Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 482South Africa
Meme-Akpta and Another v The Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 1168,City and Surban,44 Nugget Street,Johannesburg and Another (38141/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 482; 2023 (3) SA 649 (GJ) (26 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 July 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Illegal Evictions and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (‘the Act’) and the Practice Manual of this Court.The following peremptory procedural prescripts distilled:
Judgment
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## Meme-Akpta and Another v The Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 1168,City and Surban,44 Nugget Street,Johannesburg and Another (38141/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 482; 2023 (3) SA 649 (GJ) (26 July 2022)
Meme-Akpta and Another v The Unlawful Occupiers of ERF 1168,City and Surban,44 Nugget Street,Johannesburg and Another (38141/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 482; 2023 (3) SA 649 (GJ) (26 July 2022)
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sino date 26 July 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:38141/2019
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
7/26/2022
In the matter between:
TONY
EMMANUEL MEME-AKPTA
First Applicant
HLELEN
ESIMA MEME-AKPTA
Second Applicant
and,
THE UNLAWFUL OCCUPIERS
OF ERF 1168,
CITY AND SURBAN, 44
NUGGET STREET,
JOHANNESBURG
First Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Summary:
Prevention of Illegal Evictions and Unlawful Occupation
of Land Act 19 of 1998 (‘the Act’) and the Practice
Manual of
this Court.
The following
peremptory procedural prescripts distilled:
·
The main application for eviction must be drawn in accordance with
the rules of court.
·
This means that the notice of motion must contain ‘a stated
date’ on which it will be heard.
·
Service of the main application must be effected in accordance
with one of the appropriate methods prescribed by rule 4, but if
these rules for service are inadequate (which is generally the case
in mass evictions) the court must direct that service of all
process,
including the main application and the notice in terms of section
4(2), be effected in a manner which is likely to come
to the
attention of the occupants of the property.
·
The application for substituted service is, as is the usual case
with such applications, brought
ex parte
and is
a separate application from both the main application and the
application in terms of section 4(2).
·
The 4(2) application is a separate application from both the main
application and any application for substituted service and it
is
brought
ex parte
. It provides for a second
notification of the date of the hearing of the main application.
·
The 4(2) application is brought after service of the main
application has been effected in terms of the rules or the order for
substituted
service.
·
The facts of each matter will determine the mode of service of the
application, the likelihood of notice coming to the occupants
being
the decisive factor. Examples of such modes of service are the
sliding of the application under the door of each unit in
a block or
the posting of the application at strategic places on an open expanse
where dwellings have been erected or even appropriate
daily addresses
over a loud hailer for a period of days as to the date of hearing of
the application and where copies may be accessed.
There is a specimen
order in the Practice Manual which may provide some guidance.
·
Legal practitioners who are seeking to serve process in
circumstances of mass eviction or other circumstances where
notification
of all the occupants could prove challenging must be
astute to these challenges and creative in fashioning suggested
methods which
are tailored to the particular facts. In all such
instances, the process should properly begin with an ex parte
application for
substituted service.
·
If the method of service adopted under the rules is unlikely to
come to the attention of the occupants, for example service on a
person who happens to be found by the sheriff on a property where a
mass eviction is to be undertaken, the risk is run that the
court
will not be satisfied with such service when the application for the
section 4(2) approval is sought. This is likely to have
the effect
that the section 4(2) application will not be granted and the process
will have to be started afresh.
·
A proper application for eviction duly issued and delivered and
the sheriff’s return evidencing effective service must be
before the court when it considers an application for authorisation
under section 4(2).
·
The hearing date which the section 4(2) notice contains must
necessarily coincide with the hearing date on the notice of motion in
the main application and the periods adopted in the drawing of the
process must accommodate this necessity.
·
Whilst the section 4(2) procedure is such that it allows for the
providing of further service mechanisms the need for which have
come
to light during or since the service of the main application, such
procedure is not intended to be a cure for deficient service
of the
main application in the first instance. A court called upon to
authorise a notice under section 4(2) will want to be satisfied
that
all reasonable steps have been taken to obtain proper service of the
main application and mere lip service to rule 4 will
not be
tolerated.
·
Service of the main application may result in a notice of
intention to oppose being filed before the authorisation of the
notice
under section 4(2) in which event the section 4(2) process may
be a formality but is still necessary. The section 4(2) notice, may
in such instance, be delivered to the address provided in the notice
of intention to oppose.
·
In the latter event, care must be taken to determine that the
notice of intention to oppose is the result of
all
occupants having received notice.
FISHER J:
Introduction
[1]
This is
an application for the eviction of approximately 200 people
from the
various units that they occupy in a block of units situated at 44
Nugget St, Johannesburg.
[2]
The
applicants are husband and wife and are the registered owners
of the
block. They reside in Nigeria. The first applicant attested, in
London, to the founding affidavit in which it is alleged
that the
property was acquired for investment purposes.
[3]
It is
not in dispute that the respondent occupiers have no right
to occupy
the property. They pay no rental and no expenses related to the
property.
[4]
The
opposing respondents are represented by Mr Moses Siyabulela
Ncambanca. He indicates that he is authorised to depose to the
answering affidavit in respect of eight households. There are
confirmatory
affidavits to this effect.
[5]
In
essence, the defence is encapsulated in the following
paragraphs of
his answering affidavit.
‘
All of the
occupiers are poor, many of us desperately so. Many of us have no
formal employment. The average household income in
the property is
approximately R2800 per month. The occupiers’ personal
circumstances and the lack of suitable alternative
accommodation
available to us are set out in more detail below. If we were evicted
from the property, we would, at least in the
short term, have no
shelter at all. In the medium term we do not know of any alternative
accommodation which is both lawful and
affordable to us, and as a
result, we may find ourselves in unlawful occupation of a derelict
building.’
[6]
Some of
the respondents have occupied the property since 2008.
[7]
There is
no explanation given for the lapse in the bringing of
the application
which is close on eight years. But this is not the main problem. The
manner in which the application has been drawn
and dealt with
procedurally is grossly derelict. It exhibits a profound lack of
appreciation for the importance of compliance with
the legislative
scheme enacted under the Prevention of Illegal Eviction and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998.
[8]
In my
experience it is not unusual to be met in these applications
with a
failure of process. The scheme provided for by the Act prescribes
special and additional features in applications for eviction
of
illegal occupants. These prescripts are in keeping with the
recognition of the fundamental constitutional imperatives which
an
eviction entails and especially the right to housing in terms of
section 26 and all that this involves.
[9]
Whilst
these special provisions as to notification and jurisdiction
place a
significantly increased burden on landowners seeking eviction of
illegal occupiers, they are necessary to protect the integrity
of the
eviction process. These measures are especially important in a
country where extreme poverty and homelessness is endemic.
[10]
The statutory scheme seeks to
provide some balance between the rights of illegal occupants
and
landowners in that provided there is compliance with the all the
requirements of section 4 of the Act, the court has no discretion
and
must grant an order for the eviction of the unlawful occupier in the
event that the occupier offers no valid defence.
[11]
It will help clearly to state
and clarify the legal prescripts which a person seeking
an eviction
is bound to follow.
Applicable
legal prescripts - Eviction of unlawful occupiers
Section 4 of the Act
provides for the following peremptory procedure to be followed in all
eviction applications brought under section
4(1) of the Act :
‘
(2) At least 14
days before the hearing of the proceedings contemplated in subsection
(1), the court must serve written and effective
notice of the
proceedings on the unlawful occupier and the municipality having
jurisdiction.
(3)
Subject to the
provisions of subsection (2), the procedure for the serving of
notices and filing of papers is as prescribed by the
rules of the
court in question.
(4)
Subject to the
provisions of subsection (2), if a court is satisfied that service
cannot conveniently or expeditiously be effected
in the manner
provided in the rules of the court, service must be effected in the
manner directed by the court: Provided that the
court must consider
the rights of the unlawful occupier to receive adequate notice and to
defend the case.
(5)
The notice of
proceedings contemplated in subsection (2) must-
(a)
state that
proceedings are being instituted in terms of subsection (1) for an
order for the eviction of the unlawful occupier;
(b)
indicate
on what date and at what time the court will hear the proceedings;
(c)
set
out the grounds for the proposed eviction; and
(d)
state
that the unlawful occupier is entitled to appear before the court and
defend the case and, where necessary, has the right
to apply for
legal aid.
(7)
If an unlawful
occupier has occupied the land in question for more than six months
at the time when the proceedings are initiated,
a court may grant an
order for eviction if it is of the opinion that it is just and
equitable to do so, after considering all the
relevant circumstances,
including, except where the land is sold in a sale of execution
pursuant to a mortgage, whether land has
been made available or can
reasonably be made available by a municipality or other organ of
state or another land owner for the
relocation of the unlawful
occupier, and including the rights and needs of the elderly,
children, disabled persons and households
headed by women.
(8)
If the court is
satisfied that all the requirements of this section have been
complied with and that no valid defence has been raised
by the
unlawful occupier, it must grant an order for the eviction of the
unlawful occupier, and determine-
(9)
In determining a
just and equitable date contemplated in subsection (8), the court
must have regard to all relevant factors, including
the period the
unlawful occupier and his or her family have resided on the land in
question.’
[12]
The Practice Manual of this
division provides as follows in relation to applications under
the
Act:
‘
10.9 The
application for eviction must be
a
separate application
.
1.
The procedure to be adopted (except in urgent applications) is as
follows:
1.1.
The notice of motion must follow Form 2(a).
1.2.
The notice of motion must
allow not less than five days from date of
service of the application for delivery of a notice of intention to
oppose.
1.3.
The notice of motion
must give a date when the application will be
heard
, in the absence of a notice of intention to oppose.
2.
After the eviction application has been served
and no notice
of intention to oppose has been delivered or if a notice of intention
to oppose has been delivered at a stage when
a date for the hearing
of the application has been determined,
the applicant may bring an
ex parte interlocutory application authorising a section 4(2) notice
and for directions on service. The
eviction application must be in
the court file when the ex parte application is brought.
3.
When determining a date for the hearing of an eviction
application, sufficient time must be allowed for bringing the ex
parte application,
for serving the section 4(2) notice and for the 14
days’ notice period to expire. Practitioners must ensure that
sufficient
time is provided between the date of the Section 4(2)
Notice and the date of hearing of the main eviction application.
4.
If the eviction application is postponed
in open court
on a
day of which notice in terms of section 4(2) was duly given, and if
the postponement is to a specific date, it will not be
necessary to
serve another section 4(2) notice in respect of the latter date.”
(Emphasis added.)
[13]
From these provisions the
following peremptory procedural rules can be distilled:
· The
main application for eviction must be drawn in accordance with the
rules of court.
·
This means that the
notice of motion must contain ‘a stated date’ on which it
will be heard.
[1]
·
Service of the main application must be effected in accordance with
one of the appropriate methods prescribed
by rule 4, but if these
rules for service are inadequate (which is generally the case in mass
evictions) the court must direct
that service of all process,
including the main application and the notice in terms of section
4(2), be effected in a manner which
is likely to come to the
attention of the occupants of the property.
·
The application for substituted service is, as is the usual case with
such applications, brought
ex parte
and is a separate
application from both the main application and the application in
terms of section 4(2).
·
The 4(2) application is a separate application from both the main
application and any application for
substituted service and it is
brought
ex parte
. It provides for a second notification of the
date of the hearing of the main application.
· The
4(2) application is brought after service of the main application has
been effected in terms of the
rules or the order for substituted
service.
·
The facts of each matter will determine the mode of service of the
application, the likelihood of notice
coming to the occupants being
the decisive factor. Examples of such modes of service are the
sliding of the application under the
door of each unit in a block or
the posting of the application at strategic places on an open expanse
where dwellings have been
erected or even appropriate daily addresses
over a loud hailer for a period of days as to the date of hearing of
the application
and where copies may be accessed. There is a specimen
order in the Practice Manual which may provide some guidance.
·
Legal practitioners who are seeking to serve process in circumstances
of mass eviction or other circumstances
where notification of all the
occupants could prove challenging must be astute to these challenges
and creative in fashioning suggested
methods which are tailored to
the particular facts. In all such instances the process should
properly begin with an ex parte application
for substituted service.
·
If the method of service adopted under the rules is unlikely to come
to the attention of the occupants,
for example service on a person
who happens to be found by the sheriff on a property where a mass
eviction is to be undertaken,
the risk is run that the court will not
be satisfied with such service when the application for the section
4(2) approval is sought.
This is likely to have the effect that the
section 4(2) application will not be granted and the process will
have to be started
afresh.
· A
proper application for eviction duly issued and delivered and the
sheriff’s return evidencing effective
service must be before
the court when it considers an application for authorisation under
section 4(2).
· The
hearing date which the section 4(2) notice contains must necessarily
coincide with the hearing date on
the notice of motion in the main
application and the periods adopted in the drawing of the process
must accommodate this necessity.
·
Whilst the section 4(2) procedure is such that it allows for the
providing of further service mechanisms the
need for which have come
to light during or since the service of the main application, such
procedure is not intended to be a cure
for deficient service of the
main application in the first instance. A court called upon to
authorise a notice under section 4(2)
will want to be satisfied that
all reasonable steps have been taken to obtain proper service of the
main application and mere lip
service to rule 4 will not be
tolerated.
·
Service of the main application may result in a notice of intention
to oppose being filed before the
authorisation of the notice under
section 4(2) in which event the section 4(2) process may be a
formality but is still necessary.
The section 4(2) notice, may in
such instance, be delivered to the address provided in the notice of
intention to oppose.
·
In the latter event, care must be taken to determine that the notice
of intention to oppose is the result
of
all
occupants having
received notice.
[14]
The procedure adopted in this
application is an example of either a profound misunderstanding
of
these rules of process or a deliberate disregard for such process. I
turn to deal with the application.
The
application for eviction
[15]
This application was of the type
that cried out for substituted service. Although there
was an
appreciation for this as emerges from the manner in which the notice
of motion was framed, no such service was ever effected.
[16]
The notice of motion comprises
two parts. Part A constitutes an ex-parte application for
substituted
service which entails the sheriff sliding a copy of the application
under the door of each unit, alternatively affixing
a copy thereof to
the door of each room that appears to be occupied or if there is no
door by placing a copy thereof inside the
room. Part B is the main
eviction application.
[17]
Part B does not state a date for
the hearing of the main application. Instead it notifies
that the
application “will be made on a date which you will be advised
of in a notice of set-down incorporating the provisions
of Section
4(2) of [the Act], which will be served on you.”
[18]
This omission is, without more,
fatal to the application and it should not be entertained.
Indeed the
registrar is not empowered to issue such an application in the
absence of a stated date for appearance on the notice
of motion. This
notwithstanding, the unopposed motion court is often faced with such
inchoate process. The notice of motion is
then followed by a notice
of set down which is apparently meant to cure this illegality. What
is envisaged is that a respondent
may be faced with notice of process
but given no means to appear and deal with it. This is an untenable
position, especially in
the context of evictions.
[19]
This omission is enough. But
there is more. It emerges from the return of service of the
eviction
application that it was served on 05 November 2019 by ‘affixing’
at the property which is described in as
a ‘chosen domicilium’
of the occupants. Clearly this is a nonsense. The occupiers have no
leases and there is no basis
on which a domicilium address could have
been chosen be any of them.
[20]
Then on 09 December 2019 - i.e.
three days after this ‘service’ and presumably
pursuant
thereto - an application was made in the unopposed court for an
extraordinary hybrid order having the following features:
i. It sought to
authorise a section 4(2) order in terms of an annexure marked A.
ii. It provided that in
the event that the sheriff was unable to serve the notice in terms of
section 4(2) ‘timeously or at
all or should the date for final
hearing change for any reason from that reflected in annexure A …
the date of hearing reflected
in the Notice may be amended
accordingly and endorsed by the Registrar… prior to service.’
[21]
Pursuant to this application an
order in these terms was granted by van der Walt JA. The
annexure A
purportedly approved under section 4(2) has the following curious
features:
i. It is, in the first
instance, addressed to the occupiers and purports to notify them that
the applicant intends to make application
on 18 February 2020 for an
order evicting them.
ii. In the second
instance, it is addressed to the sheriff and directs that:
a.
the sheriff serve the application on the second
respondent –
i.e. the municipality (but presumably intended to refer to the
occupants) by displaying the notice and all further
processes and
notices at the entrance of the property including any order of court
and by affixing such documents to the units
occupied, alternatively
sliding a copy thereof under the door of such units;
b.
the sheriff attempt to establish the names
of the occupiers of each
and every room who are prepared to identify themselves;
c.
the sheriff serve the application on
any person present at the
property and explain the nature and importance of the relief sought
by the applicants in English and/or
Sotho and/or Zulu; and
d.
that the sheriff’s return in respect
of the notice must
specifically state that each of the above directions was carried out.
[22]
The application sans date is
reflected in a return filed as having been served on the
Municipality
on 11 December 2019. This is the only evidence of any service of any
process on the Municipality on file.
[23]
Returns reflecting service
of the section 4(2) notice and a notice of set down as
follows are
filed of record:
i. service of the
section 4(2) notice on 19 February 2020 ‘upon Ms pretty at the
main door’ who is reflected as ‘the
lady who sells sweets
at the door and being in control of the property;
ii. service of the
section 4(2) notice and a notice of set down ( for hearing on 28
April 2021) on 07 April 2021 ‘upon Lind
Kula the Committee
Member… in control of and at
the
place of business
of’ the occupants. A further note in the return reads ‘Note:
situated at 117, the service took place at the main entrance.’
[24]
A section 4(2) notice with the
original date of 18 February 2020 deleted in manuscript
and replaced
with the date ‘ 06-05-2020’ is filed of record.
[25]
Thus presumably, on each
occasion that a new date for hearing was obtained, the date of
the
original 4(2) notice was changed to accommodate the set down. Whilst
this may be in accordance with the order granted by van
der Walt JA
it is not in accordance with the procedure laid down in the Act and
the Practice Manual.
[26]
These deficiencies in service
notwithstanding, the process made its way to the knowledge
of
some
of the occupants.
[27]
There was a notice of intention
to oppose filed by these occupants. It has been made clear
in the
answering affidavits filed that this opposition is by only eight
households in the block.
[28]
These occupants represented by
Mr Ncambanca who was assisted by an organization known
as the Inner
City Foundation assisted Mr Ncambanca in filing a notice of intention
to oppose. The notice of opposition was delivered
by way of email on
behalf of the opposing occupiers.
[29]
It seems that this opposition
was received by the applicants attorneys as a stroke of
luck. They
have, on the basis that the application is opposed attempted to
conduct the matter as if this opposition by some occupants
serves to
forgive the significantly irregular process. It does not.
[30]
Firstly, there is no basis upon
which a court may be called on to determine an application
in the
face of such unbridled failure of process and in the absence of any
application for condonation ( and I express no opinion
as to whether
such condonation would be competent under the Act).
[31]
Secondly, the matter was
opposed by only some of the occupants. There are other
occupants who
have not been served in terms of the provisions of the Act or the
rules. Notwithstanding that there was, in terms
of part A of the main
application, an acknowledgment that there needed to be substituted
service of the application, there is no
order filed in relation to
Part A. As I have said, the only return of service in respect of the
main application is one which reflects
service on the building by
attachment on the basis that it is a chosen domicilium address. Which
it could not be. It seems that
Part A of the notice of motion was
never moved for.
[32]
Furthermore, although it emerges
from the eccentric section 4(2) notice that such notice
on its terms
directs substituted service thereof by the sheriff, there is no
return filed which shows that this has been done.
[33]
As if this gross dereliction of
attention to process were not enough, reference to the
merits also
shows deficiencies which impact on the manner in which this court is
able to decide the case. I move to deal with these
merits.
The
merits
[34]
An important aspect of a
decision to evict is the determination of a just and equitable
date
for eviction. In this determination the court must have regard to all
relevant factors, including the period the unlawful
occupier and his
or her family have resided in the property.
[35]
Many of the occupants in this
case have lived in the building for more than a decade.
It is an
imperative of the process that this residency be explored and
explained.
[36]
There was no explanation
as to how it has come about that some of the occupants
have lived in
their units for more than a decade. There is even less said about
why, notwithstanding the fact that the property
was purchased by the
applicants in 2011, it took more than eight years for the application
to be brought.
[37]
At the hearing, the court made
inquiries as to these procedural and substantive deficiencies.
It was
sought also that the original transfer documents be provided. The
application was postponed to allow for such supplementation.
[38]
The original transfer documents
were ultimately provided. There was, however, no information
provided
as to the lengthy periods that the occupants had variously occupied
the units in the building and there was no explanation
as to the
close on eight years which has passed between the purchase of the
building and the application for eviction.
[39]
In terms of section 4(7), the
question of whether it is just and equitable to order eviction
must
be decided ‘after considering all the relevant circumstances,
including, whether land has been made available or can
reasonably be
made available by a municipality or other organ of state or another
land owner for the relocation of the unlawful
occupier, and including
the rights and needs of the elderly, children, disabled persons and
households headed by women.’
[40]
The municipality is a critical
party in any eviction application of this nature. Municipalities
have
obligations to intervene to deal with potential homelessness in the
areas in which they operate.
[41]
As I have said, the only
evidence of service of the eviction application on the Municipality
is service of an application on 11 December 2019 which provides that
the application will be heard on a date to be determined by
the
Registrar. There is furthermore no evidence of any service of set
down on the Municipality.
[42]
The failure to properly serve a
meaningful application on the Municipality means that
the
Municipality has been unable to comply with its statutory function in
relation to the merits of the application – which
includes
providing information to the court as to whether land has been made
available or can reasonably be made available by a
municipality or
other organ of state or another landowner for the relocation of the
unlawful occupier.
[43]
In sum, the notice of motion in
the main application was defective for being contrary
to the Act.
There was, furthermore, no proper service of the application on
either the occupants or the Municipality.
Conclusion
[44]
The unashamed disregard for the
Act and the Practice Manual in this matter is regrettable.
The
deficiencies are so marked that it is difficult to believe them to be
attributable to a mere lack of understanding.
[45]
The Act enacts the
constitutional provisions relating to homelessness and the right to
housing. It recognises that eviction from one’s home entails
more than resort to the common law and that it can only be achieved
by following the statutory process set out in the Act. People subject
to an eviction from their home are generally of the most
vulnerable
in any society. It is for this reason that the Act has been enacted.
It provides special constitutional protections
for people facing
eviction. If these are not afforded illegal occupiers an eviction
order may not be granted.
[46]
As this application is
fundamentally flawed both procedurally and on the merits. It falls
to
be dismissed.
Order
[47]
I thus make the following order:
The application is
dismissed.
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
13 April 2022, matter was then postponed sine die for
delivery of further documents.
Delivery
of all further documents:
05 July 2022
Judgment
delivered:
26 July 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants
Adv C.N Nhlapho.
Instructed
by
:
Sithi and Thabela Attorneys.
For
the Respondents:
The opposing respondents were in person.
[1]
See rule 6(5)(b)(iii).
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