Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 736South Africa
Redefine Properties Ltd and Others v Chauke and Others (2023/094317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 736 (13 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 August 2024
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 736
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Redefine Properties Ltd and Others v Chauke and Others (2023/094317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 736 (13 August 2024)
Redefine Properties Ltd and Others v Chauke and Others (2023/094317) [2024] ZAGPJHC 736 (13 August 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_736.html
sino date 13 August 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
FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Jurisdiction –
Whether ESTA applying
– Property zoned for mining – Respondents started
occupying property to conduct illegal mining operations –
Evidence warrants finding that respondents are conducting illegal
mining on property – That is the reason for their
occupation
– ESTA not applicable to intended eviction –
Respondents are unlawfully present on property –
Just and
equitable to order an eviction –
Extension of Security of
Tenure Act 62 of 1997
.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-094317
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO.
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO.
3.
JUDGMENT :
13 AUGUST 2024
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN –
REDEFINE
PROPERTIES LTD
FIRST
APPLICANT
GGP
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
SECOND
APPLICANT
THE
PIVOTAL FUND (PTY) LTD
THIRD
APPLICANT
AND
CHAUKE
,
JOHN
FIRST
RESPONDENT
DLATA
MR
SECOND
RESPONDENT
ALL
OTHER OCCUPIERS OF THE
BUILDINGS
ENCIRCLED ON ANNEXURE ‘A’
TO
THE NOTICE OF MOTION, SITUATED AT 1[...] M[...] R[...] ROAD,
G[...], GAUTENG
THIRD
RESPONDENTS
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
HAWK
ACADEMY SCHOOL
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
SNYCKERS
AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an eviction application brought under the provisions of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation
of, Land
Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”).
2.
Coupled with the application for eviction relief, the applicants seek
interdictory relief to prevent the respondents from
conducting
unlawful mining operations on the property in question.
3.
The applicants between them own a portion of land in Germiston,
bordering M[…] R[…] Road, namely Remaining
Extent of
Portion 2 of the Farm Elandsfontein 90, Registration Division IR,
Province of Gauteng, and Portion 531 (a portion of
portion 8) of the
Farm Elandsfontein 108, Registration Division IR, Province of
Gauteng. The property in question is zoned for
mining. The applicants
acquired their ownership of the property in 2016. The property was
part of a mine operated at least at some
point by an entity known as
Primrose Mine. The relevant buildings in question comprise mainly a
workshop that formed part of the
mine.
4.
The property comprises this workshop compound, an informal
settlement, known as the Marathon settlement, a school (the
fifth
respondent), and some open land.
5.
Mining has occurred on this property since the 1920s. Mining
operations ceased in the early 2000s. The applicants allege
that the
respondents, or at least most of them, recently started occupying the
property, in particular the workshop compound, in
order to conduct
illegal mining operations from the property. It seems to have become
common cause or accepted for purposes of
argument that at least some
of the occupiers were former mining employees of Primrose Mine and
had formerly worked the mine in
that capacity.
6.
The applicants allege that the portion of the property occupied by
the occupiers is intended to be used for an expansion
of the school.
In this they are supported by evidence obtained from the principal of
the school.
7.
The applicants contend that the workshop compound is not the primary
residence of any of the occupiers, but that the application
has been
brought under the provisions of PIE “out of an abundance of
caution.” It is contended that the occupiers have
no legal
entitlement to occupation and are accordingly unlawfully present. It
is alleged that various attempts have been made to
engage with the
occupiers, in particular to integrate them into the Marathon
settlement, but that they insist on tenure with respect
to the
property in question. Attempts to involve the SAPS, the DMR, the
municipality (the fourth respondent), and the Department
of Home
Affairs in the impasse have yielded no fruit.
8.
The occupiers deny that
they are conducting illegal mining activities on the property. They
contend that they were employees of
Primrose Mine and that one Mr
Hart, who they say was the owner and their employer, allowed them to
occupy the property while they
were working for him, and one day
advised them that he was selling the property and would be paying
them amounts of pay that were
due to them from the proceeds of the
sale. They say Mr Hart disappeared and reneged on his undertakings,
and did not pay them.
They say they obtained a CCMA award against
Primrose mine and attach a copy of an award dated 14 March 2013 in
which it was found
that the employment of various named individuals
had been terminated by Primrose Mine and that they were entitled to
stipulated
amounts of severance pay.
[1]
The respondents further say they will not leave the property until
they are paid what Mr Hart owes them. They say some of them
have
family members present and that they would be rendered homeless if
evicted from the premises.
9.
This court authorised service under s4(2) of PIE of an attached
notice on 15 February 2024 (Gotz AJ). On 2 April 2024,
another s4(2)
order was issued (Dlamini J), with respect to an attached notice, and
with directions as to what was to happen in
relation to the filing of
documents for the main hearing of the application.
10.
The matter was enrolled for the motion week of 29 July 2024.
11.
In a practice note uploaded on 16 July 2024, counsel for the
respondents intimated that a postponement might be sought
“for
the municipal report in terms of s4(7) of PIE”. This was a
reference to a report by the municipality on the question,
mentioned
as a factor to be taken into account by a court considering whether
an eviction would be just and equitable, “
whether land has
been made available or can reasonably be made available by a
municipality or other organ of state or another land
owner for the
relocation of the unlawful occupier.
”
12.
Supplementary heads of
argument were filed for the applicants in which the position was
adopted that the respondents had been specifically
warned
[2]
to make available all and any evidence relating to their personal
circumstances, and had had ample time to have a report filed
to the
extent that this cast light on their position. The applicants did not
themselves address the question of any attempts on
their part to
procure such a report. Be that as it may, the day before the matter
was first heard (I had allocated it for hearing
from 30 July 2024),
the respondents’ attorneys uploaded a report from the
municipality (the fourth respondent) on Caselines.
I deal with that
further below.
13.
Also on 29 July 2024, the respondents uploaded a document said to be
a Rule 28 notice purporting to “amend”,
by notice only,
the answering affidavit by raising the contention that the applicants
were in the wrong court, as the matter was
in fact governed by the
provisions of the Extension of Security of Tenure Act 62 of 1997
(“ESTA”).
14.
A party cannot “amend” an affidavit by notice. The
amendment did not even purport to be a supplementary affidavit.
Be
that as it may, it introduced a new potentially important
consideration for this court to consider. Mr van der Merwe, who
appeared
for the applicants, was ready to deal with the ESTA issue.
Given this development, and given the provisions of section 2 of ESTA
(considered below), and this court’s more inquisitorial mandate
when it came to hearing and determining PIE applications,
I asked the
applicants to ascertain, with reference to publicly available
information, what the precise position was with respect
to the
declaration of townships on or around the property in question, and
for this to be provided to the court and uploaded on
Caselines before
Friday 2 August 2024, so that the matter of ESTA’s application
could be addressed more fully on that day.
I asked Mr Khosa, who
appeared for the respondents, whether there was any objection to this
being done, and he advised that there
was none. The other aspects of
the matter were argued on 30 July 2024 and the matter of ESTA’s
application argued more fully
on 2 August 2024, an “explanatory
affidavit” containing a comprehensive report by a Mr Gagy, a
registered professional
planner, having in the meantime been uploaded
onto Caselines on 1 August 2024.
THE
APPLICATION OF ESTA
15.
ESTA applies in respect of the eviction of any “occupiers”,
as defined in ESTA, from any land to which ESTA
applies. The Land
Claims Court is the court of proper jurisdiction to determine the
appropriateness of an eviction of an “occupier”
under
ESTA.
16.
There are two tiers entailed by the jurisprudential question whether
ESTA applies. The first tier entails the question
whether the land at
issue is land to which ESTA applies. The second tier, which arises
only if the answer to the first tier is
in the affirmative, is
whether the persons at issue are “occupiers” as defined
in ESTA.
17.
I raised with Mr van der Merwe my
prima facie
view that it
appeared to me that this court had jurisdiction to determine the
first tier question, but not the second. The reason
was that this
court could not find that its jurisdiction was ousted in favour of
that of the Land Claims Court unless it found
that the land at issue
was land to which ESTA applied, and this, according to s2 of ESTA,
was a matter of the scope of the application
of ESTA itself. But with
respect to the second tier question, once ESTA was held to apply to
the land in question, since the definition
of “occupier”
was a matter regulated by ESTA itself, it appeared to me that this
would of needs be something the Land
Claims Court, and not this
court, would have to consider.
18.
