Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 860South Africa
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Harmse and Others (0014030/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 July 2023)
Headnotes
Summary – Interdict sought by the Municipality to ensure compliance with the Ekurhuleni Town Planning Scheme amounts to an eviction order if it prohibits tenants from occupying their homes – An interdict compelling the owner of property to institute eviction proceedings at odds with Constitutional Court authority in Abahlali Basemjondolo Movement SA and Another v Premier of the Province of Kwazulu-Natal and Others ("Abahlali") 2010 (2) BCLR 99 (CC).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Harmse and Others (0014030/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 July 2023)
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Harmse and Others (0014030/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 July 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
EVICTION – Municipal zoning –
Enforcement
entailing eviction
– Interdict sought by
municipality to ensure compliance with town planning scheme
amounts to an eviction order
if it prohibits tenants from
occupying their homes – Pending application to rezone the
property – No meaningful
engagement with tenants –
Mechanism sought is irrational, overbroad and invasive of the
protections against arbitrary
evictions to be found in section
26(2) of the Constitution – Application dismissed.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
0014030/2017
REPORTABLE
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT
REVISED
31/07/23
In
the matter between:
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
WILLEM
PETRUS HARMSE
Respondent
(as
trustee of the Harley Trust)
VICTOR
MBONANI
First
Intervening Respondent
PHAKAMANI
BOANJOVIE DLAMINI
Second
Intervening Respondent
PRICHARD
NGIRAZI
Third
Intervening Respondent
Summary
– Interdict sought by the Municipality to ensure compliance
with the Ekurhuleni Town Planning Scheme amounts to an
eviction order
if it prohibits tenants from occupying their homes – An
interdict compelling the owner of property to institute
eviction
proceedings at odds with Constitutional Court authority in
Abahlali
Basemjondolo Movement SA and Another v Premier of the Province of
Kwazulu-Natal and Others ("Abahlali")
2010 (2) BCLR 99
(CC).
JUDGMENT
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
In this case, the central question is whether the applicant ("the
Municipality")
can compel a property owner to institute eviction
proceedings against its tenants.
[2]
The
property, 65 North Rand Road Kempton Park, is zoned residential. It
has 51 rooms providing housing to several tenants.
[1]
The Municipality contends that the owner utilises the property as a
boarding house. In terms of the Ekurhuleni Town Planning Scheme
("Scheme")
[2]
a
boarding house is a business and cannot lawfully operate from a
property zoned as residential. The Municipality asks this Court
to
interdict the respondent from using the property as a boarding house.
The Municipality locates the case within zoning law.
[3]
The
respondent does not live on the property, but is cited as a trustee
of the Harley Trust. The property is registered in
the name of
the Harley Trust. The respondent pleads that the property is
used to provide affordable housing to tenants close
to economic
opportunities. The respondent objects to the Municipality's
characterisation of the case. The respondent refers
to the
Municipality's goal - removing the tenants from their homes - to
contend that the case is about housing rights. Three of
the tenants
were granted leave to intervene. The property has been their home
since 2014.
[3]
The
tenants' position is that they will have nowhere else to go if forced
to leave.
[4]
They also
frame the case as one that concerns the right to housing.
[4]
Essentially, the parties differ on whether section 26 of the
Constitution is engaged.
[5]
The case
evolved during the hearing of the matter. The Municipality's notice
of motion prays for an interdict combined with enforcement
prayers.
[5]
The interdict is to
restrain the respondent from using or permitting the use of the
property as a boarding house. The enforcement
prayers,
[6]
if granted, would authorise the Sheriff to remove the tenants' goods
from the property and order the respondent to "rehabilitate"
the property. The enforcement orders would, in concrete terms, mean
the Sheriff arrives at the property and removes the tenants'
beds,
pillows and clothes so that the tenants can no longer live in the
rooms.
[6]
I consider
the relief initially sought by the Municipality, an interdict
combined with these enforcement orders, through the lens
of the
Constitutional Court judgments of
Zulu
and Others v eThekwini Municipality and Others
("
Zulu")
[7]
and
Motswagae
v Rustenburg Local Municipality
("Motswagae").
[8]
[7]
In
Zulu
,
the eThekwini Municipality obtained an interdict ostensibly aimed at
preventing land invasions. The eThekwini Municipality contended
that
the interdict was intended only to prevent invasions and not to
prevent the existing occupiers of the land from occupying
their
homes. The essence of the Court's finding is that even if crafted as
an interdict, if the effect of the interdict is to prevent
people
from occupying their homes, then it is an eviction order.
