Case Law[2025] ZASCA 47South Africa
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Occupiers [of Portion 9[...] of the Farm Randjesfontein No 4[...]] and Others (636/23) [2025] ZASCA 47; [2025] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (5) SA 86 (SCA) (23 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
23 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Property law – Prevention of Illegal Eviction from Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) – eviction of unlawful occupiers – emergency temporary accommodation – whether a municipality obliged to consider an unlawful occupier’s right to earn a living when determining emergency temporary accommodation –intersection between s 28 of the Constitution and s 4(7) of PIE.
Judgment
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## City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Occupiers [of Portion 9[...] of the Farm Randjesfontein No 4[...]] and Others (636/23) [2025] ZASCA 47; [2025] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (5) SA 86 (SCA) (23 April 2025)
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Occupiers [of Portion 9[...] of the Farm Randjesfontein No 4[...]] and Others (636/23) [2025] ZASCA 47; [2025] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2025 (5) SA 86 (SCA) (23 April 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Temporary accommodation –
Right
to earn a living
–
High
Court order for municipality to provide emergency temporary
accommodation – Including condition for the occupiers
who
were waster pickers – Land to be where they could sort
reclaimed waste and use their flat-bed trollies –
Right of
occupiers to earn a living is relevant factor to be considered by
court – Human rights are indivisible, interdependent
and
interrelated – Appeal by municipality dismissed –
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from Unlawful Occupation
of Land
Act 19 of 1998, s 4(7) – Constitution, s 26.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 636/23
In
the matter between:
THE
CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
FIRST APPELLANT
THE
EXECUTIVE MAYOR,
CITY
OF JOHANNEBURG
SECOND APPELLANT
THE
CITY MANAGER,
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
THIRD APPELLANT
THE
DIRECTOR OF HOUSING,
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
OCCUPIERS
OF [PORTION 9[...]
OF
THE FARM RANDJESFONTEIN NO 405
FIRST RESPONDENT
RYCKLOFF-BELEGGINGS
(PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE
INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION
OF
JURISTS
AMICUS CURIAE
Neutral
Citation:
The City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Occupiers [of Portion 9[...]
of the Farm Randjesfontein No 4[…]]
and Others
(636/23)
[2024] ZASCA 47
(23 April 2025)
Coram:
MAKGOKA, SCHIPPERS and MOTHLE JJA and HENDRICKS and NAIDOO AJJA
Heard:
27 August 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication
on the Supreme Court of Appeal website, and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 23 April 2025
at 11h00.
Summary:
Property law – Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) –
eviction of unlawful
occupiers – emergency temporary
accommodation – whether a municipality obliged to consider an
unlawful occupier’s
right to earn a living when determining
emergency temporary accommodation –intersection between s 28 of
the Constitution
and s 4(7) of PIE.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Wright J sitting as court of first instance):
The
following order shall issue:
1
Paragraph 2(b) of the high court’s order is amended and the
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality is directed to provide
temporary emergency accommodation for the first to the seventy-first
Occupiers of the farm
Randjesfontein number 4[...] as specified in
that paragraph, within sixty (60) days of the date of this Court’s
order.
2
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including
costs of two counsel
where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Mothle
JA (Makgoka and Scheepers JJA and Hendricks and Naidoo AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This
appeal raises our country’s perennial problem –
homelessness. In President
of
the Republic of South Africa v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
[1]
the Constitutional Court remarked as follows:
‘
The
problem of homelessness is particularly acute in our society. It is a
direct consequence of apartheid urban planning which sought
to
exclude African people from urban areas, and enforced this vision
through policies regulating access to land and housing which
meant
that far too little land and too few houses were supplied to African
people. The painful consequences of these policies are
still with us
eleven years into our new democracy, despite government’s
attempt to remedy them. The frustration and helplessness
suffered by
many who still struggle against heavy odds to meet the challenge
merely to survive and to have shelter can never be
underestimated.
The fact that poverty and homelessness still plague many South
Africans is a painful reminder of the chasm that
still needs to be
bridged before the constitutional ideal to establish a society based
on social justice and improved quality of
life for all citizens is
fully achieved.’
Two
decades later, despite a plethora of legislation and case law, the
problem persists.
