Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 307South Africa
Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Kennedy and Others (9919/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 307; [2024] 1 All SA 751 (WCC) (30 November 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Kennedy and Others (9919/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 307; [2024] 1 All SA 751 (WCC) (30 November 2023)
Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd v Kennedy and Others (9919/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 307; [2024] 1 All SA 751 (WCC) (30 November 2023)
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sino date 30 November 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 9919/2022
Date of hearing: 15
November 2023
In
the matter between:
GOODFIND
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ROSIE
KENNEDY
First
Respondent
CHARLENE
BOTES
’
Second
Respondent
ALL
OCCUPANTS OF THE PROPERTY SITUATED AT
911
SAKABULA FLATS, SAKABULA CIRCLE,
RUYTERWACHT,
WESTERN CAPE PROVINCE
’
Third
Respondent
CITY
OF CAPE TOWN MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
Judgment handed down
on: 30 November 2023
JUDGMENT
JAMIE, AJ
[1]
This is an opposed application by the applicant
for the eviction of the first, second and third respondents in terms
of section
4 of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction From and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act, No. 19 of 1998 (hereafter “PIE”).
The application was issued out of this Court on 13 June 2022.
[2]
The applicant describes itself in the founding
affidavit as follows:
“
3.
The Applicant is Goodfind Properties (Pty) Ltd (Registration No.:
2018/037214/07), with its registered
address at Block A, Park Lane
Office Park, Park Road, Pinelands, Cape Town, Western Cape Province.”
[3]
The applicant is referred to interchangeably in
this judgment as such or as “Goodfind”.
[4]
The applicant goes on to state the following:
“
4.
On 4 April 2019, the Applicant purchased 911 Sakabula Flats, Sakabula
Crescent, Ruyterwacht, Western
Cape Province (‘the property’)
from Communicare NPC (‘Communicare’). The Applicant
is therefore the
registered owner of the immovable property.”
“
10.
On 28 August 2002, the Applicant, duly represented (as landlord) and
the First Respondent personally (as lessee),
at Ruyterwacht, entered
into a lease agreement (‘the lease’) in respect of the
property. A copy of the lease
is annexed hereto marked ‘
B’
,
the contents of which are to be read as if specifically incorporated
herein.”
[5]
The first, second and third respondents are
described as follows:
“
5.
The First Respondent is Rosie Kennedy, an adult male
(sic)
,
whose further particulars are unknown to me, who is currently in
occupation of the property.
6.
the Second Respondent is Charlene Botes, an adult female, whose
further particulars are unknown
to me, who is currently in occupation
of the property.
7.
The Third Respondent(s) is/are all other persons who may currently
occupy the property. The
Applicant has no knowledge of who else
(if anyone aside from the Respondents mentioned above) currently
occupies the property.
8.
The Fourth Respondent is the City of Cape Town Municipality, a
municipality established in terms
of section 12, 14 and 16 of the
Municipal Structures Act, No. 117 of 1998, with its offices at Civic
Centre, 12 Hertzog Boulevard,
Cape Town, Western Cape Province.”
[6]
I shall in this judgment refer to the first and
second respondents as such or as “Mrs Kennedy” and “Ms
Botes”
respectively.
[7]
As I have said, the applicant seeks the eviction
of the first to third respondents from the property by virtue of
their alleged
unlawful occupation.
[8]
The first to third respondents oppose the
application. They are represented by Ms Adhikari and Mr
Ebrahim, instructed by Mr
MC Coetzer of Attorneys Chris Fick &
Associates. I was informed by Ms Adhikari that they appear and act
for their clients on
a pro-bono basis. The court is indebted to
them and their attorney for their assistance in this matter.
[9]
The City of Cape Town took no active part in the
proceedings save to file a brief affidavit to which was attached its
standard occupier
questionnaire. The relevant portions of the
affidavit are to the following effect:
“
6.
In these proceedings, the City has not been provided with sufficient
information (i.e. the current financial
ability of the Respondents to
obtain alternative accommodation) to determine whether the
Respondents will be able to secure alternative
accommodation if an
eviction order is granted by this Honourable Court.
7.
If the Respondents require the assistance of the City, they are
required to deliver the completed
questionnaire to the City within 15
days of attesting hereto.
8.
On receipt of a duly completed questionnaire or affidavit which
contains the personal circumstances
of the Respondents, the City will
be in a position to issue and file a comprehensive housing report
which takes into account the
personal circumstances of the
Respondents and details whether the Respondents qualify for emergency
shelter, the nature of the
emergency shelter and when such shelter
may be available for occupation.”
[10]
The respondents rely on the following grounds of
opposition to the application:
10.1.
That Goodfind lacks standing to bring the
application;
10.2.
That a tacit term should be imported into the
lease agreement to the effect that Goodfind is bound not to increase
the rental beyond
that which Mrs Kennedy can afford;
10.3.
On a proper constitutional interpretation, the
same conclusion is reached.
10.4.
An equality challenge to Goodfind’s conduct,
based on alleged age discrimination against Mrs Kennedy as also the
respondents’
right of access to housing in terms of section 26.
10.5.
That the requirements of PIE for an eviction have
not been met.
[11]
I shall deal with each of the grounds in turn.
Locus standi
[12]
The relevant averments in this regard are the
following:
12.1.
Goodfind obtained transfer of the property from
Communicare on or about 4 April 2019. I point out in this
regard that the
allegation in the founding affidavit that, on 28
August 2002, Goodfind concluded a lease agreement with Mrs Kennedy is
obviously
incorrect. As the lease agreement indicates, it was
concluded by Communicare, described as an Incorporated Association
not
for Gain, with registration no. 1929/01590/08. As appears
from its registration number, Goodfind was only incorporated in
2018. The parties however, correctly, approached the matter on
the basis that, upon its acquisition of the property from
Communicare
in 2019, Goodfind would have stepped into the shoes of Communicare as
lessor. I shall approach the matter on
that basis.
12.2.
There is a more significant error in paragraph 10
of the founding affidavit. It fails to mention that the lease
was concluded
not only with Mrs Kennedy, but also with Ms Botes.
Her name appears on the cover sheet of the lease above the word
“Tenant”,
and she also signed the lease, with Mrs
Kennedy, in such capacity.
12.3.
On 19 October 2020, Mrs Kennedy received a letter
of demand from Toefy Attorneys acting on behalf of Communicare.
It alleged
that she owed arrear rentals in the amount of R53 316,52
to Communicare. Although not alleged in the founding affidavit,
the letter also purported to give notice of cancellation of the lease
agreement should the arrears not be settled within twenty
days.
12.4.
In December 2020, Communicare issued summons
against first and second respondents out of the Goodwood Magistrate’s
Court for
recovery of the arrear rental claimed.
12.5.
The particulars of claim allege,
inter
alia,
that Communicate is the owner and
person in charge of the property, that the property was transferred
from Communicare to Goodfind,
thereby ceding all the former’s
rights in terms of the lease agreement to Goodfind, and that Goodfind
had passed a resolution
permitting Communicare to initiate and defend
legal proceedings and to manage Goodfind’s immovable
properties.
