Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 289South Africa
Badenhorst and Others v City of Ekurhuleni and Others (52/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 289 (4 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Badenhorst and Others v City of Ekurhuleni and Others (52/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 289 (4 April 2023)
Badenhorst and Others v City of Ekurhuleni and Others (52/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 289 (4 April 2023)
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sino date 4 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case No. 52/2023
Case No. 52/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
JEROME
BADENHORST
First
Applicant
THE UNLAWFUL
OCCUPIERS OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTIES AT PORTION
102
HOLGATFONTEIN 36 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
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE, NIGEL
Third
Respondent
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPT
Fourth
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicants are the residents of 484 households who took
occupation of incomplete state subsidised housing units without the
permission of the first respondent, the City of Ekurhuleni
Municipality. The Municipality had developed the units as part of its
low cost housing programme. The residents moved in to the units
during March 2020. They say that they did so because they had been
evicted from backyard dwellings nearby, and they had nowhere else to
go.
2
The Municipality applied to this court to evict the residents.
On 9 June 2021, my brother Molahlehi J granted an order for the
residents’
eviction. On 7 December 2021, Molahleli J refused
leave to appeal. The residents did not petition the Supreme Court of
Appeal,
apparently because they lacked the resources necessary to pay
for legal representation. In their founding papers, however, they
say
that they are on the verge of lodging a petition. It is not clear
whether they have actually done so.
3
For reasons that are not explained on the papers placed before
me, the Municipality sat on the eviction order for over a year after
Molahlehi J refused leave to appeal. It took no steps to remove the
residents until it sent each of the residents’ households
a
letter, dated 12 December 2022, in which it warned the residents to
vacate their homes failing which the eviction order would
be executed
“at any time” after 31 January 2023.
4
At around 5am on Tuesday 28 February 2023, the Municipality
began to execute the eviction order. The residents then applied
urgently
to me for an interim order staying the eviction pending the
determination of final relief declaring that the residents are
entitled
to alternative accommodation, directing that the
Municipality provide such accommodation, and setting out a process
for determining
where that accommodation will be situated, and when
it will be provided.
5
I
was first alerted to the urgent application at around 6am, but the
papers did not reach me until 9am. Those papers enrolled the
matter
for 10am. The Municipality had filed a notice of intention to oppose,
but had not filed any answering papers at that stage.
6
When the matter was called at 10am, I asked Mr. Brown, who
appeared for the applicants, to establish whether the Municipality
had
instructed anyone to appear. I stood the matter down to allow Mr.
Brown to make enquires. When the matter was called again, Mr.
Brown
appeared together with Mr. Sithole. Mr. Sithole was not entirely
clear on whether or not he had a mandate to act for the
Municipality,
so I stood the matter down again to allow him to clarify his
instructions. After some back and forth, Mr. Sithole
confirmed that
he acted for the Municipality, and that the Municipality would
require until Thursday 2 March 2023 to file an answering
affidavit.
Accordingly, I stood the matter down until Friday 3 March 2023, and I
stayed the execution of the eviction order until
then.
7
The parties then exchanged answering and replying papers. It
emerged from those papers that the execution of the eviction order
had commenced in the absence of the second respondent, the Sheriff.
Whatever the merits of the residents’ application for
interim
relief, that in itself rendered unlawful the removals that took place
prior to my order staying the execution of the eviction
order. I
declared as much, and directed that all those who had already been
evicted before I stayed the execution of the eviction
order be
restored to possession of their homes. My reasons for making that
order are embodied in my judgment
Badenhorst v City of Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality
[2023] ZAGPJHC 205 (8 March 2023).
8
I
heard argument on Part A of the residents’ application, but,
having reversed the illegal eviction on the narrow ground of
the
absence of the Sheriff, I reserved judgment on the application for
interim relief, and suspended the execution of the eviction
order
until I had an opportunity to consider the matter at greater length.
9
Having considered the merits of the application for interim
relief, I have come to the conclusion that the application cannot
succeed.
I say so for the following reasons.
Issues raised in Part
B are
res judicata
10
The residents have brought their application in two parts. The
interim relief is sought in Part A. The order declaring that the
residents are entitled to alternative accommodation and the
associated reporting orders are sought in Part B. It is trite that
the Part A relief can only be granted if the residents can show a
prima facie
right to the orders sought in Part B.
11
The problem is that the residents can show no such right. The
issue of whether the residents are entitled to alternative
accommodation
on eviction was placed before Molahlehi J in the main
eviction application. Molahlehi J made an order evicting the
residents. The
Judge chose not to direct that the residents be given
alternative accommodation. It appears from his judgment that he
considered
that this would encourage the unlawful occupation of other
properties in similar circumstances, and that this would imperil the
rule of law.
12
It is beyond the scope of the issues I am seized with to
express any view on the correctness or otherwise of these sentiments.
What
matters is that there is a final order against the residents
which requires their eviction
simpliciter
. The issue of
whether the residents are entitled to alternative accommodation, on
the facts as they stood at the time Molahlehi
J made his order, has
already been settled. It is not open to me to revisit that issue. But
that is precisely what the residents
now invite me to do.
13
The residents are alive to these difficulties. It was
suggested, in reply, that it is open to me to develop the common law
to allow
for the variation of an eviction order to provide
alternative accommodation where another Judge had declined to do so.
