Case Law[2024] ZASCA 83South Africa
Goedverwachting Farm (Pty) Ltd v Adriaan Johannes Roux and Others (641/2023) [2024] ZASCA 83; 2024 (5) SA 384 (SCA) (31 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Land tenure – Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 – whether the respondents were occupiers as defined – no evidence of commercial farming on the land – role of the probation report – impermissible for court to make factual findings on basis of the probation officer’s report on matters which were not raised in the pleadings.
Judgment
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## Goedverwachting Farm (Pty) Ltd v Adriaan Johannes Roux and Others (641/2023) [2024] ZASCA 83; 2024 (5) SA 384 (SCA) (31 May 2024)
Goedverwachting Farm (Pty) Ltd v Adriaan Johannes Roux and Others (641/2023) [2024] ZASCA 83; 2024 (5) SA 384 (SCA) (31 May 2024)
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sino date 31 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
LAND TENURE – Eviction –
Occupiers
–
Whether
respondents were occupiers as defined – No evidence of
commercial farming – Role of probation report –
Impermissible for court to make factual findings on basis of
probation officer’s report on matters which were not raised
in pleadings – Probation officer’s report cannot usurp
court’s discretion as to whether an eviction should
be
granted – Appeal upheld and order of Land Claims Court
substituted with order for eviction of respondents –
Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
,
ss 1
and
9
(2)(c).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
# Reportable
Reportable
Case
no: 641/2023
In the matter between:
GOEDVERWACHTING FARM
(PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
ADRIAAN JOHANNES
ROUX
FIRST
RESPONDENT
ANY AND ALL
UNLAWFUL SECOND
RESPONDENT
OCCUPIERS
OF THE PROPERTY
THE CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
THIRD
RESPONDENT
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
MINISTER OF
AGRICULTURE
FOURTH RESPONDENT
AND LAND AFFAIRS
Neutral
citation:
Goedverwachting
Farm (Pty) Ltd v Roux and Others
(641/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 83 (31 May 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MEYER and MATOJANE JJA and COPPIN and
MBHELE AJJA
Heard
:
06 May 2024
Delivered
:
31 May 2024
Summary:
Land tenure –
Extension of Security of
Tenure Act 62 of 1997
– whether the respondents were occupiers
as defined – no evidence of commercial farming on the land –
role of
the probation report – impermissible for court to make
factual findings on basis of the probation officer’s report on
matters which were not raised in the pleadings.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land Claims Court,
Randburg
(Flatela J, sitting as a court of
first instance):
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the Land Claims Court is set aside
and substituted with the following:
‘
1.
The first and second respondents are to be evicted from portion 17 of
the farm Goedverwachting, number 442, Registration Division
IR,
Gauteng Province on or before 31 July 2024.
2. The Sheriff of the
Court, together with the assistance of the South African Police
Services, if necessary, is authorised to execute
the eviction
proceedings against the first and second respondents should the
respondents fail to vacate the property by 1 August
2024.’
3.
There is no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Nicholls JA (Meyer and
Matojane JJA and Coppin and Mbhele AJJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against a decision of the Land
Claims Court (LCC) which dismissed an application for eviction in
terms of the
Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA).
The appellant is Goedverwachting Farm (Pty) Ltd (Goedverwachting),
the registered
owner of portion 17 of the farm Goedverwachting,
number 442, Registration Division IR, Gauteng Province (the farm).
The first respondent
is Adriaan Johannes Roux (Mr Roux) and the
second respondent is all those persons who occupy the farm through Mr
Roux. The third
respondent is the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality and the fourth is the Minister of Agriculture and Land
Affairs.
No relief is sought against the third and fourth
respondents. Mr Roux and those occupying through him will be referred
to as the
respondents. This appeal is with the leave of the LCC.
[2]
The issue in this appeal is one of jurisdiction,
namely whether Mr Roux falls within the definition of an ‘occupier’
in terms of ESTA. If not, the LCC does not have the necessary
jurisdiction. An ‘occupier’ is defined in terms of s
1 of
ESTA as follows:
‘“
occupier”
means a person residing on land which belongs to another person, and
who on 4 February 1997 or thereafter, had consent
or another right in
law to do so, but excluding–
(a)
. . .
(b)
a person using or intending to use the land in
question mainly for industrial, mining, commercial or commercial
farming purposes,
but including a person who works the land himself
or herself and does not employ any person who is not a member of his
or her family;
and
(c)
. . .’
