Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 49South Africa
Naidoo and Another v Nkombi and Others (2023-091028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 49 (26 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 January 2024
Headnotes
in execution of the judgment.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 49
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Naidoo and Another v Nkombi and Others (2023-091028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 49 (26 January 2024)
Naidoo and Another v Nkombi and Others (2023-091028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 49 (26 January 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_49.html
sino date 26 January 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
30
January 2025
Case
No.
2022/3947
In the matter between:
KOOSHEN
NAIDOO
First Applicant
VANESSA
LEE NAIDOO
Second Applicant
and
KHOLEKA
NKOMBI
First Respondent
NOMALANGA
SHIRLY NKOMBI
Second Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Third Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
On 3 July 2021, the applicants, the Naidoos, purchased ERF
2[…], situated at 1[…] H[…] Road, N[…]
Ext.
20, Johannesburg (“the property”). The Naidoos
bought the property from the first and second respondents, the
Nkombis.
The sale was facilitated by the property’s erstwhile
mortgagee, Standard Bank. The Nkombis had fallen into arrears on the
loan agreement secured by the mortgage bond. Standard Bank had taken
judgment on the bond in 2015, but stayed execution for long
enough to
allow the Nkombis to sell the property to the Naidoos. The advantage
of doing so was that the purchase price provided
for in terms of the
sale agreement – some R1.2 million – was much more than
either Standard Bank or the Nkombis could
reasonably expect to obtain
at a forced sale held in execution of the judgment.
2
The Naidoos became the registered owners of the property on 9
November 2021. The second respondent vacated the property and now
lives in KwaZulu-Natal. However, the first respondent, Ms. Nkombi,
became dissatisfied with the sale agreement. The source of her
dissatisfaction appears to have been that the purchase price was
insufficient to extinguish her indebtedness under the loan agreement,
and left her without the surplus she thought necessary to relocate
from the property. The Naidoos say that Standard Bank then offered
to
pay up to R100 000 to assist Ms. Nkombi to relocate. The Naidoos,
too, offered to pay R48 000 to allow Ms. Nkombi to leave the
property. Nevertheless, convinced that an injustice had been done,
Ms. Nkombi refused to vacate.
3
On 1 February 2022, the Naidoos instituted proceedings for Ms.
Nkombi’s eviction. Ms. Nkombi defended those proceedings
(albeit
in an answering affidavit filed some six months late). This
meant that the eviction application had to be placed on the opposed
roll.
4
The consequent delay left the Naidoos in an unsustainable
situation: they were paying rent to live at a townhouse in Roodepoort
while at the same time servicing the bond they had taken out to
purchase the Northcliff property. The Naidoos fell behind with both
their lease and bond payments. On 1 March 2023, the Naidoos’
Roodepoort landlord terminated their lease. They were told to
leave
the Roodepoort property by no later than 31 March 2023. On or about 2
April 2023, the Naidoos quit the Roodepoort property
and moved into
the Northcliff property with Ms. Nkombi, who still refused to vacate.
5
The situation at present is that the Naidoos occupy the living
rooms in the main house on the property with their infant son.
The
Naidoos’ other son, a ten-year-old, was sent to live with a
relative.
Ms. Nkombi lives in one of the bedrooms. On 13 April
2023, two further individuals: Warren and Chantal Ellie, moved onto
the property
with their newborn baby. They were invited to do so by
Ms. Nkombi. The Naidoos say that they introduced themselves as Ms.
Nkombi’s
“backup”.
6
There is a dispute about whether the Naidoos’ occupation
of the property in April 2023 constituted an act of spoliation. An
application to eject the Naidoos as co-spoliators failed in the
Magistrates’ Court, and they have remained ensconced at the
property since
early April 2023
.
Accordingly, whatever the lawfulness of the Naidoos’ conduct in
taking occupation of the property, their possession of their
portion
of it has now endured for nearly two years.
7
The current eviction application was
re-enrolled before Bezuidenhout AJ on 6 February 2024, but was
postponed, apparently in order
to permit Ms. Nkombi to obtain legal
representation. On 6 May 2024, Wright J postponed the application
again, this time to permit
the filing of supplementary affidavits.
On
10 October 2024, Mudau J authorised the substituted service of a
notice under section 4 (2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
Act
19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”), and the matter was
subsequently enrolled in my opposed motion court on 28 January 2025.
