Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 82South Africa
Body Corporate Of The Six Sectional Title Scheme No SS 4[....]9 v City of Cape Town (15732/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 82; [2023] 3 All SA 136 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
26 April 2023
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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## Body Corporate Of The Six Sectional Title Scheme No SS 4[....]9 v City of Cape Town (15732/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 82; [2023] 3 All SA 136 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
Body Corporate Of The Six Sectional Title Scheme No SS 4[....]9 v City of Cape Town (15732/2019) [2023] ZAWCHC 82; [2023] 3 All SA 136 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
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sino date 26 April 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
PROPERTY – Nuisance – Interdict – Illegal
occupants and activities on neighbouring plots – Body
corporate seeking to compel City to take reasonable steps –
Right to an environment that is not harmful to health or
wellbeing – City by-laws – Nature and persistence
of activities giving rise to a nuisance that applicants
cannot
reasonably be expected to tolerate – City ordered to take
steps to reasonably remediate the nuisance –
Constitution, s
24.
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
No: 15732/2019
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF THE SIX SECTIONAL TITLE
SCHEME
NO SS 4[....]9
Applicant
and
THE
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
23 November 2022 and 28 February
2023, supplementary notes delivered on 9 and 16 March 2023
Delivered
electronically:
26
April 2023
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is the body corporate of a
sectional title scheme, The Six, developed on erf 1[....]4, Cape
Town, also known as S[...]
Street, Zonnebloem, which as I understand
it comprises of a few hundred units. The applicant has been duly
authorised to launch
this application by all of the owners in the
scheme.
[2]
The respondent (“the City”)
is the registered owner of neighbouring properties, being seven
undeveloped erven forming
a large open field as well as a parking lot
(which, for sake of convenience, I will refer to as “the site”
save where
otherwise indicated). The site is situated on the corner
of S[...] and K[...] Streets, Zonnebloem, and forms a border between
the
applicant’s units and the Cape Peninsula University of
Technology (“CPUT”).
[3]
The
site is located in District Six and the erven which comprise it are
subject to land claims instituted in terms of the Restitution
of Land
Rights Act (“LRA”).
[1]
The erven have been awarded to the successful claimants in terms of a
framework agreement concluded on 26 November 2000 between
the
City, the Department of Land Affairs and the District Six Beneficiary
Trust under s 42D of the LRA. Clause 10 of the framework
agreement provides
inter
alia
that the City shall remain the registered owner of the site until
such time as it is transferred to the successful claimants. Despite
the elapse of over 22 years transfer of the site has still not taken
place.
[4]
Since the latter part of 2017 the
applicant as well as a number of unit owners have been engaging with
the City in an attempt to
obtain assistance in relation to what is
happening on the site. In short, the applicant’s case is that
in its current state,
the site as well as the activities being
conducted thereon by various persons, including the homeless,
constitute a societal health,
environmental and safety risk.
[5]
Although the City raised various
technical arguments about hearsay in relation to the applicant’s
factual allegations, nothing
much turns on this. In its answering
affidavit the City’s deponent accepted that the allegations:
‘
20.
…in some measure, may have some basis in fact.
21.
It is an unfortunate reality that the vacant erven in District Six,
in close proximity to the CBD, pose a
unique problem in that these
properties serve as magnets for the landless and socially
marginalised segments of the community.
Illegal occupation, vagrancy
and associated social problems are a persistent problem in the area…’
[6]
In its revised relief the applicant
seeks a final interdict against the City directing it to take all
steps reasonably necessary
to:
6.1
clear the site of the illegal occupants thereon, including but not
limited to the institution of legal proceedings
for their eviction if
they fail and/or refuse to vacate the site having been instructed to
do so;
6.2
clear the site of all illegal structures and debris accumulated
thereon;
6.3
abate and remediate the nuisance on the site;
6.4
ensure that the site is not used in a manner that contravenes any law
or bylaw;
6.5
fence off the site (excluding one of the erven which is the parking
lot);
6.5
take the above actions within 6 months from date of this court’s
order; and
6.6
conduct inspections twice per week to ensure that the fence is not
breached and that no illegal occupation
of the site recurs.
[7]
The
applicant also asks that should the City fail to comply with the
above, it be given leave to set the matter down on the same
papers
duly supplemented, for further consideration and/or relief
[2]
(the structural interdict component).
Points
in limine
[8]
In its answering affidavit the City
raised three points
in limine
,
namely: (a) non-joinder; (b) mootness; and (c) impossibility
of performance. Only the non-joinder point was persisted
with.
[9]
This relates to the City’s
contention that the applicant should have joined the Land Claims
Commission (“LCC”),
which is the commonly known name of
the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform. The reason
advanced was that since the
land restitution process is not complete
the LCC as the organ of state responsible for managing that process
in terms of s 6
of the LRA has a direct and substantial interest
in these proceedings.
[10]
It is fair to say that the LCC has
demonstrated a supine approach to this litigation. After the
proceedings were launched the applicant’s
attorneys were
advised by the City’s representatives of the land claim(s) and
further that the site currently “vests”
in the LCC as a
result. Consequently on 28 October 2019 the applicant’s
attorney wrote to the LCC annexing a copy of
the notice of motion and
a diagram depicting the respective erven and their location. The LCC
was requested to advise whether it
required to be joined (along with
the relevant Minister).
