Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 122South Africa
Peter v Nkonde and Others (A73/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 122 (27 May 2022)
Headnotes
the documents were authentic. Further, on the basis of the documents, the court a quo held that the respondents were not unlawful occupiers as defined in PIE in that the second respondent had lawful reason to occupy the property, was the person in charge thereof, and had legal authority to grant permission to the first and fourth respondents to occupy the property. Finally, the court a quo held that it was not just and equitable to evict the respondents.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Peter v Nkonde and Others (A73/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 122 (27 May 2022)
Peter v Nkonde and Others (A73/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 122 (27 May 2022)
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sino date 27 May 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.:A73/2021
In
the matter between:
GIDEON
LENNOX
PETER
Appellant
and
MTHOZAMI
INNOCENT NKONDE
First Respondent
BUSISIWE
MAJIKI
Second Respondent
CITY
OF CAPE
TOWN
Third Respondent
CAPE
TOWN MUNICIPALITY
ALL
OTHER UNLAWFUL OCCUPANTS
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 27 MAY 2022
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is
an appeal against a judgment and order of Francis, AJ (as he then
was) in which the appellant's eviction application in terms
of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998 (“
PIE”
)
was dismissed with costs. The appeal comes before us with leave of
the Supreme Court of Appeal (“
SCA”
).
[2]
The
first, second
and fourth respondents’ (“
the
respondents”
)
heads of argument were delivered out of time, and after considering
the condonation application, condonation was granted.
II.
THE
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
[3]
The eviction application concerns
state-subsidised property located at
Erf
[....] Philippi (“
the
property”
) which is colloquially
referred to as an RDP house. The property was allocated to the
appellant in about 2002, but the registration
of its transfer to the
appellant was only effected by the Provincial Government of the
Western Cape (“
the Provincial
Government”
) on 28 October 2014.
By that date, the appellant had long since vacated the property,
having left the second respondent in occupation
since 2003. The exact
nature of the second respondent’s occupation is in dispute.
However, it is not in dispute that on 3
April 2010 the second
respondent vacated the property and sold it to the first respondent,
who continues to live at the property
together with his wife and two
minor children.
[4]
The appellant brought the eviction
application in April 2018, on an urgent basis, attaching a deed of
transfer dated 28 October
2014 which indicated that the property was
registered in his name on that date. The basis for the eviction
application was that
the appellant had “
never
entered into any agreement of whatsoever nature with first, second
and further respondents to occupy my property”
.
[5]
In response, the second respondent averred
that she had bought the property from the appellant in 2003 for an
amount of R15 000,
which she paid in two instalments of R7000 and
R3000, and later by advancing an amount of close to R5000 for repairs
to the appellant’s
motor vehicle. As proof of the agreement to
purchase the property, the second respondent relied on two affidavits
which she claimed
were deposed by herself and the appellant on 1 May
2003, as well as a deed of sale which she alleged had been concluded
by her
and the appellant on 17 June 2003 (“
the
documents”
).
[6]
The appellant denied the second
respondent’s version, including the documents she relied upon.
Faced with this material dispute
of facts, the court
a
quo
referred the issues relating to the
authenticity of the documents, the conclusion of the deed of sale,
and the performance in terms
thereof to oral evidence.
[7]
In order to establish the authenticity of
the documents, the second respondent led the evidence of a
forensic
handwriting examiner, Ms Anne Marie Chantelle Salamon (“
the
expert”
), who was the only expert
witness called.
Based on the evidence and
report of the expert, the court
a quo
held that the documents were authentic. Further, on the basis of the
documents, the court
a quo
held
that the respondents were not unlawful occupiers as defined in PIE in
that the second respondent
had lawful
reason to occupy the property, was the person in charge thereof, and
had legal authority to grant permission to the first
and fourth
respondents to occupy the property. Finally, the court
a
quo
held that it was not just and
equitable to evict the respondents.
III.
THE
APPEAL
[8]
The appellant has raised numerous grounds
of appeal. Many of them revolve around the question of ownership and
lawful occupation
of the property by the respondents, including the
validity of the deed of sale between the parties in light of the
requirements
of the
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
.
[9]
In our view, the question of ownership and
lawful occupation in this case must be determined by reference to the
provisions of
section 10A
of the
Housing Act 107 of 1997
, which
provide as follows:
“
10A
Restriction on voluntary sale of state-subsidised housing
(1)
Notwithstanding
any provisions to the contrary in any other law, it shall be a
condition of every housing subsidy, as defined in
the Code, granted
to a natural person in terms of any national housing programme for
the construction or purchase of a dwelling
or serviced site, that
such person shall not sell or otherwise alienate his or her dwelling
or site within a period of eight years
from the date on which the
property was acquired by that person unless the dwelling or site has
first been offered to the relevant
provincial housing department.
(2)
The provincial
housing department to which the dwelling or site has been offered as
contemplated in subsection (1) shall endorse
in its records that the
person wishes to vacate his or her property and relocate to another
property and is entitled to remain
on a waiting list of beneficiaries
requiring subsidised housing.
(3)
When the
person vacates his or her property the relevant provincial housing
department shall be deemed to be the owner of the property
and
application must then be made to the Registrar of Deeds by the
provincial housing department for the title deeds of the property
to
be endorsed to reflect the department's ownership of that property.
(4)
No purchase
price or other remuneration shall be paid to the person vacating the
property but such person will be eligible for obtaining
another
state-subsidised house, should he or she qualify therefor.”
[10]
Section
10A
and
10B
of the
Housing Act were
introduced in 2001 by the
Housing
Amendment Act 4 of 2001
, came into effect on 15 June 2001, and are
applicable to the circumstances of this case. The provisions of
section 10A(1)
are peremptory. Any sale, lease or other type of
alienation of state-subsidised property is strictly prohibited within
the first
eight years of acquiring it
unless
the property has first been offered to the relevant provincial
housing department. Moreover, once the person who acquired
the
property
vacates
it the relevant provincial housing department is deemed to be the
owner of the property.
[11]
It
is common cause in these proceedings that the appellant left the
property in 2003, after it was allocated to him in about 2002,
and
accordingly, the time-limit prohibiting alienation within the first
eight years finds application. Further, the Provincial
Government was
not offered the property prior to the appellant’s alienation -
whether by agreement of sale or lease between
the parties - in terms
of
section 10A(1).
[12]
The
result is that neither the second nor the first and fourth
respondents acquired any rights in the property, as a purchaser nor
as a tenant. In terms of
section 10A(3)
, the ownership of the
property reverted to the Provincial Government when the appellant
moved out of the property. The alleged
deed of sale between the
appellant and second respondent, which amounts to alienation of the
property, constituted a nullity.
[1]
The same applies to the lease agreement which was belatedly alleged
by the appellant during his oral evidence. And the same applies
to
the sale agreement concluded between the second and first
respondents. All these agreements were void
ab
initio
.
[13]
All of the above means that
neither
the appellant nor the second respondent nor the first respondent can
be considered ‘owners’ as defined in the
PIE Act. The
appellant, although he possesses a title deed, lost his right of
ownership when he abandoned the property in 2003,
which was less than
eight years after being allocated the property. As already mentioned
above, in terms of section 10A(3), the
Provincial Government is the
lawful owner that is entitled, in terms
of
the PIE Act, to bring eviction proceedings.
[14]
This brings into sharp focus the
locus
standi
point raised on behalf of the
respondents.
It is understandable that the
court
a quo
declined to determine this point because
it
was raised for the first time in argument, after oral evidence had
been led, and had not been foreshadowed in the papers, including
by
an application for declaration of invalidity of the deed of sale. In
fact, as the court
a quo
pointed out to the respondents’ counsel, this belated argument
appeared to be in contradiction to the second respondent’s
reliance on the deed of sale. As a result, the court
a
quo
held that it was a collateral
issue, and declined to determine it.
[15]
In our view, the court
a
quo
erred in holding that this issue is
a collateral issue, although, given the circumstances in which it was
raised, it is understandable.
The application of the provisions of
the
Housing Act is
dispositive of the parties’ respective cases
both in the court
a quo
and on appeal. Most importantly, the effect of the application of the
relevant provisions of the
Housing Act is
that the appellant did not
have
locus standi
to
bring the eviction proceedings, and the application should have been
dismissed on that basis.
[16]
The fact that the Provincial Government was
not joined as a party to the proceedings means that the court had no
basis on which
to determine the merits of the eviction of the
respondents - including whether they are unlawful occupiers and
whether it is just
and equitable to evict them. In terms of the PIE
Act, it is an ‘owner’ or a
‘
person
in charge of land’ that is entitled to bring eviction
proceedings.
[17]
In the circumstances, I propose to make the
following order
:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree and it is so ordered.
E
BAARTMAN
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree.
M
SAMELA
Judge
of the High Court
## [1]See
alsoAbdul
v Williams and Others(CA227/2018)
[2019] ZAECGHC 103 (29 October 2019); andTapala
and Another v Tlebetla and Others(89400/16) [2019] ZAGPPHC 46 (22 February 2019).
[1]
See
also
Abdul
v Williams and Others
(CA227/2018)
[2019] ZAECGHC 103 (29 October 2019); and
Tapala
and Another v Tlebetla and Others
(89400/16) [2019] ZAGPPHC 46 (22 February 2019).
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