8
On the eve of the hearing, Ms. Nkombi’s erstwhile
attorneys withdrew, and Ms. Nkombi filed a notice removing the matter
from
the roll without the Naidoos’ consent. She was of course
not entitled to do so, and the matter proceeded before me on its
merits. Ms. Nkombi represented herself. She did so ably, making
fluent and relevant submissions. Ms. Cheethai appeared for the
Naidoos.
Unlawful
occupation
9
There is no serious dispute that Ms. Nkombi is an “unlawful
occupier” of the property under the PIE Act. The validity
of
the sale agreement is not in dispute. The transfer of the property to
the Naidoos is not impugned. Ms. Nkombi appears intent
on rescinding
the judgment Standard Bank obtained against her in 2015, but there is
no basis on which the rescission of that judgment
could affect the
Naidoos’ title to the property. The Naidoos’ title to the
property flows from the sale agreement.
10
There can accordingly be no doubt that the Naidoos own the
property. It is equally clear that Ms. Nkombi has neither the
Naidoos’
consent to remain at the property nor any other right
to hold the property against their will.
Justice
and equity
11
Much of the argument before me revolved around the question of
whether an eviction would be “just end equitable” within
the meaning given to that term under section 4 of PIE. It has long
been held that evictions that would lead to homelessness are
not just
and equitable (see, for example,
Occupiers, Shulana Court, 11
Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v Steele
[2010] 4 All SA 54
(SCA), paragraph 16), but this case is not of that type. In the
answering affidavit, there is a solitary one-line assertion that
an
eviction would leave Ms. Nkombi homeless. However, the affidavit
discloses no primary facts from which that inference could
reasonably
be drawn.
12
Indeed, at the hearing, Ms. Nkombi did not argue that she
would be left homeless if she had to leave the property. Ms. Nkombi
rather
suggested that she should be permitted to hold on to the
property while she pursues her recission application against Standard
Bank. I cannot see how that could be just and equitable. The
rescission application has nothing to do with the Naidoos’
title
to the property.
13
Leaving the recission application aside, the injustice of an
eviction could only be established if it were shown that the Naidoos
had been responsible for some unfairness so egregious as to justify
depriving them of possession of the property. No such unfairness
has
been shown. In truth, the scales of equity tip the other way. Ms.
Nkombi sold the property to the Naidoos. While she did so
to avoid
execution on her mortgage bond, she clearly benefitted from the sale.
She was not coerced into it, at least not in the
legal sense, and any
complaint she might conceivably have about her situation lies against
Standard Bank. It is as well to point
out that Ms. Nkombi has in fact
pursued such a complaint with the banking ombudsman. The complaint
was dismissed.
14
On the other hand, the Naidoos have been put through an ordeal
they did nothing to incite. They approached Ms. Nkombi and contracted
with her on terms which strike me as perfectly fair. They did not
seek a quick bargain against an unsuspecting homeowner at a forced
sale. They were fully entitled to expect Ms. Nkombi to vacate the
property, as her erstwhile co-owner did. There was no excuse
in law
or in equity for Ms. Nkombi to have remained behind. The fact that
she has remained entrenched at the property for years
since the sale
agreement was executed compounds the injury.
15
The Naidoos and Ms. Nkombi each accuse the other of lamentable
conduct. These accusations flow from the understandably contentious
situation that has evolved at the property since April 2023. I do not
know how any of parties has been able to put up with living
in the
same dwelling in the circumstances of this case –
especially since, on the face of it, Ms. Nkombi could have
moved out
at any time. Whatever criticism might be levelled at the Naidoos’
conduct, it seems to me that the Naidoos were
more sinned against
than sinning. In any event, there is nothing alleged against them on
the papers that would justify withholding
an eviction order.
The
Ellies
16
That leaves the question of what happens to the Ellies and
their infant child. I was originally concerned that the Ellies had
not
been joined to the proceedings in their own right. Nor did the
Naidoos’ attorneys take the step of joining the Ellies as part
of a catch-all group of unlawful occupiers, as is the practice in
this division. Ms. Cheetai submitted they need not have done
so,
since the Ellies occupy the property “through or under”
Ms. Nkombi.
