Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1110South Africa
Johannesburg Social Housing Company Soc Ltd v Deman (2020/7199) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1110 (30 October 2024)
Headnotes
“[19] Provided the procedural requirements have been met, the owner is entitled to approach the court on the basis of ownership and unlawful occupation. Unless the occupier opposes and discloses circumstances relevant to the eviction order, the owner, in principle, will be entitled to an order for eviction. Relevant circumstances are nearly without fail facts within the exclusive knowledge of the occupier and it cannot be expected of an owner to negative in advance facts not known to him and not in issue between the parties.” [19] The following considerations are relevant to establish whether an eviction in this instance is just and equitable:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Johannesburg Social Housing Company Soc Ltd v Deman (2020/7199) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1110 (30 October 2024)
Johannesburg Social Housing Company Soc Ltd v Deman (2020/7199) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1110 (30 October 2024)
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sino date 30 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2020-7199
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
30 October 2024
In
the matter between:
JOHANNESBURG
SOCIAL HOUSING COMPANY SOC LTD
Applicant
and
MUSUNDWA
SYLVIA DEMANE
First
Respondent
FURTHER
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF
KLIPTOWN
SQUARE, KLIPTOWN
Second
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
Date
of Hearing: 28 October 2024
Date
of Judgment: 30 October 2024
JUDGMENT
ESTERHUIZEN, AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the Eviction of
the First and Second Respondents in terms of Section 4(1) of the
Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from the Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act No. 19 of 1998 (“PIE Act”).
Background
[2]
The Applicant was established as a social housing company in order to
provide rental accommodation in the social housing
category whose
household income is between R1 500.00 and R7 500 per month.
To provide for this, the Applicant established
developments including
a development at Kliptown, known as Kliptown Square Building aimed at
middle income occupiers.
[3]
The First Respondent entered into a lease agreement with the
Applicant in respect of a unit in the Kliptown Flats in August
2008.
[4]
By 8 August 2019 the arrears of the First Respondent in
respect of rental and other obligations to the Applicant
amounted to
R123 772.54.
[5]
On 19 August 2019, the Applicant addressed a letter of
demand to the First Respondent demanding that the First
Respondent
bring the arrears up to date within 7 (seven) days of date of
delivery of the letter which the First Respondent did
not do.
Following on this and on 27 August 2019 the Applicant
addressed a final notice notifying the First Respondent
of the breach
of the lease agreement together with a conditional notice of
cancellation that if the First Respondent failed to
make payment the
agreement would terminate and the Respondents would be required to
vacate the property. Failing to make
payment the Respondents
were given 30 days in which to do so.
[6]
Notwithstanding demand, the First Respondent failed to make payment
of the arrears and failed to vacate the property.
[7]
The Applicant launched an application for the eviction of the First
Respondent and Second Respondents in terms of the
PIE Act on
2 March 2020.
[8]
The Notice of Motion, Founding Affidavit and Annexures were served on
the First Respondent and Second Respondent on 18 March 2020.
[9]
The Applicant proceeded to issue an Ex Parte application for
authorisation of the notice in terms of Section 4(2)
of the PIE
Act which order was granted on 22 July 2024.
[10]
The Sheriff served the Order in terms of Section 4(2), Notice in
terms of Section 4(2) of the PIE Act, Ex Parte
application,
supporting affidavit, all annexures, Notice in terms of Rule 41A
of the Uniform Rules of Court and Final Notice
of Set Down on the
First and Second Respondents on 8 August 2024. The Applicant’s
attorneys of record, as authorised in the
July order, served the
Third Respondent with the same notices.
[11]
The First, Second and Third Respondents were served not less than 14
days prior to the hearing of this application.
[12]
The Respondents have failed to serve and file an affidavit pursuant
to the Section 4(2) Notice.
Discussion
[13]
The
matter is being opposed only by the First Respondent who admits that
she is in arrears with the payment of her rental and that
she has not
been paying any rental for a number of years. The reason for being in
arrears and not making any payments, so the First
Respondent avers,
is because the rental being charged is too high compared to her other
expenses. She however admits that the lease
agreement still applies
and that she is bound by it.
[14]
Clause 3.1
of the agreement requires that “
rental
shall be paid monthly in advance on or before the 1
st
(first) day of each and every month following conclusion of this
agreement
”
.
In addition to this the failure to make rental payments is a material
breach of the agreement (Clause 13.1 of the lease agreement)
and
as such a justifiable reason for cancelation. Due to the First
Respondent’s continued failure to make payment the Applicant
on
19 August 2019, following an earlier letter to make
payment, had a letter of demand delivered to the First
respondent in which it was stated:
“
We refer
to our friendly reminder letter dated
7 August 2019
and advise that your account is still in arrears with an overdue
amount of
R123772.54
.
We further refer to our terms and
conditions where it’s stated that all rentals/levies are due
and payable in advance on or
before the 1
st
of every month
and your account status is currently in breach of the contract
signed.
We therefore advise that unless we
receive settlement of the arrears balance within 7 (seven) days from
date hereof, JOSHCO will
not hesitate to exercise its rights in terms
of the Agreement.
We look forward to payment per
return.
If payment has
been made, thank you for your patronage and kindly ignore this
notice.
”
[15]
Having received no response or payment pursuant to this demand the
Applicant on 27 August 2019 had a Final
Notice delivered
informing the First respondent:
“
1.
We note with concern that despite our previous
demands you have refused, failed and/or neglected to pay your arrear
rental including/excluding
the current rent and that the amount due
has now escalated to
R123772.54
.
2. We therefore demand,
as we hereby do, that you pay 50% of the amount in arrears
PLUS
your current rental, failing which we shall not have an alternative
but to cancel your lease and institute legal action against
you thru
[sic] a court of law for
legal eviction, attachment of your
salary through your employers or attachment of your income if
self-employed
.
3. Please be advised
that
should you fail to comply with the above demand within 7
(seven) days from date hereof
, your actions will be viewed as
occupying the unit illegally and
you’ll be required to
voluntary vacate the unit within 30 (thirty) days of failing to
remedy the breach
as provided herein above.
We trust that
you will take this notice in a more serious light
.”
[16]
The receipt of these letters is not disputed and the First
Respondent’s reasoning is that she did not make payment
as she
was not able to pay the total amount within 7 days as per the
demand. The abovementioned notices by the Applicant
were sent
in compliance with the requirements of the agreement.
[17]
Notwithstanding the Applicant having complied with the requirements
of the PIE Act and notwithstanding the First Respondent
not having
raised a valid defence the enquiry does however not stop there as it
must still be determined whether and eviction would
be just and
equitable (
Ndlovu v Ngcobo; Bekker
and Another v Jika
2003
(1)
SA 113 (SCA) para [3]). Section 4(7) of the PIE Act provides:
“
(7)
If an unlawful occupier has occupied the land
in question for more than six
months
at the time when the proceedings are initiated, a court may grant an
order for eviction if it is of the opinion that it
is
just and equitable to do so
,
after
considering all the
relevant circumstances
,
including, except where the land is sold in a sale of execution
pursuant to a mortgage, 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, and including the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disabled persons and households headed by women
.”(Own
Emphases)
[18]
In determining what is just an equitable it requires a consideration
as to whether eviction is just and equitable to
all parties meaning
both the landlord and the unlawful occupiers (See C
ity
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and others
(Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa as amicus curiae)
2012 (11) BCLR
1206
(SCA) at para [12]). Where an occupier opposes an eviction at
the very least the occupier is required to lay sufficient factual
foundation upon which the Court can make a finding. In
Ndlovu
supra
the
Supreme Court of appeal held:
“
[19]
Provided the procedural requirements
have been met, the owner is entitled to approach the court on the
basis of ownership and unlawful
occupation. Unless the occupier
opposes
and discloses
circumstances relevant to the eviction order
,
the owner, in principle, will be entitled to an order for eviction.
Relevant circumstances are nearly
without fail facts within the exclusive knowledge of the occupier and
it cannot be expected of
an owner to negative in advance facts not
known to him and not in issue between the parties
.
”
[19]
The following considerations are relevant to establish whether an
eviction in this instance is just and equitable:
a.
The First Respondent admits that she has
failed to pay any rental for several years. What the First
Respondent does not disclose
is why she ceased to make payment other
than that it was too high, what her income is, especially under
circumstances where it
is alleged that the rental amounts are too
high compared to her other expenses. The mere fact that it is
alleged that it
is too high does not mean that the First Respondent
cannot afford it. The First Respondent does not mention what these
‘other
expenses’ are and how it impacts her ability to
pay rent. When faced with a demand for arrear payments the First
Respondent
states that she could not be expected to pay the amount of
R123,000.00 within seven days (as demanded in 2019) but fails to
provide
any explanation as to why no attempt to contact the Applicant
was made to discuss possible alternatives.
b.
The eviction notices were served as early
as 2019, but the Applicant provides no evidence nor makes any
submissions with regard
the availability of or costs of alternative
accommodation. The First Respondent cannot cease payment and
expect to remain
in occupation indefinitely. This is even more
so where various steps by the Applicant were being taken, of which
the First
Respondent was aware, to evict her from the premises.
c.
The First Respondent is in material breach
of the lease agreement, which she admits still applies to her, and
the Applicant is within
its right to cancel the agreement and ask for
an eviction.
d.
The Applicant provides affordable rental
for a lower income market. However, the non-payment by any one
or more of the occupants
of this accommodation causes prejudice not
only to the Applicant in that it receives no income to maintain and
to pay expenses
in relation to the building but the non-payment by a
tenant also impacts the other occupants who are then by implication
cross
subsidising the non-paying tenants and it in turn results in
the Applicant not achieving its objectives in providing low cost
housing.
[20]
I am thus convinced that the First Respondent’s reasoning for
failing to make any rental payments for a number
of years does not
constitute a valid defense.
[21]
Because all the requirements of section 4 of PIE have been
complied with and because the First Respondent has raised
no valid
defence, section 4(8) of PIE determines that the court
must
grant an order for the eviction and in doing so must consider what is
a just and equitable date on which the occupier must vacate
the land
.
[22]
In considering this it is important to consider the
t
emporary
Emergency Accommodation Report (‘TEA’) compiled by the
Department of Human Settlements at the City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality pursuant to the Applicant’s
application for the eviction of the First Respondent. The duty
to report is described in the report itself as follows:
“
In line
with the principles as set out by the Constitutional Court in the
matter of Occupiers of Erven 87 & 88 Berea v Christiaan
Frederick
De Wet N.O, in a matter where there is a possibility or an allegation
of possible homelessness, the City is required
to provide the Court
with a report wherein it sets out whether or not the occupiers facing
eviction will indeed be rendered homeless.
If the City
concludes that the occupier(s) will indeed be rendered homeless on
eviction, the City is then required to indicate
what temporary
emergency accommodation (“TEA”) it will make available to
said occupier(s) on eviction.”
[23]
There is no need to incorporate the whole report and I refer only to
the conclusion and recommendations made following
the Department of
Human Settlements investigation:
“
21.
Based on the findings gathered during the occupancy audit, it became
apparent that the 1
st
respondent is an able person who earns a monthly salary, which
indicates that she is able to afford a new rental unit within her
means.
22.
Moreover, although the income of the 1
st
respondent has
not been specifically mentioned, she appears to be a working woman.
23.
Therefore, an inference can be made that the eviction in question
would not render the occupiers/evictees
homeless provided it is not
abrupt and immediate.
24. The
occupiers do not qualify for Temporary Emergency Accommodation.
25. TEA is
a scarce resource, and the city is confronted with a waiting list of
more than 4777 households
and priority is given to the poorest and
the most vulnerable with zero options for accommodation.
26. The 1
st
respondent should be able to source alternative and cheaper
accommodation.
27. It is
therefore recommended that should the court grant the eviction,
perhaps the eviction be postponed
to such a time that the court would
deem fair and just, so as to allow the respondent/s an opportunity to
source alternative and
cheaper accommodation.”
[24]
In the TEA report the Department of Human Settlements proposed that
where an eviction is ordered that the respondents
must be afforded
sufficient time to source alternative and cheaper accommodation as
they do not qualify for Temporary Emergency
Accommodation. The
Applicant seeks an order whereby the First and Second respondents are
to be evicted by 2 December 2024. In view
of the recommendation
contained in the TEA Report it is my view that this date is not
reasonable and that more time should be provided
to the First and
Second respondents to seek alternative accommodation and to move out
of the premises being unlawfully occupied.
In my view a just and
equitable order would be to provide the First and Second Respondents
until 31 January 2025 to vacate the
premises.
Costs
[25]
Regarding the costs of the application, I do not consider the usual
order that costs follow the outcome as appropriate
in the
circumstances of this matter
.
The
evacuation and relocations are obviously coupled with financial
implications and the significant amount still due to the Applicant
for the arrear rental is also relevant
.
What
cannot be ignored is
the
fact that the Applicant had to come to court to have the First
Respondent evicted after she failed to pay rent for a number
of
years. These facts considered it is not in the interest of justice
that the First and Second Respondents be ordered to pay the
costs of
the application, including all reserved costs in full, but that the
costs be limited to all the disbursements incurred
by the Applicant’s
attorney including any and all disbursements which have been incurred
up to date and which may still be
incurred should the Applicant have
to employ the services of the Sheriff to evict the First and Second
Respondents.
[26]
Therefor I make the following order:
Order
1. The Applicant’s late
filing of its Replying affidavit is condoned.
2. That the First Respondent be
evicted from the property known as UNIT 0[…] BLOCK 0[…],
K[…] S[…],
K[…] ROAD, KLIPTOWN (hereinafter
referred to as “the property).
3. Further occupiers who may be
occupying the property unlawfully under the First Respondent, being
the Second Respondent,
be evicted from the property.
4. The First and Second
Respondents are ordered to vacate the property on or before
31 January 2025.
5. In the event that the First
and Second Respondents do not vacate the property by 31 January 2025.
the sheriff
of the Court or their lawfully appointed deputy is
authorized and directed to evict the First and Second Respondents
from the property.
6. The First and Second
Respondents are interdicted from entering the property at any time
after they have vacated the property
or been evicted therefrom by the
Sheriff of the Court or their lawfully appointed Deputy.
7. In the event that the First
and Second Respondents contravene the order contained in the
paragraph above, the Sheriff of
the Court or their lawfully appointed
Deputy is authorised and directed to remove them from the property as
soon as possible after
their reoccupation thereof.
8. A copy of this order is to be
served on the First and Second Respondents by the Applicant in
accordance with the provisions
of Rule 4(1)(a)(i) or (ii) of the
Uniform Rules of Court within 14 days of it being issued.
9. The First and Second
Respondents are directed to pay the costs of this application and all
previous reserved costs, such
costs being limited to the
disbursements of the Applicant’s attorney including any
disbursements which may be incurred should
the Applicant have to
employ the services of the Sheriff to evict the First and Second
Respondents.
ESTERHUIZEN AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicant:
Mrs
Dhilshad Hoosen (Attorney with Right of Appearance) of
Nchupetsang
Inc Attorneys
For the
Respondent:
No Appearance
sino noindex
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