Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 439South Africa
K2012150042 South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Unknown Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 74, Electron Township and Another (2021/40484) [2023] ZAGPJHC 439 (14 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 March 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 439
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## K2012150042 South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Unknown Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 74, Electron Township and Another (2021/40484) [2023] ZAGPJHC 439 (14 March 2023)
K2012150042 South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Unknown Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 74, Electron Township and Another (2021/40484) [2023] ZAGPJHC 439 (14 March 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_439.html
sino date 14 March 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 2021/40484
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
14.03.23
In
the matter between:
K2012150042
(SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No.: 2012/150042/07)
Applicant
And
UNKNOWN
UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS OF ERF 74, ELECTRON TOWNSHIP
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER OF 8
FEBRUARY 2023
These
reasons are handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
by e-mail and by uploading to Caselines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
Introduction
and the order of 8 February 2023
[1]
In this matter, the applicant seeks the eviction from its property
located in Electron, Johannesburg of a large number of unlawful
occupiers who have been identified in the proceedings thus far as
‘the first respondent’. The City of Johannesburg
is cited
as the second respondent.
[2]
On 8 February 2023, having heard counsel for the applicant and the
City, as well as the occupiers in person (represented by
Mr Mahlangu)
at a virtual hearing on 19 January 2023, and having considered the
matter, I formed the view that I did not have sufficient
information
before me on the question of whether it would be just and equitable
in all the relevant circumstances to grant the
eviction or not. I
granted the order annexed hereto marked “A”.
[3]
On 6 March 2023, the City delivered an application for leave to
appeal against that portion of my order declaring it to be in
contempt of the earlier order issued in the matter by Rajab-Budlender
AJ on 1 December 2021 (referred to as “
the compelling
order
”). The City also delivered a request for written
reasons. These are those reasons.
The
relevant facts
[4]
The compelling order reads as follows:
2. The Second
Respondent is to provide a list of names and other details of the
First Respondent who shall require emergency
and/or alternative
accommodation upon granting of an eviction order within 20 (twenty)
calendar days of the service of this order
on the Second Respondent.
3. The Second
Respondent is to file a comprehensive report regarding the
availability of alternative and/or emergency accommodation
in terms
of Section 4(7) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and
Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1996 within 60 (sixty)
calendar
days of the service of this order on the Second Respondent.
4. The Second
Respondent’s report is to contain the following: -
4.1 The Second
Respondent’s information on the Applicant's property;
4.2 The Second
Respondent’s information on the First Respondent:
4.3 Whether an
eviction order is likely to result in all or any of the occupiers
becoming homeless;
4.4 If so, the
steps that the Second Respondent proposes to alleviate the possible
homelessness;
4.5 Implications
for the owners of delaying the eviction; and
4.6 The Second
Respondent’s engagement with the First Respondent
5. The Second
Respondent’s report be supported by substantiating documents
reflecting the Second Respondents findings
in relation to the report.
[5]
Despite the fact that the compelling order was served on the City, it
initially failed to deliver any report at all for over
ten months. On
5 September 2022, the applicant sought and obtained an order
declaring the City to be in contempt of the compelling
order and
imposing a fine of R200,000, the payment of which was suspended upon
condition that the City and/or certain of its officials
complied with
it within 20 days.
[6]
Shortly thereafter, the City delivered a report in purported
compliance with the compelling order.
[7]
Having received the report, the occupiers delivered a supplementary
affidavit on 29 September 2022 describing it as “
inadequate
”
and alleging
inter alia
that:
(a) the report had failed
to address the issue of alternative accommodation for the occupiers
that might be rendered homeless by
an eviction;
(b) “
the City
has ignored its obligations
”; and
(c) the City had failed
to comply with the compelling order.
[8]
The applicant also delivered a supplementary affidavit on 5 December
2022, in which it
inter alia
:
(a) alleged that the
report does not comply with the compelling order in various respects;
(b) noted that this
non-compliance had been raised in correspondence addressed to the
City’s attorneys on 20 September 2022
to no effect;
(c) observed that the
City’s failure to comply with the order had also been raised in
the occupiers’ supplementary affidavit;
and
(d) contended that “
in
the event that this Court is inclined to grant the Municipality
further time in which to find and secure alternative accommodation
for the unlawful occupiers, it is submitted that the Municipality is
to account to this Court at the hearing of this matter fully
in
respect of all of its efforts that have been made since the filing of
the … report …
”.
[9]
Approximately one month
prior to the hearing, the parties delivered a joint practice note
[1]
indicating
inter
alia
that:
(a) the
issues for determination by me included “
whether the Second
Respondent’s report is adequate and complies with the
compelling order
” and “
whether the Second
Respondent’s request for 12 months from the date of the filing
of its report to find and secure alternative
accommodation is
justifiable and reasonable in the circumstances
”;
(b) “
[t]he
Applicant contends that the Second Respondent’s report is
inadequate and does not comply with the compelling order
”;
and
(c) “
[t]he
Second Respondent intends on filing a supplementary … report
and shall endeavour to do so before the allocated hearing date.
Should the Second Respondent be unable to file the report timeously,
the Applicant shall be notified in advance. The supplementary report
shall contain the requisite information omitted from the initial
report. … The Second Respondent submits that it may also
deliver a further affidavit setting out inter alia the steps it
has
taken in securing emergency/alternative accommodation for the
unlawful occupiers. … The Second Respondent welcomes
any
further directives the Court may impose
.”
[10]
The City’s counsel confirmed at the commencement of the hearing
before me on 19 January 2023 that it did not object to
the delivery
of the supplementary affidavits. Despite the applicant’s demand
that the City “
account to
” the Court at the
hearing, however, it has not delivered any affidavits contesting the
allegations in the supplementary affidavits.
[11]
The City has also not sought to suggest that the report was compliant
with the compelling order. Indeed, the City’s counsel
rightly
conceded at the hearing that the report is deficient in a number of
respects. In particular, he conceded that only paragraph
4.3 of the
compelling order has been fully complied with in the report, and that
the City remains in breach thereof. When I enquired
why no attempt
had been made to explain this non-compliance (for example in the
affidavits contemplated in the joint practice note)
and indicated
that I was minded to declare that the City remains in contempt, he
informed me that there had been “
a bottleneck in obtaining
instructions
” and proposed that the City be given an
opportunity to deliver a compliant report.
[12]
Before reserving judgment, I requested both the applicant and the
second respondent to furnish draft orders in the event that
I was not
minded to grant the eviction order sought by applicant. The
applicant’s proposed draft order delivered on 22 January
2023,
proposed orders declaring the City and certain of its officials to be
in contempt of the compelling order and requiring the
City to deliver
an affidavit within twenty court days setting out reasons why the
court should not impose a period of imprisonment
on the officials.
The City’s draft order did not include similar orders.
The
law on declarations of contempt of court
[13]
In
Pheko II
, Nkabinde J observed on behalf of the
Constitutional Court that …
…
(t)he rule of
law, a foundational value of the Constitution, requires that the
dignity and authority of the courts be upheld. This
is crucial, as
the capacity of the courts to carry out their functions depends upon
it. As the Constitution commands, orders and
decisions issued by a
court bind all persons to whom and organs of state to which they
apply, and no person or organ of state may
interfere, in any manner,
with the functioning of the courts. It follows from this that
disobedience towards court orders or decisions
risks rendering our
courts impotent and judicial authority a mere mockery. The
effectiveness of court orders or decisions is substantially
determined by the assurance that they will be enforced.
Courts have the power to
ensure that their decisions or orders are complied with by all and
sundry, including organs of state. In
doing so, courts are not only
giving effect to the rights of the successful litigant but also and
more importantly, by acting as
guardians of the Constitution,
asserting their authority in the public interest.
[2]
[14]
In order for a party to be found to be in contempt, it must be
established that (a) an order
was granted against it; (b) it was
served with the order or had knowledge of it; and (c) it failed to
comply with the order.
[15]
Once these elements are
established, wilfulness and
mala
fides
are
presumed, and the alleged contemnor bears an evidentiary burden to
either establish a reasonable doubt or establish on a balance
of
probabilities that its non-compliance was not wilful or
mala
fide
.
Should it fail to discharge this burden, contempt will have been
established.
[3]
[16]
The question of whether the alleged contemnor needs merely to show a
reasonable doubt or whether it must go further and prove
absence of
wilfulness or
mala fides
on a balance of probabilities depends
on whether the order imposes a sanction of committal to prison or a
fine. In cases where
the order in question does not impose a sanction
of direct imprisonment or a fine, it is the civil standard of proof
that applies:
[W]here a court finds a
recalcitrant litigant to be possessed of malice on balance, civil
contempt remedies other than committal
may still be employed. These
include any remedy that would ensure compliance, such as declaratory
relief, a mandamus demanding
the contemnor behave in a particular
manner, a fine and any further order that would have the effect of
coercing compliance.
[4]
[17]
Nkabinde ADCJ summed up the position as follows in
Matjhabeng
:
[T]he standard of proof
must be applied in accordance with the purpose sought to be achieved,
or differently put, the consequences
of the various remedies. As I
understand it, the maintenance of a distinction does have a practical
significance: the civil contempt
remedies of committal or a fine have
material consequences on an individual’s freedom and security
of the person. However,
it is necessary in some instances because
disregard of a court order not only deprives the other party of the
benefit of the order
but also impairs the effective administration of
justice. There, the criminal standard of proof — beyond
reasonable doubt
— applies always. A fitting example of this is
Fakie
.
On the other hand, there are civil contempt remedies — for
example, declaratory relief, mandamus or a structural interdict
—
that do not have the consequence of depriving an individual of their
right to freedom and security of the person. A fitting
example of
this is
Burchell
.
Here, and I stress, the civil standard of proof — a balance of
probabilities — applies.
[5]
Application
of the law to the facts
[18]
The order granted by me on 8 February 2023 does not impose a sanction
of direct imprisonment or a fine. No such sanction will
be imposed
unless and until all of the following further events have occurred:
(a) the City fails to
comply with paragraph 3 of my order within the required time periods;
(b) the City has been
given a full opportunity, pursuant to paragraph 4 of my order, to
show cause why its officials should not
be arrested and imprisoned
until such time as the City has complied or why a punitive, as
opposed to purely coercive, sanction
should be imposed (i.e. the city
is given a further opportunity to explain its non-compliance with the
compelling order and establish
a lack of wilfulness or
mala
fides
); and
(c) if the court hearing
the matter should reach the conclusions that (i) the City has failed
to comply; (ii) has also failed to
establish a lack of wilfulness or
mala fides
; and (iii) that either imprisonment or a fine is an
appropriate sanction.
[19]
As such, the issue of contempt in the current matter fell to be
considered on the basis of the civil standard of proof.
[20]
There can be no question that the compelling order was in existence
and that the City was aware of its existence. Indeed, Senyatsi
J had
already found the City to be in contempt of the order when he granted
the first contempt order of 5 September 2022.
[21]
Although the City did then deliver a report, it is also common cause
that it did not comply with the compelling order. The
report does not
comply with the compelling order in at least the following respects:
(a) It does not include a
complete “
list of names and other details of the [occupiers]
who shall require emergency and/or alternative accommodation upon
granting of
an eviction order
” as required by paragraph 2
and 4.2 of the compelling order: it only identifies some of those
people by name and referred
obliquely to other unnamed occupiers
whose details are not indicated. For example, in paragraph 12.3 only
“
SP Sithole
” is identified by name, and the other
occupants are referred to as “
other four occupants
”,
amongst whom are “
the children in the household
”.
The same applies to a large number of the other households referred
to in paragraph 12 of the report.
(b) It contains no
information whatsoever on the Applicant's property as required by
paragraph 4.1 of the compelling order.
(c) Although it concludes
that all the occupiers would likely need temporary alternative
accommodation in the event that they are
evicted, it does not (as
required by paragraph 4.4 of the compelling order) propose any steps
whatsoever to be taken to alleviate
their homelessness, and instead
proposes that they be afforded a period of twelve months “
to
find and secure alternative accommodation
”
for
themselves
.
(d) It does not include
any information regarding the implications for the owners of delaying
the eviction as required by paragraph
4.5 of the compelling order.
(e) It contains no
information regarding the City’s engagement with the occupiers
as required by paragraph 4.6 of the compelling
order.
[22]
The remaining question is whether the City’s non-compliance
with the order was wilful or
mala fide
.
[23]
I am of the view that this is the only conclusion to be drawn from
the City’s own conduct: having recognised in the joint
practice
note that it would be necessary to deliver a further report which
“
shall contain the requisite information omitted from the
initial report”
, it failed to do so, leaving the court in
the invidious position of being unable to perform its function of
determining the eviction
application in the light of all the relevant
circumstances. What is more, the City failed to furnish its attorneys
with instructions
to deliver the contemplated “
further
affidavit setting out inter alia the steps it has taken in securing
emergency/alternative accommodation for the unlawful
occupiers”
,
in which it might have set out facts “
accounting to this
Court
” for its non-compliance and establishing absence of
wilfulness or
mala fides
.
[24]
All the requirements of contempt were thus established on a balance
of probabilities, and the declaration to this effect contained
in my
order was indicated.
[25]
With regard to the
punitive costs against the City (paragraph 10), I granted this on the
basis that unexplained non-compliance by
government officials with
court orders is a serious matter that justifies the award of costs on
a punitive basis.
[6]
[26]
The remaining paragraphs of my order (i.e. other than paragraphs 2, 4
and 10 thereof) were granted so as to ensure that:
(a) the court hearing the
eviction application is furnished with the information necessary for
it to determine whether an eviction
order would be just and equitable
in all the relevant circumstances (paragraph 3 of the order);
(b) the respective rights
of the applicant and the occupiers are safeguarded in an orderly and
peaceful manner pending the final
determination of the eviction
application (paragraphs 5 to 8 of the order); and
(c) the notice
requirements contained in the PIE Act are properly complied with in
respect of occupiers of the property who may
not be “represented”
by the Inner City Federation (paragraph 9 of the order).
[27]
The applicant is afforded fifteen days to supplement its grounds of
appeal in accordance with Uniform Rule 49(1)(b). The application
for
leave to appeal will then be set down for hearing in accordance with
Rule 49(1)(d) read with Chapter 11 of the Practice Manual
and
paragraphs 106 – 11 of Directive 2 of 2022.
RJ Moultrie AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
DATE
HEARD:
19 January 2023
ORDER:
8
February 2023
REASONS
REQUESTED:
6
March 2023
REASONS:
14
March 2023
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
V
Vergano instructed by F Stockley of Le Roux Vivier Attorneys (011
431 4117;
fraser@mlv.co.za
)
For
the 1st respondent:
In
person [some of whom c/o The Inner City Federation (072 407 0997;
innercityferderation@gmail.com
)]
For
the 2nd respondent:
V
Qithi instructed by A Mdletshe of Garnet Ngubane & Partners.
(010 109 3154;
ayanda@garnetinc.co.za
)
[1]
Although the document indicated that it had “
been
filed in the absence of the respondents’ agreement with the
contents
”
,
I was advised at the commencement of the hearing that the practice
note did in fact contain the input and accurately reflect
the
position of all parties.
[2]
Pheko v
Ekurhuleni City
[2015]
ZACC 10
;
2015 (5) SA 600
(CC) (
Pheko
II
)
paras 1- 2.
[3]
Secretary,
Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture v
Zuma
[2021]
ZACC 18
;
2021 (5) SA 327
(CC) para 37.
[4]
Pheko
II
(above),
para 37;
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd and Others
[2017] ZACC 35
;
2018 (1)
SA 1
(CC) paras 46 – 67;
Director-General,
Dept of Rural Dev & Land Reform v Mwelase
[2018] ZASCA 105
;
2019
(2) SA 81
(SCA) para 59 (overturned on appeal, but not on this
issue).
[5]
Matjhabeng
(above) para 67,
referring to
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006]
ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) and the full court decision in
Burchell
v Burchell
[2005]
ZAECHC 35
per Froneman J.
[6]
Municipal
Manager O.R. Tambo District Municipality v Ndabeni
[2022] ZACC 3
;
2022 (10)
BCLR 1254
(CC) paras 39 - 44. See also
Paterson
NO v Road Accident Fund and Another
2013
(2) SA 455
(ECP) para 17, in which it was held that and “
it
is trite that a party that fails to comply with a court order is
visited with a costs order on a punitive scale unless exceptional
circumstances exist
”
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
K2012150042 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Unknown Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 7[...], E[...] Township and Another (21/40484) [2025] ZAGPJHC 301 (19 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 301High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
K2012190864 (Pty) Limited v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (8538/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1178 (26 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1178High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
K201649887 v Njovu and Others (45483/18) [2022] ZAGPJHC 472 (18 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 472High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
K2015353138 South Africa Pty Limited v Kgomotso Motsoane and Another (2020/19564) [2024] ZAGPJHC 690; 2024 (6) SA 528 (GJ) (26 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 690High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
K201250042 (South Africa) (PTY Ltd v Mazel Foods (PTY) Ltd and Another (14207/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 558 (15 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 558High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar