Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 143South Africa
Lewray Investments (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2025/024502) [2025] ZAGPJHC 143 (25 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 February 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lewray Investments (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2025/024502) [2025] ZAGPJHC 143 (25 February 2025)
Lewray Investments (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2025/024502) [2025] ZAGPJHC 143 (25 February 2025)
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sino date 25 February 2025
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
25
February 2025
Case
No.
2025-024502
In
the matter between:
LEWRAY
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
First Respondent
DADA
MORERO NO
Second Respondent
DADA
MORERO
Third Respondent
TSHEPO
MALOKA NO
Fourth Respondent
TSHEPO
MALOKA
Fifth Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 24 February 2025, I gave an order reversing the eviction of
the applicant, Lewray, from its property situated at 7[...] D[...]
V[...] Street, Johannesburg. I directed the first respondent, the
City, to restore Lewray to peaceful and undisturbed possession
of the
property, and to repair some of the damage done to the property in
the course of the eviction. I directed the City to pay
Lewray’s
costs on the scale as between attorney and client. I indicated when I
gave my order that my reasons would follow
in due course. These are
my reasons.
2
The property is a commercially tenanted building in the
Johannesburg central business district. On 21 February 2025, the
City, acting
through its metropolitan police department, evicted all
the commercial tenants operating at the property. It sealed the
property
off. It welded the entrances to the property shut. The City
also started to brick the entrances to the property up, but it is not
clear from the papers whether it completed that work.
3
I am far from convinced that the City adequately explained its
motives during the course of the eviction, but the City ultimately
justified its conduct by reference to its Emergency Services Bylaws.
In its papers before me, the City averred that the state of
the
property constituted a fire hazard, and that it was necessary to act
under the bylaws to prevent the property from being used
until the
fire safety hazards it had identified were addressed.
4
The City annexed four notices alleging contraventions of the
bylaws to its answering affidavit. The first of these notices, issued
on 21 February 2025, did not relate to the property as a whole, but
merely to one of the units within it. During argument, it became
clear that it is this notice upon which the City claims to have
acted. The copies of the other notices provided to me were
substantially
illegible, but I could discern enough to note that the
second notice was issued two-and-a-half years ago, and is of no
relevance
to this application. The third and fourth notices related
to a completely different property, and accordingly, as was conceded
at the hearing, could not be relied upon to justify the City’s
conduct.
5
Mr. Mosikili, who appeared for the City, accepted that none of
the notices provided a basis to prevent Lewray from accessing its
property. He sought only to persuade me that Lewray’s access to
the property ought to be conditional upon it undertaking
to address
the fire safety hazards identified in the first of the four notices.
6
I declined to make my order conditional upon the provision of
such undertakings, because the City was never lawfully entitled to
evict Lewray from its property in the first place.
7
I reached that conclusion for two reasons. First, section 98
(3) of the bylaws, upon which the City relied to evict Lewray, does
not entitle the City to completely exclude an owner from their
property. The section provides for a member of the City’s
Fire
Brigade Service to issue such instructions as may be necessary to
procure compliance with the bylaws. These instructions may
include
the immediate evacuation of the relevant premises; the closure of the
premises until a bylaw violation has been rectified;
the cessation of
any defined activity; the removal of any immediate threat to any
person or property; the taking of specified steps
to comply with the
bylaws, either immediately or within a specified period; or the
issuing of a timetable for the taking of steps
necessary to comply
with the bylaws. The penalty in case of non-compliance with an
instruction issued under section 98 (3) is criminal
sanction rather
than extrajudicial eviction.
8
At its most extreme, section 98 (3) permits the evacuation or
closure of the relevant premises. That means that the premises can
no
longer be accessed or used by the general public. It does not mean
that the City may deprive the owner of possession of the
property,
thereby making it impossible for the owner to do anything with it,
including taking steps to comply with the bylaws.
9
Secondly, no lawful instruction to evacuate or close the
property was issued in this case. The written notice of contravention
actually
issued by the City’s Fire Safety Inspector, Mr.
Nathaniel Dlamini, on 21 February 2025 merely directed Lewray to
“immediately”
address a list of specified fire safety
hazards present in one of the units at the property. The notice did
not require the evacuation
or closure of the property. The notice
does appear to refer to an earlier instruction to evacuate the
property, but that
instruction was neither repeated in the
notice nor relied upon in this application.
10
It follows that the appropriately empowered official that
could have ordered the immediate evacuation and closure of the whole
property
chose not to do so. In his confirmatory affidavit, Mr.
Dlamini said that he did ultimately decide to enforce the notice “by
closing the property”, but only because unidentified
individuals he thought were in charge of the property refused to
accept
service of the notice. I do not think that it was lawful or
rational to respond in this way to an unnamed individual’s
refusal
to accept service of a fire safety contravention notice that
does not itself require the evacuation or closure of the property.
In
any event, Mr. Dlamini’s subsequent oral instruction to “close”
the property was never confirmed in writing,
as the bylaws require.
It had no force or effect before me.
11
Accordingly, even if section 98 (3) of the bylaws could be
read to authorise excluding Lewray from its property (it cannot), the
City did not lawfully exercise such a power in this case.
12
It follows from all this that the removal of Lewray and its
tenants from the property was unlawful from the outset. Lewray was
spoliated.
It is trite that a person spoliated of property is
entitled to retake possession of it before the lawfulness of its
possession
or use of the property are explored. In other words, the
City was not entitled to illegally evict Lewray from its property and
then bargain the terms on which Lewray would be allowed to retake
possession.
13
In all these circumstances, the City acted substantially
beyond any lawful power it could reasonably claim to have. It ought
to
have appreciated this from the outset, and to have restored the
property to Lewray at the first opportunity. Instead, the City
insisted on pushing an application to which it must have known it had
no defence to a hearing. For that reason, a punitive costs
order was
plainly justified.
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 25 February 2025.
HEARD
AND DECIDED ON: 24 February 2025
REASONS:
25 February 2025
For
the Applicant:
L Hollander
Instructed by Vermaak
Marshall Wellbeloved Inc
For
the Respondents:
T Mosikili
Instructed by Koikanyang
Inc
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