[9]
[8]
In
Motswagae
[10]
a Municipality engaged in construction works next to the Motswagae
family's home. The construction exposed the foundations of their
home. The Constitutional Court held that the construction works
attenuated an incident of occupation and, therefore, amounted to
an
eviction. The Court affirmed that an eviction does not consist solely
of the expulsion of someone from their home.
[9]
These two Constitutional Court judgments conclude that orders and
actions which effectively
infringe on the incidents of occupation
amount to evictions, regardless of the garb in which they are
dressed.
[10]
These
principles in
Zulu
and
Motswagae
have
been applied in the context of zoning disputes. In
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v K2016498847 (Pty) Ltd
("
K2016")
[11]
the Court faced a similar application to what served before this
Court. The Court in
K2016
concluded that although the relief sought does not explicitly
authorise eviction, "the conduct it does authorise amounts to
the same thing".
[12]
[11]
In
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Sibanda
("
Sibanda")
[13]
the notice of motion was identical to the one I have to consider.
[14]
The Court adopted the approach in
K2016
and held that the order sought was, in effect, an eviction order and
would "obviously" impact the tenants’ right
to
housing under section 26(3) of the Constitution.
[15]
The Court also held that an order to "rehabilitate" the
property impacts section 26(3) of the Constitution.
[16]
[12]
Counsel for
the Municipality has favoured the Court with two judgments that
follow different reasoning. In
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Nkosi
[17]
and
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Erasmus
[18]
the Court did not find that enforcing similar zoning provisions would
result in an eviction. I have considered these judgments.
In neither
of these cases was the Court favoured with the relevant case law of
Zulu
or
Motswagae
.
Consequently, the Courts did not consider the impact of the
principles in these judgments. I distinguish the case before me,
where these cases and principles have been placed front and centre,
from these two judgments.
[13]
Bound by
the principles in
Zulu
and
Motswagae
and convinced of the accurate application of these principles in
K2016
and
Sibanda,
the
inescapable conclusion is that the relief, as set out in the notice
of motion, amounts to an eviction order. It is impermissible
to grant
an eviction order in these circumstances, least of all, as the
tenants have not all been cited.
[19]
[14]
At the
hearing of the matter, after being presented with the judgments in
Sibanda
and
K2016
,
Mr Mtembu for the Municipality abandoned the enforcement prayers
[20]
and persisted only with prayers 1 - 3 (being the interdict). The
abandonment of the enforcement prayers permitted Mr Mtembu to
make
the nuanced argument that the case before the Court was not an
eviction application but purely an interdict against the respondent.
The Municipality contends the "compliance of the order is a
different process" and the Court need not concern itself
with
the compliance of its order. The core of the submission is that the
Court need only consider granting an interdict; after
that, if the
tenants refuse to vacate upon instructions by the respondent, it is
only then that a respondent must bring an eviction
application. The
Municipality contends that if the respondent does not comply, he can
be held in contempt of Court.
[21]
[15]
Mr Mtembu
distinguishes this case from
K2016
and
Sibanda
because both these judgments weighed and considered the enforcement
of the interdict to be central to the finding of an eviction.
Mr
Mtembu is correct that in
K2016
and
Sibanda
,
the courts attached weight to the fact that the Sheriff was empowered
to take all necessary steps to give effect to the order.
[22]
[16]
Counsel for the respondent, Mr Kruger, contends that even with the
abandonment of the enforcement parts of
the relief, the relief sought
remains an eviction order. Mr Kruger contended that the remaining
relief seeks to compel and interdict
the respondent from permitting
the property’s use contrary to its residential zoning, and to
stop the respondent from using
the property as a boarding house. The
effect of these orders, argues Mr Kruger, is to place a duty on the
respondent to prevent
the use of the property as a boarding house. It
requires the respondent to take action against the tenants by
preventing them from
living in their homes. The respondent would be
obliged to prevent the occupiers from continued residence in their
homes. Mr Kruger
argues that, at the very least, such orders will
attenuate and obliterate the occupiers' incidents of occupation.
[17]
The
respondent argues that the intention is not only to enforce the
Scheme but also to cause the eviction of the occupiers. Contending
that the order remains an eviction, the respondent relies on settled
eviction law which requires a court to consider all relevant
circumstances
[23]
and contends
the Court does not have this information and therefore cannot grant
the relief as granting an eviction without considering
all relevant
circumstances would be an arbitrary eviction.
[24]
[18]
Whilst the abandonment of the "enforcement" aspect of the
relief impacts on its practical implementation,
it does not change
the ultimate goal of the relief. The order which this Court grants
will force the respondent to evict the tenants.
The Municipality
states expressly that this is what they intend the order to set in
motion. The Municipality's abandonment of the
enforcement parts of
the relief does not leave a benign order in place. Even without the
teeth of the enforcement elements, the
impact of the relief sought is
that the tenancy of an unknown number of people will be changed from
secure to unlawful. It
seems artificial to separate an order
from its enforcement. However, to address the matter at a principled
level, I will assume
this distinction is sound and consider Mr
Mtembu's argument that the relief persisted with on the day of the
hearing is not for
an eviction order but rather for an order to
compel an eviction.
[19]
Compelling
a landlord to evict occupiers has received the attention of the
Constitutional Court in
Abahlali
Basemjondolo Movement SA and Another v Premier of the Province of
Kwazulu-Natal and Others ("Abahlali")
.
[25]
In
Abahlali
,
the occupiers of informal settlements challenged the
constitutionality of section 16 of the Slums Act.
[26]
The Slums Act's aim was to eliminate slums and prevent their
re-emergence.
[27]
The
occupiers challenged section 16 of the Slums Act as it made it
compulsory for municipalities to institute proceedings for eviction
of unlawful occupiers where the owner or person in charge of the land
fails to do so within the period prescribed by the MEC through
a
notice.
[20]
In
Abahlali
,
the Constitutional Court held that compelling a landlord to evict
occupiers breaches section 26(2) of the Constitution. The Court
declared the Slums Act at odds with section 26(2) of the Constitution
because it requires an owner or municipality to evict unlawful
occupiers even when they cannot comply with the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, 19 of
1998 (“PIE
Act”)
[28]
[21]
The Court
held that to the extent that section 16 of the Slums Act eliminates
discretion on the part of the owner or municipality,
it erodes and
considerably undermines the protections against the arbitrary
institution of eviction proceedings.
[29]
Aside from the issue of discretion, the Court found the Slums Act in
dissonance with the existing housing framework, which requires
that
an eviction should only be a matter of last resort. Provisions of the
National Housing Act
[30]
and
of the National Housing Code
[31]
stipulate that unlawful occupiers must be ejected from their homes
only as a last resort. On this basis, the Court held that the
Slums
Act conflicts with the National Housing Act and the National Housing
Code.
[32]
The Court also
held that the Slums Act was problematic as it ignored the requirement
of meaningful engagement before eviction.
[22]
The Court
acknowledged that the aim of the Slums Act is salutary.
[33]
However, the Court held that the compulsory nature of the Slums Act
disturbs the carefully established legal framework by
introducing the
coercive institution of eviction proceedings in disregard the
protections in the housing framework.
[34]
The Court's main criticism of the section was that it obliges owners
and municipalities to ask a court to eject unlawful
occupiers even if
they are certain that it may not be just and equitable or in the
public interest to do so.
[35]
I find the relief the Municipality asks me to grant in this matter,
for similar reasons, breaches section 26(2) of the Constitution.
[23]
The Municipality is asking this Court to compel an eviction
application. Coercing an eviction application
in these
circumstances suffers from the same constitutional defects as section
16 of the Slums Act. An order to compel an
owner to evict
tenants would mean eviction is no longer a matter of last resort.
Such an order would undermine the National Housing
Code and Act.
The carefully crafted protections in the housing jurisprudence and
its framework would be eroded and the owner
would be compelled to
institute eviction proceedings, regardless of whether it would be
just and equitable.
[24]
The
mechanism the Municipality asks this Court to set in motion is
irrational, overbroad and invasive of the protections against
arbitrary evictions to be found in section 26(2) of the
Constitution.
[36]
[25]
The Court
acknowledges that the Municipality is seeking to ensure coordinated
and harmonious township development.
[37]
The aim is to be saluted. However, the Constitutional Court, whilst
similarly applauding the aim of the Slums Act, still concluded
that
compelling an eviction was not constitutionally compliant.
[26]
The principled reasoning of the Constitutional Court finds practical
application in this matter. It
is common cause, on the facts
before me, that an eviction is not sought as a matter of last
resort. To the contrary, there
is currently a pending
application to rezone the property. There appears to be a hold-up in
finalising the application. Regardless,
at present, such an
application is pending. The tenants’ eviction is not considered
a matter of last resort; it is sought
to be compelled by the Court
where there is another avenue currently available to the parties to
prevent the unlawful use of the
property.
[27]
I have considered that
Abahlali
dealt with a statutory
provision, and in this case, the Municipality relies on the common
law of interdict to give effect to a
statutory provision.
However, I cannot conclude that the principles enunciated by
the Constitutional Court apply only
in relation to the Slums Act and
not the Municipality's reliance on its Scheme. Such a distinction
would be artificial. Here,
the Municipality seeks to use its
statutory powers under the Scheme to force an owner to launch
eviction proceedings. In
Abahlali
, similarly, a statutory
scheme in the form of the Slums Act was employed to compel eviction
proceedings. It is the compulsory nature
of the Slums Act which the
Constitutional Court found constitutionally offensive. The reasons
provided by the Constitutional Court
for concluding that compelling
an owner to evict occupiers applies equally in this case. This
Court cannot grant relief which
the Constitutional Court has found to
be at odds with the housing jurisprudence.
[28]
The Municipality asserts that it has a clear right. Premised on the
reasoning of the Constitutional Court
in
Abahlali
, I find that
the Municipality does not have such a clear right.
Meaningful
engagement
[29]
The
Municipality needs to meaningfully engage with the tenants. The
Municipality has outright rejected the obligation. It has not
even
cited, let alone notified the tenants of these proceedings.
The Municipality's position is at odds with long-standing
housing
jurisprudence, commencing in 2008 with
Occupiers
Olivia Road.
[38]
[30]
The Constitutional Court, in
Occupiers Olivia Road
, dealt with
the City of Johannesburg issuing a notice to vacate to occupiers of a
dangerous building. The clear right was the City's
right to take
action against unsafe buildings in terms of the National Building
Regulations. It was not an eviction application;
the relief sought
was an interdict.
[31]
The
Constitutional Court, even in the context of an interdict, required
the City to meaningfully engage with the occupiers. The
Court located
the source of the duty to meaningfully engage directly from the right
to human dignity.
[39]
The
Court finds that an interdict that ejects people from their homes
without first meaningfully engaging with them acts in a manner
that
is broadly at odds with the spirit and purpose of the Municipality's
constitutional obligations.
[40]
[32]
In
Occupiers
Olivia
Road
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that section 26 (3) meant no more
than that a court was bound to give effect to such a notice
by means
of an interdict restraining the occupation of the property. The
"relevant circumstances" to be considered were
whether the
building in question was deemed dangerous, a notice to vacate had
been issued, and the notice had not been complied
with.
[41]
[33]
I note the
similarities between the contention by Mr Mthembu for the
Municipality before me and the reasoning of the Supreme Court
of
Appeal. They both contend for a narrow consideration of the
requirements of the statutory provision at play, in
Occupiers
Olivia Road
that was the Building Regulations and in this case it is the Scheme.
However, the Constitutional Court disagreed
[42]
with the approach of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[34]
The
Constitutional Court held that, at the very least, it was relevant to
the application that the local authority had not considered
whether
the enforcement of the notice declaring a property to be a dangerous
building might render those living on the property
homeless. If the
enforcement of the notice would lead to homelessness, the local
authority had a duty to engage with the occupiers
to consider whether
and what form of alternative accommodation might be appropriate to
provide. Only once the local authority had
made a real effort to
engage meaningfully with those affected by its decision to enforce
the notice to vacate could it ask a court
to issue an order giving
effect to the notice. In its application, the local authority would
have to provide a complete and accurate
account of its efforts to
engage with the affected individuals, set out what alternative
accommodation, if any, it would provide
to them, and justify both its
engagement strategy and its decisions on how to respond to any
expressed need for alternative accommodation.
[43]
[35]
In
K2016
the Court emphasised the basis on which the Constitutional Court
overturned the Supreme Court of Appeal. The Court concluded that
a
clear right to an interdict could only be shown if there are facts
indicative of the City having meaningfully engaged with the
occupiers
and having offered alternative accommodation where reasonably
needed.
[44]
In
K2016,
the
Court held -
"I
see no principled reason why the requirements the Constitutional
Court has imposed on local authorities seeking to evacuate
dangerous
buildings in terms of the Building Standards Act should not be
extended to local authorities who seek to enforce compliance
with a
Land Use Scheme through an interdict that is to be implemented
through an eviction. It follows that in seeking relief to
give effect
to its Land Use Scheme by removing people who reside on the property
in breach of that Scheme from their homes, the
City is required to
demonstrate that it has engaged meaningfully with each of the
affected individuals and that it will provide
alternative
accommodation to those individuals where it is reasonable to do so.
In my view, it is reasonable to provide alternative
accommodation
where an occupier would be left homeless without it.
To
put it another way, I hold that the City cannot demonstrate a clear
right to an interdict which enforces its Land Use Scheme
through an
eviction unless it has shown that it has meaningfully engaged the
occupiers of the property in question and offered
to provide
alternative accommodation where it is reasonably needed.
[45]
[36]
I am persuaded by the reasoning in
K2016
and bound by the
principles enunciated by the Constitutional Court in
Occupiers
Olivia Road
.
[37]
The
Municipality, before this Court, argued that
Occupiers
Olivia
Road
is
distinguishable as it was "not an interdict application but a
plain eviction application against the unlawful occupiers
of the
dangerous building".
[46]
Occupiers
Olivia
Road
was not launched as an eviction application but was, similar to this
case: a Municipality seeking to enforce a statutory right
regarding
the use of buildings. The basis on which the Municipality seeks to
distinguish the matter, before this Court, is not
borne out by the
authority.
[38]
Before me,
the Municipality further contended that it need not meaningfully
engage as the obligation only arises when the occupiers
are poor
[47]
and as this is not a "case of destitution", the
Municipality's obligations are not triggered.
[48]
In this case, it is common cause that the three intervening
respondents will be rendered homeless if evicted. The intervening
respondents have told the Court in no uncertain terms that if
evicted, they will be rendered homeless and have no alternative
accommodation.
[49]
Similarly, the respondent stated that the tenants -
"will
have to be ejected. They have no other place to stay than the
property, and the authorities will no doubt not be able
to provide
alternative accommodation."
[50]
[39]
The
Municipality has not disputed that if evicted, the intervening
applicants face homelessness. In addition, the respondent has
alleged
that the relevant authorities have made no provision for any
alternative housing for the tenants of the property.
[51]
Again, the Municipality has not disputed this allegation. It is
common cause, before the Court that three of the tenants
- and
possibly many more - face homelessness if evicted.
[40]
The Municipality is blinded by the allegation that the tenants are
paying rent. This means they are in a
lawful occupation. It does not
mean they are not poor or destitute, and it certainly does not
absolve the Municipality of its obligations.
One of the tenants is
unemployed, and one is a porter. They cannot be typified as
pecunious. All say they will be homeless if they
cannot live on the
property.
[41]
The duty to
meaningfully engage applies regardless of whether PIE
[52]
applies or not. As can be seen from the reasoning in
Occupiers
Olivia
Road
above, the duty is sourced from the right to dignity and section 26
of the Constitution. The Municipality's duty to meaningfully
engage
in this context must be seen through what the Constitution has called
its "higher duty to respect the law".
[53]
The Municipality, as an organ of state, is the Constitution's primary
agent, it must do right, and it must do it properly.
[54]
It remains open to the Municipality to bring a fresh application,
having made out a case for meaningful engagement and for
the joinder
of the remaining tenants.
[42]
The issue of costs requires consideration. It weighs with the Court
that the Municipality approached the
Court seeking to enforce a
statutory right, with two judgments in its favour,
Nkosi
and
Erasmus
. I also consider that the Municipality has raised a
different argument to that which served before the courts in
Sibanda
and
K2016
. However, the respondents have asserted a
constitutional right to housing. This, on its own, would be
sufficient for them to be
entitled to their costs in the absence of
any allegations of their defence being frivolous or vexatious. The
position is strengthened
when the Court considers that not only are
the respondents asserting fundamental rights, but they have done so
in a manner in which
they have been largely successful. Added to this
is that the Municipality abandoned most of its prayers on the day of
the hearing
after the respondents had spent costs defending against
these prayers. All of these considerations indicate that the
respondents,
inclusive of the intervening respondents, are entitled
to their costs.
