Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 331South Africa
Madimetja v Unlawful Occupiers of Remaining Extent of ERF 5[...] City and Suburban and Others (025803/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 331 (19 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Madimetja v Unlawful Occupiers of Remaining Extent of ERF 5[...] City and Suburban and Others (025803/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 331 (19 March 2025)
Madimetja v Unlawful Occupiers of Remaining Extent of ERF 5[...] City and Suburban and Others (025803/25) [2025] ZAGPJHC 331 (19 March 2025)
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sino date 19 March 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
Number:
025803/25
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED: No
DATE
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
KGOBE
MADIMETJA
Applicant
and
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF THE
First Respondent
REMAINING
EXTENT OF ERF 5[…]
CITY
AND SUBURBAN
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Second Respondent
MINISTER
OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM J
[1]
This matter
is brought by Mr Madimetja in his capacity as the only remaining
trustee of the Marshall House Property Trust. The Trust
owns a
property situated at 2[…] M[…] Street, Erf No 5[…]
City and Suburban, Johannesburg. I will refer to
this building as the
Property.
[1]
[2]
The Trust seeks to remove the first respondents, described as the
unlawful occupiers, from the Property by way of an interim
interdict
to another building owned by the Trust in Bertrams. The Trust
requires that the City pay the costs of the transport to
Bertrams. In
Part B of the order, to be heard on the return day, the Trust seeks
to have the order made final. The Trust also seeks
an order on the
City to compel to file a report on how it intends to accommodate the
occupiers.
[3]
The first respondent whom I shall refer to as the occupiers are
legally represented in these proceedings and oppose the
relief. The
City has neither opposed or abided.
[4]
I have used the word remove advisedly. The Trust claims it is not
‘evicting’ the occupiers but ‘evacuating’
them. Of course, this might seem to be linguistic nicety since both
result in the occupiers being removed from the Property. But
this is
not so. The choice of term has juristic implications since different
statutes apply depending on whether the action taken
is an evacuation
or an eviction.
[5]
The Trust is seeking to remove the occupants, not by relying on the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation
of Land
Act, 19 of 1998 (PIE), which is what property owners normally have to
rely for an eviction, but instead seeks to rely the
National Building
Regulations and Building Standards Act, 1977 (Act No. 103 of 1977) (
the Act) and its regulations. That Act regulates
evacuations from a
property, not on the basis of unlawful occupation, but instead on the
safety of occupants be they present lawfully
or unlawfully. Nor does
it require determination of whether the removal of the occupiers is
just and equitable or a weighing of
hardship to the owner and
occupier respectively.
[6]
The question in this case is whether the Trust can rely on that
section to remove the occupiers from the property instead
of
proceeding in terms of PIE.
Background
[7]
The Trust explains that the Property was originally a warehouse but
has been unlawfully converted into residential flats
by hijackers
without the submission of plans to the City for evaluation and
approval. It now houses approximately 200 people.
[8]
It has now fallen into disrepair. This is not just the Trust’s
opinion. On 25 November 2024 various departments
of the City and
officials conducted an inspection of the building. Following the
inspection the City’s Emergency Services
officials compiled a
report. They concluded that the
building on the
Property poses various health and safety risks to the occupiers and
recommended that the Property be evacuated immediately.
[9]
It is important to note the status of this report. It describes its
objective as follows:
“
OBJECTIVE The
objective of this report is to inform the Public Safety Section 79
Committee of the contraventions at bad building
Marshall House
Building Stand No.5[…] situated at 2[…] M[…]
Street City and Suburban Johannesburg inspected
by JMPD, EMS and MMC
on the 25th of November 2024 that need immediate attention or
closure.”
[10]
This report forms the basis for the Trust’s reliance on the
enforcement provisions of the Act. But the report,
as the above
quotation indicates, is no more than a recommendation to the relevant
Committee of the City. But section 12(4) which
the Trust relies on,
requires a notice to the owner, not merely a report from one of its
entities to its officials. I set out the
relevant provision:
(12)(4) If the local
authority in question deems it necessary for the safety of any
person, it may by notice in writing, served
by post or delivered-
(a) order the owner of
any building to remove, within the period specified in such notice,
all persons occupying or working or being
for any other purpose in
such building there from, and to take care that any person not
authorized by such local authority does
not enter such building;
(b) order any person
occupying or working or being for any other purpose in any building,
to vacate such building immediately or
within a period specified in
such notice.