[2]
The first to fourth appellants are respectively; the
City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (the City), the Executive
Mayor, the City Manager and the Director of Housing, collectively
referred to as ‘the City’
.
The first to seventy-first
respondents are the Occupiers, who are in unlawful occupation of
Portion Erf 9[...] of the Farm Randjiesfontein
no. 4[...], situated
in Midrand, within the municipality of Johannesburg, (the property).
The property belongs to the seventy-second
respondent,
Rycloff-Bellegings (Pty) Ltd (
Rycloff)
.
The City appeals against the judgment and orders of the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court). That
court, at the instance of Rycloff, granted an order of eviction
against the first respondent (the Occupiers) and ordered the City
to
provide them temporary emergency accommodation (TEA) subject to a
condition that: ‘The land chosen by the City shall be
land
where the 1
st
to 71
st
respondents can live at night and there lawfully and safely sort the
reclaimed waste and from where they can reasonably go during
the day
to use their flat-bed trollies lawfully and safely to collect waste’.
It is against this order (the impugned order)
that the City appeals,
with the leave of the high court. The International Commission of
Jurists
(ICJ)
was admitted in this Court as Amicus Curiae.
[3]
The Occupiers eke out a living as waste pickers. This
they do by
extracting from the waste, recyclable materials from industrial sites
located near the property and transporting it
to the property on
flat-bed trollies. On arrival at the property, they sort, clean and
store the materials in industrial bags,
with a view to selling the
stored materials to recycling companies. In order to do this work,
which is their sole source of income,
the Occupiers have built shacks
on the property, where they reside with their families.
[4]
Adjoining the property is Erf 6[...] M[...] P[...], Extension
9, also
owned by Rycloff. The latter property houses a large commercial
business centre, the International Business Gateway. Rycloff
is in
the process of finalising an offer to lease and redevelop Midridge
Park, valued at R456 461 243.66. The prospective
lessee is
not willing to proceed with the envisaged development, because of the
Occupiers’ continued occupation of the property
neighbouring
Midridge Park. It became obvious that the continued presence of the
Occupiers on the property would be an impediment
to the envisaged
development.
[5]
On 22 May 2019, Rycloff launched an application for eviction
of the
Occupiers from the property, in terms of s 4 of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998
(the PIE Act). A plethora of interlocutory applications over delay in
the acquisition of suitable temporary emergency
accommodation,
supervised orders for relocation of the Occupiers and contempt of
court applications ensued, and continued for about
three years.
During this period, several sites for relocation were identified, but
the City and the Occupiers could not reach an
agreement on a suitable
site to which the Occupiers could be relocated. The Occupiers
preferred alternative accommodation nearer
the industrial sites, in
order to continue their waste-picking activities. In 2022, the City
identified Erf 1[...] K[...] S[...]
I[...] S[...] (K[...] S[...]), as
the relocation destination acceptable to both parties. However, the
City imposed a condition
for relocation to K[...] S[...], that the
Occupiers would not be allowed to conduct their waste picking
activities on the identified
site. The Occupiers objected to that
condition.
[6]
The eviction application eventually came before the high court,
which granted an eviction order against the Occupiers. In paragraph 2
of its order, the high court directed that the City must,
by no later
than 4 March 2023, on land of its choice but within the municipal
area of the City, provide temporary emergency accommodation
for the
occupiers, subject to certain conditions. The condition, which is the
source of the dispute in this appeal, is stated in
paragraph 3 of the
high court’s order. Dissatisfied with the impugned order, the
City sought and was granted leave by the
high court to this Court,
specifically against the impugned order.
The
parties’ contentions
[7]
The City contends, first, that the ‘right to earn
a living’,
which it submits is essentially a ‘commercial interest’,
is not relevant to the determination of what
is just and equitable in
terms of s 4(7) of the PIE Act. Related to that, it was submitted,
the section does not afford an unlawful
occupier the right to choose
where they wish to live, upon eviction. Second, that the collection,
sorting and storing of material
from waste by the Occupiers, is an
unlawful activity, as it is conducted in an area zoned ‘special’,
contrary to the
relevant zoning regulations.
