Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 34South Africa
Hohl N.O. and Others v Dalcos and Others (38224/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 34 (11 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 February 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE Act) – relationship with Extension of Security of Tenure of Land Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) – ‘occupier’ as defined in ESTA – evidentiary burden on evictee to demonstrate that he is such ‘occupier’ –
Judgment
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## Hohl N.O. and Others v Dalcos and Others (38224/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 34 (11 February 2022)
Hohl N.O. and Others v Dalcos and Others (38224/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 34 (11 February 2022)
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sino date 11 February 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
38224/2020
DATE
:
11
th
February 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
HOHL
,
RICHARD WERNER N O
First Applicant
HOHL
,
BIRGIT
Second Applicant
HOHL
,
UWE
Third Applicant
and
DALCOS
,
CHRISTOPHER
JOHN
First Respondent
DALCOS
,
MARCO
Second Respondent
THE OTHER OCCUPIERS OF
PORTION 34 OF
FARM NUMBER 495,
RHENOSTERSPRUIT,
REGISTRATION
DIVISION JQ, GAUTENG PROVINCE
Third
Respondent
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Adams
J
Heard
: 22
November 2021 – The matter was disposed of without an oral
hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
11
February 2022 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 11:00 on 11 February 2022.
Summary:
Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of
Land Act 19 of 1998 (PIE Act) – relationship with Extension of
Security
of Tenure of Land Act 62 of 1997 (ESTA) – ‘occupier’
as defined in ESTA – evidentiary burden on evictee
to
demonstrate that he is such ‘occupier’ –
Application
for eviction under PIE – onus on applicant to establish that
evictee is an unlawful occupier –– unlawful
occupation –
under an oral lease – termination – right of occupation
terminated – just and equitable to
grant an eviction order –
eviction order granted
ORDER
(1)
The first and third respondents are granted leave to file their
‘supplementary
answering affidavit’ dated 27 July 2021,
and the said affidavit is received and accepted by the court.
(2)
The first, second and third applicants are granted leave to file
their
‘supplementary replying affidavit’ dated 13 August
2021, and the said affidavit is received and accepted by the court.
(3)
The costs of both the applications for leave to file further
affidavits
shall be in the course of this, the main application.
(4)
The first and third respondents and all other persons occupying
through
or under them the applicants’ property, being
Portion
34 of Farm number 495, Rhenosterspruit, Registration Division JQ,
Gauteng Province (‘the property’)
, be and are
hereby evicted from the said property.
(5)
The first and third respondents and all other occupiers of the
property
shall vacate the property on or before the 30
th
of April 2022.
(6)
In the event that the respondents and the other occupiers of the
premises
not vacating the premises on or before the 30
th
of April 2022, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith
evict
the respondents and all other occupiers from the property.
(7)
Once evicted, the respondents are interdicted and restrained from
entering
the property at any time after they have vacated the
property or have been evicted therefrom by the sheriff of the court
or his
lawfully appointed deputy.
(8)
In the event that any of the unlawful occupiers contravene the order
in
para (7) above, the sheriff of the court or his lawfully appointed
deputy, is authorised and directed to remove them from the property
as soon as possible after their reoccupation thereof.
(9)
The first and third respondents jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, shall pay the applicants’ costs of
this opposed application, including the costs relating to the
applicants’
ex parte
application in terms of section
4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act (‘the
PIE Act’).
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
The first applicant acts herein in his
official capacity as the duly appointed Executor in the deceased
estate of his late wife,
Edeltraud Hohl (‘the deceased’),
who is the registered owner of Portion 34 of Farm number 495,
Rhenosterspruit, Registration
Division JQ, Gauteng Province (‘the
property’). The deceased died on 17 January 2015. The second
and third applicants,
the children of the first applicant and the
deceased, are the sole heirs to the estate of the deceased. The
respondents are in
occupation of the property, unlawfully so,
according to the applicants, who has already obtained an eviction
order by this Court
(per Senyatsi J) on 19 July 2021 against the
second respondent.
[2].
In this opposed application, the applicants
apply for the eviction of the first and third respondents, including
all other occupiers,
from the property, which, as its description
suggests, is designated as agricultural land.
The first and third respondents oppose the
application in the main on the following bases: (1) Firstly, that
they are not unlawful
occupiers as envisaged by the
Prevention
of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, Act 19 of
1998 (‘the PIE Act’); and (2) Second,
that they are
‘occupiers’ as defined in the
Extension of
Security of Tenure of Land Act, Act 62 of 1997 (‘ESTA’).
Additionally, the first respondent claims that he
has a claim against the owner of the property for improvements
effected to the
property, the fair and reasonable costs of which
amounted to about R200 000, which he is now claiming back from
the owner
of the property.
[3]
The case of the applicants is that the
first respondent took occupation of the property during 1996 and
remained in occupation until
during or about 2008, when he and his
family vacated the property. At that stage, they (the first
respondent and his family) required
a larger house and the first
applicant undertook to renovate the existing house. And it was for
this reason that the first respondent
vacated the property, namely to
afford the applicants an opportunity to effect the renovations to the
residence on the property.
[4]
During 2015, so the first applicant
alleges, at a time when the renovations were not yet completed, the
first respondent approached
him (the first applicant) with a request
that he and his family be allowed to return to the property. He
agreed, but subject to
certain express conditions, notably that the
first respondent and his family would occupy the house on the
property in terms of
an oral lease agreement in terms of which rental
of R3 500 per month, plus all electricity charges, would be
payable to the
first applicant by the first respondent.
[5]
Pursuant to this oral lease agreement, the
first respondent on 6 June 2016 paid an amount of R2300 and a further
R6000 on 5 February
2018. Subsequently, and during 2019 and 2020, the
first respondent made further payments totalling R17 913.06.
These were
the only payments made by the first respondent to the
first applicant in terms of the lease agreement. According to the
first applicant,
the first respondent was therefore hopelessly in
arrears with the monthly rental and related and ancillary charges by
the time
legal proceedings were instituted during November 2020 for
their eviction.
[6]
In the interim, and in view of the first
respondent’s failure to effect payment of the monthly rental,
the first applicant
on 23 July 2020 demanded payment of all arrears
and simultaneously gave the first respondent notice to vacate the
property on or
before 30 September 2020. This demand was not complied
with and the first applicant cancelled the oral lease agreement and
required
of the first respondent to vacate the property, which, not
surprisingly, the first respondent failed to do.
[7]
The case of the first respondent, which is
a convoluted one and at times rather confusing, in sum is to the
effect that he and his
family occupy and have since 1996 occupied the
property in terms of and pursuant to an oral lease agreement. During
his tenancy,
so the first respondent claims, he effected, at the
instance of the first applicant, on at least three occasions
improvements and
running repairs to the property. The first applicant
had also allegedly undertaken to compensate him for the expenses he
incurred
in effecting those improvements.
[8]
The first respondent also makes the claim
that, during 2008, he concluded an oral agreement with the deceased
in terms of which
the property would be subdivided and he would
acquire a portion of the property. Pending his acquisition of the
property, he and
his family would be allowed to occupy rent-free a
new house, which the deceased and presumably the first applicant had
agreed to
erect on the property for him and his family. This claim is
denied by the first applicant. I need not dwell on this factual
dispute
too long, for the simple reason that the claim is not only
bad in law but is also so far-fetched, if regard is had to the other
undisputed facts in the matter, that it can be rejected out of hand.
[9]
The claim is bad in law because of section
2(1) of the Alienation of Land Act, Act 68 of 1981, which provides as
follows:
‘
2
Formalities in respect of alienation of land
(1)
No alienation of land after the
commencement of this section shall, subject to the provisions of
section 28, be of any force or
effect unless it is contained in a
deed of alienation signed by the parties thereto or by their agents
acting on their written
authority’.
[10]
The oral agreement, as alleged by the first
respondent, is therefore of no force and effect. This part of the
first respondent’s
version is also so far-fetched as to render
it untenable. Why, I ask rhetorically, would the deceased and the
first applicant agree
to allow the first respondent and his family to
occupy a newly-built house rent-free for an indefinite and
indeterminable period
of time? Moreover, it is common cause that from
2016 to 2020 the first respondent made payments to the first
applicant, who explains
that these payments were in respect of rental
and other ancillary charges pursuant to an oral lease agreement. The
first respondent,
who agrees that he made those payments, does not
proffer an explanation for it.
[11]
To complicate matters further, the first
respondent, in his answering affidavit contends that their right to
occupation is founded
on ‘an agreement of set off and sale of
the Eastern portion of the property, to [him], in lieu of the
expenses that [he]
had personally incurred at the property’. I
reject this contention for the reasons mentioned in the aforegoing
paragraphs.
If indeed such agreement was entered into, it can and
should be regarded as
pro non scripto
.
Also, if regard is had to all of the other facts in the matter, it
can safely be said that that version is far-fetched and not
sustainable.
[12]
This may be a convenient juncture at which
to deal with the issue raised by the first respondent relating to
ESTA. The first respondent
contends that the proceedings are governed
by and ought to have been brought in terms of the provisions of the
ESTA Act. The applicants
contend, however, that the first respondent
failed to make out a proper case or to lead any evidence in support
of his assertion
that the ESTA Act is applicable. Pertinently, so the
applicants argue, he omitted to produce evidence relating to his own
income.
[13]
Section 1 of the PIE Act defines an
unlawful occupier as:
‘…
a
person who occupies land without the express or tacit consent of the
owner or person in charge, or without any other right in
law to
occupy such land, excluding a person who is an occupier in terms of
the
Extension of Security of Tenure Act, 1997
, and excluding a person
whose informal right to land, but for the provisions of this Act,
would be protected by the provisions
of the Interim Protection of
Informal Land Rights Act, 1996 (Act 31 of 1996).’
[14]
In terms of s 2 of PIE, the Act applies to
all land throughout the Republic. In terms of s 4(1) of PIE the
provisions of that section
apply to proceedings by an owner or person
in charge of land for the eviction of an unlawful occupier.
[15]
Section 1 of ESTA defines an occupier
as follows:
‘“
occupier”
means a person residing on land which belongs to another person, and
who has on 4 February 1997 or thereafter had
consent or another right
in law to do so, but excluding –
(a)
... … …
(b)
a person using or intending to use the land
in question mainly for industrial, mining, commercial or commercial
farming purposes,
but including a person who works the land himself
or herself and does not employ any person who is not a member of his
or her family;
and
(c)
a person who has an income in excess of the
prescribed amount.’
[16]
The other relevant portions of s 2 of ESTA
provide as follows:
‘
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 4, this Act shall apply to all
land other than land in a
township established, approved, proclaimed
or otherwise recognised as such in terms of any law, or encircled by
such a township
or townships, but including –
(a).
any land within such a township which has
been designated for agricultural purposes in terms of any law; and
(b).
any land within such a township which has
been established, approved, proclaimed or otherwise recognised after
4 February 1997,
in respect only of a person who was an occupier
immediately prior to such establishment, approval, proclamation or
recognition.
(2)
Land in issue in any civil proceedings in
terms of this Act shall be presumed to fall within the scope of the
Act unless the contrary
is proved.’
[17]
It is trite that an owner or person in
charge of land who wishes to evict another person who resides on that
land must comply with
s 26(3) of the Constitution. That section
requires that a court order first be obtained. It also provides that
legislation may
not permit arbitrary evictions. The principal
legislation regulating eviction from land is PIE.
[18]
PIE serves to regulate evictions from ‘all
land’ in the Republic. It does so by prescribing its
application only to
‘unlawful occupiers’ as defined and
sets out both procedural and substantive safeguards to avoid
arbitrary eviction.
Finally, it provides that the court dealing with
an eviction must be satisfied that the eviction is just and
equitable.
[19]
A party relying on PIE must bring its case
for eviction within the ambit of its provisions. It bears an onus to
establish, as an
essential jurisdictional requirement, that the
person sought to be evicted is an unlawful occupier. This means that
it must be
established that the occupier is not an ‘occupier’
as defined by ESTA. This much is clear from a reading of the
plain language of PIE read with ESTA.
[20]
The question therefore is simply whether
ESTA applies.
[21]
The sum total of the evidence relating to
this issue is that the property in question is ‘land designated
for agricultural
purposes’. The first respondent also alleges
that he is not ‘disqualified’ as an ‘occupier’
in terms
ESTA, as, so he avers, he earns less than the R13 625
per month prescribed as a minimum monthly income by s 1 of ESTA. The
first respondent then also goes on to state in his ‘supplementary
answering’ affidavit as follows:
‘
16
I wish to place on record that I am indeed an occupier in terms of
the ESTA Act as I earn
a monthly salary below the prescribed amount’.
[22]
The first applicant disputes this averment
by the first respondent primarily on the basis that the first
respondent ought to have
produced more convincing evidence than his
personal bank account statements for a few months. The inference to
be drawn from this,
so I understand to the applicants’ case, is
that the first respondent does indeed earn in excess of the
prescribed minimum
monthly income. There appears to be merit in this
contention by the applicants.
[23]
I am persuaded that the first applicant
discharged the onus on him to prove that the ESTA does not find
application
in casu
.
[24]
In
that regard, I am supported in this conclusion by and I adopt the
approach in the decision in
Skhosana
and Others v Roos t/a Roos Se Oord and Others
[1]
,
in which the Land Claims Court held as follows:
‘
[26]
Some components of the definition of "occupier"
(particularly the question of whether the
person concerned is a
labour tenant, and also the income of the person concerned) fall
within his or her peculiar knowledge. This
supports a conclusion that
a person who claims to be an occupier must prove that he or she
complies with all components of the
definition. There are
presumptions contained in ESTA which will assist such a person to
establish some components of the definition.
These presumptions
include a presumption that land in issue in any civil proceedings in
terms of ESTA falls within the scope of
ESTA (unless the contrary is
proved) and also a presumption that, for the purposes of civil
proceedings in terms of ESTA, a person
who has continuously and
openly resided on land for a period of one year shall be presumed to
have consent unless the contrary
is proved. There is furthermore a
deeming provision that, for the purposes of civil proceedings in
terms of ESTA, a person who
has continuously and openly resided on
land for a period of three years shall be deemed to have done so with
the knowledge of the
owner or person in charge. These provisions
would not have been necessary if it fell upon the land owner to prove
that a person
whose eviction is sought under common law, is not an
"occupier" under ESTA’.
[25]
The simple point is that, in my view, the
first respondent failed to prove, in his case, the existence of all
the components of
the definition of ‘occupier’. He fell
short in producing evidence proving his income, which falls
peculiarly within
his knowledge, and he therefore failed to convince
me that he is an ‘occupier’ as envisaged by s 1 of the
ESTA.
[26]
As
was held by the Full Court of this Division in
Pieterse
v Venter and Another
[2]
,
in claiming that he or she is an ‘occupier’ as defined in
ESTA, a party is under a duty to present evidence relating
to his or
her income, which, as I have already indicated, falls peculiarly
within his or her knowledge. Claassen J, writing for
the Full Court,
commented as follows:
‘
The
absence of any evidence as to appellant’s monthly income
sounded the final death knell to this defence. In fact, Mr Botha
acknowledged this fact in a concession contained in paragraph 3.27 of
his heads of argument:
“
3.27.
The appellant did not disclose his income and has not discharged
the
onus to show that he is an ESTA occupier. The court a quo therefore
correctly found that he is not an ESTA occupier.’
[27]
Therefore,
in my view, the first respondent has failed to prove that he is an
occupier as envisaged by ESTA. This application should
therefore be
decided in terms of PIE. It is settled law that ESTA and the PIE Act
are mutually exclusive. It is either the one
or the other that is
applicable, but not both
[3]
.
[28]
This defence of the first and third
respondents should therefore fail.
[29]
The next question is whether the applicants
should be granted the relief claimed in view of the factual disputes
between the parties,
which, according to the first respondent, cannot
be resolved on the papers.
[30]
I have already above alluded to the
difficulties with the version of the first respondent. I reiterate
that, in my view, his story
is far-fetched. Moreover, as correctly
pointed out by Mr Lubbe, who appeared on behalf of the applicants,
the first respondent
pleaded three different and mutually exclusive
bases on which he claims his right to occupy the property. All of
these bases are
bad in law.
[31]
On the flipside of the coin is the version
of the applicants, which is corroborated by contemporaneous and
subsequent events, notably
the fact that the first respondent made
payment to the first applicant of amounts totalling about R26 000
during the period
from 2016 to 2020. If the first respondent was
entitled to set off the cost of improvements to the property, which
he supposedly
effected during 2008 and 2015, then why did he not
withhold these payments as set-off against amounts due to the first
applicant.
[32]
The aforegoing translates into an oral
lease agreement, as averred by the first applicant, in terms of and
pursuant to which the
first respondent and his family took occupation
of the residence on the property. This lease was validly cancelled by
the first
applicant due to the fact that the first respondent, in
breach of the said tenancy, failed to make payment of the monthly
rental
and other ancillary charges due under the lease. This, in
turn, means that the first and second respondents are in unlawful
occupation
of the property and the first respondent is entitled to an
order evicting them.
[33]
The remaining issue relates to whether or
not it is ‘just and equitable’ to evict the first
respondent and his family.
[34]
Mr Lubbe submitted that it is and he says
so for the following reasons. The respondents were first given notice
to vacate on 17
December 2019, which notice and demand they have to
date not complied with. The respondents presently occupy and have,
for the
last approximately seven years occupied the property,
lawfully owned by the appellants, for all intents and purposes
rent-free.
The total arrear rental and related and ancillary charges
at present amount to R281 340.31, according to the applicants’
calculations. To add insult to the injury, so the appellants argue,
when faced with an eviction application, the first respondent
raised
spurious defences aimed at further avoiding having to pay rental –
not the type of behaviour which deserves the sympathy
of the court.
[35]
I agree with these submissions. It is for
the first respondent to put up facts or circumstances relevant to the
eviction order,
which, notwithstanding that the first respondent’s
occupation is unlawful, would result in the court exercising its
discretion
in his favour in not granting an order for his eviction on
the basis that to evict him and his family would be unjust and
iniquitous.
Except to baldy state that his eviction would not be just
and equitable, the first respondent does not draw to the attention of
the court any factors to be considered when exercising its
discretion.
[36]
What is more, is that during 2020 the first
respondent made a substantial offer to purchase the property from
first applicant. This
suggests to me that he has the financial
resources to easily find alternative accommodation and be able to pay
rental thereon.
[37]
I am accordingly of the view that, all
things considered, it would be just and equitable to issue an
eviction order against the
respondents.
[38]
The point about this matter is that it has been more than seven years
during which the
respondents occupied the applicants’ property
almost rent-free. They are in flagrant breach of the lease
agreement.
And they have adopted the attitude that they will milk
this cow for as long as they possibly can. Therefore, in my judgment,
the
applicants have made out a case for an eviction order. They have
also complied with the procedural and substantive requirements
of s 4
of the PIE Act.
[39]
On the point of the ‘just and equitable’
requirement, it requires emphasising that the risk of any one
occupier being
rendered homeless is slim to non-existent. In
The
Occupiers, Berea v De Wet NO and Another
,
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC), the Constitutional Court remarks as follows at
par [48]:
‘
[48]
The court will grant an eviction order only where:
(a)
it has all the information about the occupiers to enable it to decide
whether the eviction is just and equitable; and
(b)
the court
is satisfied that the eviction is just and equitable, having regard
to the information in
(a)
. The two requirements are
inextricable, interlinked and essential. An eviction order granted in
the absence of either one of these
two requirements will be
arbitrary. I reiterate that the enquiry has nothing to do with the
unlawfulness of occupation. It assumes
and is only due when the
occupation is unlawful.’
[40]
The respondents should be given sufficient time to vacate the
premises. I am of the view
that it would be just and equitable to
afford the respondents until the end of April 2022 to vacate the
premises.
[41]
It is necessary to deal briefly with a few other issues. Firstly, the
respondents raised
a point
in limine
to the effect that the
first applicant lacks the necessary
locus standi in iudicio
ostensibly because the Last Will and Testament of the deceased, in
terms of which the first applicant was appointed as the Executor
in
the estate, was invalid as it did not comply with the formalities
prescribed by s 2(1) of the Wills Act, Act 7 of 1953.
Therefore,
so the argument goes on behalf of the first and third respondents,
the first applicant’s appointment in invalid.
[42]
There is no merit in this contention. The first applicant is the duly
appointed executor
in the estate of his late wife. That appointment
stands until set aside by a court of law. He is therefore fully
empowered to act
herein on behalf of the estate. That, in my view, is
the end of that legal point, which should be rejected.
[43]
The second issue relates to the filing by the first respondent of a
‘supplementary
answering affidavit’, to which the
appellants objected on the basis that the leave of the court was not
requested nor granted
and that that affidavit should therefore be
disregarded. The first applicant, I suppose out of an abundance of
caution, nevertheless
filed a ‘replying affidavit to the first
respondent’s supplementary affidavit’. The supplementary
affidavit dealt
briefly with the ESTA issue and the first respondent
desired to place before the court additional information relating to
whether
or not he is a ‘occupier’ as defined in ESTA. I
have above dealt with and alluded to the issues raised by the first
respondent in the supplementary affidavit.
[44]
It is so that a party in motion proceedings cannot without the leave
of the court, file
affidavits other than those provided for in the
Uniform Rules of Court. A court should allow the filing of additional
and/or supplementary
affidavits if the interest of justice requires
same, as is the case, in my view, in this matter, in which arises a
fundamental
issue relating to a person’s right not be
arbitrarily evicted from his place of residence. I therefore believe
that the first
respondent should be granted leave to file his
supplementary answering affidavit and the first applicant should
similarly be granted
leave to file a supplementary reply.
[45]
I have therefore had regard to what was said by the parties in the
aforementioned affidavits,
which allowed for a proper ventilation of
the disputes between the parties.
[46]
For all of these reasons, the application should be granted.
Cost
[47]
The general
rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should be given
his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except where
there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the part
of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers v
Abramson
[4]
.
[48]
I can think of no reason why I should deviate from this general rule.
[49]
I therefore intend awarding costs against the first and third
respondents in favour of
the first, second and third applicants.
Order
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
(1)
The first and third respondents are
granted leave to file their
‘supplementary answering affidavit’ dated 27 July 2021,
and the said affidavit is received
and accepted by the court.
(2)
The first, second and third applicants
are granted leave to file
their ‘supplementary replying affidavit’ dated 13 August
2021, and the said affidavit is
received and accepted by the court.
(3)
The costs of both the applications
for leave to file further
affidavits shall be in the course of this, the main application.
(4)
The first and third respondents and
all other persons occupying
through or under them the applicants’ property, being
Portion
34 of Farm number 495, Rhenosterspruit, Registration Division JQ,
Gauteng Province (‘the property’)
, be and are
hereby evicted from the said property.
(5)
The first and third respondents and
all other occupiers of the
property shall vacate the property on or before the 30
th
of April 2022.
(6)
In the event that the respondents and
the other occupiers of the
premises not vacating the premises on or before the 30
th
of April 2022, the Sheriff of this Court or his lawfully appointed
deputy be and is hereby authorized and directed to forthwith
evict
the respondents and all other occupiers from the property.
(7)
Once evicted, the respondents are interdicted
and restrained from
entering the property at any time after they have vacated the
property or have been evicted therefrom by the
sheriff of the court
or his lawfully appointed deputy.
(8)
In the event that any of the unlawful
occupiers contravene the order
in para (7) above, the sheriff of the court or his lawfully appointed
deputy, is authorised and
directed to remove them from the property
as soon as possible after their reoccupation thereof.
(9)
The first and third respondents jointly
and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved, shall pay the applicants’ costs of
this opposed application, including
the costs relating to the
applicants’
ex parte
application in terms of section
4(2) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from, and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act (‘the
PIE Act’).
_____________________________
L R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
22
nd
November 2021 –
The matter
was disposed of without an oral hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
JUDGMENT
DATE:
11
th
February 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND
AND THIRD
APPLICANTS:
Advocate Jan Lubbe
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Louw & Heyl Attorneys, Roodepoort
FOR THE FIRST AND
THIRD RESPONDENTS:
Advocate R A More
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Hamilton Attorneys, Johannesburg
FOR THE SECOND
RESPONDENT:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No appearance
[1]
Skhosana
and Others v Roos t/a Roos Se Oord and Others
2
All SA 652 (LCC).
[2]
Pieterse
v Venter and Another
(A5016/2011)
[2012] ZAGPJHC 7 (10 February 2012).
[3]
Agrico
Masjinerie (Edms) Bpk v Swiers
2007
(5) SA 305
(SCA) at pg 308B-C.
[4]
Myers v
Abramson
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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