Mr van der Merwe referred
me to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Frannero
,
[3]
for the submission that both tiers were matters this court had
jurisdiction, and the duty, to determine, when faced with a
contention
that the Land Claims Court, and not this court, was the
court of proper jurisdiction.
19.
A consideration of the judgment in
Frannero
leaves me with no
doubt that Mr van der Merwe’s submission in this respect is
correct. That decision, from a unanimous SCA,
held that the
respondent to an eviction application seeking to invoke the
applicability of ESTA, and the ouster of the jurisdiction
of the High
Court, had to prove that ESTA applied, and this included proving that
he or she was an “occupier” as envisaged
in ESTA.
Particularly paragraph 24 of this judgment makes this sufficiently
clear to leave no room for my
prima facie
view on this aspect.
On reflection, one reason for having both jurisdictional tiers
subject to the assessment of the High Court
appears to me to be the
fact that one of the provisions dealing with defining ESTA land in
section 2, namely section 2(1)(b), refers
back to the definition of
“occupier”, making it impossible to determine the ESTA
application question purely with reference
to the type of land in
question without regard at least to the historical status of a
proposed evictee as an “occupier”
as defined in ESTA.
20.
I must note a nuance in the invocation of
Frannero
in the
instant case. At the time of
Frannero
, and also at the time
this eviction application was instituted, a labour tenant in terms of
the Land Reform (Labour Tenants) Act
3 of 1996 was
excluded
from
the definition of “occupier” under ESTA. This exclusion
was however removed effective from 1 April 2024, between
the
institution of proceedings and the hearing in this application. Mr
van der Merwe accepted that, whatever the position might
be
concerning the crystallisation of a cause of action at common law
(with respect to the time of institution of proceedings),
it would be
appropriate for a court considering the application of ESTA to any
contemplated eviction to apply the provisions of
ESTA as at the date
the eviction was being considered, not at the date the eviction
proceedings were brought. In other words, the
mere fact, if it were a
fact, that the exclusion would have been applicable to the
respondents should not be a sufficient reason
for me to ignore the
potential applicability of ESTA to this eviction.
21.
What
Frannero
entails for this application is that the
respondents needed to prove that ESTA applied. This meant that they
needed to prove, once
the land in question was land to which ESTA
applied, that they were “occupiers” under ESTA. This
meant they needed
to exclude the application of the exceptions to the
definition of “occupier”, assuming the land in question
was ESTA
land.
22.
Mr van der Merwe submitted that, whatever the position with respect
to the land in question, as the respondents did not
prove that they
were occupiers under ESTA, ESTA could not be held applicable to their
eviction.
23.
The two exclusions from the definition of “occupier” in
ESTA are the following –
(b) a person
using or intending to use the land in question mainly for industrial,
mining, commercial or commercial farming
purposes, but including a
person who works the land himself or herself and does not employ any
person who is not a member of his
or her family; and
(c) a person who
has an income in excess of the prescribed amount.”
24.
The “prescribed amount” at the moment is R5000 per month.
Mr van der Merwe submitted that no evidence was
adduced at all as to
the income of the various occupiers, and that, as they were mining,
the exclusion in (b) also applied in any
event.
25.
The cogency of the submissions above would become relevant if it
turned out that the land in question was ESTA land.
26.
On this question, whether the land in question was ESTA land, one
must consider the provisions of section 2 of ESTA as
the section
reads after 1 April 2024:
“
(1) Subject to
the provisions of section 4, this Act shall apply to all land other
than land in a township established, approved,
proclaimed or
otherwise recognised as such in terms of any law, or encircled by
such a township or townships, but including-
(a) any
land within such a township which has been designated for
agricultural purposes in terms of any law; and
(b) any
land within such a township which has been established, approved,
proclaimed or otherwise recognised after
4 February 1997, in respect
only of a person who was an occupier immediately prior to such
establishment, approval, proclamation
or recognition.
(2) Land in issue in
any civil proceedings in terms of this Act shall be presumed to fall
within the scope of the Act unless the
contrary is proved.”
27.
I will deal below with the complication that section 2(1)(b)
introduces into the present matter.
28.
Mr Khosa for the occupiers correctly relied on the presumption in
section 2(2). This must mean that, although the occupier
bears the
onus to prove the applicability of ESTA (on
Frannero
), when it
comes to the land in question, it is for the party wishing to exclude
the application of ESTA under section 2 to prove
the contrary.
29.
Gildenhuys J regarded the
Act as applying to land “
in
‘n dorp of wat deur ‘n dorp omring word”
(“in a town(ship)
or surrounded by a town(ship”)).
[4]
30.
The first question to decide in this regard is what is meant by
“
encircled by such a township or townships”.
On
the papers as they appeared before the ESTA matter was raised, it
appeared that the erven in question, zoned for mining, were
not
themselves established as a township – in fact, the applicants
said they intended proclaiming the subject property as
a township.
Yet on the evidence offered through Mr Nagy, it seemed clear that the
erven in question were overwhelmingly encircled
by proclaimed
townships. There was a gap to the south west of the erven in
question, which, although it was occupied by highways,
did not
specifically indicate proclaimed townships.
31.
Mr Khosa submitted that the “encirclement” requirement
required the circle in question to be fully closed.
No gaps were
allowed. I do not think this captures the intention of the
legislature. The application section was clearly aimed
at excluding
land which was either itself a township or found itself so surrounded
by townships as to be characterised by them
in its urban character. I
am satisfied that this can be said of this subject property in
Germiston.
32.
There is another consideration, leaving aside the “encirclement”
issue.
33.
The concept of a “township” in the application section is
not confined to a township proclaimed as such, but
extends to
townships “
otherwise recognised as such in terms of any
law
”. If the subject property is a township
recognised as such in terms of any law, it is a township for purposes
of the
non-applicability of ESTA.
34.
Mr van der Merwe
submitted that municipal by-laws were included in the term “any
law” for this purpose, and referred
in this regard to
Cape
Town City v Independent Outdoor Media (Pty) Ltd & Others
.
[5]
I have little hesitation in accepting this submission.
35.
I was then referred to the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
Spatial Planning and Land Use Management By Law of 25
July 2019,
commencing 25 September 2019, which defined “township”
inter alia
as including
“
any property …
to be developed … for … residential, business,
industrial, institutional, educational, community
services and
similar purposes or land uses, as may be contained in a land use
scheme.”
36.
The Land use scheme in
question, which according to the empowering Act of the by-law cited
above has the force of law,
[6]
to which I was referred and was included in Mr Nagy’s
affidavit, is the City of Ekurhuleni Land Use Scheme 2021. This, as
well as the uses contemplated in the Regional Spatial Development
Framework for Ekurhuleni, makes it clear to me beyond much room
for
doubt that the subject property in question falls within the
definition of a “township” as contemplated in the
by-law.
37.
The above powerful evidence against the application of ESTA is still
subject to the enigmatic proviso in s2(1)(b) of ESTA
cited above,
which brings land back into the ESTA fold where the township
recognition in question occurred after 4 February 1997
and the
person(s) in question were occupiers as defined immediately before
the township recognition occurred. The evidence hastily
put together,
at my request, as a result of the respondents’ introduction of
the ESTA question on the eve of the hearing,
did not establish when
the townships surrounding the subject property were all proclaimed,
and whether this was after 4 February
1997. The land use scheme and
by-law in question were post-1997 events.
38.
Although, on the overwhelming probabilities arising out of what was
put before me, I am highly sceptical of any suggestion
that the land
in question would not, as at 4 February 1997, have fallen into the
scope of “township or encircled by townships”,
this fact
was not fully established, nor was the position of the various
occupiers at the point immediately before the acts that
recognised
the relevant portions of land as townships. Accordingly, this being a
part of section 2 subject to the presumption in
s2(2), this would
seem to exclude a finding that ESTA was not applicable based purely
on the scope of ESTA as set out in section
2. This is unsatisfactory,
as I am fairly certain that the provisions of ESTA were not intended
to capture land such as this property
in Germiston and that evidence
to close the potential historical gaps with respect to the nature of
the encircling areas as townships,
if gathered at a more orderly pace
and not in response to a last minute point on ESTA, would have been
available.
39.
Nevertheless,
Frannero
still required the respondents to bring
themselves within the definition of “occupiers”.
40.
There was no evidence at
all of what they earned. An absence of evidence that the respondents
earned less than the prescribed amount
was fatal to the application
of ESTA in
Frannero
.
[7]
41.
Perhaps more
fundamentally, the question whether the respondents are using the
property for mining lies at the heart of any ability
to establish
their status as ESTA occupiers. This is because of the exclusion in
the definition of “occupier” where
the person in question
is using the property for mining.
[8]
As I shall examine below, the only evidence before me warrants the
finding that the respondents are conducting illegal mining on
the
property, and that this is the reason they are occupying it. Their
bald denial of this proposition and of the evidence cited
in support
of it is insufficient for them to make out a case for their status as
“occupiers” under ESTA.
42.
In the circumstances I find that ESTA is not applicable to the
current intended eviction, and it is to the provisions
of PIE and
their application that I must now turn.
THE
ELEMENTS OF PIE
43.
PIE requires an evicting applicant to establish ownership, unlawful
occupation, and that it an eviction is just and equitable.
44.
There was no effective dispute relating to the applicants’
ownership.
45.
As to the unlawful presence of the respondents, this is
disputed by the occupiers. One must accordingly examine their
version
in this regard.
46.
Their version rests on their interactions with Mr Hart (or Primrose
Mine), their erstwhile employer, and the alleged previous
owner or
controller of the property in question. (The applicants’
evidence was to the effect that they acquired ownership
from S&J
Investments (Pty) Ltd, not from “Primrose Mine” or Mr
Hart.)
47.
Had the occupiers established an agreement with the previous owner or
controller that created a present entitlement to
occupation, then, on
the application of the principle of
huur gaat voor koop
, the
applicants may have ended up being bound by such an agreement as the
new owners.
48.
But it is clear from the
respondents’ version, even if the severe flaws it contains are
ignored for present purposes,
[9]
that they are not alleging any such agreement with Mr Hart or
Primrose Mine. Their version at best establishes that, as an incident
of their employment
[10]
and
during its subsistence, they were allowed to occupy the premises, but
this employment relationship came to an end, and with
it any
suggestion of a continued agreed entitlement to remain. They
themselves decided that they would occupy the premises until
such
time as the money their employer promised them was paid to them. They
do not even make the improbable allegation that Mr Hart,
or anybody
else for that matter, agreed that they could continue to occupy the
property despite the fact that it was being sold
and the operations
were being discontinued.
49. I
have little hesitation in accepting that the respondents are
unlawfully present on the property.
50.
The next important question is whether it is just and equitable to
evict the respondents.
51.
What is integrally bound up with this question is what the
respondents are using the property for.
52.
The evidence in this regard was by no means as comprehensive or as
cogent as would be ideal, or as evidence after a trial
might have
been. To an extent, the applicants, in for example relying on hearsay
evidence of unnamed persons about mining equipment
being
surreptitiously removed from the property before an inspection, or
invoking fears of violence in having refrained from gathering
more
compelling evidence of the nature and contents of a tunnel alleged to
be the entrance to the illegal mine being used by the
respondents,
seek to excuse the absence of more compelling evidence by invoking
such difficulties. However much such difficulties
may be real, they
cannot create better evidence or turn hearsay evidence of unnamed
persons into evidence this court may properly
accept as supporting a
case that an eviction would be just and equitable.
53.
Nevertheless, the applicants have presented evidence which includes
the following:
53.1 a
video recording of an inspection showing what certainly appears to be
what the applicants allege it to
be – namely the entrance, of
significant size, to a tunnel appearing in the courtyard of the
workshop;
53.2. the
video depicting the absence of such incidents of a primary dwelling
as one might expect to find, not to mention
the absence of any of the
occupiers from their dwellings during inspections, also alleged in
the founding affidavit – as
Mr van der Merwe put it, the place
did not have the look about it of anybody’s home;
53.3. the
video depicting many blue jerry-can like cannisters, clearly
indicating some or other commercial activity
is occurring on the site
which makes use of these cannisters, and allegations relating to the
fact that these cannisters contained
chemicals or used to contain
chemicals;
53.4. the
occurrence of sinkholes on the school property consistent with
underground activity occurring in the area
under these holes;
53.5. an
apparent and alleged structural partial collapsing of the workshop
wall attributed to the tunnel and mining
activities;
53.6.
evidence of an identified employee of the school, on affidavit
confirmed by him, of his having observed use made
of the blue jerry
cans in question by the occupiers to convert soil from the tunnel
into a slurry; and
53.7. denial
of access to the tunnel by the occupiers since the video that was
taken of it.
54.
I leave out of present consideration the allegations relating to
press reports of violence and dead bodies discovered
700m from the
workshop and various hearsay confirmations of the activities said to
be taking place on the property.
55.
It is noteworthy that the occupier respondents respond to all of
these allegations with a single bald denial that they
are mining
illegally on the property. There is no attempt made to offer any
version at all with respect to the tunnel, the jerry
cans, the
slurry-making, or any of the other allegations relating to mining.
This is not the kind of response that creates a genuine
bona fide
dispute of fact.
56.
This is the most noteworthy aspect of the answering affidavit. It
responds with one paragraph, comprising 9 lines, “ad”
paragraphs 17 to 135 of the founding affidavit. It is appropriate to
quote the whole 9 lines here:
“
The contents of
these paragraphs are unknown to myself, first and third respondents,
we are not operating any illegal mining in
the property, police came
in multiple of times and none of us was arrested either for illegal
mining or contravention of section
49 of the Immigration Act.
Some of us are staying
with their children in the premises and accordingly Applicant is put
to the proof thereof.
In the premises,
granting the eviction order will leave myself, First and Third
Respondents homeless and this application falls
to be dismissed with
costs.”
57.
These denials and bald statements respond to inter alia the following
allegations in the founding affidavit:
57.1. The
rooms on the property are not the primary residences of the miners;
they are used as a sleepover facility;
the miners were not present
and the rooms are locked when inspections were held; the miners have
homes elsewhere; only males occupy
the rooms; there are no
indications at all of the presence of females or children.
57.2. The
Miners control access to the premises and to the tunnel and refuse
access to the tunnel or premises after
the last inspection.
57.3. The
wall is sinking into the ground where the tunnel was excavated under
the wall.
57.4. The
miners sell gold from the property.
57.5. The
Department of Education complained about illegal mining and
threatened to withdraw funding to the school unless
the illegal
mining ceased.
57.6. The
school raised concerns about illegal mining at meetings held with the
occupiers.
57.7.
Occupation was taken in secret.
57.8. Efforts
were made in engagement with the occupiers and the community to
integrate them into the community, offers
of integration and
alternative accommodation were made; the occupiers insisted on
permanent title to the property; this they did
because they wanted to
be able to continue with their illegal mining activities.
57.9. The
occupiers were invited to set out their personal circumstances in
answer, in particular their incomes.
57.10. The occupiers were
invited to seek alternative accommodation from the city in the event
that they needed it.
58.
The applicants set out a history of engagement with the occupiers.
They say that attempts were made to negotiate the integration
of the
occupiers into the Marathon settlement. The impasse occurred when the
occupiers insisted on being given some species of
permanent title to
the property. This the applicants contend was because they wished to
be able to continue with their mining activities.
These contentions
are also not engaged with in answer at all, and certainly not in any
manner that is capable of suggesting a genuine
dispute of fact
relating to the nature of the activities occurring on the site.
59.
I was referred to the
judgment of the full court in
Sotomela
v Harmony Gold
.
[11]
The following passages in paragraphs 25 to 27 were specifically
emphasised by Mr van der Merwe:
“
[The court]
found, on balance, that the appellant had not established that she
faced the risk of homelessness, if she were to be
evicted from the
property. We cannot fault that finding. Despite being called upon to
do so by the respondent, the appellant did
not disclose her or her
household’s monthly income, nor provide any evidence as to the
cost and/or availability of alternative
accommodation. She further
made bald and unsubstantiated allegations pertaining to various
issues, including that certain of her
family members were ‘disabled’,
without providing any particularity thereof. She indicated in her
papers that she intended
to supplement the evidence of her personal
circumstances – but never in fact did so. Indeed, her claim
that she would be
rendered homeless if evicted is made for the first
time in heads of argument – rather than in the founding or
supplementary
founding affidavit.
The Municipality’s
and the Court’s duty to interrogate the availability of
alternative accommodation is triggered only
where a proposed eviction
places the respondent at risk of homelessness.
[12]
Since the appellant
did not put up sufficient evidence to establish this risk, the court
a quo was not obliged to call for more
information from the
Municipality, nor to engage with the adequacy of the alternative
accommodation identified by it. Moreover,
the invitation extended to
the appellant to engage with the municipality regarding her personal
circumstances, was declined.
In the circumstances,
there is no basis for interfering with the discretion exercised by
the court a quo, nor with the order that
it gave.”
60.
I am aware of the
fact that it is sometimes stressed by courts that, in a PIE
application, an applicant for eviction bears the onus
to demonstrate
that it would be just and equitable to grant the order, and has a
duty to place facts before a court from which
an inference can be
drawn of such justness and equity.
[13]
Nevertheless, the very recent remarks of the full court in
Sotomela
quoted
above bear taking into account, and are in some important respects of
a
fortiori
application
to the present matter and the manner the occupiers have gone about in
neglecting to deal pertinently with their personal
circumstances and
efforts to secure accommodation despite invitations and the contents
of the founding affidavit.
61.
I should not be taken to hold, nor to interpret
Sotomela
to
hold, that a respondent must “prove” homelessness and
factors that render eviction unjust, whilst an applicant may
rest
content with proving the unlawfulness of occupation. The duty is on
the applicant to demonstrate justness. But in considering
whether
this has been established, a court takes into account everything the
applicant has said and done on this score, and how
the respondents
have responded to this, and where appropriate, as here, particularly
how the respondents have engaged with the
issue of their personal
circumstances when called upon by the applicant to do so.
62.
The applicants point to severe problems with the list put up by the
occupiers as “DLF1” to the answer. They
point out that
individuals are said to have taken up employment before they were
born, or when, according to their alleged dates
of birth, they were 9
years old. They point out that the vague reference to “some of
us have families” is supported
in this list by two references
to a “daughter” only, both of which indicating with the
facts provided by the occupiers
that the daughter in question would
be around 30 years of age. They point to the complete absence of any
indication of earnings.
There is no attempt at all on the part of the
occupiers to engage with the allegations that the rooms are not their
primary residences;
that they have homes elsewhere, that they do not
occupy these rooms when there are inspections, that there are no
signs of families
or women present, that there were efforts and
offers to integrate them into the community and that they were called
upon to engage
with the city if they needed emergency accommodation.
63.
The “report”
produced by the municipality is far from helpful or ideal. An
official reported on his engagement with
Mr Chauke at the property on
25 July 2024. Mr Chauke advised there was no need to gather their
personal circumstances as “all
47 of them”
[14]
were waiting for their pay-out before they could leave, and as soon
as they received their money from their erstwhile employer,
they
would leave the property. One is advised that in the circumstances no
report could be drawn on the personal circumstances
of the occupiers,
and the court is then referred to a generic report relating to the
availability (or lack of availability) of
accommodation dated 2021.
64.
Mr van der Merwe correctly pointed out that the relevance of the
report lay in the reaction the City received from Mr
Chauke. This
reaction does not speak to a situation of homelessness, nor to one
where one can draw the inference that the property
is the primary
residence of the individuals holding out for their pay-out, after
which they would be content to leave.
65.
Mr Khosa said one could not rely on Mr Chauke’s reported
statements as those of the occupiers. But it is all we
have on this
score, and it is significantly consistent with the attitude expressed
in the answering affidavit.
66.
I believe that a consideration of the applicants’ papers and
the manner the allegations were dealt with by the occupiers
must lead
to a conclusion that it would be just and equitable to order an
eviction. The applicants made real efforts to engage
meaningfully
with the occupiers and to integrate them into the community; they
have set out a persuasive case, especially when
viewed against the
occupiers’ bad denial, that the only real purpose of the
occupation is illegal mining, and the occupiers
have neglected to
offer anything at all in relation to their personal circumstances and
the interactions alleged by the applicant,
nor any version to address
the allegations corroborating the mining allegation, save a bald
denial and the sweeping assertions
cited above. There is also no
reason to decline to grant the interdictory relief sought by the
applicants.
67.
Mr van der Merwe abandoned the prayer for costs at the hearing.
68.
In the event, I shall grant an order more or less in the form sought
by the applicants in the draft uploaded to Caselines
at 05-44 to
05-52, as set out below (note the date of eviction differs from that
sought in the order on Caselines):
ORDER:
A. The first,
second and third respondent (the Third Respondents as identified
below) and all persons holding occupation under
or through the first
to third respondents (“the occupiers”), of the property
being the workshop building situated on
the Remaining Extent of
Portion 2 of the Farm Elandsfontein 90, Registration Division I.R.
Province of Gauteng, measuring 355,1240
hectares and Portion 531 (a
portion of portion 8) of the Farm Elandsfontein 108 Registration
Division I.R. Province of Gauteng,
physically situated at 1[…]
M[…] R[…] ROAD G[…] (hereinafter referred to as
“the property”)
are to vacate the property on or before
13 September 2024.
B. In the event
that the occupiers and those persons holding occupation through or
under them, fail to vacate the property
on the date specified in
paragraph A above, the Sheriff is authorised to give effect to this
order, by evicting the occupiers and
all persons holding occupation
through of under them, from the property, on the first week day
following the date specified in
paragraph A.
C. The occupiers
are interdicted and restrained from participating in, facilitating,
or permitting any mining operations being
conducted at the property,
and in particular, at the workshop premises, on the property.
D. The occupiers
are interdicted and restrained from retaking occupation of the
property, or any portion thereof, including
but not limited to the
workshop at the property, upon the eviction being carried out, in
terms of this order.
E. The Sheriff is
authorised to obtain the assistance of the South African Police
Services, insofar as such assistance may
be required, in order to
give effect to the relief granted in paragraphs A-D above.
F. The Third
Respondents are identified as -
(a) The persons
listed on Annexure DLF1 to the answering affidavit at Caselines 01-72
to 01-75; and
(b) The following
persons:
(i)
Louis
Madikana
(ii)
George
Matshinge
(iii)
Joao
Fernano Chauque
(iv) Mfanelo Dsandawo
(v) Francisci Antonio
Machava
(vi) Boaventura Luis
Maticane
(vii) Silvestre Joze Bule
(viii) Mfanelo Tshandawo
FRANK
SNYCKERS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was uploaded onto Caselines and distributed to the parties’
legal representatives by email on 13 August 2024;
the date of
judgment is accordingly deemed to be 13 August 2024
Heard:
30 July 2024 and 2 August 2024
Delivered:
13 August 2024
Counsel
for Applicant:
C van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Andrew Groenewald Inc
Counsel
for Respondents:
A Khosa
Instructed
by:
Ngobeni Ntsako Attorneys
[1]
The award as attached to the answering affidavit is not complete nor
attached in proper sequence of its pages, making it difficult
to
distinguish between amounts said to have been the monthly salaries
of certain employees and the amounts of severance pay to
which
certain named employees were entitled.
[2]
In the latest s4(2) notice and founding affidavit.
[3]
Frannero
Property Investments 202 (Pty) Ltd v Selapa & Others
2022
(5) SA 361 (SCA).
[4]
Lategan
v Koopman & Andere
1998
(3) SA 457
(LCC) para 3.
[5]
2024 (1) SA 309
(CC), paras 43 and 45.
[6]
Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16 of 2013
s26(1).
[7]
See paragraphs 29 to 30 – this despite a hearsay statement in
that case that ‘the majority of the Respondents are
unemployed
and do not earn an income in excess of R5000 per month’.
[8]
The inclusion where the person in question “works the land
himself or herself” was not, in my view, intended to apply
to
mining, but to farming.
[9]
such for example as an absence of any significant or identifiable
overlap between the number and identity of persons apparently
the
subject of the CCMA award and those listed in annexure “DLF1”
to the answering affidavit as the present occupiers.
[10]
Or, at best, the employment of some of them.
[11]
Sotomela
v Harmony Gold Company Ltd & Another
(unreported
Case no. A2022-041835; 7 February 2024). Leave to appeal refused by
the SCA on 25 April 2024 (Case no 181/2024) and
by the
Constitutional Court on 16 July 2024 (Case no. 134/24).
[12]
The full court cited
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 104
(CC), para 96.
[13]
See Wilson J in
Madulammoho
Housing Association NPC v Nephawe et al
2023
JDR 0049 (GJ), para 9, citing
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(6) SA 294
(SCA) para 36.
[14]
The list DLF1 contains some 142 names.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Redefine Properties Limited v Buntu Foods (Pty) Limited (2024/121804) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1192 (17 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1192High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Redfine Properties Ltd v PHB Health CC t/a Switchplayground and Another (24943/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 666 (8 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 666High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Redec Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kansai Plascon (Pty) Ltd ( Application for Leave to Apeal) (2020/29803) [2025] ZAGPJHC 537 (29 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 537High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Redpath Africa Limited v Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation Proprietary Limited and Others (55896/2021,2023/007449) [2024] ZAGPJHC 766 (31 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 766High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Redpath Mining (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation (Pty) Ltd (51107/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 288 (8 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 288High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar