Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 7South Africa
Madulammoho Housing Association NPC v Nephawe and Another (22/023954 ; 21/40262) [2023] ZAGPJHC 7 (10 January 2023)
Headnotes
HEADNOTE: LABOUR –THREEFOLD BURDEN UNDER PIE
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Madulammoho Housing Association NPC v Nephawe and Another (22/023954 ; 21/40262) [2023] ZAGPJHC 7 (10 January 2023)
Madulammoho Housing Association NPC v Nephawe and Another (22/023954 ; 21/40262) [2023] ZAGPJHC 7 (10 January 2023)
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sino date 10 January 2023
HEADNOTE:
LABOUR
–THREEFOLD BURDEN UNDER PIE
Eviction
– Requirements – Threefold burden of pleading under
PIE – Facts on which a just and equitable
eviction order
can be made – Homelessness and alternative accommodation –
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from
and Unlawful Occupation of
Land Act 19 of 1998.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
####
Case
No. 22/023954
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
10
January 2023
In
the matter between:
MADULAMMOHO
HOUSING ASSOCIATION NPC
Applicant
and
SHOTHODZO
NEPHAWE
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
Case
No. 21/40262
And
in the matter between:
FINAL
HOUSING SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
LUVALO
LUKHANYA
First
Respondent
ALL
THE UNIDENTIFIED ILLEGAL OCCUPANTS OF
ERF
[....] V[....] EXTENSION 14
Second
Respondents
CITY
OF EKURHULENI MUNICIPALITY
Third
Respondent
Summary
Unlawful
occupation of land – application of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation of, Land Act
19 of 1998
(“PIE”) – substantive requirements discussed.
Practice
– Pleading – Burden of pleading under PIE is threefold –
applicant must demonstrate ownership or lawful
control of the
property, that the respondent is in unlawful occupation, and that
there are facts that support the conclusion that
an eviction would be
just and equitable.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant in each of these matters owns residential
property from
which it seeks to evict unlawful occupiers.
2
In case number 22/023954, the applicant is Madulammoho,
a well-known
social housing company. Madulammoho is a non-profit landlord that
exists to provide low cost housing to people who
cannot afford to
rent on the open market. Madulammoho let a unit in the Fleurhof Views
housing development to the first respondent,
Mr. Nephawe. Its lease
with Mr. Nephawe commenced on 1 June 2016. The monthly rent payable
at the commencement of the lease was
just over R2 500. By 31 March
2021, Mr. Nephawe had fallen into arrears in the sum of R14 984.80.
He continued making payments,
however, and by 4 July 2022, his
arrears had been reduced to R9 715.83. At the point he signed his
lease in 2016 it appears that
no-one was living with him. It is not
clear from Madulammoho’s papers whether Mr. Nephawe still lives
alone.
3
In case number 21/40262, the applicant is Final Housing
Solutions
(Pty) Ltd (“FHS”). FHS owns a property in V[....]
Extension 14. FHS says that it purchased the property from
Nedbank in
2005, and that it found the first respondent, Mr. Lukhanya, living on
it with his family. FHS entered into an agreement
with Mr. Lukhanya
that entailed what appears to have been a complex set of arrangements
aimed at enabling Mr. Lukhanya to purchase
the property with the
assistance of the State. It is not clear precisely what that
arrangement was, because the critical averments
describing the
arrangement appear at paragraphs 17 to 20.7 of FHS’ founding
affidavit, which have been omitted from the papers
presented to me.
4
Still, the founding affidavit makes mention of “guarantees
for
the subsidy” given by “the department” in the sum
of R163 573. The purchase agreement annexed to the founding
affidavit
puts the total purchase price at R210 000, R50 000 of which is
payable as a deposit, presumably on signature of the agreement.
It is
not clear whether this amount was actually paid, but FHS does not
complain that it was not. FHS’ complaint is that
Mr. Lukhanya
neglected to pay the outstanding rates and taxes on the property,
which was apparently necessary to unlock the subsidy.
It seems that,
if the subsidy were paid, Mr. Lukhanya would be able to take
ownership of his home. However, the purchase agreement
makes no
mention of the subsidy guarantees, and the precise nature of their
relationship to the purchase agreement remains obscure.
This is
notwithstanding a supplementary affidavit filed on the applicant’s
behalf, in which it is baldly asserted that the
subsidy guarantees,
which turn out to have been given by the Department of Human
Settlements, have now expired.
5
Madulammoho and FHS each claim an eviction order under
the Prevention
of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation of, Land Act 19 of
1998 (“PIE”). They allege that
the occupation of the
property in each case has become unlawful. In Mr. Nephawe’s
case, this is because his lease has been
cancelled on breach. In Mr.
Lukhanya’s case it is because the purchase agreement has been
cancelled, apparently because of
Mr. Lukhanya’s failure to pay
the outstanding rates and taxes on the V[....] property.
6
The case for Madulammoho and FHS ended there. The attitude
of counsel
appearing before me was that once unlawful occupation has been
proved, an owner is entitled to an eviction order, at
least in the
absence of any other relevant information. That is a fundamental
misunderstanding of the applicable law. It is unfortunately
a common
one in the unopposed motion courts over which I have presided, in
which eviction applications under PIE are regularly
moved without any
attempt to satisfy the substantive requirements PIE imposes. In these
circumstances, it is necessary to restate
the requirements of PIE
before moving on to deal the applications brought by Madulammoho and
FHS.
PIE’s
substantive requirements
7
PIE authorises a court to evict an unlawful occupier only
where it is
“just and equitable”, after having considered all the
relevant circumstances (sections 4 (1), 4 (6) and
4 (7) of PIE). The
justice and equity standard has a clear and principled structure,
developed through a series of well-known appellate
decisions.
8
The principles of justice and equity are, first, that the
applicant
for an eviction order bears the onus to establish that it is just and
equitable to grant one; second, that evictions
that lead to
homelessness are not generally just and equitable; third, that a
court has wide powers to require applicants for eviction
orders,
organs of state and unlawful occupiers to produce the information
necessary to enable the formulation of a just and equitable
order;
and fourth, that where an eviction would lead to homelessness, the
duty to provide the alternative accommodation necessary
to prevent an
unlawful occupier from becoming homeless generally falls on the local
authority with jurisdiction over the property.
I address each of
these principles in turn.
Onus
9
The onus of demonstrating the justice and equity of an
eviction rests
on the applicant for an eviction order. The applicant has a duty to
place facts before a court from which an inference
can be drawn that
an eviction would be just and equitable (
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA), paragraph 34) (“
Changing
Tides
”). The decision in
Changing Tides
supersedes and overrules earlier decisions in which it was held,
obiter
,
that the onus to place information before the court shifts to the
unlawful occupier once the applicant has proven ownership and
unlawful occupation (see for example
Ndlovu
v Ngcobo, Bekker and Another v Jika
[2002] 4 All SA 384
(SCA) (“
Ndlovu
”),
paragraph 19).
10
It follows that it is no longer sufficient to approach a court for an
eviction
order merely on the basis of the applicant’s ownership
or control of a property, and the respondent’s unlawful
occupation.
Before an eviction order can be granted, the facts must
demonstrate that it would be just and equitable to make one.
11
There is accordingly no presumption in favour of granting an eviction
order
simply because the applicant has alleged and proven ownership
and unlawful occupation. Satisfying these requirements does no more
than trigger a further enquiry into whether it would be just and
equitable to evict an unlawful occupier. The fact that an owner
is,
at common law, entitled to exclusive use and occupation of their
property where there are no other counter-veiling common law
rights
held over it is a factor that counts in favour of granting an
eviction order. But it is by no means dispositive of the issue.
Homelessness
12
Although there are potentially a wide variety of reasons why an
eviction
may not be just and equitable, the case law developed under
PIE has tended to focus on the injustice of homelessness. The
appellate
courts have consistently held that it will not be just and
equitable to order an eviction where the execution of the eviction
order
would leave an unlawful occupier homeless (See
Occupiers,
Berea v De Wet
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC),
paragraph 57 and
Occupiers, Shulana
Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v Steele
[2010] 4 All SA 54
(SCA) (“
Shulana
Court
”), paragraph 16). It
follows that eviction orders that will lead to homelessness cannot be
made.
A
court’s fact-finding and remedial powers
13
Even where an eviction application is unopposed, if it appears that
an
eviction might lead to homelessness, a court is entitled neither
summarily to evict an unlawful occupier, nor summarily to dismiss
the
application. It is required to act “proactive[ly]” to
ensure that it is “appraised of all relevant information
in
order to enable it to make a just and equitable decision”
(
Shulana Court
,
paragraph 15). Its principal method of obtaining the necessary
information will be to require a local authority to investigate
the
circumstances of the unlawful occupiers, and to report to the court
on a range of matters, including whether and to what extent
an
eviction order may lead to homelessness, what steps the local
authority will take to provide any necessary alternative
accommodation,
and when those steps will be taken (see, in this
respect,
Changing Tides
,
paragraph 40).
14
That is why applicants for eviction orders that may lead to
homelessness
are required to join the relevant local authority from
the outset (
City of Johannesburg
v
Blue Moonlight Properties 39 (Pty)
Ltd
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC) (“
Blue
Moonlight
”) paragraph 45).
Where they fail to do so, a court will rectify that failure by
joining the relevant local authority, and,
if necessary, other organs
of state concerned with the provision of housing. The court will
generally require a report to be filed
addressing the need for and
provision of alternative accommodation (
Sailing
Queen Investments CC v Occupants of La Colleen Court
2008 6 BCLR 666
(W) and
Occupiers of
ERF 101,102, 104 and 112, Shorts Retreat, Pietermaritzburg v Daisy
Dear Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2009] 4
All SA 410
(SCA)).
15
Once that report is filed, a court will generally be in a position to
make
an order directing alternative accommodation to be provided
where it is needed, and setting a timetable for the provision of the
accommodation and for the eviction of the unlawful occupiers who do
not or are not entitled to relocate to it.
16
Sometimes, however, local authorities may unreasonably refuse to
provide
alternative accommodation, or provide information that is of
such a generalised nature as to be of little or no assistance in
resolving
the specific case before a court. In those circumstances, a
court may order the local authority to produce further specific
information
(see
Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd v Occupiers Saratoga Avenue
[2008] ZAGPHC 275
;
2009
(1) SA 470
(W)), or it may direct a local authority simply to provide
the accommodation by a given date, linking that date to a date on
which
an eviction order may be executed (see
Blue
Moonlight
, paragraph 97).
17
PIE does not enjoin a court automatically to dismiss an eviction
application
merely because it might result in homelessness. There are
cases where the facts require the dismissal of such an application,
but
they are rare (see, for example,
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Various Occupiers, Eden Park Extension 5
2014 (3) SA 23
(SCA),
All Builders
and Cleaning Services CC v Matlaila
[2015]
ZAGPJHC 2 (16 January 2015) and
Fischer
v Unlawful Occupiers
2018 (2) SA 228
(WCC)).
18
Instead, a court will normally seek to craft an eviction order that
may
only be executed once alternative accommodation is objectively
available to the unlawful occupiers, and which allows the local
authority to be compelled, if necessary, to provide the accommodation
if it fails to do so promptly (see, for example,
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Hlophe
[2015] 2 All SA 251
(SCA)).
Cases
that do not raise the possibility of homelessness
19
There are, of course, many eviction applications under PIE where
there
is no indication that homelessness will follow on
eviction. In the absence of some other reason why an eviction would
be
unjust and inequitable, a court will in those cases give effect to
the applicant’s common law right to exclusive possession,
and
will issue an eviction order. But the only way a court will be able
to draw the conclusion that an eviction would be just and
equitable
is if the applicant sets out facts that allow the court to do so.
That is why it is important for applicants for eviction
orders under
PIE to plead their cases fully, going beyond the traditional common
law approach of alleging ownership and unlawful
occupation.
The
Madulammoho and FHS cases
20
It follows that, apart from the need to address PIE’s
procedural
requirements, the burden of pleading on an applicant for
an eviction order is now three-fold. The applicant must allege (1)
ownership
of the property (or control of it in the sense conveyed by
the term “person-in-charge” in section 4 (1) of PIE); (2)
unlawful occupation of the property; and (3) facts on which a just
and equitable eviction order can be made.
21
It may be that these facts are not available to the applicant and it
would
be unreasonable to put the applicant to the trouble of
obtaining them. In that event, there is no reason why the applicant
themselves
should not procure a local authority’s report to
provide a basis on which the court can exercise its equitable
jurisdiction,
having regard to the principles I have set out.
22
In both matters currently before me, however, the applicants and the
respondents
are embedded in long-standing relationships. It is
inconceivable that the applicants could have had any trouble in
providing the
facts on which I would have been able to exercise my
equitable jurisdiction. But neither applicant has ultimately done so.
The
Madulammoho case
23
In the Madulammoho case, the applicant limited itself to alleging Mr.
Nephawe’s
breach of his lease, and the valid cancellation of
that lease. It stated that, other than his sex, his identity number,
and his
occupation of one of its units, Mr. Nephawe’s further
details were unknown. That obviously cannot be taken at face value.
A
social housing provider will be aware of a range of facts and
circumstances relevant to whether an eviction would be just and
equitable. In particular, a social housing provider will likely have,
or easily be able to obtain, important information about
an unlawful
occupier’s means and ability to afford alternative
accommodation.
24
These details are critical, especially where Mr. Nephawe appears to
have
taken occupation of his unit precisely because he was poor and
vulnerable. His lease also indicates the possibility that his unit
was constructed with the assistance of a state housing subsidy. In
these circumstances, Madulammoho very likely had more relevant
information within its grasp than it disclosed in its founding
papers.
25
My principal concern on reading the papers was that Mr. Nephawe was
(a)
plainly not a recalcitrant tenant, in that he had, on
Madulammoho’s own documents, been making payments in reduction
of his
arrears, and (b) if Mr. Nephawe could genuinely no longer
afford to live at Fleurhof View – itself a low-cost housing
development
– there was a strong possibility that he faced
homelessness on eviction. When I put these difficulties to
Madulammoho’s
counsel, she was understandably constrained by
the paucity of the information on the affidavits.
26
My concerns were borne out by what happened after I reserved
judgment.
The next morning, Mr. Nephawe extinguished his arrears, and
the eviction application was withdrawn. The notice of withdrawal was
invalid, as it was filed without my leave and in the absence of
evidence of either of the respondents’ consent (see
Protea
Assurance Co Ltd v Gamlase
1971 (1)
SA 460
(E) at 465G).
27
Mr. Nephawe’s payment nonetheless rendered the matter moot. But
I
indicated that I would deliver judgment in any event. In doing so,
I exercised my discretion to decide a matter that has become
moot
where it is in the interests of justice to do so (
Sebola
v Standard Bank of South Africa
2012
(5) SA 142
(CC), paragraph 32). Because of the fundamental
misunderstanding of PIE’s substantive requirements to which I
have already
referred, it is plainly in the interests of justice to
decide the issues arising in the Madulammoho case.
28
Had Mr. Nephawe not paid his arrears, I would have directed the
applicants
to file an affidavit addressing the obscurities I have
outlined. I would also have directed the City of Johannesburg to file
a
report dealing with Mr. Nephawe’s ability to afford
alternative accommodation, and the City’s capacity to provide
it.
29
None of those orders is now necessary. Nevertheless, Madulammoho
failed
to discharge its onus to demonstrate that Mr. Nephawe’s
eviction would be just and equitable. For that reason, the
application
will be dismissed. Since the matter was called in
unopposed court, there is no reason to make a costs order against
Madulammoho.
Each party will pay their own costs.
The
FHS case
30
The FHS case is more complex. There are two principal obscurities to
be
explored before just and equitable relief can be granted. The
first is the fate of the arrangement through which Mr. Lukhanya was
supposed to have been able to take ownership of his home. The second
relates to the numbers and circumstances of those in occupation
of
the property.
31
It was initially submitted on the applicant’s behalf that there
was
no-one other than Mr. Lukhanya and his family in occupation of
the property. But Mr. Lukhanya, who appeared in person, states that
there are a significant number of people living in backyard rooms on
the property.
32
In these circumstances, I am left with little option but to join the
Provincial
Department of Human Settlements to the proceedings, and to
direct it and the third respondent, the Ekurhuleni Municipality, to
file reports dealing with the relevant matters that lie with their
purview. When those reports are filed, I may be in a position
to
decide whether an eviction would be just and equitable, and, if so,
on what terms.
Order
33
For all these reasons, I make the following orders.
34
In case number
22/023954
,
the application is dismissed,
with each party paying their own costs.
35
In case number 21/40262
,
the Member of the Executive Council for Human Settlements (Gauteng)
is joined as the fourth respondent in these proceedings.
36
The MEC is directed to file a report, under oath, by no later than 28
February
2023, dealing with the following issues –
36.1
The nature of the subsidy scheme applicable to the parties in this
matter;
36.2
Whether it is possible to arrange the purchase of ERF [….]
V[....] EXTENSION 14, GAUTENG (“the property”)
for the
benefit of the first respondent using that subsidy scheme, or any
other applicable scheme; and
36.3
Any other information the Department of Human Settlements has under
its control relating to the purchase agreement
concluded between the
parties, and the role of the Department in implementing that
agreement.
37
The third respondent is directed to file a report, under oath, by no
later
than 28 February 2023 dealing with the following issues –
37.1
The number and circumstances of the occupiers of the property;
37.2
The occupiers’ ability to afford alternative accommodation;
37.3
Whether the eviction of anyone in occupation of the property would
lead to homelessness; and
37.4
What steps the third respondent will take to provide alternative
accommodation, and when those steps will be taken.
38
The applicant is directed, by no later than 20 January 2023, to serve
a
copy of this judgment on the following persons, and to draw their
attention to the contents of this order –
38.1
The first and second respondents;
38.2
The MEC for Human Settlements (Gauteng);
38.3
The State Attorney; and
38.4
The third respondent.
39
The matter will remain with Wilson J, who will supervise the matter
until
it is finally determined. The applicant may, at any time after
1 March 2023, have the matter re-enrolled before Wilson J, having
given all the other parties ten days’ notice of the
re-enrolment, for such further relief as may then be appropriate.
40
The question of costs is reserved.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
29
November and 1 December 2022
DECIDED
ON:
10
January 2023
For
the Applicant in case no. 023954: A
Kohler
Instructed
by Vermaak
Marshall Wellbeloved Inc
For
the Applicant in case no. 40262: T
Manda
Instructed
by M
Ngomane Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents
in
case no. 40262: In
person
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