Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 4South Africa
Adams v Manuel and Others (9401/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 4 (3 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Adams v Manuel and Others (9401/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 4 (3 February 2022)
Adams v Manuel and Others (9401/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 4 (3 February 2022)
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sino date 3 February 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 9401/2021
In
the matter between:
ROCHELLE
ADAMS
Applicant
and
SHARIEF
MANUEL
First Respondent
ALL
OTHER PERSONS RESIDING WITH
THE
FIRST RESPONDENT AT
1[…]
A[…] S[…] ROAD,
HOUT
BAY, CAPE
TOWN
Second Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
31 January 2022
Delivered
electronically:
3 February 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
This is an
opposed application for eviction. The following salient facts are
common cause or cannot be disputed by the respondents,
who contented
themselves with bald denials in relation thereto, and thus failed to
meet the test in
Wightman.
[1]
[2]
The applicant is the single mother of a minor child. The first
respondent
(to whom I shall refer as “the respondent”
unless otherwise indicated) is her former boyfriend. The applicant
and respondent
became romantically involved in June 2018. From late
2018 the applicant began making enquiries about available land in the
Hangberg/Harbour
area of Hout Bay on which to erect a home for
herself and her child. She approached the local City councillor as
well as the area’s
community-led organisation for assistance
but was not successful.
[3]
In about June 2019 an old friend, Ms Rukaya Davids, granted the
applicant
“permission” to erect a home on an empty plot
(in the area) which had previously been occupied by herself and her
husband.
It would seem that they had dismantled the structure erected
on the plot in which they had resided when they moved elsewhere.
[4]
Both parties are under the impression that the plot may be situated
on
land owned by the Department of Public Works (“the
Department”), although there is no official record of ownership
(the Department does own land in the area). Neither Ms Davids nor the
applicant were ever formally allocated the plot by the Department
(or
whoever the owner is or was), but it had previously been occupied by
Ms Davids and her husband for some years.
[5]
Although the Department is apparently aware of the fact that a number
of individuals occupy its land in the area, no further steps have
been taken by it to have them evicted since an unsuccessful attempt
in about 2017 which led to an uprising in that community.
[6]
The applicant then set about purchasing materials for the house she
would
erect. From her founding affidavit it is clear that, given her
financial constraints, she had no option but to build (with the
assistance of a builder) in stages, relying on loans and monies that
she was able to scrape together. This process commenced in
June 2019
and by June 2020 she was able to purchase roof sheets with monies
loaned from her former employer. She annexed objective
proof of her
financial contributions to its construction.
[7]
During 2019 and when the parties were still romantically involved,
the
applicant invited the respondent to reside with her and her child
on the property once it was fit for occupation. At the time both
lived with their respective mothers in the area (the applicant and
her child in extremely overcrowded conditions).
[8]
The relationship between the applicant and the respondent ended in
about
July 2020. The reasons for its termination are not relevant for
present purposes, although the applicant attributes this to the
respondent’s verbal and emotional abuse. There would seem to be
merit in this assertion when one has regard to the personal
attacks
made on the applicant’s character as well as the unnecessary
vitriol which permeated the respondent’s answering
affidavit.
[9]
At the time their relationship terminated the applicant informed the
respondent
that he was no longer welcome to take up residence with
her once her home was completed. The respondent thereupon moved onto
the
plot. According to the applicant he told her that he was doing so
only to protect the partially constructed dwelling from vandalism.
She initially refused but subsequently consented to him doing so
since, according to her, she had applied for a protection order
against him in the magistrate’s court, and was under the
impression that he would be ordered to move out upon finalisation
of
those proceedings.
[10]
However there is no allegation that she conveyed what she believed
would happen in the
magistrate’s court to the respondent, and
the interim protection order granted in her favour on 27 August
2020, which
is annexed to her founding affidavit, directed the
respondent
inter alia
not to enter the applicant’s
residence at a different address. The magistrate thus did not order
the respondent to vacate.
[11]
I accept that in her affidavit filed in support of the protection
order the applicant dealt
with the abuse to which she had allegedly
been subjected, what the parties had previously discussed pertaining
to the respondent
taking up occupation with her at the dwelling, and
that she also referred in the application itself to one of the direct
consequences
of the abuse being that she was ‘…
without
a house I have built’.
However she did not claim that she
resided there (correctly, because she did not), nor did she
specifically seek the respondent’s
removal from the dwelling on
the plot.
[12]
To this must be added that on 26 January 2021 the applicant’s
attorney addressed
a letter to the respondent informing him
inter
alia
that ‘…
[y]ou are aware that our client has
not given you permission to occupy or undertake any construction in
her premises…’
. Accordingly this letter also did not
inform the respondent that the applicant was revoking the consent
which she had previously
given to him.
[13]
By all accounts, after he moved onto the plot, the respondent took it
upon himself to complete
the construction of the dwelling. He has
resided in it ever since and has refused point blank to vacate it.
