Case Law[2024] ZALCC 5South Africa
Boplaas Landgoed 1743 (Pty) Ltd and Another v van der Hanse and Others (LCC47/2023 ; LCC48/2023) [2024] ZALCC 5 (29 January 2024)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
29 January 2024
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC47/2023
Judgment
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## Boplaas Landgoed 1743 (Pty) Ltd and Another v van der Hanse and Others (LCC47/2023 ; LCC48/2023) [2024] ZALCC 5 (29 January 2024)
Boplaas Landgoed 1743 (Pty) Ltd and Another v van der Hanse and Others (LCC47/2023 ; LCC48/2023) [2024] ZALCC 5 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
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IN THE LAND CLAIMS
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC47/2023
Magistrate’s
Court Case No: 2207/2021
Before:
Honourable Meer AJP and Spilg J
Heard
on:
2
November 2023
Delivered
on:
29 January 2024
In the matter between:
BOPLAAS LANDGOED 1743
(PTY) LTD
(REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2007/030873/07)
First
Appellant
FRANS
JACOBUS VAN DER MERWE
(ID NUMBER:
6[…])
Second
Appellant
and
HAROLD
VAN DER HANSE
First
Respondent
(ID: 8[…])
ELLENETTE
VAN DER HANSE
Second
Respondent
(ID: 7[…])
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
RESIDING
WITH OR UNDER THE
FIRST TO
SECOND RESPONDENTS IN
THE PREMISES
ON
DU CAP FARM, PAARL
Third
Respondent
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
PROVINCIAL DIRECTOR OF
THE
DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
Fifth
Respondent
And in the matter
between:
CASE
NO:
LCC48/2023
Magistrate’s
Court Case No: 2208/2021
BOPLAAS LANDGOED 1743
(PTY) LTD
(REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2007/030873/07)
First
Appellant
FRANS
JACOBUS VAN DER MERWE
(ID NUMBER:
6[…])
Second
Appellant
and
SARA
FORTUIN
First
Respondent
(ID: 7[…])
HENDRIK
TERBLANCHE
Second
Respondent
(ID: 7[…])
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
RESIDING
WITH OR UNDER THE
FIRST TO
SECOND RESPONDENTS IN
THE PREMISES
ON
DU CAP FARM, PAARL
Third
Respondent
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
PROVINCIAL DIRECTOR OF
THE
DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
Fifth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER, AJP
[1]
This judgment considers two appeals which were heard together (in
cases LCC47/2023
and LCC48/2023), as they pertain to the eviction of
the Respondents in both matters from the same farm in Paarl owned by
the same
owner. The facts and circumstances pertaining to the
Respondents’ residence on the farm and the applications for
their
eviction in both cases are virtually the same as appears below.
In both matters the applications for the eviction of the Respondents
was refused in the Paarl Magistrates Court on 30 January 2023, on the
basis that it would not be just and equitable to grant the
evictions.
[2]
The First Appellant, Bo-Plaas Landgoed 1743 (Pty) Ltd is the
registered owner of the
farm commonly known as Du Cap, being Portion
2 of the farm Watervliet Estate No:1224, Drakenstein Municipality,
Division Paarl,
Western Cape Province (“the farm”). The
Second Applicant is the person in charge of the farming activities
and human
resources on the farm and is also a director of the First
Applicant.
Respondents in LCC
47/2023
[3]
The First Respondent is Herold van der Hanse who originally came to
reside on the
farm with his parents in 1992. The Second Respondent is
his wife. She commenced residing with the First Respondent and his
parents
during 2000 in their family home. During 2010 the First and
Second Respondents moved from the family home to House No 62 where
they have been living ever since.
Respondents in LCC
48/2023
[4] The Respondents in
LCC48/2023, came to reside on the farm during 1982, with their
parents. Both Respondents were employed by
the erstwhile owner of the
farm when they were 12 and 14 years old respectively. During 2002,
the Respondents married but continued
to reside in a house with the
Second Respondent’s parents. During 2011, they took
occupation of House No.52. It is
from this house that their eviction
is sought. The First Respondent is unemployed. The Second Respondent
is employed as a causal
worker. He is not employed on the farm.
