Case Law[2022] ZASCA 160South Africa
Madrasah Taleemuddeen Islamic Institute v Chandra Giri Ellaurie and Another (755/2021) [2022] ZASCA 160; 2023 (2) SA 143 (SCA) (24 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Nuisance – the right to undisturbed use and enjoyment of own property is not unlimited – reasonable interference is to be expected depending on the circumstances in a specific neighbourhood – oversensitivity or personal peculiarities do not serve as a standard for reasonableness – the question of whether the interfering conduct is constitutionally guaranteed is a relevant consideration – principles governing interdicts restated.
Judgment
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## Madrasah Taleemuddeen Islamic Institute v Chandra Giri Ellaurie and Another (755/2021) [2022] ZASCA 160; 2023 (2) SA 143 (SCA) (24 November 2022)
Madrasah Taleemuddeen Islamic Institute v Chandra Giri Ellaurie and Another (755/2021) [2022] ZASCA 160; 2023 (2) SA 143 (SCA) (24 November 2022)
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sino date 24 November 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 755/2021
In
the matter between:
MADRASAH
TALEEMUDDEEN ISLAMIC
INSTITUTE
APPELLANT
and
CHANDRA
GIRI ELLAURIE FIRST
RESPONDENT
eTHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation: Madrasah
Taleemuddeen Islamic Institute v Chandra Giri Ellaurie and
Another
(755/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 160
(24 November 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA ADP and GORVEN and HUGHES JJA, and MUSI and DAFFUE AJJA
Heard:
19 September 2022
Delivered:
24 November 2022
Summary:
Nuisance – the right to undisturbed use and enjoyment of own
property is not unlimited
– reasonable interference is to be
expected depending on the circumstances in a specific neighbourhood –
oversensitivity
or personal peculiarities do not serve as a standard
for reasonableness – the question of whether the interfering
conduct
is constitutionally guaranteed is a relevant consideration –
principles governing interdicts restated.
ORDER
On
appeal from: KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Durban (Mngadi
J sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
2
The judgment of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Dambuza
ADP (Gorven and Hughes JJA and Musi and Daffue AJJA concurring):
[1]
When is noise emanating from a neighbour’s immovable property
actionable in law? The first respondent
in this appeal, Mr Chandra
Giri Ellaurie, obtained an interdict in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Durban (the high
court) against the appellant,
Madrasah Taleemuddeen Islamic Institute (the madrasah) , in terms of
which the high court ordered
that the sound of the ‘Call to
Prayer’ (the Azaan) generated from the madrasah’s
immovable property, should not
be heard at Mr Ellaurie’s
property. Mr Ellaurie had also sought orders that the madrasah cease
its operations on the property,
that it be divested of the property,
and that the property be sold to either a state organ, or a
non-Muslim South African, a Non-Governmental
Organisation, a
Non-Profit Organisation, or a Public Benefit Organisation. The high
court only granted the interdict in relation
to the Azaan –
that the madrasah had to ensure that the Azaan would ‘not [be]
audible within the buildings on [Mr Ellaurie’s]
property’.
The madrasah appeals against this order, with the leave of this
Court.
[2]
Mr Ellaurie lives about 20 metres from the madrasah’s property
in Isipingo Beach, South of eThekwini
in the KwaZulu-Natal Province.
On its property the madrasah conducts a school for Islamic studies.
About 340 students live in boarding
facilities on the madrasah
property, which is spread over three lots. There is a mosque located
on the madrasah property. Every
day five daily prayers are performed
in the mosque. Each prayer is preceded by the Azaan, which is
delivered by a Muadhin, to remind
people of the Islamic faith to come
to prayer. It is the Azaan that had to be inaudible at Mr Ellaurie’s
property, in terms
of the court order.
[3]
Although there is no cross-appeal in respect of the dismissal of the
claim for eviction of the madrasah
and confiscation of its immovable
properties, in his heads of argument, Mr Ellaurie repeated this claim
and set out numerous reasons
why the madrasah should be driven out of
Isipingo Beach. Most of these reasons reveal his abhorrence of the
Islamic faith. Not
all of these reasons are repeated in this
judgment, as no useful purpose will be served by doing so.
[4]
Of relevance to the noise nuisance claim, is Mr Ellaurie’s
complaint that the Azaans invaded his
personal space and that they
happened at an ‘unearthly time’, the first being around
03h30 at the start of summer.
He complained that they gave a
‘distinctly Muslim atmosphere to the area’, and a lot of
non-Muslim people found them
repugnant. He lamented the growth of the
Muslim community in Isipingo Beach over the 15 years preceding his
application to court,
and argued that, as a result of their dominance
in the town, Muslim people had become arrogant. He believed that
Islam promotes
racism, bigotry and sexism, and pays no regard to the
Constitution. He blamed the Constitution for affording protection to
all
religions, and maintained that, in relation to Islam, the
protection is undeserved and must have been extended only as a result
of unawareness of the inequities ingrained therein.
