Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 156South Africa
Sokanyile and Others v Broad and Another (12525/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 156 (24 August 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Sokanyile and Others v Broad and Another (12525/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 156 (24 August 2022)
Sokanyile and Others v Broad and Another (12525/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 156 (24 August 2022)
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sino date 24 August 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 12525/2022
In
the matter between:
OLWETHU
SOKANYILE
First Applicant
SILVESTER
SIWEYA
Second Applicant
DARREN
RUSSEL
Third Applicant
and
KEITH
BROAD
First Respondent
ALL
OCCUPIERS PRESENT AT [....] LIERMANS ROAD,
LLANDUDNO,
AND WHOSE IDENTITIES ARE
UNKNOWNTO
THE APPLICANTS
Second Respondent
REASONS
DELIVERED ON 24 AUGUST 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 4 August 2022 on the urgent roll, I granted the applicants’
application for the restoration of possession to them of the
immovable property situated at [....] Liermans Road, Llandudno (“the
property”). The first respondent is the registered owner of the
property. The second respondent is a group of individuals
who are
currently staying at the property so as to prevent the applicants
from regaining access thereto.
2.
I further granted an order interdicting the first respondent
from
interfering with the applicants’ occupation of the property
pending the finalisation of the eviction application instituted
by
the first respondent against the third applicant in this Court under
case number 7902/2022. The eviction application is to be
heard on 16
November 2022.
3.
The respondents subsequently requested reasons for the order.
These
are the reasons.
4.
The application was brought in reliance upon the
mandament van
spolie
and, for the further order, upon the requirements for the
grant of interim interdictory relief. This means that the applicants
had to prove that they had been in peaceful and undisturbed
possession of the property and that they were deprived of possession
without their consent. They also had to prove the four requirements
for the grant of an interim interdict, namely that the right
sought
to be protected is
prima facie
established, that there is a
well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm to the applicants if
the relief is not granted and
it ultimately succeeds in establishing
its right, that the balance of convenience favours the applicants,
and that the applicants
have no other satisfactory remedy (
Eriksen
Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors, Warrenton and another
1973
(3) SA 685
(A) at 691C-G).
5.
The first respondent relied on three defences in opposition
to the
application, namely (1) that the applicants were not in possession of
the property as contemplated by the
mandament
, (2) that
restoration of the property would be impossible due to illegality,
and (3) that no case is made out for the grant of
the interim
interdict.
6.
I deal with each of these defences below.
The
first respondent’s conduct
7.
It is common cause between the parties that the first respondent
has
prevented the applicants from occupying the property since 24 July
2022. The applicants explained in their founding affidavit
how the
deprivation of possession came to be.
8.
On 22 July 2022 the first applicant was
called by short-term accommodation guests at the property. They
stated that there were intruders
at the property, who were demanding
that they leave. On the first applicant’s arrival at the
property, he encountered about
five men, one of whom stated that
"I
am here on behalf of Mr Broad. I am a private investigating officer
and we are here to remove you from the property
”.
The first applicant responded by asking what the grounds for the
removal were, to which the man responded "
on
the grounds that you are occupying the property illegally
".
9.
The men proceeded to go through the
property, opening drawers and cupboards, telling the occupants to
leave. Their demeanour was
threatening and aggressive. The applicants
subsequently learned that the man in charge of the group was Mr
Wouter de Swart of Fox
Forensics. The applicants did not know the
identity of the other men who were present and they refused to
provide them with information
regarding their identities.
10.
The men threatened to assault the
occupants and the first applicant called the private security firm
with whom the third applicant
is contracted, namely PPA Security.
After PPA’s arrival the other men left, but indicated that they
would return on Sunday,
24 July 2022. The first applicant called the
Hout Bay charge office of the South African Police Service (“SAPS”)
four
times, but there was no answer.
11.
On the morning of 24 July 2022 the first
applicant was making breakfast in the kitchen. He heard a loud
banging on the front door.
Looking through the windows, he noticed a
large number of men walking around the house, attempting to gain
access. The second respondent
was present, as well as another
assistant.
12.
One of the men was Mr de Swart, who
confirmed that he was there on behalf of the first respondent. The
unknown men were attempting
to enter the house with a set of keys.
The first applicant refused to let them enter, as he feared for his
safety and the safety
of the other occupants of the house. He was
scared that the men would attempt an unlawful eviction. He
accordingly called the Hout
Bay SAPS office a number of times, and
the officer he spoke to eventually said that officers would attend
the scene. Some time
thereafter, SAPS members came to the property
but they did not remain there for long. While the officers were
there, the first
applicant mentioned that the applicants were lawful
tenants and that the intruders were there to take over the house. He
showed
the officers the lease agreement. The latter said that they
were departing to fetch a detective, and left. They were
disinterested
in the matter, and did not return.
13.
The first applicant called PPA Security,
but was told that they were under clear instructions from the first
respondent not to become
involved in the "
removal
of the illegal tenants
" –
this despite the fact that the applicants themselves pay PPA’s
accounts.
14.
At about midday the first applicant
received a call from PPA, requesting that the first applicant open
the property and come outside
to discuss the matter. While under the
illusion that PPA would protect the occupants, the first applicant
opened the garage door.
The men outside immediately stormed the door
and forced their way inside. One of them grabbed the first applicant
by the jersey
and threw him against the floor. Another man later
pushed him against the wall. There were about eight burly men
present. The first
applicant was told that he had to leave the
property or be killed. The men kicked the first applicant’s dog
and threatened
to kill the dog should the first applicant return to
the property. The second applicant also sustained abrasions on his
neck as
a result of assaults by the men, and the occupants were
forcibly removed.
15.
The men have since changed the locks at
the property and are currently residing there. The applicants’
personal possessions
are still in the property, including furniture
belonging to the third applicant worth a substantial amount.
16.
These events are not seriously disputed by the first respondent. In
fact, the
first respondent admits that he had engaged Fox Forensics
to remove the applicants from the property. His evidence is telling:
“
I admit that Mr
De Swart and/or security staff in the employ of Fox Forensics gained
access to the property on 24 July 2022 with
the assistance of PPA
Security. I was informed by Mr De Swart that he attended on the
property several times during the preceding
week and that, on the
occasions that he had been to the property, there was nobody present
or occupying it. I was further informed
by Mr De Swart that, apart
from a few items of clothing that apparently belonged to Mr Sewiya,
there was no trace of the applicants'
belongings or any evidence that
they reside at the property on a permanent basis.
Mr De Swart has placed
private security personnel at the property to safeguard it. This was
done because Mr De Swart was able to
establish that Mr Russel was in
the process of concluding a sublease in respect of the property in
terms of which the property
would be occupied by foreign nationals
for an extended period of time. I was not informed about this by Mr
Russel and I have no
insight into what the terms of such sublease
would entail. Mr Russel has unlawfully retained the property for a
period in excess
of 6 months since the lease was cancelled. I fear
that if the sublease is concluded, I will continue to be excluded
from my property
indefinitely without any recourse of control as to
who us being placed there or preventing further damage to it.
17.
What is clear from this excerpt (and from a reading of the
answering affidavit as a whole) is that the first respondent attempts
to justify his (and his agents’) actions on considerations
entirely irrelevant for the purposes of the
mandament
. The
essential characteristic of the
mandament
as a possessory
remedy is that the legal process whereby the possession of a party is
protected, is kept strictly separate from
the process whereby a
party’s right to ownership or other right to the property in
dispute, is determined (
Ngqukumba v Minister of
Safety and Security and others
2014 (5)
SA 112
(CC) at para [10]).
18.
In addition, he recounts hearsay evidence in an attempt to downplay
the applicants’
averments of possession of the property (I deal
with the issue of possession in more detail further below). The first
respondent
was not present when the deprivation occurred. No
confirmatory affidavit from any of the Fox or PPA employees involved
in the matter
was produced.
19.
There is no doubt that the driving force behind the forcible removal
of the
applicants from the property is the first respondent’s
dissatisfaction with the delay in finalising his eviction
application.
He bemoans the fact that the third applicant is not
currently paying rental and that he (the first respondent) thus has
an increased
financial burden in respect of the property. He states
that, because the eviction application has been postponed to November
2022,
“
in the interim, I have been left without recourse
against the third applicant (which (sic) he is clearly profiting from
my property
by conducting a short-term rental business)
”.
These are not issues that are relevant for the purposes of these
proceedings. The first respondent has no doubt already
placed all of
this evidence on record in the pending eviction application.
20.
He proceeds to state that it “
is against this background
that I engaged the services of Mr Wouter de Swart of Fox Forensics
Private Investigators and Security
Consultants to assist me in this
matter”
. This is ominous. The first respondent clearly
contracted with Fox Forensics to get the applicants out of the
property prior to
the finalisation of the eviction application. He is
attempting to render the eviction proceedings nugatory. This is
self-help in
its purest form.
21.
In my view this conduct, and the reasoning that underpins it, also
supports
the applicants’ case for the grant of interim
interdictory relief, in particular in relation to the reasonable
apprehension
of irreparable harm if the interdict is not granted. The
first respondent’s previous attempts at forcing the applicants
from
the property, resulting in an interim protection order obtained
by the third applicant as a result and the first respondents’
actions in breach thereof, strengthen the applicants’ case in
this respect, even though the first respondent brushes the
applicants’ recounting of those incidents off as irrelevant for
the purposes of this application.
The
first defence: the applicants were not in possession of the property
22.
The first respondent’s first defence was that the applicants
did not exercise
a sufficient degree of undisturbed and peaceful
possession of the property to succeed in their application.
23.
The first respondent argues that the third applicant is no longer a
lawful tenant
of the property. This does not matter for present
purposes, as I do not have to determine the lawfulness of his
tenancy. The first
respondent further submits that the third
applicant does not provide sufficient evidence as to his possession
of the property.
The latter is said “generally” to reside
at the property, but nothing is said about what this qualification to
the
third applicant’s residential status means, how often he
"generally resides" at the property, when last he accessed
the property or had any measure of control over it. Merely having an
alleged (and disputed) right to occupy a property without
actually
maintaining possession thereof is not sufficient to justify the
relief that is sought.
24.
I do not agree with that the third applicant has failed properly to
prove possession
of and control over the property. The third
respondent is the lessee of the property in terms of a lease
agreement concluded between
him and the first respondent on 15
October 2021. The lease was to endure until 14 October 2023, and was
concluded for the purposes
of allowing the third applicant to conduct
a short-term rental accommodation business. There are currently
various disputes between
the third applicant and the first respondent
in relation to whether the third applicant had contravened the lease
and whether the
lease has been validly cancelled (as a result of the
alleged contraventions). I do not have to determine those disputes.
As mentioned
earlier, there is a pending eviction application which
is to be head in November 2022.
25.
As
lessee (whether disputed or not; whether the lease has been cancelled
is a matter to be decided in the pending eviction application),
the
third respondent holds the property in such capacity. A lessee
possesses and controls the property in terms of the provisions
of the
lease agreement.
The
physical requirement for possession (
detentio
)
does not require continual physical occupation; a person has
detentio
even if he leaves the property but is capable of assuming occupation
at any time. What is required is that the person in question
should
manifest the power at his will to deal with the property as he likes
and to exclude others (see
Smith
and Others v Stellenbosch Municipality and Others
[2022] ZAWCHC 134
(11 July 2022) at para [90];
Ex
parte Van der Horst: In re Estate Herold
1978
(1) SA 299
(T) at 301F-G). In the present matter, it appears
that the third applicant resides at the property from time to time,
and
his furniture is in the proeprty. He has also employed the first
and second applicants to assist in the running and maintenance
of the
business so as to exercise control over the property. The first and
second applicants in fact reside at the property.
26.
In any event, the fact that the first applicant had instituted an
eviction application
so as to remove the third applicant from the
property is in itself a concession that the third applicant is in
possession of the
property. Whether he resides there on an ongoing
basis is not relevant.
27.
The first respondent submits that the first and second applicants do
not have
the
mandament
at their disposal because they hold the
property as “mere servants or
quasi
-servants”. In
Greaves and others v Barnard
2007 (2) SA 593
(C) the Court
stated the law as follows at para [10]:
“
[10]
The learned Judge in the Court below referred to a number of cases in
which it was decided that a person, who was in possession
of property
as an employee or as an agent, is not entitled to obtain a spoliation
order, namely Mpunga v Malaba
1959
(1) SA 853
(W); Mbuku v Mdinwa
1982
(1) SA 219
(TkS); and Dlamini and Another v Mavi and
Others
1982
(2) SA 490
(W). He pointed out, however, that the general rule
only applied to an agent or employee who had no interest in the
property over and
above the right which he held as agent or employee.
Thus in Mpunga's case (supra) Steyn AJ said at
861E - F:
‘
It
seems to me that the authorities have established that a servant
or a person who holds no rights on his own behalf, except
insofar as
such rights derive from an authority given to him by the master, is
not entitled to bring proceedings for a spoliation
order, but that
only the employer can do so. In other words, it seems to me that
before a person can bring spoliation proceedings,
he must show that
the right of which he has been spoliated is something in which he has
an interest over and above that interest
which he has as a servant or
as a person who is in the position of a servant or a quasi-servant.'
In Mbuku v Mdinwa
(supra), Hefer CJ said, at 222F - H:
'In any event, I am of
the view that an agent who has no interest in the property which he
holds for his principal, or who derives
no benefit from holding it,
is not entitled to claim the relief of a mandament van spolie.
One should not forget that it is
a remedy which is available to a
possessor; it has never, to my knowledge, been extended, except
perhaps inadvertently, to a mere detentor.
But the animus
possidendi which is required to transform detentio into
possession is not the intention required
of old for so-called civil
possession; it is no more than the intention to hold the thing in
question for one's own benefit and
not for another. And
a detentor who does not have that intention is indeed
merely a detentor. I am in full agreement
with the view
expressed in Wille's Principles of South African Law 7 ed
at 196 - 7 that
''. . . if the person
who has detentio of a thing has the intention of holding it
not for himself but for another person, he
does not have
possession, he is a custodian merely and the possessor is the person
on whose behalf he is holding''.'
And
in Dlamini and Another v Mavi and Others (supra) at 492E - F,
reference was made to Yeko v Qana
1973
(4) SA 735
(A), where Van Blerk JA (at 739D - E) said the
following:
'The very essence of
the remedy against spoliation is that the possession enjoyed by the
party who asks for the spoliation order
must be established. As has
so often been said by our Courts the possession which must be proved
is not possession in the juridical
sense; it may be enough if the
holding by the applicant was with the intention of securing some
benefit for himself.'
28.
I agree with counsel that this is the general position in law in
relation to
servants merely holding possession of a thing on their
employer’s behalf, but I do not agree that this principle
applies
to the facts of the present case. Neither
Greaves
nor
any of the cases referred to in the quoted extract deals with the
situation in which the first and second applicants find themselves,
namely that of occupiers of the property in question. The first and
second applicants both state expressly in the founding affidavit
that
they permanently reside at the property, and that they are employed
by the third applicant as hospitality providers and house
managers.
29.
Although they are employed by the third applicant, they clearly do
not hold
the property just in their capacities as “servants”.
They have an interest over and above that of serving the third
applicant. The property is their home for the time being and their
personal possessions, including the first applicant’s
dog, are
there. They reside there and is in possession of the property for
that purpose and with that intention quite apart from
the work that
they do for the third applicant in cleaning and maintaining the
property. With the salaries they earn they support
their families.
The third applicant has no other property available at which to
provide housing for the first and second applicants.
The property is
their home at least for as long as the third applicant is the tenant.
Quite apart from the lease, and in any event,
the first and second
applicants would be protected by conduct such as that displayed by
the first respondent by the provisions
of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction and Unlawful Occupation Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”).
In
Barnett and others
v Minister of Land Affairs and others
2007
(6) SA 313
(SCA) the Court stated as follows:
“
Though the
concept ‘home’ is not easy to define and although I agree
with the defendants’ argument that one can
conceivably have
more than one home, the term does, in my view, require an element of
regular occupation coupled with some degree
of permanence. This is in
accordance, I think, with the dictionary meanings of: ‘the
dwelling in which one habitually lives;
the fixed residence of a
family or household; and the seat of domestic life and interests’
(see eg The Oxford English Dictionary
2ed Vol VII). It is also borne
out, in my view, by the following statement in Beck v
Scholz
[1953]
1 QB 570
(CA) 575-6:
‘
The word ‘home’
itself is not easy of exact definition, but the question posed, and
to be answered by ordinary common
sense standards, is whether the
particular premises are in the personal occupation of the tenant as
the tenant’s home, or,
if the tenant has more than one home, as
one of his homes. Occupation merely as a convenience for . . .
occasional visits . . .
would not, I think, according to the common
sense of the matter, be occupation as a “home”.’
[39] Moreover, within
the context of s 26(3) of the Constitution – and thus
within the context of PIE – I believe
that my understanding of
what is meant by a ‘home’ is supported by Sachs J,
speaking for the Constitutional Court,
in Port Elizabeth
Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7
;
2005
(1) SA 217
(CC) para 17, where he said:
‘
Section 26(3)
evinces special constitutional regard for a person’s place of
abode. It acknowledges that a home is more than
just a shelter from
the elements. It is a zone of personal intimacy and family security.
Often it will be the only relatively secure
space of privacy and
tranquillity in what (for poor people, in particular) is a turbulent
and hostile world….’”
30.
This aspect distinguishes the present case from the facts upon
which
Greaves
was decided. (See also
City
of Cape Town v Rudolph and others
2004
(5) SA 39
(C) at 61E, in which it was held, viewed from the opposite
perspective, that PIE trumps the
mandament
:
“
As
in the case of other common-law remedies which effectively evict an
'unlawful occupier', I find that the mandament van spolie
is not
available where PIE applies
.”)
31.
In the circumstances, the
mandament
was at the first and
second applicants’ disposal and the first respondent was not at
liberty to remove them from the property
without a court order
authorising him to do so. I am satisfied that the applicants have
established their possession of the property
on a balance of
probabilities.
Is
restoration to the third applicant impossible due to illegality
?
32.
The first respondent argued that, should I return possession
of the property to the applicants – in particular to the third
applicant – I would compel him (the first respondent) to act
illegally. This is because the third applicant i
s
a foreign national and citizen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland. The third applicant entered the Republic
of
South Africa on a visitor's visa that was valid from 8 November 2021
until 31 December 2021. The visa was issued for the purposes
of
conducting a holiday in the Republic of South Africa. The first
respondent contends that the third applicant not only overstayed
his
visitor's visa, but he has also contravened the conditions attached
thereto by conducting a short-term rental business while
he is here.
33.
A
s a result, the first respondent submits
that the third applicant is in the country illegally. In terms of
section 42 of the Immigration
Act 13 of 2002 ("the
Immigration
Act"
;), no person shall aid, abet, assist, enable or in any
manner help an illegal foreigner or assist a foreigner in respect of
any
matter, conduct or transaction which violates such foreigner's
status, when applicable, including but not limited to, assisting,
enabling or in any manner helping him to conduct any business or
carry on any profession or occupation, harbouring him, which includes
providing accommodation or letting or selling or in any manner making
available any immovable property in the Republic to him.
Doing so
constitutes an offence.
34.
The first respondent thus argues that it is impossible to return the
property
to the third applicant because such restoration would oblige
the first respondent to act in contravention of the
Immigration Act.
The
first respondent was not aware of the conditions of the third
applicant’s visa or the expiry date thereof at the time that
the lease agreement was concluded.
35.
In reply, the third applicant indicates that he was advised by his
immigration
practitioner, Ursa Visa Consulting, that there is
currently a moratorium in place as declared by the Department of Home
Affairs
in relation to holders of lapsed tourist visas, as set out in
a letter dated 27 June 2022 from the Department. The letter confirms
a blanket extension and a lack of consequence in respect of persons
holding lapsed tourist visas, until 30 September 2022. The
third
applicant is receiving legal assistance in his dealings with and
applications to the Department and sees no potential valid
challenges
to the renewal of the visa. He intends to apply for permanent
residency in due course.
36.
Should
restoration of the property to the third applicant be refused because
of his alleged status? In
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) the Constitutional Court stated (at para
[14]):
“
[14] The
obvious conclusion is that the mandament van spolie is available even
against the police where they have seized goods unlawfully.
The
central question is: are ss 68(6)(b) and 89(1) of the Traffic
Act to be read in a manner that alters this position? Do
they stand
in the way of restoration of possession of the vehicle in terms of a
spoliation order in this matter? I think not.”
37.
In the
Ngqukumba
case the Constitutional Court
indicated that it was not concerned with objects the possession of
which by ordinary individuals
would be unlawful under all
circumstances. Consequently, it left open the question (at paragraph
[15]) whether the
mandament van spolie
would be
available in such circumstances.
38.
In
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019
(5) SA 386 (SCA)
the Supreme Court of Appeal observed (at
390G–391C) that the
dictum
in the
Ngqukuma
case
raised the possibility of a court refusing to order the return of the
property to a person who might not lawfully possess
it, but to do so
would require a reconsideration of a line of authority in that court
which had not hitherto been questioned (including
Yeko
v
Qana
1973
(4) SA 735
(A) at 739D-G;
Bon
Quelle (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Otavi
1989
(1) SA 508 (A)
at 512A-B;
Ivanov
v North West Gambling Board and Others
2012
(6) SA 67
(SCA) at paras [23] to [25]).
In
the light of the view it took on the case it was dealing with, the
Supreme Court of Appeal did not deem it necessary to make
a decision
on this aspect.
39.
Whilst the moratorium by the Department of Home Affairs applies to
the tourist
visa and the conditions upon which it had been granted,
and does not permit the running of a business from the property, I am
nevertheless
satisfied that third applicant has established
possession of the property in that he resides there from time to
time. His furniture
and possessions are in the property. That is an
issue apart from whether he is running a business from the property.
I was advised
form the Bar that one of the defences to the eviction
application is that the first respondent should have instituted
proceedings
under PIE in order to evict the third applicant from the
premises, as the lease provides that the property may be used for
residential
purposes only and the third applicant’s possession
and occupation thereof is not purely a commercial one. In terms of a
court
order dated 19 April 2022, regulating the further conduct of
the matter, the third applicant was impliedly permitted to remain in
the property until the determination of the eviction application.
40.
Given these factual circumstances, and third applicant’s
explanation in
relation to his visa coupled with the fact that there
is already a pending eviction application due to be heard in November
2022,
I also do not deem it necessary to investigate this issue in
detail and reconsider the line of authorities referred to by the
Supreme
Court of Appeal. I am of the view that the third applicant
has established that he had the required possession and control of
the
property, and that he was despoiled. I am also of the view that
possession should be restored to him pending the finalisation of
the
eviction application.
41.
There is in any event no evidence to the effect that the first or
second applicant
is in the country in contravention of the
Immigration Act. There is therefore no basis upon which to refuse the
return of possession
of the property to them. As they reside at the
property it is, moreover, unlawful to evict them without an order
obtained under
the provisions of PIE. The first respondent has not
launched any proceedings under PIE in respect of these applicants.
The
interim interdict
42.
In all of the circumstances of the matter, I am of the view that the
applicants
have satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict
pending the determination of the eviction application.
43.
Counsel for the first respondent argues that the applicants should
have identified
each requirement specifically by name and have made
averments in relation to each such requirement. This is a formalistic
approach.
One has to consider the applicants’ founding papers
holistically to see whether the well-known requirements from the
grant
of interim relief has been established.
44.
The papers illustrate that the applicants have a
prima facie
right
to remain in the property pending the determination of the eviction
application, especially in light of the provisions of
PIE that would
possibly also have to be extended to the third applicant.
45.
I have already remarked on the reasonable apprehension of harm. The
first respondent’s
conduct (confirmed by letters from the
applicants’ attorney) reeks of a pattern of attempts to
circumvent the hearing of
the eviction application that may very well
recur in the coming months prior to the hearing of that application.
46.
The balance of convenience favours the applicants, in particular the
first and
second applicants, who have nowhere else to live. On the
papers before me the third applicant is paying the rental agreed to
under
the lease agreement on a quarterly basis, and as at March 2022
at least he was not in arrears. I accept that he may currently be
in
arrears, but the disputes between him and the first respondent are
due for determination in the course of the eviction application
in
any event.
47.
I do not regard possible future actions for damages as a satisfactory
alternative
remedy, and the conduct of SAPS in this matter has
illustrated that invoking their assistance is also not a satisfactory
remedy.
48.
In the exercise of my discretion I regard this as a case where
interim interdictory
relief should be granted so as to maintain the
status
quo
in favour of the applicants pending the
finalisation of the eviction application.
Conclusion
49.
Following the hearing of oral argument, I agreed with the
applicants’ submission that this was a classic case of
spoliation.
I also agreed that the applicants have satisfied the
requirements for the grant of an interim interdict. I accordingly
granted
the order as sought in terms of a draft provided on the day.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances
:
For
the applicants
:
Adv. P. Coston,
instructed by Oosthuizen & Co.
For
the first respondent
:
Adv. L. van Dyk, instructed by Thomson Wilks Inc.
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