Case Law[2022] ZALCC 38South Africa
Boplaas Landgoed (PTY) Ltd and Another v Jonkies and Others (LCC 37/2022) [2022] ZALCC 38 (15 August 2022)
Land Claims Court of South Africa
15 August 2022
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC 37/2022 Reportable: Yes Of Interest to other Judges: Yes Revised Before: The Honourable Acting Judge President Meer and Cowen J
Judgment
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## Boplaas Landgoed (PTY) Ltd and Another v Jonkies and Others (LCC 37/2022) [2022] ZALCC 38 (15 August 2022)
Boplaas Landgoed (PTY) Ltd and Another v Jonkies and Others (LCC 37/2022) [2022] ZALCC 38 (15 August 2022)
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sino date 15 August 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO:
LCC 37/2022
Reportable:
Yes
Of
Interest to other Judges: Yes
Revised
Before:
The Honourable Acting
Judge President Meer and Cowen J
Heard
on:
26 July 2022
Delivered
on:
15 August 2022
In
the matter between:
BOPLAAS
LANDGOED (PTY)
LTD
First Appellant
FRANS
JACOBUS VAN DER MERWE
Second Appellant
and
JACOB
JONKIES
First Respondent
ANNA
JONKIES
Second Respondent
GRIET
KALMEYER
Third Respondent
AND
ALL OTHER PERSONS RESIDING WITH
THE
FIRST TO THIRD RESPONDENTS AT THE
FARM
PREMISES ON DANKBAAR FARM
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEER
AJP
[1]
This is an appeal against a decision of the Ceres Magistrates Court,
dated 29 October 2010.
The Magistrate dismissed an application by the
Appellants for a mandatory interdict in terms of Section 19 (1) (
b
)
of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (“ESTA”)
to relocate the Respondents, who are long term occupiers
on the
Appellants’ farm, to houses allocated to the Respondents by the
Witzenberg Local Municipality (“the Municipality”).
The
court
a quo
upheld a point
in limine
by the Respondents
to the effect that the relocation would amount to an eviction, and
dismissed the application.
[2]
The Appellants contend on appeal that the attempt at relocation does
not ‘offend the
common law remedy of relocation as confirmed by
the Supreme Court of Appeal’. Alternatively, they contend that
the common
law remedy of relocation, as they referred to it, must be
developed to include relocation from a farm to another dwelling off
the
land allocated to them by the State, in this case pursuant to the
Housing Act 107 of 1997 (“the
Housing Act&rdquo
;). They further
contend that the court
a quo
erred in finding that the
relocation constituted an eviction.
[3]
The First and Second Respondents have acquired the status of long
term occupiers, as described
in
Section 8
(4) of ESTA,
[1]
on the Appellants’ farm, Dankbaarheid, in the Western Cape.
They are aged 73 and 70 respectively. They commenced employment
on
the farm in October 1994 and were given the right to occupy a
labourer’s house by the previous owner. The First Respondent
was employed as a truck driver and the Second Respondent as a general
labourer. They worked on the farm for over twenty years until
their
retirement. In the case of the First Respondent this occurred at the
age of 69, at the request of the farm management, by
which stage he
had been an employee on the farm and had lived there for
approximately 25 years. Having been on the farm for 10
years, and
having attained the age of 60, the Respondents had obtained the
status of long term occupiers under
Section 8
(4) of ESTA, whose
right of residence may not be terminated unless they had committed a
breach as contemplated in
section 10
(1) (
a
),
(
b
)
or (
c
).
[2]
In August 2016 the First Respondent received a certificate for
rendering employment services to the farm for twenty years. The
Third
Respondent is their daughter, who has been living in her parents’
dwelling since 1994.
[4]
In November 2016, the Appellants bought the farm and acknowledged the
status and rights
of residence of the First and Second Respondents as
long term occupiers, and that of the Third Respondent as an occupier
with consent
to reside with her parents. In October 2019 the
Appellants attended a meeting on the farm in which the terms and
conditions of
their continued residence as long term occupiers were
explained to them. They received copies of the housing agreement, but
were
not required to sign it, and they contend that no housing
agreement was entered into.
[5]
During 2020 it came to the knowledge of the Appellants that the First
and Second Respondents
had been allocated a house by the Witzenberg
Local Municipality and that the Third Respondent had been allocated a
separate house.
The Respondents are owners of their respective
properties. The Appellants sought the relocation of the Respondents
to the houses
owned by them, and several meetings were held to secure
their amicable relocation. These attempts came to naught and during
2021
the Appellants instituted proceedings to compel their
relocation.
[6]
In their founding affidavit the Appellants contended,
inter alia
,
that:
6.1 It could not have
been the intention of the legislature for their rights of residence
to continue indefinitely in the face of
their stronger right or title
in the form of ownership;
6.2 The Respondents had
no further need for housing on the farm;
6.3 The Respondents
cannot continue to reside on the farm free of charge when they have
their own property;
6.4 The suitability of
the municipal housing allocated to the Respondents cannot be in
dispute when compared to the house consisting
of 3 bedrooms, a
bathroom living room and kitchen they currently occupy. By relocating
to their own property, the Respondents’
dignity will not be
impaired;
6.5 The Appellants need
the premises occupied by the Respondents for current employees who
are in dire need of accommodation;
6.6 The Appellants’
right to ownership is being frustrated.
[7]
The Respondents raised two points
in limine
:
7.1 The first of these
was that the application for relocation was a veiled eviction, given
that their removal off the land was
being sought and that as long
term occupiers who were not in material breach, they were protected
from eviction.
7.2 The second point
in
limine
, which they labelled ‘Constitutional
Considerations’, opposed the argument raised by the Appellants
that the Respondents’
right to housing in terms of the
Housing
Act is
stronger than their rights as long term occupiers under ESTA.
The security of long term tenure rights under ESTA was independent
from the right to housing in the
Housing Act. They
furthermore went
on to contend that these constitutional arguments fell outside the
jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court.
[8]
On the merits, the First Respondent’s answering affidavit
averred that the municipal
property was not suitable to the needs of
his family. Three adults and three minors live in the house on the
farm. The Second Respondent
is bedridden and his daughter and
granddaughter are her carers, who feed, bath and dress her. A
relocation would not be suitable
to their needs and might result in
the family being split up and deprived of the family life they know.
The family would be overcrowded
if they moved to the municipal
property, which is ten times smaller than the house they occupy, and
which cannot accommodate their
furniture. An offer from the
Appellants to store their furniture was not helpful, as they wish to
utilise their furniture. The
First Respondent disputed that the house
they occupy was needed for another employee, stating that all truck
driver employees have
houses on the farm. This was denied in reply.
[9]
In reply the Appellants
inter alia
refuted the contention that
the application was a veiled eviction, and noted that the Respondents
remained silent on the fact that
they were combinedly allocated two
municipal houses, the combined size of which surpassed the size of
the house on the farm. The
Respondents, it was contended, thus had no
just and equitable reason why they should not relocate to their own
alternative accommodation.
Court a quo
[10]
The court
a quo
adjudicated the first point
in limine
in the Respondents’ favour, and with reference to relevant case
law found that the relocation of the Respondents would amount
to an
eviction if granted. As aforementioned, the application was dismissed
on this basis. Apropos the second point
in limine
, the court
a
quo
accepted that it lacked the requisite jurisdiction.
On Appeal
[11]
Mr Montzinger, for the Appellants, submitted that the SCA in
Oranje
and Others v Rouxlandia Investments (Pty) Ltd
[3]
(“
Rouxlandia
”)
had extended the principles relating to relocations beyond relocation
from one dwelling to another on the same land. In
this regard he
relied on the following extract from the judgment, at paragraph 18:
‘
.
. . The Constitutional Court has acknowledged that the right of
residence conferred by
s 8
of ESTA is not necessarily tied to a
specific house. The protection afforded by those parts of
ss 5
and
6
of ESTA on which the appellants rely, is to ensure that an occupier
will not be subjected to inhumane conditions violating human
dignity.
To this extent, an occupier’s right to resist relocation is
protected. But these sections do not amount to a blanket
prohibition
on relocation under any circumstances. If indeed the relocation were
to impair an occupier’s human dignity, then
the provisions of
s
5
and
s 6
would apply and the occupier could invoke his or her
constitutional rights. This does not mean that all relocations
necessarily
suffer the same fate.’ (Internal footnote omitted.)
He
submitted that the above quotation appears to make a finding on
relocations in general and postulates a relocation under any
circumstances, including relocation off the land as in the present
case. I disagree. Read in context the extract states that
sections 5
and
6
prohibit relocations when human dignity is impaired, and is
certainly not authority in support of a relocation off the land. In
fact
Rouxlandia
explicitly confirmed, at paragraph 10, citing
Chagi
v Singisi Forest Products (Pty) Ltd
[4]
(“
Chagi
”)
with approval, that an eviction in terms of ESTA is confined to an
eviction from the land, not from one dwelling to another.
[12]
It is settled law that a relocation in terms of ESTA is the removal
from one housing unit to
another on the same farm, and that removal
off the land or farm, as in the instant case, is an eviction. In
Pharo’s
Properties CC and Others v Kuilders and Others
[5]
at
paragraph 13, this court found that relocation in terms of ESTA was
movement from one housing unit to another on the same registered
farm. A similar finding was made in
Drumearn
(Pty) Ltd v Wagner and Others
[6]
at 504F, and in
Mjoli
v Greys Pass Farm (Pty) Ltd
[7]
at paragraph 11. The Supreme Court of Appeal has confirmed this. In
Chagi
,
at paragraphs 19 and 20, it was similarly held that a relocation from
one house to another on the same land does not constitute
an
eviction. Likewise in
Rouxlandia
where,
as aforementioned, with reference to
Chagi
,
it was held that an eviction in terms of ESTA is confined to an
eviction from the land, not from one dwelling to another.
[13]
Mr Montzinger submitted that in the event of our accepting that a
relocation is limited to movement
on the same land, as we have, then
a development of what he referred to as the ‘common law remedy
of relocation’ is
necessary to define the removal of an
occupier off a farm in a case such as this where the State has
allocated an occupier a house
which the occupier now owns, as a
relocation and not an eviction. The ‘common law remedy of
relocation’, he submitted,
was – absent such a
development – inconsistent with the Constitution. (Appellants’
heads of argument, para 41.)
It had not kept up with the changing
landscape of farm evictions and provision of housing by the state,
and how a landowner protects
their rights in terms of Section 6 of
ESTA or Section 25 (1) of the Constitution, if an occupier has
security of tenure on their
land and also a stronger right to
property ownership and security of tenure off the land. Such a
development, he submitted, will
apply to a very specific set of
circumstances and will not impact other categories of occupiers’
rights to security of tenure.
[14]
What Mr Montzinger refers to as a common law remedy of relocation, is
in fact the interpretation
of the definition of ‘eviction’
as contained in Section 1 of ESTA in the cases mentioned in paragraph
12 above. There,
the judicial interpretation of ‘eviction,’
as endorsed by the SCA, confines an eviction to a removal off a farm
and
a relocation to a removal from one dwelling on a farm to another.
The exercise engaged in by the courts was judicial statutory
interpretation, which is binding. There was no pre-existing common
law remedy of relocation emanating from our courts which was
considered in the judgments referred to above at paragraph 12, at
least independent of the law of contract. In those cases, ESTA
was
considered.
[15]
What Mr Montzinger in essence contends for is an extended qualified
interpretation of eviction
in s 1 of ESTA, to exclude the
circumstances at play in this case from the definition of eviction,
or the inclusion in ESTA of
a definition of relocation favourable to
the Appellants’ stance. He conceded as much. We are unable to
oblige, not least
as to do so would require us to go against SCA
precedent, which we cannot do.
[16]
I pause to mention also, apropos the common law, that it is
undisputed that the Respondents are
ESTA occupiers. They are thus not
persons with an income in excess of the prescribed amount of R13
625,
[8]
who are excluded from
the definition of occupier under Section 1 of ESTA, and in respect of
whom the common law would apply.
[17]
The specific set of circumstances at play in this matter is the right
to security of tenure endorsed
in section 6 (2) (a) of ESTA, of two
long term occupiers, who are protected from eviction in terms of
Section 8 (4) save in the
case of material breach, as well as the
security of tenure of an occupier by consent, being the Third
Respondent.
[18]
Section 6 (2) (a) of ESTA asserts the right of security of tenure of
occupiers, balanced with
the rights of the owner, as do Sections 8
(1) and 8 (4) which apply to the Respondents.
[19] The remedy contended
for by the Appellants would trample upon their security of tenure,
and be in conflict with Sections 8
(1) and 8 (4) of ESTA, both of
which sections are cognisant of the rights of the landowner as well.
It would, opportunistically
in this case, secure their eviction by
avoiding the protections afforded to them in terms of Section 8. It
goes without saying
that this would be at odds with the spirit and
purport of both ESTA and the Constitution.
[20]
Finally, it needs to be emphasized that the rights the Respondents
have acquired as occupiers
reside under ESTA, and are independent of
their rights under the
Housing Act, however
those rights might
compare. The deprivation of their rights under ESTA may only occur
within the ambit of ESTA. This court is confined
to the parameters of
ESTA to determine whether a relocation or eviction application may be
granted, as indeed was the court
a quo
. The court
a quo
correctly, with regard to the case law, found that the application
sought was in fact an eviction. The challenge to the continued
residence of the Respondents on the Appellants’ farm stands to
be brought in terms the provisions of
Section 8
, and other eviction
provisions of ESTA. The balancing of the Appellants’ rights as
against those of the Respondents in the
particular circumstances of
this case, must be considered in that context.
[21]
In view of all of the above, the appeal cannot succeed. In accordance
with the practice of this
court not to grant costs unless there are
exceptional circumstances, of which I find there to be none, I intend
making no order
as to costs. I accordingly order as follows:
The appeal is dismissed.
Y
S MEER
Acting
Judge President
Land
Claims Court
I
agree.
S
J COWEN
Judge
Land
Claims Court
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellants:
Adv. A Montzinger
Instructed
by:
Otto Theron Attorneys Inc.
For
the Respondents:
Adv. L Adams
Instructed
by:
John PJ Sauls Prokureurs
[1]
Section
8
(4): ‘The right of residence of an occupier who has resided
on the land in question or any other land belonging to the owner
for
10 years and –
(a)
has reached the age of 60 years; or
(b)
is an employee or former employee of the
owner or person in charge, and as a result of ill health, injury or
disability is unable
to supply labour to the owner or person in
charge,
may
not be terminated unless that occupier has committed a breach
contemplated in
section 10
(1) (
a
), (
b
) or (
c
):
Provided that for the purposes of this subsection, the mere refusal
or failure to provide labour shall not constitute such
a breach.’
[2]
‘
10.
Order for eviction of person who was occupier on 4 February 1997
(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 month’s 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;
. . .’
[3]
2019
(3) SA 108 (SCA)
[4]
2007
(5) SA 513 (SCA).
[5]
2001
(2) SA 1180 (LCC).
[6]
2002
(6) SA 500
(LCC), at 504F.
[7]
[2019]
ZALCC 25
(15 October 2019).
[8]
‘
Definitions
.--
(1) In this Act, unless the context indicates otherwise—
“
occupier
”
means . . .
(c)
a person who has an income in excess of the prescribed amount; . .
.’
Schedule
A of the regulations to ESTA, item 2:
‘
(1)
The prescribed amount for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the
definition of “occupier” in section 1 (1) of the
Act
shall be an income of R13 625.00 per month.’
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