[8]
The
Occupiers submitted, in the main, that the eviction would not be just
and equitable, if it did not take into account their means
of earning
a living, i.e. if they are not relocated close to areas which create
high value waste for them to collect, store and
sell extracted
recyclable material, to the recycling companies. They further relied
on s 26(3) of the Constitution,
[2]
to contend that the City has an obligation to act reasonably, as the
right to earn a living is a component of the right to dignity.
[9]
The thrust of Rycloff’s submission was that the
high court
order exceeds what is envisaged in s 26(3) of the Constitution read
with s 4 of the PIE Act. Further, that the impugned
order offends the
separation of powers doctrine in that it deprives the City of its
discretionary power to identify suitable temporary
emergency
accommodation, which is congruent with the prevention of homelessness
and the balancing of competing interests that the
City must consider.
[10]
ICJ advanced three submissions in support of the Occupiers: (a) the
role of
both binding and ‘non-binding’ international law;
(b) the State’s obligations relating to the rights to housing
and work in the context of international human rights law; and (c)
the eviction of occupiers which results in reduced access to
existing
work opportunities, would also result in a violation of the rights of
the children of the occupiers.
[11]
Before I consider these submissions, it is important to state what
the case
is not about. It is not about whether the Occupiers wish to
be relocated to a temporary emergency accommodation of their choice.
Both the City and the Occupiers agree that K[...] S[...] should be
the destination for relocation. The dispute is whether the Occupiers
should continue to ‘earn their living’, at K[...] S[...].
In this regard, the protagonists in the dispute are thus
the City,
supported by Rycloff on the one side and the Occupiers, supported by
ICJ on the other.
[12]
The
PIE Act primarily gives expression to the right of access to adequate
housing as provided for in s 26 of the Constitution. It
regulates the
circumstances under which evictions may be conducted. The
Constitutional Court in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
,
[3]
set out the history of evictions under the then government policy of
apartheid, and the enactment of the PIE Act, following the
advent of
constitutional democracy. In essence, the PIE Act is intended to
prevent the erstwhile arbitrary and violent evictions
and forced
removals that were a cornerstone of apartheid laws. Section 4(7) of
the PIE Act, provides:
‘
If
an unlawful occupier has occupied the land in question for more than
six months at the time when the proceedings are initiated,
a court
may grant an order for eviction if it is of the opinion that it is
just and equitable to do so, after considering all the
relevant
circumstances, including, except where the land is sold in a sale of
execution pursuant to a mortgage, whether land has
been made
available or can reasonably be made available by a municipality or
other organ of state or another land owner for the
relocation of the
unlawful occupier, and including the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disabled persons and households
headed by women.’
[13]
Section
4(7) has been crafted such that the manner by which evictions are
conducted, respects the constitutional rights of occupiers,
in
particular the vulnerable amongst them. It does not expressly oblige
a municipality to provide for temporary emergency accommodation
for
evicted occupiers. Our courts have applied a wide interpretation to s
4(7). Recently, in
Charnell
Commando v City of Cape Town
[4]
(
Charnell
),
the Constitutional Court considered a municipality’s failure to
develop a policy addressing temporary emergency accommodation,
in
dealing with a homelessness crisis. The municipality instead applied
a housing plan, intended as a long-term solution. The majority
judgment, following
City
of Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight Properties
,
[5]
held:
‘
I
acknowledge that the City operates within finite resources and must
make difficult decisions about how to allocate those resources
most
effectively to meet the needs of its diverse population. However, a
lack of resources cannot be accepted as an excuse in the
present
circumstances, because that is simply not the reasoning behind its
failure to prioritise emergency housing. The availability
of
resources is evident. The City cannot hide behind the argument that
it is providing social housing in the inner city by disregarding
its
crucial responsibilities in relation to emergency housing. Those
whose needs are most urgent and whose ability to enjoy all
rights is
most in peril, must not be ignored. The City’s commitment to
long-term social housing plans should not come at
the expense of
addressing urgent concerns. This is particularly the case when one
considers the applicable waiting lists prevalent
in the applications
for state-subsidised housing and the policies against queue-jumping.
The right of access to adequate housing,
especially in emergency
situations, is a fundamental human right that demands immediate
attention. This Court cannot ignore the
City’s failure to
progressively realise its constitutional obligation in terms of
section 26 as far as emergency housing
is concerned.’
