way process where both parties actively participate in sharing
ideas and
understanding”. It complained that the City had still
taken too narrow an approach to the engagement, that it was required
to seek “mutually acceptable solutions”, and that “both
parties should buy into the solutions even if they have
to
compromise”.
[118]
I conclude that, while imperfect, the City did
meet its obligation to meaningfully engage with the Occupiers. There
are four factors
that drive me to that conclusion.
[119]
First
, as I
foreshadowed above, it is important to be clear about what the
purpose of meaningful engagement is, and what it is not. The
purpose
is to identify alternatives to eviction for those occupiers. That
could include avoiding relocation altogether, or avoiding
eviction
because the occupiers are willing to accept an offer of alternative
accommodation. The goal is to discuss available options,
and see if
there is something that can work for both parties.
[120]
The purpose is
not
to challenge the municipality’s budget or
policy decisions. When it meaningfully engages with occupiers, a
municipality does
so within those constraints. Occupiers are free to
attack the legality and constitutionality of a municipality’s
policies
that may not provide for what they think is a reasonable
alternative. But a municipality is not required to enter into those
types
of discussions as part of the meaningful engagement prior to
eviction.
[121]
Meaningful engagement is also not required to find
“mutually acceptable solutions”. That is obviously the
ideal, and
parties should be open to the compromise and agreement.
But engagement that fails to reach that ideal outcome can still be
meaningful
and reasonable. If a municipality gathers all the
necessary information about occupiers, provides them with all the
options, listens
to their concerns, and responds to them, then it has
meaningfully engaged, whether or not the occupiers like the responses
and
the outcomes.
[122]
Second
, if there
had been no further engagement after the City filed this application,
I may have found that there was not sufficient
engagement. But there
was extensive post-application engagement. The first was prompted
entirely by the City and the second by
this Court.
[123]
To my mind, the issue for a court considering
eviction is not whether there had been meaningful engagement before
the litigation
is launched, but whether it had occurred by the time
it grants the eviction order. The purpose of requiring meaningful
engagement
is not to offer a “defence” to eviction, but
to ensure that occupiers are treated with dignity and agency, that
there
has been an attempt to avoid eviction, and that the parties
have explored other plausible options.
[124]
That should occur as early as possible and ideally
before the case is launched. But if it happens later and still
fulfills the purpose,
then the delay is not a basis to refuse
eviction. In
Olivia Road
the
engagement happened only as a result of an order the Constitutional
Court granted after hearing the matter.
[125]
Third
, this is a
novel and particularly difficult context for engagement. In most
other evictions, the occupiers are fixed not transient,
and they are
often organized. That makes engagement far easier as the municipality
knows with certainty with whom it is dealing,
and can engage
collectively rather than individually.
[126]
That was not the case here. The Occupiers have
never been organized. Before they were represented it was impossible
for the City
to engage them collectively. Yet individual engagement
was, in these circumstances, unlikely to be particularly fruitful. My
finding
about what was reasonable in these circumstances may not
apply in different circumstances where occupiers are more permanent
and
organised.
[127]
Fourth
, the City
clearly listened to the Occupiers. It has altered its stance based on
their complaints about the safe spaces’ rules.
It has relaxed
rules on lock out and on the six-month residency rule. It has
promised there will be couples’ accommodation
for all who need
it. It has not closed its ears to the Occupiers complaints – it
listened and responded.
[128]
It is true that it has not shifted on the basic
position that safe spaces are suitable alternative accommodation. But
it was not
required to. It was entitled to make an offer and then
defend that offer as reasonable alternative accommodation. If the
safe spaces
are reasonable alternative accommodation, then the City
can hardly be criticized for not offering an alternative as part of
the
meaningful engagement process. Any workable alternative in the
City centre would require radical changes to the City’s
policies
and budget – neither of which is a requisite part of
meaningful engagement.
[129]
In sum
, the
engagement was not perfect. The City can probably learn lessons from
this process and engage more effectively and respectively
in similar
situations in the future. It should ideally do what it had achieved
by the end of the litigation before launching. But
it was good
enough. The City informed the Occupiers what options were available,
listened to their concerns about the alternative
accommodation, and
responded to those concerns. The failure to reach agreement, and the
failure to offer different alternative
accommodation does not mean
the engagement was not meaningful.
### Was it Permissible to
Offer Safe Spaces instead of TRAs?
Was it Permissible to
Offer Safe Spaces instead of TRAs?
[130]
The
Occupiers argue that the City wrongly did not offer the Occupiers
accommodation in TRAs built in terms of the Emergency Housing
Programme. The Emergency Housing Programme is part of the National
Housing Code, which was adopted under the
Housing Act 107 of 1997
. It
provides for funding for municipalities who need to offer emergency
housing which used to include large scale evictions.
[34]
In
practice municipalities have established semi-permanent TRAs under
this programme where people who are evicted are often offered
alternative accommodation.
[131]
The
argument is that what the Occupiers really want is a house of their
own, not temporary shelter in Safe Spaces. As I understood
it, the
argument was not that the City was obliged to comply with the
provisions for emergency housing under the National Housing
Code in
the sense that it was legally precluded from offering anything else.
That argument would be inconsistent with the Constitutional
Court’s
holding in
Dladla
[35]
which
I discuss below. It would also seem to me to be inconsistent with the
underlying constitutional obligation to act reasonably.
The Emergency
HP sets a baseline or standard that can be accepted as reasonable
unless and until it is challenged. It does not
preclude other
measures that are also reasonable.
[132]
Rather, the Occupiers contended that the offer of
places in the Safe Spaces alone was not reasonable because the City
had not explained
why the Occupiers could not be accommodated in
houses built in terms of the EHP.
[133]
The City’s answer was that accommodating the
Occupiers in TRAs was neither possible nor desirable. The City
argued, first,
that there were no spaces available in the TRAs. This
on its own is not a compelling answer; an eviction could always be
delayed
until those spaces became available as courts often do.
[134]
But
the City’s other answer is compelling. Accommodation under the
EHP is not desirable for these occupiers because TRAs are
far from
the CBD and employment, and offer none of the additional material or
developmental services available at the Safe Spaces.
There are no
TRAs in the inner City, the City does not plan to build any, and does
not have the resources to do so. The City –
following the
warning in
Blue
Moonlight
[36]
–
provided
details of its available funds to show why it could not provide
temporary accommodation in the CBD other than the safe
spaces.
[135]
The
City’s policy of not providing “ordinary”
alternative accommodation in the inner City was recently upheld
by
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Commando
.
[37]
A
group of people who faced eviction from Woodstock challenged the
reasonableness of the City’s offer of alternative accommodation
at Wolwerivier. The Supreme Court of Appeal reversed a decision of
this Court
[38]
that
the offer and the City’s underlying policy was unreasonable.
Mabindla-Boqwana JA held: “The fact that no provision
is made
for … emergency housing needs in the inner city, does not
render the choices made by the City irrational or unreasonable.”
[39]
[136]
The Occupiers’ position is somewhat
ambiguous. On the one hand they claim they just want to be offered a
place in a TRA. But
the deponent to the answering affidavit makes it
clear that what they really want is “
well-located
affordable housing”. But that is simply not
on the table. The Occupiers have not directly attacked the City’s
policy
of not offering temporary EHP housing in the inner city, and I
would in any event be bound by the judgment in
Commando
that holds it is not obliged to do so.
[137]
The question is whether the safe spaces are
suitable alternative accommodation or not. That must obviously be
assessed while considering
what else might be available. But the only
other option any of the parties identified is TRAs under the EHP that
are far from the
City centre and which the Occupiers themselves
accept would not meet their needs.
[138]
Even if it was offered, the Occupiers would be
unlikely to remain so far from the CBD. They would have no choice but
to return,
still with no accommodation other than on the pavements.
That outcome would serve nobody. The City’s goal of offering
the
safe spaces is to avoid that cycle. They were entitled to make
that offer. The question is whether it was reasonable.
### Are the Safe Spaces
Reasonable Alternative Accommodation?
Are the Safe Spaces
Reasonable Alternative Accommodation?
[139]
The City meaningfully engaged, and is not bound to
offer only housing under the EHP. But is the offer that it made –
Safe
Space 1 in Culemborg – reasonable? That question raises
the following subsidiary issues:
[139.1]
What is he standard of adequate alternative
accommodation?
[139.2]
Is the standard different for people who are
already homeless?
[139.3]
Is it permissible for the occupiers to challenge
the physical infrastructure of the safe spaces?
[139.4]
What did the Constitutional Court decide in
Dladla
?
[139.5]
Are the Occupiers’ complaints about the
rules imposed at the safe spaces valid?
#### Adequate Alternative
Accommodation
Adequate Alternative
Accommodation
[140]
Our courts consistently require “suitable”
or “adequate” alternative accommodation as a condition
for eviction
of people who face the risk of homelessness. But what
makes alternative accommodation “adequate”?
[141]
The
first point to make is that what is adequate accommodation extends
beyond merely the physical attributes of the structure. As
the
International Committee on Economic, Cultural and Social Rights has
held, the right to adequate housing should not be equated
with the
“shelter provided by merely having a roof over one’s head
… . Rather it should be seen as the right
to live somewhere in
security, peace and dignity.”
[40]
The
consequence is that what is adequate has a range of elements,
including security of tenure, availability of services, habitability,
accessibility and location.
[41]
[142]
The
second point is that there is a difference between temporary and
permanent accommodation. “[E]mergency accommodation by
its very
nature will invariably fall short of the standards reasonably
expected of permanent housing accommodation”.
[42]
The
consequence is that “those who need to occupy such
accommodation must accept less than what would ordinarily be
acceptable.”
While that may seem harsh, it must be “seen
against the realities imposed by the vast scale of the housing
backlogs with
which the state, in general, and the City, in
particular, are having to engage.”
[43]
[143]
The
third is that suitable alternative accommodation need not be
accommodation that occupiers accept. Occupiers “cannot delay
their eviction each time by stating that they find the alternative
accommodation offered by the City unsuitable.”
[44]
[144]
The fourth is this: what is suitable is not
absolute, but variable. A question which has troubled me is whether,
if this Court concludes
that the safe spaces are adequate alternative
accommodation, will that be true for all evictions, or only evictions
of similarly
situated homeless persons? Put differently, if someone
was evicted from established accommodation, would it be reasonable to
offer
that person a place in a safe space? And would that be the
necessary consequence of my judgment if I granted the eviction?
[145]
I do not read the case law to impose any universal
standard for what constitutes adequate alternative accommodation.
What a court
finds is reasonable for one category of persons is not
necessarily reasonable for all other categories. To give some obvious
examples
– accommodation that is reasonable for a physically
abled person may not be reasonable for a person with disabilities;
accommodation
that is far from any schools may be reasonable for
persons with no children, but unreasonable for those with children.
[146]
That does not mean that courts must re-evaluate
from scratch the reasonableness of alternative accommodation offers
in each and
every case. That would be unworkable. Accommodation that
has been held to be reasonable in one case will be reasonable in
other
similar cases
.
And accommodation that meets the statutory standards in the Housing
Code will ordinarily be reasonable absent a challenge to that
Code or
the policy giving effect to it.
[147]
What is reasonable will depend on occupiers’
needs, and municipalities’ means. A key question may be whether
it is better
than their current accommodation. The City’s case
is that, for a person is living on the street, giving them access to
a
safe space improves their conditions of living. That will not be
the case for a person who currently occupies a formal home, and
who
does not face the particular challenges that homeless people face.
But the question for me is not whether safe spaces are adequate
alternative accommodation for all evictions, or even for all homeless
people in all circumstances. The question is whether it is
adequate
alternative accommodation for homeless people like the Occupiers
living in the City centre of Cape Town.
[148]
The unusual feature of this case is that,
ordinarily, the requirement to provide alternative accommodation on
eviction exists because
of the risk the occupiers will
become
homeless.
What then is the role of alternative accommodation when the people
evicted are already homeless? To my mind, it must be
to improve their
situation and seek – as best as the City can – to get
them on the path to being housed. It need not
be to immediately
provide them with permanent or even semi-permanent accommodation
which is unlikely to assist them to off the
streets.
[149]
I say all this because I wish to emphasise the
limits of this judgment. I ultimately conclude that the safe spaces
are suitable
alternative accommodation for these Occupiers. It
follows that it will likely also be adequate alternative
accommodation for others
that find themselves in similarly desperate
circumstances. It does not follow that safe spaces are suitable
alternative accommodation
for all occupiers in all circumstances.
#### The Physical Conditions
at the Safe Spaces
The Physical Conditions
at the Safe Spaces
[150]
In their heads of argument, the Occupiers did not
attack the quality of the accommodation offered at the safe spaces.
They did not,
for example, argue that it offered insufficient
protection from the elements. The attack was limited to the rules
imposed at the
safe spaces, not the amenities.
[151]
In oral argument, Mr Brickhill sought to argue
that the Safe Spaces were not adequate because they did not provide
adequate physical
shelter. The source for this in the pleadings was a
throwaway remark in the answering affidavit where Mr Mquqa said that,
based
on photographs attached to his affidavit, “the safe
spaces is (sic) nothing more than a roof for individuals to sleep
overnight”.
But the details of this complaint are never
expanded on. And the Occupiers do not identify the physical
conditions at the Safe
Spaces as the reason they did not want to
return there, or did not want to take up the City’s current
offer. It was not stated
as a defence to the eviction.
[152]
Instead, the gravamen of the complaint was always
about the rules, not the conditions. Mr Mquqa stated that “the
safe spaces
are worse than the places that we currently occupy
because of the rules imposed
that infringe our constitutional rights”.
[153]
In the engagement that followed my order of 20
October 2023, the Occupiers and their attorneys visited Safe Space 1.
In the affidavit
they filed following that engagement, they complain
about the conditions there. In particular, they object that the
occupants are
required to sleep under “carport-like structures”
that are open to the elements on the side. They contend that in poor
weather, this offers less protection than their current structures.
[154]
The City does not dispute the accuracy of this
version. Instead, it maintains that it would be inappropriate to
consider an issue
raised only after the hearing. They accuse the
Occupiers of seeking to make out an “entirely new case”.
[155]
When they filed their answering affidavit, the
Occupiers were legally represented by attorneys with experience in
eviction litigation.
Many of the represented Occupiers had previously
lived in the safe spaces and were familiar with the conditions. Yet
they did not
raise it plainly as a concern for why the safe spaces
were not an adequate alternative. It was properly put in dispute for
the
first time at the hearing. The City was therefore denied a proper
opportunity to address the issue, and the Court was denied a full
set
of facts and the benefit of legal argument on the question.
[156]
I am not prepared to decide the issue on a basis
that was not properly and fully before me. In any event, I am
satisfied that, notwithstanding
the rudimentary nature of the
accommodation at Safe Space 1, it is not so deficient that they
cannot constitute adequate
temporary
accommodation.
#### The
Law inDladla
The
Law in
Dladla
[157]
It is necessary to carefully consider the
Constitutional Court’s decision in
Dladla
because it is the source for the
Occupiers’ attacks on the safe spaces’ rules.
[158]
Dladla
concerned
a challenge to the constitutionality of rules that the City of
Johannesburg imposed on temporary alternative accommodation
for
occupiers evicted from private property. The City did not provide
housing in a temporary residential area as provided for in
the EHP.
Instead, it placed them in a shelter, run by a private service
provider. The shelter was in downtown Johannesburg. It
was a
“
temporary
place for destitute individuals looking for employment
”
.
[45]
It
consisted of dormitories. Ordinarily, people would stay there for six
months, which could be extended to 12 months. The shelter
also
provided people with food.
[159]
Like the City’s safe spaces, the shelter in
Dladla
had
certain rules. Two of them were in issue: the lockout rule and the
family separation rule.
[159.1]
The
lockout rule required the applicants to leave the shelter by 8:00,
permitted them to return at 17:00, and locked them out if
they did
not return by 20:00. It could be relaxed if a special arrangement was
made. However the rule was enforced so that persons
working at night
were not permitted to sleep in the shelter during the day.
[46]
[159.2]
The
family separation rule was not specifically listed, but was enforced
through the provision of separate male and female dormitories.
The
effect was that heterosexual couples could not live together. The
rule also separated parents from their children, as children
under 16
had to stay with their mothers, and boys over 16 with their
fathers.
[47]
[160]
There are four important findings from
Dladla
that guide my decision.
[161]
First
,
the Court accepted that the shelters constituted temporary
accommodation “as required by section 26(2)” of the
Constitution.
[48]
It
also held that, but for the shelter rules, “the resultant
accommodation provided by the Shelter would be satisfactory”.
[49]
Put
differently, the shelters were temporary alternative accommodation
that avoided the risk of homelessness. This is important.
It supports
my conclusion that temporary alternative accommodation is not limited
to housing offered under the EHP.
[50]
[162]
Second
, Mhlantla
J held that the shelter’s lockout rule limited the applicants’
rights to dignity, privacy and freedom and
security of the person:
[162.1]
The
lockout rule “forces the applicants out onto the streets during
the day with no place whatsoever to call their own and
to rest. As a
result, people seek refuge on the street while they wait for the
Shelter to re-open.”
[51]
For
those who work at night, it meant they had no place to stay –
for them “the Shelter is no shelter at all.”
[52]
The
rule also infantilised the applicants, undercutting their right and
ability to manage their own lives and to be “shepherded
to and
fro
.
”
[53]
[162.2]
Being
forced onto the streets during the day denied them the privacy the
shelter offered them, at least at night. The lockout rule
denied them
“a place they can call their own to which they can retreat at
any time.”
