Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 205South Africa
Badenhorst and Others v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (Reasons) (00052/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 205 (8 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Badenhorst and Others v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (Reasons) (00052/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 205 (8 March 2023)
Badenhorst and Others v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (Reasons) (00052/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 205 (8 March 2023)
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sino date 8 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 00052/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
8 March 2023
In
the matter between:
JEROME
BADENHORST
First
Applicant
THE
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF THE IMMOVABLE
PROPERTIES
AT PORTION 102, HOLGATFONTEIN 36
Second
&
IR
NIGEL, also known as MACKENZIEVILLE EXTENSION
Further
Applicants
and
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT, NIGEL
Second
Respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES, NIGEL
Third
Respondent
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN POLICE
DEPARTMENT
Fourth
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 3 March 2023, I made an order declaring that the first, third
and
fourth respondents’ execution of an eviction order in the
absence of the second respondent, the Sheriff, on 28 February
2023,
was unlawful. The eviction order was issued by Molahlehi J on 9 June
2021.
2
Having found the eviction order to have been unlawfully executed,
I
directed the first, third and fourth respondents – the
Ekurhuleni Municipality, the South African Police Services (SAPS)
and
the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Police Department (EMPD) – to
restore the applicants to the properties from which they had
been
unlawfully evicted. I also made further orders suspending the
execution of the order of Molahlehi J pending my judgment on
further
relief sought by the applicants. That relief involved a stay of
Molahlehi J’s eviction order pending an investigation
of the
applicants’ need for alternative accommodation.
3
On Monday 6 March 2023, the first respondent, the Ekurhuleni
Municipality, applied for leave to appeal against the declaration
that its execution of the eviction order was unlawful. However,
it
did not seek leave to appeal against the order that the applicants be
restored to the properties from which they were evicted,
or against
my order suspending the execution of the eviction order pending my
judgment on the application for the stay the applicants
seek. The
Ekurhuleni Municipality requested that I reduce my reasons for
declaring the execution of the eviction order unlawful
to writing. I
give those reasons in this judgment. My judgment on the stay the
applicants sought remains reserved, and will be
delivered in due
course.
The
unlawfulness of the execution of the eviction order
4
Molahleli J issued the eviction order under section 4 of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”). It is common cause
that
the eviction order was carried out in the Sheriff’s absence.
The execution of the order was accordingly in breach of
section 4
(11) of the PIE Act, which states that “the sheriff must at all
times be present during” an “eviction,
demolition or
removal”.
5
Section 4 (11) has an obvious purpose: to help ensure that evictions
from homes are humanely carried out. It is trite that section 26 of
the Constitution, 1996 requires that eviction orders be executed
humanely (
Moddder East Squatters and Another v Modderklip Boerdery
(Pty) Ltd, President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v
Modderklip
Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
[2004] 3 All SA 169
(SCA),
paragraph 26). The presence of the Sheriff assists in ensuring that
an eviction order under the PIE Act is carried out in
a lawful,
orderly and humane manner.
6
There is good reason to believe that the way that the Ekurhuleni
Municipality, the SAPS and the EMPD executed the eviction order
against the applicants in this case was neither humane nor orderly,
and that the absence of the Sheriff may have facilitated some of the
less fortunate conduct the applicants alleged. The eviction
commenced
without notice at 5am. I was informed from the bar that it involved
the use of tear gas and rubber bullets. 500 families
were targeted,
about 250 of whom were removed before I stayed the execution of the
order in urgent court at around 11am that morning.
Significant
numbers of people appear to have been left on the streets. At least
700 children were targeted.
7
If this is true, it is unacceptable. But without the Sheriff’s
presence, it is impossible, at this stage, to make an independent
assessment of what really happened. That underscores the essential
role the Sheriff plays.
8
Because the Sheriff was not present, the order was executed in
breach
of the PIE Act. The eviction accordingly took place
ultra vires
the statute and was unlawful. The eviction was, as a result, no more
than a spoliation. I treated it as such.
The
meaning of the eviction order
9
Mr. Sithole, who appeared for the Ekurhuleni Municipality, argued
that the absence of the Sheriff did not render the execution of the
eviction order unlawful. He argued that paragraph 3 the eviction
order makes clear that those charged with the execution of the
eviction order were “the City of Ekurhuleni Police Services
and
or
the South African Police
Services
and or
assisted by [sic] the Sheriff of this Court or his lawful deputy
and a Locksmith” (my emphasis). Mr. Sithole submitted
that the
effect of this language was that the eviction order could be carried
out by either the Ekurhuleni Municipality, or the
SAPS, or the
Sheriff working with a locksmith, or, indeed, by any combination of
these agencies.
10
However, whatever the ambiguities arising from paragraph 3 of the
eviction order,
that the Sheriff was required to be present is in
fact clear from paragraph 4 of the eviction order, which refers to
the execution
of the eviction order by the “Sheriff and/or
his/her authorised deputy”. This is consistent with section 4
(11) of
the PIE Act and section 43 (1) of the Superior Courts Act,
which requires the Sheriff to “execute all sentences,
judgments,
writs, summonses, rules, orders, warrants, commands and
processes of any Superior Court directed to the sheriff and must make
return
of the manner of execution thereof to the court and to the
party at whose instance they were issued”.
11
This places the correct textual interpretation of the eviction order
beyond doubt.
If any textual ambiguity remains (it does not) then it
must be resolved by choosing a construction of the eviction order
that requires
the Sheriff’s presence over one that does not.
This is because judgments and orders of this court must where
possible be
interpreted consistently with the statutes they are meant
to enforce.
12
Having reached this conclusion, it was unnecessary for me to consider
Mr. Sithole’s
further submission that I had no power to reverse
the execution of the eviction order, as that would entail my unlawful
assumption
of an appellate jurisdiction. Since what I did was
construe the eviction order and then find that its fundamental lawful
intent
– that the Sheriff be present at the eviction –
had been ignored, there can be no question of my usurping appellate
jurisdiction.
13
I did not, in any event, set aside, vary or correct the eviction
order. I merely
declared that it had been unlawfully executed. The
effect of that order is no more than that the consequences of the
steps taken
to implement the order on 28 February 2023 must be
reversed. It does not affect the validity of the order in any way. If
I ultimately
lift the suspension I placed on the order (which, I
emphasise, is not appealed against) and refuse the stay the
applicants seek,
Ekurhuleni will be at liberty to execute the order
again – this time, it is to be hoped, in a manner consistent
with the
order’s own terms and the applicable statutory
requirements.
14
There is accordingly no sense in which I purported to exercise
appellate powers.
The
pleaded case
15
It was finally argued that the declaration that the execution of the
eviction
order was unlawful could not be granted because the
applicants had not specifically asked for that relief, and that a
case based
on the absence of the Sheriff had not been pleaded from
the outset.
16
The applicants did raise the absence of the Sheriff in their replying
affidavit.
Mr. Brown, who appeared for the applicants, urged me
conclude that the applicants had been spoliated because the order had
not
been lawfully executed. Mr. Sithole sought neither to strike out
the new matter raised in reply, nor to file further affidavits
or
argument to deal with the new contention. He informed me that I could
accept that it was common cause that the Sheriff was not
present when
the eviction order was executed.
17
It is well-established that a court is at large, within the confines
of fairness,
to decide any point that arises on the papers, and to
grant relief consequent upon that decision (
Robinson v Randfontein
Estates GM Co Ltd
1925 AD 173
at 198). This extends to ruling on
facts that are raised for the first time in reply in exceptional
cases. In deciding whether
to have regard to the new matter, a court
ought generally to consider “(i) whether all the facts
necessary to determine the
new matter raised in the replying
affidavit were placed before the court; (ii) whether the
determination of the new matter will
prejudice the respondent in a
manner that could not be put right by orders in respect of
postponement and costs; (iii) whether
the new matter was known to the
applicant when the application was launched; and (iv) whether the
disallowance of the new matter
will result in unnecessary waste of
costs”. (
Mostert v Firstrand Bank Ltd t/a RMB Private Bank
2018 (4) SA 443
(SCA), paragraph 13).
18
Here the material fact – the absence of the Sheriff - was
common cause.
Ekurhuleni Municipality could have been in no doubt
what the ultimate aim of introducing the material fact was: to regain
possession
– however temporarily – of the homes from
which the applicants had been removed. There is accordingly no
question of
prejudice to Ekurhuleni Municipality in my having regard
to the absence of the Sheriff. Mr. Brown informed me that neither the
absence of the Sheriff, and nor its legal significance was known to
the applicants when they launched the application. The absence
of the
Sheriff is a separate and discrete issue that has no impact on the
merits of the applicants’ application to stay the
execution of
the eviction order pending a further investigation of their need for
alternative accommodation, judgment on which
I have reserved. Having
regard to the Sheriff’s absence accordingly causes no prejudice
to Ekurhuleni Municipality’s
case in opposition to that relief.
There was accordingly no unfairness of any sort – and Mr.
Sithole did not suggest that
there was.
19
To this I would only add that imprecision in pleading or poorly
framed relief
in an urgent application ought never to be allowed to
get in the way of correcting a clear – and in this case
egregious –
illegality, especially where the material facts are
common cause. Indeed, it has been held that this should be the
approach “no
matter how the case was pleaded” (
Maphango
v Aengus Lifestyle Properties
2012 (3) SA 531
(CC), paragraph
152).
20
It was for these reasons that I declared the execution of the
eviction order
unlawful.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON: 3
March 2023
DECIDED
ON: 8
March 2023
For
the Applicants: D
Brown
Instructed
by: Chris
Billings Attorneys
For
the First Respondent: E
Sithole
Instructed
by: Lebea
Inc Attorneys
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