[3]
It is not disputed that the farm in question is
agricultural land and that at some stage, Mr Roux had consent to
occupy the farm.
The narrow question for determination is whether
commercial farming was conducted on the farm, and if so, whether
there were persons
other than Mr Roux and his family members employed
on the farm. Subsection
(b)
of the definition thus contains an exclusion from
the definition of occupier and an inclusion in prescribed
circumstances.
[4]
The LCC, based on a probation officer’s
report in terms of s 9(5) of the Act (the report), found that Mr Roux
was excluded
from the definition of occupier because he was
conducting commercial farming on the land, as envisaged in s (1)
(b)
of the definition of occupier. It accordingly held
that the LCC did not have the jurisdiction to determine the eviction.
The court
did not deal with the inclusionary aspect at all, namely
whether Mr Roux worked the land himself and employed only family
members. That commercial farming was taking place is denied by
Goedverwachting, who argue that this was not justified on the facts
before court. Moreover, this was not an issue in dispute between the
parties, or pleaded by them.
[5]
The respondents’ occupancy is not in
dispute. Mr Roux and all those occupying through him have been
residing on the property
since 2017, initially with the consent of
Barend Frederik Keet (Mr Keet), the previous owner. The applicant
states that the respondents
had a ‘temporally limited consent
to occupy the property’ afforded to them by Mr Keet, which was
properly terminated.
According to Mr Keet, prior to the property
being sold to Goedverwachting, he was approached by members of Deneys
Swiss Dairy (Pty)
Ltd (Deneys) who expressed an intention to purchase
the property and run a dairy business on the land. Pursuant to the
proposed
purchase the respondents were afforded a conditional right
of tenancy on condition that the agreed purchase price was paid on
the
agreed terms. Deneys, according to Mr Keet, breached the purchase
agreement and any right it had to the tenancy of the property
was
terminated. The agreement of sale was cancelled and the property
thereafter sold to Goedverwachting.
[6]
Correspondence between Mr Keet’s attorneys
and Mr Roux bears this out. A letter dated 5 June 2017, in which
reference was
made to a previous letter dated 11 May 2017, was served
personally on Mr Roux on 14 June 2017. It refers to the breach of the
sale
agreement and informs Mr Roux and Ms McGovern of the immediate
cancellation of the contract and their concomitant obligation to
vacate the premises. Two years later on 14 June 2019, another letter
was sent to Mr Roux by Mr Keet’s attorney stating that
since
the cancellation of the sale agreement in 2017, the respondents had
been in unlawful occupation and had paid no occupational
rental. Mr
Roux was invited to a roundtable conference and to settle the matter,
failing which Mr Keet would institute legal proceedings
for eviction.
It appears that the respondents did not attend any meeting.
[7]
The
property was then sold by Mr Keet to Goedverwachting on 9 December
2020 with transfer taking place on 24 June 2021. The Deed
of Transfer
registered in the Deeds Office as T41994/2021 is proof of
Goedverwachting’s ownership of the farm. Still, the
respondents
refused to vacate the property. This resulted in a notice in terms of
s 8
[1]
of ESTA being dispatched
to the respondents. Section 8 of ESTA provides that an occupier’s
right of residence may be terminated
if it is just and equitable. It
then sets out factors to be taken into consideration in determining
this. Despite receiving the
notice, no response was forthcoming from
the respondents.
[8]
The
present eviction application was launched on 15 September 2022 in
terms of s 9
[2]
of ESTA on the
basis that the statutory requirements of s 8 had been complied with
and that the consent to occupy had been properly
terminated. It is
not disputed that Mr Roux had alternative accommodation in the
form of a small holding in the Free State.
It was alleged that his
continued occupation of the farm had resulted in the deterioration
and gradual degradation of the property.
Attached to the papers are
various aerial photographs which depict a decrepit-looking farmhouse
with animals such as donkeys, chickens
and goats freely roaming on
the property. These photographs had to be taken utilising a drone and
a helicopter as the respondents
had refused representatives of
Goedverwachting any access to the farm. In addition, it was stated
that Goedverwachting, which was
to have operated a cattle farming
business, was losing substantial sums of money by the continued
occupation of the property by
the respondents.
[9]
Preempting the
defence of the respondents that their entitlement to the land was by
virtue of their early occupation of the land
as Khoi and San people,
attached to the founding affidavit of the appellant is a document
purporting to be an aboriginal title
of the Gona-Hesse !Khwe Royal
Kingdom officially endorsed by King Gqona Cornelius Botha (Mr Botha).