[54]
Mhlantla
J held: “One would think that people who have been evicted from
their homes in which they had some privacy would
be provided a
substitute with a measure of the same. They were not.”
[55]
[162.3]
The lockout rule forced the applicants onto the
street both during the day and – if they missed the 20:00 cut
off to return
– at night. Being on the street placed them at
risk of assault.
[163]
Third
,
the Court also held that the family separation rule infringed the
same three rights – dignity, privacy and freedom and security
of the person.
[56]
The
focus was on the right to dignity which, since
Dawood
,
[57]
has
included the right to family life and to cohabit with your family.
“The family separation rule creates a vast chasm –
between parents and children, between partners and between siblings –
where there should be only intimacy and love.”
[58]
[164]
Fourth
,
it was not possible for the City to justify these limitations of the
occupiers’ rights. The rules were imposed by a contract
between
the City and MES, and not by a “
law
of general application
”
as
required by s 36(1) of the Constitution.
[59]
The
majority therefore did not consider the justifications for the rules.
It did not consider, for example, the reason why the shelter
separated males and females. And it did not decide whether those
reasons justified the rules.
[165]
Dladla
naturally
casts serious doubt over the similar rules that are imposed at the
City’s safe spaces. But, nonetheless, for the
reasons that
follow I find that the existence of those rules do not prevent the
safe spaces from constituting adequate alternative
accommodation.
#### The Safe Spaces’
Rules are Reasonable
The Safe Spaces’
Rules are Reasonable
[166]
There are two preliminary issues to address before
considering each of the rules with which the Occupiers took issue.
[167]
First
, unlike in
Dladla
,
this case is not a challenge to the rules of the safe spaces. The
Occupiers have not brought a counter-application contending
that
those rules are unconstitutional and invalid. The permissibility of
the rules arises in a different context – whether
the safe
spaces are adequate alternative accommodation.
[168]
The
Occupiers were not obliged to separately challenge the rules. But the
fact that they have not done so has an important doctrinal
consequence that distinguishes this case from
Dladla
–
I
am concerned not only with whether the rules limit rights, but
whether the safe spaces’ rules mean that the accommodation
is
not adequate for these Occupiers. As I have already explained, that
assessment is a case-specific, proportional enquiry that
requires me
to consider all relevant factors. I could notionally conclude that
the rules limit rights, but still determine that
the safe spaces
provide adequate alternative accommodation.
[60]
[169]
It also means that I must assess the rules with
the concessions that the City has made for these Applicants. Other
homeless people
who voluntarily enter the safe spaces may not get the
benefit of guaranteed couples accommodation or guaranteed
accommodation beyond
six months. But then, they enter the safe spaces
voluntarily, not under threat of eviction.
[170]
Second
, the City
has – in the course of this litigation – significantly
modified or relaxed the rules it initially imposed.
It has made
express compromises to address some of the Occupiers’
legitimate complaints. I detail the nature of those modifications
when I address each rule below.
[171]
The
Occupiers have, to some extent, been faced with a shifting target.
But the City should be praised for making concessions in
response to
the concerns raised by the residents, even if it did so only in the
course of litigation. In
Mazibuko
,
the Constitutional Court explained that, if “one of the key
goals of the entrenchment of social and economic rights is to
ensure
that government is responsive and accountable to citizens through
both the ballot box and litigation, then that goal will
be served
when a government respondent takes steps in response to litigation to
ensure that the measures it adopts are reasonable,
within the meaning
of the Constitution.”
[61]
[172]
In the specific context of eviction litigation,
the purpose of meaningful engagement in the context of an eviction is
to listen.
One of the key indications that the City
was
listening is that it altered its rules.
The fact that it did so during the litigation rather than before,
should not count against
it in assessing the adequacy of the safe
spaces.
[173]
That brings us to the specific rules.
Security
of Tenure
[174]
Initially, the safe space rules provided that the
“period of initial stay” was six months. The City
explained in its
replying affidavit and heads of argument that this
was applied flexibly. The Occupiers claimed that this was
insufficient to guarantee
that they would not again be rendered
homeless after six months.
[175]
Following the request by this Court, the City
stated that it would accept an order in these terms: “The
Respondents who take
up the Safe Spaces shall be entitled to an
initial six-month stay, which shall be extended until they have
acquired alternative
accommodation”. This offer is subject only
to one proviso: that the occupier engages “with the City and
co-operating
in meeting their Personal Development Plan.”
[176]
In response, the Occupiers did not object to the
proviso. Instead, they contended that this would have the
unintentional effect
of making safe spaces – which are intended
to be temporary – into permanent or semi-permanent
accommodation. While
the safe spaces may be adequate as a temporary
measure, the Occupiers argued, they could not be adequate for long
term stays.
[177]
As
originally stated, the six-month rule was unsatisfactory. I agree
with the Occupiers that it would not be adequate to rely simply
on
“flexibility” in applying that rule without some
guidelines to indicate when people would be required to leave and
when they would be permitted to stay.
[62]
[178]
But the City has now committed that – at
least for these Occupiers – they can stay for as long as they
need; provided
only that they cooperate with the City. In my view the
offer is reasonable. I accept the Occupiers’ concern that the
safe
spaces should not become permanent accommodation. But the City
has no incentive to do that; its goal is to get people out of safe
spaces and into more permanent accommodation. That not only achieves
the goal of reintegrating those in the safe spaces, it frees
up spots
for other people.
[179]
We also cannot lose sight of where the Occupiers
are currently living; on the pavement. Unlike in
Dladla
,
the Safe Spaces are more dignified than their current situation, not
less.
The
Family Separation Rule
[180]
The City defended the Safe Space rules to keep
single men and women separately. This was necessary primarily to
ensure that women
are protected from gender-based violence. The
Occupiers did not take issue with this basic goal for single people.
But they argued
that the safe spaces should make provision for
couples and families.
[181]
Initially, the City made a limited offer for
couples. It noted that couples’ accommodation was already
available at Safe Space
1, and that it could be made available at
Paint City. Eventually, through the process of engagement, it offered
to ensure that
couples accommodation would be available for
all
couples
. To my mind, that answers the
Occupiers’ complaint. The basis on which alternative
accommodation will be provided under my
order will be on the
condition that every couple is accommodated as a couple.
[182]
The Occupiers complain that the couples’
accommodation is inadequate. They are permitted to erect “flimsy”
separation
that offers insufficient privacy. I accept that the
privacy may be limited. Ideally, couples would have separate rooms
which they
could lock. If the City upgrades the safe spaces it may
consider increasing the privacy couples can enjoy. But in my view,
the
City has done enough to meet the minimum requirements to
accommodate couples.
[183]
The City took the view – and the Occupiers
did not disagree – that the safe spaces were not suitable for
children. It
undertook that those children (and their families) that
were found to be present at the sites would be dealt with
differently.
I return to that issue when I address the just and
equitable remedy.
Lockout
[184]
Initially, the lockout rule was strictly stated.
But the City relaxed it so that it now reads: “Residents will
be encouraged
to vacate the site between 8:30 and 17h00 every day
unless the personal circumstances of any resident makes this
unreasonable on
a day or for a period of time.” The Occupiers
expressly accepted in their counsels’ heads of argument that
this amended
rule “is now consistent with the Constitution.”
[185]
In my view, that concession was correctly made. As
Dladla
holds,
a strictly enforced lockout rule is unconstitutional. But a rule
which encourages people to leave the safe space, rather
than kicking
them out, does not.
#### Conclusion
Conclusion
[186]
As they originally stood, the rules of the safe
spaces may well have been too restrictive. But the rules have been
relaxed to accommodate
all the Occupiers’ legitimate concerns.
[187]
The safe spaces are adequate alternative
accommodation for these Occupiers. They are better than the
occupiers’ current conditions,
and offer enough to meet the
standard of adequacy. Most importantly, Safe Space 1 is in the city
centre where the City acknowledges
the Occupiers must stay to earn a
living. Not only do they offer accommodation, they offer meals,
toiletries, safety, access to
healthcare, drug rehabilitation, work
opportunities and, most importantly, a promise a plausible path out
of homelessness and to
permanent accommodation.
[188]
The Occupiers aver that the safe spaces create “a
perpetual cycle of homelessness”. That claim is not borne out
by the
evidence before me. The evidence before me is that they
provide the basic shelter people need, and at least some of the
resources
to escape homelessness. The evidence shows that they have
had at least some success. Indeed, the report put up by the Occupiers
themselves calls for the expansion of the safe space model. Roughly a
third of the Occupiers have indicated they would be willing
to move
to the safe spaces if evicted.
[189]
That does not mean the safe spaces are perfect. No
doubt they can be improved. The City should always be open to
improvement. And
it does not mean they are the best or only solution
to homelessness in the City. But they meet the standard of
reasonableness.
[190]
Finally, the Occupiers raised concerns about
whether the rules would in fact be implemented as the City promised.
It asked this
Court to maintain supervision of the eviction to ensure
the City complies with its promises. For reasons I set out below, I
do
intend to maintain supervision of this matter. That will
accommodate this concern.
### Is Eviction Just and
Equitable?
Is Eviction Just and
Equitable?
[191]
Whether
eviction is just and equitable must “be decided not on
generalities but in the light of its own particular circumstances.
Every situation has its own history, its own dynamics, its own
intractable elements that have to be lived with (at least, for the
time being)”.
[63]
This
fact specific enquiry also means that, “when balancing the
interests, compromises have to be made by both parties, in
order to
reach a just and equitable outcome.”
[64]
[192]
Having carefully considered all the relevant
factors, I conclude that eviction is just and equitable. There are
ultimately six reasons.
[193]
First
,
the Occupiers’ occupation is not only unlawful, it is
unsustainable. In other cases, illegal occupation has grown, or
people
have become so entrenched that eviction is no longer feasible
and the only option is to live with the occupation.
[65]
That
is not the case here. The City has persuasively explained why the
Occupiers cannot remain indefinitely on the Properties. The
Occupiers
obstruct the pavements, create a danger for the City’s
infrastructure, and live in objectively unacceptable conditions.
The
Occupiers do not contend that they may or should remain on the
Properties indefinitely.
[194]
The
value of pavements and the government’s legitimate interest in
ensuring people do not live on them was recognized by the
Indian
Supreme Court in
Olga
Tellis
.
[66]
Chandrachud
CJ explained that “footpaths or pavements are public properties
which are intended to serve the convenience of
the general public.
They are not laid for private use and indeed, their use for a private
purpose frustrates the very object for
which they are carved out from
portions of public streets.” It rejected an argument that
homeless people – that in
India were called “pavement
dwellers” – were entitled to live on pavements: “No
one has the right to make
use of a public property for a private
purpose without the requisite authorisation and, therefore, it is
erroneous to contend that
the pavement dwellers have the right to
encroach upon pavement[s] by constructing dwellings thereon.”
[67]
[195]
The City is entitled to ensure that pavements and
roads can be used for their intended purpose. It is entitled to
protect its infrastructure.
And it is not only entitled, but obliged,
to provide suitable alternative accommodation for homeless people who
live on its pavements
and roads. As the Occupiers refuse to vacate
the Properties, it can only do that if it evicts the Occupiers.
[196]
Second
, the City
has engaged meaningfully with the Occupiers. The engagement was not
perfect. But the City did enough to inform the Occupiers
of their
options, listen to their concerns, and make reasonable compromises.
[197]
Third
,
the City has recognized that the Occupiers must remain in the City
centre and has offered alternative accommodation that will
allow them
to do so. Again, the Supreme Court of India described the futility of
seeking to move homeless people away from where
they can make a
living as “a game of hide and seek.”
[68]
The
government “removes the ramshackle shelters on the pavements …
, the pavement dwellers flee to less conspicuous
pavements in
by-lanes and, when the officials are gone, they return to their old
habitats. Their main attachment to those places
is the nearness
thereof to their place of work.”
[69]
The
safe spaces at least try to avoid that inevitable result by ensuring
that the Occupiers remain close to employment opportunities.
[198]
Fourth
, the City
does not seek the Occupiers’ eviction without a plan. It seeks
their eviction to safe spaces that, on the evidence
before me, offer
not only suitable alternative accommodation, but a plausible path out
of homelessness. I do not suggest that moving
to the safe spaces will
ensure that none of the Occupiers return to the streets. Inevitably
some of them will (which is why the
City seeks an interdict). But the
facts show that there is a reasonable possibility that the safe
spaces will help some of them
to escape homelessness.
[199]
Fifth
, the City
has shown that there is no other better, reasonably available option.
TRAs are far from the City centre and are not a
realistic solution
for the Occupiers. It does not have the funds or the land to build
temporary accommodation other than safe spaces
in the City Centre.
Its decision not to do so has been upheld by the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
[200]
Sixth
,
I accept that most of the Occupiers would prefer to remain where they
are, rather than move to the safe spaces. They have built
homes, some
of them over many years. They have formed communities and become used
to where they are and how they live. The safe
spaces come with
advantages, but do somewhat limit their freedom. But “the
wishes or personal preferences of the unlawful
occupier are not
relevant. An unlawful occupier … does not have a right to
refuse to be evicted on the basis that she prefers
or wishes to
remain in the property that she is occupying unlawfully.”
[70]
While
that was said in a very different context, it seems to me it applies
equally here. The Occupiers’ desire to continue
occupying land
unlawfully cannot be a reason to refuse eviction.
[201]
In the end
, on
these facts, eviction is just and equitable. But to ensure the
eviction does not impact unduly harshly on the Occupiers, the
conditions under which it will be carried out must be carefully
regulated.
###
### When and How should the
Occupiers be Evicted?
When and How should the
Occupiers be Evicted?
[202]
I have concluded that the City is entitled to an
eviction order. But there remain several thorny problems about how
exactly to implement
this order. Some of those problems are inherent
in this type of eviction – that of a transient population –
where neither
the City nor the Occupiers’ attorneys can say
with certainty who occupies the Properties. It has, unfortunately,
been exacerbated
by my own delay in delivering this judgment. The
result of that regrettable delay is that the information carefully
gathered by
both the City and the Occupiers after the hearing is
likely no longer accurate.
[203]
To my mind, there are six practical issues to
address:
[203.1]
Ensuring that the City has enough places at Safe
Space 1 in Culemborg for all the Occupiers (including couples) who
wish to take
advantage of them;
[203.2]
Providing special protection for any children that
are occupying the Properties;
[203.3]
Addressing the needs of the elderly and disabled;
[203.4]
Dealing with the Occupiers’ possessions;
[203.5]
Service of the Order on the Occupiers;
[203.6]
The timing of the eviction;
[203.7]
To whom the eviction applies; and
[203.8]
Supervision.
#### Adequate Places at the
Safe Spaces
Adequate Places at the
Safe Spaces
[204]
In the affidavits filed after the hearing, the
City informed this Court that it could accommodate 184 persons at the
Safe Spaces.
The high estimate of how many people were occupying the
Properties was 140. Between 37 and 64 indicated they wanted to move
to
the Safe Spaces. Similarly, the maximum number of couples that
could be accommodated was 17. The City stated it could accommodate
all these couples.
[205]
At the hearing, the City had sought a staggered
order that would require people to vacate the Properties in stages to
ensure it
had sufficient capacity to accommodate them all. However,
my understanding is that – as things stood on 10 December 2023
– it could immediately accommodate all the Occupiers and did
not require a staggered process.
[206]
However, things may have changed in the months
since then. It may not be possible for the City to immediately
accommodate all those
who want to take advantage of the offer of
alternative accommodation at the Safe Spaces. There may be more
Occupiers, or fewer
spaces.
[207]
Given my delay in delivering judgment, I do not
believe it is in the interests of justice to require the parties to
conduct yet
another count of the number of Occupiers before I deliver
judgment. Rather, the best way to deal with the uncertainty is as
follows:
[207.1]
The Order will be structured on the default
assumption that the City can immediately accommodate all the
Occupiers who wish to take
up the offer of Safe Spaces.
[207.2]
However, it will build in flexibility in case the
City is unable to meet the demand at the time of eviction. In my
view, the best
way to achieve that is threefold:
[207.2.1]
Require the Occupiers to indicate within one week
of the date of the Order whether they intend to take advantage of the
Safe Spaces.
This should give the City enough information to
determine whether it has enough capacity. However, the Order will not
prevent Occupiers
who subsequently wish to take up a space at the
Safe Spaces from doing so.
[207.2.2]
Permit the City itself to stagger the eviction to
meet its capacity constraints; and
[207.2.3]
If this approach proves unworkable, permit the
parties to approach this Court to vary or supplement the Order if
necessary.
[208]
The same principle applies to couples’
accommodation. I do not think it is necessary to provide a separate
process for that
particular capacity issue. The Order will simply
make clear that the City is obliged to provide couples’
accommodation to
those Occupiers that require it.
#### Protecting Children
Protecting Children
[209]
The latest evidence available is that in December
2023, there were no children living on the Properties. There had been
children,
but they had all been moved from the Properties. If that is
still the case, then there is no need to address the issue. However,
if minor children have since moved to the Properties, then the City
accepted that they cannot simply be evicted and required to
fend for
themselves. Nor can they responsibly be accommodated at the Safe
Spaces.
[210]
Children’s
best interests must be paramount in every matter concerning that
child.
[71]
That
includes where there is a risk that children will be evicted,
particularly when everyone accepted that the safe spaces were
not
appropriate for children. Special provision for any children is
needed.
[211]
The City proposed a mechanism to address the
possible needs of any children at the Properties. With some minor
changes, I have adopted
that proposal. In short, it will operate as
follows:
[211.1]
Children and their parents or caregivers will not
be evicted together with the other Occupiers.
