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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 386
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## Mihloti and Another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Police Department and Another (22/5396)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 386 (10 June 2022)
Mihloti and Another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Police Department and Another (22/5396)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 386 (10 June 2022)
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sino date 10 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 22/5396
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
10/06/2022
In
the matter between:
MIHLOTI,
ROSE MILANI
First Applicant
VUYISILE,
NDINISA HACKLY
Second Applicant
and
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT
First Respondent
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Order
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal that was argued on 9 June
2022.
I make the following order:
“
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed;
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the application, and
are liable jointly and
severally the one paying the other to be
absolved.”
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
I deal with the relief sought by the applicants under the headings of
the prayers in the notice of motion.
Second
[1]
prayer: Interdicting the first and second Respondents from evicting
the applicants from the property owned by the deceased farmer
without
a court order
[4]
The
applicants sought interdictory relief. An interdict is intended to
prevent harm actually occurring at present
or reasonably apprehended in the future. It is not a remedy to
redress harm that
occurred
exclusively in the past.
[2]
They
sought an order that the
respondents
be interdicted from evicting them from “
the
property owned by the deceased farmer without a court order.”
[5]
No description of the property was provided by the applicants but the
property was described by the respondents. The City of Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality (“
the respondent”
), is
the owner. The deceased farmer’s estate was not cited but I was
satisfied that the land is Council land and that there
is no need to
join the estate of the deceased farmer, Erasmus.
[6]
The first applicant informs the Court that she occupied the property
until
17 February 2022 when her shack was destroyed. It is common
cause, and was again conceded by the applicant’s counsel, that
the applicants do not have a right to occupy the property, nor do
they have a
prima facie
right for the purposes of an interim
interdict. In the light of the concession, which was properly made,
the application for an
interdict cannot succeed. A clear right is a
prerequisite for a final interdict.
[7]
The applicants in effect seek the assistance of the respondent in
respect
of accommodation and I have requested the respondent’s
counsel to convey the request to the respondent.
[8]
The situation must be distinguished from the situation where a
landowner
seeks an order evicting unlawful occupiers from its land.
In such a case, the occupiers are entitled to rely on the safeguards
created by the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act, 19 of 1998.
[9]
In the present matter the applicants seek a final interdict in
perpetuity
that they may not be evicted from the land in question
without a court order. There may be grounds for such an eviction, for
instance
in a counter spoliation and it would not be possible and
appropriate for the Court at this time to pre-judge such an event.
The
applicants are not in occupation of the respondent’s land,
and if they seize the land it would possibly or even probably be
a
mala fide
act. An interdict granted now to prevent such a
counter spoliation would not be an appropriate order and I am of the
view that
another court will not come to a different conclusion.
[10]
The Council
is an organ of state and should approach the Court for the
appropriate order if and when an order is required, and the
law must
then be complied with.
[3]
[11]
No case is made out for the order sought.
Third
prayer: To direct the respondents to compensate each individual who
their shacks were abolished and burned a sum of R2 000
each
[12]
It is trite that damages must be claimed in action proceedings.
[13]
No case is made out for a damages claim in the amount of R2 000
or indeed any amount,
and this was quite correctly conceded in
argument.
Fourth
prayer: The Respondents be directed to restore the applicants
[14]
It is not possible to attach a sensible meaning to the prayer.
Fifth
praye
r
: In the event that the Respondents evict
the Applicants the Respondents must provide an alternative
accommodation with immediate
effect
[15]
The applicants have not been in occupation of the Council’s
property and no case
is made out for an order that the Council
provide them with accommodation.
Sixth
praye
r
: The Court to direct the Respondents not
to bypass the proceedings of the appeal court, in the matter still
pending
[16]
The relief sought in this prayer relates, it is claimed, to the
pending appeal in a matter
that was heard in the Gauteng Division,
Pretoria.
[17]
The suspension of the order granted in the matter in the Pretoria
High Court is governed
by
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10
of 2013
.
The applicable
principles in an application for leave to appeal
[18]
Section 17(1)(a)(i)
and (ii) of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
provides that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or
judges concerned are of the opinion that the appeal would have
a
reasonable prospect of success or there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard, including conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration. Once such an opinion is
formed leave may not be refused.
[19]
In
KwaZulu-Natal
Law Society v Sharma
[4]
Van Zyl J held that the test enunciated in
S
v Smith
[5]
still holds good:
“
In order to
succeed, therefore, the appellant must convince this court on proper
grounds that he has prospects of success on appeal
and that those
prospects are not remote, but have a realistic chance of succeeding.
More is required to be established than that
there is a mere
possibility of success, that the case is arguable on appeal or that
the case cannot be categorised as hopeless.
There must, in other
words, be a sound, rational basis for the conclusion that there are
prospects of success on appeal.”
[20]
In an
obiter
dictum
the Land Claims Court in
Mont
Chevaux Trust (IT 2012/28) v Tina Goosen
[6]
held that the test for leave to appeal is more stringent under the
Superior Courts Act of 2013
than it was under the repealed Supreme
Court Act, 59 of 1959. The sentiment in
Mont
Chevaux Trust
was echoed by Shongwe JA in the Supreme Court of Appeal in
S
v Notshokovu
.
[7]
[21]
No sound, rational basis is suggested for a submission that there are
reasonable prospects
for success on appeal. The applicants approached
the Court for urgent relief on papers that were defective in that the
papers did
not adequately identify the property with which their
application was concerned with, and failed to identify the right that
entitles
them to occupation of the respondent’s property. On
their version of the facts the property belonged to a third party,
who
or which they failed to cite as a respondent.
[22]
I therefore make the order as set out above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
10 June 2022
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
Ms M K Bareki
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Kagiso Rakhuba Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENTS:
S Zimema
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Renqe Fa Inc Attorneys
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
9 June 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
10 June 2022
[1]
The first prayer in the notice of motion related
to urgency.
[2]
Van Loggerenberg and Bertelsman
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
D6-1
et
seq.
[3]
See s 4 of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction
from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act and
Occupiers,
Berea v De Wet NO
2017 (5) SA 346
(CC) paras 39 to 57. See also
P
ort
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2005
(1) SA 217
(CC) para 36;
Machele
v Mailula
2010
(2) SA 257
(CC
)
para 15;
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(6) SA 294 (SCA)
paras 11 to 25.
[4]
[2017]
JOL 37724
(KZP) para 29.
[5]
2012
(1) SACR 567
(SCA) para 7.
[6]
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC)
,
[2014] ZALCC 20
para 6.
[7]
[2016]
ZASCA 112
para 2. See also
Van Loggerenberg and Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
A2-55;
The
Acting National Director of Public Prosecution v Democratic Alliance
[2016]
ZAGPPHC
489,
JOL
36123 (GP)
para
25;
South
African Breweries (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner of the South African
Revenue Services
[2017]
ZAGPPHC 340 para 5
;
Lakaje
N.O v MEC: Department of Health
[2019] JOL 45564
(FB)
para
5;
Nwafor
v Minister of Home Affairs
[2021]
JOL 50310
(SCA),
2021 JDR 0948 (SCA)
paras 25 and 26.
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