[5] The Respondents were
employed by the previous owner of the farm. The First Applicant
purchased the farm in 2016, and upon doing
so provided all occupiers
residing on the farm, including the Respondents with an opportunity
to apply for employment. The Respondents
did not apply for employment
because they were employed as seasonal workers on a nearby farm at
the time.
[6]
The Second Applicant’s founding affidavit states that it is an
accepted practice
on farms in the area that employees enjoy a right
of residence by virtue of their employment. This is not denied.
Continued residence
by the Respondents who are not employees is
prejudicial to the Applicants as housing cannot be allocated to
permanent employees.
This too is not denied.
[7]
In the months preceding the eviction applications, the Appellants
embarked on a mediation
process over a period of six months from
August 2020 to January 2021 to secure the amicable eviction of the
Respondents. The answering
affidavit of the First Respondent in LCC
47/2023 states that during this process the Second Applicant did not
give the Respondents
the option of obtaining employment in order to
continue residing on the farm. In reply the First Appellant avers
that the Respondents
have never applied for employment so as to
possibly continue their residence on the farm on the basis of a
permanent employment
relationship with the Appellants. At the hearing
of the appeal we were informed by Mr Montzinger for the Appellants,
that he was
instructed that there were currently no employment
vacancies to accommodate the Respondents.
[8]
On 3 August 2020, the Respondents informed the mediator conducting
the aforementioned
mediation process, that they were willing to
vacate the premises voluntarily if the First Applicant were to
provide them with Wendy
houses. The First Appellant agreed and
encouraged the Respondents to find vacant plots via the Fourth
Respondent, the Drakenstein
municipality upon which the Wendy houses
could be built. Three months passed and the Respondents did not
furnish the Appellants
with any feedback. A notice was delivered to
the First Respondent in LCC 47/2023 on 16 November 2020, requesting
him to confirm
whether he had acquired a vacant plot within ten days.
This did not occur. Nor did the other Respondents pursue the Wendy
house
option, it would appear. The Respondents approached Democratic
Alliance Council member, Mr Kroutz, to represent them in further
discussions.
[9]
A meeting was held between the Appellants’ attorneys and Mr
Kroutz, on 23 November
2021 at which the possible Wendy house
relocation was discussed but not resolved.
[10]
A further meeting was convened between the Drakenstein Municipality’s
Housing officials,
the Appellants’ attorneys and Mr Kroutz.
Alternative options to an eviction application were considered at the
meeting. Once
again, there was no resolution. The founding affidavit
notes that due to the Respondents’ unwillingness to
participate
in an inclusive mediation process, no feedback was
provided by the respondents or Mr Kroutz enabling an amicable
resolution. Consequently,
formal steps for the eviction of the
Respondents commenced.
[11]
A notice to make representations as envisaged in section
8(1)(e) of ESTA, was served on the Respondents,
on 4 February 2021.
The Respondents did not respond to the notice. Nor did they advance
any reasons orally or in writing why their
rights of residence should
not be terminated. As a consequence, a notice to terminate their
right of residence was served on the
Respondents on 18 March 2021.
The notice called upon them once again to provide reasons why the
Appellants should not proceed with
an application for their eviction.
On 9 April 2021 a notice was served on the Respondents requiring them
to vacate the farm within
30 days. When this did not occur the
appellants commenced with the eviction application.
[12]
In refusing the eviction application the court
a quo
appears
to have based its decision solely on the question of the availability
of suitable alternative accommodation. It found there
to be none
notwithstanding a comprehensive report from the Fourth Respondent
about the options for alternative accommodation. Of
concern is the
fact that the Court
a quo
relied on photographs attached to
the Respondents’ heads of argument which had not been part of
the pleadings and evidence.
Furthermore, there was
disquietingly no attempt by the Court
a quo
to consider
whether the mandatory requirements for an eviction as set out in
section 9 of ESTA had been complied with. The section
states as
follows:
“
9.
Limitation on eviction
(1)Notwithstanding
the provisions of any other law, an occupier may be evicted
only in terms of an order of court issued
under this Act.
