Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 468South Africa
Khoza and Others v Vosloo and Others (2025/003669) [2025] ZAGPJHC 468 (8 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khoza and Others v Vosloo and Others (2025/003669) [2025] ZAGPJHC 468 (8 May 2025)
Khoza and Others v Vosloo and Others (2025/003669) [2025] ZAGPJHC 468 (8 May 2025)
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sino date 8 May 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2025/003669
Consolidated
case no: 31313, 31314, 31315, 31316/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
In
the matter between:
KHOZA
ANGELINE
1
ST
APPLICANT
HLOMENDLINI
KHETHUKAZI
2
ND
APPLICANT
NGQULUNGA
SWEETNESS BHABHA 3
RD
APPLICANT
ALECK
DHLAMINI
4
TH
APPLICANT
NOMFUNDO
KOSI
5
TH
APPLICANT
SYMPATHY
KOSI
6
TH
APPLICANT
TINYIKO
KHOZA
7
TH
APPLICANT
BRIAN
MNCUBE
8
TH
APPLICANT
MPUME
ZUNGU
9
TH
APPLICANT
NOMATHEMBA
HLOMENDLENI
10
TH
APPLICANT
ZODWA
HLOMENDLINI
11
TH
APPLICANT
XOLANI
HLOMENDLINI
12
TH
APPLICANT
ZAMOKUHLE
HLOMENDLINI
13
TH
APPLICANT
NANDIPHA
HLOMENDLINI
14
TH
APPLICANT
NOLUTHANDO
HLOMENDLINI
15
TH
APPLICANT
ZENADE
HLOMENDLINI 16
TH
APPLICANT
MAKHOSAZANE
NGQULUNGA
17
TH
APPLICANT
THANDEKA
KHOZA
18
TH
APPLICANT
NELISIWE
NKOSI 19
TH
APPLICANT
MICHAELA
KHOZA
20
TH
APPLICANT
RIVONGO
KHOZA
21
ST
APPLICANT
and
VOSLOO, ARNOLDUS
JOHANNES 1
ST
RESPONDENT
ARTU CC T/A AFCON
HOUSING
2
ND
RESPONDENT
THE SHERIFF JOHANNESBURG
EAST
3
RD
RESPONDENT
THE CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
MUNICIPALITY 4
TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
[1]
This application is brought on the basis of extreme
urgency. The relief claimed is that the part-owner (1
st
respondent) and the managing agent and lessor (2
nd
respondent) be “
directed to
restore the Applicants, into occupation of their primary homes
occupation and possession of properties at Erf 7[…]
F[…],
located on street address 3[…], 3[…] and 3[…]
C[…] Street Johannesburg, pending the Applicants
Recission
Application to be instituted within 10 days of this Order
.”
[2]
In the alternative, applicants claim that the City of Johannesburg,
4
th
respondent, be directed to provide emergency
alternative accommodation to the applicants, who have been rendered
homeless and destitute
by the eviction executed on the 15
th
of April 2025.
How
this urgent application came about
[3]
The application was brought on Tuesday 15 April 2025, notice of
intention to oppose was filed the next day and the first
and second
respondents’ answering papers were filed on Thursday 17 April
2025. Easter weekend (Friday 18
th
to Monday 21
st
April 2025) followed. The matter came before the urgent court on
Tuesday 22 April 2025. On that day, at 1pm, applicants filed their
replying papers. The matter was heard during that week.
[4]
In my view, much of the urgency was self-created. Nonetheless, it
seemed to me that this matter required urgent attention
due to the
obvious gravity of an eviction of this kind. I also considered that
the parties required a decision, sooner rather than
later. The
parties were well represented, heads of argument were filed by
counsel, the applicants and respondents were well prepared
despite
the fact that applicants brought the application on such very short
notice. The evicted occupiers could, in my view, not
be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course, as contemplated in
Uniform Rule 6(12). In consequence, I heard the
matter as an urgent
application.
[5]
This case has a long history. The eviction orders that were sought
initially, caused a multiplicity of applications (four
in all) which
were consolidated in an order granted by Wepener J on 29 June 2020,
given the commonality of the facts, parties and
legal issues
involved. Subsequently, the court actively case-managed these
consolidated matters to streamline the issues and secure
compliance
with procedural requirements.
[6]
Eventually, on 4 September 2024, the opposed eviction application
served before Acting Judge Bruinders, who granted the
eviction order.
Ms Khethukazi Virginia Hlomendlini, who deposed to the founding
papers, contends that their erstwhile attorneys,
Sithi and Thabela
Attorneys did not attend court on that day, despite the attorneys
having been served with a notice of set down
of the matter.