[11]
The provisions of the Act are echoed in the Regulations which the
Trust also seeks to place reliance on. Regulation A
15(4) states:
"The local
authority, may, by notice, in writing to the owner, order the
evacuation of such building where the state of such
building,
equipment, installation, or facility will cause conditions which in
the opinion of the local authority, may be detrimental
to the safety
or health of the occupiers or users of such building."
[12]
There is no evidence in the record that such a notice has been given
to the Trust either in terms of the Act, or the
regulation. Counsel
for the application conceded this but sought to argue that the Report
could constitute such a notice. Unfortunately
for the reason I
explained it does not constitute a notice. A notice is not a mere
formality. It requires the relevant functionary
to have applied
his/her mind to the issue and then to issue a notice which inter alia
requires the owner to indicate the period
in which the relevant
persons must be removed.
[13]
If that is
the case, then the Trust cannot rely on that provision or its mirror
image in the regulations to base this application
on. It must either
procure such a notice from the City, which regrettably despite being
a respondent, and its own officials’
alarming report, has
remained passive in the litigation . The other choice for the Trust
is to act in terms of section 5(1) of
PIE which provides such a
situation of emergency, but which requires the procedures of that Act
to be followed.
[2]
“
5.
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 4, the owner or person
in charge of land may institute urgent proceedings for the
eviction
of an unlawful occupier of that land pending the outcome of
proceedings for a final order, and the court may grant such
an order
if it is satisfied that—
(a)
there is a real and imminent danger of substantial injury or damage
to any person or property if the unlawful occupier is not
forthwith
evicted from the land;
(b)
the likely hardship to the owner or any other affected person if an
order for eviction is not granted, exceeds the likely hardship
to the
unlawful occupier against whom the order is sought, if an order for
eviction is granted;
And
(c) there is no other
effective remedy available.”
[14]
Section 5(2) of PIE then sets out the procedure for such an
application which requires a court authorised prior notice
to be
given to the occupiers. This safeguard is
significant
and because PIE has not been followed in this case, this has been
denied to the occupiers.
[15]
It is not necessary for me then to consider any of the other issues
in this case raised by the representatives of the occupiers
as this
is the crisp issue. Of course, the occupants could leave voluntarily
given that they have been offered accommodation for
free in the
neighbourhood and in the view of the Trust, is superior in every
respect. It does not appear that anyone representing
the Occupiers
has ever looked at the alternative accommodation instead they have
quibbled with every technical point imaginable
except the one I have
had to decide this case on. Nor do they appear to have consulted with
anyone other than the deponent to the
answering affidavit. She claims
to represent them all, but this is by no means clear. Attached to her
affidavit is a handwritten
list of names of 196 people with the place
for signatures next to their names left blank. The list appears to be
all in the same
handwriting. If this was meant to show she was
authorised by all of them to oppose the application, it is
unconvincing. For this
reason, even though I have dismissed the claim
I do not consider that costs of any more than that of a single
respondent on scale
B are warranted.
ORDER
1. The application
is dismissed.
2. The applicant is
liable for the costs of the first respondent, but limited to the
costs occasioned by a single person as
a respondent, on a party and
party Scale B.
MANOIM J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicant: K
Maupa instructed by EMG Attorneys
For the First Respondent:
L Mhlanga instructed by Muleya Attorneys
Date of hearing: 14
March 2025
Date of Judgement: 19
March 2025
[1]
A challenge was made to the locus standi of Madimetja and the Trust
to bring the action, but I consider this point was of no
substance.
The were only two trustees of the trust but one has resigned. The
latter gave an affidavit to confirm this but nevertheless
indicated
his support of the application. Madimetja also attached the title
deeds for the property indicating it is owned by
the Trust.
[2]
I was advised from the Bar that such an application had been brough
earlier this year but not persisted with for reasons that
are
disputed between the applicant and the first respondent. I need not
take this issue further.
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