(2)A court may
make an order for the eviction of an occupier if—
(a)the occupier’s
right of residence has been terminated
in terms of section 8;
(b)the occupier has
not vacated the land within the period of notice given by the owner
or person in charge;
(c)the
conditions for an order for eviction in terms of
section 10 or 11 have been complied with; and
(d)the owner
or person in charge has, after the termination of the right of
residence, given—
(i)
the occupier;
(ii)
the municipality in whose area of jurisdiction the land in
question is situated; and
(iii)
the head of the relevant provincial office of the Department of Land
Affairs, for information purposes, not less than two
calendar months’
written notice of the intention to obtain an order for eviction,
which notice shall contain the prescribed particulars
and
set out the grounds on which the eviction is based: Provided that if
a notice of application to a court has, after
the
termination of the right of residence, been given to the occupier,
the municipality and the head of the relevant
provincial
office of the Department of Land Affairs not less than two months
before the date of the commencement of the hearing
of the
application, this paragraph shall be deemed to have been complied
with.”
[13]
I now proceed to perform the exercise which the court should have
undertaken.
Compliance with
section 9(2)(a) of ESTA:
[14]
As the Respondents were occupiers by consent, their right of
residence could only be terminated
having regard to the factors set
out at section 8(1) of ESTA
“
8.
Termination of right of residence
(1)Subject
to the provisions of this section, an
occupier
’s
right of residence maybe terminated on any lawful ground, provided
that such termination is just and equitable, having
regard to all
relevant factors and in particular to—
(a)
the fairness of any agreement, provision in an agreement, or
provision of law on which the
owner or person in
charge
relies;
(b)
the conduct of the parties giving rise to the termination;
(c)
the interests of the parties, including the comparative hardship to
the
owner or person in charge
, the
occupier
concerned,
and any other
occupier
if the right of residence is
or is not terminated;
(d)
the existence of a reasonable expectation of the renewal of the
agreement from which the right of residence arises, after the
effluxion of its time; and
(e)
the fairness of the procedure followed by the
owner or person
in charge
, including whether or not the
occupier
had
or should have been granted an effective opportunity to make
representations before the decision was made to
terminate
the
right of residence.”
[15]
With regard to section 8(1)(a) there was no agreement for the
Respondents’ continued residence
on the farm. It is
recalled that in 2016 the Respondents were given the option to
continue residing on the farm if they were
to be employed by the
Appellants, an option which they rejected. Given the policy of the
Appellants to provide accommodation for
employees only, they required
the Respondents to vacate the dwellings they occupied so that these
could be available to other employees.
[16]
With regard to section 8(1)(b), it is common cause that the
Appellants sought to engage with
the Respondents in an attempt to
resolve the matter. The Respondents suggested a Wendy house solution,
but it would appear, did
not take the matter any further.
[17]
In respect of the factor set out at section 8(1)(c) and comparing the
interests of the parties,
in must be borne in mind that the
Respondents have been living since 2016 on the farm rent free. This
is prejudicial to the Appellants
who cannot house employees in the
premises the respondents occupy. The hardship to the Respondents
should they be evicted is that
they will be deprived of the
accommodation they currently enjoy. They are however on a housing
waiting list and could be housed
in a housing project still to be
completed, or emergency housing, as referred to in the Fourth
Respondent’s report referred
to below.
[18]
In respect of section 8(1)(d), there was no reasonable expectation of
the renewal of the consent
to reside.
[19]
In respect of section 8(1)(e), the Respondents were given effective
opportunities to make representations
in the forms of mediation and
meetings before the decision was made to terminate their right of
residence.
Compliance with
section 9(2)(b):
[20]
The respondents have not vacated the land within the period of notice
given by the appellants.
Compliance with
section 9(2)(c):
[
21]
Section 10 is applicable to the First Respondent in LCC47/2023 and
the Respondents in LCC48/2023
as they came to live on the farm before
1997. The section states:
Order
for eviction of person who was occupier on 4 February 1997
“
10.
(1) An order for the eviction of a person who was an
occupier on 4 February 1997 may be granted if—
(a)
the occupier has breached section 6(3) and the court is satisfied
that the breach is material and that the occupier has not
remedied
such breach;
(b)
the owner or person in charge has complied with the terms of any
agreement pertaining to the occupier’s right to reside
on the
land and has fulfilled his or her duties in terms of the law, while
the occupier has breached a material and fair term of
the agreement,
although reasonably able to comply with such term, and has not
remedied the breach despite being given one calendar
months’
notice in writing to do so;
(c)
the occupier has committed such a fundamental breach of the
relationship between him or her and the owner or person in charge,
that it is not practically possible to remedy it, either at all or in
a manner which could reasonably restore the relationship;
or
(d)
the occupier—
(i)
is or was an employee whose right of residence arises solely from
that employment; and
(ii)
has voluntarily resigned in circumstances that do not amount to a
constructive dismissal in terms of the Labour Relations Act.”
[22]
Section 10(1)(a)-(d) is not applicable to their circumstances.
However, section 10(2) and (3)
is of relevance dealing as they do
with suitable alternative accommodation. I am therefore
required to consider the availability
thereof.
[23]
Section 11 of ESTA is applicable to the Second Respondent in
LCC47/2023 as she became an occupier
after 1997. This section states:
“
11.
Order for eviction of person who becomes
occupier
after
4 February 1997
(1)
If it was an express, material, and fair term of the
consent
granted
to an
occupier
to reside on land, that
the
consent
would
terminate
upon a
fixed or determinable date, a
court
may on
termination of such
consent
by effluxion of time
grant an order for eviction of any person who became an
occupier
of
the land in question after 4 February 1997, if it is just and
equitable to do so.
(2)
In circumstances other than those contemplated in subsection (1),
a
court
may grant an order for eviction in respect
of any person who became an
occupier
after 4
February 1997 if it is of the opinion that it is just and equitable
to do so.
(3)
In deciding whether it is just and equitable to grant an order for
eviction in terms of this section, the
court
shall
have regard to—
(a)
the period that the
occupier
has resided on the land
in question;
(b)
the fairness of the terms of any agreement between the parties;
(c)
whether
suitable alternative accommodation
is
available to the
occupier
;
(d)
the reason for the proposed eviction;
(e
)the balance of the interests of the
owner
or person in charge
,
the
occupier
and
the remaining occupiers on the land.”
[24]
The factors for consideration in section 11 mirror the factors set
out at section 8(1) which
I have considered above, save that section
11(3) specifically requires a court to consider whether suitable
alternative accommodation
is available. A comprehensive report dated
17 February 2022 on alternative accommodation and emergency housing
by the Fourth Respondent
Municipality indicated that the Respondents
have been registered on the Municipality’s housing demand data
base since 2009
and have been listed as possible beneficiaries for
Phase 2 of the Vlakkeland Housing project (“Vlakkeland
Project”)
which will be completed over a 3 to 5-year period.
The report as well as a further report of 27 July 2022 also indicated
that emergency
accommodation would be available at Schoongezicht.
[25]
The court
a quo
as aforementioned accepted on the basis
of photographs which were not part of the evidence but attached to
the Respondents’
heads of argument, that such emergency
accommodation was in essence not fit for human habitation and
unsanitary. At the hearing
of the Appeal we directed the Fourth
Respondent to deliver an updated supplementary report by 14 December
2023 to address
inter alia
any concerns regarding the
availability of access to water, sanitation and electricity as well
as safety for human habitation.
[26]
We are grateful to the Fourth Respondent for filing an updated report
timeously. The report indicates
that emergency accommodation in Phase
4 Schoongezicht will be available by mid to end February 2024. The
report states that Schoongezicht
is not situated next to a dumpsite
as alleged by the Respondents. The Municipality addresses the problem
of people dumping refuse
in an area not meant for refuse. There are
operational toilets with doors to provide for privacy. The structures
for emergency
accommodation are temporary and provide basic
protection against the elements. They are in line with the
guidelines on minimum
specifications for emergency shelter. Public
transport is available.
[27]
In
Occupiers
of erven 87 and 8 Berea v Christiaan Frederic De Wet N.O
[1]
at paras 61-62 the Court held that once it is established that there
is a risk of homelessness, the duty of a municipality to provide
temporary emergency accommodation is triggered. Such duty in the face
of the Respondent’s professed homelessness has been
triggered
and responded to.
[28]
In
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties
[2]
it
was held that where the eviction of occupiers is linked to the
provision of emergency accommodation by the Municipality,
the
eviction of the occupiers is just and equitable. That in my view is
the situation in the instant case.
[29]
I am of the view that in an assessment of the factors set out at
section 8(1) together with the
factors set out at sections 10 (2),
10(3) and 11(3), it would be just and equitable to grant an order for
the eviction of the Respondents
who have been living at the
Appellants’ expense on the premises since 2014; who have
rejected the offer of employment; who
work elsewhere; and for whom
emergency accommodation is available. I am however also of the view
that emergency housing should
be resorted to as a last resort in the
instant case given that the Respondents have lived on the farm for
decades, some of them
since childhood. As that their
names are on the housing list it would be preferable if they were
relocated to Phase
2 of the Vlakkeland Housing Project, which, on a
three-year projection of the Municipality should be completed by
February 2025.
[30]
The Appellants have submitted that an eviction order giving the
Respondents 6 months to vacate
would be just and equitable. In my
view justice and equity in all the circumstances would be better
served if a further 6 months
were added to the eviction date so that
hopefully the Respondents could relocate once only, and to the
Vlakkeland Project. Justice
and equity would also in my view be
served if the Respondents could commence paying an affordable rental
to be negotiated if possible
according to their means for the
remaining duration of their occupancy on the farm. Should the
Vlakkeland Project not be completed
by the end of February 2025, it
would be just and equitable for the Respondents at that stage to move
to the emergency housing
at Schhongezicht.
[31]
The eviction of the Respondents will thus be rendered just and
equitable if it is linked to the
provision of alternative and
emergency accommodation, by the Municipality. The order that I
intend making is of that ilk
and will give the Municipality
reasonable time to arrange housing at the Vlakkeland Project and
emergency accommodation in the
event of that Project not being
completed timeously. The date of eviction will be linked to a date on
which the Municipality has
to provide housing at Vlakkeland and
thereafter emergency housing should such be needed. Such date will
precede the date of eviction
so that the Respondents are assured of
accommodation and can make suitable arrangements for their
relocation. The Municipality
is urged to take all steps necessary to
ensure that the Vlakkeland Project is completed timeously.
[32]
In keeping with this Court’s practice not to grant cost orders
in matters of this nature,
I intend making no order as to costs.
[33]
In the circumstances the appeal succeeds. The order of the court
a
quo
is substituted with the following order:
1.
The Respondents shall vacate the dwellings
they occupy on the Appellants’ farm, Du Cap in Paarl (“the
farm””)
by no later than 28 February 2025.
2.
In the event of the Respondents failing to
vacate the dwellings on 28 February 2025, the Sheriff for the area is
authorized to secure
their eviction on 1 March 2025.
3.
The Drakenstein Municipalities must provide
the Respondents with accommodation at Phase 2 of the Vlakkeland
Housing Project on or
before 15 February 2025, should such project be
completed by that date, and provided the Respondents are still on the
farm and
have not vacated it.
4.
Should Phase 2 of the Vlakkeland Housing
Project not be completed by 15 February 2025, the Drakenstein
Municipality must provide
the Respondents with emergency housing at
Schoongezicht until such time as Phase 2 of the Vlakkeland Housing
Project is completed,
provided the Respondents are still on the farm
and have not vacated it. Thereafter the Drakenstein Municipality must
provide the
Respondents with accommodation at Phase 2 of the
Vlakkeland Housing Project immediately upon completion of such
Project.
5.
There is no order as to costs.
_____________________
Y
S MEER
Acting
Judge President
Land
Claims Court
I
agree.
__________________
B
SPILG
Judge
Land
Claims Court
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellants:
Adv. A Montzinger
Instructed
by:
Otto
Theron Attorneys Inc.
For
the First and Second Respondents: T J Mgengwana
Maguga
Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Occupiers
of erven 87 and 8 Berea v Christiaan Frederic De Wet N.O .
2017
(5) SA 346
CC
[2]
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and Another
2012
(2) SA104 CC
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