Apparently his two
minor children now reside there as well.
[14]
The defences raised by the respondent on the merits varied. In
response to a letter of
demand his erstwhile attorney advised the
applicant’s attorney on 28 January 2021 that he is the
‘
sole owner of the structure’
. In response to
service of the eviction application the respondent’s current
attorney advised the applicant’s attorney
in a letter dated
18 June 2021 that ‘
in our view there is no basis in
fact or law for your client to bring the application’.
[15]
In his later answering affidavit the respondent acknowledged the
applicant’s financial
contributions to the erection of the
dwelling and did not take issue with the nature of the materials she
had purchased. However
he baldly alleged that he spent R295 000
thereon, which he maintained served as some sort of proof that
therefore he is the
owner of the structure.
[16]
He chose not to attach any objective evidence of how the sum of
R295 000 was allegedly
expended because, according to him, it
was ‘
too voluminous and unnecessary for purposes of this
application’
but invited the court to peruse it if
required. This too fails to meet the
Wightman
test. As far as
can be gleaned from his affidavit no other defences were raised
concerning his occupation, other than another bald
assertion that he
‘…
started to erect a dwelling as I wanted to build a
house for my family’.
[17]
However,
the respondent raised two points
in
limine
.
The first is that the applicant lacks the necessary
locus
standi
and the second is the non-joinder of the Department. During argument
it was accepted, in light of
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker v Jika
,
[2]
that PIE
[3]
applies to the
eviction of
all
unlawful occupiers, meaning persons who occupy land without the
express or tacit consent of the owner or person in charge, or without
any other right in law to occupy that land, (save for occupiers under
ESTA
[4]
, the Interim Protection
of Informal Land Rights Act,
[5]
juristic persons, or those not using the subject property as a form
of dwelling or shelter).
[18]
Accordingly,
it is necessary to determine whether the applicant enjoys
locus
standi
under PIE. The applicant based her
locus
standi
on the following allegation in the founding affidavit: ‘
As
should be clear from the above, the land to build my home on was
granted to me and I paid for the construction.’.
[6]
[19]
Section 4(1) of PIE stipulates that ‘
(n)otwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law or the common law, the
provisions of this section apply to proceedings
by an owner or a
person in charge of land for the eviction of an unlawful occupier’.
It is common cause that the applicant is not the owner of the land.
The question which then arises is whether she qualifies as
a “person
in charge of land”. Such a person is defined in s 1 of PIE
as meaning ‘…
a person who has or at the relevant time
had
legal authority to give permission to a person to enter
or reside upon the land in question
…’
.
(my emphasis)
[20]
In heads of
argument counsel for the respondent referred to Smith CP et al:
Eviction
and Rental Claims: A Practical Guide
[7]
where the authors state that a “person in charge of land”
could be a lessee or a person acting as agent of the owner
of the
land. There is no suggestion that the applicant falls into the second
category mentioned by the authors. The question which
then arises is
whether she may be considered to be a lessee.
[21]
In
Mighty
Solutions t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd and
Another
[8]
the Constitutional Court stated that:
‘
[28]
…As noted in
Boompret
, it is an established rule that
when being sued for eviction at the termination of a lease, a lessee
cannot raise as a defence
that the lessor has no right to occupy the
property. This flows naturally from the rule that a valid lease does
not rest on the
lessor having any title…’
[22]
However
this reflects the common-law position, whereas in applications of the
present nature the Supreme Court of Appeal has made
clear that the
provisions of PIE apply. There is also no suggestion that the
applicant ‘
leased’
the plot to the respondent. Indeed and in any event, on her own
version, one of the essential elements of a lease is absent, namely
payment of rental.
[9]
Nor does
the applicant qualify as a “lessor” under a
precarium
,
because Ms Davids is not the owner of the plot
.
As was explained in
Pezula
Private Estate v Metelerkamp
:
[10]
‘
[10]
…The notion of a
precarium
is based on the application
by one party for a concession which is granted by the other party;
that other party reserving at all
times the right to revoke that
concession as against the grantee in terms of the particular
conditions, to which the grant is subject.
Put differently, a
precarium
is a legal relationship which exists between parties
when one party has the use of the property
belonging to the
other
on sufferance, by leave and licence of the other…’
(my emphasis)
[23]
During argument it became apparent that the “legal authority”
upon which the
applicant seeks to rely is that of a
bona fide
possessor, and therefore she must be found to qualify as such before
consideration can be given to whether a
bona fide
possessor
constitutes a person with “legal authority” for purposes
of PIE. The concept of a
bona fide
possessor encompasses
various elements, namely (a)
bona fides
; (b) physical
control; and (c) a particular mental attitude.
[24]
In Wille’s
Principles
of South African Law
[11]
the authors state that possession in good faith (
bona
fide
)
is when the possessor thinks, on reasonable or probable grounds, that
he or she has some kind of ownership in the property possessed.
They
quote
Levy
v Maresky
[12]
where the words ‘
on
reasonable and probable grounds’
were added, but rejected in
Banjo
v Sungrown (Pty) Ltd.
[13]
In the latter decision the court found that:
‘…
the
absence, otherwise, of reasonable grounds for belief may, indeed,
provide cogent evidence that the belief did not exist.
Grant and
Another v Stonestreet and Others
1968 (4) SA 1
(AD) at p21H. But
the existence or otherwise of an honest belief remains a question of
fact…’
[25]
In the present matter the applicant, on the evidence, did not believe
that she had some
kind of ownership of the land. What she believed is
that the dwelling she was in the process of constructing on the land
was her
property. But the dwelling was not yet complete and, on both
parties’ versions, it was still uncompleted when the respondent
moved onto the plot. There was thus no ‘
house I have built’
as she asserted, and the
bona fide
element has not been
established.
[26]
As to
physical control, this must be sufficient and effective, judged
objectively: Mostert
et
al
:
The
Principles of the Law in South Africa
.
[14]
The difficulty which the applicant faces is that her control over the
property is too tenuous. She has never resided there. She
consented
to the respondent moving onto the property without conveying to him
any attendant conditions. Again, the dwelling was
not fit for
occupation when she gave him that consent. This element is therefore
also absent.
[27]
As far as
her mental attitude is concerned, this must be appropriate to the
factual context and is determined on the outward manifestation
of
that attitude, which approximates an objective judgement of physical
control.
[15]
As the authors in
Mostert
et
al
[16]
put it ‘
[i]n
other words the mental attitude is taken as that which can be
established by the outward appearance or conduct rather than
by mere
subjective personal testimony’.
It is not necessary to repeat the evidence already dealt with, save
to state that, on her own version, the applicant has failed
to show
that there was an outward manifestation of the revocation of her
consent
vis-à-vis
the respondent. This element too has not been established.
[28]
I am therefore compelled to conclude that the applicant is not a
‘
person in charge of land’
for purposes of PIE,
and therefore lacks the necessary
locus standi
. I acknowledge
that this is a “hard luck” case, but cases do not fall to
be determined on sympathy. As Harms JA put
it in
Ndlovu
:
‘
[16]
There is clearly a substantial class of persons whose vulnerability
may well have been a concern of
Parliament, especially if the
intention was to invert PISA [Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act 52
of 1951]. It would appear that
Schwartzman J overlooked the poor, who
will always be with us, and that he failed to remind himself of the
fact that the Constitution
enjoins courts, when interpreting any
legislation, to promote the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill
of Rights, in this case
s 26(3). The Bill of Rights and social
or remedial legislation often confer benefits on persons for whom
they are not primarily
intended. The law of unintended consequences
sometimes takes its toll. There seems to be no reason in the general
social and historical
context of this country why the Legislature
would have wished not to afford this vulnerable class the protection
of PIE. Some may
deem it unfortunate that the Legislature, somewhat
imperceptibly and indirectly, disposed of common-law rights in
promoting social
rights. Others will point out that social rights do
tend to impinge or impact upon common-law rights, sometimes
dramatically.’
[29]
I
accordingly leave open the question whether a
bona
fide
possessor in the legal sense enjoys the protection of those ‘
in
charge of land’
under
PIE. It is also not necessary to deal with the second point
in
limine
,
save to mention that in my view it has some merit, nor is it
necessary to condone the applicant’s failure to comply with
s 4(2) of PIE (although I would have granted condonation),
[17]
nor does one reach the stage of determining the matter in accordance
with s 4(7) of PIE.
[30]
Costs would, in the ordinary course, follow the result. However, in
the present matter
there can be little doubt that the respondent has
throughout behaved in deplorable manner, and the applicant, although
unsuccessful,
has approached court for relief in good faith. In these
circumstances it is appropriate that each party bears their own
costs.
[31]
The following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
Each party shall bear their own costs.
J
I CLOETE
[1]
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at para [13].
[2]
2003 (1) SA 113 (SCA).
[3]
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998.
[4]
Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
.
[5]
31 of 1996.
[6]
Para 36 of the founding affidavit.
[7]
Chapter 3 at para 3.4.
[8]
2016 (1) SA 621 (CC).
[9]
See
inter
alia
LAWSA: 2ed Vol 14
Part 2
at 3.
[10]
2014 (5) SA 37
(SCA).
[11]
9ed at 452.
[12]
1939 GWL 21
at 32.
[13]
1969 (1) SA 401
(N) at 406D-E.
[14]
[2020] at 69.
[15]
Mostert
et
al
(
supra
)
at 69.
[16]
At 69.
[17]
See
inter
alia Moela v Shoniwe
2005 (4) SA 357
(SCA) at para [8].
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