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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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[2024] ZAKZDHC 16
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## Transnet SOC Ltd v Govender and Others (D528/2023)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 16 (26 April 2024)
Transnet SOC Ltd v Govender and Others (D528/2023)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 16 (26 April 2024)
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sino date 26 April 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D528/2023
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
SOC
LTD
APPLICANT
and
LOGASPERIE
SAMANTHA GOVENDER
FIRST RESPONDENT
ALL
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF PORTION 2,
SECOND RESPONDENT
LOT
20, FARM NUMBER 1557
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
THIRD RESPONDENT
Coram:
Mossop J
Heard:
26 April 2024
Delivered:
26 April 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The third
respondent is directed by 1 June 2024, to file a report, supported by
an affidavit, in which it confirms:
(a)
What steps it
has taken and what steps it intends or is able to take to provide
accommodation for the first respondent and her three
daughters and
father who presently unlawfully occupy the immovable property with a
street address of
[...] S[...] Road, Ottawa, Durban
in
the event of their being evicted from that immovable property;
(b)
If such
alternative accommodation can be provided, by when it can be made
available; and
(c)
What the
effects would be if the eviction of the first respondent were to be
ordered without such alternative accommodation being
made available.
2.
The applicant and the
first respondent may, within fifteen days of delivery of the third
respondent’s report and affidavit
referred to in paragraph 1 of
this order, file affidavits in response to such report.
3.
The matter is
otherwise postponed
sine
die
, to be
finally determined on a date convenient to all parties.
4.
All questions of
costs are reserved.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
[1]
This is an ex tempore judgment.
[2]
It is not in dispute that the applicant is the owner of the immovable
property with a street address of [...] S[...] Road, Ottawa, Durban
(‘the property’). The property is ordinarily rented
out
by the applicant to its employees and, in particular, to employees of
the applicant that operate its trains. Such a rental
ordinarily
occurs in terms of a written lease agreement after the prospective
tenant has provided the applicant with certain prescribed
documentation and after a credit check has been conducted by the
applicant. The applicant states that employees of the applicant
who
rent premises such as the property are precluded, in terms of the
written lease agreement, from ceding or subletting those
premises to
any third-party.
[3]
The first respondent occupies the property, together with her three
young
children and her father. Neither she nor her father are
employees of the applicant. The applicant now wishes to evict her and
all
those who occupy the property through her and to this end has
brought an application in terms of s 4(1) of the Prevention of
Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(the Act).
[4]
The first
respondent resists the application on several grounds, to which I
shall revert shortly. But before doing so, it is appropriate
to
acknowledge the general proposition that the applicant is not legally
required to provide the first respondent with any form
of housing.
While it is a state owned company and it is an organ of state, it is
not ‘the state’ and the renting out
of immovable property
is not its core business function. There is, moreover, no connection
between it and the first respondent.
They are two strangers to each
other. Neither the first respondent nor her father are employees of
the applicant or even ex-employees.
The only connection between the
two that exists is that the first respondent and her family are
presently in the property. Many
pages of the answering affidavit have
been utilised by the first respondent in making the point that the
applicant bears a constitutional
obligation to ensure that she and
her family have a place to stay. The argument is misplaced and
incorrect and must be dispelled
forthwith.
[1]
[5]
The
applicant wants the first respondent to vacate the property because
it wishes to lease it to a current employee. As the owner
of the
property, it is entitled to do what it wishes with its asset.
In
Chetty
v Naidoo
,
[2]
the court, in dealing with the topic of ownership, held that:
‘…
one
of its incidents is the right of exclusive possession of the
res
,
with the necessary corollary that the owner may claim his property
wherever found, from whomsoever holding it. It is inherent
in the
nature of ownership that possession of the
res
should
normally be with the owner, and it follows that no other person may
withhold it from the owner unless he is vested with some
right
enforceable against the owner (e.g., a right of retention or a
contractual right).’
[6]
Having noted that the first respondent is not employed by the
applicant,
it must be acknowledged that the applicant has, very
fairly, indicated that it does not only rent out premises that it
owns to
its employees. It also lets such premises to members of the
public where circumstances permit this to occur. This is, however,
not such an instance, so it asserts.