17
In this case, it seems clear that Ms. Cheetai is right. The
Ellies occupy the property “through or under” Ms. Nkombi,
because they moved onto the property at her invitation after the
eviction proceedings against her were instituted. The nature of
the
arrangement between Ms. Nkombi and the Ellies is unclear, but there
is obviously an agreement between them in terms of which
the Ellies
are permitted to occupy the property in return for some
consideration, even if that consideration is merely the provision
of
“backup”, as the Naidoos allege. It matters not that Ms.
Nkombi was herself an unlawful occupier at the time that
invitation
was taken up, since a lessor need not themselves own the property
they lease. They need do no more than warrant the
lessee against
eviction from it (see
Mpange v Sithole
2007 (6) SA 578
(W),
paragraph 24 and the cases cited there).
18
Under the common law, an ejectment order that covers an
unlawful occupier and those in occupation “through or under”
them may be executed without joining the secondary occupiers in their
own right (see
Nthai v Vereeniging Town Council
1953 (4) SA
579
(A) at 583 to 585). However, in my view, courts should be
reluctant to accept that the eviction of one person necessarily
covers
that of another without a clear factual basis having been laid
for that proposition. In the past, wives and children with their
own
statutory rights of occupation have been evicted as occupiers
“through and under” their husbands and fathers. The
Constitutional Court has disapproved of this practice (see
Klaase
v Van der Merwe
2016 (6) SA 131
(CC), paragraphs 49 to 66). In
addition, where eviction orders are sought against large communities
of people, it will not normally
be accepted that the community
occupies a property “through or under” a smaller number
of named individuals. Each occupier
must usually be joined in their
own right, if only as part of a catch-all group identified as all the
unlawful occupiers of a particular
property.
19
But this case is not of that nature. The Ellies moved onto the
property after the eviction application was instituted. They did so,
at least in part, to thwart the Naidoos’ attempts to obtain
exclusive possession. They would not have moved onto the property
without Ms. Nkombi’s express permission. They have no rights of
occupation, save through her. If Ms. Nkombi is an unlawful
occupier,
then so are they. While the Ellies did not appear before me, they
have been given written and effective notice of this
application, and
every opportunity to adduce evidence of their circumstances. There is
no indication anywhere on the papers that
they would struggle to find
alternative accommodation. Accordingly, they fall to be evicted as
occupiers “through or under”
Ms. Nkombi.
20
Section 4 (8) of the PIE Act requires me to set a “just
and equitable” date for Ms. Nkombi’s eviction and that
of
those who occupy the property through or under her. The exercise of
that discretion in this case entails balancing the length
of time Ms.
Nkombi has been present at the property against the need to bring the
plainly untenable situation there to an end as
soon as reasonably
possible. I would ordinarily have given someone with Ms.
Nkombi’s length of occupation three months
to vacate, but the
circumstances of this case justify shortening that period to two
months.
Costs
21
Ms. Cheetai asked for a punitive costs order against Ms.
Nkombi. I do not think that is justified. Ms. Nkombi represented
herself
before me. She did so amicably and appropriately. While her
case on the merits is untenable, she has not committed the sort of
litigious misconduct that would justify a punitive costs order.
However, having pressed a plainly unsustainable case to the bitter
end, she ought, in my view, to bear the costs of this application on
the ordinary scale.
Order
22
Accordingly –
22.1 The first respondent, and
all those occupying through or under her, (“the occupiers”)
are evicted from
ERF 2[…], 1[…] H[…]
Road, N[…] Ext. 20, Johannesburg (“the property”).
22.2
The
occupiers are directed to vacate the property by no later than Monday
31 March 2025, failing which the Sheriff may evict them,
assisted, if necessary, by the South African Police Service or a
private security company contracted by the sheriff and acting
under
the sheriff’s control
.
22.3
The
first respondent is directed to pay the costs of this application.
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 30 January 2025.
HEARD
ON:
28 January 2025
DECIDED
ON:
30 January
2025
For
the Applicants:
N Cheethai
Instructed by Fouche Attorneys
For
the First Respondent: In person
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Naidoo and Another v Nkombi and Others (2022/3947) [2025] ZAGPJHC 49 (30 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 49High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Naidoo v Road Accident Fund (42843/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1084 (22 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1084High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Naidoo v Minister of Police (20412/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 793 (4 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 793High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Naidoo v Chicktay N.O. and Others (39321/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 929 (22 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 929High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Naidoo v Magampha and Another (2023/036454) [2025] ZAGPJHC 225 (3 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 225High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar