Case Law[2022] ZASCA 40South Africa
Maluleke N.O. v Sibanyoni and Others (1012/2020) [2022] ZASCA 40 (4 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Land – Land Reform –Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) – termination of right of residence – were occupiers given an effective opportunity to make representations before termination of right to residence in terms of s 8(1)(e) – if not, was the termination of right of residence just and equitable.
Judgment
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## Maluleke N.O. v Sibanyoni and Others (1012/2020) [2022] ZASCA 40 (4 April 2022)
Maluleke N.O. v Sibanyoni and Others (1012/2020) [2022] ZASCA 40 (4 April 2022)
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sino date 4 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 1012/2020
LCC Case No: 59/2018
In
the matter between:
TIMOTHY
MALULEKE N.O.
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as trustee of
the
(Applicant
in the Court a quo)
Hlaniki
Trust IT 1101/2007)
and
DANIEL
PHELLIMON SIBANYONI
FIRST RESPONDENT
(First
Respondent in the Court a quo)
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
(Second
Respondent in the Court a quo)
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL: DEPARTMENT
OF
RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND
LAND
REFORM
THIRD RESPONDENT
(Third
Respondent in the Court a quo)
Neutral
citation:
Timothy
Maluleke N.O. v Daniel Phellimon Sibanyoni and Others
(Case
no 1012/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 40
(04 April 2022)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MOLEMELA AND CARELSE JJA AND
MUSI AND SMITH AJJA
Heard
:
23 February 2022
Delivered
:
04 April 2022
Summary:
Land – Land
Reform –Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) –
termination of right of residence – were occupiers
given an
effective opportunity to make representations before termination of
right to residence in terms of s 8(1)
(e)
– if not, was the termination of right of residence just and
equitable.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Land
Claims Court, Randburg (Spilg J, sitting as court of first instance):
judgment reported
sub
nom Timothy v Sibanyoni and Others
(LCC/24/2009)
[2009] ZALCC 8
(5 August 2020)
1
The appeal is
dismissed.
2
No order as to costs.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Carelse
JA (Mocumie, Molemela and Carelse JJJA and Musi and Smith AJJA –
concurring)
[1]
The central issue in
this appeal is whether the termination of the first respondent’s
(Mr Sibanyoni) right to reside on a farm was
just and equitable both
in substance and procedure in terms of s 8(1) of the Extension of
Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA).
This appeal is with leave
of the Land Claims Court (LCC).
[2]
The appellant,
the Hlaniki Trust (the Trust) sought the eviction of Mr Sibanyoni,
under ESTA from portion 5 (a portion of Portion
4) of the farm
Tweefontein 541, Registration Division JR, Province of Gauteng (farm)
measuring 498,8842 hectares. In 2015, the Trust
bought the farm, from
the previous owner, the Tweefontien Trust represented by Ms Viljoen
without knowing about Mr Sibanyoni’s
occupation.
[3]
Mr Sibanyoni, at the time of the application was 56 years old. He
resided in a labourer’s cottage on
the farm with his wife, niece,
nephew and mother. Subsequent to the launch of the application, Mr
Sibanyoni’s mother has since
died.
[4]
Both Mr Sibanyoni’s parents resided on the farm. He was born and
raised there. According to him, his late
father and the previous
owner had a verbal agreement in terms of which they were given rights
to a portion of the farm which they
used for cropping and grazing as
part payment for their labour.
[5]
The Trust disputed the agreement. It alleges that it was only
in 2017, when the sheriff attempted
to serve documents on Mr Johannes
Sibanyoni, (the older brother of the appellant, Mr Sibanyoni) that it
became aware that Mr Sibanyoni
and his family resided on the farm.
Furthermore, the Trust alleges that Mr Sibanyoni and Mr Johannes
Sibanyoni shared a labourer’s
cottage on the farm.
[6]
Disputing this, Mr Sibanyoni contends that he lived in a separate
labourer’s cottage on the farm. It
is not disputed that Mr
Sibanyoni has 30 cows and a number of goats and chickens. According
to Mr Sibanyoni he was employed
as a seasonal worker. However, it is
common cause that he is not, and never was, employed by the Trust.
[7]
In its founding affidavit, the Trust alleges that Mr Sibanyoni moved
onto the farm after 4 February 1997
without the necessary consent.
Notwithstanding this contention by the Trust, at the hearing of this
appeal, the Trust conceded that
Mr Sibanyoni is, in fact, an
occupier.
[1]
Initially in
issue, was whether Mr Sibanyoni arrived on the farm before or after
1997. However, during argument, the Trust
conceded that Mr Sibanyoni
arrived on the farm before 4 February 1997. Section 9(2) (c) of ESTA
requires compliance with section
10 of ESTA, if the person to be
evicted was already an occupier on 4 February 1997, and compliance
with s 11 if the person became
an occupier after 4 February 1997. It
follows that the provisions of s 10
[2]
and not s 11
[3]
in terms of ESTA
apply.
[8]
The LCC dismissed the application for the eviction of Mr Sibanyoni
and his family. It is common cause
that if this Court finds that the
Trust did not comply with s 8 of ESTA, it would be dispositive of the
matter. There would be no
need to deal with s 9
[4]
,
and 10 of ESTA.
[9]
This Court in
Aquarius
Platinum (SA) (Pty
)
v
Bonene
and
Others
[5]
re-affirmed the principle that ESTA envisages a two–stage eviction
procedure. The first is a notice terminating the occupier’s
right
to reside, thereafter a second notice of eviction in terms of s
9(2)
(d)
[6]
should be given to the occupier. Several letters purporting to
terminate Mr Sibanyoni’s right to reside were sent to him.
However,
it is not disputed that Mr Sibanyoni received a letter dated 12
February 2018, terminating his right to reside on the farm.
It is
trite that until an occupier’s right to reside is terminated
through the withdrawal of an owner’s consent, an occupier
cannot be
evicted. Mr Sibanyoni refused to vacate, as a result thereof, on 5
April 2018, the Trust launched an eviction application
against Mr
Sibanyoni and all those who occupy through him.
[10]
Section 9(2)
(a)
of ESTA requires that the occupier’s right
of residence must have been terminated in terms of Section 8 of ESTA,
which in relevant
part, reads 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 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.
’ (Emphasis added.)
Section 9(3)
provides:
‘
(3)
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 No 116 of 1991), or
an
officer of the department or any other 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.
[11] The
requirements for an eviction order are located in s 9(2) under ESTA.
The right of residence of an occupier can,
subject to certain
exceptions which are not relevant in this case, only be terminated if
it is just and equitable to do so, having
regard specifically to five
factors set out in s 8(1) of ESTA.
[12]
In
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[7]
Sachs J analysed the phrase ‘just and equitable’ with reference
to The Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation
of
Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE) and said:
‘
The
phrase “just and equitable” makes it plain that the criteria to
be applied are not purely of a technical kind that flow ordinarily
from the provisions of land law. The emphasis on justice and equity
underlines the central philosophical and strategic objective
of PIE.
Rather than envisage the foundational values of the rule of law and
the achievement of equality as being distinct from and
in tension
with each other, PIE treats these values as interactive,
complimentary and mutually reinforcing. The necessary reconciliation
can only be admitted by close analysis of the factual specifics of
each case. The court is thus called upon to go beyond its normal
functions and to engage in active judicial management according to
equitable principles of ongoing stressful and law-governed social
process. This has major implications for the manner in which it must
deal with the issuers before it, how it could approach questions
of
evidence, the procedure it may adopt, the way in which it exercises
its powers and the orders it makes. The Constitution and PIE
require
that in addition to considering the lawfulness of the occupation the
court must have regard to the interests and circumstances
of the
occupiers and pay due regard to . . . broader considerations of
fairness and other constitutional values, so as to produce
a just and
equitable result.’ (Footnotes omitted.)
These
remarks apply with equal force to ESTA.
[8]
[13]
The question that arises is whether the termination of Mr
Sibanyoni’s residence was just and equitable as required by
s 8(1)
of ESTA. This requires a court to consider ‘
all
relevant factors
’
and, in particular, the subparagraphs
(a)
to
(e)
.
The nature of the enquiry has been laid down by the Constitutional
Court in
Snyders
and Others v De Jager
[9]
where it was said:
‘
Section
8(1) makes it clear that the termination of a right of residence must
be just and equitable both at a substantive level as
well as at a
procedural level. The requirement for the substantive fairness of the
of the termination is captured by the introductory
part that requires
the termination of a right of residence to be just and equitable.’
ESTA
demands fairness and equity in all dealings with occupiers.
[14]
The Trust submits that a
court is called upon to determine
ex
post facto
,
whether the termination of the right of residence was lawful as well
as just and equitable. I agree that the enquiry into whether
the
termination of the right of residence is lawful and just and
equitable occurs
ex
post facto
.
However, this does not mean that the occupier must first be evicted.
It only means that it happens after the termination, while
the
occupier still resides on the premises.
[15] In
this case subparagraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of s 8(1) do not
apply. The Trust does not rely on any agreement to seek the eviction
of Mr Sibanyoni and neither is any reliance
placed on the conduct of
Mr Sibanyoni or any of his family members.
[16]
Regarding subparagraph
(c)
,
the Trust alleges that not terminating Mr Sibanyoni’s right of
residence will result in hardship for the Trust. In its founding
affidavit
[10]
the Trust
contends that,
‘
.
. . it is suffering considerable hardship on account of being
prevented from developing the area of the Farm in which the First
Respondent resides. Furthermore, by virtue of the First Respondents
continued occupation, the Applicant is prevented from accommodating
current and/or prospective employees of the Applicant on the Farm. It
is unjust and inequitable for the First Respondent to continue
residing on the Applicants’ Farm without giving any benefits to the
Applicant and depriving its current and / or prospective employees
of
accommodation.’
[17] In
response thereto, Mr Sibanyoni contends that:
‘
I
hereby submit that me and my family have been occupying the portion
of the farm that we are currently occupying, for a long period
of
time and it has not previously been an impediment to the development
of the farm. Considering the size of the portion that we
are
occupying and its positioning on the farm, without assuming or
suggesting that I am knowledgeable in this regard, it cannot
reasonably
be considered to be a disturbance to any prospective
development, unless the contrary can be proven, in which case the
Applicant
is put to the proof thereof.’
[11]
[18]
With regard to subparagraph
(c)
, on the issue of comparative
hardship, the LCC held that the termination of Mr Sibanyoni’s right
of residence will have a devastating
impact and consequences for him.
The information of the proposed development is scant and lacks
particularity. No plans pertaining
to the alleged development was
attached to its founding affidavit. The further contention that the
cottage was required for its employees
and for operational needs of
the farm appeared unfounded as there was no evidence as to how many
labourers currently occupy the property
or any other details or
information pertaining to the operational requirements of the Trust
and the farm. The Trust had to do more
than make mere assertions that
it will suffer hardship if it did not terminate Mr Sibanyoni’s
right of residence.
[19]
Counsel for the Trust correctly submits that the
onus
is on
the Trust to place information before the Court to enable it to have
regard to the criteria listed under s 8(1)
(a)
to
(e)
and any other relevant factors. I agree that the hardship that Mr
Sibanyoni would suffer if evicted far outweighs that of the Trust.
[
20]
It bears mentioning that the attitude of the Trust concerning the
issue of alternative accommodation for Mr Sibanyoni
and his family
cannot be countenanced by any court. On the issue of alternative
accommodation, the Trust submitted that it had established
that there
is a nearby township which could accommodate Mr Sibanyoni and his
family. The Trust, thereby, ignores the undisputed fact
that Mr
Sibanyoni has livestock which require grazing land. This is not,
ordinarily, possible in a township.
[21]
Subparagraph
(d)
is not applicable. As far as s 8(1)
(e)
is concerned, the Trust contends in its Founding Affidavit that:
‘
The
Applicant submits that the procedure followed has been fair and that
the First Respondent has been given ample opportunity and
time to
vacate the Farm and will be given an opportunity to make
representations before the Honourable Court.’
[22]
In
Snyders
[12]
the Constitutional Court held:
‘
In
any event, even if it were to be accepted that Ms De Jager terminated
Mr Snyders’ right of residence, she has failed to show,
as is
required by section 8(1) of ESTA, that there was a lawful ground for
that termination and that, in addition, the termination
was just and
equitable. At best for Ms De Jager she purported to show no more that
there was a lawful ground for the termination
of the right of
residence. She did not go beyond that and place before the
Magistrate’s Court evidence that showed that the termination
of Mr
Snyder’s right of residence was just and equitable.
.
. . Counsel for the Snyders family also contended that the
Magistrates Court should not have issued an eviction order because
the Snyders family had not been afforded any procedural fairness by
way of an opportunity to be heard before they were required to
vacate
the property. It is common cause that the Snyders family were never
invited to make representations to Ms De Jager on why
they should not
be required to vacate the house before they were actually required to
vacate it. In my view, the submission by Counsel
for the Snyders
family has merit. ESTA requires the termination of the right of
residence to also comply with the requirement of
procedural fairness
to enable this person to make representations why his or her right of
residence should not be terminated. This
is reflected in section
8(1)(e) of ESTA. A failure to afford a person that right will mean
that there was no compliance with this
requirement of ESTA This would
render the purported termination of the right of residence unlawful
and invalid. It would also mean
that there is no compliance with the
requirement of ESTA that the eviction must be just and equitable. .
..’
[23]
The Trust submitted
[13]
that
the procedure adopted by it was fair. However, it is not stated what
procedure is referred to. More telling is the further allegation
that
Mr Sibanyoni will have the opportunity to make representations before
a court. This misconstrues the provisions of s 8(1)
(e)
which expressly states:
‘
‘
the
fairness of the procedure followed by the owner or person, 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.’(Emphasis added.)
In
this case it is common cause that the Trust did not engage with Mr
Sibanyoni before terminating his right of residence.
[24]
Counsel for the Trust submitted that para 75 in
Snyder’s
was
obiter. I disagree. The Constitutional Court dealt with both the
issue of substantive fairness and procedural fairness which
were
before it. Paragraph 75 dealt specifically with procedural fairness.
[25]
The approach of the LCC on the issue of s 8(1)
(e)
cannot be faulted. The LCC held that:
‘
Furthermore
as I will indicate later, the fairness of the procedure followed must
of necessity be case specific and a weighting must
be given to it
relative to the other factors. It may well be definitive in some
cases while in others it may only be a factor carrying
little or no
weight. In short; whether it will be the silver bullet cannot be
determined in isolation at this preliminary stage bearing
in mind the
extent of the disputed facts.’
[26] It
is apparent from the record that the Trust was only prepared to
engage with the erstwhile owner of the farm and
not the occupier.
There is no plausible reason why the Trust did not engage with Mr
Sibanyoni before it terminated his right of residence.
Given the
particular hardship for Mr Sibanyoni that will flow from an eviction,
in my view this is a case where there ought to have
been ‘an
effective opportunity to make representations before the decision was
made to terminate the right of residence’ in terms
of s 8(1)
(e)
of ESTA. According to Mr Sibanyoni, he was born on the farm. What is
therefore clear is the fact that Mr Sibanyoni was on the farm
prior
to 4 February 1997. Had the Trust engaged Mr Sibanyoni before it
terminated his right of residence, it would have appreciated
the
history of Mr Sibanyoni and his family’s occupation on the farm.
[27]
The failure by the Trust to provide Mr Sibanyoni with an opportunity,
let alone an effective opportunity, to make
representations before
terminating his right of residence is not reconcilable with the
principles of procedural fairness as envisaged
in s 8 of ESTA and
confirmed in numerous judgments of this Court
[14]
and the Constitutional Court
[15]
.
[28] As
a result, the termination of Mr Sibanyoni’s right of residence was
not just and equitable. In light of this
finding, there is no need to
deal with ss 9 and 10 of ESTA.
[29] In
the result the appeal falls to be dismissed and the following order
is made:
1
The appeal is
dismissed.
2
No order as to costs.
Z CARELSE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
Mr G F
Porteous
Instructed by:
Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr,
Sandton
McIntyre
van der Post Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For first
respondent: Mr L Sefudi
Instructed
by:
Marivate Attorneys,
Pretoria
Moroka
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For third
respondent: Mr K Toma
Instructed
by:
Office of the State
Attorney, Pretoria
Office
of the State Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
‘
Occupier’
means a person residing on land which belongs to another person. and
who has or on 4 February 1997 or thereafter had
consent or another
right in law to do so, but excluding—
(a)
a labour tenant in terms of the Land
Reform (Labour Tenants) Act, 1996 (Act No. 3 of 1996); and
(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)
a person who has an income in excess of
the prescribed amount.
[2]
Section
10 of ESTA provides that:
‘
(1)
An order for the eviction of a person who was an occupier on 4
February 1997 may be granted if—
(a)
the occupier has breached section 6(3)
and the court is satisfied that the breach is material and that the
occupier has not remedied
such breach;
(b)
the owner or person in charge has
complied with the terms of any agreement pertaining to the
occupier’s right to reside on the
land and has fulfilled his or
her duties in terms of the law, while the occupier has breached a
material and fair term of the agreement,
although reasonably able to
comply with such term, and has not remedied the breach despite being
given one calendar month’s notice
in writing to do so;
(c)
the occupier has committed such a
fundamental breach of the relationship between him or her and the
owner or person in charge, that
it is not practically possible to
remedy it, either at all or in a manner which could reasonably
restore the relationship; or
(d)
the occupier—
(i)
is or was an employee whose right of
residence arises solely from that employment; and
(ii)
has voluntarily resigned in
circumstances that do not amount to a constructive dismissal in
terms of the Labour Relations Act.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (3), if none of the
circumstances referred to in subsection (1) applies, a court may
grant an order for eviction if it is satisfied that suitable
alternative accommodation is available to the occupier concerned.
(3)
If—
(a)
suitable alternative accommodation is
not available to the occupier within a period of nine months after
the date of termination
of his or her right of residence in terms of
section 8;
(b)
the owner or person in charge provided
the dwelling occupied by the occupier: and
(c)
the efficient carrying on of any
operation of the owner or person in charge will be seriously
prejudiced unless the dwelling is
available for occupation by
another person employed or to be employed by the owner or person in
charge.
A court may grant an order for
eviction of the occupier and of any other occupier who lives in the
same dwelling
as him or her. And whose
permission to reside there was wholly dependent on his or her right
of residence if it is
just and equitable to do so,
having regard to—
(i)
the efforts which the owner or person in
charge and the occupier have respectively made in order to secure
suitable alternative
accommodation for the occupier; and
(ii)
the interests of the respective parties.
Including the comparative hardship to which the owner or person in
charge. The occupier
and the remaining occupiers shall be exposed if
an order for eviction is or is not granted.
[3]
Section
11 provides as follows:
‘
(1)
If it was an express, material and fair term of the consent granted
to an occupier to reside on land, that the consent would
terminate
upon a fixed or determinable date, a court may on termination of
such consent by effluxion of time grant an order for
eviction of any
person who became an occupier of the land in question after 4
February 1997, if it is just and equitable to do
so.
(2) In circumstances other than
those contemplated in subsection (1), a court may grant an order for
eviction in respect of any
person who became an occupier after 4
February 1997 if it is of the opinion that it is just and equitable
to do so.
(3) In deciding whether it is
just and equitable to grant an order for eviction in terms of this
section. the court shall have regard
to-
(a)
the
period that the occupier has resided on the land in question;
(b)
the fairness of the terms of any agreement
between the parties;
(c)
whether suitable alternative
accommodation is available to the occupier;
(d)
the
reason for the proposed eviction;
(e)
the balance of the interests of the
owner or person in charge. the occupier and the remaining occupiers
on the land.’
[4]
Section
9 provides as follows:
‘
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, an occupier may be
evicted only in terms of an order of court issued under
this Act.
(2)
A 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 Land
Affairs, 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 a 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 Land
Affairs 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.’
[5]
Aquarius
Platinum (SA)(Pty) Ltd v Bonene and Others
[2020] ZASCA
7
;
2020 (5) SA 28
(SCA);
Sterklewies
(Pty) Ltd t/a Harrismith Feedlot v Msimanga and Others
[2012]
ZASCA 77.
[6]
Ibid, s 9 (2)
(d)
.
[7]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004]
ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC)
paras
35 & 36.
[8]
See
Herman Diedericks
v Univeg Operations South (Pty) Ltd t/a Heldervue Estates
LCC
18/2011.
Snyders
and Others v De Jager
[2016] ZACC 55
;
2017 (3) SA 545
(CC) para
56.
[10]
Founding Affidavit para 28.
[11]
Answering
Affidavit para 31.
[12]
Footnote 9, paras 72 and 75.
[13]
See para 19 of this judgment.
[14]
See fn
5.
[15]
S
ee
fn 9.
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