[211.2]
The City will ensure that the Provincial
Department of Social Development conducts an assessment of any child
and produces a report
for the City.
[211.3]
The City will engage with the parents or
caregivers (and if appropriate in light of their age, also the child)
about the alternative
accommodation options that are available.
[211.4]
The City will file an affidavit with the Court
setting out the report of the DSD, the outcomes of its engagement,
and its proposals.
[211.5]
The affected Occupiers will be entitled to file a
responding affidavit.
[211.6]
The Court will then make a specific order for how
any children should be dealt with in light of that information.
#### The Elderly and Disabled
The Elderly and Disabled
[212]
PIE
requires courts to have specific regard for the elderly and the
disabled when granting eviction orders.
[72]
The
Court asked the parties to report on whether there were any elderly
or disabled people amongst the Occupiers.
[213]
The post-hearing engagement revealed one person
living at the Helen Suzman site who is disabled. Ashton Jumat has
impaired mobility
and struggles to walk. The City proposed that he be
accommodated with his mother at Safe Space 1. Alternatively, he can
be accommodated
at Safe Space 2, which has disabled bathrooms. The
Occupiers did not directly respond to this offer.
[214]
There was only one person who the Occupiers
described as elderly – Nceba Manyela who is 57 or 58. I agree
with the City that
this does not qualify as elderly as contemplated
in PIE.
[215]
In my view, the City’s approach seems
reasonable. If once the Order is granted, it emerges that there are
other disabled persons
living on the Properties, they can be dealt
with in two ways:
[215.1]
The Order will include a general requirement that
the City reasonably accommodate any disabled person who wishes to
take up a place
at the Safe Spaces.
[215.2]
If there is a dispute, about whether the City has
done so, it can be dealt with under this Court’s general
ongoing supervision.
#### The Occupiers’
Possessions
The Occupiers’
Possessions
[216]
The Occupiers all have possessions – their
clothes, their shelters, and all the other things that make up a
life. They may
seem meagre to some, but they are part of a dignified
life. The Occupiers have collected them over a period of time, and
should
not be required to give them up. There are three categories of
issues.
[217]
First
, there may
be Occupiers who do not wish to go to the Safe Spaces, but have
somewhere else that they wish to go. The City has agreed
to transport
those Occupiers’ belongings to their new home provided that:
(a) it is within 40km of the city centre; and (b)
the person has
permission to occupy that property or store their belongings there.
Those conditions seem reasonable to me. The
City cannot be complicit
in facilitating a fresh unlawful occupation of its own or another’s
property. I accept that there
may be few if any Occupiers who can
demonstrate consent to occupy alternative land, but if they can, the
City should assist them
to transport their possessions.
[218]
Second
, for those
who are evicted, the City has agreed to store their possessions in
its facility in Maitland for six months. The Occupier
can regather
their possessions later if they require them. This offer is well
made. However, I intend to impose two additional
requirements on the
City:
[218.1]
If an Occupier subsequently collects their
possessions, the City will transport them to the person’s new
place of living,
subject to the same conditions that apply to those
who choose to relocate at the time of eviction.
[218.2]
An occupier may request a once-off six month
extension of the period for which the City will store their
possessions.
[219]
Third
, what of
the possessions of those who do take up the Safe Space offer? Some of
them can be taken to the Safe Space. The City should
transport those
limited possessions for the Occupiers. But the storage capacity
there is limited. It may not accommodate
all an Occupier’s
possessions. The Occupier may not need the things she used to
construct a shelter while she is in the Safe
Space. But she may need
them later. An Occupier should not be required to sacrifice all her
possessions as a condition for entering
a Safe Space. I therefore
intend to make the same regime applicable to those who are evicted
available for Occupiers who take up
the offer of a Safe Space and
indicate they wish to have their possessions stored.
#### Service
Service
[220]
The City has proposed a two-pronged method of
service – reading the Order by loudhailer at each of the sites,
and affixing
it to a notice board or permanent structure at each
site. This seems appropriate. I have made some minor amendments to
the proposal
to make it clear when and how often the Order must be
read.
[221]
In addition, I require that the Occupiers’
attorneys themselves must use their best efforts to ensure all the
Occupiers are
aware of the Order. I have no doubt that they would
have done so in any event. But I include it in the Order because it
seems to
me that may be the most effective way to ensure that the
Occupiers understand the content and effect of the Order.
#### Timing of the Eviction
Timing of the Eviction
[222]
How long should the Occupiers be granted before
they are required to vacate the Properties? The City initially asked
for an order
that they vacate the Properties within 30 days failing
which they could be forcibly evicted. The draft order provided at the
hearing
would have afforded the Occupiers between two weeks and four
months. That staggered approach was designed to meet the City’s
capacity at the Safe Spaces.
[223]
Six weeks – thirty court days – seems
reasonable to me in these circumstances. It will provide enough
time for
the City and the Occupiers to perform the various tasks that
need to be done before the eviction can take place. It will also
provide
sufficient time for the Occupiers to consider their position
and, if they wish, to make alternative arrangements.
#### To Whom Does the Eviction
Order Apply?
To Whom Does the Eviction
Order Apply?
[224]
As I have set out in detail above, there has been
ongoing uncertainty about who lives on the Properties. Both the City
and the Occupiers
accepted that it was impossible to obtain a single,
comprehensive list of all those living on the Properties. There are
three groups
of people:
[224.1]
Those whom the City and/or the Occupiers’
attorneys have confirmed have at some point between the launching of
the application
and the post-hearing engagement, lived on the
Properties; and
[224.2]
Unnamed people who lived on the Properties
previously, but do not do so currently; and
[224.3]
Unnamed people who live on the Property when this
Order is granted and/or when the eviction is sought to be carried
out.
[225]
For the purposes of the eviction order, it does
not matter. All those who are occupying the Properties when the
eviction order is
effected may be evicted. Both those who have
already indicated they wish to move to Safe Space 1, and those who
indicate that intention
after this order must be accommodated.
#### Supervision
Supervision
[226]
This is an unusual eviction. The order is,
necessarily, lengthy and somewhat complicated. I am also concerned
that the position
on the ground may have changed substantially since
the last affidavits were filed. As mentioned earlier, the Occupiers
are concerned
about how the rules at Safe Space 1 will be
implemented.
[227]
I have therefore decided to maintain light
supervision of the eviction. I do not think it is necessary to have
ongoing reports (save
as concerns any children). But I do think it is
appropriate to require the City to file an affidavit at the
conclusion of the eviction,
and to permit the Occupiers to respond.
The purpose is twofold – to ensure that the City has complied
with the order, and
to deal with any outstanding issues that may
arise. If the parties want further supervision at that stage, they
can explain why
they think it is needed. I will then decide whether
to continue supervision and, if so, on what terms.
[228]
In addition, in order to address any eventualities
that occur during the process, I will permit any party to approach
this court
for a variation of the order on notice to the other
parties.
[229]
I
emphasise that the purpose of this supervision is not punishment, not
is it motivated by suspicion. It is about trying to ensure
that the
different branches of state work together to achieve constitutional
outcomes in difficult circumstances.
[73]
# interdict
interdict
[230]
In addition to the eviction, the City seeks an
interdict. Initially, the interdict it sought was against all the
Occupiers –
named and unnamed – and sough to prohibit
them “from occupying the properties or engaging in prohibited
conduct on
the properties and any other properties owned and/or
controlled by the” City. In the draft order handed up at the
hearing
of the matter, the relief was altered slightly. It applied
only to the named Occupiers, and it sought to interdict them “from
occupying the properties, and taking any action that denies the
Applicant or other members of the public from accessing or using
the
properties and any other properties owned and/or controlled by the
Applicant.”
[231]
Limiting
the interdict to named applicants was proper. Courts should not
generally grant interdicts against unnamed persons.
[74]
In
this case, it would be impossible to know who had been interdicted
and who had not.
[232]
But the question still is whether the interdict is
justified. There are two parts to what was sought. First, an
interdict against
the named Occupiers from re-occupying the specific
properties from which they were evicted, or other Occupiers were
evicted. I
have no difficulty with this part of the interdict. In my
view, it is implicit in any eviction order that the person cannot
re-occupy
the same property with impunity. I am not sure the
interdict is even necessary; the original eviction order could be
used to “re-evict”
someone who re-occupied the property.
[233]
The difference here is that the City seeks to
interdict re-occupation not only of the properties from which a
particular occupier
will be evicted, but from all the other
properties from which other occupiers will be evicted. I am satisfied
that is just and
equitable. I have determined that an eviction order
is appropriate for all the Occupiers on all the Properties. I am
willing to
interdict them all from re-occupying any of the
Properties, not only the particular one that they occupied.
[234]
That leaves the question of which Occupiers should
be covered by the interdict. In my view, it should apply to all those
Occupiers
whose names have been provided to the Court during this
litigation.
[235]
The second part of the interdict the City seeks is
more problematic. It seeks to interdict the named Occupiers from
stopping the
City or the public from using any other property owned
by the City. That relief is wide-ranging. It would impose a specific
legal
regime on the Occupiers that would not apply to other homeless
people in the City. It would prevent them from living on any other
City-owned land in a manner that interfered with its ordinary use.
[236]
The City explained that without the interdict, its
eviction order would be futile. The Occupiers could simply move
across the street
to another pavement owned by the City, but not
listed in this case. The City would then have to apply for a new
eviction order.
It would, in its view, be back to square one.
[237]
The Occupiers saw the interdict differently. In
their view, it would authorize the City to evict the Occupiers from
different properties
in the future without following the requirements
of PIE. That, it argues, is unconstitutional. Moreover, the City has
alternative
remedies available to it – an eviction application
or its own By-law that permits it to remove people from public places
in certain circumstances.
[238]
I am not inclined to grant the broader part of the
interdict. In my view, while it may have some short-term utility for
the City,
it is unlawful, unnecessary and ineffective.
### The Interdict is Unlawful
The Interdict is Unlawful
[239]
I
agree with the Occupiers that the interdict will – and is
intended to – permit their eviction in the future from City
land without an eviction order that is compliant with either PIE or s
26(3) of the Constitution. That is the whole point of the
interdict –
to avoid the cost of eviction applications in the future. In
Zulu
,
[75]
the
Constitutional Court held that a similar interdict that was used to
remove people from informal settlements constituted an eviction
order. I do not see how the interdict the City seeks is different.
[240]
But s 26(3) is clear: “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.”
PIE is the legislation enacted to give effect to s 26(3) and sets out
the process for an eviction order and the factors that must be
considered. The enforcement of the interdict would result in an
eviction without following that process.
[241]
I accept that the interdict the City seeks would
not only apply to situations where the Occupiers had made a new home
on City land
– it would also apply to other conduct that
obstructed access or use and enforcing it then would not violate s
26(3). But
its purpose is primarily directed at preventing them from
re-
occupying
City-owned
land, and allowing the City to remove them through a process other
than an eviction. That is the purpose of the interdict.
In my view,
this Court cannot do that.
[242]
If the interdict were granted, the Occupiers would
be evicted without an order of court that considered all relevant
circumstances,
and without an eviction order granted in terms of PIE.
They could be evicted without meaningful engagement, and without a
consideration
of whether alternative accommodation is available.
That, as I understand it, is the entire point of the interdict.
[243]
The
majority in
Zulu
declined
to make a finding on whether the interdict was unlawful or not for
procedural reasons. But in a concurring judgment,
Van der
Westhuizen J (joined by Froneman J) held that it was unconstitutional
and unlawful to grant interdicts that effectively
permitted
evictions. He held: “An order of this nature deprives unlawful
occupiers of rights enshrined in the Constitution
and recalls a time
when the destitute and landless were considered unworthy of a hearing
before they were unceremoniously removed
from the land where they had
tried to make their homes.”
[76]
[244]
Wilson
AJ (as he then was) reached a similar conclusion in
Johannesburg
City v K2016498847 (Pty) Ltd
.
[77]
He
held that a municipality was not entitled to an interdict to enforce
a land use scheme that would have the effect of evicting
people from
their home unless it met the requirements for an eviction under s
26(3) of the Constitution.
[78]
That
would include meaningful engagement and the offer of alternative
accommodation if there was a risk of homelessness. The same
principle, to my mind, applies here.
[245]
In short, while evictions may be expensive and
time-consuming that is because they have serious consequences. People
should not
lose their homes unless the proper process has been
followed and a court has considered all the relevant circumstances. I
do not
believe the City has a clear right to bypass those
requirements.
### The Eviction is
Unnecessary
The Eviction is
Unnecessary
[246]
The City claims that without the interdict the
costs of addressing new occupations by the Occupiers will be too
high. It will be
hamstrung from clearing its pavements and other
public places. As I have explained, that is the price s 26(3)
requires the state
to pay. But there is another reason to refuse
relief. The City has an alternative remedy – its own By-Law.
[247]
The
City’s By-Law permits the City to, in effect, evict people who
have made their homes in public places without a court
order, at
least in certain circumstances. Section 2 of the By-Law prohibits a
range of conduct in public. In particular, s 2(3)(m)
prohibits
sleeping overnight or erecting any shelter in a public place. Section
22A – which was introduced in 2022 –
permits the City’s
officials to direct people to comply with the By-Law and, if they
refuse, to arrest the person. That power
is subject to an important
proviso. Section 22A(2) provides that the power to arrest “may
only be exercised in respect of
a contravention of section 2(3)(m) if
the person refuses to accept an offer of alternative shelter.”
[79]
The
same proviso appears to apply to the power to impound a person’s
possessions in s 22A(1)(e).
[248]
In short, the By-Law permits the City to, in
effect, evict (and even arrest) people who are living in public
places, provided only
that the person refuses an offer of alternative
shelter. If there is no alternative shelter available the City
cannot, under its
own By-Law, remove/evict the person.
[249]
When I
heard this matter, there was a pending challenge to the
constitutionality of the By Law; that was part of the reason
the
Occupiers did not proceed with their counter-application.
[80]
To the
best of my knowledge, it is still pending. Until it is decided, the
By-law remains valid. I express no view on whether that
challenge or
any other constitutional challenge to the By-Law is good or bad.
Either way, the City should not get its interdict.
[250]
If the challenge is bad, then the City has an
alternative remedy and need not enlist the Court to provide a remedy
through an interdict
that it already has through its own laws. If the
challenge is good, then the City would be seeking to do through court
orders what
it cannot constitutionally do through its by-laws.
[251]
The
Constitution binds all branches of government – the
legislature, the executive
and
the judiciary
.
[81]
If the
removal of homeless people from the streets without an eviction order
is unconstitutional when done through a By-Law, it
is also
unconstitutional when done through a court order.
[82]
And if
it can be done through the By-law, the City does not need its
interdict.
[252]
The City argues that this case is different
because it involves an interdict against people who have already been
evicted. I do
not see why that makes a difference. Section 26(3)
applies to all people, whether they have previously been evicted or
not. It
is not a once-off guarantee. In any event, the City could
amend its By-Law so that it would only permit removal without court
order
of people who have already been evicted from City-owned land.
If it believes that justifies a limitation of s 26(3), it should
enact it into law and defend it.
[253]
The City is not an ordinary litigant that must
live within the existing legislative universe. It is a law-maker. It
can enact new
by-laws and amend existing by-laws. It should do so,
rather than seeking to legislate through court orders against
specific groups
of people.
[254]
I
accept that the scope for by-laws that permit evictions outside of
PIE may be narrow, not only because of s 26(3), but also because
of s
156(3) which provides that by-laws contrary to national legislation
are ordinarily invalid.
[83]
But
that is the constitutional scheme. I do not see why the City should
be able to escape it through interdicts.
### The Interdict will be
Ineffective
The Interdict will be
Ineffective
[255]
This interdict on its own will not solve the
City’s “problem”. It would only permit to evict
without court order
those named Occupiers who re-occupy City land.
But it would still need to obtain an eviction order for all the other
homeless people
who will likely be occupying the same land. It seems
inherently unlikely that there will be a future occupation solely of
the named
Occupiers. But if it must obtain an eviction order for some
people occupying the same portion of land, why not all of them?
[256]
This interdict will not avoid the need for an
eviction order. It will – at most – mean some people on a
particular property
must be evicted under PIE and some can be evicted
outside of PIE. That will not significantly reduce the City’s
costs.
[257]
All the interdict would achieve is to create a
special category of homeless people subject to a different regime
than all other
homeless people in the City. The only reason would be
that they had previously been evicted from different City-owned land.
I do
not see the value in that outcome.
[258]
I was informed from the bar that, depending on the
outcome of this application, the City would seek to bring further
similar eviction-plus-interdict
applications. The plan, it seems, is
to capture as many homeless people as possible within a net of
interdicts. To my mind, that
just shows this is an attempt to
legislate through courts, rather than through the legislative
process. In any event, I cannot
grant an interdict that will be
ineffective now because it may become effective only once numerous
future interdicts are granted.
Put simply, the interdict will
not prevent the injury.
### Conclusion on the
Interdict
Conclusion on the
Interdict
[259]
For these reasons, I take the view that I cannot
grant the broad interdict the City seeks. The interdict would be
unlawful and unconstitutional.
If the City is permitted to limit s
26(3) and circumvent PIE, then it must do so through its by-laws. And
the interdict would only
aid the City if it obtained a similar
interdict for all or most homeless people in the City.
[260]
In refusing the interdict I do not mean to
undermine the City’s goals. I have accepted that the City has a
right and an obligation
to ensure that all public places are
accessible for all its residents. It has a right and an obligation to
assist homeless people
to leave the streets and reintegrate and
rehabilitate. It has a right and an obligation to protect its
infrastructure from damage
and degradation. But the Constitution
imposes limits on how it can achieve those goals when people are
living on the streets. The
City must work within those limits because
they protect the fundamental rights of all its residents, including
those experiencing
homelessness.
[261]
That may require more carrot than stick –
incentivizing homeless people to leave the streets rather than
threatening them.
The expansion of the safe space model seeks to
achieve exactly that. Or it may require new, imaginative solutions
and collaborations.
Or it may be that the law as it stands makes it
impossible for the City to effectively achieve its goals. But the law
is the law
and this Court cannot ignore it.
# CONCLUSION AND Costs
CONCLUSION AND Costs
[262]
The City has achieved substantial success in this
case. It has obtained its eviction, and an interdict – albeit
on much narrower
terms than it sought. However, the Occupiers have
also had some success. Through the litigation they have extracted
substantial
concessions from the City. If the City had not engaged
further with the Occupiers after the application was launched, and
adjusted
the rules for the safe spaces, I would likely have refused
the eviction. On the other hand, the Occupiers continued to oppose
the
eviction even after the further engagement and the adjustments to
the rules.
[263]
This
litigation is covered by the principles for costs in non-frivolous
constitutional litigation between private parties and the
state.
[84]
The
City has no right to recover costs from the Occupiers even if it
successful. The Occupiers, on the other hand would be entitled
to
their costs against the City if they had been successful.
[264]
In this case, where the Occupiers have been
partially successful, the appropriate order is to award them part of
their costs. In
my view 30% fairly reflects the extent of their
success. As this case was resolved prior to 12 April 2024, Rule 67A
has no application.
[265]
For all the above reasons, I make the following
order:
1.
In terms of section 4, read with section 6 of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19
of 1998,
the Respondents are evicted from properties described in
paragraph 1 of Part A of the Notice of Motion, and graphically
depicted
in Annexure B to the Notice of Motion (
the
Properties
).
2.
The Respondents shall vacate the Properties by 30
July 2024.
3.
The Applicant (
the
City
) shall provide alternative
accommodation in the form of a place at its Safe Space 1 located in
Culemborg (
the Safe Space
)
to any of the Respondents who has informed the City, or at any point
prior to eviction informs the City, that they wish to be
accommodated
at a Safe Space. To give effect to this order:
3.1.
The Respondents’ attorneys shall, within ten
days of the date of this order, provide a list of Respondents who
wish to move
to the Safe Space; and
3.2.
The City may, depending on the number of
Respondents who indicate an intention to move to the Safe Space,
stagger the eviction to
ensure it has enough space to accommodate all
the Respondents.
4.
The Respondents who take up the alternative
accommodation at the Safe Space shall be entitled to an initial
six-month stay, which
shall be extended until they have acquired
alternative accommodation, subject to such individuals engaging with
the City and co-operating
in meeting their respective Personal
Development Plans.
5.
The City shall ensure that those Respondents who
take up the alternative accommodation at the Safe Spaces, who are in
a partnership
with another Respondent, and who require accommodation
with their partner, are provided with accommodation for couples.
6.
The City shall provide storage for the belongings
of the Respondents who take up the offer of accommodation at the Safe
Space for
six months. In addition:
6.1.
That period may be extended for a single period of
six months at the Respondent’s request;
6.2.
If the Respondent wishes to collect their
possessions, the City shall transfer them on the same conditions set
out in paragraphs
9.1
and 9.2, save that
the information in 9.2
need only be
provided when the Respondent wishes to collect their possessions; and
6.3.
If the Respondent does not collect their
possessions, the City shall be permitted to dispose of those
possessions.
7.
The City shall ensure that if there are any minor
children occupying the Properties as at the date of this Order:
7.1.
Those children are referred to the Provincial
Department of Social Development (
DSD
)
for an assessment of the minor child and their parents to be
undertaken, including options for the alternative accommodation of
the minor children and their parents or caregivers;
7.2.
The City shall consider the DSD’s report,
engage with the children’s parents or caregivers and, if
appropriate in light
of the child’s age, the child, about
alternative accommodation options;
7.3.
The City shall, as soon as possible, and within 10
days of the date of this order file an affidavit with the Court
setting out the
assessment by DSD, its engagement with the child and
the parents or caregivers, and the offer of alternative
accommodation;
7.4.
The Respondents shall, within five days of the
date the City files its affidavit, file an affidavit in response;
7.5.
The Court shall determine the date of the eviction
of any minor child, and the alternative accommodation that shall be
offered;
and
7.6.
Those children and their parents or caregivers
shall not be evicted from the Properties until the above process is
complete.
8.
The City shall reasonably accommodate any
Respondent who chooses to move to the Safe Space and is elderly or
disabled.
9.
If any Respondent elects to voluntarily relocate
to a place other than the Safe Spaces, the City shall assist that
Respondent to
transport their possessions to their chosen relocation
destination, subject to the following conditions:
9.1.
The relocation destination is within a 40km radius
of the Cape Town Central Business District; and
9.2.
The Respondents’ attorneys shall, within two
weeks of the date of this order, provide the City’s attorneys
with:
9.2.1.
The full names of the Respondents who require the
City’s assistance;
9.2.2.
The destination to which the possessions must be
transported; and
9.2.3.
Evidence that the owner or person in charge of the
property has given their consent for the Respondent to occupy their
property
and/or store their possessions at their property.
10.
In the event that the Respondents fail and/or
refuse to vacate the Properties in terms of this Order, subject to
the special provision
for children in paragraph 7, the City and/or
any person appointed by the City, duly assisted by the South African
Police Services
to the extent necessary, is authorised to:
10.1.
Eject any Respondent who has not indicated an
intention to accept an offer of alternative accommodation at the
City’s Safe
Spaces from the Properties;
10.2.
Demolish and or remove any structure unlawfully
occupied by the Respondents on the Properties; and
10.3.
Remove any possessions found at the properties
belonging to the Respondents, save that:
10.3.1.
Those possessions shall be kept in safe custody by
the Applicant for a period of six months, which may be renewed for
one further
period of six months at the Respondent’s request;
10.3.2.
If the Respondent wishes to collect their
possessions, the City shall transfer them on the same conditions set
out in paragraphs
9.1
and 9.2, save that
the information in 9.2
need only be
provided when the Respondent wishes to collect their possessions; and
10.3.3.
If the Respondent does not collect their
possessions, the City shall be permitted to dispose of those
possessions.
11.
The following Respondents, once they are evicted
or voluntarily vacate the Properties, are interdicted and restrained
from re-occupying
the Properties:
11.1.
The Respondents listed in Annexure A to the Notice
of Motion;
11.2.
The Respondents listed in Annexure KB1 to the
Supplementary Affidavit of Khululiwe Bhengu dated 9 October
2023;
11.3.
The Respondents listed in the Affidavit of Nazlie
Du Toit dated 10 November 2023;
11.4.
Annexure PK9 to the Affidavit of Portia Dyantyi
dated 28 November 2023; and
11.5.
The Respondents listed in the affidavit of Megan
Pangeni filed on 8 December 2023.
12.
This Order shall be served on the Respondents in
the following manner:
12.1.
By delivery of the Judgment by the Registrar to
the Respondents’ attorneys by email;
12.2.
By the City’s officials reading aloud at the
Properties, the contents of this Order by loudhailer in English,
Afrikaans and
isiXhosa before 9 AM and after 6 PM for three
consecutive days, beginning two days after the date of this Order;
12.3.
By the City’s officials, within two days of
the date of this order:
12.3.1.
Erecting two notice boards at each of the
Properties, where the erection of such notice boards is possible, and
affixing thereto
copies of this Order in English, Afrikaans and
isiXhosa; or
12.3.2.
Where it is not possible to erect a notice board,
by affixing three copies of this Order to any wall, fence and/or
permanent structure
on each of the Properties; and
12.4.
By the Respondents’ attorneys communicating
to the Respondents in the way they deem most appropriate, the content
of this
Order.
13.
This Court shall retain supervision of the
implementation of this Order on the following terms:
13.1.
The City shall, within ten days of the final
eviction, file an affidavit with this Court specifying which
Respondents accepted offers
of accommodation at the Safe Space, and
including any other information the City believes relevant;
13.2.
The Respondents shall be entitled, within ten days
thereafter, to file an affidavit in response;
13.3.
The Court shall consider the affidavits and make
any further order it deems just, including terminating its
supervision; and
13.4.
Any party may, at any stage, and on notice to the
other parties, approach the Court for a variation of this order.
14.
The City shall pay 30% of the Respondents’
costs.
____________________
M
J BISHOP
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv K Pillay SC, Adv M Adhikari, Adv M Ebrahim
Attorneys
for Applicant:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
Counsel
for Respondents:
Adv J Brickhill, Adv N Simmons
Attorneys
for Respondents:
Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa
[1]
Soobramoney
v Minister of Health (Kwazulu-Natal)
[1997]
ZACC 17
;
1998 (1) SA 765
(CC);
1997 (12) BCLR 1696
(CC) at para 8.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
City of
Cape Town v Commando and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 7
;
[2023] 2 All SA 23
(SCA);
2023 (4) SA 465
(SCA) at para 5.
[4]
Government
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Grootboom and Others
[2000] ZACC 19
;
2001 (1)
SA 46
;
2000 (11) BCLR 1169
(CC) at para 44.
[5]
Queen
Under
Pressure
(1981).
[6]
See
New
Nation Movement NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
[2020]
ZACC 11
;
2020 (8) BCLR 950
(CC);
2020 (6) SA 257
(CC) at para 25, fn
31: “IsiXhosa for: ‘One becomes a fulfilled human being
because of others.’ Literally,
‘A person is a person
because of other people.’”
[7]
Olga
Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation
1986
AIR 180
, 1985 SCR Supl. (2) 51.
[8]
Some of the Occupiers claim they have been occupying the properties
for longer than this, but nothing turns on the dispute.
[9]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC);
2004 (12) BCLR 1268
(CC) at para 32.
[10]
Ibid at para 36.
[11]
City of
Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012] ZASCA 116
;
2012
(6) SA 294
(SCA);
2012 (11) BCLR 1206
(SCA);
[2013] 1 All SA 8
(SCA)
at para 27.
[12]
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA) at para
13.
[13]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC);
2004 (12) BCLR 1268
(CC) at para 11.
[14]
PIE s 6(6).
[15]
PIE s 6(1).
[16]
PIE s 6(2).
[17]
Occupiers
of 51 Olivia Road, Berea Township and 197 Main Street Johannesburg v
City of Johannesburg and Others
[2008]
ZACC 1
;
2008 (3) SA 208
(CC) ;
2008 (5) BCLR 475
(CC) at paras 9-22.
[18]
Ibid at para 15.
[19]
Changing
Tides
(n
11) at para 15.
[20]
This case is distinguishable from
Ngomane
and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and
Another
[2019]
ZASCA 57
;
[2019] 3 All SA 69
(SCA);
2020 (1) SA 52
(SCA) where the
SCA held there was no eviction because, while people were removed
from land they were occupying, there were no
structures on the land,
just loose wooden pallets, cardboard boxes and plastic. While the
Occupiers here used many of the same
materials, they had constructed
structures.
[21]
Olivia
Road
(n
17).
[22]
Ibid at para 18.
[23]
Ibid.
[24]
Ibid at para 21.
[25]
Residents
of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others
[2009]
ZACC 16
;
2009 (9) BCLR 847
(CC);
2010 (3) SA 454
(CC) at para 243
(Moseneke DCJ and Sachs J concurring).
[26]
Ibid.
[27]
Ibid at para 113.
[28]
Ibid at para 117.
[29]
Ibid.
[30]
Ibid at para 302.
[31]
Ibid.
[32]
Ibid.
[33]
Occupiers
of Saratoga Avenue v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
and Another
[2012]
ZACC 9; 2012 (9) BCLR 951 (CC).
[34]
See
Commando
(n 3)
at para 37.
[35]
Dladla
and Another v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2017] ZACC 42; 2018 (2)
BCLR 119 (CC); 2018 (2) SA 327 (CC).
[36]
City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties
39 (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2011]
ZACC 33
;
2012 (2) BCLR 150
(CC);
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) at para 74.
[37]
Commando
(n 3).
That decision has in turn been appealed to the Constitutional Court
and judgment has been reserved. It is possible that
Court will
disagree with the SCA’s conclusions. But unless and until
Braamfontein reverses Bloemfontein, I am bound by
the SCA’s
judgment.
[38]
Commando
and Others v Woodstock Hub (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2021] ZAWCHC 179;
[2021] 4 All SA 408 (WCC).
[39]
Commando
(n 3)
at para 60.
[40]
ICESCR
General
Comment No. 4: The Right to Adequate Housing
(1991). South Africa has
ratified the treaty the ICESCR was interpreting – the Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights – and our courts have
repeatedly referred to its General Comments to interpret
socio-economic rights in our Constitution
(although our courts have
not always agreed that the obligations under the CESCR should be
adopted in South African law). See,
for example,
Mazibuko
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009] ZACC 28
;
2010 (3)
BCLR 239
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 1
(CC) at para 52.
[41]
General
Comment 4
(n
40) at para 8.
[42]
Commando
(n 3)
at para 62, quoting
City
of Johannesburg v Dladla and Others
[2016]
ZASCA 66
;
2016 (6) SA 377
(SCA) para 20.
[43]
Ibid.
[44]
Baron
and others v Claytile (Pty) Limited and Another
[2017] ZACC 24
;
2017
(10) BCLR 1225
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 329
(CC) at para 50.
[45]
Dladla
(n 35)
at para 7.
[46]
Ibid at para 13.
[47]
Ibid at para 12.
[48]
Ibid at para 41.
[49]
Ibid.
[50]
I accept immediately that the shelters in Dladla were different from
the safe spaces. They were permanent buildings; the safe
spaces are
not. But for the reasons I have given, it is not appropriate for me
to reject the safe spaces as suitable alternative
accommodation
based on their physical attributed given the pleadings and (lack of)
evidence before me.
[51]
Dladla
(n 35)
at para 48.
[52]
Ibid.
[53]
Ibid.
[54]
Ibid at para 50.
[55]
Ibid at para 50.
[56]
Ibid at para 48.
[57]
Dawood
and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[2000] ZACC 8; 2000 (3)
SA 936 (CC); 2000 (8) BCLR 837 (CC).
[58]
Dladla
(n 35)
at para 49.
[59]
Ibid at paras 52-3.
[60]
Even if there had been a challenge to the rules, I am not sure that
Dladla
would preclude a s 36(1)
enquiry. In
Dladla
,
the rules were imposed through a contract between the City of
Johannesburg and a service provider. Here the City itself runs
the
safe spaces and it seems has enacted the rules to regulate them. It
is unclear to me whether, applying
Dladla
,
these rules are a law of general application for the purposes of
s 36(1). I prefer not to decide the issue as it was not
argued
before me and, for the reasons already given, is not determinative.
[61]
Mazibuko
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009] ZACC 28
;
2010 (3)
BCLR 239
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 1
(CC) at para 96.
[62]
This applies only to people who enter the safe spaces following an
eviction, not those who freely chose the safe spaces without
any
threat of eviction.
[63]
PE
Municipality
(n
9) at para 31.
[64]
Grobler
v Phillips and Others
[2022]
ZACC 32
;
2023 (1) SA 321
(CC);
2024 (1) BCLR 115
(CC) at para 40.
[65]
See, for example,
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Another v Modderklip Boerdery
(Pty) Ltd
[2005]
ZACC 5; 2005 (5) SA 3 (CC); 2005 (8) BCLR 786 (CC).
[66]
Olga
Tellis
(n
7).
[67]
Ibid.
[68]
Ibid.
[69]
Ibid.
[70]
Grobler
(n 64)
at para 36.
[71]
Constitution s 28(2).
[72]
PIE s 4(6).
[73]
Mwelase
and Others v Director-General for the Department of Rural
Development and Land Reform and Another
[2019]
ZACC 30
;
2019 (11) BCLR 1358
(CC);
2019 (6) SA 597
(CC) at para 46.
[74]
City of
Cape Town v Yawa and others
[2004]
2 All SA 281 (C).
[75]
Zulu
and Others v eThekwini Municipality and Others
[2014] ZACC 17; 2014 (4)
SA 590 (CC); 2014 (8) BCLR 971 (CC).
[76]
Ibid at para 44.
[77]
2022 (3) SA 497
(GJ). See also
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Harmse and Others
[2023] ZAGPJHC 860 and
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Sibanda
[2022]
ZAGPJHC 286.
[78]
Wilson AJ concluded that PIE may not apply because the people facing
eviction in that case were not “unlawful occupiers”
as
defined in PIE. The implication is that if they were unlawful
occupiers, the Municipality would be required to comply not
only
with s 26(3), but also with PIE.
[79]
Section 22A(2) must be read with s 22(1)(d) which expressly makes
the power to arrest “subject to subsection (2)”.
[80]
I was initially allocated to hear that application as part of a Full
Court shortly after this application was heard, but it was
postponed
by agreement.
[81]
Constitution s 8(1).
[82]
There may be circumstances where removal without a court order, or
without an eviction order, is justified. For example, in emergency
situations, or to prevent imminent safety risks. But then that
limitation of s 26(3) will be justifiable whether enacted in By-Law
or court order.
[83]
The relevant part of s 156(3) reads: “Subject to section
151(4), a by-law that conflicts with national or provincial
legislation is invalid.” Section 151(4) reads: “The
national or a provincial government may not compromise or impede
a
municipality’s ability or right to exercise its powers or
perform its functions.”
[84]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[2009] ZACC 14
;
2009 (6)
SA 232
(CC);
2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC).
sino noindex
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