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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 623
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## Okoye and Another v Lockyer and Others (2022/43051)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 623 (9 July 2024)
Okoye and Another v Lockyer and Others (2022/43051)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 623 (9 July 2024)
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sino date 9 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2022/43051
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
OKOYE,
SIMON
First
Applicant
OKOYE,
SILINDILE IRENE IMMACULATE Second
Applicant
and
IAN
BRUCE LOCKYER
(AND
ALL OTHER UNLAWFUL OCCUPANTS)
First
Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF PORTION 2 OF
ERF
813 ROSETTENVILLE SITUATED AT
18
HAIG STREET, ROSETTENVILLE
Second Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF REMAINING EXTENT OF
ERF
757 ROSETTENVILLE SITUATED AT
79
MABEL STREET, ROSETTENVILLE Third
Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF REMAINING EXTENT OF
ERF
758 ROSETTENVILLE SITUATED AT
81
MABEL STREET, ROSETTENVILLE
Fourth
Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF REMAINING EXTENT OF
ERF
813 ROSETTENVILLE SITUATED AT
54
GEORGE STREET, ROSETTENVILLE
Fifth
Respondent
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF ERF 814
ROSETTENVILLE
SITUATED AT
52
GEORGE STREET, ROSETTENVILLE
Sixth
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Seventh Respondent
UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS “ANNEXURE A” Eighth
Respondent
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL
DEVELOPMENT Ninth
Respondent
REASONS
Manoim
J,
Background
[1]
This is an application for the eviction of the respondents from five
residential properties in downtown Johannesburg.
It is common cause
that the eviction is governed by the provisions of the Prevention of
Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation
of Land Act No 19, of
1998 (“PIE”).
[2]
The matter has already served before nine judges in this division
since the notice in terms of section 4(2) of PIE was
authorised on 9
December 2016. This means that when the matter came before me on 31
May 2024, the application had been with the
courts for seven and a
half years without resolution.
[3]
The 31 May 2024 date was meant for the matter to be heard as a
special motion. This means that it was considered complex
enough to
justify an extended time for hearing than would be allocated for
ordinary opposed motions. Everything should have been
ready by then.
This is because provision for all outstanding filings had been
arranged, first in terms of a case management meeting
held on 20th
September 2022, and then subsequent directives from the office of the
Deputy Judge President.
[4]
Despite the lengthy list of parties cited in the headnote there are,
de facto, three protagonists in this litigation each
represented by a
separate legal team. The applicants are a husband and wife, who
jointly own the properties since they took transfer
of them on 28
September 2016. They have not had access to the properties since
then. The occupiers are an indeterminate number
of people who
variously occupy the five properties. An NGO, the Centre for Applied
Legal Studies, represents at least some of them
although its mandate
in this respect seems uncertain. Nevertheless, it is serves as the
only legal representative that the occupiers
presently have. The
third protagonist is the City of Johannesburg.
[5]
The City is the organ of state in this case contemplated in terms of
section 4(7) of PIE. Since many of the occupiers
may have been in
occupation for more than six months prior to the initiation of these
proceedings, the City, if it is just and
equitable, may be required
to offer them alternative accommodation in the event an eviction is
ordered. The City has a policy,
which it considers constitutionally
compliant, in terms of which it offers temporary emergency
accommodation (TEA) to persons earning
less than R 3500 per month.
But the City further qualifies this by saying the obligation is only
triggered if the City has the
resources to do so.
[6]
What led to the impasse in the evolution of this case is the triad of
interests at stake; the applicants as owners seek
restoration of
their properties; the occupiers seek a roof over their heads; and the
City claims its resources are constrained.
[7]
All the facts were meant to be placed before the court by 31 May
2024, so a final determination could be made. Specifically,
the City
was meant to provide its TEA report. This report would state which
occupants qualified for TEA and where they would be
accommodated,
including details about this accommodation. The City’s
obligations to furnish the report were known to it as
the time
periods were set out in a court order dated 1 September 2022. The
City was to have conducted its assessment on 2 and 3
September 2022
and presented a proposal for accommodation 14 days later. Thus, if
the City had complied, all would have been achieved
by mid-September
2022. It did not.
[8]
On 20 May 2024, clearly in anticipation of the 31 May 2024 hearing
date before me, the City wrote to all parties to request
their
agreement to a postponement of the hearing on the 31 May, so that the
City could apply for an extension of the time period
to comply with
its obligations in the 1 September 2022 order. The applicants refused
to agree to the postponement.