[14]
The courts are empowered to exercise a broad discretion, to ensure
that the
evictions are conducted in a just and equitable manner. In
determining what is just and equitable, a court cannot ignore a
possible
breach of other constitutional rights, including
socio-economic rights
.
As submitted by the ICJ, South Africa ratified the United Nation’s
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights
(ICESCR) on 12 January 2015, to deepen the enforcement of
socio-economic rights in our Bill of Rights. In this regard, s
39(1)
of the Constitution provides that the courts must consider
international law, and s 39(2) provides that when interpreting
legislation, the courts must promote the spirit, purport and objects
of the Bill of Rights.
[15]
The issue for determination is whether a court ordering an eviction
under s 4(7)
of the PIE Act must, as part of just and equitable
enquiry, consider an occupier’s ‘right to earn a living’.
As mentioned, the City considers the Occupiers’ activities
unlawful, as according to it, the Occupiers conduct a
waste
recycle business
and are therefore
involved in a ‘commercial interest’ activity which, it
submits, falls outside the purview of s 4(7)
of the PIE Act. On the
other hand, the Occupiers characterised their activity as
collecting,
sorting and storing
material
extracted from waste, to sell it to recycling companies.
[16]
However, the City’s view is contradicted in a letter dated 26
September
2022, from the City’s own attorneys, addressed to
Seri Law Clinic representing the Occupiers. Paragraphs 3.1 and 3.2 of
that
letter state:
‘
The
City has no interest in encroaching on your client’s ability to
earn a living, however the City is not obligated by any
statute or
policy to provide Temporary Emergency Accommodation (TEA) that would
enable the continuation of your clients
recycling
activities
.
The
City has endeavoured (as an indulgence to your clients) to find TEA
that would cater for your client’s needs. In this
respect, and
coincidentally, erf 1[...] K[...] S[...] is situated next
to a
recycling facility
.’ (Own emphasis.)
[17]
Recycling is defined by s 1 of the National Environmental Management:
Waste
Act 59 of 2008 (the Waste Act) as ‘a process where waste
is reclaimed for further use, which process involves the separation
of waste from a waste stream for further use and the processing of
that separated material as a product or raw material’.
The
organs of State in all spheres of government are enjoined to
implement the provisions of the Waste Act, including taking uniform
measures that seek to reduce the amount of waste generated by
business or domestic entities.
[18]
The
activities of waste pickers are described in the expert report filed
by Dr Samson,
[6]
in
which he states:
‘
Waste
picking is prevalent in unequal societies, where a person is
sufficiently wealthy to throw away used commodities that retain
value
and other residents being so poor that they are willing to go through
their waste to generate a relatively small income to
support
themselves and their families.
Waste
pickers perform several stages of work before they sell materials
they have salvaged. These include waking early (often by
4 am);
travelling by foot (most frequently with a trolley) to high income
suburbs; salvaging materials from bins; travelling home
by foot, this
time with a trolley that can carry up to 200 kgs of recyclables. When
they are not salvaging, the waste pickers must
then classify the
recyclables into different categories, do rudimentary cleaning of the
materials, prepare the materials for sale,
and then transport the
materials, again by foot, to sell to buyback centres or another kind
of buyer.
Waste
pickers’ incomes are low, as they are currently only paid for
the sale of the recyclables and not for their services.
Prices are so
low as this is the bottom level of the global recycling value chain
and many actors seek to extract profits before
the final sale of the
materials for recycling.’
[19]
It is clear that we are here dealing with the
collection
,
sorting and storing
of recyclable material at K[...] S[...], and not recycling in the
sense of commercial interests, as characterised by the City.
Waste
picking occurs at different levels, including instances where people
ordinarily produce waste while cleaning their homes.
The waste is
often separated from re-usable materials, before its disposal at
municipal dump sites.
Section
4(7) of the PIE Act and commercial interests.
[20]
I
turn now to the City’s submission, which is two-pronged. First,
that the right to work amounts to a commercial interest,
which is not
protected by the PIE Act. For this contention, the City relied on
Turnover
Trading 191 (Pty) Ltd v Moshela and Others
[7]
(Turnover
).
There, it was held that an unlawful occupier is not entitled to
resist eviction on the basis that the business undertaking conducted
on another’s property, is the source of their livelihood.
[21]
The present case is distinguishable from
Turnover
.
