Case Law[2022] ZALCC 42South Africa
Napier Grundstucks GMBH and Others v Fredericks and Others (LCC68/2022) [2022] ZALCC 42 (23 December 2022)
Headnotes
AT RANDBURG CASE NO: LCC68/2022 Magistrate’s Court Number: 417/2020 REPORTABLE: No OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No REVISED.
Judgment
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## Napier Grundstucks GMBH and Others v Fredericks and Others (LCC68/2022) [2022] ZALCC 42 (23 December 2022)
Napier Grundstucks GMBH and Others v Fredericks and Others (LCC68/2022) [2022] ZALCC 42 (23 December 2022)
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sino date 23 December 2022
IN
THE LAND CLAIMS COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
AT RANDBURG
CASE
NO: LCC68/2022
Magistrate’s
Court Number: 417/2020
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED.
DATE:
23 December 2022
In
the matter between:
NAPIER
GRUNDSTÜCKS GMBH
First Appellant
NAPIER
VINEYARDS (PTY) LT
Second Appellant
COENRAAD
LEON BESTER
Third
Appellant
and
GERSHWIN
FREDERICKS
First Respondent
BRENWIN
FREDERICKS Second
Respondent
MELANEY
FREDERICKS Third
Respondent
ALL
PERSONS RESIDING WITH OR UNDER THE
FIRST
AND SECOND RESPONDENTS ON THE
FARM
NAPIER VINEYARDS, WELLINGTON Fourth
Respondent
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY Fifth
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF LAND REFORM AND
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT Sixth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN
J
1.
On
4 April 2022, Magistrate Saptoe of the Wellington Magistrates Court
dismissed an application to evict the first and second respondents
from a farm known as Napier Vineyards in Wellington (the farm).
The application was instituted in terms of the Extension
of Security
of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA).
[1]
An appeal against the decision was argued in this Court on 8 August
2022. Mr Montzinger appeared for the appellants.
There
was no appearance for the respondents.
2.
The
appellants are Napier Grundstucks GMBH,
[2]
the owner of the farm, Napier Vineyards (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
the lessee of the farm and Coenraad Leon Bester. Mr Bester, the
deponent to the founding affidavit, is the person in charge
of day to
day farming operations, human resources, employment and housing
matters on the farm.
3.
The
respondents are residing on the farm together with their mother and
step father (Mrs Maria Fredericks and Mr Koos Fontein),
who are both
ESTA occupiers. Mr Fontein is a long-term occupier as
contemplated by section 8(4) of ESTA, having lived on
the farm since
about 1998. He retired some years back, before the first
applicant purchased the farm. Mrs Fredericks
arrived on the
farm in about 2010 with the respondents, who are twins and who were
then both about 14 years old. Mrs Fredericks
and Mr Fontein
currently live in a unit known as Flat 8B on the farm which is in a
section used for retired employees.
Flat 8B is a three
roomed unit, with one bedroom. Mrs Fredericks is about 50
years old. At present, the respondents
live with them in Flat
8B. According to the appellants, the respondents were employed
by the appellants but are no longer
so employed. The appellants
contend that the respondents both derived their consent to reside on
the farm through their employment.
4.
The first
respondent was employed from 19 May 2017 as a general farmworker,
although a written contract of employment was signed
only in April
2019. A housing contract was signed at the same time. Clause
6 of the written contract of employment
regulates housing in the
following terms:
‘
6.
Behuising
Indien
daar behuising aan die werknemer beskikbaar gestel word is dit
onderhewig aan die diskresie van die wekgewer en die reëls
en
regulasies soos uiteengesit in Aanhangsel 3.
Huur
is weekliks betaalbaar en sal van die werknemer se weeklikse loon
verhaal word.
Die
werknemer se reg op behuising word uitdruklik gekoppel aan die
werknemer se werkreg. Die werknemer het slegs die reg om
die
huis te bewoon en te huur terwyl hy / sy in diens is van die
werkgewer. Die werknemer moet ook volgens Artikel 28(2)
van die
Sektorale Vasstelling 13, die behuising ontruim (een) maand na
diensbeëindiging.’
5.
The housing
contract records that house number 7 is allocated to the first
respondent. It records further that Mrs Fredericks,
Mr Fontein,
the second respondent and the third respondent may reside in the
house as family members.
6.
According to
the appellants, the first respondent’s employment was
terminated during 2019 in circumstances where he was allegedly
abusing drugs and the appellants have a zero tolerance policy on
illegal substances. The appellants set out the disciplinary
process followed over several months, which they say, culminated in
the conclusion of a settlement agreement on 13 June 2019.
However, that agreement records, amongst other things, that the first
respondent’s services are voluntarily terminated by
mutual
agreement and neither party made any admissions on related conduct.
7.
The
second respondent commenced employment in February 2017 and allegedly
absconded the following month. The second
respondent did
not refer any dispute in that regard to the appropriate body for
resolution in accordance with the
Labour Relations Act 66 of
1995
.
[4]
There was no
written contract concluded in respect of second respondent’s
employment. The appellants contend
that his right of residence
was dependant on his employment.
8.
The appellants
say that they terminated the respondents’ respective rights to
reside on the farm after they followed a process
requesting
representations. They served a letter requesting
representations on 31 October 2019. The letter refers
specifically to house number 7 and the recorded reason for the
termination is ‘operasionele benodighede en vooruitgang van
die
plaas/besigheid.’ Neither the first nor the second
respondent made any representations and on 7 November 2019,
the
appellants terminated their rights of residence in respect of house
number 7. The appellants instituted the eviction
application
some ten months later, in August 2020. The founding affidavit
focuses on the first respondents’ history
of drug use, which
allegedly led to the disciplinary process and ultimately the
termination of his employment. The appellants
supply evidence
of positive drug tests from 2019. It is alleged that the
circumstances that led to the termination of rights
included
complaints from other occupiers about both respondents’ drug
use and resultant aggressive behaviour. Concerns
about the
impact on minor children living on the farm are raised.
9.
The
respondents opposed the application. They were represented by
the Stellenbosch Law Clinic but only during the process
in the
Magistrates Court. The second respondent deposed to an answering
affidavit in April 2021, which is confirmed by the first
respondent.
The second respondent explains that he and the first respondent are
twins. In April 2021, they were 24
years old and they are both
employed as gardeners earning a salary of R2600 each per month.
10.
As
indicated, they live in Flat 8B together with their mother and
stepfather, Mrs Fredericks and Mr Fontein. Mrs Fredericks
works
as a general worker at Groenberg Wassery earning a salary of R3 600.
Mr Fontein is now about 67 years old.
He worked on the farm for
about 26 years and retired at the age of 60. He has lived on
the farm since his employment commenced.
He receives a state
pension in an amount of some R1 800 per month and does casual
work as a gardener about two days a week
earning R150 a day.
11.
The
respondents explain that they are not refusing to vacate the property
out of spite or malice but because they do not have alternative
accommodation at their disposal. Their financial circumstances
do not enable them to rent or buy alternative accommodation
while
also providing for their daily needs. They have looked for
alternative accommodation but to date have not been successful
finding a place that they can afford. They say that they do not have
friends or family members with space on their properties to
accommodate them and their parents are the only people who can assist
them. Their current employer cannot assist them.
Their names are not independently on the Municipality’s housing
list, but they explain that they have been advised to register
their
names, which they will do. They are registered on the housing
list as dependants of their mother, Mrs Fredericks, who
has applied
for housing.
12.
The
respondents explain their history of residence on the farm.
Consistent with the appellant’s evidence, they explain
that
they arrived on the farm with their mother when they were 14 years
old. They say that from that time, they resided in
house number
7. It is common cause that the appellants commenced employment
with the appellants in early 2017, and they say
that their right to
reside in house number 7, indeed, arose from that employment.
