Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 183South Africa
Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Blake and Others (12653/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 183 (28 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
28 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Blake and Others (12653/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 183 (28 July 2023)
Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Blake and Others (12653/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 183 (28 July 2023)
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sino date 28 July 2023
Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No. 12653/2022
Before: The Hon. Ms
Acting Justice Hofmeyr
Date of hearing: 27July
2023
Date of judgment: 28 July
2023
In
the matter between:
GOODFIND
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
JOHN
DERRICK BLAKE
First
Respondent
ALL
OCCUPANTS OF THE PROPERTY
SITUATED
AT 701 SAKABULA FLATS, SAKABULA CIRCLE,
RUYTERWACHT,
WESTERN CAPE PROVINCE
Second
Respondent
THE
CITY OF CAPE TOWN MUNICIPALITY
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
HOFMEYR AJ:
1
This is an application to evict the occupants from a flat in
Ruyterwacht, Western Cape.
2
It is brought by a company, Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd,
which owns the block of flats. It purchased the block of flats in
April
2019.
3
The occupiers have been living in the block of flats for more
than thirty years, since 1987.
4
They fell into arrears with their rental in March 2021.
The
applicant brought eviction proceedings in June 2022.
5
The wife of the first respondent, Ms Sarah Blake, who resides
at the flat, deposed to the answering affidavit on 6 March 2023.
6
She provides the following details about the occupiers:
6.1
Mr Blake is 70 years old and his sole
source of income is a monthly government grant of R1945.00. He had
been working as a security
guard but retired in 2020. In June 2022,
he suffered a severe stroke and is undergoing rehabilitation.
6.2
Also living at the property is Ms Blake’s
sister who is separated from her husband. She has also suffered from
a stroke and
has profound neurocognitive deficits. She is unemployed
and lives off a disability grant of R1980.00 a month.
6.3
Ms Blake’s son is 22 years old also
lives in the flat. He suffers from schizophrenia and is disabled. He
also receives a disability
grant of R1980 a month.
6.4
Ms Blake looks after and cares for these
three people on the property.
6.5
Ms Blake receives a grant of R450 per
month. She is unable to find employment because she has to look after
the occupants of the
flat.
6.6
There are no other relatives who can be
relied upon to provide alternative accommodation and no further
source of income for the
occupiers.
7
In
its decision in
Changing
Tides
,
[1]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal emphasised the important role that
municipalities play in dealing with homelessness that can follow
eviction proceedings. In particular, it emphasised that
municipalities have a duty to report to the courts about the
availability
of alternative land or accommodation for people who are
evicted pursuant to court orders.
8
On 6 February 2023, the Acting Judge
President of this Court granted an order in this matter requiring,
amongst other things, the
third respondent – the City of Cape
Town – to deliver a report dealing with the special
circumstances of the occupiers,
as well as the following:
8.1
whether the eviction of the occupiers would
likely result in homelessness;
8.2
details of all engagements between the
applicant, the City and the occupiers and whether any scope exists
for mediation;
8.3
the infrastructure in the proposed
settlement area, including but not limited to availability and
location of public transport,
medical facilities and further social
services; and
8.4
the impact of relocation on the occupiers.
9
The City’s report was filed with the
Court on 22 March 2022. It took the form of an affidavit. In the
affidavit, the City
initially identifies the first respondent
correctly as an adult male. However, later in the affidavit, the
deponent incorrectly
uses the pronoun “she” to refer to
the first respondent.
10
The City also incorrectly states that the
first respondent is employed and gets a monthly income of R6355.00.
This error tends to
indicate that the deponent to the City’s
affidavit did not read the answering affidavit of the occupiers
before preparing
the report because their affidavit makes it clear
that the first respondent is not employed and that the combined
income of the
household is from social grants.
11
The City’s report and affidavit
therefore proceeds from the incorrect premise that the first
respondent receives an income
from employment. He does not. He is
severely disabled and not working. Despite the fact that the City was
specifically ordered
by this court to deal with the special
circumstances of the occupiers, the City’s affidavit makes no
reference to the fact
that the occupiers are acutely vulnerable.
Amongst them are the elderly and the disabled. It is therefore not
clear whether this
factor was even taken into account in the City’s
consideration of alternative accommodation or land for the occupiers.
The
cavalier way in which the City prepared its report is to be
deprecated.
12
On the issue of alternative accommodation
or land, the City’s affidavit is also woefully inadequate. It
deals only with the
provision of what is called “emergency
shelter material”. The City’s deponent says that “this
is the only
form of emergency shelter that is on offer from the
City”. Quite how the provision of material with which to build
a shelter
qualifies as alternative accommodation or land is not
explained by the City. Moreover, the City’s offer of emergency
shelter
material is made conditional on the occupiers being able to
secure a site for its construction and providing proof, in the form
of an affidavit, from any relevant landowner that she or he will
consent to the construction of the emergency shelter material
on the
land and will comply with the City’s building and planning
by-laws in the construction of the structure.
13
However, by attaching these conditions to
the provision of the shelter material, the City has made it extremely
difficult for those
facing homelessness even to be able to take up
the offer of the provision of the material. Notably, the City does
not say that
it, as landowner, is willing to provide the necessary
consent and give the undertakings required. It leaves it to those
facing
eviction to secure this consent but it is unclear how this
would ever be achieved given the onerous obligations that the City
insists
on placing on any landowner who may be willing to give
consent. Similar concerns about the City’s provision of
emergency
shelter material have recently been raised by Justice
Binns-Ward in a judgment handed down earlier this month on 10 July
2023 in
Vacation Import (Pty) Ltd v
Bumina and Others
(3852/2022;
3855/2022)
[2023] ZAWCHC 162
(10 July 2023).
14
There is also no explanation in the City’s
affidavit for why “emergency shelter material” is “the
only form
of emergency shelter that is on offer from the City”.
There is simply no detail provided about the resources available to
the City, what alternative accommodation or land is available, and
why the shelter material is all that the City is in a position
to
provide to these acutely vulnerable people.
15
It is also apparent that no consideration
has been given to whether the City should step in and assume the
rental obligation of
the occupiers until alternative accommodation or
land becomes available. The facts before court are that these
occupiers dutifully
paid their rental every month for more than 30
years until, it seems, the first respondent stopped his employment in
2020 and then
they started to fall into arrears from March 2021. The
monthly rental that was being paid in 2021 was in the order of
R3,250. It
escalates at a marginal percentage each year.
16
In the light of these inadequacies in the
report from the City, the report fails to provide the court with the
information it requires
for the purposes of section 4(7) of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998. In
Changing Tides
,
the Supreme Court highlighted the fact that:
“
courts
are required, in matters such as this one, to go beyond their normal
functions and to engage in active judicial management
according to
equitable principles of an ongoing, stressful and lawgoverned
social process. This has major implications for
the manner in which
[the court] must deal with the issues before it, how it should
approach questions of evidence, the procedures
it may adopt, the way
in which it exercises its powers and the orders it might make
.”
[2]
17
The
issue of the inadequacy of the City’s report was taken
pertinently in the heads of argument of Mr Nduli, who appeared
for
the occupier-respondents. During argument, I raised the question of
its adequacy with Ms Oosthuizen, who appeared for the applicant.
Ms
Oosthuizen fairly conceded that the City’s report failed to
meet its constitutional obligations in cases of eviction and,
moreover, failed to comply with the order granted by this court in
February. In her own words, it appeared that the affidavit had
been
produced using a standard “template”. As the
Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal have previously
observed, it is essential that proper investigations been done to
place all the relevant facts before a court in eviction
proceedings.
[3]
As
a result, the matter will need to be postponed to enable the City to
meet its obligations to provide a proper and detailed account
of the
availability of alterative accommodation or land for the occupiers.
18
Given the City’s prior failure to
comply with this court’s order, it is also necessary to make
provision for a representative
of the City to be present in court and
available to testify when the matter is heard again. This is required
so that if the report
filed remains inadequate in any respect, the
court and the parties can make the necessary enquiries of the
official who will give
oral evidence on the day.
19
I therefore make the following order:
(a)
The application is postponed to Friday, 22
September 2023 at 10am or so soon thereafter as the matter may be
called.
(b)
The applicant is directed to procure the
service of this order, together with the answering affidavit of the
occupier-respondents
in this matter and a copy of this judgment, on
the third respondent at the office of the City Manager by no later
than 3 August
2023.
(c)
The third respondent is directed to file a
further report, on or before 24 August 2023, confirmed on affidavit,
in order to report
to the court on the following:
(i)
the steps that have been taken by the City
to meet with the applicant and occupier-respondents to mediate the
issue of their continued
occupation of the property;
(ii)
the steps the City has taken or intends to
take in order to provide alternative land or emergency accommodation
for the occupier-respondents
in the event of their being evicted and
when such alternative land or accommodation can be provided;
(iii)
in the event that the third respondent
cannot provide either alternative land or emergency accommodation to
the occupier-respondents,
the reasons why it cannot do so;
(iv)
in setting out the reasons in (iii) above,
the third respondent is directed to explain:
-
if the reasons relate to resource
constraints, what those constraints are in the context of the overall
budgeting of the third respondent;
-
any existing plans that it has in place to
deal with the need for alternative accommodation or land to be made
available to persons
who are evicted pursuant to a court order within
the area of jurisdiction of the municipality;
-
the extent to which the specific personal
circumstances of those who face eviction are taken into account in
the allocation of alternative
accommodation or land, such as, in this
case, the fact that three of the four occupier-respondents are
severely disabled and one
is elderly;
-
the extent to which people who face
eviction from properties falling within the jurisdiction of the third
respondent have managed
to comply with the conditions set by the
third respondent for the provision of emergency shelter material
referred to in the third
respondent’s report dated 22 March
2023;
-
the third respondent’s assessment of
whether providing emergency shelter material is effective in
providing people who are
evicted with a means to avoid homelessness.
(v)
what the effects would be if the eviction
of the occupier-respondents were to take place without alternative
land or emergency accommodation
being made available, particularly in
the light of their disabilities and age; and
(vi)
what steps may be taken by the third
respondent, including to assume responsibility for paying the monthly
rental under the lease
for the property, to alleviate the effects of
the current occupation of the property if the occupier-respondents
are not immediately
evicted and pending alternative land or
accommodation being made available.
(d)
The applicant’s attorneys of record
are directed, within 5 days of receiving the third respondent’s
further report pursuant
to paragraph (c) above, to provide a copy
thereof to the occupier-respondents or their legal representatives;
(e)
The applicant and the occupier-respondents
may, by 14 September 2023, file affidavits in response to the third
respondent’s
further report;
(f)
The applicant’s attorneys of record
are directed, by no later than 14 September 2023, to subpoena the
responsible official
of the City of Cape Town, or, if such person
cannot be identified, the City Manager, to appear in person at the
hearing on 22 September
2023 and to provide such functionary with a
letter of notice succinctly setting forth the reasons why he or she
has been subpoenaed
in terms of this order.
(g)
The question of costs is reserved.
K HOFMEYR
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Applicants'
counsel:
Adv
A Oosthuizen
Applicants'
attorneys:
BBM
Attorneys, Cape Town
First
and Second Respondent's counsel:
Adv
B Nduli
Respondent's
attorneys:
Legal
Aid
[1]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (6) SA 294 (SCA)
[2]
Changing
Tides
supra, para 26 quoting from
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC) para 36
[3]
Changing
Tides
supra, para 27
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