Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 15South Africa
For Real Chicks (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mount Carmel Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/47326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 15 (16 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## For Real Chicks (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mount Carmel Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/47326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 15 (16 January 2025)
For Real Chicks (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mount Carmel Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/47326) [2025] ZAGPJHC 15 (16 January 2025)
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sino date 16 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 16 January 2025
Case
No.
2021/47326
In the matter between:
FOR
REAL CHICKS (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
DEMETER
WINGS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
MOUNT
CARMEL FARMS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
CITY
OF EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
MEC
FOR AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND REFORM, GAUTENG
Third
Respondent
MINISTER
FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, FORESTRY
AND
FISHERIES
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF WATER AND SANITATION
Fifth
Respondent
MEC
FOR HUMAN SETTLEMENTS, GAUTENG
Sixth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicants own land in Elandsfontein, near Kempton Park.
Their land is immediately adjacent to a farm owned by the first
respondent,
Mount Carmel. There is a substantial informal settlement
on Mount Carmel’s property. It is not presently known exactly
how
many people live in the informal settlement, but the applicants
say that there were at least 162 structures present on the property
in 2015. That number had grown to 269 structures by February 2020.
The second respondent, the Ekurhuleni Municipality, says that
there
were at least 126 households living on the property in December 2021.
That figure was based on what the Municipality refers
to as an
“audit” of the property that is, apparently, only 70%
complete.
2
The Mount Carmel property originally housed nothing more than
an abandoned farmhouse and a dumpsite. The property has been occupied
since 2011, apparently without Mount Carmel’s consent, and
against its will – although I am not convinced that Mount
Carmel made much of an effort to stop the occupation. The
Municipality says that those of the residents of the informal
settlement
who are employed work on neighbouring farms, and that they
earn an average of R4200 per month from doing so. The land does not
appear to have been prepared for residential occupation. There are
few if any services on the property. At least some of the residents
are forced to wash themselves and launder their clothes in a stream
that runs through it.
3
The applicants regard the informal settlement as a nuisance.
They point to what they say are the clear health and environmental
hazards posed by a large number of people living without basic
services in such close proximity to their land. In their founding
affidavit, the applicants complain that the residents of the informal
settlement regularly trespass on their property, sometimes
using dogs
to hunt there. The applicants emphasise what they say are the
consequent risks of “rabies and other diseases”
being
spread by that activity. They say that the noise emanating from the
informal settlement is “extreme” over weekends,
and that
“crime ha[s] increased exponentially” as a result of the
informal settlement’s occupation.
The
relief sought before me
4
Aggrieved, the applicants instituted a two part application in
this court. In their “first order prayed”, the applicants
ask for three declarations. First, the applicants ask that I declare
that the “establishment of a township” on the
Mount
Carmel property contravenes both the Spatial Planning and Land Use
Management Act 16 of 2013 (“SPLUMA”) and the
Municipality’s own Spatial Planning and Land Use Management
by-laws. Second, they ask for a declaration that the structures
erected on the Mount Carmel property contravene the National Building
Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1997 (“the
NBRA”). Thirdly, they ask for declaration that the structures
were erected in contravention of the National Environmental
Management Act 107 of 1998 (“NEMA”), of the regulations
promulgated under it, and, of the right to an environment that
is not
harmful to their health or well-being, enshrined in section 24 of the
Constitution, 1996.
5
The applicants also seek an order directing Mount Carmel, the
Municipality and the sixth respondent, the MEC, to compile a list of
the names of the residents of the informal settlement, together with
further information concerning the residents’ relationships
to
each other, their nationalities and their immigration status. The
applicants also seek an order directing the Municipality and
the MEC
to file a report addressing availability of alternative accommodation
to the residents of the informal settlement.
6
Furthermore, the applicants ask for an order interdicting and
restraining Mount Carmel from “allowing additional occupiers
to
take occupation” of its property, to “take steps to
prevent pollution” of water on the applicants’ property,
and to file a report setting out the steps it intends to take to
achieve that objective.
7
In the second part of their application - the “second
order prayed” – the applicants seek an order directing
Mount
Carmel and the Municipality to demolish the informal
settlement, to provide alternative accommodation to those residents
of the
informal settlement who would be rendered homeless by the
demolition, and to interdict and restrain the Municipality and the
fourth
respondent, the Minister, from granting permission to
establish a township on Mount Carmel’s property.
The
relief sought is incompetent
8
Only the “first order prayed” is before me. None
of it can be granted for at least the following reasons.
Non-joinder
9
In the first place, none of the residents of the informal
settlement on Mount Carmel’s land has been joined to these
proceedings.
This is despite the fact that the applicants seek final
relief which clearly affects the residents’ interests.
Far-reaching
final declaratory orders are sought in relation to which
the residents must be given a reasonable opportunity to be heard. I
am
also asked to authorise a highly invasive form of census, which
will see the residents being asked to disclose a wide range of
personal information. None of this relief can be granted without the
residents being joined to the proceedings and heard in relation
to
the relief, should they wish to be so heard.
10
Mr. Roberts, who appeared together with Ms. Roberts for the
applicants, was unable to submit that the residents of the informal
settlement did not have a direct and substantial interest in the
“first order prayed”. He instead submitted that the
residents could not be joined to the proceedings because nobody can
say who they were. He followed that submission up with the
proposition that the relief sought in the “first order prayed”
is so obviously meritorious as to be incapable of dispute.
11
Mr. Roberts was wrong to submit that there was no way of
joining the residents of the informal settlement to these
proceedings.
The applicants know that they seek relief in respect of
all of the occupiers of Mount Carmel’s property. They need only
have
identified and joined the residents in that capacity. The
practice of citing all of the residents of a particular property,
usually
in eviction proceedings, is so well-known that I have some
difficulty in accepting that this did not occur to the applicants. Be
that as it may, the applicants were plainly in a position to identify
the residents of the informal settlement with sufficient
particularity to make them parties to these proceedings.
12
I was, in addition, constrained to point out to Mr. Roberts
that the compulsory practice of joining all directly and
substantially
interested parties to a lawsuit applies even to
apparently unlosable cases. What matters is not the strength of the
applicants’
case, but the fact that the relief sought will
directly affect the rights of others. For the reasons I have given,
the relief the
applicants seek plainly directly affects the rights of
the residents of Mount Carmel’s property, who ought to have
been joined
from the outset.
No
prima facie
right to the second order prayed
13
Mr. Roberts submitted that the relief sought in the “first
order prayed” is merely preparatory to the relief being sought
in the “second order prayed”. The “second order
prayed” is essentially an eviction order. Accepting for
a
moment that the “first order prayed” really is no more
than interim relief pending the determination of the “second
order prayed”, it is trite that I cannot grant it unless I am
satisfied that the applicants have a
prima facie
right to the
“second order prayed”.
14
The applicants plainly have no such right. I can think of no
cause of action in law for an order directing a neighbour to evict an
occupier of their property. Even if that remedy is available at
common law to abate a nuisance, the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction
from, and Unlawful Occupation of, Land Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE
Act”) has long since supplanted any such remedy
against an
unlawful occupier. Everyone before me accepted that the residents of
the Mount Carmel property are unlawful occupiers
within the meaning
given to that term under section 1 of the PIE Act. The PIE Act makes
clear that eviction applications may only
be brought against unlawful
occupiers by the owner or person in charge of the relevant property,
or by a local authority acting
in the public interest. The applicants
simply have no standing to seek the eviction of the residents.
15
That being so, the applicants have no right to the “second
order prayed”. To the extent that the absence of such a right
precludes the grant of the “first order prayed”, the
application for it must be dismissed.
The
declaratory orders sought
16
In any event, the three declarators the applicants seek in
their “first order prayed” are neither interim in nature
nor preparatory to an application for the second order prayed. They
are, in substance, orders that confirm that the informal settlement
is neither an approved township under SPLUMA, nor an approved
structure under the NBRA, nor a development that has been approved
under NEMA.
17
It is well established that I have a discretion to refuse an
application for declaratory relief, even if it has some merit. That
discretion is normally exercised where there is no live controversy
between the parties that would be resolved by a declaratory
order.
This is clearly such a case. Neither the Municipality nor Mount
Carmel contend that the informal settlement has been erected
in
compliance with SPLUMA, the NBRA or NEMA. Indeed, in 2012, the
Municipality instituted proceedings against Mount Carmel to compel
the eviction of the people then resident at the property, on the
basis that they had moved on to the property in breach of the
Municipality’s Town Planning Scheme. The Municipality, wisely
in my view, has not pressed that application to a hearing,
but the
very existence of the application indicates that the Municipality
takes no issue with the applicants’ claims that
the informal
settlement was erected without complying with NEMA, SPLUMA or the
NBRA. There is accordingly no controversy
to resolve.
18
There is a further, more fundamental, reason why I will not
grant the declaratory orders. Neither SPLUMA, nor the NBRA, nor NEMA
were ever intended to provide a mechanism to stigmatise informal
settlements as illegal or unwanted blights on the environment
or on
urban development. They are intended to govern the terms under which
sustainable, inclusive and environmentally friendly
urban development
takes place. It seems to me to be an abuse of these statutes to seek
relief which is ultimately intended to eradicate
a large number of
people’s homes – whether or not those homes are perceived
to constitute a nuisance to neighbouring
property owners.
19
If the conditions in the informal settlement are to be
addressed, they cannot sustainably be addressed as if the people
living there
are no more than sources of urban blight. The
Constitution, the PIE Act and the National Housing Code, 2009
(especially the Upgrading
of Informal Settlements Policy contained in
the Code) provide the proper vehicles through which to address the
needs of the informal
settlers. I will not assist in applicants’
attempts to repurpose SPLUMA, the NBRA and NEMA to evict the
residents and destroy
their homes. Nor, as a matter of law, may I do
so.
The
amendment
20
The applicants and the residents of the informal settlement,
may, of course, have administrative law remedies against the
Municipality
and the other state respondents to take steps to improve
living conditions there, or to provide alternative shelter if such
steps
cannot be taken while the residents remain
in situ
. It
was perhaps an inkling that these remedies might be the proper route
to a resolution of their difficulties that led the applicants,
in
April 2022, to amend the relief they sought, albeit without a formal
application to do so. Instead of a straightforward eviction
order in
their “second order prayed”, the applicants’
amendment envisages a
mandamus
against the Municipality,
compelling it to bring eviction proceedings under the PIE Act against
the residents of the informal settlement.
21
The problem with the amendment, however, is that it completely
redefines the legal issues between the parties. The question of
whether
a local authority may be compelled to bring eviction
proceedings in the public interest is one of some difficulty (see,
for example,
Abahlali Basemjondolo Movement SA v Premier of the
Province of Kwazulu-Natal
2010 (2) BCLR 99
(CC), paragraph 112).
The PIE Act affords a Municipality the discretion to institute
eviction proceedings. That discretion must,
of course, be lawfully
exercised, and a neighbour may well be heard to complain that a
Municipality has failed to exercise that
discretion lawfully in
respect of a group of unlawful occupiers on adjacent land.
22
That issue is, however, nowhere canvassed in the papers. The
applicants were not entitled to introduce it without a formal
application
to do so, and without affording the other parties to this
case, especially Municipality, the opportunity to file further papers
dealing with it. At the hearing of the matter, Mr. Hulley, who
appeared with Mr. Sithole for the Municipality, strenuously objected
to the introduction of the amendment on the grounds that the
Municipality had no fair opportunity to deal with it. Mr. Hulley’s
objection was clearly well-taken. The amendment is not properly
before me, and I do not think I can fairly entertain it.
23
Nevertheless, in my view, the amendment envisages the only
cognisable cause of action the applicants may have. If they wish to
pursue
it, they may do so in the context of a fresh substantive
application, or by way of the formal introduction of the amendment
under
rule 28 before the “second order prayed” is brought
back to a hearing.
Order
24
However, for the reasons I have given, the application as it
stands is stillborn. The “first order prayed” must be
refused.
The application for it was woefully misconceived from the
outset. I think that the application was so inept as to deprive the
applicants
of the costs shield that a litigant raising a
constitutional issue would normally have in a case like this.
25
For all these reasons-
25.1 The
application for the “first order prayed” is dismissed.
25.2 The applicants
are directed to pay the respondents’ costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 16 January 2025.
HEARD
ON:
27
November 2024
DECIDED
ON:
16
January 2025
For
the Applicants:
MG
Roberts SC
E
Roberts
Instructed
by Moolman & Pienaar Inc
For
the First Respondent:
ACJ
van Dyk
Instructed
by Krouse Attorneys Inc
For
the Second Respondent:
GI
Hulley SC
E
Sithole
Instructed
by Chiba & Tourapi Attorneys.
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