First, in that case, the occupier resisted eviction on the basis that
he wished to continue conducting business on the property.
In the
present case, the Occupiers are not resisting eviction. They join
issue with the relocation to a place where they would
not be able to
earn a living at. Second, in this case, as noted by the high court,
there are children, as well as households headed
by women – two
vulnerable groups in society specifically mentioned in s 4(7) of the
PIE Act. In
Turnover
,
the high court judgment specifically records that the question of
children did not arise. Therefore, the City’s reliance
on
Turnover
as
authority prohibiting sorting and storing of recyclable material, is
inapposite.
[22]
What
is more, both this Court and the Constitutional Court have recognised
that the right of Occupiers to earn a living is a relevant
factor to
be considered by a court in terms of s 4(7) of the PIE Act. For
example, in
City
of Johannesburg v Rand Properties (Pty) Ltd
,
[8]
this Court acknowledged the link between the location of residence
and employment opportunities. The Court stated as follows:
‘
Obviously,
the
State would be failing in its duty if it were to ignore or fail to
give due regard to the relationship between location of residence
and
the place where persons earn or try to earn their living.
’
[23]
This
was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Residents
of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others
[9]
, thus:
‘
Some
of the reasons advanced by the residents for refusing to relocate to
the TRUs in Delft are a lack of schools and other amenities
and
a
lack of employment
.
What must be stressed here is that relocation is necessary to develop
Joe Slovo so that decent housing can be built there. This
will
benefit the residents. Moreover, the Constitution does not guarantee
a person a right to housing at government expense at
the locality of
his or her choice. Locality is determined by a number of factors
including the availability of land.
However,
in deciding on the locality, the government must have regard to the
relationship between the location of residents and
their places of
employment
.’
(Own emphasis.)
[24]
In
Dladla
v City of Johannesburg
[10]
the
Constitutional Court considered conditions the City had imposed
on occupiers whom it had granted temporary accommodation.
Those were
that: (a)
the
occupiers should be out of the accommodation between 08h00 and 17h30
every day and return by 20h00;
(b)
men
and women were prohibited from living together through the provision
of single-sex dormitories; (c) children were separated
from their
caregiver depending on their age. The Constitutional Court
declared
these unconstitutional. It defined the State’s duty to provide
temporary accommodation in the following terms:
‘
Temporary
accommodation of necessity entails more than just providing a roof
and four walls; it must include all that is reasonably
appurtenant to
making the temporary accommodation adequate. The provision of housing
entails not only the delivery of a building
or tent. The conditions
the state attaches to the accommodation are part of its provision.
Therefore, any rules the Shelter implemented
to regulate the conduct
of its inhabitants necessarily informed the adequacy of the housing
it was providing. It cannot be that
the provision of temporary
accommodation implicates section 26(2) while rules designed to
fulfil that provision do not.’
[11]
[25]
As mentioned, in this Court, the City first contended that ‘
the
waste recycling activity as conducted by the Occupiers, is [per se]
unlawful
.’ However, counsel
for the City could not point to any authority for this proposition.
The debate veered to the question
whether the sorting and storing of
material extracted from waste, is prohibited by the municipal zoning
by-laws. It was submitted
on behalf of the City that K[...] S[...]
was zoned ‘special’, even though in the City’s
heads of argument it
is designated as a residential area. To clarify
this aspect, the parties were directed to submit the by-law on the
zoning of the
land to which the Occupiers are to be relocated,
including further submissions on that issue. Both the City and the
Occupiers complied,
as directed.
[26]
Attached
to the City’s further submissions, were the Johannesburg Land
Use Scheme, 2018 (the scheme) and a copy of the Zoning
Certificate
for Erf 1[...] K[...] S[...]. The City submits that K[...] S[...] is
zoned ‘Special Use’ and the Zoning
Certificate has an
annexure which indicates that K[...] S[...] shall be used solely for
public road.
[12]
Considering
the scheme and the absence of a prohibition policy consistent
with the Waste Act, there is no support for the
City’s
contention, concerning the alleged unlawfulness of the Occupiers’
waste picking, based on the municipal zoning.
[27]
Any municipal zoning which involves human activity, such as business,
industrial,
residence, agriculture or special zoning, will
undoubtedly produce waste, whose disposal must be managed in terms of
the environmental
laws. The City failed to refer to any law or policy
which prohibits waste collection, sorting and storing in any
specified area.