[5]
Prior to the interdict application, various forms of intervention
were undertaken to attempt to resolve
the dispute between Mr Ellaurie
and the madrasah. These included an unsuccessful attempt by the
second respondent, the eThekwini
Municipality (the city), to mediate
in 2003, and another mediation attempt by the South African Human
Rights Council (SAHRC). Mr
Ellaurie bemoaned what he considered to be
the City’s approval of non-compliant building plans and failure
to sanction the
madrasah for various structures that it allegedly
constructed illegally on its properties. However, he did not
pertinently challenge
the decisions taken by the city in relation to
those buildings. His application was only directed at what he
considered to be the
nuisance caused by the madrasah.
[6]
In granting the interdict, the high court found that the freedom of
religion guaranteed in the Constitution
was no ‘guarantee [of
the] practice or manifestations of religion’. Therefore, the
madrasah had to demonstrate that
the Azaan was essential to the
practice of its religion. All that Mr Ellaurie had to prove was
interference with enjoyment of his
‘private space’. I do
not agree.
[7]
The main principle of our neighbour law is that, whilst everyone has
a right to undisturbed use and
enjoyment of their own property, such
right is not unlimited. A limited interference with property rights
and enjoyment thereof
by owners of other properties in the same
neighbourhood is expected and acceptable in law. Mutual tolerance is
a civic value that
is restricted by the legal yardstick of
reasonableness. In Holland v Scott, one of the earliest South African
nuisance cases, the
court stressed the contextual nature of the test
into the reasonableness of the interference from a neighbouring
property. The
court held that for nuisance to be actionable it had to
seriously and materially interfere with the plaintiff’s
ordinary
comfort and existence. This remains the test in our law to
date.
[8]
It has also been expressed as follows:
‘
The
determination of when an interference so exceeds the limits of
expected toleration is achieved by invoking the test of what,
in the
given circumstances, is reasonable. The criterion used involves an
objective evaluation of the circumstances and milieu
in which the
alleged nuisance has occurred. The purpose of such evaluation is to
decide whether it is fair or appropriate to require
the complainant
to tolerate the interference or whether the perpetrator ought to be
compelled to terminate the activities giving
rise to the harm.’
[9]
The factors relevant in determining whether the reasonableness
threshold has been breached include:
the seriousness of the
interference; the time and duration of the interference; the
possibility of avoiding the harm; and the applicant’s
sensitivity thereto. The interference is not considered to be
unreasonable when the harm or complaint in respect thereof arises
from a special or extraordinary sensitivity of the plaintiff or
applicant to the activity complained of. In De Charmoy v Day Star
Hatchery (Pty) Ltd, the court put it thus:
‘
The
test, moreover, is an objective one in the sense that not the
individual reaction of a delicate or highly sensitive person who
truthfully complains that he finds the noise to be intolerable is to
be decisive, but the reaction of “the reasonable man”
–
one who, according to ordinary standards of comfort and convenience,
and without any peculiar sensitivity to the particular
noise, would
find it, if not quite intolerable, a serious impediment to the
ordinary and reasonable enjoyment of his property.’
[10]
In Rogers v Elliott, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
considered whether the defendant was liable for damages
suffered by
the plaintiff as a result of noise caused by the repeated ringing of
church bells in a Roman Catholic Church located
opposite his house.
The noise threw the plaintiff, who was suffering from sun stroke,
into violent convulsions on each of the eight
occasions when the
church bells were rung. His claim for delictual damages was founded
on the contention that the ringing of the
bells was a nuisance. The
court held that the interference or harm occasioned to the plaintiff
was not unreasonable, because he
suffered from a condition that
caused him to be extraordinarily sensitive to the noise nuisance on
which his claim was founded.
In this regard, the court stated:
‘
In
an action of this kind, a fundamental question is, by what standard,
as against the interests of the neighbor, is one’s
right to use
his real estate to be measured.
In
connection with the importance of the business from which it
proceeds, that must be determined by the effect of noise upon people
generally, and not upon those, on the one hand, who are peculiarly
susceptible to it, or those, on the other, who by long experience
have learned to endure it without inconvenience; not upon those whose
strong nerves and robust health enable them to endure the
greater
disturbances without suffering, nor upon those whose mental or
physical condition makes them painfully sensitive to everything
about
them.’
[11]
Mr Ellaurie’s application for an interdict failed to meet the
legal requirements for the relief he sought.
Because he sought a
final interdict, he first had to establish a clear right. Then, he
had to demonstrate that the nature and/or
level of noise unreasonably
interfered with his established right. He also had to show that he
had no other satisfactory alternative
remedy. Contrary to the
approach by the high court, it was, in fact, Mr Ellaurie who had to
satisfy the requirements for the interdict
sought, and to satisfy the
court, in particular, that the interference with his comfort was
unreasonable. The madrasah had no responsibility
to show that the
Azaan was essential to its religious practice.
[12]
Although Mr Ellaurie explained that the first of five daily Azaans
was at 03h30, he did not explain what exactly
the nature and level of
the noise was, and how long it lasted in each instance. He tendered
no evidence of what a reasonable Azaan
would be in the circumstances.
Instead, the evidence tendered was that of his profound dislike of
Islam. In fact, he would rather
have the Azaan banned from Isipingo
Beach altogether.
[13]
In addition to his assertions as already set out above, Mr Ellaurie
took exception to what he considered to be
elevation of the Islamic
faith above all other religions, which, according to him, were
denigrated in the Qur’an. He referred
to the Azaan as a
‘foreign sound that invades the public and private space’,
that ‘bears down on [him]’,
over which he has no control,
and which robs him of the opportunity ‘to the quiet enjoyment
of [his] property’. It
is apparent from his founding affidavit
that he discovered most of the information on which his averments are
based from research
he undertook after he had resolved to approach
the court for an interdict application.
[14]
Apart from failing to provide evidence of unreasonable interference
in the circumstances, Mr Ellaurie placed himself
within the realm of
a specially or extraordinarily sensitive complainant. The
reasonableness (or otherwise) of the Azaan could
not be judged by his
standards, the essence of which was a deep aversion to the Islamic
faith. It had to be judged by the standard
of an ordinary person
living in Isipingo Beach. On this there was, at best, a paucity of
evidence.
[15]
Given the finding by the high court that manifestation of religious
freedoms is not guaranteed in the Constitution,
it is necessary to
say something on the protection afforded to the interfering conduct
by the Constitution. Section 15(1) and (2)
of the Constitution
guarantees freedom of religion as follows:
‘
(1)
Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience, religion, thought,
belief and opinion.
(2)
Religious observances may be conducted at
state-aided institutions, provided that –
(a)
those observances follow rules made by the appropriate public
authorities;
(b)
they are conducted on an equitable basis; and
(c)
attendance at them is free and voluntary.’
[16]
The Constitution therefore does not only provide protection for
different religious beliefs and affiliation, it
also guarantees the
freedom to observe and manifest the different religious beliefs. For
effective observance or practice of these
religious freedoms, the
Constitution sets an overarching standard of ‘equitable’
for the different religions, and leaves
it to public authorities to
regulate, more specifically, such practices. The Constitution then
prohibits discrimination on the
basis of religious belief, culture or
affiliation. Having regard to all these considerations, there can be
no room for the conclusion
that the Constitution provides no
guarantee for religious practices.
[17]
This interpretation of the Constitution is consistent with the
findings of the Constitutional Court in Christian
Education South
Africa v Minister of Education. Therein, the Constitutional Court
interpreted s 15 of the Constitution as follows:
‘
I
will start with section 15 which deals with freedom of religion,
belief and opinion. The meaning of a similar provision in the
interim
Constitution was considered by Chaskalson P in S v Lawrence; S v
Negal; S v Solberg where he made the following observation:
“
In
the [R v Big M Drug Mart Ltd] case Dickson CJC said:
‘
The
essence of the concept of freedom of religion is the right to
entertain such religious beliefs as a person chooses, the right
to
declare religious beliefs openly and without fear of hindrance or
reprisal, and the right to manifest religious belief by worship
and
practice or by teaching and dissemination.”.’
[18]
Similarly, in Prince v Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope, the
Constitutional Court confirmed the universal right
to a religion of
choice, the right to manifest openly that or any other religion, and
freedom from restraint when observing or
manifesting a religious
belief. The submission was well made on behalf of the madrasah that
the reasonableness assessment in this
case had to take into account
and balance the countervailing constitutional rights. There was no
room for these considerations
in Mr Ellaurie’s convictions.
Having regard to all these factors, the appeal must succeed.
[19]
As to the costs, in Biowatch Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources,
the Constitutional Court outlined, as some of
the guidelines for
determining costs awards, considerations such as the character of the
litigation and the conduct of the parties
in pursuing it. Of
importance is whether a costs award would hinder or promote the
advancement of constitutional justice. In this
case, Mr Ellaurie did
not seek to assert his rights against the State. His motivation for
pursuing litigation was not advancement
of constitutional justice,
but rather his dislike of Islam. The madrasah has no fiscal resources
comparable to that of government.
There can thus be no reason for
costs not to follow the result.
[20]
Therefore, the following order shall issue:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
2
The judgment of the high court is set
aside and replaced with the following:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
N
DAMBUZA
ACTING
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
APPEARANCES
For
appellant: R
Bhana SC and
R Itzkin
Instructed
by: Abba
Parak Inc,
Johannesburg
Webbers,
Bloemfontein
For
first respondent: C G Ellaurie (in
person)
sino noindex
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