Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 45South Africa
Ethekwini Municipality v Gopal (D1353/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 45 (21 July 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Ethekwini Municipality v Gopal (D1353/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 45 (21 July 2023)
Ethekwini Municipality v Gopal (D1353/2022) [2023] ZAKZDHC 45 (21 July 2023)
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sino date 21 July 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D1353/2022
In
the matter between:
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
and
BHAMNATHY
GOPAL
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Mossop J
Heard:
21 July 2023
Delivered:
21 July 2023
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The respondent is directed to do all things
necessary to present an application to the applicant to secure its
approval for the
construction work performed at the immovable
property with a street address of
1[...]
C[...] Avenue, Block 1[...], Westcliff, Chatsworth.
2.
The applicant is
directed to afford the respondent all such assistance as she may
require to present the aforesaid application to
it and is directed to
consider it and determine her application.
3.
The respondent must
present her application to the applicant within 6 months of the date
of this order, failing which the applicant
may reapply on the same
papers, suitably supplemented, for further relief.
4.
There shall be no
order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Mossop
J
:
[1]
This is an ex tempore judgment.
[2]
The respondent leases
certain immovable property situated at 1[...] C[...] Avenue, Block
1[...], Westcliff, Chatsworth (the property)
within the boundaries of
the eThekwini municipality. The entity from whom she leases the
property is the applicant. The applicant
claims that contrary to the
terms of the lease that it concluded with the respondent, the
respondent has made certain unlawful
structural alterations to the
property. The applicant wants her to demolish what she has
constructed. The respondent, who acts
in this matter in person,
resists that relief.
[3]
The order sought by the applicant reads as
follows:
‘
2.
[1]
That it is hereby declared that the Respondent is in contravention of
Section 4(1) of the National
Building Regulations and Building
Standards Act 103 of 1977 as amended.
3.
That it is declared that in terms of Regulation A25(7) and (10) of
the National
Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of
1977, the Respondent is ordered forthwith to demolish and remove the
illegal
building operations that have been conducted on the property
described as portion 2[...] of ERF 1[...] of Chatsworth with the
address
1[...] C[...] Avenue, block 1[...], Westcliff, Chatsworth.
4.
Should the Respondent fail to demolish and remove illegal operations
within 30
days upon granting this order, the Applicant is hereby
authorised to demolish and remove the illegal structure. The costs of
such
demolition to be borne by the Respondent.
5.
The Respondent is directed to pay the costs of the application.’
[4]
This morning, the applicant was represented
by Ms Mbonane. The respondent appeared in person. Ms Mbonane is
thanked for the assistance
that she provided to the court.
[5]
The written lease agreement (the lease
agreement) between the parties was concluded on 6 March 2009. It
records that it relates
to premises situated at ‘1[...] Road
3[...], Block 1[...], Westcliff.’ It does not mention the name
of the road, unlike
the notice of motion, but it appears to be common
cause based upon the admissions contained in the answering affidavit
that Road
3[...] is, in fact, C[...] Avenue where the property is
situated.
[6]
Clause 5 of the lease agreement deals with
alterations, repairs and renovations. The respondent, in agreeing to
the lease, agreed
to keep the property in good order and agreed to
the provisions of sub-clause 5.3, which reads as follows:
‘
The
LESSEE
shall not make any structural
alterations, additions, repairs or renovations to
the
premises
without the prior written
consent of
the COUNCIL
thereto.’
[7]
The applicant contends that the respondent
has breached this undertaking. Regrettably, the applicant does not
state in its founding
affidavit in what way the respondent has
offended this clause. What building work has allegedly been done by
the respondent is
not mentioned or described. There are, however,
three photstatted photographs in black and white attached to the
founding affidavit.
Photograph B1 appears to show a wall. Given the
lack of clarity of the photostat, I cannot determine whether it is a
precast concrete
wall, or a wall constructed from bricks. Photograph
B2 shows what appears to be a precast concrete wall. Whether it is
the same
wall depicted in photograph B1 is not clear. Photograph B3
is virtually entirely black and devoid of detail but appears to show
a portion of a window in its top right corner. How the three
photographs are related to each other is also unclear.
[8]
The applicant relies on one of its
functionary’s investigative reports to establish the
respondent’s unlawful conduct.
The functionary is referred to
in the founding affidavit as a ‘Ms Pumla’ but is, in
fact, a Ms Pumla Madikana (Ms Madikana).
Ms Madikana’s
investigative report reads as follows:
‘
I
went to see the tenant and ask her to demolish the structure and she
said there are many illegal structures why she had to demolish
her
one.
I ask her to come to the
office with the rent bill to see my manager as he had no permission
to do the structure.
She said she will come on
Friday 01-02-2019.’
[9]
The investigative report accordingly
sheds no light at all on the nature of the illegal structure. There
are other letters and notices
attached to the founding affidavit that
refer, inter alia, to ‘the illegal structure’, and
‘building operations’,
but nothing that is attached
describes what the nature of the structure is.
[10]
Section 4 of the National Building
Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977 (the Act) states
as follows:
‘
Approval
by local authorities of applications in respect of erection of
buildings
(1)
No person shall without the prior
approval in writing of the local authority in question, erect
any
building in respect of which plans and specifications are to be drawn
and submitted in terms of this Act.
(2)
Any application for approval referred
to in subsection (1) shall be in writing on a form made
available for
that purpose by the local authority in question.
(3)
Any application referred to in
subsection (2) shall—
(a)
contain the name and address of the
applicant and, if the applicant is not the owner of the land
on which
the building in question is to be erected, of the owner of such land;
(b)
be accompanied by such plans,
specifications, documents and information as may be required by
or
under this Act, and by such particulars as may be required by the
local authority in question for the carrying out of the objects
and
purposes of this Act.
(4)
Any person erecting any building in
contravention of the provisions of subsection (1) shall be
guilty of
an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding R100 for
each day on which he was engaged in so erecting
such building.’
[11]
Given the fact that I am uninformed on the
nature of the structure, I cannot on the applicant’s papers
find that it is a structure
in
respect of which plans and specifications are to be drawn and
submitted in terms of the Act.
[12]
The respondent has delivered an answering
affidavit. It appears that she has drafted the affidavit herself
after failing to secure
legal representation as she is apparently
currently unemployed. She has done a fine job. But in advancing her
version she has clarified
the parts of the applicant’s case
that were not clearly established in the founding affidavit. She
describes the building
that she rented from the applicant as
comprising of a bedroom and a kitchen. Within that dwelling, she, her
partner and her six
daughters resided. She states that after living
in those conditions for ten years she added a second room. She claims
that other
people living in the immediate vicinity of her home had
also erected additional structures on their property. She attaches
nine
pages of photographs that depict, so she says, other dwellings
in the vicinity of her home where unauthorised structures have been
constructed by their occupants. Unlike the applicant’s
photographs, her photographs are in colour. But she ultimately
concedes
that what she has done has been done without the necessary
approval being sought from the applicant. She claims to be aware of
the protection offered her by the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from
and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (the PIE Act).
This,
however, is not a matter that concerns the PIE Act.
[13]
Besides her honest acknowledgment that she
has not obtained the imprimatur of the applicant to construct the
alteration to the property
that she occupies, the next most
significant part of her answering affidavit is her statement that she
is willing to make application
to the applicant for the necessary
permission.
[14]
While there may undoubtedly be merit in the
allegation by the applicant that the respondent has not complied with
the law, there
can also be no doubt that the respondent and her
family lived in intolerable conditions before performing the
alterations. It cannot
be easy living in a single room with 6
children. The respondent has done something about that and has tried,
at her own expense,
to improve her living conditions. For that she
deserves some praise even though she has gone about it in the
incorrect fashion.
For it cannot be denied that building standards
must be maintained so that buildings and alterations thereto do not
ultimately
pose a threat to their occupants or the general public.
[15]
In its replying affidavit, the applicant
insists that its prior written consent was necessary before the
respondent commenced with
her alteration. Significantly, it concedes
that:
‘
Had
the Respondent approached the Applicant regarding her intention of
renovating the property, the Applicant would most certainly
have
assisted the Respondent.’
That is most heartening
to read. I intend ordering that the applicant assist her now and
trust that the applicant will find within
itself the necessary ubuntu
to help a needy but well-meaning member of society.
[16]
I think that in the circumstances, it would
be just to order that each party pay their own costs.
[17]
I accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The respondent is directed to do all things
necessary to present an application to the applicant to secure its
approval for the
construction work performed at the immovable
property with a street address of
1[...]
C[...] Avenue, Block 1[...], Westcliff, Chatsworth.
2.
The applicant is
directed to afford the respondent all such assistance as she may
require to present the aforesaid application to
it and is directed to
consider it and determine her application.
3.
The respondent must
present her application to the applicant within 6 months of the date
of this order, failing which the applicant
may reapply on the same
papers, suitably supplemented, for further relief.
4.
There shall be no
order as to costs.
MOSSOP
J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Ms M
A Mbonane
Instructed
by:
Luthuli
Sithole Attorneys
56
Henwood Road
Morningside
Durban
Counsel
for the respondent:
In
person
Instructed
by:
In
person
Date
of argument:
21
July 2023
Date
of Judgment:
21
July 2023
[1]
The
relief claimed in the notice of motion commences at paragraph 2. It
appears that there may previously have been a paragraph
1, but that
relief is apparently no longer claimed, and it appears that
paragraph 1 has been removed from the notice of motion
by placing a
piece of blank white paper over it.
sino noindex
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