Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 342South Africa
Selemetja vs City of Johannesburg (024646/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 342 (8 April 2024)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Selemetja vs City of Johannesburg (024646/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 342 (8 April 2024)
Selemetja vs City of Johannesburg (024646/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 342 (8 April 2024)
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sino date 8 April 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO
: 024646/2024
DATE
: 20-03-2024
1.REPORTABLE: YES / NO.
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO.
3.REVISED.
In
the matter between
SUNNYBOY
SELEMETJA Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KILLIAN,
AJ
: This is an urgent application
where the applicant seeks final interdictory relief against the
respondents. The applicants seek
to interdict officials of the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents from committing any act which may be
prejudicial to the 1
st
and 6
th
applicants and all those occupying the property
described as erven 557, 559, 560, 561, of Extension 3 Glen Austin
Midrand Township,
to which I will refer to as a property, through or
under them, including
inter
alia
harassment, intimidation,
threatening, assaulting, or making derogatory remarks. The applicants
also seek to interdict the 1
st
to 5
th
respondents from damaging any of the applicants’
personal belongings, building material and other property to be found
on
the immovable properties. Further, applicants seek to interdict
the 1
st
to
5
th
respondents
from evicting them from the property without the necessary court
order authorizing them to do so, and from demolishing
and evicting
the applicants from the property without a court order authorising
them to do so.
This
application was brought with very limited time afforded to the
respondents to file notices of intention to oppose, to take
legal
advice and to prepare answering affidavits. Nonetheless the
respondents all managed to do so and the applicants filed a replying
affidavit.
Counsel
for the parties argued the issue of urgency and the core essentials
of the merits of this application. The facts that are
domain to the
issue of urgency are also relevant and material to the merits of the
relief sought. I have decided to hear the matter
on an urgent basis.
Central
to this application are the allegations that on 16 February 2024 two
unidentified officials of the 2
nd
respondent
threatened to evict the entire community and to burn their properties
to the ground come 30 March 2024. The said unidentified
officials
also allegedly branded their weapons, stating that they will not
hesitate to shoot to kill. Further threats were made
that they, being
the officials, will return on 30 March 2024 and that they will use
the opportunity to kill the applicants. I pause
here to say that the
applicants stated that they do not bring this application on behalf
of the entire community, but that they
act in their personal
capacities only. The applicants say that they have reason to believe
that these threats will be carried out
as the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents acted
unlawfully by previously evicting members of the community from the
property on 17 March 2023 without an order
of court authorising them
to do so. The alleged eviction that occurred on 17 March 2023 led to
an urgent application brought by
the six applicants to this Court,
where she sought similar interdictory relief against the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents, and I
call this application the 2023 urgent application.
The
3
rd
to 5
th
respondents were
later joined as parties to the 2023 urgent application, as they are
the owners of the property. Thus, it is contended
by the applicants
that this Court should urgently issue an order interdicting the
respondents as set out above. They rely on the
strength of threats
issued against them on 16 February 2024, which threats expressly made
reference to 30 March 2024 as a date
on which their structures are
set to be demolished.
The
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents deny
that they intend to evict any person from the property, either on 30
March 2024 and at any other date. They claim
to have no interest in
the property or the continued occupation thereof by the applicants.
The property belongs to the 3
rd
to 5
th
respondents. The
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents made
the same declaration in opposing the 2023 urgent application. They
also denied that they have carried out an unlawful
eviction on 17
March 2023 and claim that they were not involved in any eviction that
may have occurred on that day. The 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents further
denied the events of 16 February 2024 and filed affidavits by the
relevant officials in charge of the sector
in which the property is
situated denying such conduct. They state that they have not issued
threats of eviction to the applicants,
that their officials have not
visited the property, and that they are not aware of, and have not
scheduled any evictions for 30
March 2024.
It
is common cause that the 3
rd
to 5
th
respondents
launched eviction proceedings against all the occupiers of the
property in the High Court, Gauteng Division, Pretoria,
which I will
refer to as the Pretoria application. The Pretoria application is
opposed and still pending. The 1
st
respondent is a
party to the Pretoria application and filed a report, stating amongst
others, that it will abide by the decision
of that Court. The 3
rd
to 5
th
respondents deny
any wrongdoing and claim that they are following the prescripts of
law and pursuing the eviction of the occupiers
of the property by
means of the Pretoria application.
There
is a clear dispute of fact on the central issue in this matter,
namely allegations that the City employees are guilty of the
conduct
complained of. A real genuine and
bona
fide
dispute
of fact can exist only in circumstances where the party who purports
to raise that dispute, in this case the respondents,
have in their
affidavits seriously and ambiguously addressed the facts said to be
disputed. To my mind and on a reading of the
affidavits, this is what
the respondents have done.
Different
considerations apply to the resolutions of disputed facts in motion
proceedings. This is so because the Court has not
had the benefit of
observing and listening to witnesses. The Court has to decide on the
papers before Court, namely the affidavits.
It is important to note
that it is not prudent for an applicant to approach the Court by way
of motion for final relief where there
is a likelihood of a serious
and genuine dispute of fact arising. In such an instance it is
preferable for the applicant to go
by way of action. When confronted
with a dispute of fact, the Court may dismiss the application or may
refer the matter for trial
or make an order for oral evidence to be
led.
However,
where the Court is inclined to adopt a robust approach and resolve
the matter on the papers, even though there is a dispute
of fact, the
Court is obliged to apply the principles in Plascon-Evans Paints LTD
v
Van Riebeeck Paints
(Pty) Ltd and the reference is
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
A.
“
Where
the Court is required to consider whether on the facts averred by the
applicant, which respondent has admitted, together with
the facts
averred by the respondent, the applicant is entitled to the relief
that they claim.”
And when considering the question, if
there is a genuine dispute of fact, in the matter of Stellenbosch
Farmer’s Winery LTD
v
Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957
(4) SA 234
C, the following was stated:
“
A
respondent’s version can be rejected in motion proceedings only
if it is fictitious or so far fetched and clearly untenable,
that it
can confidently be said on the papers alone that it is demonstrably
and clearly unworthy of credence.”
By
applying the test to this matter, in my view, there is a real and
bona fide
dispute of fact that cannot be resolved on the
papers before me. This dispute was partly foreseeable.
The
respondents made their stance clear in the 2023 urgent application.
The applicants should have known that the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents have no
desire or power to seek their eviction. Over and above this, no case
is made out that would justify any order
being granted against the
3
rd
to 5
th
respondents. They
seek the applicants’ eviction but in accordance with the law,
in the Pretoria application, there is no evidence
to suggest that
those respondents intended to act lawlessly. On this basis, the
application stands to be dismissed.
Even
if I am wrong about the existence of a dispute of fact, the
application should still fail for reasons that follow. The
requirements
for granting a final interdict are well known and they
are the following, a clear right, an injury actually committed or
reasonably
apprehended, and the lack of an alternative remedy. The
meaning of reasonable apprehension was quoted with approval in the
matter
of Minister of Law-and-Order
v
Nordine, where the
Court held the following:
“
A
reasonable apprehension of injury has been held to be one which a
reasonable man might entertain on being faced with certain facts.
The
applicant for an interdict is not required to establish that on a
balance of probabilities flowing from the undisputed facts
injury
will follow. He has only to show that it is reasonable to apprehend
that injury will result. However, the test for apprehension
is an
objective one. This means that on a basis of the facts presented to
him, the Judge must decide whether there is any basis
for the
entertainment of a reasonable apprehension by the applicant.”
In so far as the applicants seek a
final interdict to prevent their eviction from the property without
the court order, they have
failed to meet the requirements for the
final interdict, and I say so for the following reasons:
1.
An
order in those terms will be academic only. In law no person may
evict another from land without an order of Court.
2.
The
1
st
and
2
nd
respondents
have no interest in evicting the applicants. They will abide by the
outcome of the Pretoria application.
3.
The
Pretoria application is still pending and the applicants are opposing
that application.
4.
It
is not the applicants’ case that the 3
rd
to 5
th
respondents threatened to evict them by 30 March
2024.
5.
Should
anybody try to evict the applicants from 30 March 2024 without an
order of Court, the applicants will have a remedy available
to them.
They have exercised a similar remedy in the 2023 urgent application.
6.
They
have failed objectively to establish a reasonable apprehension that
the eviction will take place on 30 March 2024. On their
own version,
the applicants say that the 2023 urgent application was withdrawn in
February 2024, because the threat of eviction
no longer existed.
Insofar as the applicants seek final
relief based on the alleged acts of February 2024, on the facts
available to me, it cannot
be said on a balance of probability
firstly that those events indeed occurred and secondly that the two
unidentified officials
will execute their alleged threats or violence
and intimidation.
Based
on all of the aforesaid facts, I am satisfied that the application
stands to be dismissed with costs, and I make that order.
KILLIAN, AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
……………….
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