Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1022South Africa
Hlophe v Johannesburg Social Housing Company and Others (2024/106288) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1022 (11 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 October 2024
Headnotes
at paragraph 48 as follows: “The court will grant an eviction order only where :
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hlophe v Johannesburg Social Housing Company and Others (2024/106288) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1022 (11 October 2024)
Hlophe v Johannesburg Social Housing Company and Others (2024/106288) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1022 (11 October 2024)
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sino date 11 October 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
Case
Number:
2024-106288
In
the matter between:
AYANDA
BHEKISIZWE HLOPHE
Applicant
and
JOHANNESBURG
SOCIAL HOUSING COMPANY
First
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF, ROODEPOORT SOUTH
Second
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Third
Respondent
In
re
:
JOHANNESBURG
SOCIAL HOUSING COMPANY
Applicant
and
AYANDA
BHEKISIZWE HLOPHE
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Strydom, J
[1]
This is an urgent application in which the
applicant approached the court for,
inter
alia,
the following relief:
“
1.
To restore the applicant and her children to her (sic) unit B[…],
F[…], R[…], Cnr B[…] and
H[…] Road, R[…],
Gauteng Province.
2. Pending the
final determination of the rescission application, the order of the
court granted by the Honourable Judge Sigobo
under Case No:
2019/01339 on the 19
th
of November 2019 be stayed.
3. Interdicting
and restraining the first and second respondent and any other person
who may be directed by the first respondent
from evicting the
applicant pending the final determination of the rescission
application.
4. The orders in
paragraphs 2 and 3 hereof are to operate in the interim with
immediate effect.
5. The first and
second respondents, as well as any party who opposes the granting of
the relief being ordered, are to pay
the costs of this application on
an attorney and client scale.”
[2]
Three respondents were cited. They are the
Johannesburg Social Housing Company (JOSHCO) as the first respondent.
The Sheriff, Roodepoort,
as the second respondent and the City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (the City) as the third
respondent.
[3]
The applicant alleges that he is employed
and currently resides at the property belonging to the City.
[4]
An eviction order against applicant was
previously granted by default in this court on 19 November 2019. This
is the order which
the applicant now, after almost five years, wants
to rescind. The rescission application had not been filed by the
applicant seeking
interim relief pending the final determination of
the rescission application.
[5]
The intended rescission is predicated on
three grounds relied upon by the applicant providing good cause as to
why the eviction
order should be rescinded. According to applicant
JOSHCO failed to meaningfully engage with the applicant or to report
to the court
on the availability of alternative accommodation.
Secondly, the personal circumstances, including the risk of
homelessness upon
the eviction of applicant, were not taken into
account by the court which ordered the eviction. Thirdly, the date of
eviction was
not linked to the provision of temporary alternative
accommodation by the City.
[6]
Reliance is placed on Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Rules of this Court, submitting that the eviction order was
erroneously sought or erroneously
granted. It was submitted that
there was no meaningful engagement between the applicant and the City
considering that the eviction
order would render the applicant
homeless. It was argued that an injustice would occur if an eviction
order is executed rendering
the applicant homeless.
[7]
The
applicant placed reliance on the case of
Occupiers,
Berea v DeWet NO and Another.
[1]
In
this matter the Constitutional Court held at paragraph 48 as follows:
“
The
court will grant an eviction order only where :
(a) it has all the
information about the occupiers to enable it to decide whether the
eviction is just and equitable; and
(b) the court is
satisfied that eviction is just and equitable having regard to the
information in (a).
The two requirements
are inextricable, inter-linked and essential. An eviction order
granted in the absence of either one of these
two requirements will
be arbitrary. I reiterate that the enquiry ha nothing to do with the
unlawfulness of occupation. It assumes
and is only due when the
occupation is unlawful.”
[8]
The applicant is then relying on an
injustice which will occur if his occupancy is not restored and if he
is not protected from
eviction. All of this is predicated on his
submission that he will be rendered homeless if evicted.
[9]
It is common cause before this Court that
the applicant and his family were in fact evicted on 29 August 2024
from the premises
but that he subsequently, with the assistance of
the other occupants of the building, re-occupied the unit.
[10]
This is the date on which the applicant
alleges that he first became aware of an eviction order being granted
against him in this
Court.
[11]
On behalf of JOSHCO it was argued that
before the order was granted in November 2019, the application was,
on three occasions, served
on the applicant. The applicant elected
not to oppose the application and acted in wilful default.
[12]
The relationship between the applicant and
JOSHCO is contractual. The latter leased the premises to the
applicant in terms of a
written lease from 1 January 2017. Rental
payable was R2,140 per month. The applicant chose his
domicilium
citandi et executandi
to be at the
premises. Since 2018, the applicant fell into arrears which situation
continues. This led to cancellation of the lease
agreement.
[13]
Currently the applicant owes JOSHCO over
R194,000. For many years he has paid no rental at all.
[14]
The eviction application served before the
court on more than two occasions. The notice of motion under case
number 01339/19 indicated
that the application would be heard on 21
February 2019. This application was served on the applicant’s
domicilium
address by the sheriff on 26 January 2019 by way of affixing. The
date of the hearing on the notice of motion was changed in manuscript
from 21 February to 18 April 2019. Whether the matter was heard on 21
February 2019 is unclear but on 27 February 2019 Judge Vally
authorised the service of a section 4(2) notice in terms of Act 19 of
1998, (the PIE Act). Leave was granted to serve the notice
on the
domicilium
address of the applicant, being the premises which he occupied. In
this notice, the hearing date of the eviction application was
set to
be 18 April 2024, and the applicant was informed that he could oppose
the application. This section 4(2) notice was served
on the applicant
by the sheriff on 6 April 2019 by leaving a copy on a table within
the applicant’s unit as the person found
at the unit was under
16 years old.
[15]
As the abovementioned sheriff’s
return of service could not be obtained timeously, a new date was
obtained for 18 June 2019
and the section 4(2) notice, this time
containing the date of 18 June 2019, was served on 4 June 2019 by
affixing on the applicant’s
premises, as the occupant of the
unit found there was younger than 16.
[16]
On 18 June 2019 at the hearing of the
eviction application, the court postponed the application
sine
die
for the City to file a report
regarding the availability of alternative housing. Such report was
filed. In this report the dire
situation to supply housing to many
people with a limited budget was set out.
[17]
After the report was filed a further notice
in terms of section 4(2) was served at the
domicilium
address on 7 November 2019 by affixing
the notice to the principal door of the premises. It was stated on
the return of service
that the appearance date would be 19 November
2019. On this date the court granted the eviction order in the
absence of the applicant.
[18]
JOSHCO waited until 29 August 2024, nearly
5 years later, to execute the writ of eviction.
[19]
The reasons for the delay were provided,
inter alia
,
caused by the staying of evictions during the Covid-19 pandemic.
[20]
The applicant averred that he received none
of the notices. It is the applicant’s case that he only became
aware of the eviction
order when the writ was executed. He could only
after 29 August 2024 start to take steps to apply for the stay of the
execution.
He could only do this with the financial assistance of the
community. He then appointed a legal representative to bring the
current
application on an urgent basis.
[21]
JOSHCO opposed the urgency of the matter,
submitting that the applicant dragged his feet from 19 August 2024
until the application
was filed during mid-September 2024. It was
argued that he knew since 2019 about the pending eviction application
but that he,
even on his own version, created his own urgency by not
acting with expedience.
[22]
The court is satisfied that the matter is
sufficiently urgent to have been placed on the urgent court roll. It
cannot be found that
the urgency was self-created considering the
difficulty the applicant would have experienced to obtain legal
representation considering
his financial position.
[23]
The question which should be considered is
whether a case has been made for interim relief, i.e. the stay of the
execution pending
the institution of a rescission application.
[24]
The first question to consider is whether
the applicant was in wilful default when the eviction order was
granted on 19 November
2019. It is common cause that personal service
was never affected and service took place at the
domicilium
address of the applicant either by affixing or by leaving a copy of
the notices.
[25]
Service of notices were done in terms of
the Rules of court but there is no evidence that the applicant was
aware of the date of
hearing of the eviction application on 19
November 2019. There was not attached to the papers the section 4(2)
notice for the hearing
on 19 November 2019. The veracity of the
applicant’s averment that he was not made aware of the hearing
date sounds improbable
but cannot be rejected. Consequently, it
cannot be said that the applicant acted in wilful default not to
oppose the application
on 19 November 2019.
[26]
In
Gois
t/a Shakespear’s Pub v Van Zyl and others
[2]
the
requirements which should be satisfied for a stay of execution were
stated to be as follows:
“
(a)
A court will grant a stay of execution where real and substantial
injustice requires it or where injustice would otherwise result.
(b) The court will be
guided by considering the factors usually applicable to interim
interdicts, except where the applicant is
not asserting a right, but
attempting to avert injustice.
(c) The court must be
satisfied that:
(i) The applicant has
a well-ground apprehension that the execution is taking place at the
instance of the respondent(s); and
(ii) irreparable harm
will result if execution is not stayed and the applicant ultimately
succeeds in establishing a clear right
(d) Irreparable harm
will invariably result if there is a possibility that the underlying
causa may ultimately be removed, i.e.
where the underlying causa is
the subject-matter of an ongoing dispute between the parties.
(e) The court is not
concerned with the merits of the underlying dispute – the sole
enquiry is simply whether the causa is
in dispute or susceptible to
setting aside.”
[27]
In my view, the applicant must be afforded
the opportunity to place facts before court in an attempt by him to
convince the court
that it would not be just and equitable to order
his eviction. The only way to do this would be to stay the current
execution order
and afford the applicant an opportunity to rescind
the eviction order. If such stay is not granted there exists a
possibility that
a real and substantial injustice could result should
the eviction order be carried out without the applicant being
provided with
the opportunity to place facts before the court to
consider whether it would be just and equitable to evict the
applicant. On the
papers before court he avers that he and his family
would be rendered homeless. This court does not have to decide
whether that
eventuality would in fact occur when the applicant is
evicted. It may very well not be the case as the applicant on his own
version
earns an income of approximately R5,800 per month which may
make it possible for him to obtain alternative housing.
[28]
For purposes of the rescission application,
the applicant will have to show that he has a reasonable prospect of
success to obtain
such relief. The mere fact that the court must
accept for purposes of this application that the applicant did not
have the opportunity
to place facts before the court as to why an
eviction should not be granted is sufficient to meet this
requirement.
[29]
It is unclear what enquiry the court
conducted when the eviction application was granted. In so far as a
bona fide
defence
is concerned that has some prospect of success, there is no evidence
that the court ordering eviction engaged in the obligatory
enquiry
required in terms of section 4(7) of PIE to consider all the factors
in order to decide whether it would be just and equitable
to grant
the eviction order. Moreover, there was a delay of almost five years
between the eviction order and the execution thereof.
The
circumstances of the applicant and his family could have changed.
[30]
It was found in the matter of
Nomthandazo
Makhunzi v Raymond Hlazo NO and three others
(Case
No: 8797/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 479 (15 May 2023) as follows in a case
that bears a lot of similarity with the current matter:
“
12.
It is however not necessary for the applicant to prove the necessary
enquiry was not carried out. For purposes
of assuming under common
law, there is enough of an insufficiency of evidence that the
necessary enquiry was carried out by the
court on 15 November 2018,
the absence of which enquiry which would constitute a bona fide
defence that has some prospect of success.”
[31]
The court is satisfied that the applicant
established that an injustice would present itself if the applicant
is not afforded an
opportunity to place facts before court to attempt
to convince the court not to order eviction. At least a
prima
facie
case, although open to some
doubt, was established that he would be entitled to a rescission
order. This would mean that he is entitled
to a stay of the eviction
order.
[32]
The other requirements for an interim
interdict being met, the court is satisfied to grant the staying
application. The applicant
must be placed on terms to file the
recission application within 15 days in lieu of which the interim
order would lapse.
Order
[33]
The following order is made:
a.
Condonation is granted for the
non-compliance with the Rules of this Court in terms of Uniform Rule
6(12)(a).
b.
To the extent that the applicant no longer
occupies the premises, the first respondent should restore the
applicant and his children
to unit B[…], F[…] Flats,
M[…] R[…] Road, F[…], Roodepoort, Gauteng.
c.
Pending the final determination of a
rescission application to be instituted within 15 days of this order,
the order of the court
granted by Acting Judge Sigogo under Case No.
2019/01339 on 19 November 2019 and the execution thereof be stayed.
If the rescission
application is not filed and served within the said
15-day period the interim relief would lapse and the first respondent
can proceed
with the eviction of the applicant.
d.
Interdicting and restraining the first and
second respondents and any other person who may be directed by the
first respondent from
evicting the applicant pending the final
determination of the rescission application if filed and served
within the 15-day period
mentioned in (c) above.
e.
The order in paragraphs (c) and (d) hereof
to operate in the interim with immediate effect.
f.
The costs of this interim application to be
cost in the proposed recission application.
R STRYDOM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Heard
on: 02 October 2024
Delivered
on: 11 October 2024
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
K. Kabinde
Sithi
and Thabela Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Adv.
S. S. Maelane
GMINC
Attorneys
[1]
2017
(5) SA 346 (CC).
[2]
2011
(1) SA 1
48 (LC)
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