[9]
When the matter came before me on 31 May 2024, the City had still not
served its application for an extension. Counsel
for the City
requested a postponement to allow the City to file an extension. I
asked the City what the basis of the extension
application would be.
Counsel informed me that the application was to illustrate that the
City thus far had not been able to find
alternative accommodation for
the occupants nor was it clear how many people would qualify in terms
of the TEA policy. The City
he said would explain that due to recent
fires in City buildings which led to many others requiring emergency
accommodation, the
City, at present, did not have TEA accommodation
available. Counsel stated that it would take the City about 8 months
to find accommodation
for the qualifying occupants. The applicants
opposed the application. They were not opposed to the City being
given more time to
find TEA but wanted a fixed date to be determined
for the eviction. At my suggestion, the parties agreed to negotiate
an order
to meet each parties’ respective needs. The parties
duly negotiated. The order below is the product of an agreement
reached
as between the City and applicants.
[10]
The occupiers however wanted the eviction date to be conditional on
the City having furnished the occupiers with alternative
accommodation by then. They indicated that they were satisfied with
the other terms set out in the order but insisted on this condition.
The applicants were unwilling to accede to this concession.
Understandably their view was that if they had to wait 8 months for
the eviction date it must be final, not subject to a further
condition given the history of the delays in this matter.
Analysis
[11]
There is no dispute that the occupiers occupy the properties
unlawfully. The only issue is whether the terms of the order
for
eviction are just and equitable.
[12]
A brief history is necessary. The application for evictions relates
to five adjacent properties in Rosettenville, a suburb
in the south
of Johannesburg. The properties are situated on the corner of two
roads and hence physically represent a continuous
area. According to
the version of the one of the occupants in the course of this
litigation there are two main houses on the property
whilst two
stands are empty. However, he refers to there being two granny flats
and a “
couple of shacks
.” The owners contend that
there are nearly 20 shacks on the properties. Given the number of
people who the occupiers attorneys
now contend reside on the
properties, the latter number is the more likely.
[13]
The first respondent, lan Lockyer, was the previous owner of the five
properties. He was unable to repay the bond and
so the properties
were foreclosed by the bank which was the bondholder and sold on
auction. But the new buyers at the auction did
not hold on to the
properties for long, and they on sold them to the applicants, who got
transfer on 28 September 2016. They found
that the property was
occupied. The applicants had no agreement of lease with any of the
occupants. They got the sheriff to serve
a letter of eviction on one
of the occupiers on 3 November 2016, demanding that all the occupiers
vacate the properties. The occupants
refused.
[14]
In an answering affidavit one of the occupants, described as the
fifth respondent, says that he has been in occupation
since 2011 and
had an oral lease with Lockyer to whom he paid a rental of R 750 per
month. However, this arrangement ended he says
in 2012, when Lockyer
ceased visiting the property to collect rent and they had no details
of any bank account to pay him. The
fifth respondent relied on the
“
huur gaat voor koop
” doctrine and tendered
payment of rent to the new owners i.e. the applicants.
[15]
However, no payments were forthcoming and apart from one brief
period, none have been paid to date. The applicants instituted
these
proceedings in December 2016, obtaining their first order to
authorise their section 4(2) notices on 9 December 2016. Subsequently
they obtained an eviction order from Judge Victor on 17 March 2017.
In terms of this order the then occupants were required to
vacate the
properties within 30 days of service of the order. The occupants
remained. A further eviction order was granted by Judge
Mabesele on
22 January 2018. Again, no-one left the properties. Instead, some of
the occupants, now represented, brought an application
to rescind the
orders of Victor J and Mabesele J. Pending these applications they
brought an urgent application to restore possession
of the properties
to them from Sutherland J. As part of this order the occupants who
were parties to that litigation undertook
to pay rental to the
applicants of R 400 per month. But notably there was also a condition
imposed to identify who the people were
who occupied the property to
ensure that occupation was limited to those so identified and who
were meant to pay the agreed rentals.
[16]
On 4 March 2019 Lamont J set aside the Victor J and Mabesele J
orders. But following a further application by the owners,
the order
of Sutherland J was restored by Keightley J. This time however the
Gauteng Social Development Department was joined as
a respondent. The
City was placed on terms to prepare a report on which occupants
qualified for TEA support. Thus, at this stage
of the litigation the
issues now were focussed not on the lawfulness of the occupation, but
on a just and equitable remedy.
[17]
The reason the case has not been concluded is due to the failure of
the City to fulfil its obligations to present a TEA
report. The City
says its officials visited the property in about March 2021 to assess
which occupants qualified to emergency accommodation.
According to
counsel’s submission only 12 people qualified. CALS acting for
some of the occupants filed an affidavit dated
16 April 2021 which
contains a list of 71 names of heads of households. The number of
occupants in these households varies between
1, and in one case, 10.
It is not clear whether this informal census is current nor whether
it is accurate in terms of its numbers,
numbers of dependants and the
income reflected.
[18]
What is not contested is that the applicants are receiving no income
from the properties but are still liable for their
expenses. Given
the overcrowding on the property, the number of shacks erected, and
the cessation of municipal services to them,
there is little doubt
that whatever equity once existed in the properties in 2016 –
the date of the purchase- has diminished.
Moreover, the applicants
have been deprived of the benefits of ownership for a period of more
than eight years by the time the
eviction order takes effect in
January 2025. The applicants’ rights of ownership in terms of
section 25 of the Constitution
have been compromised and severely
curtailed.
[19]
I accept that the occupiers whose present details are not known may
have amongst them persons who cannot afford housing.
How many fit
into this category is presently unclear. At the beginning of the
hearing CALS advised the court that the number of
people was 51.
Later in the morning I was told that this figure was to be corrected
– the number was 51 households not 51
persons. CALS was not
able to tell me the aggregate figure. It is apparent that they have
limited information as do the other two
parties to the litigation the
applicants and the City.
[20]
The only issue in this case is whether the order is just and
equitable. But the dispute is now even narrower. Given that
both the
City and the applicants have agreed to the terms of this order, the
occupants represented by CALS have narrowed the dispute
to one of
whether the eviction order should remain conditional lest the City
has not complied with its obligations to provide alternative
suitable
housing for the occupants.
[21]
But in terms of the order there are still eight months before the
eviction date. In this period the City has to attend
at the premises
and assess which of the occupants qualify for TEA. A date of 22
nd
and 23
rd
June 2024 has been agreed upon for this purpose.
These dates are on a weekend to allow those who work to be assessed
on their day
off. Prior to that date CALS will have been given the
opportunity to notify the City of the names it has of an additional
15 unlawful
occupiers.
[22]
There has also been specific allowance for two elderly persons who
are named in the order who may take up accommodation
if they so wish
at accommodation provided at a home of safety and care or an old-aged
home provided by the Province.
[21]
But assuming the worst-case scenario for the some of the occupants;
if the City fails to identify persons who ought to
qualify for TEA or
if they do qualify, fails to provide TEA in terms of its own policies
prior to the date on which they must vacate,
there is sufficient time
for the occupants to bring a mandamus against the City to do so.
[22]
There is no reason to expect the applicants who have waited 8 years
unrewarded to continue to provide accommodation to
the occupants. No
occupant is presently even complying with the Sutherland JP order to
pay rent until alternative accommodation
is found. The concept of
what is just and equitable is not just viewed from the consideration
of occupants but also the owners
of the property. As the
Constitutional Court noted in
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight Properties
39 (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1]
“31
The
provisions of PlE are not designed to allow for the expropriation of
land. A private owner has no obligation to provide free
housing.”
[2]
[23]
But the court also stated:
“
Of course a
property owner cannot be expected to provide free housing for the
homeless on its property for an indefinite period.
But in certain
circumstances an owner may have to be somewhat patient, and accept
that the right to occupation may be temporarily
restricted, as the
Blue Moonlight's situation in this case has already illustrated. An
owner's right to use and enjoy property
at common law can be limited
in the process of justice and equity enquiry mandated by PIE.”
[3]
[24]
In the present case the applicants cannot be accused of impatience.
They have waited eight years to get an order of eviction,
and having
got one, will wait another eight months still to be able to enforce
it. They cannot be expected to delay their right
to occupy any
further on a conditional basis when they have no role in seeking
fulfilment of the condition. They are entitled to
finality and that
is what the order provides, whilst still providing temporary
accommodation for the occupants, special provision
for those
identified as elderly, and a mechanism for the others who may qualify
for TEA.
[25]
The City has agreed to tender costs. I set out again below the order
I delivered on 31 May 2024.
ORDER:-
[26] In the result
the following order is made:
1. All Unlawful
Occupiers, and all those persons in possession of and/or occupying
and/or holding the following immovable
properties by, through or
under the Unlawful Occupiers, are hereby ordered to vacate the
following immovable properties
by no later than
31
January 2025
:
PORTION 2 OF ERF 813
ROSETTENVILLE;
REMAINING EXTENT OF ERF
757 ROSETTENVILLE;
REMAINING EXTENT OF ERF
758 ROSETTENVILLE;
REMAINING EXTENT OF ERF
813 ROSETTENVILLE; and
ERF 814 ROSETTENVILLE
(“
the properties
”).
2. The Sheriff for
the area within which the properties are situated is hereby
authorized and directed to forthwith evict
all Unlawful Occupiers,
and all those persons in possession of and/or occupying and/or
holding the immovable properties by, through
or under the Unlawful
Occupiers in the event of them failing to vacate the property in
terms of paragraph 1 above.
3. The Sheriff for
the area within which the properties are situated is hereby
authorized and directed to enlist the services
of members of the
South African Police Services, or any other person of service, to
assist him/her in the eviction as envisaged
in terms of paragraph 2
above.
4. All Unlawful
Occupiers who have been assessed and who qualify for Temporary
Emergency Accommodation (“
TEA
”) in terms of the
report dated 17 May 2021 and issued by the Seventh Respondent, shall
be given a place of accommodation
by the Seventh Respondent on or
before
31 January 2025
.
5. All Unlawful
Occupiers who have not yet been assessed as to whether they qualify
for TEA by the Seventh Respondent shall
be so assessed on 22 and 23
June 2024 from 10h00am onwards.
6. The Seventh
Respondent shall put up a notice of the date and time of the
aforesaid assessment at the main entrance/(s)
to the properties as
well as on the doors of every unit on or before 7 June 2024 informing
the Unlawful Occupiers of the date and
time of the assessment.
7. All Unlawful
Occupiers who have been assessed on 22 and 23 June 2024 and who
qualify for TEA, shall be given a place of
accommodation by the
Seventh Respondent on or before
31 January 2025
.
8. Every Unlawful
Occupier who does not qualify for TEA, shall be evicted from the
properties by the Sheriff in terms of paragraph
1 to 3 above.
9. The Ninth
Respondent shall provide SOPHIE ANOSTER (with ID NO: 610808 0253 086)
with a place of accommodation in a Home
of Safety or Care Centre on
or before
31 January 2025
, if she desires to take up
such accommodation.
10. The Ninth
Respondent shall provide NOMPI GUMA (with ID NO: 591221 0256 088)
with a place of accommodation in a Home of
Safety or Care Centre on
or before
31 January 2025,
if she desires to take up
such accommodation.
11. The Ninth
Respondent shall provide all Unlawful Occupiers who qualify for TEA
and who are recipients of an Old Age Grant
with a place of
accommodation in a Home of Safety or Care Centre or Old Age Home on
or before
31 January 2025
, if they/he/she desires to
take up such accommodation.
12. A copy of this
Court Order shall be served on all the Unlawful Occupiers in the
following manner:
12.1. By service on
CALS via email; and
12.2. By attaching
a copy of this Order at the main entrance/(s) to the properties.
13. CALS shall
provide to the Seventh Respondent a list of the names and identity
numbers of the 19 additional unlawful occupiers
as at the date of
this Court Order, on or before close of business on Tuesday, 4 June
2024.
14. The Seventh
Respondent shall pay the Applicants’ costs of the eviction
application on a party and party scale.
N.MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
31 May 2024
Date of Reasons:
09 July 2024
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
C. Dénichaud
Instructed
by.
Kinstler Inc
Counsel
for the
Second to Sixth Respondents
:
M. Marongo
Instructed
by:
Centre for applied legal studies
Counsel
for the
Seventh Respondents
:
MC. Makgato
Instructed
by:
Mnchunu Attorneys
[1]
2012 (2) SA 104 (CC)
[2]
Ibid, at paragraph 31.
[3]
Ibid at paragraph 40.
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