Applicants did not say what explanation their attorneys proffered for
not attending court on that day. There is
also no explanation on
record of why, according to the attorneys, they did not attend.
[7]
The court order was served on the applicant’s attorneys Sithi
and Thabela on 5 September 2024. In her founding affidavit,
the
deponent complains that service of the order of 5 September 2024 was
not brought to her attention by the attorneys. Ms Hlomendlini
then
proceeds: “
On or around the 23
rd
of
November 2024, Applicant’s seeking to have information of the
status of our eviction matter, myself and the First Applicant
attended to consult our erstwhile attorneys Sithi and Thabela
Attorneys, wherein we were advised that an Order directing our
eviction
had since the 4
th
of September
2024, been granted and a copy of the Court order was handed to us
.”
[8]
Again, there is no explanation on record by either the applicants or
the attorneys why the attorneys acted the way they
did. The fact that
their attorneys did not communicate the facts to them, caused the
applicants to terminate their mandate “instantly”.
The
applicants then sought other legal assistance. Nonetheless, no
application for leave to appeal was filed, till this day.
[9]
The time to file an application for leave to appeal has long lapsed.
The eviction order of Bruinders AJ stands. During
argument counsel
for the applicants disavowed any reliance on an appeal. For
establishing the applicants’ prima facie right
for an interim
interdict, counsel confined himself to the prospects of success in an
application to be brought to rescind the eviction
order granted
against the applicants on 4 September 2024.
[10]
Since at least 23 November 2024 applicants have had personal
knowledge of all the facts necessary to bring an application
for
rescission of the eviction order. A rescission application brought
under Rule 42(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court or common
law must be
brought within a reasonable time.
Applicants
foistering blame on their attorneys
[11]
As for the relief sought by the application against the City of
Johannesburg for obtaining emergency alternative accommodation,
several facts are relevant. On the correspondence that form part of
the papers in this matter, the applicants’ then attorneys,
Webber Wentzel, as early as 14 March 2023 confirmed in a letter to
the respondents’ attorneys that they “
will be
assisting our clients to approach the City of Johannesburg for
purposes of applying for alternative accommodation”.
[12]
The applicants blame at least some of the delays, non-appearances and
other procedural mishaps on their attorneys of
the day. The attorneys
were not given an opportunity in these papers to give their version
of the events. For the sake of this
analysis, I shall assume that the
version presented by the applicants when they attribute blame on
their own attorneys, is factually
correct. The question arising
therefrom is whether negligent conduct of their attorneys exonerate
the applicants from blame.
[13]
The Appellate Division dealt with this issue in
De Wet and
Others v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A
). In that
judgment the Court also dealt with the approach adopted by the Full
Court in
De Wet and Others v Western Bank Ltd
1977 (4) SA 770
(T).
The Appellate Division considered the genesis and
principles relating to this issue (
De Wet
at 1042G to 1043A)
and then applied it to the facts in the case before it.
[14]
In
De Wet
, the appellants argued that their failure to appear
was due to their attorney, who withdrew from the matter shortly
before the
hearing without informing them timeously. On that date, he
wrote a letter to a certain Mr Coligionis (who was acting as the
plaintiff’s
intermediary) asking him to notify the plaintiffs
of his withdrawal. The letter reached Mr Coligionis only on 13
August, two days
before the hearing. By then, it was too late to
arrange representation (
De Wet
at 1043 C to H).
[15]
The court found the attorney’s conduct to be inexcusable. He
failed to act with the urgency required in the circumstances.
He had
Mr Coligionis’ telephone number, but did not phone him. His
failure to alert his clients timeously left them unable
to appear or
make alternative arrangements for the hearing. The court suggested
that the matter could warrant reporting to the
Law Society (
De Wet
at 1043 H).
[16]
However, the court also found that the appellants themselves bore
some responsibility. They had not contacted their attorney
at any
stage and left all responsibility to Mr Coligionis. After an interim
settlement in 1973, they showed little interest in
the progress of
their case. They offered no acceptable explanation for their lack of
engagement for more than three years (
De Wet
at 1044 A to C).
Here the court referred to the reasoning in the Full Court, wherein
they found that the appellants “
cannot divest themselves of
their responsibilities about the action and then complain vis-à-vis
the other party to the action
that their agents, in whom they have
apparently vested sole responsibility, have failed them
”.
[17]
The appellants were largely the cause of their own problems.
Prejudicing the other party (Western Bank) because of their
(the
appellants) disinterest and failure to manage their case responsibly,
would be inequitable. Consequently, the application
for rescission
was refused.
[18]
Applying the principles laid down in
De Wet
, I am satisfied
that considerable blame should be attributed to the applicants
themselves, mostly due to their inaction. Nor have
the applicants
offered an acceptable explanation for their lack of engagement over a
long period of time. Prejudicing the owners
of the property that the
applicants have occupied for so long because of their disinterest and
failure to manage their case responsibly,
in my view, would be
inequitable. The applicants’ prospective application for
rescission, in my view, has poor prospects
of success, for this
reason alone. If this be so, the applicants have very little prospect
of proving a prima facie right.
[19]
On the balance of convenience, the applicants have suffered the grave
consequence of having been evicted. But the owner-respondent
has
suffered prejudice too. As early as 24 July 2023, the respondents’
attorneys in an email to the then attorneys of the
applicants,
complained that his clients “
are severely prejudiced, being
expected to fund free accommodation since 2013 and to incur
exorbitant legal costs in the process
”. On the papers
before me, those allegations are not disputed.
Applicants’
conduct and inaction
[20]
Nonetheless, the gravity of evicting especially the poor and the
homeless, is obvious and well documented in our law.
Judges are
encouraged, if not required, to play a proactive role in such
proceedings. Consequently, a close look at the facts and
the
governing principles of law are required.
[21]
Throughout the case management process, the court required the
occupiers to provide comprehensive personal and financial
circumstances to enable a proper assessment of their potential
homelessness in the event of eviction. Despite nine distinct
opportunities
and specific directives from the court to furnish
supplementary affidavits detailing their circumstances, the occupiers
repeatedly
failed to comply. These opportunities included explicit
instructions during case management meetings, invitations from
respondents'
attorneys to the applicants to supplement their
affidavits and formal notices served upon the occupiers. The nine
opportunities
are set out below, the references to the CaseLines
record are in brackets:
[i] Personal service of the
eviction application in September 2019, where each occupier was
personally warned to place their
personal circumstances before Court
(009-11).
[ii] The letter by first and
second respondents’ attorneys on 1 March 2023 formally invited
the occupiers to supplement
their answering affidavit regarding their
homelessness risk and personal circumstances as well as approaching
the municipality
for an assessment on the provision of temporary
emergency accommodation (009-11). (When reference herein is made to
“respondents”,
it refers to the first and second
respondent, except when the contents clearly suggest otherwise.)
[iii] A second formal invitation
by letter on 6 March 2023 reminded the occupiers of the need to
supplement and warning that
failure would have consequences for the
adjudication of the eviction (009-11).
[iv] A third letter was sent on
6 July 2023, again recording that the occupiers had still not
supplemented their evidence
(009-13).
[v] A fourth letter sent on 24
July 2023, again recording that the occupiers had still not
supplemented their evidence and
urging them to do so (009-13).
[vi] On 31 August 2023 there was
another invitation to supplement papers, whereafter Weber Wentzel
withdrew as attorneys of
record (000-14).
[vii] An invitation was extended
during the Case Management Meeting on 29 November 2023, where it was
agreed and recorded
that supplementary affidavits would be filed by
30 January 2024. (The Court also made clear that the municipality
needed these
affidavits to prepare its report.) (0099-14).
[viii] Service of a second
section 4(2) notice on 13 June 2024 (authorized by Judge Mahalelo),
compelling the occupiers to
appear before the municipality and to
file personal circumstances information within 7 working days
(009-15).
[ix] There was a last
opportunity by virtue of the hearing notice for 26 August 2024, with
no response or attendance by the
occupiers, despite knowing that
failure to supplement would undermine the defence founded on their
homelessness (009-15).
[22]
On many occasions, from March 2023 through to January 2024, the
respondents' attorneys repeatedly invited the occupiers
to supplement
their papers with detailed information regarding their personal and
financial circumstances. The occupiers' attorneys
initially responded
positively to these requests, undertaking to submit supplementary
affidavits by January 2024. Despite these
commitments, no
supplementary affidavits were delivered. Additionally, a section 4(2)
notice, authorised by Mahalelo J on 13 June
2024, explicitly required
all occupiers to present themselves to the municipality and deliver
detailed information within seven
working days. The occupiers did not
comply with this directive either.
[23]
An answering affidavit was eventually filed by the occupiers, in
which they alleged substantial disrepair and neglect
of the
properties by the owners. They asserted their rights under the Rental
Housing Act, contending that the cancellations of
their leases were
retaliatory and substantively unfair. They further pleaded their
socio-economic hardships and the risk of homelessness,
should the
evictions proceed. However, this affidavit lacked detailed evidence
and corroboration regarding their financial circumstances
and
homelessness, despite clear prior warnings and directives from the
court.
[24]
The eviction application was ultimately set down for hearing before
Acting Judge Bruinders on 26 August 2024. Despite
proper notice,
neither the occupiers nor their legal representatives appeared at
this hearing. Consequently, the court proceeded
in their absence and,
on 4 September 2024, Bruinders AJ granted an eviction order against
the occupiers. The order required the
occupiers to vacate the
premises by 31 October 2024.
[25]
The eviction order was served on the occupiers’ attorneys,
Sithi and Thabela Attorneys, on 5 September 2024. As
already stated,
this service was not communicated by the attorneys to the occupiers.
The occupiers allege that they only became
aware of the eviction
order on 23 November 2024, during consultations with their attorneys.
[26]
On advice from a civic organisation (SANCO), the occupiers attempted
to appeal the eviction order on 23 November 2024,
believing this
would stay the eviction. It later emerged that this appeal was
procedurally invalid as leave to appeal had not been
sought or
granted. Realising this error, on 11 April 2025, the occupiers
drafted and subsequently served a belated application
for leave to
appeal on 14 April 2025 through their newly appointed attorneys,
Precious Muleya Attorneys.
[27]
Notwithstanding these procedural steps, on 15 April 2025, the Sheriff
of Johannesburg East, assisted by members of the
South African Police
Service, executed the writ of ejectment based on the eviction order.
This execution rendered approximately
twenty-one occupiers, including
minors, elderly pensioners, and vulnerable persons, homeless.
[28]
Consequently, on the same date, the occupiers instituted the present
urgent application, seeking immediate restoration
of occupation of
their primary residences at Erf 7[…] F[…], pending the
outcome of a rescission application against
the order granted by
Bruinders AJ. Alternatively, they sought an order directing the City
of Johannesburg to provide emergency
alternative accommodation.
[29]
The respondents opposed this application on the grounds that the
occupiers had extensive notice and ample opportunity
to litigate
their position and present evidence regarding homelessness. The
respondents further argued that the occupiers'
urgency
was self-created and that their eviction was lawfully executed
pursuant to a valid court order, thereby rendering their
requested
relief incompetent.
[30]
The applicants presently seek restoration of possession specifically
in respect of Erf 7[…] F[…]. The eviction
order granted
by Bruinders AJ on 4 September 2024 related to four erven, namely
Erven 6[…], 7[…], 7[…] and
7[…], F[…],
Johannesburg. The unlawful occupiers were evicted from all four
properties pursuant to that order. Upon
analysis of the confirmatory
affidavits filed in the present urgent application, only one of the
applicants alleges that she previously
resided at Erf 7[…].
The majority of applicants seeking restoration, therefore, appear to
claim occupation of a property
where they did not previously reside,
without laying any factual basis for their restoration claim. This
fact raises concerns regarding
the
bona fides
and
appropriateness of the relief sought by the evicted occupiers.
Challenging
the eviction order
[31]
The applicants’ attempts to challenge the eviction order
granted by Bruinders AJ, amount to this. After the eviction
order was
granted on 4 September 2024, the applicants, assisted by SANCO,
attempted to file an application styled as an "application
for
appeal" on 23 November 2024. However, this application was
irregular and incompetent as no application for leave to appeal
had
been sought or granted. The mere filing of this document did not stay
the execution of the eviction order. Subsequently, the
applicants
prepared and served a formal application for leave to appeal by their
newly appointed attorneys on 14 April 2025. However,
this application
for leave to appeal was not filed and, in law, is of no effect. The
eviction order was executed on 15 April 2025.
The applicants, in any
event, through their counsel, abandoned any right to an appeal at the
hearing of this urgent application.
No rescission application against
the eviction order, at the time the urgent application was brought,
had been launched by the
applicants. Although the applicants
assert that they intend to bring a rescission application, no such
application has been
placed before this Court.
[32]
The present urgent application does not concern an eviction order
granted by default, nor is it a matter where the occupiers
were
deprived of an opportunity to place relevant facts before the Court
for purposes of determining whether an eviction, and the
date
thereof, would be just and equitable. On the contrary, the record
reflects that the occupiers were afforded multiple, specific
opportunities over an extended period to submit personal and
financial information to the Court and to the City of Johannesburg.
Their repeated failure to make use of these opportunities resulted in
the absence of detailed personal circumstances on the record
and,
consequently, no obligation on the part of the municipality to
furnish a report under the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(“
PIE”
).
The eviction order granted by Bruinders AJ was accordingly granted on
the available evidence and in compliance with procedural
fairness.
The
present urgent court proceedings
[33]
Following the launching of the urgent application, the matter was
enrolled and heard over a period of two days. During
the hearing,
this court raised the issue whether it would not be appropriate to
hear officials of the City of Johannesburg on the
prospects of the
City providing temporary emergency accommodation to the poor and
homeless. (The City of Johannesburg was joined
as a party in these
proceedings, but did not file answering papers and was not
represented at the hearing.) Counsel for both the
applicant and first
and second respondent agreed that the officials be called to court.
Consequently, this court issued an order
requiring the attendance of
Mr Segala Malahlela, the Head of Legal of the City of Johannesburg.
Mr Malahlela, in turn, arranged
the presence of Mr Oupa Nkoane, the
Head of the Department of Human Settlements (“
the
Department
”). Messrs Malahlela and Nkoane attended the
proceedings and provided oral testimony concerning the availability
of temporary
emergency accommodation, the general procedures followed
for displaced persons and the capacity of the City and Department to
accommodate
the current housing crisis.
[34]
The oral evidence of Messrs Malahlela and Nkoane presented at the
hearing, stack up to this: The City embarked upon creating
temporary
emergency accommodation during about 2018 by using derelict buildings
in the inner city at Jeppe’s Town. Three
buildings were
identified and changed to make them fit for purpose. These three
buildings were designed to accommodate 250, 200
and 98 persons
respectively and have been occupied to the level of overcapacity for
at least the past 3 years. The accommodation
so created was intended
to house the poor and homeless on the basis of temporary emergency
accommodation, but for no longer than
6 months. However, Mr Nkoane’s
evidence was that, once occupation has been taken, the occupiers
don’t vacate the buildings,
they stay. Since then, no further
progress has been made in creating additional accommodation for the
poor and homeless, lack of
funding being the main constraint. As
matters now stand, the waiting list for temporary emergency
accommodation is more than 4 000
families
. Once an
applicant has passed the audit of the City (one criterion being an
income of R2 600 or less per month), such applicant
must join at
the back of the queue.
[35]
Mr Malahlela testified that the City simply does not have the
capacity to give accommodation to the homeless and the
poor. He urged
the court not to give an order that the City should provide such
accommodation, because it will not be able to comply
therewith. Mr
Malahlela pointed out that it would be pointless to grant an order
that the City cannot comply with. This has been
the City’s
position for at least the past three years.
[36]
Mr Malahlela also gave evidence that there are attempts afoot to
improve the capacity of the City to provide more accommodation
for
the poor and homeless. There is a housing project, still in its
planning stage, that, if it eventuates, will provide accommodation
for about 250 people. It involves the restoration of a derelict
building that will cost some R180 million to make it fit for purpose.
However, at this stage, the project has not been budgeted for. Mr
Malahlela testified that it is uncertain whether the housing
project
will eventuate at all.
Issues
for consideration
[37]
Against this background, several issues arise for consideration.
37.1 Whether the eviction order
granted by Bruinders AJ was susceptible to rescission under Rule
42(1) or common law.
37.2 Whether the notice of
motion in the eviction application was too narrow to evict all
occupiers.
37.3 Whether the applicants
have established a prima facie right to interim restoration of
possession pending the outcome
of an application for rescission.
37.4 Whether the applicants'
failure to place their personal circumstances before the Court impact
upon the relief sought
by the applicants. Related thereto, whether
the absence of a municipal report renders the eviction order
procedurally irregular
or unjust and whether the City of Johannesburg
should be directed to provide temporary emergency accommodation to
the applicants.
Applicants’
legal submissions
[38]
The applicants contended that the eviction order granted by Bruinders
AJ was susceptible to rescission under Rule 42(1)
of the Uniform
Rules of Court. They argued that the eviction was granted "in
the absence" of the occupiers and their
attorneys, despite the
prior filing of answering affidavits. Relying on the decision in
Pitelli v Everton Gardens Projects CC
2010 (5) SA 171
(SCA)
at
para 27, the applicants submitted that a judgment obtained in the
absence of a party, remains rescindable under Rule 42 if the
party or
its legal representatives were not present at court when the matter
was determined.
[39]
Applicants further relied on
Occupiers, Berea v De Wet NO and
Another
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC)
, arguing that courts are under a
constitutional duty to actively enquire into the circumstances of
occupiers to ensure that any
eviction order is just and equitable,
even in circumstances of apparent consent and non-appearance. The
applicants submitted that
the absence of a municipal report assessing
their risk of homelessness constituted a material procedural
irregularity, rendering
the eviction order unjust and liable to
rescission.
[40]
The applicants also referred to
City of Johannesburg v Changing
Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA)
, contending
that an eviction may not be granted where there is a risk of
homelessness without careful judicial inquiry into alternative
accommodation. They submitted that in the absence of such an inquiry
at the time the eviction order was granted, the Court was
obliged to
rescind the order and restore the occupiers pending the determination
of the intended rescission application.
[41]
In support of their plea for restoration pending rescission, the
applicants cited
Khoza v Madulammoho Housing Association
and others 2023 JDR 1184 (GJ)
, arguing that it is competent for a
court to order interim restoration of possession following eviction
under a constitutional
remedy pending the outcome of a rescission
application with prospects of success.
[42]
Finally, the applicants relied on
Smith v Zenzo Khumalo and all
the Unlawful Occupiers of the Property and another 2024 JDR 2025 (GJ)
for their submission that the High Court retains the power to direct
the City of Johannesburg to provide emergency accommodation
where the
constitutional rights of evictees are implicated, particularly under
section 26(2) of the Constitution.
Respondents’
legal submissions
[43]
The respondents opposed the relief on multiple grounds. First, they
contended that the eviction order was not a default
judgment as
envisaged by Rule 42(1), because the applicants had filed answering
affidavits and placed their defences on record.
Relying on
De Beer
v ABSA Bank Limited 2016 JDR 0868 (GP)
at para 12, the
respondents argued that where a party has filed pleadings but fails
to appear at the hearing, judgment is not granted
"in the
absence" of that party, and the appropriate remedy is appeal,
not rescission.
[44]
The respondents further submitted that the applicants’ reliance
on
Pitelli
is misplaced, as that decision involved
circumstances where no answering affidavits were filed, unlike the
present case. Similarly,
they distinguished
De Allende v Baraldi
t/a Embassy Drive Medical Centre
2000 (1) SA 390
(T)
, noting that
in that matter the judgment simply found that if a litigant was
represented by an attorney at the hearing, he could
not claim that
the order had been given in his absence.
[45]
As to the reliance on
Berea,
the respondents contended that
the facts were materially different. In
Berea
the
eviction was based on a purported agreement without proper consent or
judicial inquiry, whereas here the applicants were legally
represented, given repeated opportunities to present their personal
circumstances, but failed to do so. Consequently, Bruinders
AJ could
not be faulted for proceeding on the available evidence.
[46]
The respondents emphasized that the applicants had been given no less
than eight opportunities to present information
required by the City
of Johannesburg to assess eligibility for emergency accommodation.
Their deliberate failure to do so frustrated
the City's involvement
and justified the Court proceeding without a municipal report.
[47]
On the issue of restoration pending rescission, the respondents
distinguished
Khoza,
arguing that in
Khoza
a rescission
application had already been filed at the time interim relief was
granted, whereas in the present case, no rescission
application has
been launched and the applicants’ prospects of success are slim
to non-existent. In any event, in
Khoza
the court was not
required to decide whether rescission was the appropriate procedure.
This decision is at odds with the Full Court
decision in
De Beer
,
which decision was binding on
Khoza
. Consequently,
Khoza
was decided wrongly.
[48]
Finally, regarding the City of Johannesburg's role, the respondents
argued that while a court may direct the City to
engage with
displaced persons, it cannot compel the City to provide emergency
accommodation, unless proper procedures have been
followed and
eligibility have been established. They submitted that it would be
inappropriate to grant mandatory relief against
the City without
evidence of compliance with internal housing policies and
availability of emergency accommodation. In any event,
the evidence
of Messrs Malahleha and Nkoane have made it clear that the City of
Johannesburg has not been able, for at least the
past three years, to
provide emergency temporary accommodation for the poor and homeless.
Any order to compel the City of Johannesburg
to provide emergency
temporary accommodation, as demonstrated by the oral evidence
presented, would be pointless, for such order
could not be executed.
Further
legal principles applicable to eviction proceedings
[49]
The legal principles relevant to the adjudication of eviction
proceedings and the grant of interim relief pending rescission,
are
well settled in our law. As summarised in
City of Johannesburg v
Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA)
at paras 24 to
25, and explained in Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, Part D 9-1
[service 24, 2024], a court is required to undertake
two separate
enquiries when adjudicating an eviction application. First, the Court
must determine whether it is just and equitable
to grant an eviction
order. Second, if eviction were to be ordered, the Court must
determine a just and equitable date for its
implementation and
consider attaching appropriate conditions. In weighing the rights of
property owners against the plight of unlawful
occupiers, the
availability of alternative accommodation is relevant, but primarily
informs the second enquiry, namely the determination
of the eviction
date, rather than the grant of the eviction itself.
[50]
In
Smith v Senzo Khumalo and All the Unlawful Occupiers 2024 JDR
2025 (GJ)
at paras 25 to 27, the Court reaffirmed that justice
and equity require that unlawful occupiers who receive notice of
eviction
proceedings should take proactive steps to seek alternative
accommodation. Occupiers cannot simply remain in unlawful occupation
indefinitely to the detriment of the property owner’s
constitutionally protected rights. While the availability or absence
of municipal alternative accommodation is a relevant consideration,
it does not preclude the granting of an eviction order, provided
that
justice and equity are appropriately considered when setting the date
for eviction.
[51]
Similarly, in
Msibi v Occupiers of Unit 67 Cedar Creek 2025 JDR
0640 (GP)
at paras 18 to 24, the Full Court held that the absence
of a municipal report does not constitute a legal impediment to the
granting
of an eviction order. PIE provides a procedure to regulate
evictions, but does not allow unlawful occupiers to indefinitely
defeat
the rights of property owners. Although the circumstances of
vulnerable occupiers, such as the elderly, children, and disabled
persons, must be carefully considered, these factors do not in
themselves automatically preclude eviction where it remains just
and
equitable to grant such an order.
Notice
of motion in the eviction proceeding
[52]
The applicants argued that the eviction order granted by Bruinders AJ
unlawfully extended to occupiers who had not been
cited in the
founding papers or properly served, asserting that the reference to
"
further any other unlawful occupiers
" only appeared
for the first time in the judgment itself. They contended that,
absent citation and service, the order was
procedurally defective.
The respondents submitted that the notices of motion in the original
eviction applications expressly sought
the eviction of "
the
First Respondent and all persons claiming any right of occupation
through them
”. They argued that the section 4(2)
notices served on the occupiers similarly identified "
for the
eviction of you, the unlawful occupants, and all those holding under
you
" as respondents, thereby properly extending the
proceedings to all persons unlawfully occupying the premises. The
respondents
maintained that the procedural safeguards required by PIE
were complied with and that the eviction order properly encompassed
all
occupiers holding their right of occupation under the cited
respondents.
Findings
of this court
[53]
This is an application for an interim interdict. The prima facie
right on which the applicants rely for obtaining interim
relief, is
that the judgment of Bruinders AJ granting the eviction order, was
wrong and that the applicants’ intended rescission
application
of that eviction order, is likely to succeed. If the anticipated
rescission application were to fail, the applicants’
have no
right to found its claim for interim relief.
[54]
I am of the view that applicants’ anticipated application for
rescission, will fail. There was no error in Bruinders
AJ’s
eviction order as contemplated in Rule 42(1) of the Uniform Rules of
Court or at common law. In my opinion, having regard
to the facts set
out in the judgment, the papers filed in the application and the
legal principles referred to herein, the notice
of motion in the
eviction application was not too narrow to evict all occupiers.
[55]
The application for rescission of the eviction order should not
succeed in circumstances such as the present. The applicants
filed a
notice of opposition and an answering affidavit and was represented
by an attorney, but simply did not appear when the
eviction
application was heard. No reason was advanced why this occurred. No
affidavit of the then attorneys was presented in evidence.
The
applicant was not “absent”, as contemplated in law. The
eviction order has been executed. Even if a rescission
of the
eviction order were to be granted, an order compelling restoration is
discretionary and will probably not be granted, especially
as the
occupiers have been in occupation of the building since 2013, without
paying any rental to the owner, whatsoever.
[56]
The occupiers have not, during the many years of litigation and,
especially, after the eviction order had been granted,
made any
attempt whatsoever to find alternative accommodation. During argument
I asked counsel for the applicants whether there
was any obligation
on the occupiers to attempt to find alternative accommodation to
which he answered, “no”. I cannot
agree. See also
Smith
at paras 25 to 27, referred to in para [50] above. The applicants had
many opportunities to place their personal circumstances
before
court, but failed to do so, failures for which they have themselves
to blame. These facts put a different perspective on
the absence of a
municipal report, which absence in my view does not render the
eviction order procedurally irregular or unjust.
In any event, the
oral evidence rendered at the hearing makes it plain that the City of
Johannesburg lacks the ability to provide
temporary emergency
accommodation to the applicants. This, according to the evidence, has
been so for at least the past three years,
which covers the period
when Bruinders AJ made his eviction order. The alternative order
sought by the applicants that the City
of Johannesburg should be
directed to provide temporary emergency accommodation to the
applicants, should not be granted, for all
the reasons already
mentioned. In addition, the City of Johannesburg is not capable of
providing temporary emergency accommodation
and an order compelling
the City to do so, cannot be complied with. Such an order will serve
no purpose and should be avoided.
In any event, the applicants are
entitled to approach the City of Johannesburg for assistance of their
own accord.
[57]
There is in my view another reason why it is highly probable that
applicants’ prospective application for rescission
of the
eviction order, will fail. An application for rescission, both under
Rule 42(1) and at common law, must be brought within
a reasonable
time. The case law on this point, is explicit.
[58]
The eviction order was granted on 4 September 2024. The applicants’
attorneys were aware of the order since it
was granted. The
applicants claim that their attorneys did not advise them that the
eviction order was granted until their meeting
held on 24 November
2024. Yet, since at least that date, the applicants did not bring a
rescission application, at least not before
they were evicted
pursuant to the court order granted by Bruinders AJ. They were
evicted on 15 April 2025. In the founding papers
applicants advance
some explanation why they did not bring an application for rescission
before the order for eviction was executed.
I am not satisfied that
applicants’ explanations for their long delay to bring a
rescission application, are satisfactory.
There were long periods of
inaction for which the applicants gave no explanation. I am of the
view that an application for condonation
for the long lapse of time
before the application for rescission of the eviction order was
brought, will fail. The principles governing
condonation were dealt
with comprehensively in
Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another
(Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC).
Paragraph [22] of the judgment also provides an
illustration of the application of such principles:
“
[22] An
applicant for condonation must give a full explanation for the delay.
In addition, the explanation must cover
the entire period of delay.
And, what is more, the explanation given must be reasonable. The
explanation given by the applicant
falls far short of these
requirements. Her explanation for the inordinate delay is superficial
and unconvincing. It amounts to
this. During the entire period of
approximately 11 months she was considering whether or not to appeal
the decision of the Supreme
Court of Appeal. During this period she
sought advice from a number of individuals whom she has not
disclosed. In addition, she
alleges that she does not have unlimited
funds although she admits that that this is not a compelling reason
for the delay. She
has not furnished any explanation as to why it
took approximately 11 months for her to decide whether or not to
appeal. Nor has
she furnished any explanation how she overcame her
funding difficulty.”
[59]
Given the history of this matter, the question arises whether the
legal processes protecting and enforcing the contesting
rights and
obligations of occupiers and owners have now not run its course. The
principle of finality expressed in the maxim
interest rei publicae
ut sit finis litium
(it is in the public interest that litigation
be brought to finality) is of long standing in our law. In
Zondi v
MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs, and Others
2006 (3) SA
1
(CC)
at para [28] the Constitutional Court held that it is in
the public interest that litigation should be brought to finality,
because
the “parties must be assured that once an order of
Court has been made, it is final and they can arrange their affairs
in
accordance with that order.” See also
Freedom Stationary
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Hassom and Others
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA)
at
p 465 A to C and the authorities referred to therein. In
Van Wyk
the Constitutional Court held at para [31]:
“
There is an important
principle involved here. An inordinate delay induces a reasonable
belief that the order had become unassailable.
This is a belief that
the hospital entertained and it was reasonable for it to do so. It
waited for some time before it took steps
to recover its costs. A
litigant is entitled to have closure on litigation. The principle of
finality in litigation is intended
to allow parties to get on with
their lives. After an inordinate delay a litigant is entitled to
assume that the losing party has
accepted the finality of the order
and does not intend to pursue the matter any further. To grant
condonation after such an inordinate
delay and in the absence of a
reasonable explanation, would undermine the principle of finality and
cannot be in the interest of
justice.”
[60]
I find that the applicants have not made out a case for the relief
they seek.
[61]
When I raised the issue of costs with counsel, they were in agreement
that there should be no order as to costs. I agree.
[62]
In consequence, the following order is made: The application is
dismissed. There is no order as to costs.
AP JOUBERT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on:
22 – 25 April 2025
Delivered
on:
8 May
2025
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
Adv. L Mhlanga
Instructed
by:
Precious Muleya
Incorporated Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv. B D
Hitchings
Instructed
by:
Warfemius van der
Merwe Inc
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