Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 236South Africa
Circle Properties (Pty) Ltd v Khuzwayo and Another (2023-124888) [2025] ZAGPJHC 236 (13 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 February 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Circle Properties (Pty) Ltd v Khuzwayo and Another (2023-124888) [2025] ZAGPJHC 236 (13 February 2025)
Circle Properties (Pty) Ltd v Khuzwayo and Another (2023-124888) [2025] ZAGPJHC 236 (13 February 2025)
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sino date 13 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2023-124888
(1)
REPORTABLE:NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE 13/02/2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
CIRCLE PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
DUMISANI TOMSON
KHUZWAYO
First
Respondent
(and all those occupying
through or under him)
THE CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
JUDGMENT
FISHER
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an
application for eviction in terms of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
[1]
(PIE Act). The only defence raised is that there should be a
stay of proceedings pending the determination of a complaint
which
was instituted in the Rental Housing Tribunal more than two years
ago.
Material
facts
[2]
The lease in question has been cancelled and there is no discernible
defence
on the application of the PIE Act.
[3]
The respondent and his family (comprising his wife and one child aged
nine and
an adult daughter aged 26) have occupied the flat in
question for in excess of twenty-two years. However, the lease which
is in
issue and which has been cancelled dates from August 2017. The
flat is one of approximately 71 units situated at Circle Court in
Hillbrow, Johannesburg.
[4]
The material terms of the lease are as follows:
i.
It commenced on 01 August 2017 and terminated on 31 July
2018.
ii.
After expiry, the lease would continue indefinitely until terminated
by either party giving the other one calendar month’s written
notice to terminate the lease.
iii.
The rental payable was R3 934 payable monthly in advance.
iv.
The lessor could increase the rent by giving the lessee one calendar
months’
notice.
v.
There was a holding over clause which provided that if the applicant
terminated the lease and the respondent disputed the applicant’s
right to do so and respondent remained in occupation, the
respondent
would pay the equivalent of the rental, and the applicant would be
entitled to recover such payments without prejudice
to the claim of
termination.
vi.
The lessee would pay for the following monthly:
-
Water at R240.
-
Effluent removal R134.57.
-
Refuse removal R113.
-
On-site parking R208.46
-
Electricity as metered.
[5]
After the expiry of the lease the respondent remained in occupation
on a month
to month basis.
[6]
On 01 March 2019, the respondent was notified of an increase in the
rental from
R4 327.40 to R4 673.59 and in respect of the
parking from R229.31 to R247.65.
[7]
More than two years later , in July 2022 the respondent was
given notice
of a 10% increase in rental which became effective
01 September 2022.
[8]
From a payment schedule attached to the founding affidavit, which is
not seriously
in dispute, the respondent was consistently paying less
than the amounts due under the lease. The arrears began to climb and
as
at November 2023 they stood at R58 572.87.
[9]
On 18 June 2021, and with an amount of in excess of R 24 000
then outstanding,
demand was made by the applicant for the bringing
up of the arrears under the lease within 20 business days.
[10]
The breach was not remedied and, accordingly, the applicant cancelled
the lease. It was sought that
the flat be vacated by 30 July 2021.
[11]
At a stage thereafter, Mr Edi Xavier of BBM attorneys came on record
for the respondent and a flurry
of litigation has ensued since then.
[12]
This application is the second attempt at eviction and it comes in
consequence of the applicant serving
via its attorneys, Joshua Apfel
attorneys, a second letter of cancellation on 05 October 2023. By
this date the outstanding rental
amounted to over R 52 000.
Accordingly, between the first cancellation and the second there had
been some bringing up of arrears,
but a substantial amount remained
outstanding, and the parties continued in litigation with each other.
[13]
In defence to this cancellation and this subsequent application for
eviction, the respondent’s
attorneys embarked on a convoluted
calculation in terms of which they seek on his behalf to go back more
than twenty years to allege
that there had been unreasonable
increases in the rental over all those years. This is notwithstanding
that the respondent had,
from time to time over this long period of
tenancy, signed new lease agreements without demur.
[14]
This retrospective approach was clearly devised in a bid to stave off
what was an inevitable eviction
under the PIE Act. It is relevant
that, no complaint as to the rental was raised prior to the
cancellation of the lease and the
attempts to evict the respondent.
[15]
In terms of
this device, it is argued that the respondent has been charged
unreasonable rentals over decades; that this constitutes
an unfair
practice under the Rental Housing Act (the Act)
[2]
and is thus a matter which falls under the jurisdiction of the
Renting Housing Tribunal (the Tribunal) established under the Act.
