Case Law[2023] ZASCA 108South Africa
Stay At South Point Properties (Pty) Ltd v Mqulwana and Others (UCT intervening as amicus curiae) (1335/2021) [2023] ZASCA 108; 2024 (2) SA 640 (SCA) (3 July 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Eviction – applicability of the provisions of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) to student residence at a higher education institution – residence not considered a home – PIE not applicable.
Judgment
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## Stay At South Point Properties (Pty) Ltd v Mqulwana and Others (UCT intervening as amicus curiae) (1335/2021) [2023] ZASCA 108; 2024 (2) SA 640 (SCA) (3 July 2023)
Stay At South Point Properties (Pty) Ltd v Mqulwana and Others (UCT intervening as amicus curiae) (1335/2021) [2023] ZASCA 108; 2024 (2) SA 640 (SCA) (3 July 2023)
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sino date 3 July 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 1335/2021
In the matter between:
STAY AT SOUTH POINT
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
ABULELE
MQULWANA
FIRST RESPONDENT
AKHONA
NTOTHO
SECOND RESPONDENT
AMANDA
MSABA
THIRD RESPONDENT
ANDILE
PHAKADE
FOURTH RESPONDENT
ANDISIWE
SITYATA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
APHIWE
MASEBENI
SIXTH RESPONDENT
ASEMAHLE
DANGISA
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
AVILE
GIYAMA
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
AVUMILE
MZANTSI
NINTH RESPONDENT
AVUYILE
SOMAGAGU
TENTH RESPONDENT
AWODWA
PICANE
ELEVENTH RESPONDENT
AYANDA BUHLEBEMVULO
SIKO
TWELFTH RESPONDENT
BONGA
GWABENI
THIRTEENTH RESPONDENT
BONGANI
PUZA
FOURTEENTH RESPONDENT
BUKHO
MANGALI
FIFTEENTH RESPONDENT
EYRAM
ADALETE
SIXTEENTH RESPONDENT
FULUFHELO LENNOSE
KHOMOLA
SEVENTEENTH
RESPONDENT
GLODIE
KABUYA
EIGHTEENTH RESPONDENT
IVIWE
LOLIWE
NINETEENTH RESPONDENT
KAMVELIHLE
MDAYI
TWENTIETH RESPONDENT
KELETSO
QHETSU
TWENTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
KHANYISILE
DUBULA
TWENTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
KHOLIWE
NGUMBE
TWENTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
LELOKA
MOTHIBE
TWENTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
LERATO
NGQOBWA
TWENTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
LESIBA
KHALO
TWENTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
LIMPHO
RANAMANE
TWENTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
LITHAKAZI
MQUQU
TWENTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
LONWABO
ALVIN
TWENTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
LONWABO
NOFEMELE
THIRTIETH RESPONDENT
LULAMILE
DYANI
THIRTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
LUNGELO
MNGUNI
THIRTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
LUTHOLWETHU
NTLOKO
THIRTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
LWANDO
MKWANE
THIRTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
MANCOBA
VUYISANANI
THIRTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
MBONGENI
BOQWANA
THIRTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
MDUNA
AKHONA
THIRTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
MELINDA
SOGIBA
THIRTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
MIHLALI
SITYATA
THIRTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
MINENHLE SG
NGWENYA
FORTIETH RESPONDENT
MOJAKI
REETUMETSI
FORTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
MPHO-ENTLE
MOKOENA
FORTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
MVELELI
MADOTYENI
FORTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
NEO
MONGALE
FORTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
NHLANHLA
MKHITHIKA
FORTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
NJABULO
NHANZI
FORTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
NOLUVUYO
NOCANDA
FORTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
NTANDO
TSHANAVHA
FORTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
NTLAKANIPHO
NIKA
FORTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
NTOBEKA
SEKHUKHUNI
FIFTIETH RESPONDENT
NTOKOZO
MASEKO
FIFTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
OKUHLE
JAMES
FIFTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
PAMELA
NKOMANA
FIFTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
PHELOKAZI
NTOLA
FIFTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
PHUMZA
MHAGA
FIFTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
SANDISIWE
CHWAYI
FIFTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
SANDISO
MBANJWA
FIFTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SIHLE
YANI
FIFTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
SIKHO SISONKE
MBOTO
FIFTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
SIMAMKELE
NCWADI
SIXTIETH RESPONDENT
SINDISWA
SIYAKA
SIXTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
SINOXOLO
MDAKA
SIXTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
SIPHAMANDLA
QOLI
SIXTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
SIPHENATHI
MZWALI
SIXTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
SIPHO
NUSE
SIXTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
SIPHO
VONGWE
SIXTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
SITHSABA
MACEMBE
SIXTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SIXOLILE
MADWARA
SIXTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
SIZWE
TYOKWANA
SIXTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
SOUKE
MDIYANA
SEVENTIETH RESPONDENT
WILLIAM
MAKASHANE
SEVENTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
XOLANI JAFTA
SEVENTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
YAMKELA
MVULANKULU
SEVENTY-THIRD RESPONDENT
YONELA
DALASILE
SEVENTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
ZIMASA
KATA
SEVENTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
ZIPHINDILE
NYOKANA
SEVENTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
ZIPHO
MHLABA
SEVENTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
ZIZIPHO
DANO
SEVENTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
BONGA
NOBOKWANA
SEVENTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
GERALD THABO
MASUKU
EIGHTIETH RESPONDENT
ITUMELENG
DWANGU
EIGHTY-FIRST RESPONDENT
KONELE
MHLOTYANA
EIGHTY-SECOND RESPONDENT
LEHLOHONOLO THABISO
MOLOMO
EIGHTY-THIRD
RESPONDENT
LUNGA
DINISO
EIGHTY-FOURTH RESPONDENT
MASENTLE
PONI
EIGHTY-FIFTH RESPONDENT
MTHANDENI NKAZIMULO
CELE
EIGHTY-SIXTH RESPONDENT
NOZIPHO PETUNIA
KHUZWAYO
EIGHTY-SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SIPHOSETHU
THOBIGUNYA
EIGHTY-EIGHTH RESPONDENT
THANDOLWETHU
MYATAZA
EIGHTY-NINTH RESPONDENT
VIWE PRINCESS
NJONGO
NINETIETH RESPONDENT
UNIVERSITY OF CAPE
TOWN
AMICUS CURIAE
Neutral
citation:
Stay
At South Point Properties (Pty) Ltd v Mqulwana and Others (UCT
intervening as amicus curiae)
(1335/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 108 (3 July 2023)
Coram:
SALDULKER, ZONDI and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and MALI
and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
21
February 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and
release to SAFLII. The date for hand down is deemed to be 3 July 2023
at 11h00.
Summary:
Eviction –
applicability of the provisions of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
19 of 1998 (PIE) to student
residence at a higher education institution
–
residence
not considered a home – PIE not applicable.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Baartman J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a)
It is declared that the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
19 of 1998 did not apply to the
unlawful occupation by the respondents of their student
accommodation, and the applicant was entitled
to secure their
eviction.
(b)
Each party to pay its own costs.’
JUDGMENT
Mali AJA (Saldulker,
Zondi and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Unterhalter AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the order of the
Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the high court)
discharging a rule
nisi
and dismissing the appellant’s application to evict the
respondents, with costs, including the costs of two counsel. The
respondents had been called upon to show cause why they should not be
evicted from the student residence which they continued to
occupy
without the consent of the owner of the property. Leave to appeal to
this Court was granted by the high court.
[2]
The appellant is the owner and the manager
of a residence, known as New Market Junction (the residence). It is a
residence for students
enrolled at the Cape Peninsula University of
Technology (CPUT). The respondents are all students who were studying
at CPUT during
the 2020 academic year. The University of Cape Town
(UCT) was admitted as an
amicus curiae
in the appeal.
[3]
The appellant leased the residence to CPUT
for purposes of providing student accommodation. The respondents were
allocated accommodation
by CPUT in the residence until the end of
November 2020. However, they remained in occupation of the residence
and refused to vacate,
after CPUT gave them notice to do so within 72
hours of their last examination of the 2020 academic year, in terms
of its procedures.
The seventy-ninth to ninetieth respondents were
granted permission to remain in the residence for the 2021 academic
year, but they
were required to vacate the premises at the end of
2020 and stay in alternative premises, which the appellant had made
available,
so that maintenance and decontamination could be done.
These respondents also refused to vacate the residence. Consequently,
the
appellant summoned private security guards to remove them
forcibly on 12 January 2021. When the respondents resisted their
forcible
removal, the appellant approached the high court on 15
January 2021 for an order to evict the respondents from the
residence. The
appellant relied upon the
rei
vindicatio
to do so.
[4]
The
respondents contended that the appellant was non-suited on the basis
that the provisions of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) applied to the
proceedings brought by the appellant and to the extent
that the
appellant failed to bring the eviction proceedings in terms of PIE,
the application was fatally defective.The appellant
contended that
the residence did not constitute the respondents’ home, and if
evicted, they would not be rendered homeless,
because they had homes
to go to. For this reason, the appellant submitted that PIE did not
find application. In the alternative,
the appellant contended that
should PIE be applicable, then the eviction order nevertheless ought
to be granted in terms of s 5
of PIE.
[1]
[5]
At the commencement of the hearing in this
Court, we were informed that the respondents were no longer in
occupation of the residence.
That rendered the appeal moot. Both
parties agreed, however, that this appeal ought to proceed because of
the wider and far-reaching
implications of the eviction of students
from student accommodation. I am also persuaded that this Court
should hear the appeal,
because the rights and duties of students
provided with accommodation by CPUT is an issue of recurring
controversy.
[6]
PIE was promulgated to give effect to s
26(3) of the Constitution. Section 26(3) provides that ‘[n]o
one may be evicted from
their home
. . . without an order of court made after considering all the
relevant circumstances’. (My emphasis.)
[7]
PIE’s Preamble, in relevant part,
provides:
‘
WHEREAS
no one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general
application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation
of property;
AND WHEREAS no one may be
evicted from
their home
, or have their home demolished without
an order of court made after considering all the relevant
circumstances;
AND
WHEREAS it is desirable that the law should regulate the eviction of
unlawful occupiers from land in a fair manner, while recognising
the
right of land owners to apply to a court for an eviction
order in appropriate circumstances.’
(My
emphasis.)
[8]
Section 2 of PIE provides as follows:
‘
This
Act applies in respect of all land throughout the Republic.’
Section 4(7) of PIE
states:
‘
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.’ (My
emphasis.)
[9]
Although
the substantive provisions of PIE reference the occupation of land,
it is plain that PIE gives effect to the constitutional
protections
against the peril of homelessness. It follows that, if the occupation
of land does not constitute the home of an occupier,
PIE does not
find application. Further support for this proposition is found in
Lester
v Ndlambe Municipality and Another
.
[2]
There, this Court stated that s 26(3) needs to be read against
the backdrop of s 26(1), that is, the right of access to adequate
housing.
[3]
It has been found
that where one cannot demonstrate that one would be without
alternative accommodation, and thus be rendered homeless,
the
protection of s 26(3) does not find application.
[10]
What
then is a home? This Court in
Barnett
[4]
held that the sensible and ordinary meaning of home is a place with
‘regular occupation coupled with some degree of permanence’.
At para 37 it further said:
‘
I
believe it can be accepted with confidence that PIE only applies to
the eviction of persons from their
homes
.
Though this is not expressly stated by the operative provisions of
PIE, it is borne out, firstly, by the use of terminology such
as
“relocation” and “reside” (in sections 4(7)
and 4(9)) and, secondly, by the wording of the preamble,
which, in
turn establishes a direct link with section 26(3) of the Constitution
(see eg
Ndlovu v Ngcobo; Bekker and
Another v Jika
2003 (1) SA 113
(SCA)
paragraph 3).’
[11]
The central issue in this appeal is
whether, given what this Court has held a home to be for the purposes
of s 26(3) of the Constitution
and its implementation in PIE, the
provision of student accommodation by CPUT to its students
constitutes a home, so as to render
PIE of application.
[12]
There are three important features of the
accommodation afforded by CPUT to the respondents which are relevant.
First, the students
came from homes in order to study at the
university. Unless otherwise demonstrated, student accommodation does
not displace or
replace the homes from which students come, and
hence, logically, the respondents have homes other than the
residence. There is
then no basis to seek the protection of PIE.
Eviction does not render the students homeless.
[13]
Second, the provision of student
accommodation is for a finite period of time and it has a limited and
defined purpose, that is,
to accommodate students for the duration of
the academic year and thereby assist them to study at the university.
The arrangement
is by its nature temporary and for a purpose that is
transitory. Students who are assisted by CPUT with accommodation are
well
aware that this valuable benefit is of limited duration.
[14]
Some legislative background is relevant to
the third feature of the accommodation afforded to the respondents by
CPUT. The
amicus
advanced submissions which placed the provision of student
accommodation within the context of the Higher Education Act 101 of
1997 (HEA). UCT, for example, provides student accommodation, both on
and off campus, to 8 040 students of some 28 000 students
who are
registered at the university. The
amicus
submitted that student accommodation is primarily an incident of the
right to access to higher education, and higher education
institutions, such as UCT, regulate access to student accommodation
in terms of its institutional rules.
[15]
In
this regard, the
amicus
referred to the Policy on the Minimum Norms and Standards for Student
Housing at Public Universities
[5]
(the Policy). The Policy, in relevant part, states as follows:
‘
The
Policy is applicable
to
all public universities and privately owned accommodation accredited
by public universities
. These Norms and
Standards should be incorporated into the criteria developed by
each
public university
and stipulated in the
university’s policy and rules. Private providers shall
establish clear and comprehensive standard lease
agreements after
consultation with relevant University officials and student
representatives. Universities should rate and differentiate
off-campus student accommodation according to standards set by each
University.’ (My emphasis.)
[16]
This legislative backdrop is relevant to
the third feature of the accommodation afforded to the respondents.
This is particularly
so in the context of the current scarcity of
student housing in the higher education sector in our country. Those
who are fortunate
enough to benefit from accommodation provided by
CPUT know full well that each and every year new students come to the
university
who legitimately look to the university for the very
assistance that the respondents enjoyed. Equity requires that those
who have
had the benefit of accommodation should yield to those who
have not. And nothing about the position of the respondents suggests
that this equitable principle should not continue to apply. It is
also for this reason, as the
amicus
reminded us, that student accommodation
forms part of the larger policy framework of higher education.
[17]
These features of the student accommodation
made available to the respondents indicate that this accommodation is
not a home. It
is a residence, of limited duration, for a specific
purpose, that is time-bound by the academic year, and that is, for
important
reasons, subject to rotation.
[18]
It follows that PIE did not apply to the
respondents’ occupation of the property. The appellant was thus
entitled to evict
the respondents in reliance upon the
rei
vindicatio
. The high court’s
refusal to order the respondents’ eviction was therefore in
error. Accordingly, the appeal must be
upheld.
[19]
As the respondents have now vacated the
property, we do not order their eviction. It suffices to declare that
PIE did not apply
to the unlawful occupation by the respondents of
their student accommodation. The appellant was entitled to secure
their eviction.
As to costs, the appellants rightly did not seek a
costs order against the respondents.
[20]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a)
It is declared that the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
19 of 1998 did not apply to the
unlawful occupation by the respondents of their student
accommodation, and the applicant was entitled
to secure their
eviction.
(b)
Each party to pay its own costs.’
________________________
N P MALI
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
D
C Joubert SC
Instructed
by:
Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr, Cape Town
Claude
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
R
Nyman with N Mashava
Instructed
by:
Herold
Gie Attorneys, Cape Town
McIntyre
Van der Post, Bloemfontein
For
the amicus curiae:
M
O’Sullivan with T Sarkas
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges
Wertheim Becker, Cape Town
Lovius
Block Incorporated, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
5 provides for urgent
evictions
of an unlawful occupier pending the outcome of proceedings for a
final order. The court may grant such an order if it
is satisfied
that, inter alia, ‘there is a real and imminent danger of
substantial injury or damage to any person or property
if the
unlawful occupier is not forthwith evicted from the land’.
[2]
Lester
v Ndlambe Municipality and Another
[2013] ZASCA 95; 2015 (6) SA 283 (SCA); [2014] 1 All SA 402 (SCA).
[3]
Ibid
para 17.
[4]
Barnett
and Others v Minister of Land Affairs and Others
[2007] ZASCA 95
;
2007 (6) SA 313
(SCA);
2007 (11) BCLR 1214
(SCA)
para 38.
[5]
Policy
on the Minimum Norms and Standards for Student Housing at Public
Universities, GN R 897,
GG
39238
,
29 September 2015.
sino noindex
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