Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 563South Africa
Kaprivi Investment Corridor CC v Msibi and Others (2022/027250) [2024] ZAGPJHC 563 (13 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kaprivi Investment Corridor CC v Msibi and Others (2022/027250) [2024] ZAGPJHC 563 (13 June 2024)
Kaprivi Investment Corridor CC v Msibi and Others (2022/027250) [2024] ZAGPJHC 563 (13 June 2024)
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sino date 13 June 2024
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022-027250
1. REPORTABLE: YES / NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
3. REVISED.
In
the matter between:
THE
KAPRIVI INVESTMENT CORRIDOR CC
Applicant
and
HILDA
MSIBI
First
Respondent
PRECIOUS
THENJIWE SIBANDA
Second
Respondent
ALBERTINAH
NTHABELENG NENZINANE
Third
Respondent
NKOSANA
MABHENA
Fourth
Respondent
MDUDUZI
NDEBELE
Fifth
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Sixth
Respondent
Coram:
Maenetje AJ
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and uploading on
Caselines. The date and time for handdown is deemed to be 10h00 on 13
June 2024.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Maenetje
AJ:
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicant applies for two orders. First, to confirm cancellations
of oral lease agreements concluded with each of
the first to fifth
respondents. Second, to evict the first to fifth respondents and all
other persons occupying the immovable property
situate at flat
numbers 1 to 5, M[…] C[…], 1[…] M[…]
Street, B[…] East, Johannesburg, Gauteng
(
the Property
)
through the first to fifth respondents.
[2]
The applicant alleges that it is the registered owner of the
property. It alleges that it concluded oral lease agreements
with the
first to fifth respondents separately on different dates in September
2004, February 2005, March 2009, July 2012 and September
2016. It
states further that the oral agreements were on a month-to-month
basis. The applicant alleges that the first to
fifth respondents
breached the lease agreements in that they failed to pay amounts
owing in respect of rental and utilities over
a period of time. It
served notices of breach on the first to fifth respondents and
afforded them a reasonable period in which
to remedy the breach,
failing which it would cancel the lease agreements and require the
first to fifth respondents to vacate the
property. The first to fifth
respondents failed to remedy the breach and the applicant cancelled
the oral lease agreements and
notified the first to fifth respondents
to vacate the property.
[3]
The applicant alleges that despite the cancellation of the lease
agreements and the notice to vacate the Property, the
first to fifth
respondents and all those occupying the property through them
continue to occupy the property unlawfully. It says
the first to
fifth respondents and all those occupying the property through them
have no right in law to remain in occupation of
the property. It
contents that it would be just and equitably to evict the first to
fifth respondents and all those occupying the
property through them
and to authorise the Sheriff and/or his Deputy to do all such things
necessary to give effect to the eviction
of the first to fifth
respondents and all those occupying through them. The applicant seeks
the eviction under the provisions of
the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 19 of 1998 (
the
PIE Act
).
[4]
The breach notice or letter of demand that the applicant sent to the
first to fifth respondents is dated 15 August 2022.
The letter of
termination is dated 26 August 2022.
[5]
In the answering affidavit, the first to fifth respondents dispute
that the applicant has proved its ownership of the
property. As a
result, they dispute the locus standi of the applicant to bring the
application for their eviction under the PIE
Act.
[6]
In relation to the lease agreements, the first to fifth respondents
allege that they have written lease agreements concluded
with the
applicant. They give different dates for the conclusion of these
written lease agreements. Although each of the first
to fifth
respondents dispute that they had an oral agreement with the
applicant and allege that the lease agreements they concluded
were in
writing and give the dates when those lease agreements were
concluded, none of them alleges that their respective written
lease
agreements are still in force. I therefore accept that the applicant
has cancelled lease agreements concluded with the first
to fifth
respondents that were in force at the time of the cancellation.
[7]
I turn to consider each of the two orders that the applicant seeks.
Confirmation
of the cancellation of lease agreements
[8]
On the
facts presented by the applicant the founding affidavit, I accept
that the applicant has cancelled the lease agreements it
had with the
first to fifth respondents. It has given the reason for termination
as a failure to pay monies due for rental and
utilities. It is not
disputed by the first to fifth respondents such monies were not paid
and they accumulated arrears. They seek
to justify the non-payment on
a ruling by the Housing Tribunal rendered in 2011. The ruling of the
Housing Tribunal had nothing
to do with the obligation to pay rental.
The complaint to the Housing Tribunal concerned the calculation of
certain water charges,
electricity charges, the question whether the
applicant could carry out certain maintenance work on the property
whilst its tenants
remained in occupation of the property and charges
under the
Debt Collectors Act, 114 of 1998
. It did not concern the
entitlement of the first to fifth respondents to withhold rental for
any reason. In the absence of any
ruling by the Housing Tribunal to
the contrary, the applicant was entitled under the common law to
cancel the lease agreements
with the first to fifth respondents on
notice.
[1]
The
eviction order
[9]
The first to fifth respondents contend that the applicant has failed
to establish its locus standi under the PIE Act to
bring the eviction
proceedings. They say that only an owner of land or a building, or a
person in charge of such land or building
has legal standing under
the PIE Act to bring eviction proceedings. The PIE Act defines owner
as the registered owner of land.
The person in charge is defined as a
person who has or at the relevant time had legal authority to give
permission to a person
to enter or reside upon the land in question.
[10]
It is common cause on the affidavits that the applicant is the entity
that concluded the lease agreements with the first
to fifth
respondents to entitle them to occupy the property, whether in
writing or orally. Each of the first to fifth respondents
alleged
that the applicant concluded written lease agreements with them,
which entitled to them to occupy the property. They provide
the dates
when such written lease agreements were allegedly concluded. In
addition, the applicant has expressly alleged that it
is the owner of
the property. Even if it may be accepted that the applicant has
failed to provide written proof of ownership, it
is clearly the
person in charge as defined in the PIE Act because it is common cause
that at the relevant times it had legal authority
to give permission
to the first to fifth respondents to occupy the property by means of
the lease agreements concluded with them.
Furthermore, the Housing
Tribunal ruling on which the first to fifth respondents rely dealt
with the applicant as the lessor against
whom the complaints were
raised. I therefore find that the applicant has legal standing under
the PIE Act to seek the eviction
of the first to fifth respondents
from the property.
[11]
The difficulty for the applicant is the lack of relevant facts on
affidavit upon which the Court is legally obliged to
make a
determination whether an eviction is just and equitable and whether
the timing of the eviction, to be implemented within
ten
days of the grant of the order, would be just and equitable. In the
absence of these relevant facts, which the court is statutorily
required to consider in coming to its decision, the order of eviction
cannot be granted.
[12]
The courts
have clarified that in terms of sections 4(7) and (8) of the PIE Act,
a court hearing an application for eviction at
the instance of a
private person or body, owing no obligations to provide housing or
achieve the gradual realisation of the right
of access to housing in
terms of section 26(1) of the Constitution, is faced with two
separate inquiries. First, it must decide
whether it is just and
equitable to grant an eviction order having regard to all relevant
factors. Under section 4(7), those factors
include the availability
of alternate land or accommodation to which the unlawful occupiers
may be relocated and the rights and
needs of the elderly, children,
disabled persons and households headed by women.
[2]
[13]
These factors are not addressed at all in the affidavits filed for
the applicant and the affidavits filed for the first
to fifth
respondents. When this issue was raised with counsel with for the
applicant, her submission was that it was not possible
for the
applicant to access the property in order to obtain the relevant
facts. Even if this could constitute an excuse, it is
not stated in
any of the applicant’s affidavits, which include a founding
affidavit, a supplementary affidavit and a replying
affidavit.
[14]
Under section 4(8) of the PIE Act, if the Court is satisfied that all
the requirements of the section have been complied
with and that no
valid defence has been raised by the unlawful occupier, it must grant
an order for the eviction of the unlawful
occupiers, and determine a
just and equitable date on which the unlawful occupier must vacate
the property under the circumstances;
and the date on which an
eviction order may be carried out if the unlawful occupier has not
vacated the property on the date contemplated.
[15]
Under 4(9) of the PIE Act, in determining a just and equitable date
contemplated in subsection (8), the Court must have
regard to all
relevant factors, including the period the unlawful occupier and his
or her family have resided on the land in question.
[16]
The SCA has
explained that the order that a court grants in respect of these two
discrete inquiries is a single order. Accordingly,
the order cannot
be granted until both inquiries have been undertaken and the
conclusion reached that the grant of an eviction
order, effective
from a specified date, is just and equitable. Nor can the inquiry be
concluded until the court is satisfied that
it is in possession of
all the information necessary to make both findings based on justice
and equity.
[3]
In the same judgment, the SCA emphasised that the implication of this
is that, in the first instance, it is for the applicant to
ensure
that the information placed before the court is sufficient, if
unchallenged, to satisfy the Court that it will be just and
equitable
to grant an eviction order. Both the constitution and PIE require
that the court must take into account all relevant
facts before
granting an eviction order.
[4]
[17]
In
Occupiers
of Erven 87 and 88 Berea,
[5]
the Constitutional Court explained at paragraph 54 of its judgement
that the application of PIE is mandatory, and courts are enjoined
to
form the opinion that it is just and equitable to order an eviction.
The opinion to be formed is that of the court and not the
respective
parties. Accordingly, a court is not absolved from actively engaging
with the relevant circumstances even where parties
purport to consent
to an eviction. It confirmed further that where the relevant
information is not before the court, the required
inquiry cannot be
conducted and no order may be granted.
[6]
[18]
In the present case, the Court is not able to conduct the required
inquiry because the relevant facts have not been placed
before the
Court by both parties. The order for eviction can therefore not be
granted. If the applicant wishes to persist with
the eviction, it
must approach court on full facts, placing all the relevant factors
before the court. It may also seek an order
to compel the sixth
respondent to conduct an inspection of the property, assess the
personal circumstances of those occupying the
property and present a
report to the court. The applicant has not done this. It is clear
from the wording of the order that the
applicant seeks that it
envisages that there may be other allegedly unlawful occupiers of the
property in addition to the first
to fifth respondents who occupy the
property through the first to fifth respondents. In this regard, the
applicant requires the
eviction order to operate also against those
that may be occupying the property by, through or under the first to
fifth respondents.
These people may conceivably include children,
people with disabilities or the elderly. The Court is uninformed of
these relevant
facts on the papers before it.
[19]
Since the main purpose of the application was to obtain the eviction
of the first to fifth respondents, and this was
unsuccessful, I am of
the view that it would be just and equitable that each party bears
its own costs.
[20]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
(1) Cancellation of
the oral lease agreements concluded between the applicant and the
first to fifth respondents is confirmed.
(2) The balance of
the orders sought are dismissed.
(3) Each party is
to bear its own costs.
NH
MAENETJE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
11 June 2024
Date
of judgment:
13 June 2024
For
the applicant:
U Madhoo
Instructed
by Singh
& Madhoo Inc
For
the respondent: LR
Matshidza
Instructed
by
[1]
Maphango
and Others v Aengus Lifestyle Properties (Pty) Ltd
2012 (3) SA 531
(CC) para 29.
[2]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and others
(Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa as amicus
curiae)
[2013]
1 All SA 8
(SCA) para 25 (
Changing
Tides
).
[3]
Changing
Tides
para 25.
[4]
Changing
Tides
para 30.
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality and another v Various Occupiers, Eden Park
Extension 5
[2014]
1 All SA 386
(SCA) para 21
.
[5]
Occupiers
of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v De Wet N.O. and Another
2017 (5) SA 346 (CC).
[6]
Occupiers
of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v De Wet N.O. and Another
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) para 46.
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