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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 222
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## Ngale N.O. v Mhlongo and Another (A3003/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 222 (8 March 2022)
Ngale N.O. v Mhlongo and Another (A3003/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 222 (8 March 2022)
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sino date 8 March 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A3003/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
08
/03/2022
In
the matter between:
NGALE
LORRAINE KGOSINKWE N.O
APPELLANT
and
MHLONGO
SIDWELL
FANI
1
ST
RESPONDENT
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
2
ND
RESPONDNT
JUDGMENT
MODISE
AJ:
1.
This is an appeal against a decision of
the Magistrate’s Court wherein the Appellant had applied for an
order evicting the
first respondent from the premises situated at Erf
[....] Nagathola Street, Kagiso 1 (“the property”) with
ancillary
relief and costs against First Respondent.
2.
The Magistrate dismissed the application
with costs finding that the Appellant had “failed to satisfy
the court that the grounds
and the requirements of PIE had been
established and that all the factors had been placed before court and
that it was just and
equitable for the court to evict the
respondent.”
3.
From the documents contained in the
record, it is clear and indeed common cause that the provisions of
The Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of
Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”) were applicable.
4.
Put differently, the Magistrate found
that the Appellant failed to demonstrate that she had
locus
standi
to evict as either owner
or person in charge as envisaged in PIE and secondly she had failed
to comply with the procedural
provisions of section 4 of PIE.
5.
The Appellant appeals against the
Magistrate’s orders to this Court.
6.
We are of the view that there are two
main issues for determination being
locus
standi
, and whether there is a basis
for the appeal court to interfere with the Magistrate’s
discretion.
7.
There is no appearance or opposition by
any of the respondents.
8.
Counsel for the appellant contended that
by virtue of the letter of executorship issued to the appellant by
the Master of the High
Court on 1 September 2017 under estate number:
14385/2017 for estate of the late Molotsi Lucas Mathuloe, to whose
estate the property
belongs, the appellant is the person in charge of
the deceased estate and therefore of the property.
THE
LAW
9.
The starting point is
Section
26(3) the of Constitution which provides that no one may be evicted
from their home or have their home demolished without
a court order
authorising such eviction after having due regard to “all the
relevant circumstances”.
10.
The
PIE Act amplifies this by providing that a court may not grant an
eviction order unless the eviction sought would be “just
and
equitable” in the circumstances. The court thus has to have
regard to a number of factors including but not limited to:
whether
the occupiers include vulnerable categories of persons (the elderly,
children and female-headed households), the duration
of occupation
and the availability of alternative accommodation, whether by the
state or otherwise.
11.
In
Bekker
and Bosch v Jika
2003 (1) SA 113
(SCA) the Supreme Court of Appeal, in a majority judgment, held
inter alia
that
PIE invests in the courts the right and duty to make an order which,
in the circumstances of the case, would be just and equitable,
and it
prescribes some circumstances that have to be taken into account in
determining the terms of the eviction. In other words,
the court, in
determining whether or not to grant an order or in determining the
date on which the property has to be vacated,
has to exercise a
discretion as to what is just and equitable. The discretion is one in
the wide, and not the narrow sense. Consequently,
the court does not
have a free hand to do whatever it wishes.
LOCUS
STANDI/STANDING TO EVICT
12.
The appellant contended that she has
locus standi
to institute the eviction proceedings against the first respondent in
terms of section 4(1) of PIE by virtue of the letter of executorship
issued to her by the Master of the High Court to be in charge of the
deceased estate.
13.
On or about 12 August 2018, the first
respondent lodged a review application in which he sought relief that
the appellant’s
appointment as executrix, by the Master of the
High Court, be set aside.
14.
At the court
a
quo
and during argument in the
appeal court, the appellant’s attorney conceded that the review
application is still pending and
that the challenge to the
appellant’s authority to be in charge of the deceased estate
has not been resolved. This issue
becomes relevant in our
consideration of a just and equitable remedy.
15.
We are
of the view that until such time that the review application has been
decided, the Appellant’s letter of executorship
remains extant.
16.
Against
the facts and legal position relating to PIE application,
the Appellant has successfully
demonstrated that she is the person in charge who has standing to
bring the eviction application.
17.
In the
circumstances it seems to us that the Magistrate erred in his
conclusion in this regard.
WHAT
IS JUST AND EQUITABLE?
18.
The duty of a court faced with the eviction application is to
consider what
is just and equable in the circumstances.
19.
The issue was put succinctly in the case of
Port Elizabeth
Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC) at para 32
as follows:
The obligation on the
court is to 'have regard to' the circumstances, that is, to give them
due weight in making its judgment as
to what is just and equitable.
The court cannot fulfil its information at its disposal. It needs to
be fully apprised of the circumstances
before it can have regard to
them. It follows that, although it is incumbent on the interested
parties to make all relevant information
available, technical
questions relating to onus of proof should not play an unduly
significant role in its enquiry. The court is
not resolving a civil
dispute as to who has rights under land law; the existence of
unlawfulness is the foundation for the enquiry,
not its
subject-matter. What the court is called upon to do is to decide
whether, bearing in mind the values of Constitution, in
upholding and
enforcing land rights, it is appropriate to issue an order which has
the effect of depriving people of their homes.
Of equal concern,
it is determining the conditions under which, if it is just and
equitable to grant such an order, the eviction
should take place
.
Both the language of the section and the purpose of the statute
require the court to ensure that it is fully informed before
undertaking the onerous and delicate task entrusted to it. In
securing the necessary information. the court would therefore be
entitled to go beyond the facts established in the papers before it.
Indeed. when the evidence submitted by the parties leaves important
questions of fact obscure. contested or uncertain. the court might be
obliged to procure ways of establishing the true state of
affairs. so
as to enable properly to 'have regard' to relevant circumstances."
(My emphasis)
20.
As already alluded to above, in our view the pending review
application is relevant
to the question of what is just and equitable
in the circumstances. The property in question is part of a deceased
estate on which
both the current person in charge and the occupier
have a claim. The review application will determine whether the
applicant will
remain the person in charge and therefore retain the
power to evict the respondent. The applicant conceded that she has
also done
nothing to advance the finalisation of the review
application, if the contention is that the respondent has been
delaying.
21.
In these circumstances, it cannot be just and equitable to permit the
applicant
to evict the respondent when her very power to do so is
under review.
22.
In our view, the Magistrate properly exercised his discretion in
making a determination
whether it is just and equitable to grant the
eviction order and rightly refused to grant the order sought.
THE
PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS OF PIE
23.
PIE requires the applicant to serve the
notice in terms of section 4 of PIE on the unlawful occupier and the
Municipality.
24.
In the instant case the Municipality was
cited and served with the section 4 notices in terms of of PIE. In
the circumstances relevant
to procedure, the statutory process
requirements was complied with.
25.
Notwithstanding the above, the appellant
has failed to demonstrate that an eviction in the circumstances would
be just and equitable.
CONCLUSION
26.
The Appellant
has failed to establish that the eviction order would be a just and
equitable remedy. The only order that could have
been made in the
specific circumstances of this case was to dismiss the
application. The Magistrate in this regard made the
correct
order in respect of the eviction application
ORDER
27.
The following order is made:
27.1
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
T.
MODISE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree.
S.
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
18 October 2021
Date
of Judgment: 08 March 2022
Appearances
Applicant’s
Attorney: Smith Van Der Watt Inc
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