[16]
A complaint was thus laid at the Tribunal to the effect that
increases of rental which have been agreed
to over the years have, in
retrospect, been exorbitant and unfair. There are also allegations
that there have been incorrect charges
levied relating to the fact
that the property is serviced by a borehole and thus the applicant
should not be entitled to charge
for the water usage.
[17]
The argument goes that this approach to the Tribunal may ultimately
result in a decision by the Tribunal
which allows for the recoupment
of rentals under long expired leases, some of which are decades old,
on the basis that the rentals
have amounted to overcharging which is,
according to the respondent, an unfair practice which implicates the
Act and the jurisdiction
of the Tribunal.
[18]
The central allegation is that when these historic charges are
reconciled by the Tribunal, the applicant
could end up owing the
respondent money.
[19]
It seems, that buoyed by this approach, the respondent has stopped
paying rental altogether. The last
payment made by the respondent was
06 February 2024 in the amount of R 4000.
[20]
Mr Xavier, in argument denied this. He does not support this denial
with any details of any further
payment on behalf of the respondent.
It is trite that a person who contends that payment has been made
should provide details and
evidence of such payment to avoid the
contention being rejected as unsubstantiated.
[21]
There are no such details provided. On the contrary, the central
allegation made is that the applicant
will be shown to owe the
respondent money when the retroactive calculation is done in the
Tribunal.
[22]
The complaint to the Tribunal was lodged more than two years ago. It
has not yet been adjudicated on.
[23]
The personal circumstances of the respondent are as follows. He and
his wife are both gainfully employed
– the respondent as a
security guard and his wife as a chef. The respondent alleges that
their total income is approximately
R10 600 per month. There is
no proof tendered of this income and the court is not told how it is
made up. In addition, the
respondent sub-lets part of the flat for R1
600 per month. Thus, on the respondent’s version, the income
received is R 12 200.
And yet no rental has been paid for a
year.
Application
for postponement
[24]
Three days before the hearing of this matter, the respondent launched
an application for postponement.
The reason for the postponement and
the defence is essentially the same – that the Tribunal
proceedings should effectively
stay the eviction proceedings.
[25]
If this point is not upheld in the main application, then it follows
that the point is not good for
the postponement application either. I
thus considered it convenient that the applications be adjudicated at
the same time and
one judgment be given.
[26]
I pause to mention that the respondent’s attorneys have
known of the set-down date for
some months. They, however, saw fit to
launch this postponement application on one day’s notice and on
the eve of the hearing.
Furthermore, this was done on the basis that
no heads of argument were filed for the respondent and no practice
note.
The
respondent’s contentions in the main application
[27]
This court was called upon, without any cogent submissions on behalf
of the respondent, to determine
an issue which has some complexity.
This behaviour cannot be allowed to prejudice the applicant which has
been without redress
for some years, has significant arrears to
recoup and which has had no rental for a year.
[28]
Accordingly, with little to no help from the side of respondent and
on the basis that a Constitutional
Court judgment was produced in
argument by Mr Xavier like a rabbit out of a hat and with no courtesy
extended to his opponent or
the court as to a copy either being
provided or uploaded, it is proper that this court determine the
issue.
[29]
The
judgment relied on for the defence and the postponement is the
decision of the Constitutional Court in
Maphango
and Others v Aengus Lifestyle Properties (Pty) Ltd.
[3]
[30]
It is argued on behalf of the respondent, that this case is authority
for the proposition that, where
there is a pending Tribunal hearing
relating to an unfair practice, any eviction should properly be
stayed pending the outcome
of the hearing.
[31]
I move to examine the judgement in
Maphango
in light of this
submission.
[32]
The applicants were tenants in a ten-storey block of flats in
the inner city. The landlord of
the property, which was an investment
company had, as its stated business practice, the acquisition of
run-down inner-city low
rent buildings and the stripping and
refurbishing or the upgrading thereof so that much higher rentals
could be commanded. The
landlord bought the property in question,
upgraded it and then sought to increase the rent to a much higher
rental. To do so, it
cancelled the existing leases, but offered the
tenants new tenancies on identical terms to their existing leases but
at the much
higher rent.
[33]
Each existing lease made provision for an annual rent increase at a
stipulated rate. Each lease also
had a clause entitling either party
to terminate the lease on written notice. It is this latter clause
that was evoked by the landlord.
[34]
The landlord's case was that it could use the termination clause to
oblige the tenants either to vacate
or to enter new leases at the
higher rentals. The tenants' case was that the law did not permit the
landlord to use the bare power
of termination for this purpose.
[35]
The landlord admitted that its purpose in using the termination
rights was to force the tenants out
of their accommodation. There was
no expectation that they would be able to afford the rental under the
proffered new tenancies.
The 30-day cancellation clause was thus,
admittedly, employed by the landlord a tactic rather than a natural
incident of a fair
lease between landlord and tenant.
[36]
The accommodation of a large number of inner-city dwellers was at
stake. There were 58 flats occupied
by various tenants and others
through them.
[37]
The Constitutional Court acknowledged the inherent balancing of
financial and other interests of landlord
and tenant in the Act and
its broader legislative scheme. It took into account that there
should be cognisance of economic conditions
and the need for a
realistic return on investment for investors in rental housing.
[38]
The Court
held, however, that the scheme afforded a protection of interests
that went beyond the common law
[4]
.
Hence, the Court held that the fact of the termination clauses in the
leases did not circumvent a determination by the Tribunal
of
unfairness and remedies to such unfairness because of the common law.
[39]
It
acknowledged further that the Act requires the Tribunal when making a
ruling to have regard to specified factors which included
‘the
common-law to the extent that any particular matter is not
specifically addressed in the regulations or a lease’,
the
provisions of the lease 'to the extent that it does not constitute an
unfair practice', as well as 'the need to resolve
matters in a
practicable and equitable manner.'
[5]
[40]
Thus, contrary to the submissions of Mr Xavier as to
Maphango
prescribing a hard and fast rule as to the stay of eviction
proceedings, the judgment represents a balancing of interests and a
deference to the Tribunal where its purposes and expertise are best
suited to dealing with the dispute.
Discussion
[41]
In
Maphango,
the Court was faced with a stratagem which
went wider than the tenants affected and presented a possible threat
to inner-city
dwellers as a whole.
[42]
The business practice involved is one which is a trend recognised
internationally and is commonly called
Gentrification
. The
Court held, on the facts, that this constituted a practice which was
best suited to the delicate weighing up exercise between
the rights
of tenant and landlord which is provided for in the legislative
scheme under the Act.
[43]
This case is different. The rental increases in issue were not
exorbitant. There has also been a consistent
delinquency over the
years – which has been accommodated by the landlord.
[44]
Furthermore, the fact that there has been a failure to pay
rental whilst deriving income from
the property suggests bad faith on
the part of the respondent. In contradistinction to this case, the
tenants in
Maphango
were not withholding rental.
[45]
The respondent alleges that the rental charged is not market
related in that there are similar
units in the area which are
significantly cheaper to rent. If this is the case, then there is no
reason why the respondent should
not avail himself of these
opportunities.
[46]
It is doubtful that the Tribunal even has the jurisdiction to
determine rental retrospectively in a
manner that would create a
credit position over decades. It is not necessary for me to enter
this inquiry, however, as the case
is so patently without merit that
it bears no consideration. To my mind this is an attempt to abuse the
processes of the Tribunal.
[47]
The appropriateness or otherwise of staying eviction proceedings so
that the Tribunal hearings can
take effect is something that a court
will consider in accordance with the weighing up of the just and
equitable considerations
which it undertakes under section 4(7) of
the PIE Act.
[48]
This is not a case where the rights of children or the elderly are
prejudiced. The family has an income
and access to appropriate
accommodation. Furthermore, this financial position must have been
enhanced by the holding back of rental
over the past year.
Order
[49]
In the circumstances I order as follows:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs to be paid on the B tariff.
2.
The respondent and those who occupy through him are directed to
vacate the property by 31 March 2025.
3.
If the respondent and those occupying through him fail to vacate the
property by 31 March 2025, the sheriff
of this court is directed to
do all things necessary to achieve the eviction of the respondent and
those occupying in breach of
this order.
FISHER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This Judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 13 February 2025.
Heard:
03 February 2025
Delivered:
13 February 2025
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv.
V Vergano
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Joshua
Apfel Attorneys
Respondent's
Counsel:
Mr
E Xavier
Respondent Attorneys:
Biccari Bollo Mariano
Inc
[1]
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land ACT 19 of
19981
[2]
Rental
Housing Act 50 of 1999
.
[3]
Maphango
and Others v Aengus Lifestyle Properties (Pty) Ltd
2012
(3) SA 531 (CC).
[4]
Id
at para 53
[5]
Id
at para 44.
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