The Waste Act, the Regulations, by-laws or policy
documents that deal with waste management were not referred to nor
attached.
No case was made out which demonstrates any breach, or
potential breach of any legal provisions. On the contrary, the Waste
Act
and its Regulations encourages waste collection as part of the
prevention of environmental degradation.
[28]
The
high court conducted an inspection
in
loco
at
the property. The note of the inspection indicates that there are
communal areas with seating, which is kept neat and tidy. It
has
well-maintained vegetable gardens and the waste is stored in ‘several
rows of neatly sorted recyclable waste, contained
in industrial sized
bags.’
[13]
The material
transported to the Occupiers’ shacks to later sell to recycling
companies is not the waste, but the extracted
recyclable materials of
the waste.
[29]
The
case of the Occupiers, supported by the ICJ, is grounded on the
occupiers’ right to dignity, finds expression within the
context of socio-economic rights. The Occupiers submit, on authority
of the decision in
Dladla
that
the City must act reasonably in giving effect to the rights in s
26(3) of the Constitution, with reference to socio-economic
rights,
to protect the dignity of the Occupiers. This approach is also
supported by the majority in
Charnell
,
[14]
where the Constitutional Court stated thus:
‘
In
determining if a set of measures are “reasonable”, the
measures ought also to be scrutinised within their social,
economic
and historical context. A housing programme must be balanced,
consider all sections of society, be flexible, and be able
to
reasonably respond progressively to housing crises and short, medium
and long-term needs. To be reasonable, there must be sufficient
weight towards the most needy and vulnerable, so that they can live
in conditions of dignity, equality and freedom guaranteed by
the Bill
of Rights. The state will be failing in its constitutional duties
unless it takes reasonable steps towards addressing
the needs of the
most vulnerable groups.’
[30]
The
minority judgment in
Charnell
[15]
agrees with the majority judgment on the role of socio-economic
rights in giving effect to the right to dignity when dealing with
socio-economic rights, as follows:
‘
Socio-economic
rights in the South African Constitution have two important
foundations. The first is universalistic in nature and
rooted in the
notion that every individual is entitled to be treated with dignity
and, as such, must be provided with the necessary
conditions for
living a life of dignity. That idea has been behind the recognition
of these rights at the international level in
the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and enshrined in the binding ICESCR.
South Africa signed the ICESCR on 3 October 1994
and ratified it on
12 January 2015: that change in the legal status of the
ICESCR is an important development for this
Court to grapple with.
…
.
This
case implicates both these foundations of a central socio-economic
right: the right to have access to adequate housing enshrined
in
section 26 of the Constitution. The B[...] residents are facing
eviction and potential homelessness. The duty on the state to
ensure
dignified treatment of persons facing eviction and to be provided
with alternative accommodation has been established by
legislation –
in the form of the PIE Act – and by this Court. This is also a
community that, against all odds, survived
in inner city Cape Town
against a sustained onslaught of forced removals and the attempted
banishment of people classified by the
apartheid government as Black
or Coloured from this area in pursuance of spatial apartheid in terms
of the various iterations of
the Group Areas Act. To allow their
removal from that area would consolidate the legacy of apartheid
rather than undermine it.’
(Footnotes excluded)
[31]
In
this regard, the CESCR General Comment No. 4 (the General Comment) is
important. It concerns the right to adequate housing as
provided in
article 11(1) of the CESCR,
[16]
and
recognises
the
indivisibility,
interdependence and interrelatedness of human rights.
[17]
One
of the defining features of what constitutes adequate housing in the
General Comment is the location, in respect of which the
General
Comment states:
‘
Adequate
housing must be in a location which allows access to employment
options, health care services, schools, childcare
centres and
other social facilities. This is true both in large cities and in
rural areas where the temporal and financial costs
of getting to and
from the place of work can place excessive demands upon the budgets
of poor households.’
[18]
[32]
This principle was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Dladla
as stated in paragraph 24 of this judgment. The City in the present
case acted unreasonably by seeking to subject the relocation
of the
Occupiers to a condition that prevents the latter from earning a
living at the temporary emergency accommodation. This condition
fails
to recognise the principle that human rights are indivisible,
interdependent and interrelated.