This would
be a far-reaching development, for which no justification
– other than that it would assist the residents in this case –
has been provided. In addition, there is already a statutory
mechanism through which an eviction order may be varied. I address
that mechanism below. The residents do not explain why a development
of the common law, which would effectively entail my assumption
of
appellate jurisdiction over Molahlehi J’s order, is justified
in circumstances where they have not as yet sought to engage
that
mechanism.
Variation or appeal
14
The residents’ true remedies, such as they are, lie in
seeking leave to appeal against Molahlehi J’s order, or in
seeking
to vary the terms of the order on good cause shown under
section 4 (12) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and
Unlawful
Occupation of, Land Act 19 of 1998 (“the PIE Act”).
It appears that an appeal has not yet been pursued, and I obviously
lack the jurisdiction to entertain an appeal against the eviction
order.
15
It seemed to me that the possibility of a variation of the
order under section 4 (12) of the PIE Act had not been adequately
explored
in the context of the parties’ necessarily rushed
preparations for an urgent hearing. I asked the parties to address me
on
whether the eviction order ought not to be varied under the PIE
Act in light of changed circumstances, given the lengthy and
unexplained
delay in executing the eviction order.
16
Mr. Sithole argued that section 4 (12) of the PIE Act is not
engaged on the facts of this case, since that section only permits
the variation of a condition attached to an eviction order. Here, it
was argued, the eviction order is unconditional. I put to Mr.
Sithole
that the date on which the order had to be executed constitutes a
condition capable of variation. Mr. Sithole argued that
it does not.
17
Whatever the merits of that position, the residents have not
applied for a variation under section 4 (12), and their application
does not address the question of whether circumstances have changed
such that the eviction order should be varied to make provision
for
alternative accommodation. Nor does the application show “good
cause” for such a variation, which is a requirement
of section
4 (12). In those circumstances, there is presently no case made out
to vary the eviction order under section 4 (12)
of the PIE Act in the
manner envisaged in Part B of the residents’ application.
18
It follows that the residents have not demonstrated a
prima
facie
right to the relief they seek in Part B of their
application, and their application for interim relief must fail.
The appropriate relief
19
The fact remains that there is a substantial likelihood that
circumstances have changed in the year it has taken the Municipality
to execute the eviction order, and that the residents and their legal
representatives ought to be given an opportunity to consider
whether
any new circumstances might justify a variation in the eviction
order. Accordingly, although I will dismiss the application
for
interim relief, it is plainly in the interests of justice that the
execution of the eviction order be suspended for a further
month,
during which the residents, if so advised, will have an opportunity
to investigate and consider whether a case under section
4 (12) can
be made out, and to take such further steps as they may be advised to
take.
20
I also intend to place conditions on the execution of the
eviction order once the suspension is lifted. This is necessary to
avoid
a repeat of the wholly unacceptable conduct of the Municipality
after Molahlehi J refused the residents’ application for leave
to appeal. The Municipality advanced no acceptable reason for its
delay in executing the eviction order, or for its failure to
inform
the residents of the day on which the order would be executed.
Section 26 of the Constitution, 1996 requires that eviction
orders be
executed humanely (
Modder East Squatters and Another v Modderklip
Boerdery (Pty) Ltd, President of the Republic of South Africa v
Modderklip Boerdery
(Pty) Ltd
[2004] 3 All SA 169
(SCA),
paragraph 26). The very least that requires is due notification of
the date and time on which the eviction order is to be
executed. The
pre-dawn commencement of the eviction on 28 February 2023 was also
inhumane and unacceptable. That conduct must not
be repeated.
21
My power to further suspend the execution of the eviction
order and to impose conditions on the Municipality’s conduct in
executing it arises from Rule 45A of the Rules of this court, and
from section 38 of the Constitution, 1996. The eviction of the
residents is a constitutional matter (
Machele v Mailula
2010
(2) SA 257
(CC), paragraph 25), and the residents have approached me
in order to address a threat to their rights to housing and to
dignity.
22
Section 4 (12) of the PIE Act also permits a court to place
reasonable conditions on the execution of an eviction order. While
the
applicants have not been successful in obtaining the orders they
originally sought, the suspension of the eviction order and the
conditions I will place on its execution are plainly reasonable, in
that they constitute appropriate relief necessary to protect
the
residents’ constitutional rights on the facts currently
disclosed on the papers. Whether the residents are entitled to
further relief, and what that relief is, depends on the further facts
that may be adduced in an application to vary the eviction
order
under section 4 (12) of the PIE Act, if such an application is
brought.
Costs
23
I have already observed that this application, being concerned
with evictions from homes, is a constitutional matter. That in itself
would render a costs order against the residents inappropriate. But I
would in any event have deprived the Municipality of its
costs as a
mark of my displeasure at the wholly unlawful and inappropriate
manner in which it went about executing the eviction
order, after
such a long, unexplained delay.
Order
24
For all these reasons, I make the following order –
24.1 The relief sought in
Part A of the application is refused.
24.2 The execution of the
eviction order of Molahlehi J, dated 9 June 2021, is suspended until
5 May 2023.
24.3 The eviction order
may not be executed thereafter unless and until the applicants have
been given at least two weeks’
notice of the date on which
execution of the order is to commence. That notice may be given, at
the earliest, on 5 May 2023.
24.4 The eviction order
may not be executed before 8am or after 4pm.
24.5 Each party will pay
their own costs.
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, by uploading it to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment
to the
South African Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 4 April 2023.
HEARD
ON:
3
March 2023
DECIDED
ON:
4
April 2023
For
the Applicants:
D
Brown
Chris
Billings Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents:
E
Sithole
Instructed
by:
Lebea
Inc
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