Order
[43]
As a result, the following order is granted:
a)
The application is dismissed.
b)
The applicant is to pay the respondents' costs, including the costs
of the intervening respondents.
____________________________
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
MA Mtembu
Instructed
by:
Mabunda Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent:
NS Kruger
Instructed
by:
Schoeman, Van der Heever & Slabbert Inc
Counsel
for the Intervening Respondents
JC Viljoen
Date
of the hearing:
9 May 2023
(final submissions on 23
June 2023)
Date
of judgment:
31 July 2023
[1]
The
number of tenants is unknown.
[2]
On
25 September 2019, a new Spatial Planning and Land Use Management
Act was adopted.
[3]
Intervening
Respondents' Affidavit at para 14 (CL18-9).
[4]
Intervening
R
espondents'
Affidavit
para 34 (CL053 - 237).
[5]
The
Notice of Motion reads -
"1.
Ordering the Respondent to forthwith cease to use Erf 32 Kempton
Park, IR Gauteng, for purposes which are not permitted
under the
zoning of "Residential 1", such as, for example, inter
alia, using the property for boarding house and rooms
purposes."
2.
Restraining and interdicting the respondent from permitting the use
of the property, through or by another person or persons,
for the
purposes which are not permitted under the zoning of "Residential
1", for inter alia, boarding house and rooms
business which is
being operated in the property for as long as such use is prohibited
on the property.....
3.
Restraining and interdicting the respondent from using or permitting
the use of the property for any other purpose than the
use as
permitted and prescribed in terms of the zoning "Residential 1"
in terms of the Scheme.
4.
Ordering the Respondent to forthwith remove from the property all
items which relate to the use of the property for the purpose
of
boarding house and rooms business or similar activities for so long
as the property remains zoned as "Residential 1".
5.
Ordering the Respondent to stop using the property as a boarding
house and rooms business for so long as the property remains
zoned
"Residential 1".
6.
Ordering the Respondent to forthwith rehabilitate the property to
conform to the zoning "Residential 1" in terms
of the
Scheme.
7.
That should the respondent fail to comply with orders 1 to 6 above
within 30 days after the date of service of this order,
property and
then, in such event:
7.1
The Sheriff of the above honourable Court is authorised and directed
to take all necessary steps for purposes for giving effect
to 4, 5
and 6 above; in particular, the Sheriff is authorised to seize and
take into custody all movables found at the property
which are used
in relation to the use of the property for purposes other than
permitted under the zoning "Residential 1"
such as inter
alia of using the property for boarding house and rooms business,
and to keep such movables in his possession pending
compliance with
7.2 hereunder; and
7.2
The respondent shall be liable for payment of the Sheriff's
reasonable fees and disbursements, including storage costs, incurred
for purposes of 7. above, which sums shall become due, owing and
payable on demand, supported, in so far as necessary, by vouchers
8. Ordering the
respondent to pay the applicant's costs of this application."
[6]
The enforcement prayers required -
a)
the respondent to remove from the property "all items which
relate to the use of the property for the
purpose of boarding house
and rooms business".
b)
The respondent to rehabilitate the property from a boarding house to
a residential house.
c)
If the respondent did not remove the items and rehabilitate
the property, then the Sheriff was authorised to remove all movables
found at the property "which are used in relation to the use of
the property for purposes other than permitted under the
zoning
'Residential 1'" such as "using the property for boarding
house and rooms business, and to keep such movables
in his
possession".
[7]
2014 (4) SA 590 (CC); 2014 (8) BCLR 971 (CC).
[8]
2013 (2) SA 613
(CC).
[9]
Zulu
(above) para 26.
[10]
Motswagae
(above) para 12.
[11]
2022 (3) SA 497 (GJ).
[12]
K2016 (above) at paras 14 and 16. The Court weighed that the relief
sought would restrain the landlord from letting out the property
and
directed to comply with the Scheme prohibiting the occupiers from
making their homes at the property. The Sheriff was empowered
to
"take all necessary steps" to enforce these orders in the
event of non-compliance. In doing so, the Sheriff could
seize the
occupiers' possessions if the order is not complied with within 15
days. The Court concluded that there could accordingly
"be
little real doubt about what the order sought is meant to achieve".
The
Court held that the structure of the relief the City sought was the
same as that sought in
Zulu
,
although the words used and the individuals involved differed. The
Court considered that the City sought relief restraining
the
landlord from using the property as an 'accommodation establishment'
and directing the Sheriff to do what was necessary to
achieve that
result. The Court held this "plainly encompasses the eviction
of the occupiers."
[13]
(26108/17)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 286 (3 May 2022).
[14]
Sibanda
(above) para 28.
[15]
Id
at para 27.
[16]
Id
at para 27.
[17]
(13191/17)
[2019]ZAGPJHC 238 (4 June 2019 per Bokaba AJ).
[18]
(2017/6617) [2017] ZAGPJHC 393 (12 December 2017).
[19]
One of the orders sought was for the Sheriff to seize the tenant's
property. Such an order would amount to an arbitrary deprivation
of
property. See K2016 (above) at paras 11 - 12.
[20]
The
Municipality persisted only with prayers 1 - 3.
[21]
Municipality's
supplementary heads of argument para 16 (CL020-100).
[22]
Sibanda
(above) para 31; D2016 (above) para 14.
[23]
Berea (above) 46.
[24]
Berea
(above).
[25]
2010 (2) BCLR 99 (CC).
[26]
Abahlali
(above) para 91.
[27]
Id
at para 99.
[28]
Id
at para 111.
[29]
Abahlali
(above) para 112.
[30]
107
of
1997.
Section
2(1)(b)
of
the
Housing
Act provides
:
“
National,
provincial and local spheres of government must—
. . .
(b) consult meaningfully
with individuals and communities affected by housing development”.
[31]
Chapter 13 of the National Housing Code provides that municipalities
"must demonstrate that effective interactive community
participation has taken place in the planning, implementation and
evaluation of the project" at 9. It also provides that
"[w]here
possible, relocations should be undertaken in a voluntary and
negotiated manner. Mechanisms to ensure that the
land is not
re-occupied must be identified during this process. Legal processes
should only be initiated as a last resort, and
all eviction-based
relocations must be undertaken under the authority of a court order"
at 20.
[32]
Abahlali
(above) para 113.
[33]
Id
at para 121.
[34]
Id
at para 122.
[35]
Id
at para 109.
[36]
See
reasoning in Abahlali (above) para 118.
[37]
Johannesburg
City Council v Bernard Lewis Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1991] 3 All SA 334
(W) at p 338.
[38]
Occupiers
of 51 Olivia Road, Berea Township and 197 Main Street Johannesburg
2008 (3) SA 208 (CC).
[39]
Olivia
Road (above) para 16.
[40]
Olivia
Road (above) para 18.
In
Olivia Road, the Court also acknowledged that the City had a duty to
engage people who may be rendered homeless after an ejectment.
The
duty is grounded in section 26(2) of the Constitution. Section 26(2)
mandates that the response from any municipality to
potentially
homeless people with whom it engages must also be reasonable (see
para 17).
[41]
City
of Johannesburg v Rand Properties
2007
(6) SA 417
(SCA) para 41.
[42]
K2016
(above) at para 23.
[43]
Olivia Road (above) paras 9 to 22.
[44]
K2016 (above) at paras 23 and 325. This was followed in Sibanda
(above) at paras 34 and 35.
[45]
D2016 (above) paras 22 - 24.
[46]
Municipality's
supplementary heads of argument para 24.7 (CL020-104).
[47]
Reliance was placed on Premier Eastern Cape v Mtshelakana 2011 (5)
SA 640 (ECM).
[48]
Municipality's
supplementary heads of argument para 25 (CL020-105).
[49]
CL20-34 para 5.6.
[50]
CL
10-26 para 17.1.
[51]
Answering
affidavit para 3.1
.
[52]
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land
Act, 19 of 1998 (“PIE Act”)
.
The Court in
D2016
left open the question of whether PIE applies in these
circumstances. The Court remarked obiter that PIE might not apply as
PIE requires occupation without the owner's consent. In this case,
the tenants live on the property with the owner's consent.
The
Municipality, therefore, argued that PIE would not apply. However,
such consent would be illegal and unlawful as it offends
against
statutory prescriptions. In such circumstances, illegal consent is
no consent. The Municipality's contention of not having
standing in
terms of the PIE Act based on consent is rejected.
[53]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
2019
(4) SA 331
(CC) at para 60.
[54]
Id.
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