[33]
First, the City misconstrued the conduct of the Occupiers as
recyclers, when
in effect, they are reclaimers who collect and sell
waste material to recyclers for re-use. Second, the City sought to
rely on
the municipal zoning as prohibiting the sorting and storing
of waste material, when it does not do so. Third, the City’s
condition is not supported by any law or policy and is thus
arbitrary, irrational and unreasonable. In the circumstances, the
appeal
must fail.
[34]
Since
the terms of the high court order concerning the envisaged relocation
dates are no longer capable of implementation due to
the lapse of
time as a result of the appeal, it is necessary and appropriate for
this Court to intervene. Consequently, the high
court order must be
dismissed. The City has been unsuccessful, in terms of the
Biowatch
principle
[19]
and should accordingly be ordered to pay the costs.
[35]
The following order shall issue:
1
Paragraph 2(b) of the high court’s
order is amended and the
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality is directed to provide
temporary emergency accommodation
for the first to the seventy-first
Occupiers of the farm Randjesfontein number 4[...], as specified in
that paragraph, within sixty
(60) days of the date of this Court’s
order.
2
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is
dismissed with costs, including
costs of two counsel where so employed.
S
P MOTHLE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants:
C
Georgiadies (with him N Mahlangu)
Instructed
by:
BM
Kolisi Inc., Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henny Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
1
st
respondent:
I de
Vos (with her O Mohlasedi)
Instructed
by:
SERI
Law Clinic, Johannesburg
RC
Ishmail Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
2
nd
respondent:
WR
Mokhare SC (with him M Majozi)
Instructed
by:
Werksmans
Attorneys, Johannesburg
Symington
de Kock Inc., Bloemfontein
For
Amicus Curiae:
A
de Vos SC
Instructed
by:
Lawyers
for Human Rights, Pretoria
Webbers,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
President of the
Republic of South Africa v Modderklip Boerdery
2005 (5) SA 3
(CC) para
36.
[2]
Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[3]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7
;
2004 (12) BCLR 1288
(CC);
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC) from para 8.
[4]
Charnell
Commando and Others v City of Cape Town and Another
[2024] ZACC 27
;
2025
(13) BCLR 248
(CC) para 84.
[5]
City of
Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight Properties
39
(Pty) Ltd and Another
(CC)
[2011] ZACC 33
;
2012 (2) BCLR 150
(CC);
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) (1
December 2011)
.
In this case, the Court identified the obligation to plan to provide
housing in instances of emergency. Thus, it developed jurisprudence
on the right to alternative accommodation as a shield against
homelessness in addition to other existing housing programs.
[6]
Volume
5, p 817 of the record.
[7]
Turnover
Trading 191 (Pty) Ltd v Moshela and Others
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 240 para 33.
[8]
City
of Johannesburg v Rand Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2007]
ZASCA 25
;
[2007] 2 All SA 459
(SCA);
2007 (6) SA 417
(SCA);
2007 (6)
BCLR 643
(SCA)
para
44
.
[9]
Residents
of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others
(Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions and Another,
as Amici
Curiae)
[2009]
ZACC 16
;
2009 (9) BCLR 847
(CC);
2010 (3) SA 454
(CC)
para
254.
## [10]Dladla
and Another v City of Johannesburg and Others[2017]
ZACC 42; 2018 (2) BCLR 119 (CC); 2018 (2) SA 327 (CC).
[10]
Dladla
and Another v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2017]
ZACC 42; 2018 (2) BCLR 119 (CC); 2018 (2) SA 327 (CC).
[11]
Ibid
para 57.
[12]
The City has also attached the copies of Zoning Certificates of
Portions 46 and 51, zoned as ‘agriculture’ and whose
relevance to this case is not explained.
[13]
Volume 10 p 1940, para 5.
[14]
Charnell
Commando and Others v City of Cape Town and Another
[2024] ZACC 27
;
2025
(13) BCLR 248
(CC) para 73.
[15]
Per Bilchitz AJ with Dodson AJ concurring at paras 117 and 119.
[16]
International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, often referred to
as second generation rights or group rights.
[17]
Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action adopted on 25 June 1993 at the
Second World Conference on Human Rights.
[18]
Ibid
at 4.
[19]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[2009]
ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC);
2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC).
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