A notice of the Kingdom declares
that Mr Roux occupies the farm by
virtue of his aboriginal title ‘and in conjunction with the
Customary Law and Constitution
of South Africa (1996)’. The
deponent to the appellant’s affidavit, a director of
Goedverwachting, alleges that this
is a fictitiously created document
and the stamp it bears of the Midvaal Municipality was fraudulently
obtained. The date stamp
has allegedly also been tampered with. The
Midvaal Municipality has indicated that it has no knowledge of the
document. Nothing
was put up to refute this.
[10]
Two answering
affidavits have been filed. The first is that of Mr Botha, apparently
in the name of the Gonas Customary & Indigenous
Law Agency, and
in his capacity as King of the Gona-Hesse !Khwe Royal Kingdom. He
states that Mr Roux and the members of Deneys
are members of his
kingdom and that
the land was stolen
from his forefathers, the Gona-Hesse !Khwe people who are the real
landowners and the true indigenous aboriginal
people of South Africa.
As such, Goedverwachting and Mr Keet are in possession of ‘stolen
goods’- the land that was
stolen from their forefathers and
never returned to them. Mr Botha denies staying on the farm which he
describes as a false accusation
by Goedverwachting. He did however
assist Mr Roux and the Deneys Swiss Dairy as they are members of the
Gona-Hesse !Khwe Royal
Kingdom. Numerous allegations of dishonesty
and fraud are made against Mr Keet.
[11]
Mr Roux in a similar vein relies on the ‘Gonas
Customary & Indigenous Law System’ to assert ownership of
the farm
and states that he does not, and will not, unlawfully occupy
any land. In relation to the facts contained in the founding
affidavit,
he states that Mr Keet sold the property to Deneys and the
members of Deneys gave them ‘permission to look after the
farm’.
Hilda McGovern, Mr Roux’s daughter, filed a
confirmatory affidavit wherein she confirms that she is a member of
Deneys and
gave Mr Roux permission to stay on the farm after Deneys
‘paid’ Mr Keet for the farm. No evidence of any payment
is
attached in substantiation.
[12]
The only defence put up by the respondents is that
the land in question belonged to them by virtue of their aboriginal
title and
because they had purchased the farm. No evidence was
provided to support this defence. What is singularly lacking in both
answering
affidavits is any allegation that the land was being
operated as a commercial venture at the time the eviction was sought.
Nor
is there any description of who worked on the farm. By relying on
their indigenous rights to the land, the issue of whether the
appellant is entitled to evict the respondents in terms of ESTA or
whether they are occupiers in terms of ESTA is not pertinently
addressed. Instead, the case made out by the respondents is that they
are in legal occupation by virtue of their indigenous title
to the
land, alternatively that they are the owners of the land having
purchased it from Mr Keet.
[13]
It is very difficult to ascertain the situation of
Deneys on the papers before this court. However, what is evident is
that the
dairy business did not succeed and Deneys went into
voluntary liquidation at the hands of Ms McGovern who filed a special
resolution
in terms of
s 352(2)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
. A
final liquidation order was granted on 4 November 2020. It appears
that during mid 2022, members of Deneys unsuccessfully
attempted to
have the liquidation set aside on the basis that there was value in
the equity and goodwill in the brand of Deneys
Swiss Dairy. From
excerpts of the affidavits in the various applications, it is evident
that the business of Deneys had stopped
operating and had completely
closed by December 2019. Mr Roux himself stated under oath on 9 April
2021 that by 6 April 2021
‘there was not a single
item on the premises that belonged to Deneys Swiss Dairy’.
[14]
The confusion was further compounded by the
respondents’ heads of argument which were filed late and for
which condonation
was sought, and granted. In this Court, as in the
LCC, Mr Roux refused legal representation. He insisted that lawyers
were not
to be trusted and that his daughter, Ms McGovern, would
argue on his behalf. He explained that persons with legal knowledge
had
assisted him in drafting his heads of argument. Apart from
asserting their original aboriginal title to the land, the main
thrust
of the heads of argument is that the legal representatives of
Goedverwachting had fraudulently and dishonestly omitted to include
portions of the record which would further Mr Roux’s case. This
is an apparent reference to papers where Ms McGovern applied
to be an
intervening party in the present case and an application to set aside
the liquidation of Deneys. It was alleged that Deneys
is not in
voluntary liquidation and that Ms McGovern was coerced into signing
the necessary documents and resolutions. As a result,
an urgent
application for the rescission of the liquidation was to be brought,
and a further attempt was made to justify Ms McGovern’s
intervention as an interested party in these proceedings. Ms McGovern
confirmed that both the application for the rescission of
the
liquidation of Deneys and the application for Ms McGovern to be
admitted as an intervening party had been heard by the time
the
matter was heard in this Court. Both applications were dismissed and
have not been appealed. Despite the heavy reliance on
the alleged
wrongdoings in respect of these applications in the heads of
argument, these applications are not relevant to the issue
before
this Court which is whether a commercial enterprise was being
conducted on the farm at the time the eviction was sought.
[15]
As
indicated, the finding of the LCC that the respondents did not fall
within the purview of ESTA, was based solely on the probation
officer’s report dated 25 October 2022 provided by
the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development.
In
terms of
s 9(2)
(c)
of
ESTA a court is compelled to obtain a report to ensure the
‘conditions for an order for eviction in terms of
section 10
or
11
have been complied with’. Section 26(3) of the Constitution
requires a court to consider all relevant circumstances before
ordering an eviction. The probation officer’s report is merely
a mechanism to place information before a court to enable
it to
comply with its constitutional obligations.
[3]
The content of the report enables the court to get an indication of
what constitutional rights are implicated, including any rights
to
education of the children on the property; the availability of
alternative accommodation to the occupier; and any other hardships
that the eviction may cause the occupier. Thus the role of a
probation officer’s report is to assist the court in
determining
whether an eviction would be just and equitable in the
circumstances of a particular case.
[16]
The purpose for which such reports are made is
clearly set out in s 9(3) of the Act which provides as follows:
‘
For
the purposes of subsection (2)
(c)
,
the Court must request a probation officer contemplated in section 1
of the Probation Services Act, 1991 (Act 116 of 1991), or
an officer
of the department or any other officer in the employment of the
State, as may be determined by the Minister, to submit
a report
within a reasonable period-
(a)
on the availability of suitable alternative accommodation to the
occupier;
(b)
indicating how an eviction will affect the constitutional rights of
any affected person, including the rights of the
children, if any, to
education;
(c)
pointing out any undue hardships which an eviction would cause the
occupier; and
(d)
on any other matter as may be prescribed.’
[17]
The sole statement in the report upon which the LCC relied to find
that a commercial enterprise was
being conducted on the farm was the
following:
‘
During
the 7 years residing on the farm [Mr Roux] has also indicated that he
has been farming with livestock which consist of 200
pigs and 18
cattle.’
The version apparently
given to the probation officer by Mr Roux was that Deneys had entered
into an agreement with Mr Keet to acquire
the farm for R5 million.
This was to be paid in cash of R900 000; cows to the value of R2
million and livestock feed to the value
of R1,2 million. A total of
R4,1 million had already been paid.
[18]
Relying on the above, the LCC made the following
finding:
‘
[36]
Section 1 excludes from the definition of an occupier a person using
or intending to use the land in question mainly for industrial,
mining, commercial, or commercial farming purposes. On the facts of
this case, the respondents have been occupying the premises
since
2017 through Deneys Dairy which had an intention to purchase the farm
for commercial purposes. The respondents were granted
consent to
occupy the farm pending payment of the purchase price. Clearly this
was a commercial enterprise, and that it failed,
and with the
respondents continuing to occupy the property despite not having
fulfilled the suspensive condition does not find
for their consent in
occupation of the property nor bring them in the ambit of occupiers
in terms of ESTA.
[37] The Probation report
notes that the first respondent operates a farming business which
consists of 200 pigs and 18 cattle,
a commercial business. The
respondents are simply excluded by section 1 by reason of the
commercial enterprise. That their agreed
facts stated to the
contrary, they are wrong in law.’
[19]
The first point is that the probation officer’s
report cannot usurp the court’s discretion as to whether an
eviction
should be granted. Secondly, the report is not made under
oath. It is, therefore, not evidence before the Court. Thirdly, even
on Mr Roux’s own version, it contained factual inaccuracies.
These included the duration of his tenancy on the farm; the identity
of the other occupants and his dependency on a state pension, an
anomalous situation if the farm were a functioning commercial
enterprise. That he received a social grant was vehemently denied by
Mr Roux.
[20]
The reference to livestock numbers is not
sufficient to establish the scale and nature of any commercial
enterprise. The report
itself does not suggest that a commercial
venture was being conducted and no mention is made of a functioning
dairy. There is no
evidence of any commercial activity at the time
the eviction application was launched. The aerial photographs taken
in 2022 do
not reflect this. If indeed a business enterprise were
operating on the farm, one would have expected some financial
information
to be provided. But more importantly, this was not the
version put up by the respondents.
[21]
This
Court has repeatedly emphasised that the function of judicial
officers is to determine the issues before them and to confine
themselves to such issues. It is for the parties to set out and
define the nature of their dispute in the pleadings and the court
to
then adjudicate on the issues so defined.
[4]
It is not for the judicial officer to create new factual issues
particularly where the parties were not asked for their submissions
whether this was an appropriate approach to the matter, or even
whether the issue was in dispute.
[22]
The
probation officer’s report cannot be used as a substitute for
evidence. It was incumbent upon the respondents to raise
the issue
that they did not fall within the definition of an occupier in terms
of ESTA and to set out the reasons therefor. The
LCC impermissibly
took it upon itself to make a finding on an issue that was not in
dispute between the parties without hearing
either party on the
issue. In doing so, the LCC erred in finding that the
respondents were excluded from the definition of
‘occupier’
under s 1 of ESTA and dismissing the application for eviction on this
basis. Taking into consideration that
the requirements of s 11
[5]
of ESTA have been complied with, it is just and equitable to grant an
order for eviction against Mr Roux and all those occupying
through
him.
[23]
As regards costs, Goedverwachting acknowledged
because land claims invariably deal with vulnerable persons, costs
are only awarded
in exceptional circumstances. However, it was
contended that a costs order was warranted against the respondents as
they had been
in unlawful occupation since 2017 without paying any
rental. This had resulted in ongoing financial losses.
Goedverwachting only
took transfer of the property in June 2021 so
any financial losses can only have taken place thereafter. In
any event I am
not persuaded that that this is an exceptional
circumstance which would justify a costs order against the
respondents.
[24]
Although Goedverwachting seeks the immediate
eviction of the respondents, it was conceded that this would be
unduly harsh. In view
of the fact that the respondents have been
residing on the farm for a number of years, it is just and equitable
that they be given
a couple of months within which to vacate the
property.
[25]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the Land Claims Court is set aside and substituted with
the following:
‘
1.
The first and second respondents are to be evicted from portion 17 of
the farm Goedverwachting, number 442, Registration Division
IR,
Gauteng Province on or before 31 July 2024.
2. The Sheriff of the
Court, together with the assistance of the South African Police
Services, if necessary, is authorised to execute
the eviction
proceedings against the first and second respondents should the
respondents fail to vacate the property by 1 August
2024.’
3.
There is no order as to costs.
_____________________
C
E
HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the Appellant:
L van Gass
Instructed by: Van
Greunen & Associates Inc, Pretoria
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the Respondent: A.J
Roux (in person)
H McGovern (in person)
[1]
Section
8(1) of ESTA provides as follows:
‘
8
Termination
of right of residence
(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]
Section
9 of ESTA provides 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 the Court issued
under this Act.
(2) The 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 Rural
Development and Land Reform, 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 the 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 Rural Development and Land Reform 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.
(3) …’
[3]
Valley
Packers Co-operative Limited v Dietloff and Another
[2000]
ZALCC 47
;
[2001] 2 All SA 30
(LCC) para 7;
Nederburg
Wines (Pty) Ltd v Nero and Others
[2018]
ZASCA 119
paras 7-9.
[4]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA);
[2009] 2 All SA 243
paras 15-16;
Advertising
Regulatory Board NPC and Others v Bliss Brands
(Pty)
Ltd
[2022]
ZASCA 51
;
[2022] All SA 607
(SCA);
2022 (4) SA 57
(SCA) para 9;
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA) para 15;
Road
Accident Fund v MKM obo KM and Another
;
Road
Accident Fund v NM obo CM and Another
[2023]
ZASCA 50
;
[2023] 2 All SA 613
(SCA);
2023 (4) SA 516
(SCA) para
66.
[5]
Section
11(2) provides that a Court may grant an eviction order in respect
of any person who became an occupier after 4 February
1997 if it is
just and equitable to do so while section 11(3) sets what factors
the court should have regard to. These include
the length of
occupation of the land, the reason for the eviction, whether there
is suitable alternative accommodation and the
balance of interests
between the owner and the occupiers.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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