Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 590South Africa
Telkom SA (Soc) Ltd v Moeletsi and Others (40530/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 590 (30 May 2023)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Telkom SA (Soc) Ltd v Moeletsi and Others (40530/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 590 (30 May 2023)
Telkom SA (Soc) Ltd v Moeletsi and Others (40530/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 590 (30 May 2023)
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sino date 30 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Imminent danger – Dolomitic ground
instability – Entire property not requiring immediate
evacuation – No imminent risk – Balance of hardship
and alternative remedy – Whether eviction would cause
substantial injury to those to be evicted – In this case
eviction of residents would do nothing to enhance their safety
and
may even make them less safe – Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998,
s 5.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 40530/2023
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
30.05.23
In the matter between:
TELKOM
SA (SOC)
LTD
Applicant
and
MATADINGWANA ELIAS
MOELETSI AND SIX
OTHERS LISTED IN
ANNEXURE “B” TO THE
NOTICE
OF
MOTION
First
Respondent
FURTHER
OCCUPIERS
Eighth Respondents
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Ninth Respondent
Neutral citation: Telkom
SA (Soc) Ltd v Moeletsi (40530/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 590 (30 May
2023).
Summary
Eviction under section 5
of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful Occupation
of, Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”)
– although the
court in such a case is not concerned with the justice and equity of
an eviction order, the question of whether
the occupiers would be
left homeless on eviction remains relevant to whether the
jurisdictional requirements set out section 5
(1) and 5 (2) of PIE
have been established.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Telkom, owns a substantial property in
Olifantsfontein, to the northwest of Midrand. There is a large
training centre
on the property, and a number of houses that were
once used to accommodate lecturers who taught at the training centre.
The property
is at least forty hectares in extent.
2
The respondents are between 60 and 100 people (it is not
possible to be more precise) living in 16 of the houses. It seems
from
the papers that at least some of the residents once rented the
houses, but Telkom says that any right that the residents had to
occupy the property has now been terminated.
3
Telkom approached me on an urgent basis for an order evicting
the residents under section 5 of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from, and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”).
Section 5 of PIE permits a court to make an urgent and
interim order
for the eviction of unlawful occupiers if the jurisdictional
requirements set out in the section are met. Such an
order amounts to
a direction that the unlawful occupiers vacate the property to which
it applies, pending the outcome of an application
for final relief
under section 4 of PIE. An eviction order under section 4 of the Act
can only be granted if and to the extent
that the permanent vacation
of the property would be just and equitable.
4
Telkom’s notice of motion makes clear that this is
indeed what it envisages. I am asked to decide Part A of its
application,
in which the urgent interim relief under section 5 is
sought. The final relief under section 4 is prayed for under Part B,
which
will proceed in due course however I dispose of Part A of the
application. Telkom says that the Part A relief is urgent because
the
land on which the residents live is dolomitic, and there is an
imminent threat of ground instability and sinkhole formation
that
presents a serious risk to the residents’ safety, and to
Telkom’s property.
5
Although the application was not formally opposed,
approximately 25 of the residents of the property appeared at the
hearing. Two
of them addressed me. I had careful regard to what they
had to say. Ultimately, however, I came to the conclusion that Telkom
has
failed, on its own papers, to make out a case in terms of section
5, and that Part A of its application must be dismissed.
6
In giving my reasons for reaching this conclusion, I shall
first address the meaning and application of section 5 of the PIE
Act.
I will then deal with the factual basis on which Telkom sought
to persuade me that the requirements of section 5 have been met.
Section
5 of PIE
7
Section 5 of the PIE Act states that applications for urgent
interim eviction orders may be granted if (a) there is a real and
imminent
danger of substantial injury to persons or property unless
an unlawful occupier is immediately evicted; and if (b) the hardship
caused to the applicant if the eviction order is not granted exceeds
the likely hardship to the unlawful occupier if it is; and
if (c) the
applicant has no other effective remedy.
8
As I have said, any order granted under section 5 is both
urgent and interim in nature, and it persists only for so long as it
takes
to decide an application for final relief. It follows that,
read together, sections 4 and 5 of PIE mean that (a) final eviction
orders may not be granted on an urgent basis; and that (b) an interim
eviction order may only be granted urgently pending the outcome
of
proceedings for a final order under section 4 if the test set out in
section 5 is met; and that (c) proceedings for a final
eviction order
must always follow the notice procedure and adhere to the substantive
requirements set out in section 4 of the Act.
9
Judgments of this court that have suggested otherwise, and
have held that urgent eviction orders are available under section 4
of
PIE, are wrongly decided
(see, for example,
G M J Property Trading (Pty) Limited v Molenge
[2019] ZAGPJHC 403 (13 September
2019)).
If urgent eviction proceedings under section 4 were
available, there would be little point to section 5 of PIE. No
reasonable applicant
for an eviction order would bother to satisfy
the stringent section 5 test for an urgent interim eviction order if
an urgent final
eviction order could be obtained under section 4 by
satisfying the far less exacting standard of urgency set out in
section 6 (12)
of the Uniform Rules of Court: viz. that the applicant
would not achieve substantial redress in the ordinary course.
10
Eviction orders under section 4 of PIE may only be granted if
they are “just and equitable”. It has been held,
correctly
I think, that this test need not be met before an urgent
interim eviction order under section 5 is made. Once the
jurisdictional
requirements set out in section 5 itself have been met
on the facts, an eviction order may follow whether or not it is “just
and equitable” (
Residents of the Joe Slovo Community,
Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes
2010 (3) SA 454
(CC), paragraph
90). Mr. Kutumela, who appeared for Telkom, submitted that this means
that the question of whether an eviction
would lead to homelessness –
which is normally associated with the question of justice and equity
– is also irrelevant
to whether an urgent interim eviction
order under section 5 of PIE should be granted.
11
However, that does not follow. The question of whether, and to
what extent, an urgent interim eviction order would lead to
homelessness
is clearly relevant to the jurisdictional requirements
of section 5. In assessing, for example, whether there is a real and
imminent
danger of substantial injury to persons or property unless
an unlawful occupier is immediately evicted, consideration must
obviously
be given to whether an eviction would cause substantial
injury to those to be evicted. In considering whether
the
hardship caused to the applicant if the eviction order is not granted
exceeds the likely hardship to the unlawful occupier if
it is, the
hardship of likely homelessness is plainly a relevant factor.
12
That does not mean that an urgent interim
eviction order can never be granted if homelessness would follow. In
the type of situation
which the framers of section 5 no doubt had in
mind – a single violent unlawful occupier who is causing harm
to persons or
property around them – it is conceivable that an
unlawful occupier’s likely homelessness may not tip the balance
against
evicting them pending the outcome of the application for
final relief. But where, as in this case, there are whole communities
of people sought to be removed for the sake of their own safety, a
court must, in my view, have careful and detailed regard to whether
the eviction of the unlawful occupiers will in fact make them more
safe. If the eviction would leave a large number of unlawful
occupiers homeless, then an inference that an eviction is necessary
for their own safety will not easily be drawn.
13
Applications under section 5 of PIE,
especially those which rest on claims of the nature Telkom makes in
this case, warrant close
scrutiny. Any substantiated claim of
imminent risk to a person’s safety and property obviously
demands serious consideration.
It is equally obvious, though, that an
applicant in a section 5 case has an interest in emphasising the
imminence of any potential
risks to life and limb in order to obtain
an urgent interim eviction order.
14
This difficulty is compounded by the fact
that many, perhaps most, eviction applications under section 5 of PIE
will be heard without
formal opposition. They will generally be
brought on a very short notice by people with the resources necessary
to engage the urgent
mechanisms PIE provides. Unlawful occupiers
faced with a section 5 eviction claim will seldom have the
wherewithal to obtain the
representation necessary to contest the
applicant’s version, especially when that version rests on
expert evidence.
15
It is accordingly incumbent on a court to
evaluate the applicant’s factual claims carefully. Counsel for
the applicant is
also under a heightened duty to present the case
fairly, by making arguments that go no further than are reasonably
justified by
the facts alleged, and by drawing the court’s
attention to any fact that might count against an urgent interim
eviction order.
16
I now turn to whether the requirements of
section 5 have been met on the facts of this case.
The dolomite
instability claim
17
Telkom’s case rests squarely on the outcome of a series
of expert studies done on dolomite instability at the property. Large
swathes the Witwatersrand are underlain by dolomite. Dolomite is a
type of rock that dissolves in water. If water seeps into the
ground,
it may, over time, dissolve dolomite under the surface. If enough
dolomite close enough to the surface is dissolved, the
ground can
fall away. Sinkholes can form. Sinkholes that form under buildings
and roads can obviously lead to the collapse of those
structures.
There is a concomitant risk of injury and, in extreme cases, loss of
life. A Council for Geoscience Report annexed
to the papers says that
39 deaths have been caused by sinkholes in South Africa over the
sixty years to 2011.
18
This is obviously cause for concern. However, it appears from
the papers before me that 52% of Ekurhuleni Municipality’s
surface
area is underlain by dolomite. The Council for Geoscience
Report says that a quarter of land in Gauteng is dolomitic. Dolomitic
land may be perfectly safe to build on, provided that surface water
is properly managed, and that the structure of the dolomitic
substrate is carefully investigated and mitigated for. I can only
assume that this is what was done when the decision to build
on the
property was made in the first place.
19
Accordingly, dolomitic ground is not necessarily unsafe
ground. In this case, however, Telkom says that the ground on which
the
residents’ houses are constructed has become unsafe. There
are three sinkholes on the property. Two appear to have formed
at
some unspecified date before June 2022. The third formed in November
2022. One of the sinkholes is two metres across. It is
not clear from
the papers how big the other two are. There is a risk that more may
form in future, unless prompt action is taken
to manage surface water
on the site, and to refill the existing sinkholes.
20
These conclusions emerge from the latest of the reports
compiled about the property. The report, produced by ARQ Engineers,
recommends
that any inhabited structures immediately around the
existing sinkholes be evacuated, but also makes clear that at least
some mitigation
measures can be taken while the land is occupied.
Indeed, the report sets out measures to manage ground water flow in
the event
that the site is not evacuated. These appear at section 4.1
of the report, where it is said that “[s]hould [Telkom] allow
the continued habitation of the residential units, ARQ strongly
recommends that a detailed services inspection be conducted as
soon
as possible, and any leaks/broken services be repaired with due
haste”.
21
The report does not support the conclusion that the entire
property requires immediate evacuation. What the report says is that
“the residential buildings that are currently occupied in the
areas surrounding the existing sinkholes/subsidences [sic]”
ought ideally to be evacuated. The portions of the property the
report marks as “areas of concern” around the existing
sinkholes make up a fraction of the occupied land. Telkom has made no
effort on the papers to differentiate between the residents
who might
live in these “areas of concern” and those who live
outside them. During the hearing, Mr. Moraba, one of
the residents
who appeared in person, said that there were in fact no occupied
houses in the immediate vicinity of any of the sinkholes.
He also
said that the training centre on the property, which is adjacent to
the houses, remains in use, with no sign that Telkom
intends to
evacuate it.
22
However, I do not have to accept what Mr. Moraba says
in order to reject the claims Telkom makes on the strength of ARQ’s
report. Nor am I bound to accept ARQ’s conclusions on their
face. I must instead
consider what conclusions can
reasonably be drawn on the basis of the facts set out in ARQ’s
report. In other words, I must
examine ARQ’s reasoning and
determine whether it is logical in the light of the facts set out in
the report. If I conclude
that ARQ’s opinion is one that can
reasonably be held on the facts, then I may accept it. However, if I
am not satisfied
that the expert conclusions drawn in the report are
reasonably related to the facts proffered in support of them, I
cannot rely
on them (see, in this regard,
MV
Pasquale Della Gatta
2012 (1) SA 58
(SCA), paragraph 26). I must then consider whether those of ARQ’s
conclusions that I can accept support the case Telkom seeks
to rest
on them.
23
It seems to me that the facts
established on the papers are reasonably related to the expert
conclusion that there is a risk to
some residents of the property
posed by the dolomitic ground and the potential for sinkhole
formation. However, the facts do not
provide a reasonable basis on
which to assess the precise nature or imminence of that risk, or
precisely to which of the residents
that risk applies. Nor do the
facts establish that the urgent evacuation of the whole property is
necessary to address that risk
– and that is, in any event, not
what ARQ says. Nor do the facts establish that mitigation measures
cannot be taken to address
the risk while the residents remain in
occupation.
24
These conclusions are consistent, in
my view, with three further facts. The first is that the ARQ report
describes its conclusions
and recommendations as “preliminary
only” and warns that its report is based on “limited
information”.
The second fact is that the ARQ report is dated
17 January 2023. This application was enrolled before me on 18 May
2023, fully
four months later. It was served on the respondents on 11
May 2023, seven calendar days before the hearing, and almost a year
since
ARQ first set foot on the property. The third fact is that the
ARQ report records that the property “has experience[d]
numerous
sinkholes over the years” since Telkom’s
acquisition of the property. This information came from Telkom
itself. Nothing
is said in the papers about how, if at all, this
particular instance of sinkhole formation is different, or whether
prior instances
of sinkhole formation resulted in evictions or
evacuations from the property.
No imminent risk
requiring an eviction
25
In these circumstances, it cannot be
said that the first jurisdictional requirement of section 5 –
that there is an imminent
danger to persons or property if the
residents are not forthwith evicted – has been established. I
can accept that there
is a danger, but the degree of risk to the
residents and the imminence of that risk have not been established on
the papers.
26
Even were I to accept that there is
an acute risk, and that the risk is imminent, it has not been
established that the residents
would be made any safer by being
evicted from the property. It is clear on the papers that the
property has been occupied for some
time. Ms.
Mkhatshwa, who
spoke for the residents before me, stated that the residents had
lived on the property for many years, that there
were many children
among them, and that they would have nowhere else to go if they were
evicted. She did not think that there were
as many as 100 people
living on the property. She accepted my suggestion that there were
perhaps closer to 60 or 70 people living
in 16 houses. But even
without regard what Ms. Mkhatshwa told me, on the facts Telkom
alleges, there is a community of people on
the property who are
living in disused houses without paying rent. Despite having been
warned of what Telkom says is a serious
risk to their well-being,
they have not moved. These facts are in themselves a clear indication
that there is a real risk of homelessness
on eviction.
27
On the papers, I cannot accept that putting a community
of between 60 to 100 people out on the streets – children
included
– in the middle of winter is necessary to ensure their
safety. But that is precisely what I must be satisfied of if I am to
accept – as section 5 of PIE requires – that there is an
imminent risk to the residents that requires their eviction
forthwith. In other words, the residents’ eviction, on the
facts as pleaded, would do nothing to enhance their safety, and
may
even make them less safe.
28
In these circumstances, I cannot accept that the
jurisdictional requirement entrenched in section 5 (1) (a) of PIE has
been established.
Balance
of hardship and alternative remedy
29
That conclusion renders it strictly
unnecessary to consider whether the other two requirements set out in
section 5 of PIE have
been established, but it is as well to point
out that they have not. Telkom has not established on the papers that
the likely hardship
to it if an urgent interim eviction order is not
granted exceeds the likely hardship to the residents if they are
allowed to remain
in occupation pending the outcome of an application
under section 4. As I have already said, there are indications that
the residents
face a real risk of homelessness if they are evicted.
Telkom faces no comparable hardship.
30
Mr. Kutumela argued that there is a
possibility that some of the structures Telkom still uses on the
property – such as a
mast and the training centre – might
be damaged or destroyed by sinkholes. However, Telkom’s papers
make no more than
very general allegations about the risk to Telkom’s
property beyond the risk to the houses in which the residents live.
As
I have already found, Telkom has not established that mitigation
measures are impossible to implement while the residents are still
in
occupation. In these circumstances, I cannot conclude that the
potential damage to Telkom’s property is enough to balance
out
the likely hardship to the residents and their children on eviction.
31
I have already pointed out that the
nature and likelihood of the hardship that might ensue to the
residents from further sinkhole
formation cannot be assessed on the
papers. All I know is that sinkholes and dolomite instability have
been a known risk for as
long as Telkom has owned the property, and
that this did not prevent Telkom from using the property for
residential and educational
purposes. In light of those facts, it
seems to me that the risk of hardship to the residents from an
eviction is greater than the
risk to them of remaining at the
property. Neither situation is, of course, without risk, and I do not
wish to be understood as
playing down the risk the residents face
from dolomite instability. I have found only that, on the facts
presented to me, an eviction
from the property would place the
residents at a substantially greater risk than remaining on it until
Telkom’s application
under section 4 of PIE can be heard.
32
Mr. Kutumela also relied on the decision of this court
in
Tshwane North Technical and Vocational Education and Training
College v Madisha
2019 JDR 0065 (GP) to advance the proposition
that the hardship that might be done to Telkom’s property if
there were no
eviction outweighs the hardship that the residents will
likely endure if they are evicted.
In that case,
the applicant sought and was granted a section 5 eviction order
because it said that one of its student hostels was
an irredeemable
fire risk. But Mr. Kutumela’s reliance on that case overlooks
the fact that, in the court’s opinion
in that case, the
students in occupation of the hostel did not face homelessness on
eviction. The Judge held that the students
in that case were “likely
to leave the hostel for family homes during the festive season and
can upon their return make alternative
arrangements” (paragraph
40). The facts of this case are obviously very different.
33
Finally, I cannot accept that Telkom
has no effective remedy other than the residents’ eviction.
There is obviously the substantially
unexplored option of mitigating
the risk arising from dolomite instability while the residents remain
in situ
.
Even if the enquiry were confined to legal remedies, Telkom itself
asked, in the alternative, for an order directing the ninth
respondent, the Municipality, to provide accommodation off-site to
the residents. That alternative prayer is nothing less than
a
concession that Telkom has alternative legal remedies. The
alternative relief, as Telkom framed it, would have been to order
the
Municipality to provide accommodation to the occupiers within seven
days, before an eviction order takes effect.
34
Shortly before the hearing, the
Municipality filed a document it called a “notice to abide”.
It was really no such thing.
Despite evincing an intention “to
abide by the decision of the court”, the notice also records a
request “to
extend and/or relax the time frames to allow [the
Municipality] a reasonable time for compliance”. That clearly
does not
abide the court’s decision. I do not know what to make
of the Municipality’s cryptic stance, but I do not think that
an order to provide accommodation can be made in the absence of an
indication from the Municipality that it is able to provide
accommodation within a definite period. All I really know from the
Municipality’s notice is that the Municipality probably
does
not think it can comply with the alternative order Telkom proposes.
35
However, I would only need to
confront that difficulty if the first two requirements – the
need for an immediate eviction
and a balance of hardship in Telkom’s
favour – had been established. They have not been established,
so the Municipality’s
capabilities need not be explored at this
stage.
Relief
36
It follows from all this that relief
under section 5 of PIE cannot be granted, and that Part A of Telkom’s
application must
be dismissed. I invited Mr. Kutumela to address me
on whether I should make an order expediting the hearing of Part B
and giving
directions requiring engagement with the residents and the
Municipality, and the production of reports on the availability of
alternative
accommodation and measures that could be taken to address
the dolomite instability hazard in the interim. Mr. Kutumela’s
response clearly indicated that his instructions went no further than
obtaining an urgent interim eviction order. He declined to
motivate
for any relief beyond that set out in Telkom’s notice of
motion. I think that was unfortunate. That attitude, together
with
the fact that Telkom chose to wait four months after the ARQ report
was produced before bringing this application on a week’s
notice, raises some doubt about the extent to which Telkom is
genuinely concerned about the residents’ safety.
37
Be that as it may, the choice Mr.
Kutumela placed before me was either to make a section 5 eviction
order under PIE, or to grant
no relief at all. For the reasons I have
given, in that binary world, the outcome must be that Telkom can have
no relief at all.
I indicated to the residents present at the hearing
that I would see to it that my judgment is brought promptly to their
attention.
I will make an order that will ensure this.
38
For all these reasons -
38.1
Part A of the application is dismissed,
with each party paying their own costs.
38.2
The applicant is directed to serve 5 copies
of this judgment on each inhabited structure at the property, by no
later than 15 June
2023.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
18 May 2023
DECIDED
ON:
30 May 2023
For
the Applicant:
L Kutumela with S Mlangeni
Instructed by Motseoneng
Bill Attorneys Inc
For
the First to
Approximately 25 of the residents in person,
Eighth
Respondents:
including Magdeline Nomsa Mkhatshwa and Tshililo Dorian Moraba
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