12.6.
The aforementioned resolution is to be found as
annexure “H” to the replying affidavit at record page
212. It
is dated 20 May 2019 and records the following:
“
1.
GOODFIND PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD hereby appoints COMMUNICARE NPC
(Registration Number: 1929/001590/08)
as
its true and lawful Agent and in its name, place and stead to
initiate and/or defend any legal proceedings on behalf of GOODFIND
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD and/or its subsidiaries.
2.
GOODFIND PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD hereby appoints COMMUNICARE NPC
(Registration Number: 1929/001590/08)
as
its true and lawful Agent, entitling it to manage all immovable
properties registered in the name of GOODFIND PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
and/or its subsidiaries, but without prejudice to the generality of
the aforegoing, be entitled to authorize and/or give permission
to
any person to enter or reside upon any immovable property owned by
GOODFIND PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD and/or its subsidiaries.”
12.7.
The resolution is signed by one Anthea Houston, in
her capacity as a director of Goodfind.
12.8.
In their answering affidavit the respondents aver
that, to the best of their knowledge, Ms Houston is also a director
of Communicare
and its Chief Executive Officer.
12.9.
Based on the aforegoing, the respondents contend
that, as far back as May 2019, Goodfind divested itself of the right
to litigate
on its own behalf, and that it follows that it has no
standing to institute these proceedings in its own name, and that
same should
have been instituted by Communicare. On that basis
alone, the respondents contend that the application falls to be
dismissed.
[13]
It
will be apparent from the aforesaid that the respondents have not
utilised the provisions of Rule 7(1) to dispute that the institution
of the application was properly authorised. In my view, Rule 7
has no application in the present instance. What is
being
challenged here is the applicant’s
locus
standi
,
i.e., whether it is entitled to seek the relief in the proceedings
instituted. Rule 7 deals with a different point, i.e.,
whether
the institution of the proceedings themselves is authorised, not the
question of whether the applicant is entitled to seek
the requested
relief.
[1]
[14]
In response to the challenge to its standing, the
deponent to the founding affidavit, Ms Lynn Oliver, who, in the
founding affidavit
stated that she was duly authorised by Goodfind to
bring the application on its behalf, states the following in the
replying affidavit:
14.1.
She is an adult female portfolio manager employed
by Goodfind, the applicant in the matter.
14.2.
On 20 May 2019 Goodfind resolved to authorise
Communicare to institute any legal proceedings on its behalf.
14.3.
Communicare has its own internal delegation
authority, initially adopted on 26 February 2008, whereby the Board
of Communicare adopted
a delegation of authority framework, which
came into effect on 1 March 2008. The delegation authority is
updated from time
to time, the latest amendment being made on 16
August 2019. A copy of the delegation authority in force when
the present
matter was instituted is attached to the replying
affidavit marked “I”.
14.4.
Ms Oliver then avers the following:
“
8.
[The] delegation provides for matters such as this to be initiated by
the General Manager: Rental Property
Management, Faieda Jacobs, who
in turn on 11 August 2021 authorised me by way of a delegation of
authority that I attach hereto
marked ‘J’”.
Such delegation is pertinently permitted in third principle on
annexure A to I.
(sic)
9.
In terms of the delegation of authority, I was provided with the
necessary authority to commence,
institute and defend any legal
proceedings on behalf of the applicant, which includes the signing of
all affidavits for any legal
proceedings specifically related to the
immovable properties leased by the applicant. I therefore, as
stated, have the necessary
authority to initiate these proceedings,
and to appoint attorneys for this purpose.”
14.5.
Ms Olivier then, puzzlingly, goes on to say the
following:
“
Communicare,
acting through its functionaries, properly institutes
(sic)
these proceedings in
the applicant’s name.”
14.6.
Ms Olivier also conceded that Goodfind is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Communicare.
14.7.
The delegation of authority from Ms Jacobs to her,
relied upon by Ms Oliver, is on a Goodfind Properties letterhead
and states
the following:
“
This
letter serves to confirm that in terms of the clause 6.5.3 of the
applicable Delegation of Authority Framework, Faieda Jacobs
in her
capacity as General Manager: Rental Property Management has with
immediate effect, delegated to Lynn Oliver in her capacity
as
Portfolio Manager of Goodfind Properties the responsibility to
commence, institute and defend any legal proceedings on behalf
of the
aforementioned entity including the signing of affidavits for any
legal proceedings pertaining specifically to the immovable
properties
leased by Goodfind Properties.”
14.8.
The letter is signed by Faieda Jacobs in her
capacity as General Manager and is countersigned by one Elsabe Marx
in her capacity
as Company Secretary.
14.9.
Clause 3.4.1 of the delegation authority relied
upon by Goodfind in reply states that instructions to institute legal
proceedings
in matters other than those relating to collections and
arrears may be recommended by Communicare’s General Manager:
Rental
Property Manager but are subject to the final approval of the
Chief Executive Officer of Communicare.
14.10.
Clause 6.5.3 of the delegation authority empowers
Communicare’s General Manager: Rental Property Management to
grant final
approval for the authorisation of legal proceedings and
the signing of affidavits in respect of collections.
[15]
Accordingly, the respondents contend, as to
Goodfind’s standing:
15.1.
Goodfind clearly, by virtue of the resolution of
May 2019, divested itself of the right to litigate on its own behalf
and appointed
Communicare for this purpose.
15.2.
Although the respondents accept that Goodfind
could, by way of a further resolution, have revested itself with this
power, there
is no evidence before the court that it in fact did so.
15.3.
The fact that Goodfind, in its reply, seeks to
demonstrate that Communicare, in the person of Ms Jacobs, had
delegated the power
to institute these proceedings to Ms Oliver,
demonstrated that no such resolution had been taken by Goodfind to
revest the power
to litigate in itself. I agree with this
submission.
15.4.
The matter is further confused by the assertion,
referred to above, that the proceedings had been instituted in
Goodfind’s
name by duly authorised functionaries of
Communicare. This is at odds with, and destructive of, the
assertion by Ms Oliver,
both in the founding affidavit and in reply,
that she, as an employee of Goodfind, is authorised to bring the
present proceedings
in Goodfind’s name.
15.5.
I am further in agreement with the respondent’s
contentions that the provisions of the delegation authority relied
upon do
not assist Goodfind. In this regard:
15.5.1.
Clause 3.4.1 clearly only contemplates a
recommendation by Communicare’s General Manager: Rental
Property Management, but
final approval by Communicare’s Chief
Executive Officer. There is no evidence that Ms Houston, who
appears to occupy
that office, approved the institution of the
present proceedings.
15.5.2.
Clause 6.5.3, which purportedly authorises Ms
Jacobs to delegate her powers to Ms Oliver, does not assist as it is
confined to collections.
15.6.
Finally, the actual purported delegation by Ms
Jacobs to Ms Oliver does not evidence any act on the part of
Communicare. As
stated, it is on Goodfind’s letterhead
and, although signed by Ms Jacobs in the capacity of General Manager,
there is no
indication that she is acting in such capacity on behalf
of Communicare, as opposed to on behalf of Goodfind.
[16]
It is settled that a party can divest itself of
the right to sue. In
Picardi
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held as follows:
“
An
effective and unconditional transfer of rights occurred when the
cession in securitatem debit was executed. The consequence
is
that the respondent was divested of the power to sue the appellant in
respect of the unpaid rentals. In order to sue for
the recovery
of the ceded debts the respondent should have taken recession of them
from the bank.”
[2]
[17]
It
is further the position that a principal can revoke his or her
representative's authority provided that the authorised act has
not
already been concluded.
[3]
[18]
As already indicated above, there is no evidence
that Goodfind rescinded the resolution divesting itself of the power
to sue in
respect of its immovable properties.
[19]
For what it is worth, the facts set out in
paragraphs 12.3 to 12.5 above support the conclusion that Goodfind
ceded the right to
manage its immovable properties, including the
right to institute legal proceedings in that regard, to Communicare.
[20]
In the circumstances, and on the basis of the
facts placed before me, I am of the view that Goodfind has not
demonstrated that it
has or had the power to institute the present
proceedings. In summary:
20.1.
It divested itself of that power in favour of
Communicare in May 2019.
20.2.
There is no indication on the papers that it ever
retook the power.
20.3.
The fact that it had not retaken the power is to
be inferred from the efforts made in the replying affidavit to
demonstrate that
Communicare, via Ms Jacobs, had authorised Ms
Oliver, on behalf of Goodfind, to institute proceedings.
20.4.
Those efforts are ineffectual as:
20.4.1.
Ms Jacobs had no power, in terms of clause 3.4.1
of the delegation authority, to institute legal proceedings, whether
on behalf
of Communicare or Goodfind. Her authority was limited
to making a recommendation to Communicare’s Chief Executive
Officer,
who had to approve same.
20.4.2.
In terms of clause 6.5.3, relied upon in the
subsequent alleged delegation by Ms Jacobs to Ms Oliver, Ms Jacobs
did have such power
but only in respect of collections.
20.4.3.
In respect of the actual letter of delegation
relied upon, there is no indication in same that it emanates from
Communicare or that
Ms Jacobs was acting as General Manager of
Communicare when she signed the letter.
[21]
For all of the above reasons, I am of the view
that Goodfind has not demonstrated
locus
standi
to bring this application, and
that same accordingly falls to be dismissed on this ground alone.
[22]
That
would ordinarily be the end of the matter. However, Ms Adhikari
referred me to the judgment of the Constitutional Court
in
S
v Jordan
[4]
.
There
the Court said that where the constitutionality of a provision is
challenged on a number of grounds and the court
a
quo
upholds
one such ground, it is desirable that it should also express its
opinion on the other challenges. This is necessary
in the event
of the Court declining to confirm on the ground upheld by the court
a
quo
.
In the absence of a judgment on the other grounds, the matter may
have to be referred back to the court
a
quo
which
could result in unnecessary delays in the disposal of cases.
[5]
[23]
Although the dictum in
Jordan
is strictly applicable to constitutional
proceedings only, I consider the reasoning to be equally applicable
to non-constitutional
matters, especially where a point
in
limine
is upheld. Should the
matter go on appeal, and should it be found that I was wrong in
respect of Goodfind’s lack of
locus
standi
, the matter will have to be
referred back to me for judgment on the other issues. This is
obviously undesirable. I
have heard full argument, and I will
accordingly also deal with the further grounds of objection raised on
behalf of the respondents.
Tacit term
[24]
The tacit term contended for by the respondents is
pleaded as follows, with the preceding paragraphs in the answering
affidavit
provided for the relevant context:
“
61.
Communicare’s business model is one which makes available
affordable rental options for low-income consumers.
This is, as
I have stated, the express basis on which the lease agreement was
concluded in 2002. Further, Communicare was
well aware of my
financial circumstances and my age when the lease agreement was
concluded, which is why I qualified to rent affordable
housing from
Communicare.
62.
Consequently, when Communicare entered into the lease agreement with
me, it was, or ought reasonably to have been
aware that when I
reached retirement age, the only income which I would have would be a
SASSA grant.
63. Since
the purpose of the lease agreement was to provide me with affordable
housing, properly interpreted in light
of all the relevant facts and
surrounding circumstances, Clause 7.4 only permits Communicare as
lessor to increase the rental amount
to an amount that remains
affordable for me bearing in mind my income.
64. In the
circumstances, on a proper interpretation of Clause 7.4, once I
retired, the lease agreement permitted Communicare
to increase my
rental to an amount that does not exceed my SASSA grant
and
allows me to provide for my basic amenities such as food, water, and
electricity from my SASSA grant.
(Emphasis in the
original)
65. In the
alternative, and only in the event that the Court does not find that
the proper interpretation of Clause 7.4 is
as set out above, I submit
that the lease agreement contains a tacit term, limiting the
permitted rental increase in terms of Clause
7.4 so that the total
amount of my rental after retirement does not exceed my SASSA grant
and allows me to provide for my basic
amenities from my SASSA grant.
66. I
point out that Clause 7.4 does not require the lessor to increase my
rental. It permits the lessor to elect
not to increase my
rental, or to decrease my rental.
67.
However, Communicare elected to vary the rental by increasing my
rental amount on a yearly basis to an amount that
is not affordable
for me
, in breach of Clause 7.4 properly interpreted,
alternatively in breach of the tacit term pleaded above. (Emphasis
supplied)”
[25]
Clause 7.4 of the lease agreement provides as
follows:
“
7.4
The Landlord shall have the right to vary the rental during the lease
period by giving the Tenant one clear calendar
month’s written
notice.”
[26]
It
is trite that the process of interpretation involves a unitary
exercise of considering language, context and purpose. It
is an
objective exercise where, in the face of ambiguity, a sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one which undermines the purpose
of the
document.
[6]
[27]
In oral submissions in support of the existence of
the contended for tacit term counsel had some difficulty in
articulating with
precision the terms of same.
[28]
Thus,
in the heads of argument, the contention was made that it limited the
permitted rental increases under the lease agreement
to no more than
that which is affordable for Mrs Kennedy.
[7]
[29]
However, in oral argument, counsel was constrained
to accept that, given that the second respondent was also reflected
as a lessee
in the agreement of lease, the tacit term should relate
to increases which were affordable to first and second respondents
collectively.
[30]
A
tacit term, or term inferred from the facts, was described by Corbett
AJA in
McAlpine
& Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration
[8]
as
“
an
unexpressed provision of the contract which derives from the common
intention of the parties, as inferred by the Court from the
express
terms of the contract and the surrounding circumstances. In
supplying such an implied term the Court, in truth, declares
the
whole contract entered into by the parties
.”
[9]
[31]
There
are a number of principles to bear in mind when considering the
importation of a tacit term into a contract. The first
is that
such a term cannot be imported into a contract where the parties have
expressly and unambiguously dealt with the matter,
and a tacit term
may not contradict such an express term.
[10]
[32]
A second is that the tacit term sought to be
imported must be capable of clear and exact formulation. The
following has been
said as to this requirement:
“
Once
there is difficulty and doubt as to what the term should be or
how far it should be taken it is obviously difficult to
say that the
parties clearly intended anything at all to be implied.”
[11]
[33]
I deal with the second principle first. I
have already referred to the difficulty that respondents’
counsel had in formulating
the precise content of the tacit term, and
also the concession that it would have to include affordability in
relation to the second
respondent as well.
[34]
Upon a consideration of the lease agreement there
are various indicators that it was not meant to be an ordinary
residential lease.
I refer to the following:
34.1.
Clause 7.5 provides as follows:
“
The
Tenant agrees to complete and return to the Landlord an income survey
form as and when required by the Landlord.”
34.2.
In my view, the clear meaning and purpose of
clause 7.5 is to enable the landlord, from time to time, to ascertain
whether the tenant
still qualifies for affordable housing as offered
by Communicare (and Goodfind).
34.3.
Various clauses of the lease, for example 7.2 and
10.1, refer to the Rental Housing Act, Act 50 of 1999. Section
2(1)(a) of
that Act provides that Government must promote a stable
and growing market that progressively meets the latent demand for
affordable
rental housing among persons historically disadvantaged by
unfair discrimination and poor persons, by the introduction of
incentives,
mechanisms and other measures.
34.4.
Once again, this points to the lease being
directed at persons as described in the aforementioned section, i.e.
who require affordable
housing.
34.5.
Clause 11.2 provides as follows:
“
[The
Landlord] [s]hall have the right and be entitled to require the
Tenant to transfer from the leased Premises to other Premises
of the
Landlord on the Landlord’s Housing Estate if and when the
Landlord considers circumstances render such transfer necessary
or
desirable. Failure or refusal by the Tenant to move to such
other Premises when instructed by the Landlord to do so, shall
constitute a breach of this agreement by the Tenant and entitle the
Landlord to cancel this lease.”
34.6.
This is a highly unusual provision, and indicative
of the fact that one is not dealing here with an ordinary residential
lease.
In fact, Communicare (and Goodfind) would appear to
stand in a different relationship to its tenants from that of an
ordinary landlord.
This is clear from the fact that it may
allocate different premises to the tenant for a variety of reasons,
one of which would,
presumably, be affordability of the rental to the
tenant concerned.
[35]
Accordingly,
and had the tacit term contended for been one to the effect that,
notwithstanding clause 7.4 of the lease, any increases
had to be
affordable, whether in the sense of being lower than market-related
rentals for a similar property, or in line with affordable
housing
for purposes of applicable legislation, such as the Rental Housing
Act, or the
Social Housing Act, 16 of 2008
, there may have been some
traction in respondents’ point.
[12]
[36]
However, none of the above considerations point to
a tacit term of the very specific, and self-serving, sort contended
for by the
respondents,
viz
that,
regardless of circumstances and the needs of others in relation to
affordable housing, there is a term that the rental would
always be
affordable to the first respondent, whether alone or in conjunction
with the second respondent, and would in addition
be such as to
enable her to purchase groceries, utilities and the like.
[37]
I consider the suggestion of such a term to be
far-fetched and such as to render Communicare’s (and
Goodfind’s) business
impractical, if not impossible.
[38]
Thus, if the contended for term were to be
imported across the board, as it would have to be in respect of other
leases containing
clause 7.4 or a similar provision, Communicare (and
Goodfind) would find themselves having to deal with a myriad of
subjective
considerations before they could increase rentals at any
of their affected units. This, to my mind, does not make sense,
even in the context of the provision of affordable housing. Put
differently, I can accept the notion of an objective standard
of
affordability, but not the subjective, personalised one contended for
by the respondents.
[39]
Such
a construction would also not be necessary in the business sense in
order to give efficacy to the contract.
[13]
In
fact, for the reasons aforementioned, it would have the opposite
effect.
[40]
As to the principle that the term may not
contradict an express term, I find this to be the case here.
Clause 7.4 is clear
and unambiguous. The tacit term sought to
be imported would clearly contradict it and in fact render it
pro
non scripto.
This is not
permissible.
[41]
As to Ms Adhikari’s suggestion that clause
7.4 was textually and purposively connected to clause 7.5, and that
the income
form provided for in the latter was so that the landlord
could assess what rental the tenant could afford, I disagree. I
consider
the interpretation suggested by me above,
viz
that the purpose of the form is to assess whether
the tenant still qualifies for affordable housing as determined by
Communicare
or Goodfind, to be more plausible, in light of the
business conducted by Communicare and Goodfind.
[42]
Such interpretation is supported by the language
used, which suggests an obligation on the tenant, not an entitlement
directed at
obtaining a lower rental.
[43]
In the circumstances, I find that respondents have
not established the tacit term contended for.
The constitutional
interpretation argument
[44]
As I understand the argument, the respondents
contend for an interpretation of the contract that would lead to the
same conclusion
as the tacit term contended for,
viz
that rental increases had to be
commensurate with what Mrs Kennedy could afford, taking into account
her requisite living expenses.
I intend to approach the matter
on that basis.
[45]
As
a starting point, one should bear in mind what was said by Brand JA
in
Potgieter
v Potgieter N.O.
[14]
,
viz:
“
Reasonableness
and fairness are not freestanding requirements for the exercise of a
contractual right. That much was pertinently
held in Bredenkamp
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2010
(4) SA 468
(SCA)
para 53. As to the role of these abstract values in our law of
contract this court expressed itself as follows in South
African
Forestry Co Ltd v York Timbers Ltd
2005
(3) SA 323
(SCA
)([2004]
4 ALL SA 168)
para 27:
‘
[A]lthough
abstract values such as good faith, reasonableness and fairness are
fundamental to our law of contract, they do not constitute
independent substantive rules that courts can employ to intervene in
contractual relations. These abstract values perform creative,
informative and controlling functions through established rules of
the law of contract. They cannot be acted upon by the courts
directly. Acceptance of the notion that judges can refuse to enforce
a contractual provision merely because it offends their personal
sense of fairness and equity will give rise to legal and commercial
uncertainty.’”
[15]
[46]
In
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
[16]
the
Constitutional Court pronounced authoritatively on the proper
approach to the role of the Constitution, fairness, reasonableness,
justice and ubuntu in relation to the interpretation and enforcement
of contracts.
[17]
The
Court referred to the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in
Pridwin
[18]
in
which that court set out what it viewed as the most important
principles governing the judicial control of contracts through
the
instrument of public policy. These principles were:
“
(i)
Public policy demands that contracts freely and consciously entered
into must be honoured;
(ii)
A court will declare invalid a contract that is prima facie inimical
to a constitutional value or principle, or otherwise
contrary to
public policy;
(iii) Where a
contract is not prima facie contrary to public policy, but its
enforcement in particular circumstances is, a
court will not enforce
it;
(iv) The party
who attacks the contract or its enforcement bears the onus to
establish the facts;
(v) A court will
use the power to invalidate a contract or not to enforce it,
sparingly, and only in the clearest of cases
in which harm to the
public is substantially incontestable and does not depend on the
idiosyncratic inferences of a few judicial
minds;
(vi)
A court will decline to use this power where a party relies directly
on abstract values of fairness and reasonableness
to escape the
consequences of a contract because they are not substantive rules
that may be used for this purpose.”
[19]
[47]
The Constitutional Court went on to say the
following:
“
These
principles are derived from a long line of cases and find support in
the decisions of this court. There are, however,
two principles
listed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in Pridwin which require
further elucidation.”
[20]
[48]
The
first principle identified by the Constitutional Court was that of
pacta
sunt servanda
.
The Court said that the principle gives effect to the central
constitutional values of freedom and dignity and that, in
general,
public policy requires that contracting parties honour obligations
that have been freely and voluntarily undertaken.
[21]
However,
the Court went on to say that, in our new constitutional era the
principle was not the only or the most important one informing
the
judicial control of contracts. The requirements of public
policy are informed by a wide range of constitutional values,
and
there is no basis for privileging the principle over other
constitutional rights and values. Where a number of
constitutional
rights and values are implicated, a careful balancing
exercise is required to determine whether enforcement of the
contractual
terms would be contrary to public policy in the
circumstances.
[22]
[49]
The
second of the
Pridwin
principles
that the Court qualified was that a contract would only be
invalidated or not enforced in the clearest of cases in which
harm to
the public is substantially incontestable, the so-called ‘perceptive
restraint’ principle.
[23]
[50]
In
this regard, the Court noted that it had recognised that the
principle was sound and that the power to invalidate, or refuse
to
enforce, contractual terms should only be exercised in worthy
cases.
[24]
[51]
The
Court went on however to say that the principle should not be used in
order for courts to shrink from their constitutional duty
to infuse
public policy with constitutional values. Moreover, the notion
that there must be substantial and incontestable
‘harm to the
public’ before a court may decline to enforce a contract on
public policy grounds is alien to our law
of contract.
[25]
[52]
The respondents' constitutional interpretation
argument, is not a model of clarity. As far as I can discern
from the papers,
it is as follows:
52.1.
When the lease agreement was concluded in 2002,
the monthly rental was R690 per month. In 2021 it was R3 323,96
per month,
an increase of 381.5%.
52.2.
Although the property does not appear to form part
of Communicare’s accredited social housing program, when the
lease was
concluded Communicare did so on the basis that it was
providing affordable housing to the first respondent as a person who
could
not afford market-related rentals.
52.3.
At the time that the lease was concluded, she was
55 years old, and Communicare was aware that, upon retirement, she
would only
have a pension or grant as income.
52.4.
The first respondent is a 75-year-old pensioner
and her only income is an amount of R1 980 per month, being her
SASSA grant.
52.5.
When she took occupation of the property in 2002
she was employed at a salary of R2 000 per month.
52.6.
Her daughter, the second respondent, assisted with
paying rental until early 2019 when she lost her job.
52.7.
She began experiencing difficulty in meeting the
full rental amount from around October 2018. At that stage the
second respondent
assisted her so she could continue paying an amount
of approximately R2 800 per month, albeit that the rental had
increased
to R3 049 per month.
52.8.
She continued paying the rental even after the
second respondent lost her job until April 2020, when she
(purportedly) realised
that the applicant was not acting in good
faith by increasing the rental to an unaffordable amount.
52.9.
Since the purpose of the lease agreement was to
provide the first respondent with affordable housing, properly
interpreted in light
of all the relevant facts and surrounding
circumstances, clause 7.4 only permits the applicant to increase the
rental amount to
an amount that remains affordable for her bearing in
mind her income.
52.10.
The applicant has thus breached the lease
agreement by increasing her rental after retirement to an amount that
renders the rental
unaffordable to her, thus undermining the very
purpose of the lease agreement.
52.11.
The alleged arrear rental claimed by the applicant
is a direct result of its aforesaid breach of the lease agreement and
is thus
not due and payable by the first respondent, and she is not
in breach of the lease agreement, and accordingly not in unlawful
occupation
of the premises.
52.12.
The first respondent is aware that she cannot
simply not pay rental and is prepared to agree to a reasonable rental
amount going
forward, and the applicant is invited to engage with her
in this regard.
52.13.
The applicant’s conduct is manifestly
contrary to the principles of good faith and/or ubuntu.
[53]
In my view, the construction of the agreement
contended for by the respondents, underpinned as it is with
allegations that the applicant
has acted in bad faith, and is
therefore not entitled to enforce the lease, ignores the extracts
that I have referred to above
from
Pridwin
and
Beadica
,
particularly the need to undertake a careful balancing exercise in
order to determine whether enforcement of the contractual term
at
issue would be contrary to public policy. There is no attempt
in the first respondent’s papers to undertake such
exercise.
[54]
I consider there to be force in the argument,
advanced by Mr Brink, who appeared for Goodfind, that, upon the
construction contended
for by the respondents, Goodfind and
Communicare would be hampered in their ability to provide affordable
housing to other, deserving,
persons.
[55]
In this regard it must be borne in mind that
Goodfind, and Communicare, are not organs of state and are not
generally under a positive
obligation to provide housing, let alone
to do so when a tenant is unable or unwilling to pay the agreed
rental.
[56]
In
Juma
Musjid
[26]
a
Trust had over many years provided premises for a public school,
albeit one that provided a Muslim-based curriculum. The
MEC for
Education refused or failed to conclude a formal agreement with the
Trust however, eventually leading the Trust to seek
the eviction of
the school from its premises.
[57]
Having found that the MEC had failed in his
obligations to the learners in question, the Constitutional Court
went on to say the
following:
“
[57]
It is clear that there is no primary positive obligation on the Trust
to provide basic education to the learners.
That primary
positive obligation rests on the MEC. There was also no
obligation on the Trust to make its property available
to the MEC for
use as a public school. A private landowner may do so, however,
in accordance with section 14(1) of the Act
which provides that a
public school may be provided on private property only in terms of an
agreement between the MEC and the owner
of the property.
[58] This
Court, in Ex Parte Chairperson of the Constitutional Assembly: In re
Certification of the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa,
made it clear that socio-economic rights (like the right to a basic
education) may be negatively
protected from improper invasion.
Breach of this obligation occurs directly when there is a failure to
respect the right,
or indirectly, when there is a failure to prevent
the direct infringement of the right by another or a failure to
respect the existing
protection of the right by taking measure that
diminish that protection. It needs to be stressed however that
the purpose
of section 8(2) of the Constitution is not to obstruct
private autonomy or to impose on a private party the duties of the
state
in protecting the Bill of Rights. It is rather to require
private parties not to interfere with or diminish the enjoyment
of a
right. Its application also depends on the ‘intensity of
the constitutional right in question, coupled with the
potential
invasion of that right which could be occasioned by persons other
than the State or organs of State’.
…
[59] The Trust
permitted the Department to enlist the school as a public school on
its property with a distinctive religious
character in accordance
with sections 56 and 57 of the Act. It also performed the
public function of managing, conducting
and transacting all affairs
of the Madressas in the most advantageous manner, including the
payment of the costs of various items
which the SGB and the
Department ought to have provided. By making contributions
towards expenses associated with the
running of a public school, the
Trust acted consistently with its duties: to erect, maintain, control
and manage the school in
terms of the Deed of Trust.”
(Footnotes
omitted)
[58]
I accordingly accept that there is a negative
obligation on Communicare and Goodfind not to interfere with or
diminish the enjoyment
of a constitutionally protected right, in this
case the right of access to housing. The actual question is
whether that is
what has occurred here, on the facts placed before
me.
[59]
One of the
Pridwin
principles accepted in
Beadica
was that the party who attacks the contract or its
enforcement bears the onus to establish the facts. The
following are relevant
in this regard:
59.1.
Although the first respondent has placed her
personal circumstances before the Court, the details relating to the
second respondent
are, at best, sparse.
59.2.
Thus, although I am told that second respondent
was employed until 2019, no details are provided as to her
educational status, her
income, her present employment, if any, or
any attempts made by her to obtain employment.
59.3.
The first respondent’s son resides with her
and the first respondent in the property. The sole information
in the answering
affidavit about the son is that he is a major male
and that neither he, or the second respondent, is employed ‘at
present’.
Although there is reference to a confirmatory
affidavit by the son, none has been filed.
59.4.
The first respondent, having decided that the
rental was unaffordable to her, and that Goodfind and/or Communicare
was acting in
bad faith, simply stopped paying rent in 2021.
59.5.
Although there is the aforementioned suggestion in
the answering affidavit that she is prepared to pay what is termed a
‘reasonable
rental’, it is clear that no offer has been
made in this regard, nor do the respondents suggest what a reasonable
rental
would be in the circumstances.
59.6.
In the answering affidavit the respondents
themselves aver that Communicare is a social housing institution, and
thus, that at least
some of its operations, take place in terms of
the
Social Housing Act
.
59.7.
As pointed out by the applicant, although
Communicare is a non-profit company, that does not mean it can afford
to run at a loss.
Were it to do so on a sustained basis, it
would fall to be wound-up.
59.8.
Communicare’s core mandate is to carry on
the business of providing rental for low to medium income
households. It does
so,
inter
alia,
by providing social housing in
terms of the
Social Housing Act. The
property at issue in this
matter is however not such a property and has not had the benefit of
public funding.
59.9.
The monthly rental has increased, since 2002 by
less than 10% per annum. Had it increased at a rate of 10% per
annum it would
be at present over R5 000 per month.
59.10.
While the property can be regarded as ‘affordable
housing’, inasmuch as it is not market-related, the rental
charged
is not linked to the amount paid in social grants.
[60]
Those are the facts against which I must consider
the constitutional arguments advanced by the respondents, both as to
construction
of the term and its enforcement.
[61]
In my view, the principal argument of the
respondents,
viz
that
rental increases must be confined to what the first respondent, can
afford, is not sustainable, for the following reasons:
61.1.
To give the lease such a construction would
entirely ignore the rights of Goodfind, and Communicare, to conduct
their business,
which, while providing housing to low and medium
income earners, cannot be conducted at a loss, for obvious reasons.
61.2.
The respondents have placed little, if any,
information before the Court as to the personal circumstances of the
second respondent,
and none at all as to the personal circumstances
of the third respondent, the unnamed son who resides with the first
and second
respondents in the property.
61.3.
In the balancing exercise envisaged in
Baedica,
the rights and interests of other
persons who wish to obtain affordable housing must also be
considered. These persons, who
may well themselves be aged, or
comprise households headed by women, or include children and disabled
persons, are also entitled
to seek access to affordable housing, in
terms of the housing model provided by Goodfind, and Communicare.
61.4.
The respondents point to no constitutional
provision which would entitle them to insist that they are entitled
to remain in occupation
of the property, regardless of whether they
can afford it or not, thereby rendering the property unavailable to
other disadvantaged
and poor persons who can afford it.
61.5.
Further, by simply remaining in occupation of the
property, in clear violation of Goodfind’s rights, and going
further and
asserting that this conduct was justified inasmuch as
Goodfind and Communicare have acted unlawfully, the respondents have
clearly
ignored what was stated in both
Pridwin
and
Baedica
regarding the importance of the principle that
persons who conclude contracts should be held to them.
[62]
In my view, and given a conspectus of all of the
facts, I am unable to interpret or enforce the contract in the manner
contended
for by the respondents.
[63]
In particular, given Communicare and Goodfind’s
model for providing affordable housing, the fact that there is no
legal obligation
on them to do so, the fact that the need for such
housing will always outstrip the ability to provide same, and thus,
inevitably,
some, such as those who cannot afford the accommodation
provided, will have to seek assistance from the State, which bears
the
primary positive obligation to fulfil the
section 26
right, I
cannot find that the conduct of Communicare and Goodfind has breached
the negative constitutional obligations resting
upon them, in terms
of
Juma Musjid
,
viz
not to
interfere with or diminish the enjoyment of the right of access to
housing on the part of the respondents.
[64]
I point out that the obligation resting on the
state, and private actors such as Communicare and Goodfind, not to
interfere with
or diminish the enjoyment of a right (described as a
negative right in our jurisprudence) is not unqualified.
[65]
In
New
Nation Movement NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
[27]
the
Constitutional Court dealt with the question of whether the
section
18
right,
viz
the
right to freedom of association, included a negative right,
viz
the
freedom not to associate.
[66]
The
Court referred to what it called ‘the
Lavigne
threshold’,
derived from the dictum in
Lavigne
v Ontario Public Service Employers Union
[28]
,
a
decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, in which the following was
stated:
“
Given
the complexity and expansive mandate of modern government, it seems
clear that some degree of involuntary association beyond
the very
basic foundation of the nation state will be constitutionally
acceptable, where such association is generated by the workings
of
society in pursuit of the common interest.”
[29]
[67]
On the question, the Constitutional Court
concluded as follows:
“
[54]
This must be not be taken to mean the state is entitled to ride
roughshod over associational choices that are not sound.
Even
if not well founded, choices by an individual may well define her or
him. Unless the state can justify interference,
even such
choices are deserving of protection under
section 18.
”
…
“
[55]
All this must also apply to arational choices not to associate.
Again, that is subject to constitutionally compliant
curtailment by
the state.”
[68]
I consider these dicta to be equally applicable to
private actors such as Communicare and Goodfind. It must be
noted that
the dicta were expressly made by the Constitutional Court
subject to the
Lavigne
threshold, quoted above.
[69]
In light of the above jurisprudence, and given my
discussion above regarding the mandate of, and its execution by,
Communicare and
Goodfind, I conclude that, in the circumstances of
this case, Communicare and Goodfind have not acted in a
constitutionally offensive
manner,
vis a
vis
the respondents, even in the
context of the negative protection of the right as outlined in
Juma
Musjid
above.
The equality
challenge
[70]
This ground was pleaded with even less clarity
than the constitutional interpretation. In my view, the
challenge fails on
the basis of first principles.
[71]
The argument is focused on the first respondent,
who is an elderly person. No regard is had, however, to the
fact that the
household also consists of the second and third
respondents, who are not elderly persons.
[72]
If the matter is considered from the point of view
of the respondents constituting a household, as I consider it must
be, then it
is hard to understand how the respondents, collectively,
can complain of age discrimination.
[73]
I have already referred above to the facts
relating to the core mandate of Communicare and Goodfind and how they
go about achieving
same. I reiterate that such core mandate is
to provide affordable housing to lower and medium income earners, who
would,
inter alia,
not
be the beneficiaries of assistance from the State. This is a
commendable objective and comports with the positive obligation
to
fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights, also on the part of private
persons. I have also referred to the fact that Communicare’s
and Goodfind’s mandate would be frustrated were they to be
compelled to operate at a loss because they were obliged to provide
housing to persons unable to afford same. This includes aged
persons.
[74]
I find support for this reasoning in the following
passage from
Beadica:
“
[101]
The National Empowerment Fund Act established the Fund to facilitate
the redress of economic inequality that resulted
from unfair
discrimination against historically disadvantaged persons. This
falls within the scope of the ‘measures’
envisioned by
section 9(2) of the Constitution (as would initiatives funded by the
Fund). The applicants have not shown that
the failure of their
businesses, in these circumstances, would unjustifiably undermine
substantive equality. To hold that
the failure of a black
economic empowerment initiative financed by the Fund renders the
enforcement of the renewal clauses deleterious
to the constitutional
value of equality would have the undesirable result of defeating the
Funds own objects. This is because
the effect of this finding
would increase the risk of contracting with historically
disadvantaged persons who benefit from the
Fund. If the
applicants were to succeed, it would establish the legal principle
that enforcement of a contractual term would
be inimical to the
constitutional value of equality, and therefore contrary to public
policy, where enforcement would result in
the failure of a black
economic empowerment initiative. This could, in turn, deter
other parties from electing to contract
with beneficiaries of the
Fund, or force beneficiaries to offset the increased risk by making
concessions on other contractual
aspects during contract
negotiations. These outcomes would, in effect, undermine the
very objects that the Fund and section
9(2) seek to achieve.
[75]
To transpose the above reasoning to the facts
here: to hold that Communicare’s (and Goodfind’s)
business model offends
substantive equality would be to imperil the
achievement of their core objectives as described above, and impair
their ability
to provide affordable housing to those in need thereof.
[76]
For these reasons, I would not uphold the equality
challenge.
PIE
[77]
The last question to address is whether the
applicant has made out a case for an eviction order in terms of the
provisions of PIE.
[78]
PIE has led to a veritable cottage industry of
litigation. This is because of the collision between the
requirements of the
law, on the one hand, and the overwhelming need
of large segments of the population for access to housing when they
are able to
afford or procure same from their own resources.
[79]
In approaching the legal question of whether the
applicant has made out a case on the facts of this matter for an
eviction order
against the respondents, I intend referring to only
two authorities, one from the Supreme Court of Appeal and one from
the Constitutional
Court. These, in my view, cover the relevant
aspects that I must consider and are dispositive of the question as
to what
a just and equitable order, in accordance with the legal
requirements, would be on the facts of this case.
[80]
First,
as to the Supreme Court of Appeal, in
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[30]
,
the
Court said the following:
“
Reverting
then to the relationship between ss4(7) and (8), the position can be
summarised as follows. A court hearing an application
for
eviction at the instance of a private person or body, owing no
obligations to provide housing or achieve the gradual realisation
of
the right of access to housing in terms of s 26(1) of the
Constitution, is faced with two separate enquiries. First it
must decide whether it is just and equitable to grant an eviction
order having regard to all relevant factors. Under s 4(7)
those factors include the availability of alternative land or
accommodation. The weight to be attached to that factor must
be
assessed in the light of the property owner’s protected rights
under s 25 of the Constitution, and on the footing
that a
limitation of those rights in favour of the occupiers will ordinarily
be limited in duration. Once the court decides
that there is no
defence to the claim for eviction and that it would be just and
equitable to grant an eviction order it is obliged
to grant that
order. Before doing so, however, it must consider what justice
and equity demands in relation to the date of
implementation of that
order and it must consider what conditions must be attached to that
order. In that second enquiry
it must consider the impact of an
eviction order on the occupiers and whether they may be rendered
homeless thereby or need emergency
assistance to relocate elsewhere.
The order that it grants as a result of these two discrete enquiries
is a single order.
Accordingly it cannot be granted until both
enquiries have been undertaken and the conclusion reached that the
grant of an eviction
order, effective from a specified date, is just
and equitable. Nor can the enquiry be concluded until the court
is satisfied
that it is in possession of all the information
necessary to make both findings based on justice and equity.”
[31]
[81]
As
to the Constitutional Court, in
Occupiers,
Berea v de Wet N.O. and Another
[32]
,
the Court said the following:
“
The
court will grant an eviction order only where: (a) it has all the
information about the occupiers to enable it to decide whether
the
eviction is just and equitable; and (b) the court is satisfied that
the eviction is just and equitable having regard to the
information
in (a). The two requirements are inextricable, interlinked and
essential. An eviction order granted in
the absence of either
one of these two requirements will be arbitrary. I reiterate
that the enquiry has nothing to do with
the unlawfulness of
occupation. It assumes and is only due when the occupation is
unlawful.”
…
“
In
brief, where no information is available, or where only inadequate
information is available, the court must decline to make an
eviction
order. The absence of information is an irrefutable
confirmation of the fact that the court is not in a position
to
exercise this important jurisdiction.”
[33]
[82]
Based on my conclusions in the portions of the
judgment dealing with the respondents’ various defences, I find
as follows:
82.1.
Upon a proper construction of the lease, the
applicant was entitled to cancel same based on the first and second
respondents’
failure to pay the agreed rental, and to approach
this court for an eviction order.
82.2.
It follows that the respondents are unlawful
occupiers in terms of PIE.
82.3.
The respondents have not prevailed in their
attempt to raise legal defences to the eviction proceedings.
82.4.
The question of the potential homelessness of the
respondents has not been adequately addressed in the affidavits by
the respondents,
and I am accordingly unable to conclude either that
it would be just and equitable to grant an eviction order, or what
the date
of any such eviction should be. I refer to the City’s
aforementioned affidavit in this regard.
82.5.
On the authority of
Changing
Tides and Occupiers, Berea,
I am
precluded from granting an eviction order in the absence of such
information.
[83]
In the circumstances, it is clear that the
respondents have to be afforded a further opportunity to place all
relevant facts pertaining
to their potential homelessness, should an
eviction order be granted, before the court.
[84]
In
Occupiers,
Berea,
the
Constitutional Court referred to the steps that might have to be
taken by a court in the event that occupiers are unrepresented,
in
order to ensure that all the relevant facts are before the court
before it exercises its jurisdiction in relation to an eviction
in
terms of PIE.
[34]
[85]
Here
of course the respondents are not unrepresented. In the latter
regard, a Full Bench of this court in
Luanga
[35]
made
the following general observations, by which I am bound, and which I
in any event consider both correct and applicable
[36]
:
“
To
my mind it is incumbent upon a respondent in eviction proceedings who
is legally represented and who avers that an eviction order
will
render her and her family homeless, to explain to the court why that
is so. Where a respondent facing an eviction application
has
the benefit of legal representation, she and her legal
representatives must engage fully on the relevant issues. Facts
must be put up to demonstrate that there is indeed a risk of
homelessness, and that the assertion is made in good faith.
Details regarding the employment status and income of adult members
of the household are obviously relevant to substantiate the
assertion
of a risk of homelessness, and must be provided. And if there
is good reason for why the information cannot be
furnished, that
should be disclosed in the affidavit.
Respondents
in eviction proceedings who have the benefit of legal representation
cannot be permitted to content themselves with
bald, unsubstantiated
averments of homelessness. They must be made to understand that
if they do, they run the risk that
the court may infer that the
assertions regarding inability to afford alternative accommodation
and the risk of homelessness are
not genuine and bona fide, and may
be rejected merely on the papers.”
[37]
[86]
I need to make two comments here. First, I
do not understand the respondents in this matter to assert squarely
that they would,
as a fact, be rendered homeless, should an eviction
be ordered. I accept, however, that it is asserted, at least by
Mrs Kennedy
that she cannot afford other accommodation.
[87]
The second comment that I wish to make is that
reference to the dicta in
Luanga
is not to be taken to impute any criticism
whatsoever to the manner in which the respondents’ defence has
been conducted by
their legal representatives.
[88]
In the circumstances, and had I been required to
rule on the eviction order, I would have granted an order to the
following effect:
88.1.
The application for an eviction order is postponed
sine die
.
88.2.
The first, second and third respondents are
directed to file an affidavit with this court within thirty (30) days
of the granting
of this order in which affidavit they are required to
deal with:
88.2.1.
Their personal circumstances in full, including
their employment status and income and attempts to obtain employment,
any attempt(s)
made on their behalf, whether collectively or
individually, to obtain alternative accommodation, and if no such
attempts have been
made, the reason(s) therefor, and whether they
will, as a fact, be rendered homeless should an eviction order be
granted.
88.2.2.
Whether, in all the circumstances, it would be
just and equitable to grant an eviction order.
88.2.3.
If so, what the date of such order should be.
88.3.
The fourth respondent, the City of Cape Town, is
directed, upon the filing of the affidavits contemplated above, to
furnish to this
court within thirty (30) days of the receipt of such
affidavits, a comprehensive report dealing with the matters set forth
in paragraph
8 of its affidavit filed in this matter and referred to
in paragraph 9 of this judgment.
88.4.
The applicant is given leave, should it so elect,
to file a response to both such affidavits and report, within fifteen
(15) days
of receipt of same by it.
88.5.
The applicant is given leave to re-enroll this
matter following compliance with the above directions.
Order
[89]
For all of the aforesaid reasons, I make the
following order:
“
The
application is dismissed with costs.”
I JAMIE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
For
the Applicant:
Adv
A Brink
Instructed
by:
Mr
S Thomson
BBM
Attorneys
For
the First, Second
and
Third Respondents:
Adv
M Adhikari
With:
Adv
M Ibrahim
Instructed
by:
Mr
MC Coetzer
Chris
Fick and Associates
No
appearance for the Fourth Respondent
[1]
See
Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, Second Edition, at D1 – 96.
[2]
Picardi
Hotels Limited v Thekweni Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 128
;
2009 (1) SA 493
(SCA)
at
[14]
[3]
Stowe
v Royal Insurance Co
(1885) 5 EDC 37
; Bhanjee v Kara Devraj 1933 NPD
547
[4]
2002
(6) SA 642 (CC)
[5]
At
para 21
[6]
Martrade
Shipping and Transport GmbH v United Enterprises Corporation and MV
‘Unity’
[2020] ZASCA 120
(2 October 2020)
[7]
At
para 58
[8]
1974
(3) SA 506 (A)
[9]
At
531 to 532, footnotes omitted
[10]
Shepherd
Real Estate Investments (Pty) Ltd v Roux Le Roux Motors
2020 (2) SA
49
(SCA) at [24]
[11]
Desai
v Greyridge Investments (Pty) Ltd
1974 (1) SA 509
(A) at 522 to 523
[12]
Section
2(1)(f)
of the
Social Housing Act requires
the State and social
housing institutions,
inter
alia,
to
ensure the sustainable and viable growth of affordable social
housing as an objective of housing policy. While there
is no
definition of “affordable housing”, the phrase
‘affordable social housing” is defined,
inter
alia,
as
“a rental or co-operative housing option for low to medium
income households”. Such households are in turn
defined
as “those households falling within the income categories as
determined by the Minister from time to time.”
[13]
Hamleyn
& Co v Wood & Co
[1891] 2 QB 494
, cited with approval in
Union Government (Minister of Railways) v Faux Ltd
1916 AD 105
, at
112
[14]
2012
(1) SA 637 (SCA)
[15]
At
para [32]
[16]
2020
(5) SA 247 (CC)
[17]
From
para [71] onward
[18]
AB
v Pridwin 2019 (1) SA 327 (SCA)
[19]
Pridwin
at para [27] quoted in Beadica at para [82]
[20]
Id
[21]
At
para [83]
[22]
At
para [87]
[23]
At
para [88]
[24]
At
para [89]
[25]
At
para [90]
[26]
Governing
Body of the Juma Musjid Primary School and Others v Essay N.O. and
Others
2011 (8) BCLR 761
(CC)
[27]
[2020]
ZACC 11
[28]
[1991]
2 SCR 211
[29]
Lavigne
at 321, quoted in New National Movement at para [50]
[30]
2012
(6) SA 294
SCA
[31]
At
para [25]
[32]
2017
(5) SA 346 (CC)
[33]
At
paras [48] and [51] respectively
[34]
At
paras [49] and [50]
[35]
Luanga
v Perthpark Properties (Limited) 2019 (3) SA 214 (WCC)
[36]
I
point out that the judgment in
Luanga
was
delivered by a full bench of this division.
[37]
At
paras [44] and [45]
sino noindex
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