They occupied house number 7 with their
parents based on the housing
contract.
13.
The
respondents deny that they have displayed aggressive behaviour
towards other occupiers on the farm or that they have abused
illegal
drugs since January 2021. They admit that they occasionally use
cannabis, but that it does not make them aggressive.
It
is common cause that they do not contribute to the farming activities
on the farm. They do not pay rent, but say that
they have not
been asked to and note that they are living with their parents.
14.
Importantly,
however, the respondents explain that they relocated to Flat 8B
during 2019 when their parents did. The
appellants, they
say, were aware of this and did not at any stage say that they were
not allowed to occupy that Flat with their
parents. By
April 2021, they had resided there for some two and a half years with
the appellant’s knowledge.
The respondents explain that
they did not consider it necessary to make any representations in
respect of the notice of termination
of residence rights sent in
October 2022 as by then their right to reside derived from their
parents who are, to date, occupying
Unit 8B.
15.
In a replying
affidavit of September 2021, the appellants, amongst other things,
dispute that the respondents moved to Unit 8B when
their parents did
and say that they moved there after ‘the employment
relationship’ came to an end. Although
no date is
provided for their parent’s location, it is suggested that this
occurred when the respondents commenced employment
in 2017.
They dispute that they moved into Unit 8B with their knowledge or
permission and say that they commenced eviction
proceedings when it
came to their knowledge that they were living there. The
appellants, furthermore, take issue with a number
of the respondents’
claims. Pertinently, they say that they have failed to
substantiate their claims regarding the
unavailability of suitable
alternative accommodation and point out that their names are not on
the housing list some two years
after the application was
instituted. They say that Flat 8B is not large enough to
accommodate a family of four, being only
27 square metres. The
minimum requirement for family accommodation is, they say, 30 square
metres according to guidelines
described as the Sustainable
Agriculture in South Africa guidelines. However, the origin and
status of those guidelines is
not explained and Mr Montzinger could
not shed light on that during argument. Moreover, the
appellants put up various affidavits
from other farmworkers in order
to corroborate their concerns about drug use and loud or
confrontational behaviour. The affidavits
confirm weekend use
of marijuana post 2021 and, in 2020, also of mandrax. They
refer to an incident at about 9pm on a Sunday
evening in September
2021 in which the respondents were apparently ‘stoned’ on
marijuana and involved in a loud argument
and fight between
themselves.
16.
The appellants
also take issue with the reason offered for not responding to the
request for representations, by saying:
‘
the
letter itself calls for reasons why they should not be evicted.
It is common sense that their occupation of the flat would
not be
allowed to continue if they failed to provide sufficient reasons why
it should.’
17.
The
appellant’s difficulty is that the letter refers specifically
to their occupation of house number 7 stating that the reason
for
termination is operational and the furtherance of the farm. It
does not mention Flat 8B.
18.
The fifth
respondent, the Drakenstein Municipality delivered a report on
possible and emergency accommodation, dated 7 July 2021.
The
report records that there was engagement between the parties on 19
May 2021. At this meeting, the Department confirmed
that it
cannot provide accommodation. The respondents’
representatives confirmed that while they have family in Paarl,
the
area is unsafe and the family uses illegal substances. Their
inability to afford rental accommodation was confirmed,
as was their
willingness to move to alternative accommodation should any be
available. The Drakenstein Municipality explains
its housing
and emergency housing policy in its report. It confirms that
the respondents were not at that stage on any housing
list, which in
any event have long backlogs. At best, emergency accommodation
would be available in one of its emergency
sites, Schoongezicht in
mid-2022 and in the interim, building material could be supplied to
erect an informal structure on private
property.
19.
The probation
officer’s report is dated 12 June 2021. It recommended
that no eviction order be granted and that the
respondents be
permitted to continue to live as a family with their mother and step
father on the farm, as at present they do not
have any alternative
accommodation.
20.
The
Magistrate agreed with the appellants that the respondents had, since
2017, derived consent to reside from their employment
contracts.
However, the Magistrate concluded that the respondents’ right
to reside on the farm had originated several
years earlier and
derived from their parents’ right to a family life protected in
section 6(2)(d)
of ESTA. That right, it was held, is currently
being exercised in respect of Flat 8B and has never been terminated.
The Magistrate refers to the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Hattingh,
[5]
which gave content to the
section 6(2)(d)
right to a family life,
holding that:
‘
the
purpose of the conferment of this right on occupiers was to ensure
that, despite living on other people’s land, persons
falling
within this vulnerable section of our society would be able to live a
life that is as close as possible to the kind of
life that they would
lead if they lived on their own land. This means as normal a
family life as possible having regard to
the landowner’s
rights.’
[6]
21.
The
Court continued:
[7]
‘
Living
a family life may mean the occupier living with his or her spouse or
partner only or living with one or more of his or her
children or
with one or more members of his or her extended family, depending
upon what the result is when one balances the occupier’s
living
with any one or more of these persons with what the owner of the land
is also entitled to. If, in a particular case,
the balancing
produces a result that is unjust and inequitable to the owner of the
land, the occupier’s right to family life
may be appropriately
limited. If, however, the occupier were to live with his or her
spouse or partner and with one two or
more of his children or other
members of the extended family and this would not result in any
injustice or unfairness and inequity
to the owner of the land, the
occupier would be entitled to live with those members of his or her
family.’
22.
Moreover,
the Constitutional Court held that ‘the attainment of the age
of majority or being independent of parents’
does not ‘take
a person out of the ambit of his or her parents’ family.’
[8]
23.
The
Magistrate considered a range of factors in this regard concluding in
all the circumstances, that, on the grounds advanced by
the
appellants, it would not be just and equitable to terminate this
right in terms of
section 8
of ESTA
[9]
or grant an eviction order in terms of
section 9.
1cm; line-height: 150%">
24.
The
Magistrate appears to have assumed that any right to reside that
flowed from the respondents’ employment was terminated
in
accordance with
section 8
of ESTA.
[10]
To that extent, the application was then decided with reference to
section 9
of ESTA. The decision then turned on the application
of
section 11
of ESTA, which is applicable to the case on the common
cause facts. The Magistrate considered various factors arriving
at
the conclusion that it would not be just and equitable to grant an
order for eviction. The question whether suitable alternative
accommodation is available to the respondents was a highly material,
if not decisive consideration:
[11]
the Magistrate concluded that he was unable on the information at
hand to find that the issue was addressed.
25.
The
appellants appeal on a series of grounds. They say that the
Magistrate erred in how he exercised the discretions that
vest with a
Court seized with an ESTA eviction, both as a matter of law and
fact. This includes incorrectly applying
the concept of
justice and equity. A concern that frames these features of the
appeal is that the landowners’ circumstances
are said to be
wholly dismissed. The Magistrate is also said to have only
focused on those portions of the probation officer’s
report
that support the respondents
[12]
and to have incorrectly applied
Hattingh.
In
respect of factual matters, the Magistrate is said to have both made
incorrect factual findings and had no regard to other facts.
26.
I
agree with the Magistrate’s decision regarding the application
of
Hattingh.
It
is common cause that the first and second respondents are residing
with their mother and step-father in Unit 8B. They do
not
require consent to do so, but if they did, on the respondents’
version,
[13]
they have
occupied that flat with the appellants’ knowledge and without
objection since they moved there in 2019. As
indicated above,
the letter of termination refers only to house number 7. Any
ESTA occupier residing in that flat enjoys
a right to family life
under
section 6(2)(d)
of ESTA, albeit subject to the balancing of
rights with those of the owner as contemplated by
section 6(2)
and
Hattingh
itself.
27.
In my view the
Magistrate correctly found that those rights have not been
terminated. They are rights that, at least, vest
in Mrs
Fredericks and Mr Fontein whose status as occupiers is not in
question. The appellants have not taken any steps to
terminate
their rights and they are not parties to these proceedings.
Moreover, the appellants have not sought to terminate
the
respondents’ rights to reside, as family members, with their
parents. The letter seeking representations does not
reference
these rights nor Flat 8B: it is quite clear that what the
appellants were purporting to terminate is the right
to occupy house
number 7 as an incident of employment, which the respondents have in
any event vacated. In my view these
considerations are decisive
of the appeal.
28.
In
any event, I do not think, on the evidence before us, that the
Magistrate’s order can be disturbed on principles of justice
and equity as contemplated by
section 11(2)
, or when the right to
family life is balanced with the rights of the owner and persons in
charge. The latter enquiry too is to
be infused with considerations
of justice and equity.
[14]
In this regard, I have considered each of the issues traversed in
paragraphs 5 and 6 of the notice of appeal, which, according
to the
appellants, concern facts the the Magistrate incorrectly found
(paragraph 5) or failed to have regard to (paragraph 6).
I am
not persuaded that the issues, to the extent factually sustained, can
alter the balance in the appellants’ favour. Moreover,
I am
satisfied that the Magistrate was, on the evidence to hand and at the
relevant times, entitled to treat the absence of suitable
alternative
accommodation as a weighty matter. While it would have put any
doubts to rest if the respondents had supplied
the Court with more
information of the actual costs of alternative accommodation
available in the area, which they say that they
cannot afford, the
information they provided, in context of their salary and specific
circumstances, sufficed.
29.
In the result,
the appeal stands to be dismissed. The appeal is unopposed, but
in any event, there is no basis to depart from
the usual approach
whereby this Court only makes costs orders in special circumstances,
of which there are none.
30.
I make the
following order:
30.1
The appeal is
dismissed.
SJ
COWEN
I
agree
TM
NCUBE
Date
reserved: 8
August 2022
Date
delivered: 23 December
2022
Appearances:
Appellants: Mr
Montzinger
instructed
by Terblanche
Attorneys
Respondents: No
appearance
[1]
The
farm is more described as No 14369, Wellington and situated in the
Drakenstein Municipality, Paarl Division, Western Cape.
The
third respondent vacated the farm during 2019 and relocated to
Villiersdorp and there is no party affected by the citation
of the
fourth respondent. For convenience, I refer to the first and
second respondents collectively as the respondents.
I refer to
the fifth respondent as the Drakenstein Municipality and the sixth
respondent as the Department.
[2]
Registration
number 2017/058337/10).
[3]
Registration
number 2015/178484/07.
[4]
See
section 8(3)
of ESTA.
## [5]Hattingh
and Others v Juta[2013]
ZACC 5; 2013 (3) SA 275 (CC); 2013 (5) BCLR 509 (CC).
[5]
Hattingh
and Others v Juta
[2013]
ZACC 5; 2013 (3) SA 275 (CC); 2013 (5) BCLR 509 (CC).
[6]
At
para 35.
[7]
At
para 37.
[8]
At
para 34.
[9]
Section
8
is titled ‘
Termination
of right of residence’ and provides:
(1)
Subject
to the provisions of this section, an occupier's right of residence
may be 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.
(2)
The
right of residence of an occupier who is an employee and whose right
of residence arises solely from an employment agreement,
may be
terminated if the occupier resigns from employment or is dismissed
in accordance with the provisions of the
Labour Relations Act.
>
[10]
At
para 16.
[11]
Section
11(2)(c).
[12]
In
conflict with this Court’s decision in
Glen
Elgin Trust v Titus and another
[2001] 2 All SA 86 (LCC).
[13]
Which must be accepted applying the principles in
Plascon
Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634H-635C and
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at para 13.
[14]
Hattingh
,
supra at para 32.
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