Case Law[2024] ZALCC 18South Africa
Quantum Foods (Pty) Ltd v Jansen and Others (LCC88/2021) [2024] ZALCC 18 (16 May 2024)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
16 May 2024
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG
Judgment
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# South Africa: Land Claims Court
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## Quantum Foods (Pty) Ltd v Jansen and Others (LCC88/2021) [2024] ZALCC 18 (16 May 2024)
Quantum Foods (Pty) Ltd v Jansen and Others (LCC88/2021) [2024] ZALCC 18 (16 May 2024)
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sino date 16 May 2024
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC88/2021
Before:
The Honourable Judge Cowen
Heard
on:
16
February 2024
Delivered
on:
16 May 2024
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
NO
16
May 2024
In
the matter between
QUANTUM
FOODS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
(Reg.No.2012/124966/07)
and
DANIEL
JANSEN
First Respondent
BRONJA
JANSEN
Second Respondent
JOHANNES
JONAS
Third
Respondent
NANCY
JONAS
Fourth
Respondent
NATALIE
JONAS
Fifth
Respondent
JOAN-ANNE
VAN ROOYEN
Sixth
Respondent
MARIO
OLIVIER
Seventh
Respondent
MORNE
ISODORE DEDAA
Eighth
Respondent
BURTON
QUASHU
Ninth
Respondent
BERENIQUE
QUASHU
Tenth
Respondent
CHARLES
EGEN AWERIES
Eleventh
Respondent
ANNAMARIE
PIETERSE
Twelfth
Respondent
ALL
OTHER OCCUPANTS OF
COTTAGES
1,3,4,6 AND
THE
SUPERVISORS HOUSE, EGGLAND FARM,
UITENHAGE
Thirteenth
Respondent
NELSON
MANDELA BAY MUNICIPALITY
Fourteenth Respondent
HEAD:
EASTERN CAPE PROVINCIAL
DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE, LAND
REFORM
AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Fifteenth
Respondent
KOUGA
MUNICIPALITY
Sixteenth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1.
The applicant, Quantum Foods (Pty) Ltd
(Quantum Foods), has applied to this Court to evict the first to
thirteenth respondents from
property known as Eggland Farm, Uitenhage
in the Eastern Cape (the property). Quantum Foods is the owner
of and in charge
of the property, which is used for agricultural
purposes, specifically the production of hen’s eggs and the
propagation of
wildlife for sale.
2.
For purposes of these proceedings, Quantum
Foods accepts that the respondents are occupiers in terms of the
Extension of Security
of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) and the
eviction application is subject to its provisions. The first and
second respondents, Mr
Daniel Jansen and Mrs Bronja Jansen, are
husband and wife and live together in the supervisor’s house on
the property.
The third and fourth respondents, Mr Johannes
Jonas and Mrs Nancy Jonas, are also married and live together in
cottage number 3
on the property, with their adult daughter, Ms
Natalie Jonas who is some twenty years old. The sixth and
seventh respondent,
Mrs Joan-Anne van Rooyen and Mario Olivier, live
together in cottage number 6 on the property. The eighth
respondent is Mr
Morne Dedaa, who lives in cottage number 1.
The ninth and tenth respondents are Mr Burton Quashu and Ms Berenique
Quashu.
They are, however, now deceased. They were
siblings and lived in cottage number 4. The eleventh and
twelfth respondents,
Mr Charles Egen Aweries and Mrs Annamarie
Pieterse, reside together in cottage number 7. The thirteenth
respondent is ‘all
other persons who might occupy the above
mentioned premises under the first to twelfth respondents’, in
other words, in one
of the five affected households.
3.
The fourteenth respondent is the Nelson
Mandela Municipality, which was erroneously joined. The
sixteenth respondent (which
was only subsequently joined) is the
relevant municipality, the Kouga Municipality (the Municipality).
The fifteenth respondent
is the Head of the Eastern Cape Provincial
Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform (the
Department).
4.
I am unable to determine the application
for eviction on the papers at this stage for two related reasons.
5.
First,
in the report delivered to Court in terms of section 9(3) of ESTA,
the probation officer pointed out that amongst the persons
living on
the property in the five affected households are various adults who
have not been served with termination notices.
There are
several adults so affected who are identified in the probation
officer’s report and mentioned in the answering
affidavit.
I am mindful that the applicant cited the thirteenth respondent as
all other persons who occupy the cottages.
But it is clear from
a consideration of the papers that the applicant did not terminate
any of these adult persons’ rights
of residence.
Moreover, on the information before me it appears that at least most
and possible all have been continuously
and openly residing on the
property for a period of a year before proceedings were instituted,
and in consequence are presumed
to have consent to do so.
[1]
Each adult is sought to be evicted. In the circumstances, the
applicant has not, at least at this stage, made out a
case for their
eviction whether under section 8 or section 9.
6.
Secondly,
I am not satisfied on the information before me that there has been
meaningful engagement regarding suitable alternative
accommodation
for all of the affected occupants with the relevant State
parties.
[2]
In this regard, the report submitted by the Municipality is dated
August 2022 and was compiled on the strength of the information
contained in the founding affidavit. The answering affidavit
was delivered in November 2022 and there are material issues
that are
disputed including regarding earnings. While the timing is not
on its own necessarily problematic, in context of
this case problems
do arise. The earnings are disputed and materially different
information manifests from the answering
affidavit and the probation
officer’s report dated October 2022, yet the content of the
Municipal report is at least party
informed by the information in the
founding affidavit. There are other difficulties.
The respondents dispute
the Municipality’s claim that they have
no wish to be or are not registered on the housing database and the
consultation
that ensued between the Municipality and the respondents
did not include all affected respondents and their family members.
Moreover, there is no suggestion on the papers that there has been
any engagement, whether with the applicants or the State parties,
regarding the possible invocation of State assistance to the
occupiers through section 4 of ESTA regarding on or off site
developments.
To that end, the Department would also need to be
involved.
7.
The
precise timing and manner in which engagement must ensue to be
meaningful will depend on the facts and circumstances of a case.
However, it must ensue in a manner that can serve its purposes, which
include to limit homelessness.
[3]
8.
In
Miradel
[4]
this Court held:
[5]
‘
The
value of meaningful engagement is two-fold. It facilitates
participatory democracy in resolving housing rights disputes,
allowing
occupiers a stake in decision-making which fundamentally
affects their lives and it carries the potential to achieve the
resolution
of housing disputes in a pragmatic, humane and sustainable
manner.’
9.
In
Miradel,
the Court was focused on the process of
engagement at the stage of termination of rights in terms of section
8. The facts
of this case are different in that the applicant
did attempt, in this case, to engage with the respondents before
proceeding with
the process of terminating rights and thereafter.
Nevertheless, in view of my first conclusion, that process may still
ensue
in respect of, at least, certain persons residing on the
property broadly cited as the thirteenth defendant. But
even
in respect of the current named respondents, there remains a
need for the State parties meaningfully to engage with the
respondents
before the eviction application can be determined.
The applicants would need to continue to be involved in that
engagement.
10.
Not only will this serve the purposes of
meaningful engagement, including to limit homelessness, but, if the
matter proceeds further,
it will mean that the Court can in due
course be better informed of information relevant to potential
homelessness and available
alternatives. The Municipal Report,
as it stands, read with the probation officer’s report and the
answering affidavits,
do not suffice.
11.
I am mindful that the applicant has been
waiting a long time to resolve the dispute it has with the
respondents. However,
the applicant itself delayed the process
initially and there is no reason why the matter needs to be unduly
further delayed if
the parties comply with the order I make.
12.
The following order is made:
12.1.
The Municipality, Department, the applicant
and the first to thirteenth respondents still residing on the
property (including all
adults residing in the supervisor’s
cottage, cottage number 3, cottage number 6, cottage number 1 and
cottage number 4) are
directed to engage meaningfully about the
availability of suitable alternative accommodation for the
respondents and available
emergency accommodation.
12.2.
The above engagement must be completed
within a period of two months of the date of this order, whereafter
the Municipality must,
no later than 31 July 2024 deliver a
supplementary report to this Court.
12.3.
Should the applicant thereafter wish to
persist with the application:
12.3.1.
The applicant is granted leave to
supplement its papers on or before 31 August 2024;
12.3.2.
Each adult person residing on the property
joined as the thirteenth respondent may be regarded as joined but
must be separately
cited and served, and their circumstances dealt
with in a supplementary affidavit.
12.3.3.
The respondents whose evictions are
ultimately sought must, when answering the supplemented papers,
detail their work experience,
their current income and income over
the past three years, information relevant to their efforts to
identify possible alternative
accommodation and details about the
impact of any eviction on their ability to access their current or
prospective employment and
their children’s ability to access
their current schools.
12.3.4.
Supplementary answering affidavits must be
delivered by no later than 30 September 2024, whereafter the
applicant may reply within
10 days.
12.3.5.
The matter is provisionally re-enrolled for
6 November 2024 for further argument, which enrolment must be
confirmed by the applicant
delivering a notice of set down upon
supplementing its papers in terms of paragraph 12.3.1.
12.3.6.
The parties may deliver supplementary heads
of argument dealing only with additional matter fifteen days
(applicant) and ten days
(respondents) before the hearing.
12.3.7.
Costs are reserved.
SJ Cowen
Judge, Land Court
Date
reserved:
16 February 2024
Date of
judgment:
16 May 2024
Appearances:
Applicant:
Adv L Wilkin instructed by du
Plessis & Mostert Attorneys
Respondent:
Adv C Macomzoma instructed by Bate Chubb & Dickson Inc
[1]
Section
3(4) of ESTA.
[2]
Diedericks
v Univeg Operations South Africa (Pty) Ltd t/a Heldervue Estates
[2011]
ZALCC 11
;
Miradel
Street Investments CC v Mnisi and others
[2017]
ZALCC 13
(
Miradel
);
Occupiers
of 51 Olivia Road and 197 Main Street, Johannesburg v City of
Johannesburg (Olivia Road)
para
5.
[3]
Diedericks
supra n2.
[4]
Para
56.
[5]
With
reference to Liebenberg S Socio-Economic Rights: Adjudication
under a Transformative Constitution (Juta 2010) at p
314 and.
Olivia
Road
at
para 1.
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