Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 847South Africa
City of Johannesburg v Unlawful Occupiers Of Various Units of Various Units At Donovan Macdonald Retirement Centre (2024/090272) [2024] ZAGPJHC 847 (2 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Johannesburg v Unlawful Occupiers Of Various Units of Various Units At Donovan Macdonald Retirement Centre (2024/090272) [2024] ZAGPJHC 847 (2 September 2024)
City of Johannesburg v Unlawful Occupiers Of Various Units of Various Units At Donovan Macdonald Retirement Centre (2024/090272) [2024] ZAGPJHC 847 (2 September 2024)
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sino date 2 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
2
September 2024
Case
No. 2024-
090272
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Applicant
And
UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS OF VARIOUS UNITS
AT
THE DONOVAN MACDONALD RETIREMENT CENTRE
First
Respondents
TASHREEKS
HANSLOW AND 24 OTHERS
Second
Respondents
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The Donovan MacDonald Retirement Centre is a 183-unit older
persons home in Florida, to the west of Johannesburg. The applicant,
the City, owns and operates the Centre. The City says that units at
the Centre are allocated by reference to its “vetting
and
selection criteria”. These criteria are presumably deployed to
ensure that only those genuinely in need of accommodation
at the
Centre are allowed to take occupation of its units.
2
In this application, however, the City all but admits that it
has lost control of the Centre, and that it can no longer say who
resides there. The City alleges that a number of units and the common
areas at the Centre are poorly maintained or have been vandalised,
although there is no suggestion that the condition of the buildings
at the Centre is such as to present a risk of harm to its residents.
Some of the units have become illegally occupied. Others are said to
be used to peddle drugs. One unit is alleged to accommodate
sex work.
The City’s papers do not adequately explain how this happened.
The City itself has taken no responsibility for
allowing the
conditions at the Centre to deteriorate to the extent that they have.
3
The City is nonetheless clear about what it wants to do to
bring the Centre back under its control. On 20 August 2024, it
applied
in my urgent court for an eviction order under section 5 of
the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation of,
Land Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”). The effect of the
order the City asks for would be to remove everyone currently
resident at the Centre, save for those who are registered on the
City’s list of “vetted” occupants. The City
cannot
say how many individuals it wishes to evict. Nor can it identify
those individuals with any precision. It nonetheless undertakes,
before executing the eviction order, to consider their eligibility
for alternative accommodation in terms of its temporary emergency
accommodation policy, and to provide such accommodation to any of the
unidentified occupants who are found to qualify for it.
4
Orders under section 5 of the PIE Act authorise the urgent
eviction of unlawful occupiers in circumstances where the applicant
cannot
be expected to wait for the outcome of an eviction application
brought in the ordinary course. Section 5 orders may only be granted
if three jurisdictional requirements are met. The first of these is
set out in section 5 (1) (a), which requires the City to show
a “real
and imminent danger of substantial injury to persons or property
unless an unlawful occupier is immediately evicted”.
This means
that a rational factual link must be drawn between “a real and
imminent danger of substantial injury” on
the one hand, and an
identified “unlawful occupier” on the other.
5
The City’s papers do not come close to meeting this
requirement. It is in fact clear on the papers that the relief the
City
seeks would result in the eviction of entirely innocent
occupants who, while not on the City’s list of “vetted”
residents, have nothing to do with the conduct the City seeks to
eliminate.
6
Mr. and Mrs. Adonis are two such occupants. They appeared in
person before me. They reside in unit 34 at the Centre with Mrs.
Adonis’
mother, Mary-Ann. Mr. Adonis is 69 years old. Mrs.
Adonis is 59 years old. Mary-Ann is 82 years old. She has Alzheimer’s
disease. Mr. and Mrs. Adonis live with Mary-Ann in her unit to help
her feed, bathe and dress herself, and to protect Mary-Ann from
the
obvious dangers that living on her own would present. Mr. Nhutsve,
who appeared for the City before me, conceded that the Centre
is not
equipped to provide this level of care for Mary-Ann. Ordinarily,
Mary-Ann would have been moved to another facility capable
of
providing more intensive support, but that has not happened. The City
does not explain why.
7
Accordingly, I must accept on the evidence before me that Mr.
and Mrs. Adonis are the only source of care and support Mary-Ann has.
They also pose no risk, substantial, imminent or otherwise, of any
injury to persons or property. Mr. Nhutsve could not suggest
that
they did. He nonetheless persisted in an order ejecting Mr. and Mrs.
Adonis from the Centre, solely on the basis that they
are not
“vetted” residents. He could give no undertakings that
Mary-Ann would receive the care she needs from some
other source. He
did not undertake that the City would provide such care.
8
Because the City’s papers do nothing to isolate and
identify the individual occupants of the Centre who are the source of
the unlawful conduct of which it complains, I cannot say how many
other “vetted” residents of the Centre are similarly
dependent on “unvetted” members of their family or other
carers who are present at the Centre technically unlawfully.
The
City’s own investigations, (summarised in a report authored by
a company called “Phoka Forensics” which was
attached as
annexure “PP5” to its founding affidavit), suggest that
there is a large number of people resident at the
Centre with family
members. Without any sense of who these people are, and whether or
not they are the source of the conduct of
which the City complains,
it is impossible to identify to whom any eviction order should apply.
9
Mr. and Mrs. Adonis were but two of several people who
appeared in person before me, none of whom seemed to me to be the
source
of any threat of real and substantial injury to persons or
property. Nor could Mr. Nhutsve say that they were the cause of any
such threat.
10
For at least these reasons, the application must fail. It
would be wrong to dispose of this case without pointing out that the
City
appears to have both caused and exacerbated the problems it says
this application is meant to address. Whatever the extent of the
deterioration of living conditions at the Centre, the City must take
its share of the responsibility for failing to prevent that
deterioration. It is, after all, the City that owns the Centre, and
the City which ought to have put in place the controls necessary
to
ensure that its use is properly regulated. Having failed to do that
over what seems like an extended period, the City now seeks
relief
which would, on its face, endanger the safety and well-being of the
very people the City says it wishes to protect.
11
The application is dismissed.
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 2 September 2024.
HEARD
ON:
20
August 2024
DECIDED
ON:
2
September 2024
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by BMK Attorneys Inc
E
Nhutsve
For
the Respondents:
Several
residents in person
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