Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1145South Africa
Unlawful Occupiers Occupying 20 Op De Bergen Street, Fairview Johannesburg v Emikon Auctioneering Services and Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (12423/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1145 (4 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 October 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Unlawful Occupiers Occupying 20 Op De Bergen Street, Fairview Johannesburg v Emikon Auctioneering Services and Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (12423/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1145 (4 October 2023)
Unlawful Occupiers Occupying 20 Op De Bergen Street, Fairview Johannesburg v Emikon Auctioneering Services and Import and Export (Pty) Ltd and Another (12423/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1145 (4 October 2023)
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sino date 4 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:
12423/2021
In the matter between:
THE
UNLAWFULL OCCUPIERS OCCUPYING
20 OP DE BERGEN
STREET, FAIRVIEW
JOHANNESBURG
First
Applicant
And
EMIKON
AUCTIONEERING SERVICES AND IMPORT AND EXPORT (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT ON
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
MAKUME, J
:
[1] This is an
application for leave to appeal the judgement that I granted against
the Applicants on the 18
th
July 2023.
[2] The application
before me then was one of rescission of an eviction order that had
been granted by Senyatsi J on the 19
th
July 2021. In
my judgement I ordered the Applicants to vacate the premises situated
at 20 Op De Bergen Street, Fairview,
Johannesburg by not later than
the 30
th
July 2023.
[3] On the 14
th
July 2023 the Applicants filed this notice of application for leave
to appeal that judgement and order and have set out grounds
of appeal
as amplified on the 31
st
July 2023.
[4] Briefly the grounds
can be summarised under the following headings
4.1 That the Court erred
in not rescinding the judgment granted by Senyatsi J on the 19
th
July 2021.
4.2 That the Court erred
in not staying eviction of the Applicants pending the process of
providing alternative accommodation to
the Applicants by the second
Respondent.
4.3 That this Court erred
in not taking into consideration the risk of homelessness should the
eviction follow.
4.4 That this Court
misconstrued and failed to consider properly the decision of the High
Court and Supreme Court of Appeal in
First National Bank of South
Africa vs Van Rensburg N.O.
1994 (1) SA 677
T; City of Johannesburg v
Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA); The
Occupiers of Erven 87 and 88 Berea v Christian Frederick De Wet N.O.
201
7 (5) Sa 346
(CC); Port Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC); City of Johannesburg v Blue Moonlight
Properties
2012 (2) SA 104
(CC).
4.5 That this Court erred
in ignoring its Judicial oversight to determine whether it will be
just and equitable to enforce an eviction.
[5] As is custom the
starting point in deciding an application for Leave to Appeal is the
provisions of Section 17(1) of the Superior
Courts Act number 10 of
2013 which provides as follows:
“
Leave
to Appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are
of the opinion that-
(a)
…
(i)
the appeal would have
reasonable prospects of success or
(ii)
there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.”
[6] The application
before me was that this Court rescind a judgement granted against
them by default in their absence. Prior
to me hearing that
application they the Applicants had failed in their bid to stay an
eviction order pending the outcome of the
rescission application.
[7] It is trite law that
an order of the High Court can only be set aside under Rule 42, Rule
31(2) (b) on appeal or in terms of
the Common Law. In all
instances the requirements set out in those statutes or Common Law
must be proved by the Applicants.
[8] In their application
to rescind the Applicants denied that the Notice of Motion as well as
all subsequent documents that led
to the judgement by Senyatsi J had
been served on them. They say that the persons on whom the
Court documents were served
are unknown and do not live at the
premises and lastly that such persons had no authority to accept
documents on their behalf.
The Deponent to the Applicant’s
affidavit does not say who of the Unlawful Occupiers has the
authority to accept receipt
of legal documents on behalf of the whole
group.
[9] This matter has a
long and chequered history which commenced in December 2009 when
Mokgoatlheng J in Case number 01223/2008
granted an order in an
application by Onla Investments in the following terms:
“
(a) The City of
Johannesburg was joined as the fourth Respondent. The first,
second and third Respondents being:
-
Mkhwanazi Maria - First
Respondent
-
Mdebele Abe - Second
Respondent
-
The Unlawful Occupiers
Of Erf 221 Fairview
Township - Third
Respondent
(b)
The City being the fourth
Respondent was directed to report to the Court within four weeks on
what steps it has taken and in future
can take to provide emergency
shelter or other housing for the first, second and third Respondents
in the event of their eviction.
(c)
The Applicants, first,
second and third Respondents may within two weeks of the delivery of
such report file an affidavit dealing
with the report.”
[10] On the 27
th
November 2013 some four years later Yacoob AJ as she then was granted
the following order in that matter:
(a)
Declaring that the fourth
Respondent (the City) is Constitutionally and statutorily obliged
within its available resources to provide
temporary accommodation to
those of the first, second and third Respondents (the Occupiers) who
would be rendered homeless in the
event of this Court ordering their
eviction from Erf 221 Fairview Township, Johannesburg (the property).
(b)
The City is directed
forthwith to engage meaningfully with the occupiers on the following
issues:
-
The particulars of the
occupiers and their housing situation including details as to the
number of occupiers that would be rendered
homeless if the eviction
order were to be carried out and the needs of the children, elderly
and disabled persons and homelessness
headed by women who would be
affected by the eviction.
-
What steps can be taken to
provide the occupiers with suitable alternative accommodation
including temporary emergency accommodation
in the event that the
Applicants are granted an eviction order.
-
When alternative land or
accommodation can be provided.
-
The effects of an eviction
on occupiers and the surrounding residents if the eviction order is
executed without alternative accommodation
being made available.
-
The steps that can be
taken to alleviate the effects of the occupants of the property in
question on the Applicant if the date of
eviction is postponed until
after alternative accommodation is made available to those occupiers
who will be rendered homeless
by the eviction.
-
City is directed within 30
days of the date of this order to file at Court and serve on the
attorneys to the Applicant and the occupiers
a report under oath
setting out the outcome of the engagement process and the steps that
will be taken to provide the occupiers
with suitable alternative
accommodation.
-
The Applicant and the
occupiers may within two weeks of receiving the report referred to
above (3) deliver a commentary on the city’s
response.
-
The Applicants eviction
application (the main application) is stayed pending the outcome of
the process set out above.
-
The main application to be
enrolled by the Registrar in consultation with the presiding judge
for the consideration of the City’s
report and the replies
thereto of the Applicant and the Occupiers and the determination of
such further relief as may be appropriate.
[11] There is a
dearth of information on the papers as to what happened or what steps
were taken by either the Applicants
or the Respondents after the
order that was granted by Yacoob AJ in the year 2013 save to say that
Miss Mkhwanazi who was the first
Respondent in that case says in her
affidavit filed in the rescission application said that in June 2021
a certain Emmanuel told
her or them (the occupiers) that he has
purchased the property and that they must vacate. Ms Mkhwanazi
then tells the Court
that a meeting was arranged between Emmanuel and
their lawyers and at that meeting Emmanuel fled when he saw the
gathering of the
unlawful occupiers. It must be recalled that
by June 2021 the Application for Eviction had already been issued and
served
on one lady who lived on the property.
[12] It is common
cause that I dismissed the application to rescind the judgement of
Senyatsi J on the basis that the Respondents
were aware of the
judgement against them as far back as August 2021 amongst others.
A number of events took place before
my judgement and thereafter
leading to this application for leave to appeal they were as follows:
12.1 On the 7
th
June 2023 the Sheriff carried out the eviction order and all unlawful
occupiers were evicted from the property.
12.2 On the 8
th
June 2023 the Applicants launched an urgent application
seeking an order on an
interim basis preventing the owner from evicting them. This was
done despite the fact that eviction
had already taken place. It
is also common cause that when the Applicants launched that urgent
application they had moved
back into the property in defiance of a
Court order. The Urgent application was struck off the roll due
to lack of urgency.
12.3 In that judgement
Shepstone AJ found that the warrant of ejectment authorised by
Senyatsi J had been executed. The learned
Judge also made a
finding that the Applicants did not seek an order setting aside the
warrant of eviction on any factual basis
on in law and that in actual
fact the warrant had been executed.
[13] It was after
the dismissal of the Applicants application before Shepstone AJ that
a third Urgent application was set
in motion and set down for hearing
before me on the 27
th
June 2023. It is the judgement
in that application that the Applicants seek to appeal.
However, in the meantime whilst
awaiting a hearing of the Application
for Leave to Appeal the Applicant once more approached the urgent
court and on the 21
st
September 2023 before Moosa J an
order was granted in which the first Respondent consented not to
unlawfully evict the Applicants
pending the outcome of the appeal
process.
[14] It is against
that background that I now deal with this application for leave to
appeal. Section 17(1) of the Superior
Court Act 10 of 2013 enjoins
this Court to grant leave if I am of the opinion that here are
prospects of success or there is some
other compelling reason why the
appeal should be heard.
[15] The Applicants
concede in paragraph 18.1 of their heads that an order had been
granted in their favour during the years
2009 and 2013 directing the
Municipality to engage meaningfully with the Applicants in order to
facilitate their moving out of
the property. The Applicants have been
sitting idle on that order took no steps to enforce it much to the
detriment and prejudice
of the owner of the property.
[16] The order
granted in 2009 and 2013 did not grant the Applicants permanent stay
it was temporary accommodation at the
expense of the Respondent.
[17] As I have
indicated Section 17(1) besides dealing with prospects of success
also enjoins this Court to give consideration
to whether there are
any other compelling reasons why this Appeal should be heard. I
have now come to the conclusion that
there are compelling reasons why
I should grant leave to appeal.
[18] The facts
leading up to the judgement by Senyatsi J are almost identical to the
facts in Blue Moonlight as well in City
of Johannesburg vs Changing
Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd. In both matters eviction order had been
granted by default. The Constitutional
Court in both matters
emphasised on the need for a Court granting an eviction order to have
regard to homelessness and whether
it will be just and equitable.
[19] In this matter
the City of Johannesburg was directed to do certain things in order
to bring evidence before this Court
to enable that Court to make a
determination as to what will be just and equitable in carrying out
the eviction order.
[20] It is
regrettable that the previous order made in 2013 which still stands
has not been given effect to and on that basis
I deem it fair that
leave to appeal be granted with the hope that the Applicants together
with the City of Johannesburg will see
to it that the necessary
information is made available to this Court.
[21] In the result
I make the following order:
ORDER
1
The
Application for Leave to Appeal the judgement dated the 18
th
July 2023 is granted.
2
The
Appeal shall be heard by the Full Bench of this Division.
3
The
costs of this application shall be costs in the Appeal.
Dated at Johannesburg on
this
day of October 2023
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF HEARING : 29
SEPTEMBER 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT : 04
OCTOBER 2023
FOR APPLICANT :
ADV L MTSHIYO
INSTRUCTED BY :
SERI LAW CLINIC
FOR RESPONDENT :
ADV L MHLANGA
INSTRUCTED BY :
NWANEZI AGBUGBA ATTORNEYS
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