Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 479South Africa
Makhunzi v Hlazo NO and Others (8797/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 479 (15 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Makhunzi v Hlazo NO and Others (8797/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 479 (15 May 2023)
Makhunzi v Hlazo NO and Others (8797/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 479 (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
8797/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between:
NOMTHANDAZO
MAKHUNZI
Applicant
and
RAYMOND
HLAZO N.O.
First
Respondent
SIZAKELE
CHILIZA
Second
Respondent
WILLIAM
MAZIBUKO
Third
Respondent
DANIEL
MFANIMPELA MKHALIPHI
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral Citation:
Nomthandazo Makhunzi v Raymond Hlazo N.O and 3 Others
(Case
No: 8797/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 479 (15 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is deemed to be handed down upon uploading by the Registrar
to the electronic court file.
Gilbert AJ:
1. On 15 November
2018, the court granted an order
inter alia
evicting the
applicant from her home. The order was executed on 9 December 2019.
Although the applicant was evicted that day, she
soon re-occupied the
property through the intervention of the community. The applicant has
been in occupation of the property since.
2. The applicant
now seeks of the court to rescind the order that had been granted on
15 November 2018 by way of these rescission
proceedings launched on
25 April 2022. The applicant was not present in court on 15 November
2018 when the order was granted and
so the applicant seeks to rescind
the order in terms of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) on the basis that the
order had been erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in her
absence, alternatively under the common law on good cause shown.
3. The first,
second and third respondents, as the successful applicants in the
eviction proceedings, have opposed the rescission.
A fourth
respondent, being a subsequent purchaser of the property, has been
cited in these proceedings and who abides the decision
of the court.
I shall refer to the first, second and third respondents as “the
respondents”.
4.
The
respondents oppose the rescission
inter
alia
on
the basis that the applicant was in wilful default in not appearing
in court on 15 November 2018 when the order was
granted,
and in any event the applicant elected not to participate in the
proceedings on 15 November 2018 and therefore, on the
authority of
decisions such as the recent Constitutional Court decision of
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Enquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
including
Organs of State and Others
[1]
cannot rely upon Rule 42(1)(a). The respondents further contend that
the applicant has not disclosed a
bona
fide
defence
which
prima
facie
carries
some prospects of success and so, when coupled with the absence of a
reasonable explanation for her default in failing to
appear in court
on 15 November 2018, results in the applicant not having made out out
a case under common law for rescission of
the order.
[2]
5. Dealing first
with the issue as to whether the applicant was in wilful default in
failing to appear on 15 November 2018
and elected to absent herself,
I during the course of the hearing invited each counsel to point out
in the papers where there was
any specific and unequivocal notice
given to the applicant that she was to be in court on 15 November
2018. Bearing in mind that
the purpose of compliance with section
4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction From and Unlawful
Occupation Land Act, 1998 is
to ensure in so far as reasonably
possible that written and effective notice of the proceedings is
given to a person before he
or she is evicted from his or her home,
this was a pertinent enquiry. Neither counsel could refer me to any
such unequivocal written
and effective notice in the court file.
6.
The
respondents’ counsel submitted that the applicant would have
known of the hearing date of 15 November 2018 because she
had
previously been informed of that date when she attended court on a
previous occasion, on 8 August 2018. But it does not appear
to me
from the papers that it is at all clear that this in fact was so. The
applicant denies that she was in court and even if
she was in court,
there does not appear to be any cogent evidence that the applicant
was informed, or at the very least appreciated,
that an eviction
order may be granted on 15 November 2018, and so that she should
attend court, and particularly place her personal
circumstances
before the court to enable the court to determine
inter
alia
whether it would be just and equitable to grant an eviction order.
[3]
7. The respondents’
counsel submitted that the third respondent, who was an applicant in
the eviction proceedings, personally
served a notice of set down upon
inter alia
the applicant on 12 November 2018. An affidavit by
the third respondent is in the court file. The difficulty is that it
is not
clear what notice of set down was so “
served
”
on the applicant, particularly as to whether that notice of set down
informed the applicant that she was to be in court
on 15 November
2018. A further difficulty is that given the personal interest of the
third respondent as an applicant in the main
application, it is
problematic that he should be the person “
serving
”
a notice as important as that which informs the applicant that she
may be evicted, rather than, as is usually the case,
the sheriff of
the court. There is also no cogent evidence as to whether the
prescribed and court-authorised section 4(2) notice
had been served
on the applicant as the returns of service that appear in the court
file do not show personal service upon the
applicant and where in any
event the only section 4(2) notice to which I was directed does not
contain any date as to when the
applicant was required to be in
court.
8. In the
circumstances, I am unable to find that the applicant in fact knew
she had to be in court on 15 November 2018 and
so I am not in a
position to find that she was in wilful default in not appearing in
court that day, or that she deliberately elected
to absent herself
from court that day.
9.
Insofar as
a
bona
fide
defence is concerned that has some prospects of success, there is no
evidence that the court, with respect, engaged in the obligatory
enquiry required in terms of section 4(7) of PIE to consider all the
factors in order to decide whether it would be just and equitable
to
grant an eviction order,
[4]
and,
if so, the further obligatory enquiry for purposes of determining in
terms of section 4(8) of PIE the date upon which the
applicant was to
vacate the property, and failing which the eviction order would be
carried out. 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’
.
[5]
10. I invited
counsel, and particularly the respondents’ counsel, to point me
to evidence that would demonstrate otherwise.
11. Consequent upon
a request for reasons, the court that granted the order on 15
November 2018 did deliver reasons for its
making the order that day.
Those reasons do not show that the necessary enquiry was carried out
but rather that the court was prepared
upon the reading of the
applicant’s papers and in the absence of an answering affidavit
to grant the relief. No evidence
was led as to what enquiry the court
undertook on the day before granting the order. The reasons do not
state that such an enquiry
was undertaken, and if anything is
implicit from a reading of the reasons, it is that the enquiry was
not carried out.
12. It is however
not necessary for the applicant to prove that the necessary enquiry
was not carried out. For purposes of
rescission under the common law,
there is enough of an insufficiency of evidence that the necessary
enquiry was carried out by
the court on 15 November 2018, the absence
of which enquiry which would constitute a
bona fide
defence
that has some prospects of success.
13. In any event,
in my view, much is to be said for the applicant’s case that
the court had erroneously granted the
order in the absence of the
applicant as contemplated in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) in circumstances
where (i) there is no evidence
indicating that it had considered all
relevant factors before granting the order as was required of it in
terms of PIE; and (ii)
it does not appear to have been aware of
the respondents’ failure to give adequate notice to the
applicant that she
was to appear in court that day.
14. Accordingly,
whether the matter is approached from the basis of a rescission in
terms of Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) or under
the common law, in my view a
case for rescission has made out.
15. The difficulty
that presents itself for the applicant is the lengthy delay from when
she learnt of the order, which was
on 9 December 2019 when she was
evicted, until she launched this application some two and a half
years later in April 2022.
16. The applicant’s
explanation is terse. The applicant explains that she did not know
what to do or what steps to take
in reaction to the order and upon
being evicted, and that the first attorney she approached did not
give any real assistance. The
applicant continues that it is only
when she approached her present
pro bono
legal
representatives, being the Seri Law Clinic, that she for the first
time was made aware that she could seek rescission of
the order and
that she then acted expeditiously within a month in launching these
proceedings.
17. The respondents
counter on the basis that this is not an adequate explanation and
that the reason that the applicant is
now seeking a rescission was
that the shoe of criminal proceedings was beginning to pinch. These
criminal proceedings had been
launched by the respondents upon the
applicant’s failure to abide the eviction order and by her
instead simply returning
to the property notwithstanding she had just
been evicted on the strength of the court order.
18. I echo what was
said by Binns-Ward J in the recent decision of
Vacation Import
(Pty) Limited v Bumina and Others
;
Vacation Import (Pty)
Limited v Ngaleka and Others
[2023] ZAWCHC 44
(3 March 2023) when
having to deal with a condonation application in the context of
eviction proceedings:
“
It was only
because of the nature of the litigation in the eviction applications,
which bears not only on the respondents’
rights in terms of s
26 of the Bill of Rights but, as has been recognised by the
Constitutional Court, also involves broader societal
implications
requiring the courts to engage actively in the issues in an
interrogative manner quite different to the approach adopted
in the
ordinary course in adversarial litigation,
[6]
that I in the end decided, not without hesitation, that the
respondents should be given the opportunity to have their cases in
the eviction matters heard.”
[7]
19. There is also
some merit to the respondents’ counsel’s submission that
because the applicant was almost immediately
restored to occupation
of the property, notwithstanding the eviction, through the
intervention of the community in what the applicant’s
counsel
described as a “
imbizo”
of sorts that she was of
the mindset that the issue of her eviction had been resolved, at
least insofar as the order was concerned
and until the criminal
proceedings arose. Whilst the applicant’s conduct in simply
retaking possession of the property after
an eviction order had been
executed and served upon her cannot be countenanced, there does
appear to be sufficient cogency to her
belief as asserted by counsel
to give some explanation for the delay.
20. The serious
deficiencies in the manner in which the respondents went about
obtaining the eviction order on 15 November
2018, and the
strength of the applicant’s case on the merits when it comes to
the probable absence of the obligatory enquiry
into all the relevant
circumstances before granting the eviction order, outweighs the
deficiencies in the applicant’s explanation
as to why she
delayed for the time that she did before launching these proceedings.
This is especially so given the context of
the applicant asserting
her constitutional rights in terms of section 26 of the Constitution.
21. The same
reasoning informs my view that the costs of these rescission
proceedings, albeit that at least to some extent
the applicant is
seeking an indulgence, should be costs in the main eviction
proceedings.
22.
As it is
only the applicant as the second respondent in the main eviction
application that seeks rescission of the order and not
the first
respondent in the main application (who in any event has not been
cited in these rescission proceedings), the rescission
is to be
limited to the order in so far as the applicant is concerned.
[8]
23. An order is
granted:
23.1. Rescinding and
setting aside the order granted by this court on 15 November
2018 under this case number as against the
applicant.
23.2. Directing that the
applicant deliver her answering affidavit in the main application
under this case number within 20 (twenty)
days of this order.
23.3. That the costs of
the rescission application are to be costs in the main application
under this case number.
Gilbert AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
11 May 2023
Date of judgment: 15 May
2023
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Mr
L Moeli
Instructed
by:
Seri
Law Clinic
Counsel
for the First, Second
and
Third Respondents:
Mr
T Mosikili
Instructed
by:
F
H Munyai Inc & Mojela Hlazo Attorneys
[1]
[2021]
ZACC 28
, para 56.
[2]
Grant
v Plumbers (Pty) Limited
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) at 476 to 477, and as approved in numerous subsequent
decisions including by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Limited t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA) at 9 E/F and the Constitutional Court in
Gundwana
v Steko Development and Others
2011
(3) SA 608
(CC) at 628 B, footnote 54.
[3]
See,
for example,
Occupiers
of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v De Wet N.O. and another
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC), para 48.
[4]
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.
[5]
Occupiers
,
Shulana
Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg v Steele
[2010] 4 All SA 54
(SCA), para 15.
[6]
See,
for example,
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2005
(1) SA 217
(CC) especially paras 32 to 38.
[7]
Para
15.
[8]
As to the rescission of an order of eviction in relation to only
some of several respondents, see
Sehube
and Another v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
[2021]
ZAGPJHC 535 (13 October 2021) paras 36 to 45.
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