[11]
Despite numerous undertakings to revert
after further active engagement by the applicant’s attorney
with the LCC, at the time
of deposing to the replying affidavit (3
years later on 27 October 2022) the applicant had still not received
a formal response.
[12]
After I canvassed the deafening silence
of the LCC with counsel during the first day of argument the parties
agreed to an order
(of 24 November 2022) in which,
inter
alia
, the court directed that a
further copy of the notice of motion, revised order sought by the
applicant as well as the order itself
be served by the applicant’s
attorney on the LCC by Friday 2 December 2022; and that the LCC was
granted a final opportunity
to inform the parties by Friday 27
January 2023 whether it intended to intervene in these proceedings,
failing which the parties
and the court would accept that it intended
abiding the court’s decision or any settlement reached. Service
was duly effected
on 1 December 2022 and when argument resumed on 28
February 2023 the LCC had still not responded. The matter thus
proceeded on
the basis that the LCC abides this court’s
decision.
Pending
proceedings for eviction
[13]
The
City delivered its answering affidavit on 29 October 2021. It
disclosed that on 19 May 2021 it obtained final interdictory
relief in this court under case number 7349/2021
[3]
preventing individuals from attempting to enter upon certain
specified erven in District Six for the purposes,
inter
alia
,
of unlawfully occupying or invading those erven; erecting, completing
or extending any structure thereon and/or occupying any
vacant
structure; and granting the City the authority to remove any person
found to be in contravention of the order, to demolish
any unoccupied
incomplete structure; and to remove any possessions (including
building materials) found at or near such structures.
The erven in
respect of which the interdict was granted include those which form
part of the site in the present application.
[14]
What the City did not disclose is that
in the founding affidavit in case number 7349/2021 the deponent
stated that:
‘
[45]
At present, approximately 28 tents and one wood and zinc structure
are present on Erven 1[....]8, 1[....]4
and 1[....]7 which are
situated on the corner of H[...] Street and Constitution Street,
District Six (“the H[...] Street
property”). Erf 9[....]3
is being used to place building materials thereon;…
[54]
The City will have to obtain an eviction order in respect of those
persons as they are unlawful occupiers
for the purposes of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19
of 1998 (“the PIE Act”)…’
[15]
The erven referred to are part of the
site. It was unclear during the first day of argument whether the
City had taken any steps
in terms of PIE in respect of those
occupying the site as at May 2021. Accordingly, this was also
canvassed with counsel, and included
in the order of 24 November
2022 was an agreement between the parties that the City be granted
leave to file a supplementary
affidavit detailing the steps, if any,
it had taken to procure the eviction of the unlawful occupiers on the
site; alternatively,
what steps it intended taking to procure such
eviction; and in either event the City should include an anticipated
timeline for
finalisation.
[16]
In its supplementary affidavit the City
adopted a rather peculiar approach. It took the stance that the
earlier affidavit by one
of its officials in case number 7349/2021
constituted hearsay evidence, and as such was inadmissible for
purposes of the relief
sought. It nonetheless went on to say that
‘…
however,
[the
City]
remains committed to the
statement in the context of the application, where it was made…’
.
[17]
As regards steps taken by the City in
District Six the deponent stated that:
‘
20.
The final interdict granted
[under
case number 7349/2021]
added impetus
to an ongoing conversation between the City (as registered owner of
land in District Six) and the Department of Land
Restitution and
Rural Development (as the agency responsible for implementing the
restitution of land in District Six).
21.
The land in District Six has been awarded to successful land
claimants. It is earmarked for development to
accommodate the
relocation of these claimants. The development is to proceed in
phases. However, in order to give effect to this
development program,
the land within District Six has to be rendered vacant. Contextually,
the land in question is being managed
by the City along with the
National Departments of Land Restitution and Public Works. This
government collective of stakeholders
is alive to the fact that
evictions within District Six are necessary.
22.
However, there are several complexities for government to navigate,
which were discussed at a meeting convened
on 30 June 2021
between
[those]
parties.
These included: First, finding common ground between national and
local government. Second, addressing the lack of available
land
within the Metropole to accommodate persons evicted from District
Six. Third, adequately securing the site post-eviction to
avoid
evicted persons moving to vacant erven within the area. Fourth,
whether evictions must commence holistically, over the whole
District
Six area, or incrementally prior to each phase of development.
Incremental eviction would probably result in evictees
moving to
vacant erven in the area, whilst whole-scale eviction would require
the availability of sufficient land to accommodate
evicted persons
which the City does not have. Solutions to these complexities are
required.
23.
A further meeting was held on 27 October 2021, where the parties
continued to debate the above issues. No
resolution was reached,
however over the following period the parties continued to share
information regarding the scale of the
relocation process that would
be required as well as the continuing land restitution process.
24.
A number of meetings were also held at executive level between the
Minister for Land Affairs, Minister Didiza,
the (then) Mayor,
Alderman Dan Plato, and their respective legal teams. These meetings
focussed on determining a common strategy
on how best to approach the
eviction of occupiers from the various erven comprising District Six.
25.
In 2021, the Department had appointed counsel for advice on its
responsibilities and approach to these issues.
Unfortunately, on
26 April 2022 their counsel took ill and became unavailable.
Further substantive engagements therefore had
to await the
appointment of new counsel for the Department. This happened in
August 2022. A meeting scheduled on 14 September
2022 did not
proceed due to the non-availability of counsel. The City awaits a
date from the Department to schedule further engagements
in these
issues.
26.
In the meantime, the City has prioritised urgent evictions that it
deemed necessary, both within and outside
the CBD, the lead-up to
which required the preparation of extensive studies, research and
reports to motivate for the relief.
27.
The CBD eviction application referred to above
[which
it is common cause was launched on 12 December 2022]
focuses
on the eviction of street people occupying public streets, road
reserves and pavements in and around seven sites within
the CBD.
28.
I mention the above to illustrate that the City’s obligations
are wide-ranging and not confined to the
provision of one type of
accommodation. The City has adopted an Integrated Human Settlements
Framework, which is aligned to applicable
legislation and policies.
In addition the City has promulgated the Integrated Human Settlements
Sector Plan for the period ending
1 July 2027… in terms of
which it has a number of housing programs, inter alia social housing,
GAP housing, finance-linked
individual subsidy housing, institutional
housing, and emergency and transitional housing.
29.
Each type of housing program is aimed at a different category of
recipient, according to their needs. The
availability of housing, in
turn, will affect which area of need can be alleviated first. The
City’s decision to institute
proceedings for the eviction of
street people in the CBD, as opposed to instituting proceedings for
the eviction of all unlawful
occupiers in District Six, must
therefore be seen as an exercise of the City’s executive
powers, and the implementation of
policy decisions made on how to
best allocate public resources under its stewardship…
30.
The City is engaged in discussions with the Department to find a
common strategy to facilitate restitutional
development in the area.
This process is ongoing. Until the City and the Department can agree
a common strategy to navigate the
associated challenges, it would be
premature to commit to any time-line.’
[18]
Accordingly the City has not yet
instituted any formal proceedings for the eviction of the occupiers
of the site. There is no indication
by the City as to when that might
occur. Moreover, there is no affidavit from any individual in the
Department (or LCC) to cast
light on the steps, if any, that
it
has taken or intends to take to assist the City in a meaningful and
proactive way regarding the erven which make up the site. One
has to
wonder, in these circumstances, whether the LCC in fact has any real
intention of ensuring that successful claimants, who
have been
waiting over 20 years, will ever ultimately return to the place
from which they were so cruelly evicted by the apartheid
government.
This is a matter of grave concern to this court.
[19]
According to the City, the
redistribution process will allegedly be completed in August 2024. I
agree with the applicant’s
submission that having regard to the
delays experienced to date, this seems highly unlikely. Moreover the
LCC has elected not to
take the court into its confidence regarding
how it intends placing the successful claimants in possession of the
erven which make
up the site even if the process is completed as
envisaged by the City. It is thus fair to assume that the prevailing
situation
will continue in limbo for some years to come. As the
applicant submits it is evident that, without more, the parties are
in a
catch-22 situation. The unlawful conduct will not end until the
land is distributed, and the land cannot be distributed until the
unlawful activities end. It is against this background that the
applicant contends the City must be ordered to take more permanent
steps.
[20]
The applicant accepts that it has no
locus standi
to institute proceedings for the eviction of the unlawful occupiers
of the site. It is also not for this court to interfere with
policy-laden decisions made by the City in relation to the eviction
of the unlawful occupiers from the site, particularly given
that the
applicant does not seek to review any such decision(s).
[21]
It would thus not be appropriate for
this court to order the City to take steps to evict the occupiers of
the site at this stage,
which would include that part of the relief
sought by the applicant to clear the site of any occupied illegal
structures and to
fence it off, thus preventing those already in
occupation from accessing it.
[22]
There is also the additional factor of
the City’s interdict to prevent further unlawful occupation
which, given its constitutional
and other obligations referred to
below, it is presumably duty bound to enforce. However that is not an
issue before me but for
another court to decide should the applicant
or other interested party approach court on the basis that the City
is failing to
do so. I thus turn to deal with the other bases upon
which the applicant relies.
Nuisance
and contravention of laws and/or by-laws
[23]
Section 24 of the Constitution provides
that everyone has the right to an environment that is not harmful to
their health or wellbeing,
and that the environment is to be
protected through reasonable legislative and other measures. The
applicant maintains that the
City is in breach both of s 24 and
certain of its by-laws due to the latter’s failure to take
proper steps to prevent
the activities on the site.
[24]
These are alleged to include dealing in
and consuming drugs; open fires that are often left unattended;
screaming and shouting at
all times of the day and night; public
urination and defecation with the attendant reek of foul odours;
nudity and open sexual
activity; abundant trash in overgrown grass
and weeds; and harassment, assaults and intimidation of those who
occupy the applicant’s
units and others in the area.
[25]
The City’s response is that it
does not in any way condone or tolerate the conduct complained of; to
the extent that the application
is directed at the conduct of persons
alleged to be contravening its by-laws this is misconceived since it
is not legally liable
or responsible for the conduct of private
individuals; and that as owner of the site it is not in any way in
breach of those by-laws
or remiss in enforcing them. It also –
strangely – baldly denied that the applicant (in this case
obviously the owners
of the units) have any s 24 rights. In its
supplementary affidavit it accepted however that if found to be in
breach of the by-laws
the appropriate order would be to compel it to
comply.
[26]
The applicant also contends that, apart
from contravention of the by-laws, the City’s lack of
constructive action is unlawful
under the common law of neighbours or
nuisance. The City’s response in its answering affidavit was
merely that the applicant
has failed to make out a case in this
regard.
[27]
The applicant relies on 5 by-laws:
27.1
the Municipal Planning By-law, 2015
[4]
;
27.2
the Environmental Health By-law, 2003
[5]
;
27.3
the Community Fire Safety By-law, 2002
[6]
;
27.4
the By-law relating to Street, Public Places and the Prevention of
Noise Nuisances, 2007
[7]
; and
27.5
the Integrated Waste Management By-law, 2009
[8]
.
The
municipal planning by-law
[28]
This prescribes, amongst others, the
framework for the management and use of land within the jurisdiction
of the City. In terms
of s 35 ‘
no
person may use or develop land unless the use or development is
permitted in terms of the zoning scheme or an approval is granted
or
deemed to have been granted in terms of this By-law’.
In terms of s 133(1) the use of land other than in accordance
with the development management scheme of the by-law constitutes
an
offence. The erven comprising the site are zoned for GB5 (General
Business Zoning 5), OS2 (Open Space Zoning 2), and TR2 (Transport
Zoning 2).
[29]
It is necessary to detail what these
different types of zoning permit. The GB zoning provides for general
business activity and
mixed-use development of a medium to high
intensity. The primary uses are business premises, a dwelling house,
a second dwelling,
boarding house, flats, places of instruction,
places of worship, an institution, hospital, place of assembly, place
of entertainment,
hotel, conference facility, service trade,
authority use, utility service, rooftop base telecommunication
station, multiple parking
garage, private road and open space.
Consent uses are an adult shop, adult entertainment business, adult
services, informal trading
(as defined in the by-law and which does
not include the activities on the site), expo centre, motor repair
garage, warehouse,
freestanding base telecommunication station, wind
turbine infrastructure, transport use, helicopter landing pad and
service station.
[30]
The OS2 zoning provides for active and
passive recreational areas on public land, as well as the protection
of landscape and heritage
areas, including woodlands, ridges,
watercourses, wetlands, and the coastline. The primary uses are
public open space and environmental
conservation use. Consent uses
are environmental facilities, tourist facilities, a utility service,
cemetery, rooftop base tele-communication
station, freestanding base
telecommunication station, wind turbine infrastructure, cultural and
social ceremonies, urban agriculture,
informal trading, harvesting of
natural resources and air and underground rights.
[31]
The TR2 zoning provides for public
streets and roads, whether constructed or still to be constructed, as
well as premises for the
public parking of operable motor vehicles.
The primary uses for this zoning are public street, public road and
utility service
uses. Consent uses are informal trading, a multiple
parking garage, wind turbine infrastructure and air and underground
rights.
[32]
The applicant correctly contends that
the activities on the site do not conform to any of the uses
permitted and are thus illegal.
The City’s stance is that it
cannot be said that it is making use of the site for these activities
and nor can it be held
liable for any such conduct committed by the
unlawful occupants.
[33]
In
Intercape
Ferreira Mainliner (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[9]
the applicant sought to interdict the respondent from operating a
refugee office on its neighbouring property on the bases that:
(a) the use of the property contravened the City’s zoning
scheme; and (b) the refugee office constituted a common
law
nuisance. The applicant’s complaints included noise
interference, health concerns and safety and security issues. The
court found that the state is bound by its own zoning schemes:
‘
[100]
Under the Constitution a foundational value of our country is the
supremacy of the Constitution and
the rule of law (s1(c)). The notion
of a State which is not in general bound by legislation strikes one
as antithetical to the
rule of law. Even more anomalous is the
proposition that the State in this country should, in its various
manifestations under
the Constitution, be assumed not to be bound by
legislation merely because this was the position of the Crown
developed over hundreds
of years by the common law of England.
Furthermore, the presumption does not appear to sit comfortably with
the constitutional
regime for the legislative competencies of the
various spheres of government. The legislative powers of the
national, provincial
and municipal legislatures are powers conferred
on them directly by the Constitution; the provincial and local
legislatures do
not exercise powers notionally delegated to them by
national government (cf City of Cape Town and Another v Robertson and
Another
[2004] ZACC 21
;
2005 (2) SA 323
(CC) paras 53-60). Under common law, the
proposition would have been that the Crown or State President in
assenting to legislation
was not thereby presumed to be agreeing that
the State (whose head he or she was) should be bound. But where (for
example) a provincial
legislature under our Constitution enacts a law
within its competence and such law is assented to by the provincial
premier, why
should it be assumed that the provincial legislature was
not intending thereby to bind (for example) the national government
or
municipalities within its area? And if those other spheres of
government are bound, why not the province itself?...
[105]
In accordance with the common law approach, the fact that legislation
is in the public benefit
is relevant but not sufficient to establish
that the State is bound. Nor is it enough to show that the State
would not be prejudiced
if it were bound (Raats at 263B); the court
must be satisfied that the objects of the legislation would be
frustrated if the State
were not bound. Now the court can, I think,
take judicial notice of the fact that the national and provincial
governments are significant
owners and users of land in the Western
Cape (and indeed in the country as a whole). From a town planning
perspective, the control
over the utilisation of land customarily
involves the allocation of the same use rights to all properties in a
particular area
so that one will have areas set aside for residential
use, other areas for commercial use and yet others for industrial
use, and
so forth. The purpose of town planning would, in my view, be
frustrated if the State as a significant user of land were free to
disregard zoning restrictions. Even if only a few pieces of land in a
particular area were free to be used by the State contrary
to the
zoning for that area, the character of the area and the welfare of
the members of the community in that area would be jeopardised
and
the planning objectives of the local authority (as approved by the
province) frustrated.’