[7]
According to the applicant, the property had previously been let to
its
employee who had then, impermissibly, sublet a portion thereof to
the first respondent. When the employee ultimately left the property,
the first respondent assumed occupation of the entire property. That
this had occurred was apparently ascertained by the applicant
in
2015. Since then, the applicant has tried to negotiate with the first
respondent to get her to vacate the property, with no
success.
[8]
Upon discovering that the first respondent was in the property, the
applicant
initially attempted to regularize her occupation by
requiring her to sign a lease agreement, but she balked at the idea.
The applicant
then offered her alternative accommodation. The first
respondent rejected the proposed alternative accommodation. However,
in a
letter penned by attorneys assisting her, she later stated that
she would be willing to move to a next door property, on the
condition
that it was renovated by the applicant. After some
contemplation, the applicant indicated that it did not have the funds
available
to renovate that property and consequently did not agree
with the first respondent’s proposal. The first respondent thus
occupies the property in the absence of a valid lease agreement and
against the wishes of the applicant.
[9]
Its
negotiations with the first respondent having failed, the applicant
now seeks the assistance of this court. It has disclosed
all the
facts known to it, including such information as it possesses
regarding the age and gender of the occupants that it seeks
to evict
from the property.
[3]
[10]
The first respondent acknowledges that she sublet a portion of the
property from a former
employee of the applicant and then took over
the whole of the property when the employee vacated the property in
January 2016.
She claims that she interacted with the applicant’s
representatives and acknowledges that she was initially given a lease
agreement to sign. What happened to that lease agreement is not
clearly explained in the first respondent’s answering
affidavit.
She never explicitly states that she agreed to its terms
or that she signed it. She claims that she was told by the
applicant’s
representatives to stop making any payments that
she was then making and was allegedly also told that she could remain
in the property
‘free of charge’ until a formal lease was
concluded. Given that there was apparently no fixed date by which the
lease
agreement had to be concluded, I consider this to be entirely
unlikely. The first respondent has, on her own admission, now
occupied
the property rent free for the past eight years. She claims
to receive a total monthly income of R3 980, comprised of
earnings
of R500 in respect of herself, child grants totalling R1 500
in respect of her three children and R1 980 from a pension
that
her father receives.
[11]
There
clearly is no surfeit of money in the first respondent’s
household. Yet, she claims to have spent R180 000
[4]
in improving and maintaining the property. I am simply not able to
accept this claim, for two reasons: firstly, it seems unlikely
that
there would be such funds available for this purpose, for any income
would surely have been used by the first respondent to
maintain her
family and she makes no claim to any additional income; and,
secondly, because the first respondent has not put up
any evidence of
such expenses having been incurred by her.
[12]
In her answering affidavit, the first respondent proceeds to accuse
the applicant of double
standards because it has allegedly concluded
a lease agreement with another family who are not employees of the
applicant and who
occupy a nearby property owned by the applicant,
but it will not do the same with her. Given her unlawful occupation
of the applicant’s
property, she is in no position to demand
that she be treated as others are treated. In any event, she was
initially asked to sign
a lease agreement but refused to do so. The
first respondent complains, further, that the applicant has not
meaningfully engaged
with her regarding her departure from the
occupied property. Given the fact that on her own version there have
been interactions
between both sides for the past eight years, I take
this complaint with a large pinch of salt.
[13]
The
approach to determining applications brought in terms of this section
of the Act was set out by Wallis JA in
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and others
,
[5]
where he held that the provisions of this section trigger a two-stage
enquiry:
‘
A
court hearing an application for eviction at the instance of a
private person or body, owing no obligations to provide housing
or
achieve a 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 the order. Before doing so,
however, it must consider what justice and equity demand 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 had 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.’
[14]
The
applicant makes a strong case for the eviction of the first
respondent and her family.
