Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 59South Africa
PZL Properties (Pty) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Erf[....] Judith's Paarl Township and Another (053569/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 59 (30 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## PZL Properties (Pty) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Erf[....] Judith's Paarl Township and Another (053569/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 59 (30 January 2023)
PZL Properties (Pty) Limited v Unlawful Occupiers of Erf[....] Judith's Paarl Township and Another (053569/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 59 (30 January 2023)
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sino date 30 January 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 053569/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
30 January 2023
In
the matter between:
PZL
PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF ERF [....]
JUDITH’S
PAARL TOWNSHIP
First
Respondents
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant, PZL, owns property in Judith’s Paarl
from which
it seeks to evict unlawful occupiers. The number of people presently
living on the property cannot be established at
this stage. PZL
concedes that there are at least 85. However, Mr. Stephan Kades, who
occupies the property and rents rooms in it
out to the other
occupiers, and who purported to represent the residents of the
property before me, says that there are at least
200 men, women and
children living on the property.
2
The eviction application was placed on my urgent roll for
hearing on
10 January 2023. This happened in unusual circumstances. PZL has
already obtained an ejectment order against Mr. Kades,
and his
partner, Erica De Kok. That order was granted in the Magistrates’
Court on 10 October 2022. It was obtained after
PZL cancelled an
agreement to sell the property to Mr. Kades and Ms. De Kok.
3
The Magistrates’ Court eviction order applied not
only to Mr.
Kades and Ms. De Kok, but also to “all those occupying through
and under” them. PZL accepts that the other
residents of the
property, though they are apparently renting rooms from Mr. Kades, do
not occupy it “through or under”
him. PZL now seeks an
order against all of the other residents, cited as a class of
unlawful occupiers.
4
The application is brought on an urgent basis because PZL
has now
entered into a sale agreement with another person interested in
buying the property. In terms of that agreement, PZL must
give that
other purchaser (a close corporation identified on the papers as
“Alpha-Gonder Wholesalers”) vacant possession
of the
property by 15 January 2023. PZL understands that Alpha- Gonder
wishes to take vacant possession of the property by 30 January
2023.
5
That notwithstanding, when the matter was called, PZL no
longer
sought the eviction relief. It instead asked for an order joining Mr.
Kades to the proceedings, directing Mr. Kades to file
an answering
affidavit on his own behalf and on behalf of the first respondents by
17 January 2023, and reserving costs. Mr. Peter,
who appeared for
PZL, submitted that, despite PZL having accepted that the residents
do not occupy the property “through
or under” Mr. Kades,
Mr. Kades was nonetheless authorised to oppose the application on
their behalf. I found that puzzling,
especially in circumstances
where, as will become clear, the residents of the property have not
had any notice of the eviction
application.
6
I raised two further issues with Mr. Peter. The first issue
was
whether the application ought not to have been brought under section
5 of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful
Occupation
of Land Act, 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”), which, on its
face, applies to allegedly urgent eviction proceedings
of this
nature. The second issue was whether the notice requirements set out
in section 4 (2) of the PIE Act, which PZL accepts
apply to this
application, had been complied with.
7
After hearing oral argument from Mr. Peter, I reserved
judgment. At
my request, Mr. Peter filed further written submissions on the issues
I had raised, and on the relief to be granted
at this stage of the
proceedings. Those submissions were filed on 12 January 2023. I am
grateful to Mr. Peter for his assistance.
8
I will now turn to deal with the issues of urgency and
notice, before
setting out an order for the further conduct of the application.
Urgency
9
There are two provisions of the PIE Act that regulate the
steps
owners or persons in charge of unlawfully occupied property must take
to secure an eviction order. Section 4 of the PIE regulates
applications for final eviction orders. Section 5 of the PIE Act
regulates urgent applications for interim eviction orders, which
may
be granted pending the finalisation of proceedings under section 4.
10
Section 5 of the PIE Act states that applications for urgent interim
eviction
orders may be brought if (a) there is a real and imminent
danger of substantial injury to persons or property unless an
unlawful
occupier is immediately evicted; and if (b) the hardship
caused to the applicant if the eviction order is not granted exceeds
the
likely hardship to the unlawful occupier if it is; and if (c) the
applicant has no other effective remedy.
11
Mr. Peter submits that section 5 is not the only route to an urgent
eviction
order. He emphasises that section 5 of the PIE Act applies
only to interim eviction orders, and that PZL seeks a final eviction
order. Final eviction orders are dealt with under section 4 of the
PIE Act. Mr. Peter says that PZL was entitled to bring an application
for a final order under section 4 if it could satisfy the ordinary
test for urgency. That test is simply that an applicant needs
urgent
relief because they will not, on the facts of a particular case, be
able to obtain substantial redress in the ordinary course
(Uniform
Rule 6 (12)).
12
Mr. Peter relied on the decision of this court in
Lewray
Investments v Mthunzi
[2018] ZAGPJHC
432 (23 May 2018). In that matter, it was decided that final orders
for eviction may be granted on an urgent basis
under section 4 of the
PIE Act if the ordinary test for urgency is satisfied. The necessary
implication of that conclusion is that
the test set out in section 5
need only be satisfied if an interim eviction order is sought.
13
I have some doubts about the correctness of the
Lewray
decision. It seems to me that, read purposively, as a whole, and in
light of the constitutional rights and interests they are meant
to
balance, sections 4 and 5 of the PIE Act mean that (a) final eviction
orders may not be granted on an urgent basis; and that
(b) an interim
eviction order may only be granted urgently pending the outcome of
proceedings for a final order under section 4
if the test set out in
section 5 is met; and that (c) proceedings for a final eviction order
must always follow the notice procedure
and adhere to the substantive
requirements set out in section 4 of the Act. If this were not so,
there would be little point in
section 5 of the PIE Act. No
reasonable applicant for an eviction order would bother to satisfy
the stringent section 5 test for
an urgent interim eviction order if
an urgent final eviction order could be obtained under section 4 by
satisfying a far less exacting
standard.
14
It also seems to me that court in
Lewray
was animated by the fact that there was, on anybody’s version,
no risk that the unlawful occupiers in that case would be
rendered
homeless by an eviction, and so there was a reduced need for the
kinds of safeguards that the PIE Act is normally meant
to provide.
Lewray
was
accordingly a poor test case for exploring the meaning of section 5
of the PIE Act, and its relationship with section 4.
15
However, I need not make any definitive finding on the correctness of
the
Lewray
decision. This is because, even on the ordinary test for urgency, PZL
has not made out a case.
16
The urgency PZL claims is self-created. On PZL’s own version,
the
property has been occupied since at least October 2022. But the
likelihood is that the residents have lived at the property for
far
longer. PZL allowed Mr. Kades to take occupation of the property in
December 2015. It sold the property to Mr. Kades in 2021
before later
cancelling the sale. Mr. Kades made clear before me that he bought
the property for the sole purpose of letting it
out. It is
accordingly a fair, if provisional, inference that at least some of
the residents may have been in occupation of the
property for up to
six years. Although PZL says that Mr. Kades sublet the property
without its consent, it must have known, or
ought reasonably to have
known, about Mr. Kades’ activities throughout.
17
Ordinarily, there is no urgency to an eviction application where the
unlawful
occupiers sought to be evicted have lived undisturbed at the
property for several years. PZL sought to create that urgency by
warranting
vacant possession to Alpha-Gonder by 15 January 2023. In
its papers PZL complained that the ordinary procedures applicable to
eviction
proceedings under PIE could not be complied with in the time
available to meet that contractual undertaking. But that means only
that PZL ought not to have warranted vacant possession to
Alpha-Gonder by 15 January 2023. It does not, in itself, supply the
urgency that PZL claims. Plainly, a matter is not rendered urgent
simply because a party inserts an unrealistic term into a contract.
18
PZL does not suggest that it is at risk of any crippling financial
loss,
or other irreparable damage to its legal interests, if the
matter is not heard as one of urgency. Indeed, other than the
self-created
deadline of 15 January 2023, which it must have known it
could not meet once it declined to seek a final order before me,
there
is no suggestion that PZL will not be able to achieve
substantial redress if the eviction application is heard in the
ordinary
course.
19
For these reasons, the application is not urgent, and should not have
been
placed on the urgent roll.
Notice
20
This conclusion renders it strictly unnecessary for me to deal with
the
question of whether the notice requirements in section 4 (2) of
the PIE Act have been satisfied. Ordinarily, I would do no more
than
strike the application from the urgent roll. However, since the
effect of my decision is that the application must proceed
on a
non-urgent basis, it is important to record that section 4 (2) of the
PIE Act has not yet been complied with. It is also important
to deal
with PZL’s request to join Mr. Kades to the proceedings, and to
give directions as to the further conduct of the
matter that will
ensure compliance with the provisions of the PIE Act, while providing
appropriate recognition to the parties’
competing rights and
interests.
21
Section 4 (2) of the PIE Act requires unlawful occupiers facing
eviction
to be given at least two weeks’ “written and
effective notice” of the date on which proceedings for their
eviction
will be heard. An unlawful occupier is entitled to this
notice separately from, and in addition to, the ordinary service of
the
application papers or combined summons that institute the
eviction proceedings (
Cape Killarney
Property Investments v Mahamba
[2001] 4 All SA 479
(A), paragraphs 13 and 14). The form and manner
of service of the notice must be approved by a court (see
Cape
Killarney
, paragraphs 11 and 16).
22
In this case, that did not happen. The application papers were served
together
with the section 4 (2) notice. The content and service of
the section 4 (2) notice were not approved by a court. Indeed, PZL
brought
the application urgently precisely because it did not want to
comply with the ordinary requirements that the two documents be
served
separately and that the court approve the contents and manner
of service of the section 4 (2) notice.
23
Mr. Peter relies on the decision in
Moela
v Shoniwe
2005 (4) SA 357
(SCA) to
contend that PZL’s admitted non-compliance with section 4 (2)
of the PIE Act does not matter so long as the purpose
of the section
– effective notice to the unlawful occupiers of the date on
which the eviction application will be heard –
is achieved.
24
Moela
is not authority for the proposition that a section 4 (2) notice can
be held valid even if it is not approved by a court. In any
event, in
this case, the sheriff’s returns make clear that no-one at the
property (other than Mr. Kades and Ms. De Kok) was
actually served
with the application or the section 4 (2) notice. At best, two copies
of the papers were left at the front door
of the property. That was
plainly not effective service on a group of people numbering between
85 and 200. On these facts, the
purpose of section 4 (2) was
obviously not achieved (see, in this respect,
Mntambo
v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
[2009]
ZAGPJHC 17 (4 May 2009), paragraph 4).
25
For all these reasons PZL must now comply fully with section 4 (2) of
the
PIE Act, read in light of the
Cape
Killarney
decision.
Further
Conduct of the Matter
26
It remains to address the role of Mr. Kades in the matter. PZL asks
for
an order joining him to the proceedings and restraining him from
preventing the sheriff from accessing the property for the purposes
of serving notices in terms of section 4 (2) of the PIE Act.
27
It is not clear to me whether Mr. Kades lives at the property, or
simply
occupies it for the purposes of renting it out to others. If
he lives at the property, then he is obviously already one of the
class of people cited as the first respondent. If he does not live at
the property, he is nevertheless clearly interested in the
relief
sought and ought to be joined. In the circumstances, I see no
difficulty with joining him in his own right out of an abundance
of
caution. Mr. Kades has no objection to being joined to the
proceedings in this manner.
28
I also think that an order requiring Mr. Kades to ensure that the
sheriff
can access the property for the purposes of serving future
process on the other residents is warranted. Mr. Kades resisted that
order before me, on the basis that the service of an eviction
application at the property might trigger a rent boycott. In the
circumstances of this case, that is not a submission to which I can
attach any weight, but it seems clear that Mr. Kades will do
what he
can to prevent effective service of the section 4 (2) notice and the
application papers, and that an appropriate order
ought to be made to
make clear that he is not permitted to act in that way.
29
It is finally necessary to deal with Mr. Kades’ assertion that
the
residents to whom he is letting rooms on the property would face
homelessness on eviction. Mr. Kades says that there are families
on
the property paying R800 per room per month in rent. Some pay less.
Some do not pay at all. In those circumstances, Mr. Kades
submits
that there is at least a likelihood that some or all of the residents
would be rendered homeless on eviction.
30
I think that these indications that the property may potentially be
home
to a large number of poor and vulnerable people are enough to
trigger my duty to call for further information (see
Occupiers,
Shulana Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v Steele
[2010] 4 All SA 54
(SCA), paragraphs 12 to 16). I will direct the
second respondent, the City of Johannesburg, to file a report dealing
with the residents’
circumstances and ability to afford
alternative accommodation (see
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(6) SA 294
(SCA), paragraphs 40 and 41).
Order
31
For all these reasons –
31.1
The application is postponed
sine
die
.
31.2
Stephan Kades is joined as the third respondent in these proceedings.
31.3
Stephan Kades is interdicted and restrained from preventing the
sheriff of this court from accessing the property
at ERF [....]
Judith’s Paarl (“the property”) for the purposes of
providing effective notice of these proceedings
to the first
respondents.
31.4
The second respondent is directed to engage with first respondents,
(“the occupiers”), and to identify
in a report to be
submitted to this court by no later than 31 March 2023 –
31.4.1
The extent to which the occupiers would be rendered homeless
on
eviction;
31.4.2
the steps the second respondent will take to provide alternative
accommodation to those occupiers who would be rendered homeless by
eviction;
31.4.3
when those steps will be taken; and
31.4.4
all other relevant facts of the nature identified at paragraph
40 of
the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(6) SA 294
(SCA).
31.5
The applicant is directed to serve –
31.5.1
one copy of this judgment on the second respondent;
31.5.2
one copy of this judgment on Mr. Kades; and
31.5.3
one copy of its founding papers and one copy of this judgment
on each
identifiable room or dwelling on the property, where possible on the
occupiers of each dwelling in person, by no later
than 10 February
2023.
31.6
The question of costs is reserved.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be
30 January 2023.
HEARD
ON: 10
January 2023
FUTHER
SUBMISSIONS ON: 12 January 2023
DECIDED
ON:
30
January 2023
For
the Applicant: L
Peter
Instructed
by Vermaak
Marshall Wellbeloved Inc
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