[34]
I am in agreement. To my mind the City
has either misconceived its obligations or is seeking to hide behind
the fact that since
its own officials are not conducting the
activities it is not obliged to do anything to curb them. The City’s
stance fails
to recognise its constitutional obligation to all
citizens in its area of responsibility, and it has failed to advance
any basis
upon which it could be concluded that its decision not to
properly enforce its own by-law is rational or excusable. While it is
so that it has taken a policy decision to postpone the eviction of
the unlawful occupiers (which cannot be interfered with in these
proceedings for the reasons already given) this does not mean that it
can simply abrogate its other responsibilities.
[35]
In argument the City sought to
distinguish the facts in the present matter from those in
Intercape
on the basis that the site was unlawfully occupied without its
knowledge; it has not consented thereto; and it does not condone
the
activities there. But, as stated, this argument overlooks its own
obligations. The City surely cannot be permitted to rely
on a policy
decision in relation to the postponement of an application to evict
as an excuse not to conduct itself lawfully. It
needs to take
reasonable and appropriate steps, at the very least, to curb the
activities on the site. How exactly it does that
is not for this
court to prescribe since this is for the City to decide. But it must
do something.
The
environmental health by-law
[36]
In addition to the applicant’s
s 24 right the City also has an obligation under s 152 of
the Constitution to strive
to promote a safe and healthy environment.
This section provides in relevant part that:
‘
152.
Objects of local government
(1)
The objects of local government
are - …
(d)
to promote a safe and healthy environment; and…
(2)
A municipality must strive,
within its financial and administrative capacity, to achieve the
objects set out in subsection (1).’
[37]
In
Mayfair
[10]
this was emphasised as follows:
‘
[47]
As rightly submitted by Mr Ohanessian, the City of Johannesburg is an
organ of state that is obliged to respect, protect, promote
and
fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights. It is also obligated, under
section 152(1) of the Constitution, to, among other things,
ensure a
safe and healthy environment… The City therefore has a
constitutional obligation to enforce the applicable land
use scheme
and to ensure the applicants’ right to an environment that is
not harmful to their health or wellbeing.’
[38]
The environmental health by-law
prohibits and regulates,
inter alia
,
health nuisances. It defines a “person” as including any
sphere of government. The most relevant provisions for present
purposes are s 2(1) and s 8. These provide that no person shall:
‘
2…
(1) Allow any erf to be overgrown with bush, weeds or grass or other
vegetation… to such an extent that, in the
opinion of the
Council, it may be used as shelter by vagrants, wild animals or
vermin or may threaten the public health or the
safety of any member
of the community…
8…
keep, cause or suffer to be kept on any premises any accumulation or
deposit of filth, rubbish, refuse, manure, other
offensive matter, or
objectionable material or thing so as to be a health nuisance.’
[39]
The applicant submits that the City, as
owner of the site, is in breach of these provisions, amongst others,
but that even if it
were not the owner, the City nonetheless has a
constitutional obligation to ensure that the occupants of the site do
not contravene
the relevant provisions.
[40]
The City denies that, as owner, it has
allowed any contravention of the by-law to occur on the site. Its
explanation is that in
order to comply with its obligations as owner,
it is required to issue a tender for grass cutting services at its
cost. In the
2019 financial year this totalled R330 206.41.
However, since District Six needs to be cleared twice a year the
annual cost
is double.
[41]
To my mind this explanation falls far
short of a reasonable explanation. It pertinently fails to address
how cutting the grass twice
a year is sufficient to prevent
threatening the public health or safety of any member of the
community, or what steps the City
takes to prevent the accumulation
or deposit of filth, rubbish, refuse and the like on its site. The
City has also wholly failed
to engage with its obligation as local
government independent of any duty arising from its ownership of the
site.
[42]
Either the City has chosen to be
dismissive of the applicant’s complaints or it has failed to
understand its obligations.
Neither is good enough. I do not repeat
what has already been stated regarding the City’s prerogative
to determine how it
fulfils its obligations, but the same applies to
the by-law under discussion as well as those which follow.
The
community fire safety by-law
[43]
This by-law is aimed at promoting and
achieving a fire-safe environment for the benefit of all persons
within its jurisdiction.
For present purposes the following
provisions are most relevant:
‘
26(1)
The owner or person in charge of the premises or a portion thereof
must not allow combustible waste or refuse to accumulate
in any area
or in any manner so as to create a fire hazard or other threatening
danger...
34(2)
The owner or person in charge of the premises may not permit
vegetation to grow or accumulate thereon, or other
combustible
material to accumulate thereon, in a manner likely to cause a fire
hazard or other threatening danger.’
[44]
The City’s answer is that its
interventions are responsive in nature, i.e. it acts on receipt
of a complaint. It also
claims that the by-law permits open fires for
cooking purposes in terms of s 35(2). However s 35(1) and
(2) provide that:
‘
(1)
The lighting of fires and the disposal of combustible
material by burning is prohibited, save in the circumstances
set out
in this section.
(2)
A person may light a fire or use
a flame-emitting device for the purpose of preparing food or any
other domestic purpose
in a
manner which will not cause a fire hazard or other threatening danger
or where such a fire is not precluded by any other legislation.’
(emphasis supplied)
[45]
Accordingly the City’s
understanding of its obligation in respect of open fires is
incorrect. As far as vegetation growth
is concerned the City again
relies on its grass cutting service twice a year which, as already
stated, is insufficient (and if
it were, then the unanswered question
is why the site is overgrown).
[46]
The deponent to the answering affidavit
does however point out that the site is monitored regularly to assess
risks. Where necessary,
compliance notices in terms of s 6 of
the by-law are issued by the Department of Fire Safety to the City as
owner. In addition,
statistics provided for the site indicate that
over the 3 year period from 2017 to 2019 a total of 31 complaints
were responded
to. The City also annexed one of its notices to comply
in which the Department of Fire Safety conducted an inspection of one
of
the erven on the site, seemingly in December 2019. The notice
records that:
‘
The
inspection revealed the following:
Contraventions:
Permit
vegetation/combustible material to overgrow/accumulate on premises in
a manner likely to cause a Fire Hazard or other threatening
danger.
Permit
rubbish to accumulate on premises in a manner likely to cause a Fire
Hazard or other threatening danger.
Remedial
Action:
1.
Housekeeping to be improved
,
accumulation of combustible material must not create a Fire Hazard or
other threatening danger:
a)
Vegetation to be cleared and
maintained;
b)
Rubbish to be removed;
c)
Informal structures to be
removed.
You
are hereby given notice in terms of Section 55(3) to comply with the
above provisions on or before 2020-01-20…’
(emphasis supplied)
[47]
The
notice went on to inform the City that failure to comply was an
offence as prescribed in the Fire Services Act.
[11]
Despite this notice, the City elected not to take the court into its
confidence about the manner in which it complied, or whether
it
complied at all. Accordingly, as correctly submitted by the
applicant, on its own version the City has breached this by-law
on at
least one occasion and probably more, given its statement that ‘
where
necessary, compliance notices… are issued’.
What is remarkable is how the City interprets the compliance notice:
‘
48.
…A copy of such a notice is attached… in which the City
is requested to improve its
housekeeping of the affected property
by (a) clearing vegetation, (b) removing rubbish and (c) removing
informal structures.’
(emphasis supplied)
[48]
The City thus appears to view a demand
to comply under threat of being charged with an offence, issued by
one of its own Departments,
as nothing more than a “request”.
This does not bode well for the applicant and calls out for
intervention by this
court.
The
street, public places and prevention of noise nuisances by-law
[49]
This by-law is aimed at controlling,
inter alia
,
public nuisances since in accordance with its preamble ‘
aggressive,
threatening, abusive or obstructive behaviour of persons in public is
unacceptable to the City’.
The
applicant’s complaint in this regard is that pedestrians and
persons staying in the area are harassed daily for food
and money by
the occupants of the site. This is generally accompanied by abusive
and threatening language in order to break down
any resistance. Those
having to walk across the site to go to CPUT, the Muir Street Mosque
or the MyCiti bus stop have on occasion
been robbed, stabbed,
victimised and intimidated. Women are subjected to sexual innuendo
and physical threats. One of the owners
in the applicant’s
building has witnessed an illegal occupant threaten to attack a
security guard with acid.
[50]
The relevant provisions of the by-law
relied upon by the applicant are:
‘
2
.
Prohibited behaviour
(1)
No person, excluding a peace officer or any other official or person
acting in terms of the law shall
–
(a)
when
in
a public place
–
(i)
intentionally block or interfere
with the safe or free passage of a pedestrian or motor vehicle; or
(ii)
intentionally touch or cause
physical contact with another person, or his or her property, without
that person’s consent;
(b)
approach or follow a person
individually or as part of a group of two or more persons, in a
manner or with conduct, words or gestures
intended to or likely to
influence or to cause a person to fear imminent bodily harm or damage
to or loss of property or otherwise
to be intimidated into giving
money or other things of value;
(c)
continue to beg from a person or
closely follow a person after the person has given a negative
response to such begging…
(3)
No person shall
in
a public place
–
(a)
use abusive or threatening
language;
(b)
fight or act in a riotous or
physically threatening manner…
3.
Noise nuisance
No
person shall
in a public place
–
(a)
cause or permit to be caused a
disturbance by shouting, screaming or making any other loud or
persistent noise or sound…’
(emphasis
supplied)
[51]
The applicant submits that, once again,
the City is in contravention of this by-law as well as its
constitutional obligation to
enforce it. That may or may not be the
case, but the applicant has not sought any relief in relation to
conduct by the unlawful
occupants of the site in a “public
place”. The orders which it seeks are directed at the site
itself and accordingly
I deal no further with this ground.
The
integrated waste management by-law
[52]
This by-law aims to regulate and control
waste management, including littering and illegal dumping, to ensure
a safe, healthy and
sustainable environment and the protection of the
rights of individuals. A “person” is defined as including
any divisional
or municipal council or like authority. Section 15(5)
provides that:
‘
(5)
A person who owns land or premises, or who is in control of or has a
right to use land or premises,
may
not
use or
permit
the use
of the land or
premises for unlawful dumping of waste
and
must take reasonable steps to prevent the use of the land or premises
for that purpose
.’
(emphasis supplied)
[53]
That the City has permitted rubbish to
accumulate on the site is beyond dispute. This much is evident from
the notice to comply
referred to above, and is seemingly only one
example thereof.
[54]
In its founding affidavit the applicant
only relied on s 15(1) which prohibits littering by persons or
allowing a person under
one’s control to do so. The City
responded as follows:
‘
65.
There is no allegation made that the City has acted in contravention
of the By-law. Similarly, since any illegal
occupants/transients
cannot be considered to be under the City’s control, there is
no cause of action against the City…
66.
Accordingly any claim in terms of this By-law must fail.’
[55]
While it may be that the applicant only
later relied on s 15(5) as well, the compliance notice was
attached by the City to
its own answering affidavit and s 15(5)
was also canvassed in argument. Accordingly there can be no prejudice
to the City
if this court has regard to s 15(5) in determining
this application.
Nuisance
at common law
[56]
In
Intercape
the court explained “nuisance” as follows:
‘
[142]
In the context of the present case, the term “nuisance”
connotes a species of delict arising from a wrongful
violation of the
duty which our common law imposes on a person towards his neighbours,
the said duty being the correlative of the
right which his neighbours
have to enjoy the use and occupation of their properties without
unreasonable interference. Wrongfulness
is assessed, as in other
areas of our delictual law, by the criterion of objective
reasonableness, where considerations of public
policy are to the fore
(see, generally,
East London Western
District Farmers’ Association and Others v Minister of
Education and Development Aid and Others
1989
(2) SA 63
(A) at 66G-68A;
Dorland and
Another v Smith
2002 (5) SA 374
(C) at
383B-C and 384A-C). For a recent statement by this court of the
factors which typically fall to be assessed in determining
reasonableness, see
Laskey and Another
v Showzone CC and Others
2007 (2) SA 48
(C) paras 19-21; see also LAWSA Vol 19 (2
nd
Ed) paras 173-185.
[143]
Since the applicants in the present case do not claim damages but an
interdict in respect of an allegedly ongoing
nuisance, fault on the
part of the Department and Cila is not an element of the cause of
action (see
Regal v African Superslate
(Pty) Ltd
1963 (1) SA 102
(A) at 106A
and 120G).’
[57]
In
the present matter there is no genuine dispute that the unlawful
occupants of the site are conducting the activities of which
the
applicant complains. In
Mayfair
[12]
the following was said:
‘
[36]
Neighbours have the right to the use and enjoyment of the property
that they occupy or upon which they reside… Additionally,
section 24(a) of the Constitution provides that the applicant has the
right to an environment that is not harmful to their health
or
wellbeing. In order to determine whether a nuisance is actionable the
question before me is whether the nuisance is unreasonable
and cannot
be expected or tolerated in the circumstances. This requires a test
not only of what a reasonable person would tolerate,
but more
importantly “an objective evaluation of the circumstances and
milieu in which the alleged nuisance has occurred”…
[37]
In making this determination the court may take into account any
relevant factors, including the type of locality in which
the
nuisance emanates…’
[58]
In the present matter, the nature,
extent and persistence of the activities complained of on land
adjacent to the units of the applicant
can only lead to one
reasonable conclusion, namely that the activities give rise to a
nuisance that the applicants cannot reasonably
be expected to
tolerate. This is exacerbated by the fact that the City is unable to
provide the court with any concrete indication
of when the nuisance
is likely to abate as a consequence of the unlawful occupants being
evicted from the site.
[59]
The
nuisance complained of is similar to that in
Redefine
Properties Ltd v The Government of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
.
[13]
The adjacent property was vacant, save for unlawful occupation which
began in 2018. As in the present case, there was no access
to running
water, sewage disposal or any other amenities. The applicant
considered the living conditions and activities of those
on the
adjacent property to be a nuisance as well as a health and fire
hazard.
[60]
It stated that it generated income from
its property and would likely suffer significant financial loss
should its tenant terminate
the lease agreement due to the unlawful
occupation of the adjacent property. It was also alleged that the
condition of the adjacent
property posed a threat to the safety of
both the applicant’s tenant and the unlawful occupiers
themselves. It sought an
order,
inter
alia
, directing the respondent to
abate the nuisance. The court held:
‘
[36]
I find that the applicant has established that there is a nuisance of
a private nature occurring on the Adjacent Property.
But it does not
really make any difference if the nuisance could also be classified
as a public nuisance. The nuisance interferes
with the applicant’s
use and enjoyment of the Property (or those occupying the Property
with the applicant’s consent)
due to the interference with the
comfort of human existence on the Property. The applicant’s
tenant on the Property cannot
inhabit and occupy the Property in the
physical comfort, convenience and wellbeing due to the violations
stated above emanating
from the Adjacent Property. The interferences
are beyond what the tenant of the Property or the applicant can be
expected to tolerate.
The nuisance ought to be remedied.’
Entitlement
to interdictory relief
[61]
Given the above analysis I am persuaded
that the applicant has established a clear right to the City’s
adherence to the relevant
provisions of the Constitution and its own
by-laws. It has also established a clear right under the common law
to prevent the continuation
of the nuisance occurring on the site.
[62]
The applicant has also shown an injury
committed or reasonably apprehended. The injury (or infringement) is
ongoing. Given what
appears to be the increasing gravity of the
situation, it is fair to accept the applicant’s contention that
it will not be
long before circumstances arise in which serious
bodily harm to one of its members or property is caused.
[63]
Not even the City seriously suggests
that the applicant has any alternative satisfactory remedy at its
disposal. The best it could
come up with, raised for the first time
on the second day of argument when it had also appointed senior
counsel, was that the applicant
should approach the City Ombudsman in
terms of the City Ombudsman By-law for the purpose of having the
latter assist the City in
fulfilling its obligations.
[64]
The requirements for final interdictory
relief have thus been met. However the applicant fairly acknowledges
that the most appropriate
remedy would be a structural interdict. In
my view this would afford a reasonable opportunity for the City to
determine and take
appropriate remedial steps while at the same time
the court’s order would not interfere with the policy decision
made by
the City in respect of the eviction of the unlawful occupants
of the site. The order that follows attempts to properly address
this.
Costs
[65]
In its notice of motion and founding
affidavit the applicant sought costs on the ordinary scale. After
having received the answering
affidavit and perusing the City’s
case in the application under case number 7349/2021, the applicant
decided to ask for costs
on the attorney and client scale. The
reasons advanced in its replying affidavit were as follows.
[66]
First, the applicant represents a group
of individuals utilising their after-tax income to approach court for
an order compelling
the City to uphold the Constitution after years
of largely fruitless engagement. Second, this application was
threatened, in very
specific detail, following a lengthy process of
individual complaints, and the City did not even afford the applicant
the courtesy
of a response. Third, after having to incur legal costs
to launch this application the City’s response was woefully
inadequate.
In these circumstances the applicant submits that
anything short of an award of attorney and client costs will cause it
to be unfairly
out of pocket.
[67]
In my view most of the applicant’s
submissions on this score have merit. In addition, although the order
of 24 November
2022 granted the City leave to file a
supplementary affidavit on specific limited issues, as the applicant
correctly points out,
the affidavit that followed also raised other
matter. The applicant was thus obliged to deal with that as well
which resulted in
it incurring yet further costs.
[68]
This is not one of those cases where,
for example, a private individual is aggrieved by the City’s
refusal to approve building
plans. The applicant’s members have
demonstrated that throughout they have been as reasonable and
accommodating towards the
City as possible, and that this application
was really a last resort. The applicant should thus not be out of
pocket as far as
reasonably possible, given also that it has been
substantially successful.
[69]
In the
result the following order is made:
1.
Subject to paragraph 2 below, the
respondent is directed, by no later than FRIDAY 27 OCTOBER 2023,
to take steps to abate and/or
reasonably remediate the nuisance on
erven 9[....]3, 1[....]4, 1[...]6, 1[...]6, 1[....]7, 1[....]8 and
1[….]0, Cape Town
(“the site”), which is
interfering with the use and enjoyment of erf 1[....]4, Cape Town on
which The Six Sectional
Title Scheme No SS 4[....]9 (“the
property”) is situated;
2.
The abatement and/or remediation
referred to in paragraph 1 above is directed at curbing the criminal
activities on the site as
well as directing the respondent to comply
with the Environmental Health By-law (PG 6041 dated 30 June 2003),
the Community Fire
Safety By-law (PG 5832 dated 28 February 2022
as amended), and the Integrated Waste Management By-law (PG 6651
dated 21 August
2009 as amended), so that the use and occupation
of the site does not continue to pose a threat to the safety and
wellbeing of
those occupying the property as well as safeguarding the
property itself;
3.
The respondent is directed to provide
the applicant’s attorney of record with a written report of the
steps taken in accordance
with paragraphs 1 and 2 above by no
later than FRIDAY 17 NOVEMBER 2023;
4.
The applicant is granted leave to
approach court thereafter on the same papers, duly supplemented where
necessary, for further or
alternative relief; and
5.
The respondent shall pay the costs of
this application on the scale as between attorney and client,
including any reserved costs
orders and the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
J
I CLOETE
For applicant
:
Adv
C Cutler and Adv J Hamers
Instructed by
:
Smith
Tabata Buchanan Boyes (Mr M Bey)
For respondent
:
Adv B Joseph SC and Adv R
Abrahams
Instructed
by
: Herold
Gie Attorneys (Mr A Meyer)
[1]
No
22 of 1994.
[2]
In
its notice of motion the applicant also sought an order that the
City rehabilitate the site into a green, accessible space
for the
community, but it now accepts that such relief is not possible given
the terms of the framework agreement.
[3]
City
of Cape Town v Those Persons attempting and/or intending to settle
on the erven in District Six
(7349/2021)
[2021] ZAWCHC 98
(19 May 2021).
[4]
Provincial
Gazette Extraordinary
7414 of 29 June 2015.
[5]
Provincial
Gazette
6041
of 30 June 2003.
[6]
Provincial
Gazette Extraordinary
5832
of 28 February 2002.
[7]
Provincial
Gazette
6469
of 28 September 2007.
[8]
Provincial
Gazette
6651 of 21 August 2009.
[9]
2010
(5) SA 367
(WCC); followed in
Mayfair
Residential Association v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality
2021
JDR 1957 (GJ)
[10]
See
fn 9.
[11]
No
99 of 1987.
[12]
See
fn 9 above.
[13]
2022
JDR 0777 (GP).
sino noindex
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