Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 330South Africa
Khoza v Madulammoho Housing & Others (2022/9714) [2023] ZAGPJHC 330 (12 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khoza v Madulammoho Housing & Others (2022/9714) [2023] ZAGPJHC 330 (12 April 2023)
Khoza v Madulammoho Housing & Others (2022/9714) [2023] ZAGPJHC 330 (12 April 2023)
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sino date 12 April 2023
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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FLYNOTES:
RESTORATION OF POSSESSION AFTER EVICTION
EVICTION
– Restoration – Rescission application – Court
order authorised dispossession so mandament van
spolie not
available – Interim interdict not suitable when applicant
already evicted – Court granting restoration
of possession
pending rescission application as temporary solution –
Constitutional matter under section 26(3) –
Court crafting
suitable relief under section 172(1)(b) of Constitution.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No.: 2022/9714
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between:
KHOZA,
WINNIE Applicant
and
MADULAMMOHO
HOUSING ASSOCIATION First
Respondent
MERVYN
JOEL SMITH ATTORNEYS
Second Respondent
SHERIFF
ROODEPOORT SOUTH
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
These proceedings concern what is to be done when a warrant of
eviction has already been executed and an occupier evicted from land
falling within the ambit of The Prevention of Illegal Eviction From
and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 1998 (“PIE”)
and the
occupier seeks to be restored occupation pending the determination of
an application by the occupier to rescind the order
that founds the
eviction.
2.
The applicant as a lessee occupied a residential flat in a
government subsidised low cost housing development in Roodepoort.
According
to the lessor (the first respondent), the lease was
cancelled because the applicant failed to pay rental and other
charges.
3.
On 3 February 2023, the applicant was evicted from the flat
pursuant to a warrant of eviction issued on 18 January 2023. The
applicant
launched urgent proceedings on 14 February 2023, which were
set down for hearing a week later on 21 February 2023, seeking an
array
of relief including a declaration that her eviction from the
flat was unlawful in terms of section 26(3) of the Constitution as
read with section 8(1) of PIE, that she be afforded access to the
flat and that an interdict be granted restraining the respondents
from evicting her from the flat. It is however clear that the primary
relief that the applicant seeks is that she be restored possession
of
the flat that she occupied as her home.
4.
The applicant cites the lessor as the first respondent, the
first respondent’s attorneys as the second respondent and the
relevant Sheriff who effected the eviction as the third respondent.
5.
At the outset, it must be stated that the applicant’s
papers (which consist of her notice of motion, founding affidavit and
replying affidavit), are inelegantly framed. They also contain
several averments which the first and second respondents (who oppose
the application), with some justification, challenge as factually
devoid of merit, and, in certain instances, false. Nonetheless
I am
cognisant that these are urgent proceedings pursuant to which the
applicant seeks to vindicate what she asserts is her constitutional
right not to be evicted from her home except on the authority of an
order of a competent court. The applicant does not appear well
resourced. Although the applicant describes herself as a law student
and was employed as a part-time legal secretary, the applicant
says
in her founding affidavit that she lost her employment. Her attorney,
I was informed during argument, acts and appears
pro bono
on
her behalf. The financially vulnerable position of the applicant is
also borne out by the type of accommodation, which is government
subsidised housing and where the rental at the commencement of the
lease in January 2019 was R2 849.00.
6.
I
have therefore adopted a generous approach towards the applicant’s
papers and the framing of her relief, and more especially
because of
the constitutional right that she asserts.
[1]
7.
I have also, where possible, had recourse to the common cause
facts.
8.
Having heard argument on 23 February 2023, I was persuaded
that the applicant’s occupation of the premises was to be
urgently
restored and so rather than delay delivering an order
restoring occupation, I made the order which appears at the end of
this judgment,
stating that my reasons would follow. These are those
reasons.
9.
I first summarise the relevant factual chronology.
10.
On 4 March 2022, the first respondent as lessor launched
eviction proceedings against the applicant on the basis that the
written
lease agreement between the parties had been cancelled
because of the applicant’s failure as lessee to make payment of
rental
and other charges. In due course, and presumably after
compliance with section 4(2) of PIE, the eviction application was
enrolled
for hearing on 2 November 2022. Although the applicant had
delivered an answering affidavit, the applicant would subsequently
sign
a settlement agreement on 14 September 2022 which provided
inter
alia
that should the applicant not settle the then arrears of R48
287.66 by 30 November 2022, and should she then fail to vacate the
premises by no later than 1 December 2022, the first respondent would
be entitled to cause a warrant of eviction to be issued. There
is a
dispute relating to the conclusion of the settlement agreement, with
the applicant contending
inter alia
that she did not
understand what she was signing and that she was “
tricked
into signing the said settlement
”. The opposing respondents
adduced persuasive countervailing evidence that this challenge to the
settlement agreement was
lacking in merit but, for reasons as will
appear below, this issue need not and should not be decided by this
court.
11.
When the eviction application was called for hearing on 2
November 2022, the first respondent sought that the settlement
agreement
be made an order of court. The applicant appeared,
represented by her present attorneys of record. Although there is a
dispute
as to precisely what transpired before the court that day and
what representations were made
inter alia
by the applicant’s
attorney, the court nonetheless made the settlement agreement an
order of court.
12.
There is no evidence that the court on 2 November 2022 when
making the settlement agreement an order of court considered whether
it would be just and equitable, after considering all the relevant
circumstances, to grant an eviction order. I shall return to
this.
13.
On 21 November 2022, the applicant launched an application
seeking that the order granted on 2 November 2022 be reconsidered and
set aside and that pending finalisation of that application the first
respondent is to be interdicted and restrained from executing
the
eviction order. Amongst the grounds relied upon by the applicant in
the founding affidavit annexed to that application for
rescission are
that the applicant was not aware of what she was agreeing to in
relation to the settlement agreement and, importantly
for present
purposes, asserting reliance upon section 26 of the Constitution. It
is in this affidavit that the applicant also explains
that she has
lost her employment as a legal secretary.
14.
The first respondent did not file an answering affidavit to
this rescission application. Instead, on 30 November 2022, the first
respondent’s attorneys wrote to the applicant’s attorneys
recording that although the first respondent had received
the
rescission application, their instructions were to persist with the
issue of a warrant of eviction on 1 December 2022, as provided
for in
terms of the settlement agreement that had been made an order of
court on 2 November 2022.
15.
On 2 December 2022, the first respondent drafted and sought
the issue of a warrant of eviction. On the same day, 2 December 2022,
the first respondent’s attorneys state they again notified the
applicant’s attorneys that their instructions were to
proceed
with the eviction.
16.
The state of play then at that stage, early December, is that
notwithstanding the first respondent having received the applicant’s
rescission application, it chose not to oppose that application, but
instead to persist with execution of the eviction order.
17.
The warrant of eviction was issued by the Registrar on 18
January 2023.
18.
The applicant enrolled her rescission application for hearing
on 23 February 2023 on the unopposed roll.
19.
Accordingly, when the warrant of
eviction was executed on 3 February 2023, there
was
a rescission application that was pending, which the first respondent
had acknowledged that it had already received on 21 November
2022 and
which by the time the warrant of eviction was executed the first
respondent had not opposed.
20.
The first respondent argues that any urgency is self-created
as the applicant should have taken appropriate steps earlier than she
did to avert the eviction and not wait until after she had been
evicted on 3 February 2023. But what this overlooks, as appears
from
the chronology, is that the applicant had already on 21 November
2022, in the same month that the order had been granted,
initiated
rescission proceedings which included seeking a stay of the eviction,
and which had not been opposed by the first respondent.
21.
It appears that the first respondent chose to press on with
eviction, rather than oppose the rescission application. It would
only
be on the date of hearing of this urgent application, when first
called on Tuesday, 21 February 2023, that the first respondent
would
enter notice of intention to oppose the applicant’s rescission
application that had been set down by the applicant
for hearing on
the unopposed roll for Thursday, 23 February 2023. I was informed
during argument that as this rescission application
had, belatedly it
appears, been opposed, the applicant had removed the application from
the unopposed roll.
22.
Having summarised this chronology, I can now return to the
question posed at the beginning of this judgment, namely what is to
be
done where an occupier has already been evicted from residential
premises in circumstances where there is a pending rescission
application, and the primary relief that the occupier seeks is to be
restored possession?
23.
The
launching of the rescission proceedings by the applicant before the
warrant of eviction was executed does not suspend the order
authorising the eviction, in contrast to an appeal.
[2]
24.
The applicant in her founding affidavit relies upon the
mandament van spolie
to found the declaratory relief that her
eviction was unlawful and that she be restored possession of the
flat. The applicant had
to therefore prove that she was in peaceful
and undisturbed possession of the flat, and that she was unlawfully
deprived of possession
by the respondents.
25.
The applicant needs to establish these requirements on the
standard applicable to final relief in motion proceedings. As held by
the then Appellate Division in
Nienaber v Stuckey
1946 AD 1049
at 1053 to 1054:
“
Although a
spoliation order does not decide what, apart from possession, the
rights of the parties to the property spoliated were
before the act
of spoliation and merely orders that the status quo be restored,
it
is to that extent a final order and the same amount
of
proof is required as for the granting of a final interdict, and not
of a temporary interdict
; where the proceedings
are on affidavit as in this case
--- no application
having been made by the Court to exercise its powers under [Rule
6(5)] to hear oral evidence --- the principles
which have been
recently discussed in this Court in Hilleke v Levy
(1946 AD 214)
apply … At this stage it is sufficient that the appellant must
satisfy the Court on the admitted or undisputed facts by
the same
balance of probabilities as is required in every civil suit, of the
facts necessary for his success in his application.”
26.
This
Division in
Scoop
Industries (Pty) Limited v Langlaagte Estate and GM Co Limited (in
voluntary liquidation)
1948
(1) SA 91
(W) held that:
[3]
“
There must be
clear
proof of possession and of the illicit
deprivation before an order should be granted.”
27.
It
is therefore necessary for the applicant in relying upon the
mandament
van spolie
to
establish the two requirements for that relief based on the usual
Plascon-Evans
approach
that any
bona
fide
factual
disputes are to be
resolved
by
accepting
the
respondents’
version,
save
where
such
version is so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the court is
justified in rejecting it merely on the papers.
[4]
28.
There is no dispute that the applicant was in peaceful and
undisturbed possession of the flat when she was evicted on 3 February
2023. What is in dispute is whether the dispossession was unlawful.
29.
The eviction was executed by the sheriff pursuant to a warrant
of eviction.
The applicant raises
various ground why the dispossession was unlawful. This includes an
averment that the warrant of eviction is
a not a “
proper
warrant of ejectment
”
,
since “
it was
without the court stamp, it is just a made up document
”.
This averment is made by the applicant in her replying affidavit
after the first respondent had attached the warrant of
eviction to
its answering affidavit in these proceedings. I must confess
difficulty in understanding this challenge as
ex facie
the
warrant it is stamped by the Registrar and there is no evidence to
support the averment that “
it is just a made up document
”.
30.
But
the applicant goes further than this. Upon a holistic reading of the
applicant’s affidavits and in the context of the
chronology of
the litigation between the parties, the applicant is challenging the
lawfulness of the eviction
on
the
basis
that
it
is
predicated
upon
a
court
order,
that
of 2
November 2022,
which
is
the
subject
of
her
pending
rescission
proceedings and so is liable to be set aside. The first respondent
argues that this is not the case that is advanced
by the applicant in
her papers. In my view, allowing for these proceedings being urgent
proceedings relating to the eviction of
a financially vulnerable
person from her home, the applicant is entitled to proceed on this
basis.
[5]
The first respondent
also cannot be said to have been taken by surprise that the efficacy
of the warrant of eviction would be challenged.
This should be plain
from there being a pending rescission application, which rescission
application had been set down for hearing,
as it would turn out, in
the same week that this urgent application would be heard.
31.
The difficulty for the applicant is that, as described above,
any
bona fide
factual dispute is to be resolved in favour of
the respondent, and this includes those relating to whether her
dispossession by
way of the eviction was unlawful. As matters
presently stand, there is an extant court order, that of 2 November
2022, which makes
a settlement agreement an order of court and which
settlement agreement provides for a warrant of eviction to be issued.
A warrant
of eviction was issued and on the evidence before me in the
affidavits the applicant was evicted by the Sheriff on 3 February
2023
pursuant to that warrant.
32.
As
long as there is a court order that remains extant and which
authorises the
dispossession,
it
is
questionable
whether
relief
based
upon
the
mandament
van spolie
can
in any event be granted. In
Williston
Court
[6]
the
occupiers had been evicted while an application for the rescission
order was still pending. The occupiers sought to rely upon
the
mandament
van spolie
,
contending that their dispossession was unlawful as the eviction
order had been suspended by the launching of a rescission
application.
Meyer J held that as the launching of a rescission
application does not suspend the operation of a court order, the
eviction was
not unlawful and so the application for restoration of
possession was dismissed. It should be noted that that Meyer J was
not called
upon to consider the issues that now feature in these
proceedings.
33.
In the circumstances, I am unable to find that the applicant
has satisfied the requirements of the
mandament van spolie
and
so am unable to find that the applicant is to be restored occupation
of the flat on that basis.
34.
Similarly the declaratory relief that the applicant seeks,
which is to declare that her eviction was unlawful and which too is
final
relief, cannot be granted for as long as the court order
remains extant.
35.
But the matter does not end there. The applicant also sought
in her founding affidavit to satisfy the requirements of interim
interdictory
interdict, although no such relief is sought, at least
in express terms, in her notice of motion.
36.
It
should be immediately apparent that a fundamental difficulty with
relying upon an interdict to obtain restoration of possession
is that an
interdict is, to use the phraseology of the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Tswelopele
Non-Profit Organisation and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
2007
(6) SA 511 (SCA)
[7]
,
‘future-directed’ and cannot be used for ‘remedying
a past injustice’. The primary relief sought by the
applicant
is to be restored possession of the flat, which is directed at
remedying the past.
37.
Nonetheless, for reasons that will become apparent, I
borrowed, insofar as may be appropriate, from the requirements for
interim
interdictory relief in seeking to craft effective and
suitable relief in these circumstances.
38.
To succeed in obtaining interim interdictory relief, an
applicant
must inter alia
establish a
prima facie
right.
39.
The right that the applicant asserts is the right enjoyed
under section 26(3) of the Constitution that “
no one may be
evicted from their home, or have their home demolished, without an
order of court made after considering all the relevant
circumstances
”
and which is reinforced by PIE, including section 8(1) which provides
that “
no person may evict an unlawful occupier except on the
authority of an order of a competent court
”.
40.
Moseneke J, writing for the majority of the Constitutional
Court, in
National Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban
Tolling Alliance and Others
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC)
,
in the
context of granting interim interdictory relief pending the review of
a decision by an organ of state, held in paragraph
46 that when
considering whether the requirements for interim relief have been
satisfied, “
[i]f the right asserted in a claim for an
interim interdict is sourced from the Constitution it would be
redundant to enquire whether
that right exists”.
41.
Moseneke J continued in paragraphs 49 and 50:
“
[49] Second,
there is a conceptual difficulty with the high court's holding that
the applicants have shown 'a prima facie . . .
right to have the
decision reviewed and set aside as formulated in prayers 1 and 2'.
The right to approach a court to review and
set aside a decision, in
the past, and even more so now, resides in everyone. The Constitution
makes it plain that '(e)veryone
has the right to administrative
action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair' and in turn
PAJA regulates the review
of administrative action.
[50] Under the
Setlogelo test the prima facie right a claimant must establish is not
merely the right to approach a court in order
to review an
administrative decision. It is a right to which, if not protected by
an interdict, irreparable harm would ensue. An
interdict is meant to
prevent future conduct and not decisions already made.”
42.
Adapting this to the present case, it is not enough for the
applicant to demonstrate that she has the constitutional right not to
be evicted from her home – as she clearly has that right –
she must go further.
43.
There is a court order which authorises the eviction of the
applicant, in this instance the court order of 2 November 2022 making
the settlement agreement an order of court.
44.
In
the context of considering whether to grant interim interdictory
relief pending a review of a decision of an organ of state,
the court
is called upon to evaluate the prospects of success of the decision
being set aside in due course in the review application.
[8]
I adopt an analogous approach.
45.
It is necessary for the applicant in seeking to establish her
prima facie
right that she not be evicted from her home except
on the authority of an order of a competent court to show that there
are prospects
of success of the order being set aside.
46.
It is to this aspect that I now turn. I am cognisant that the
applicant’s rescission application must still be determined and
that it is not for this urgent court to anticipate the outcome of
those rescission proceedings. I am also cognisant that it is
not for
this urgent court to decide whether the applicant should have been
evicted. What I decide is if there are sufficient prospects
of
success that the order granted on 2 November 2022 is assailable.
47.
Section 4(7) of PIE provides that if an unlawful occupier has
occupied the land in question for more than six months at the time
when the proceedings are initiated (which is common cause in this
instance), a court may grant an order for eviction if it is of
the
opinion that it is just and equitable to do so, after considering all
the relevant circumstances, including (except where the
land is sold
in a sale of execution pursuant to a mortgage) whether the land has
been made available or can reasonably be made
available by a
municipality or other organ of state or other land owner for the
relocation of the unlawful occupier, and including
the rights and
needs of the elderly, children, disabled persons and households
headed by women.
48.
If the court is so satisfied, then in terms of section 4(8)
the court must proceed to grant the eviction order and determine both
a just and equitable date on which the unlawful occupier must vacate
the land, and the date on which an eviction order may be carried
out
if the unlawful occupier has not vacated the land on such date.
49.
It is common cause in this matter that the warrant of eviction
was issued consequent upon an order of court which makes a settlement
agreement an order of court. It is the settlement agreement that
provides that the applicant is to vacate the premises by 1 December
2022 and that if she does not so vacate the premises the applicant
can approach the registrar for the issue of a warrant of eviction.
The court order itself does not provide for the eviction of the
applicant and it follows that the order does not provide for either
of the dates required by section 4(8) of PIE.
50.
As
stated, there is no evidence that the court on 2 November 2022 when
making the settlement agreement an order of court considered
all the
relevant circumstances and
whether it
was just and equitable to grant an order that in effect permitted an
eviction.
[9]
A court is required
to act proactively to ensure that it is ‘appraised of all
relevant information to enable it to make a
just and equitable
decision’
.
[10]
51.
The eviction could only in terms of the settlement agreement
occur if the applicant did not pay the full outstanding arrears by 30
November 2022. That was something that still had to happen in the
future. I do not see how a court could on 2 November 2022 already
be
in a position as required in terms of section 4(7) of PIE to form an
opinion, after considering all the relevant circumstances,
including
whether there been compliance with the settlement agreement, that it
was just and equitable to evict the applicant. Or
whether if there
had been non-compliance with the settlement agreement, it was
nevertheless just and equitable to evict the applicant.
For example,
if the applicant had paid all the outstanding arrears, but did so one
day late, then upon a strict application of
the settlement agreement,
the first respondent would nonetheless be entitled to proceed with
the warrant of eviction, without the
court considering whether it
would be just and equitable to so evict the applicant. One would
hardly think that if the court has
been called upon in those
circumstances – where all the rental arrears had been paid, but
one day late – it would have
formed the opinion that it was
just and equitable to evict the applicant from her home.
52.
This demonstrates, in my view, that what in effect is an
anticipatory eviction order may be problematic.
53.
The position of the court that made the settlement agreement
an order of court on 2 November 2022 must be appreciated, bearing in
mind that it was sitting as one of the busiest unopposed courts in
the country. It does not appear from the papers before me as
to what
submissions were made to the court on 2 November 2022 and whether
that court was precognised of the difficulties that I
have raised.
54.
When I put to the parties during argument whether the order
that had been granted on 2 November 2022 should sustain a lawful
eviction
of the applicant, the proposition that an anticipatory
eviction order should not be granted was not seriously challenged but
rather,
the first respondent argued, that this was not the case that
is made out by the applicant in her papers.
55.
I accept that the applicant does not raise this challenge, at
least not in these terms, but it is clear from her papers that the
applicant does squarely rely upon her constitutional right not to be
evicted from her home except on the authority of a competent
order.
The applicant expressly on several occasions in her affidavits refers
to section 26(3) of the Constitution and section 8(1)
of PIE.
56.
Given that these proceedings are aimed at a vindication of the
applicant’s constitutional rights and, again, given that these
are urgent proceedings, I find that the applicant, in the context of
demonstrating a
prima facie
right, has shown that there are
reasonable prospects of setting aside the order granted on 2 November
2022.
57.
The applicant explains that because she has been evicted from
her home, she fears for her safety. The applicant explains that she
has not been offered any temporary emergency housing by the
municipality. The applicant also explains in her affidavit that she
is staying temporarily with people she does not know because although
she spoke to her friends to see if they could arrange accommodation
for her, she has had no success. The applicant explains that she had
lost her employment as a legal secretary and is a law student,
and
cannot afford accommodation.
58.
Although the first respondent challenges the veracity of this
evidence on the basis that the applicant has not produced sufficient
detail, the first respondent has not adduced any evidence to gainsay
what the applicant says. In the circumstances described in
her
affidavits, I find that the applicant has suffered and will continue
to suffer irreparable harm arising from her eviction from
her home.
59.
No other satisfactory remedy to restoration of possession is
apparent.
60.
When dealing with the balance of convenience the applicant
reiterates that she is sleeping with strangers in an over-crowded
shack.
I cannot disregard the safety concerns expressed by the
applicant. It is common cause that the first respondent is a low cost
housing
development. Such prejudice as the first respondent may
suffer by being required to continue to afford the applicant
accommodation
whilst the rescission application is pending does not
outweigh the self-evident prejudice that the applicant suffered in
having
been evicted from her home. What also weighs upon me in
assessing the balance of convenience is that the applicant did launch
rescission
proceedings shortly after the order had been granted on 2
November 2022, and the first respondent’s conduct in relation
thereto,
which was to delay opposing the rescission application until
21 February 2023 whilst pressing on with the eviction.
61.
I therefore find that the applicant has established the
requirements for an interim interdict, or at least would have done so
had
the applicant approached the court
before
she was evicted
from her home.
62.
Therein lies the rub. The applicant has already been evicted
from her home and so, as appears from
Tswelopele
,
jurisprudentially the grant of an interdict, which is forward-looking
and does not address something that has passed, cannot be
used to
restore the possession that the applicant seeks as her primary
relief. Ordinarily restoration of possession would take
place through
the
mandament van spolie
but I have already found that the
applicant has failed to establish the requirements for a
mandament
.
63.
There
would have been no difficulty if the court been approached before the
eviction order was executed, as then interim interdictory
relief
could have been granted interdicting the eviction pending the
determination of the recission application or the operation
and
execution of the order suspended in terms of Uniform Rule 45A.
[11]
[12]
But what is to be done now
that the eviction has already been executed and there is a pending
rescission application that has prospects
of success, but in the
meanwhile the applicant has been rendered homeless?
64.
The opportunity for an urgent court, particularly in this
Division, to closely consider solutions is limited.
65.
Section 172(1) of the Constitution provides that “
[w]hen
considering a constitutional matter within its power, a court (a)
must declare that any law
or
conduct
that
is
consistent
with
the
Constitution
is
invalid
to
the extent of its inconsistency; and (b) may
make any order that is just and equitable …
”.
66.
The
matter before me is a constitutional matter, directly affecting the
applicant’s right not to be evicted from her home
without an
order of court made after considering all the relevant circumstances
under section 26(3) of the Constitution and under
PIE.
[13]
An order can be made that is just and equitable without first
necessarily declaring any law or conduct invalid as being
inconsistent
with the Constitution.
[14]
In the circumstances, and in crafting appropriate relief to address
the situation that presents itself, I find that I am able pursuant
to
section 172(1) to grant relief restoring possession, albeit that the
applicant has not satisfied the requirements for final
relief such as
pursuant to the
mandament
van spolie
.
67.
Crafting
suitable relief to vindicate constitutional rights under section
26(3) where the
mandament
van spolie
is
not available has precedent. In
Tswelopele
[15]
the occupiers had been evicted without a court order. During the
eviction, the materials used to construct their homes and many
of
their belongings were destroyed. The court
a
quo
refused
the occupiers relief on the basis that the
mandament
was
unavailable as the
mandament
could
not be used to restore possession of that which had been destroyed.
Although the Supreme Court of Appeal agreed that the
mandament
was
unavailable, and should not be extended to cover the restoration of
destroyed property,
[16]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that effective relief was required to
speedily address the consequence of the breach of the occupiers’
constitutional rights, and that the only way to achieve this was to
require the respondents to re-create the occupiers’
shelters.
[17]
68.
Of
course there are distinguishing factors. In
Tswelopele
there
was no dispute by the time the matter reached the appeal court that
the occupiers’ constitutional rights had been wantonly
infringed. In the present instance, there is a court order
authorising an eviction. In
Tswelopele
the
mandament
was
unavailable as jurisprudentially it was not a suitable remedy as it
is aimed at restoration of physical control and enjoyment
of
specified property, and not its reconstituted equivalent.
[18]
In the present instance the restoration of possession under the
mandament
is
unavailable as the unlawfulness of the dispossession as a requirement
for the remedy cannot be established as there is an extant
court
order. In
Tswelopele
an
effective remedy required the reconstitution of destroyed property as
the property had been destroyed, and not restoration of
property. In
the present instance, an effective remedy requires restoration of
occupation of the residential flat, which has not
been destroyed. But
the point is that
Tswelopele
is
precedent for the crafting of effective relief to vindicate an
infringement of a constitutional right, and particularly those
under
section 26 of the Constitution.
69.
Although
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Tswelopele
granted
effective relief on the basis that it was “a remedy special to
the Constitution”,
[19]
without referring to the court’s powers under section
172(1)(b),
more
recently, the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Ngomane
v Johannesburg (City)and Another
2020
(1) SA 52
(SCA), also for purposes of vindicating constitutional
rights under section 26(3) of the Constitution, in fashioning
appropriate
relief, expressly relied upon section 172(1). Maya P
referred
[20]
to the following
from
Fose
v Minister of Safety & Security
[1997] ZACC 6
;
1997
(3) SA 786
(CC):
'It is left to the
courts to decide what would be appropriate relief in any particular
case.
Appropriate relief
will in essence be relief that is required to protect and enforce the
Constitution. Depending on the circumstances
of each particular case
the relief may be a declaration of rights, an interdict, a mandamus
or such other relief as may be required
to ensure that the rights
enshrined in the Constitution are protected and enforced. If it is
necessary to do so, the courts may
even have to fashion new remedies
to secure the protection and enforcement of these all-important
rights.'
[21]
'… (T)his Court
has a particular duty to ensure that, within the bounds
of
the
Constitution,
effective
relief
be
granted
for
the
infringement of any of the rights entrenched in it
Particularly
in a country where so few have the means to enforce their rights
through the courts, it is essential that on those
occasions when the
legal process does establish that an infringement of an entrenched
right has occurred, it be effectively vindicated.
The courts have a
particular responsibility in this regard and are obliged to forge new
tools and shape innovative remedies, if
needs be, to achieve this
goal.'
[22]
70.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Tswelopele
declined
to extend the common law
mandament
to
grant relief that went beyond the restoration of property, and to
order pursuant to that common law remedy the respondents furnish
the
occupiers with substituted property.
Rather than
forcing the common-law remedy to perform a constitutional function,
and detract from many years of jurisprudence informing
the parameters
of that remedy, the Supreme Court of Appeal held
[23]
that the relief it was granting “
is
a remedy special to the Constitution, whose engraftment on the
mandament would constitute an unnecessary superfluity”
.
71.
Similarly, in granting an order restoring possession to the
applicant of the flat, I do not seek to expand the availability of
the
mandament
to include circumstances where the order
authorising the dispossession may be assailable but is not finally
established or to contort
interdictory relief that is forward-looking
so as to restore possession and so address something that has
happened in the past.
Rather I granted the primary relief that I did
in restoring possession on the basis of crafting suitable relief
under section 172(1)(b)
of the Constitution. But in considering
whether these are appropriate circumstances in which to grant relief
under section 172(1)(b)
I have, as appears above, borrowed from the
requirements for interim interdictory relief. This appears to me to
be preferable than
granting relief under section 172(1)(b) in an
untethered manner, without some form of guidance from established
principles.
72.
In
at least some sense this restoration of occupation is, in effect,
final in that it restores the
status
quo
and
whatever the outcome of proceedings to determine whether the
applicant’s occupation is lawful, that occupation cannot
be
undone.
[24]
[25]
But it does not follow that I have finally decided as between the
parties the parties’ respective rights to the flat, or
whether
the eviction was unlawful or that the warrant is to be set aside. The
lis
between
the parties remain, and which are to be determined in due course.
[26]
The relief that I have granted does not have any final effect on the
underlying, but disputed,
rights
of the
parties, whatever the effect the relief has on the
object
of
those rights, which is occupation of the flat.
[27]
73.
The relief that I granted is ultimately interim relief in that
it is relief crafted under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution as
a
temporary, not final, solution to the position that presents itself
and pending determination of the pending litigation between
the
parties.
74.
Upon the applicant having taken re-occupation of the premises
pursuant to the primary relief as granted, and so being in occupation
of the premises, I further provided in the order that I made for the
usual interim interdictory relief that pending the determination
of
the rescission application, the first respondent is restrained from
evicting the applicant from the premises. I am satisfied
that such
relief is appropriate in the circumstances, whether upon the
applicant having satisfied the usual requirements of such
interim
interdictory relief or under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution as
adjunctive relief to the primary relief.
75.
I nonetheless provided for some protection for the first
respondent in the order that I granted so as to mitigate the risk
that
the applicant, once being restored occupation of the flat,
failed to proceed expeditiously with her rescission application.
Leave
is granted to the first respondent, on papers duly
supplemented, to approach the court for a reconsideration of the
interdictory
relief should the applicant not proceed expeditiously
with the prosecution of her rescission application. To some extent
the prosecution
of the rescission application can also be advanced by
the first respondent itself, in proceeding expeditiously to file its
answering
affidavit in those proceedings. As appears above, the first
respondent had delayed it opposition to those rescission proceedings,
and therefore cannot be heard to overly complain at the pace of the
rescission proceedings.
76.
As there can be no turning back of the clock in relation to
the relief that I have granted restoring occupation of the flat to
the
applicant, there is no point providing for that particular relief
to be reconsidered. Accordingly, it is the interim interdictory
relief only that is open to be so reconsidered.
77.
The applicant seeks in addition that she be permitted to have
two family members effectively occupy the flat with her and that she
and her family members and visitors be entitled to access the housing
development in which the flat is situated through their motor
vehicles. The lease agreement does not appear to provide for this and
there is insufficient evidence on the papers that this was
the
situation prevailing before the eviction took place. In restoring
possession, I cannot go beyond restoring that which was dispossessed.
78.
The
applicant further seeks that certain household items be returned that
she asserts were removed during the eviction, alternatively
that she
be compensated for those household items. The same applies in
relation to an amount in cash that she the applicant asserts
went
missing during the eviction. There are substantial factual disputes
relating to these issues and in the circumstances there
is no scope
in these proceedings to grant that relief. To the extent that the
eviction took place illegally, which still needs
to be established,
and a cause of action can be made out by the applicant in respect of
her missing or destroyed household contents
or
the missing
cash, the applicant has her remedies.
[28]
79.
The applicant also sought relief against the Sheriff, alleging
that the Sheriff had illegally executed the warrant. The applicant
has not made out a case that the Sheriff has acted unlawfully,
particularly given the short affidavit filed by the Sheriff
explaining
that he undertook the eviction on the strength of a
warrant of eviction, and as set out above, there is such a warrant of
eviction.
There is accordingly no basis to grant any relief against
the Sheriff, at least not in these proceedings.
80.
The applicant also cited the second respondent, being the
attorneys of record for the applicant, and similarly sought relief
against
them. The applicant in framing her relief in her notice of
motion does not distinguish clearly which relief is sought against
which
respondent. When raised during argument, the applicant’s
attorney indicated that the applicant would no longer be pressing
for
relief against the second respondent firm of attorneys, particularly
as those attorneys asserted that they had been misjoined
to these
proceedings. Given the urgency of these proceedings, and in light of
the applicant no longer pressing for any relief against
the second
respondent, there is no need to deal any further with its position.
The second respondent argued that it had to incur
costs in opposing
these proceedings but in my view a separate costs order need not be
made respect of the second respondent as
the first respondent in any
event opposed these proceedings and where it does not appear to me
that any substantial additional
costs were incurred because the
second respondent was also joined.
81.
In my discretion, the costs of these proceedings are
appropriately reserved. It may be that the appropriate court to
determine the
incidence of costs in this application is the court
determining the rescission application. Whether or not the rescission
succeeds,
and how that determines the fate of the warrant of
eviction, informs the incidence of costs.
82.
These then are the reasons for the order that I made on 23
February 2023 that:
82.1.
The first respondent is to restore possession to the applicant of
Flat [...], Roodepoort ["the
premises"] forthwith and in
any event before 18h00 on 23 February 2023.
82.2.
Pending the determination of the applicant's rescission application,
the first respondent is
interdicted from:
82.2.1.
evicting the applicant from the premises;
82.2.2.
barring, impeding or hindering the applicant's access to the
premises;but
which interdictory relief does not extend beyond the
applicant personally and does not include any vehicle.
82.3.
The first respondent is granted leave to approach the court, on duly
supplemented papers, for
a reconsideration of the relief granted in
the sub-paragraph 2 above should the applicant not proceed
expeditiously with the prosecution
of her rescission application.
82.4.
The costs of the urgent application dated 11 February 2023 are
reserved for determination by
the court in the rescission
application, save that if the applicant does not proceed with the
rescission application, the applicant
is to pay the costs of the
urgent application.
Gilbert
AJ
Date
of hearing:
23 February 2023
Date
of order:
23 February 2023
Date
reasons delivered: 12
April 2023
Counsel
for the Applicant:
C S Mopedi (Attorney)
Instructed
by:
Mopedi CS Attorneys
Counsel
for the First and
Second
Respondents:
N Lombard
Instructed
by:
Mervyn Joel Smith Attorneys
For
the Third Respondent:
No appearance
[1]
Ngomane
and Others v Johannesburg (City) and Another
2020
(1) SA 52
(SCA), para 23.
[2]
Erstwhile
Tenants of Williston Court and Others v Lewray Investments (Pty) Ltd
and another
2016
(6) SA 466
(GJ), not following the earlier decisions of
Khoza
and others v Body Corporate of Ella Court
2014
(2) SA 112
(GSJ), which was in any event distinguished, and
Peniel
Development (Pty) Ltd and Another v Pietersen and Others
2014
(2) SA 503
(GJ), para 12. See also
Pine
Glow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Brick-On-Brick Property and Others
2019
(4) SA 75
(MN), which applied and approved of
Willison
Court
and
not
Khoza
.
Pine
Glow
in
turn was applied in
Hlumisa
Technologies and another v Nedbank and Others
2020
(4) SA 553
(ECG), paras 16 to 18.
[3]
At 98-99, and cited with approval by the Appellate Division in
Reck
v Mills en ‘n Ander
1990
(1) SA 751
(A) at 755 G-I.
[4]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C;
Botha
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
[2008] ZASCA 106
;
2009
(1) SA 227
(SCA) at para 4.
[5]
Ngomane
above,
para 23.
[6]
Above.
[7]
Para 18, at 5128G.
[8]
8 In the context of considering whether to grant interim relief
pending a review, the court is called upon to evaluate the prospects
of success in the review application: see, for example,
Ladychin
Investments (Pty) Ltd v South African National Roads Agency Ltd and
Others
2001
(3) SA 344
(N),
Capstone
566 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Commissioner, South African Revenue
Service and Another
2011
(6) SA 65
(WCC), para 53, and Binns-Ward AJ (as he then was) in
Searle
v Mossel Bay Municipality and Others
[2009]
ZAWCHC 9
(12 February 2009) described the test as follows:
“
That
means the prospects of success in the contemplated review
proceedings - as far as it is possible at this stage to assess
them
- represent the measure of the strength or otherwise of the alleged
right that the applicant must establish prima facie
in order to
obtain interim relief.”
[9]
A recent reminder in this Division that a court is required to
consider all the relevant circumstances and that the facts must
demonstrate that it would be just and equitable to grant an eviction
order before it can be granted is
Madulammoho
Housing Corporation NPC v Nephawe and another
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 7 (10 January 2023), para 10, per Wilson J.
[10]
Occupiers
,
Shulana
Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v Steele
[2010]
4 All SA 54
(SCA), para 15.
[11]
Uniform Rule 45A provides that “
[t]he
court may, on application, suspend the operation and execution of
any order for such period as it may deem fit: Provided
that in the
case of an appeal, such suspension is in compliance with section 18
of the [Superior Courts] Act”.
[12]
As to Uniform Rule 45A affording a suitable remedy, see
Plne
Glow
above
and, in this Division,
Williston
Court
,
para 20 and
Peach
v Kudjoe
[2018]
ZAGPPHC 291 (10 January 2018).
[13]
Occupiers,
Berea v De Wet NO and Another
2017
(5) SA 346
(CC) at para 65.
[14]
Head of
Department, Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoërskool Ermelo and Another
2010
(2) SA 415
(CC) at para 97;
Minister
of Safety & Security v Van der Merwe and Others
2011
(5) SA 61
(CC) at para 59.
[15]
Above.
[16]
Para 20 to 26
[17]
Para 27 and 28.
[18]
Para 24.
[19]
Para 27, at 522F.
[20]
At para 22.
[21]
Para 18 and 19.
[22]
Para 69.
[23]
Para 27, at 522F.
[24]
See
Nienaber
above,
at 1053-4.
[25]
This is also why the primary relief restoring occupation as appears
in the order is not framed as interim relief.
[26]
It is in this sense that I understand the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
description in
Tswelopele
at
521D-E of the restoration of physical control and enjoyment of the
specified property pursuant to the
mandament
as
being ‘interim’.
[27]
As to this distinction between interim and final relief, see
Andalusite
Resources (Pty) Ltd v Investec Bank Ltd and Another
2020
(1) SA 140
(GJ), particularly para 20 to 24.
[28]
Contrast to
Tswelopele
where
there was no dispute that there has been an unlawful eviction and
that the occupiers’ belongings and other property
had been
destroyed.
sino noindex
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