In
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker and another v Jika
,
[6]
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated as follows:
‘
Unless
the occupier opposes and discloses circumstances relevant to the
eviction order, the owner, in principle, will be entitled
to an order
for eviction. Relevant circumstances are nearly without fail facts
within the exclusive knowledge of the occupier and
it cannot be
expected of an owner to negative in advance facts not known to him
and not in issue between the parties.’
[15]
In my view, the first respondent has not established a legal right to
remain in occupation
of the property. It seems inevitable that an
order authorising her and her family’s eviction from the
property must issue.
But where must they go if such order issues?
[16]
The respondent has a very limited income and her ability to
take up alternative accommodation and yet support her family is
gravely
restricted. With that income, some form of subsidised housing
appears to be the first respondent’s only hope. The third
respondent
has such housing schemes.
[17]
A
court authorising an eviction in terms of the Act must be satisfied
that it is just and equitable for an eviction order to be
granted.
That can only be determined if the court has considered the
possibility of alternative accommodation being made available
for
the relocation of the unlawful occupier and if it has considered the
rights and needs of the elderly, children, disabled persons
and
households headed by women. Information relating to these latter
matters was placed before the court by both the applicant
and the
first respondent. The prospect of alternative accommodation that may
potentially be offered by the third respondent has
not.
[7]
I
am at this stage entirely uninformed of any alternative accommodation
that the first respondent may take up if her eviction is
ordered.
[18]
The third respondent
is habitually joined in these applications but plays no meaningful
role unless directed to do so by the court.
In this case, it has not
delivered any papers, has not attended court, and has not
participated in argument today. It has offered
no assistance to this
court whatsoever.
[19]
The first respondent remains
a member of our community and is entitled to be respected and to have
her dignity preserved. She is
not in her current position by design
or through choice. She is doing her best to provide for her family
and to keep them intact
and safe.
It cannot be in the
interests of justice that she and her family be rendered homeless.
That would simply be solving one problem
by creating another problem.
The third respondent,
through its indifference to her plight, appears to regard her as a
non-person, unworthy of its assistance.
She is not that. She is a
citizen of this country, and she is entitled to assistance in her
moment of need from the entity that
is burdened with providing that
assistance. I intend to give the third respondent the opportunity to
redeem itself by requiring
it to assist this court in resolving this
vexing social issue.
[20]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The third
respondent is directed by 1 June 2024, to file a report, supported by
an affidavit, in which it confirms:
(a)
What steps it
has taken and what steps it intends or is able to take to provide
accommodation for the first respondent and her three
daughters and
father who presently unlawfully occupy the immovable property with a
street address of
[...] S[...] Road, Ottawa, Durban
in
the event of their being evicted from that immovable property;
(b)
If such
alternative accommodation can be provided, by when it can be made
available; and
(c)
What the
effects would be if the eviction of the first respondent were to be
ordered without such alternative accommodation being
made available.
2.
The applicant and the
first respondent may, within fifteen days of delivery of the third
respondent’s report and affidavit
referred to in paragraph 1 of
this order, file affidavits in response to such report.
3.
The matter is
otherwise postponed
sine
die
, to be
finally determined on a date convenient to all parties.
4.
All questions of
costs are reserved.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Ms
M A Mbonane
Instructed
by:
Tembe
Kheswa Nxumalo Inc.
62/64
Florida Road
Morningside
Durban
Counsel
for the respondent:
In
person
Instructed
by:
Not
applicable
[1]
City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties
39 (Pty) Ltd
2012 (2) SA 104 (CC).
[2]
Chetty
v Naidoo
1974
(3) SA 13
(A).
[3]
Pillay
and another v Ramzan and others
[2022] ZAGPJHC 306 para 24.
[4]
Accepting
that the first respondent’s income per month is R3 980,
this would mean that she used her entire income for
a period of 45
months to carry out the improvements. The proposition need only be
stated to be rejected.
[5]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and others
2012
(6) SA 294
(SCA) para 25.
[6]
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo; Bekker and another v Jika
2003
(1) SA 113
(SCA) para 19.
[7]
Pillay
and another v Ramzan and others
[2022] ZAGPJHC 306 para 24.
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